MOVING ON.....2024

A Note From The Author: Jacqueline E. Hughes

I am so happy to welcome in the new year, 2024!!! My Blog is changing-up a bit....mainly because I am evolving. Travel will always take precedence in my life and, my journeys will be shared with you. This 2024 version will offer a variety of new stories and personal ideas, as well. This is all about having fun and enjoying this Beautiful Journey called......Life!!!

Thursday, February 29, 2024

HOW TO DETERMINE IF WE ARE GROUNDED AND HOW DID WE EVEN GET THERE?

 


A series of essays….




MY BEAUTIFUL UKRAINIAN FAMILY ~
I AM SEATED ON GRANDMA’S LAP AND RONNIE IS TO MY RIGHT.
MY MOTHER IS IN SECOND ROW FROM TOP, SECOND FROM THE RIGHT.

….as seen through my eyes!





By: Jacqueline E Hughes



To be grounded is to possess a firm and unwavering foundation, an internal strength and self-confidence that sustains you through ups and downs and from which deep and enduring success can be found. It’s simple to describe someone who is grounded as one who is sensible and down-to-earth or, plainly, having one’s feet on the ground.


Are we born grounded? Or, would our place of birth encourage us to become grounded through the sense of ancestry, community, responsibility, and location?  We may ask ourselves what is it that sustains us—strengthens and supports us both physically and mentally—and then come up with examples that have helped to keep us grounded and true to ourselves and those around us. 


The meaning of being grounded, for me, holds such diversity from generation to generation considering I’d spent many of my early years in the home of my Ukrainian grandparents in Mishawaka, Indiana. My grandparents were raising their five youngest (adult) children who still lived at home as they were pursuing their higher education, work endeavors, and even just graduating from high school. The six older siblings had already left the nest to find jobs and raise families of their own.


It was a whirlwind arrangement that tossed my older brother and me between the Ukrainian language spoken by my grandparents and English, the preferred language of my aunts and uncles, as the younger generation planted their feet firmly onto the New Land and the modern ideas they embraced. Sadly, distancing themselves from their parents and the Old World (Ukraine) that represented their heritage was their desire and main goal as they spread their wings and learned how to fly in America.


My brother and I could see and feel the distance growing between parents and children. With grandma working constantly to maintain the house and ‘feed the troops,’ and grandpa spending his time raising a vegetable garden in the back yard, their younger children pursued personal happiness and did very little to assist their parents. 


Ronnie and I were grandpa’s faithful students and learned how to grow and maintain the veggie patch. Grandma would spend days canning what she could to supplement the family meals during the winter. The five children at home wanted to flaunt their youth and ties to freedom during the early 1950’s, after WW2 had ended, and frequently showed their distain towards the two people who helped to make their lives comfortable. They were, indeed, their own generation.


Our parents both worked throughout the summer months and depended on my mother’s parents to watch over us during the week. Grandma would have a huge meal prepared as everyone slipped into the backdoor around five-thirty in the evening. Soon, after dinner, my parents would scoop Ronnie and me up for the short drive home only to repeat the day beginning in the early morning hours.


My grandpa and grandma fought a long, difficult flight to avoid the Bolsheviks back in the Ukraine (Soviet Union) as this group, led by Vladimir Lenin, would soon become the Communist Party of the Soviet Union and represent the animosity and hatred that the Communist Party opened-up and enforced on the people. 


My grandparents were so proud to have been able to bring over from the Motherland pieces of furniture that were a part of their heritage via their own parents and would serve to keep them grounded in this foreign land they had adopted as their own. This land is where their own children were born, loved, and raised as citizens of the United States. My American (Ukrainian) aunts and uncles became math teachers, a Russian History and Language professor, a Master Electrician, an Executive Secretary, mothers and housewives raising their own young citizens in a land that opened its arms as wide as possible to those seeking refuge and kindness while their feet were being planted firmly on the ground.


I am most proud of the fact that both of my grandparents studied the Constitution, passed the test, and became citizens of the United States in the mid 1950’s!


