Friday, August 29, 2008

One Big Year!













The distance between age 20 and age 21 is bigger than the distance between most years.

Hang in there with me for a moment ... I'm not losing my mind. (Well, I might be but this still makes sense!)

A year ago we had no more teenagers in the family. I blogged about it. It seemed like a big event. But somehow age 21 seems sooooooooo much older than age 20. Joey is 21 years of age today!!! Maybe it's because he's now into his twenties a ways, or maybe it's because he's wrapping up his internship at his college, or maybe it's because we saw him in July, ... whatever the reason -- he seems much more mature than just one year older than 20!!!!

So, Happy Birthday Old Joey!!! :-) We love you!

Tuesday, August 26, 2008

Celebrating Jeri's Birthday Across the Miles


Jim and I are feeling so blessed to have a daughter like Jeri and today we celebrated her birthday! Well, the celebration was basically Jim and me singing a family version of a Red Robin restaurant "Happy Birthday!" Usually, to be done properly, everyone should be in a long line and the leader guides the gang through the house, weaving in and out of rooms, while everyone sings and claps:

Happy birthday, have a happy birthday
Happy birthday, have a happy day
Is there a birthday here?
Yes, there is a birthday here!
Happy
Birthday
Ha ha ha ppy!
etc.
(The photo is the only sample I have of another time and place where we sang the song!!!)

So, we sang and Jeri and her dog, Machi, marched and I'm sure the puppy will never be the same again!

We love you, Jerz! We hope you can hear our cheers and feel our bear hugs all the way to Thailand from here!

Sunday, August 17, 2008

Guns and Men

We have grown quite accustomed to seeing guns, so much so that I can't count how many I see on a given day. They are everywhere! There are always an assortment of men and their guns outside our office gates. And anytime we want to go to our beach hut, the gun-toting police (MoPol for Mobile Police) must accompany us in a separate vehicle. Trucks filled with uniformed men and their guns regularly "horn" (the term used for what we would call "honk") and force others to let them pass. The roadsides have police strutting around with their guns. Sometimes they use the guns to enforce a roadblock -- sometimes it's actually a legal roadblock but usually they just want some extra money for dinner.

With so many guns about, you'd think I would have blogged about them by now.

So ... here are a couple of anecdotes.

This week, one of our drivers was sitting in his parked Zulu Control (the name for our hired patrol teams with security experts and MoPol) truck awaiting a job. The MoPol in the front passenger's seat decided to clean his gun. He removed the magazine and discovered that a bullet was lodged in the chamber. When he started poking around inside the chamber with his finger, the driver began to feel "uncomfortable" and decided to exit the vehicle. Less than one minute after shutting the door there was a loud bang. Pointing upwards and toward the area where the driver's head had been just moments before, the gun discharged. The bullet tore through the roof, demolished the red and blue lights on the top of the truck, but injured no one. They don't hand out brains when they hand out guns.

The incident led to another fascinating discussion with our own driver on our way home from work. He told us of the time when a cousin was being buried. The cousin had been a policeman so the police attended the burial in full force. When the casket was being lowered into the ground, 7 policemen encircled the hole and did a "gun salute" -- three times they ceremoniously pointed their guns in the air and, following the proper shout from the commander, they shot their guns. At the first shot, 3 guns worked. For the second shot, 4 guns worked. For the final shot, 3 guns worked.

Between inept handlers, poor equipment, and a serious lack of ammunition --- these aren't very good odds if we actually needed protection! But, we're not too concerned. Most of the time when there is a problem the police are the first to drop their guns, shed their uniforms, and run. This is why we make sure that we carry enough cash, our mobile phones, and easy-to-pull-off-but-not-very-valuable jewelry. That way, the bad guys will be satisfied and we will be safe!