Monday, March 24, 2025

DESSERT TO DESERT (February 15-March 8, 2025)




 

We left tropical Hawaii with her 90% humidity and traveled to desert like Phoenix, Arizona with a humidity of 15%. We would stay at the Legacy Golf Resort for three wonderful weeks of gathering ourselves and getting ready for an upcoming Carribean cruise.

The weather was sunny and warm, and the resort provided a variety of things to do. I managed to find my way to the hot tub, the gym, and the onsite restaurant. Our room was just a studio but was plenty big and well equipped.

                                       REFLECTIONS


About a mile journey from the WYNDHAM LEGASY GOLF RESORT are the South Mountains. The rugged landscape presents a stark contrast to the lush golf community where we stayed.  The level paved sidewalk to get there is bordered by tall palm trees, amazing flowering bushes, rapidly flowing canals, and the perfectly manicured fairways of two outstanding golf clubs.

However, at the end of the walk, one is faced with a stark contrast. 

The paved sidewalk turns to a rock and dirt trail. Uneven and winding upward, it is definitely not an easy go! No more verdant green landscaping. It becomes a desert-like terrain that challenges the sojourner.

As I made the trek back and forth, I was reminded that as we walk through life it is pretty much the same. There are times when everything goes smoothly, and the journey is easy, beautiful, and refreshing. There are also times when our life's journey becomes uneven, sparse, and much more cumbersome.


Those two drastically different places were not that far apart. The colorful and the drab literally bumped up against each other! There was no buffer just a complete change.

How many times in our lives do we suddenly go from the dessert to the desert with little or no warning. It happens! We're walking along with ease, enjoying the scenery, and suddenly we are confronted with a dry, prickly environment.

The good news is that the opposite is likewise true. We find ourselves in a sparse place and suddenly we emerge into a place of plenty. No buffer, just a complete change.

It is important to remember that in these transitional times, there is worth in both. There is the rugged beauty of the desert and the flowerful, fragrant beauty of the "norm".

Also, remember that when in one place or the other, the other is not far away. Learn to enjoy and to be prepared. BE BLESSED.




Friday, March 7, 2025

BREATH OF LIFE (January 18-February 14, 2025)


Wyndham Shearwater Resort

After landing on Kauai, we made our way to the northside and our

resort. While in Hawaii we stayed at three different WYNDHAM Resorts. Our first two weeks were at the WYNDHAM Bali Hai. Our third week was at the WYNDHAM Ka'Eo Kai. Our final week was at WYNDHAM Shearwater. Each resort had its strong points but, we loved Shearwater. This resort sat on a cliff above the Pacific. We could watch the whales and enjoy the sunrise. What a wonderful blessing it was to spend a full month in the Aloha state!

Having been to this Island several times, we primarily just relaxed and stayed around the resorts. 


Wyndham Bali Hai Resort

                                                                                      REFLECTIONS
 

   
"Aloha"! You hear it every time you interact with the Hawaiian locals. It's expected. I always thought that it meant "Hello" or "Goodbye" but, I have learned differently.  According to several sources, when translated from the native language, means "breath of life".
    It has come to express more than just "hello" or "goodbye". It has become an expression of mercy, love, affection, peace, and respect. It has grown to identify a way of life. 
    "Aloha" has become a simple way of "breathing life" into others.         In its concise way it says, "I offer you mercy, affection, peace, and respect with nothing expected in return."
    Not a bad way to treat our fellowman! So, to all who read my blogs, "Aloha" from the bottom of my heart.
    








Sunday, March 2, 2025

OF PATRIOTS AND PASTRIES (January 4-February 17, 2025)


 

We left our son's home in Missouri and traveled to the great state of Texas. While there we stayed at the WYNDHAM Riverside Suites in San Antonio. This has become a "go to" place just after Christmas. The weather is decent and the Christmas Lights along the Riverwalk don't get turned off until the middle of January.  Our three weeks there were spent relaxing and visiting the places we had come to enjoy. Those spots would include, the Alamo, the Riverwalk, the Tower of the America's, Mi Tierra Cafe, and the Guenther Pioneer Flour Mill Restaurant.




As always, we enjoyed watching and listening to the horse drawn carriages as they paraded past our room nightly. It was a time of getting organized for our winter/spring adventures that lay ahead.

We left San Antonio and flew to Hawaii through Los Angles. The flights were long but, stepping off the plane in the Aloha State, smelling the flowers, and feeling the tropical warmth was worth it.
  
                                                                                       REFLECTIONS

Our times in San Antonio always seem to be a blend of the old and the new. It is a place with great history and a bright future. The resort we stay at used to be, in the early 1900s, a Salvation Army housing unit, then it was a standard hotel, and now a Wyndham Timeshare Resort. It is the perfect blend of the old and new. The rooms are small and have maintained the architectural features of the original building with the niceties of the 21st century. We love it.

The Guenther House Restaurant is in the original Guenther Home and overflows with history. It is an unassuming eatery in the old home but, it has the best pastries and signature waffles. The upstairs is a sort of Museum with the original period furnishings. We love it!

And, of course, there is the Alamo. Smack dab in the center of the busy city.  A small but important reminder of days gone by and our history as Americans. We love it.

That's pretty much the way it is with life. We are, for the most part, what our past has made us. Yet, throughout the years, we have changed. We need to be a bland of the old and the new. We need to always remember our heritage and how we have arrived at this point in life. As much as our history has shaped us, we must learn to adapt to the new day in which we live and reach forward to the days ahead.

Like the Alamo, the Guenther House, and the Wyndham Riverside Suites, we should cherish our past and live in the present. Repurposed as it were. For those of us who have lived many decades we must find a way to be relevant in our later days.

We cannot do or be what we once were but, we can certainly find an avenue to be of value in our golden years.  Be blessed and remember.... THE BEST IS YET TO COME!   





  

Friday, January 10, 2025

THOSE WERE THE DAYS (November 24 -January 3, 2025)

 


Lake of the Ozarks, Missouri

After our friends departed from our annual "Celebration of Friends" Outing, our family arrived to spend Thanksgiving together. For several days we enjoyed WYNDHAM LAKE OF THE OZARKS and being together. When Sherry and I left on December 1st we had been at this lovely resort for a full month. 

Our next stop was in the Springfield, Missouri area where we stayed with Aaron and his family, enjoyed Christmas activities, and stayed until the New Year arrived. 

As I write this, we have left Missouri for Texas and are staying at the WYNDHAM RIVERWALK SUITES in San Antonio. We are here for just weeks before heading to Hawaii for a month.

                                                                            REFLECTIONS



One of the downsides of our transient lifestyle is that we are, many times, separated from family and friends. This is somewhat muted by the ease of communication these days. You can actually do video calls (I remember when the thought of that was just a wild dream). Social media helps a great deal during those "away times". Yet being with them physically is so much nicer!

That's why times like the last two months were so wonderful. 

The entire clan, sixteen, were an integral part of our lives over the thanksgiving and Christmas holidays! It was time well spent with people we deeply love. They were days we will never forget.

Many of you who will read these comments have your family close by. You get to see them often. Please don't take that for granted. It is a blessing. Treasure those times when you get together. Pass out kind words and hugs. Don't let the stress of closeness ruin your relationships.