Late summer of 1975, we were invited to a family reunion which included my Ukrainian relatives living in the States and a large contingency of Ukrainian relatives who had remained, survived in, or returned to the Motherland to settle in or around the city of Kiev. They flew over to the Chicago area for several weeks to meet their American relatives. How fortunate we all were to mingle with and talk about our own experiences and try to understand what gave us internal strength and self-confidence along the individual paths we followed. 


I am very proud to acknowledge my Ukrainian roots—even more so now that my maternal ancestry, including the land, her people, and politicians, has been enduring an unwanted conflict with Russia for over two years and, miraculously, continues to hold tight even when recent aid has not been forthcoming! They are a strong, resilient people who, because they remain grounded to their heritage and the land they love so much, fight long and hard and by whatever means necessary to keep what is rightfully theirs. 


As a citizen of the United States living in America, I feel I am grounded by family and the long roots of freedom that my ancestors desired and fought to achieve. Arriving in a new land to work and put down your own roots without speaking the language or knowing how family and friends were surviving back home, had to be difficult. To find employment, marry, and raise children in this new land is quite admirable. 


I am a product of sturdy, ambitious, and brave individuals who escaped death only to bring life into this world—including my own. I am eternally grateful for this. Because of Alexandria and Antone’s hard work and belief in themselves, I live a sustainable existence today and possess a firm and unwavering foundation with love in my heart and feet planted firmly on the ground.



Copyright © 2024 by Jacqueline E Hughes

All rights reserved













Thursday, February 22, 2024

WHAT IS BEAUTY?

 


A series of essays….




TAKEN NEAR STIRLING CASTLE IN SCOTLAND.
I FIND TRUE BEAUTY IN HONORING THE LIVES THAT 
PRECEDED ME AND CONSIDER CEMETERIES 
VERY ENDEARING AND BEAUTIFUL.


….as seen through my eyes!



By: Jacqueline E Hughes


When I began my Blogging career over ten years ago, I was a bastion for all ideas past, current, and future that related to anything regarding the travel life. I was out of the league of a Samantha Brown, but I held the travel bug deep inside me and called on the beauty of travel to guide me through its inner landscape and feel comfortable sharing my personal experiences with readers like you.


This particular trip to The Wild Atlantic Way of Ireland was our fourth as we continued to work our way north along the coast and the outstanding beauty of Western Ireland. Four years before, traveling with friends, I’d booked a two night stay at Craggy Island B&B in Doolin and Dan and I became friends with the owners, Adrian O’Connor and his extremely kind wife, Bev.


Irish traditional music has been a central part of life in this area of County Clare for many years and Doolin has become known as the traditional music capital of Ireland. Our host was an essential component of this vibrant music scene throughout the year and played various instruments with other local musicians in all three pubs in Doolin. Adrian created and produced his own music and contributed a haunting CD which we gladly purchased to bring back home.





ADRIAN’S LOVE FOR DOOLIN SHINES THROUGH



The enlightening music that he composed and for which he was loved and known for suddenly became a part of us and was instantly embedded in our hearts. We realized that we were being called to his music and willingly traveled the path it had taken us on. As in his music and the poetry within his music, I have always likened this enlightenment to literature and ask, why do we read books? And the most simple and direct answer is always, because that is where the wisdom is. Wisdom and pure emotion is in Adrian’s music.


Since meeting Adrian and Bev and sharing the fullness of their lives, we knew that life itself would never be the same. Life was richer now; so full and complete it was almost exotic, in a sense. 


The Burren, the villages of Lisdoonvarna (home of the Matchmaking Festival each year) and Ballyvaughan, Cliffs of Moher, and Doolin itself, one of the last stops before sailing out to the amazing Aran Islands, County Clare and its people have so much to give and we were the willing recipients of all this area had to offer. By the time we came back to Ireland in 2010 to rent a small cottage north of Galway City, we’d heard that Adrian’s health had been severely compromised. We took a chance and stopped by Craggy Island on our way back to Shannon Airport with the hope of talking with him, once again.


