Journaling

Hiding in Amsterdam to avoid persecution of the Jews in 1942-44 could not have been the easiest of experiences.

Diary. ©iStockphoto/AndrejaD

Diary. ©iStockphoto/AndrejaD

We can know what it was like for Anne Frank and her family and four others through Anne’s record of daily events in the annex of her father’s business. They were discovered in August 1944 and taken to camps. Of the Frank family, only Otto survived. When he returned, Meip Giles, who had collected Anne’s writing and family photo albums, returned them to Frank. Learning of her intent to publish a work based on her experience after the war, Otto Frank decided to publish Anne’s writings. The book was favorably received. I read it in junior high school.

Not having been one to journal my life events, Anne Frank makes me consider the possibilities. As a sharer of my life story, I am encouraged by the fact that Anne’s experience continues to make an impact on the world long after her death. However, there was no assurance Anne’s work would have been preserved or eventually published after her death. So, encouragement might come from other benefits of journaling. Maud Purcell in The Health Benefits of Journaling on PsycheCentral.com indicates there is evidence that journaling impacts physical well-being positively. Both Purcell and C.M. Smith author of 6 Ways Journaling Will Change Your Life say it is a way to clarify what is happening in your life and how you really feel about it. Journaling provides us with insight into who we are which can assist in decision making.

Want to begin the practice of journaling regularly? Michael Hyatt has created a template to help jog thoughts in How to Become More Consistent in Your Daily Journaling.

I celebrated what would have been Anne Frank’s 85th birthday June 12, 2014, by seeing The Fault in Our Stars, based on the book by the same name. When Hazel Grace Lancaster (Shailene Woodley) and Augustus Waters (Ansel Elgort), two youths who meet in a cancer support group, travel to Amsterdam to meet the author of Lancaster’s favorite book, they aren’t welcomed warmly by the author. His assistance takes them on a tour of the city including the Anne Frank Museum. Anne’s short life echoes what these two youths face; they both are likely to leave this world too early.

Whenever we leave this life, it may always feel too early. Recording our lives leaves a chance we may live on in influence in this world even after our death.

Enduring kindness

Gentian (gentiana clusii) growing in the Austrian Alps. ©iStockphoto/Pferd

Gentian (gentiana clusii) growing in the Austrian Alps. ©iStockphoto/Pferd

The flowers I planted wouldn’t bloom before we left Vogelweh, Germany, to return to the United States. Two brothers that were my playmates feared I would be disappointed. They bought flowers, stuck them in the ground, then came to get me so I could pick them. Then they handed me a small package. Inside was a beautiful purple gentian (gentian clusii) pin to help me “remember the flowers of Germany.”

I never saw these military family boys again. The pin broke, then was stolen. But memory of hearts so kind they would plant flowers to avoid disappointment for a six-year-old girl hasn’t faded.

Becoming an Apple devotee

Apple. ©iStockphoto/kingvald

Apple. ©iStockphoto/kingvald

After years of listening to creative friends drone on and on about the virtues of Apple, I purchased an iMac in mid-2007. Soon I, too, was in love. Busy with life, I put off keeping current with updates. I wasn’t upset in 2014 that WordPress kept pointing out that my version of Safari was old until WordPress dug its feet into the ground and refused to do some things I requested. Is it time for new equipment? Off to the Apple store I go.

I am considering my options (i.e., drooling over the new iPad mini with retina display) when an employee magically appears to assist me. Magic? It must be because this guy solves my problem instantly with a question, “Have you considered upgrading your software?”

Is that even a possibility? At my Genius Bar appointment, a resident genius informs me that it is indeed a possibility! About a week later – after I order and upgrade my RAM from 1 to 4 GB – my software is taken from 10.4.11 to 10.9.3, the most recent version! In three hours my machine is better than new. Since the software upgrade is FREE (can you believe that?!), my only cost is time and $60 for RAM!

Having had to replace PC laptops about every three years, I am stunned that my 7-year-old iMac is still fully functional. Apple may appear to cost a little more, but it is well worth the cost due to its longevity. Apple, you and me forever!

Failed garden

Owning my own home, I decided a garden was the best avenue to fresh, top quality, inexpensive food.

My one tomato looked like this! ©iStock/photo/kevinruss

My one tomato looked like this! ©iStock/photo/kevinruss

I created a garden with 5′ wood dividers. I filled it with good soil, then made smaller divisions with string. I planted seeds to grow things like eggplant, green beans, and tomatoes. I fed and watered and weeded and watered. My mouth, too, watered thinking of the meals composed of home-grown veggies. A first-time gardener, I didn’t count on clandestine foragers. Critters took bites out of almost everything. One tomato remained pristine. Delicious, it was undoubtedly the most expensive tomato I’ve ever eaten.