This beautiful man, pounds lighter, more frail, but without having lost any of his innate vibrancy, greeted us with grace and charm and invited us in for coffee. Many of us had asked him to create another CD, more beautiful music, but his illness was too strong to have him comply. He did, however, claim his Irish Uilleann pipes and played us several songs while we sat out soaking up the warm, Irish sunshine.





ADRIAN GETTING READY
TO PLAY HIS UILLEANN PIPES




ADRIAN AND ME AT CRAGGY ISLAND B&B



Bev, a nurse, was at work and Adrian promised to give her hugs from us upon her return home knowing that she would be disappointed having missed us. 


In September of 2018 we had set-up a visit with Adrian and Bev in Doolin. We were traveling with good friends and were delighted to share our Irish friends, the trad music, and the warmth of Gus O’Connor’s Pub with Michael and Marsha. Surreal might be the best way to describe this beautiful evening; the perfect mix of fact and fantasy! The inner landscape of beauty that pulled us in and surrounded all of us with its deep, lasting love can be conjured up each time I think about that night. It will, gladly, stay with me throughout my lifetime.


So, if you should ask me the question, what is beauty?, I would reply, that magical night in Doolin, for certain. I would be quick to add the images of our daughters and grandchildren, new buds on the trees, a rolling Yorkshire landscape, poetry read aloud for all to absorb, our dog named Bree, any and all music that stirs the soul and puts a swing in your step. Beauty is everything you want it to be and even…nothing at all; the blank slate of pure emptiness when we close our eyes and all is silent, all is still.





BEV AND ME CATCHING UP WITH LIFE


 BEV, ADRIAN AND ME AT GUS O’CONNOR’S 
PUB IN DOOLIN IN 2018


MINE WERE TEARS OF JOY WHILE TALKING
WITH MY FRIEND AND HERO, ADRIAN O’CONNOR



The late Irish philosopher, poet, and author, John O’Donohue, writes about beauty from every aspect in his book of the same name and asserts that beauty is a gentle but urgent call to awaken and celebrates it as a homecoming of the human spirit. Beauty is the hope we should never relinquish. O’Donohue opens our eyes, hearts, and minds to the wonder of our own relationship with beauty by exposing the infinity and mystery of its breadth. He reveals how beauty’s invisible embrace invites us toward new heights of passion and creativity even in these uncertain times of global conflict and crisis.


The word glamour does not apply here. Its superficial and exciting attractiveness is usually associated with striking physical beauty, luxury, or celebrity. Love, kindness, hopefulness, joy, and contentment define much deeper forms of beauty and personal satisfaction.


In early September of last year, we met a couple while having a drink in a hotel bar in Burford, a beautiful village in The Cotswolds Hills of England. They popped over from Chipping Camden, just up the road, to enjoy dinner and a night out.


We talked about travel, life experiences, and everything that made us truly happy. I told of our friendship with Adrian O’Connor in Ireland. Dan, phone at the ready, looked Adrian up to show them who he was and relay his ties to trad music considering our new acquaintances were in the music business, as well.


Sadly, we discovered that Adrian had recently passed away from the cancer that ultimately consumed him. Had beauty failed us, lost forever by the absence of this man, our friend? Tears arrived later that evening as Dan and I reminisced about the many years we shared Adrian with the world. Instinctively, we knew that the beauty he represented within our lives had actually expanded, released into the entire world for all to cling to, rejoice in, and immortalize for all of eternity.


Adrian’s death was a call to be awakened. We knew we must celebrate his passing as a homecoming of the human spirit. His life, his story, would offer all who knew him the comfort and hope required to carry on and pass the beauty we knew in this world on to everyone else. Your kindness, Adrian, will be remembered and passed down through your spirit to all who knew you and all who find solace in good people who care about others and set positive examples for us to follow.






Copyright © 2024 by Jacqueline E Hughes

All rights reserved

Photos Copyright © 2024 by Jacqueline E Hughes 

All rights reserved












Thursday, February 15, 2024

SNOW ON THE CHERRY BLOSSOMS

 

A series of essays….




             THE INFLUENCE OF TEMPERATURE CHANGES ON OUR FRUIT CROPS                       

                   John L. Russell from the A.P.


….as seen through my eyes!




By: Jacqueline E Hughes



The world calendar hosts a leap year in February adding one more day to a short month, but giving so many born on February 29th a full day to celebrate. A despicable, disgraced, and twice impeached ex-president demeans a young, talented, female pop star for encouraging everyone to register to vote. Punxsutawney Phil has spoken and predicts an early spring this year. Really? I guess there’s ‘no shadow’ for our particular ground hog this winter’s day.


What a crazy and mixed-up world we all live in. But, the most difficult thing I’ve observed lately are all of the budded-out trees that would, seemingly, predict an early spring even without seeing their own shadow. To see buds on the trees in the depth of winter should have all of us asking so many questions; keep us charged-up and fully attuned to the changing weather patterns.


The 2012 tart cherry crop was viewed as a disaster after freezing temperatures hit blooming trees in Michigan during April of that year. Almost every fruit crop in Michigan was frozen out when cold temperatures followed some eighty degree days in March. The cycle had been broken and all of us, but especially the farmers, were the sad recipients of this unwanted phenomena. 


Driving down to spend our week on Sanibel Island, Florida, with our two young daughters gave us such joy and delight as we could, literally, cross the border from Georgia and know we were in the Sunshine State by seeing the row upon row of orange trees standing at attention. The orchards consumed the landscape and we loved the sight of their strength in numbers lining I-75 as if escorting us to our final destination.


Today, finding orange groves north of Orlando or even within the Orange County area is a distinct impossibility. Where beautiful groves once thrived, nurtured by the latest generation of farmers whose fathers, grandfathers, and great-grandfathers (and for generations before them), depended on this juicy, prolific fruit for the livelihood of their families.





A THRIVING FLORIDA ORANGE TREE



According to Florida Memory, citrus trees arrived with European explorers in the 16th century and quickly took root in Florida. It wasn’t until the 1830’s that Florida developed a monopoly over cultivating citrus fruits. A devastating freeze in 1835 destroyed citrus growing efforts in the Carolinas and Georgia, beginning a permanent southward migration of the industry into Florida.


Little did we know, arriving in Florida ourselves in 1997 to reside there for over twenty-three years, that we would be seeing the demise of long established orange groves and a particular way of life in Florida—the very groves that ushered our small family into the State for so many memorable family trips from the late 1970’s and through most of the 1990’s! 


Understanding that history often repeats itself, I can’t help but look up at the newly budded trees here in Western Michigan in late January and not feel the shiver moving up my spine for what once was and what is to be. I ask myself why it takes a near disaster before humans even attempt to divert it. It would be like playing the game of ‘chicken’ with billions of lives at stake, not to mention the animal and plant life, as well.


So, when you gift the one you love with a box of heart shaped chocolates this week and tell them how much they mean to you, keep in mind that their health and well-being should be included in your gift of love. Refresh the idea about just how much our warming temperatures influence nature and a natural way of life for all of us. Together, plan on the best way to make the necessary changes in habits and lifestyle in order to protect our precious resources.


I firmly hope that Michigan’s cherry and fruit crops do not fall to the wayside as did many of Florida’s orange groves these past couple of decades. Looking at the early tree buds and young sprouting daffodils in late January, early February, here in Michigan, concerns me a great deal. Let’s learn how to make good changes in order to protect a world that offers us sustainability, comfort, and an abundance of joy. Let’s strive to make a positive difference for the benefit of everyone, today and into the future.





HOPE YOU ENJOYED A
HAPPY VALENTINE’S DAY!


Copyright © 2024 by Jacqueline E Hughes

All rights reserved