Here is the next question my friend, Myra gave me so I'd have something to blog about.
What has been the happiest time of your life?
I sat here thinking and thinking and thinking. I have lots of happy times and it's good to think about that now as I sit at home unable to travel anywhere. But the happiest? Sorry Art, because I can't say it was our wedding. He agrees actually. The wedding itself was probably more stressful with so many things to think about and prepare for. And besides that, he did pay for the whole thing. 😁
Was it the day of Tiffany's birth? That was stressful too. It was a difficult birth due to the incompetence of my obstetrician at the time. Was it Keola's birth? That was better since Art delivered him by himself. But, exuberantly happy? Hmmm... That had its stresses too.
Then I thought about that trip to England.
Art had seen a poster about a super deal to England during a shoulder season when fares were cheaper and the kids happened to be on spring break. It would be our first trip out of the country and this was perfect since it was to an English speaking country. 😂
We went to Blenheim Palace, tasted scones and had tea with cream and sugar. Wow! That was the first time we'd had scones and found cream and sugar with tea is very lovely. (We learned it's not the same with green tea though.)
We tried to persuade the kids not to eat the bread fried in bacon fat, but it fell on suddenly deaf ears and they loved every bite of their full English breakfast.
We met so many lovely people and saw every historical place Art could fit into our schedule. It wore the kids out so much they fell asleep watching the musical Cats on stage.
The next trip we took out of country was to Rome.
We had just seen the Christmas papal mass at St. Peter's Basilica the night before we left and was awed by actually being inside it a few days later. It's huge!
Imagining wild animals and gladiators at the Colosseum was amazing.
The kids were thoroughly taken by panini, that thin Italian sandwich. And we fell in love with Tuscan seasoning.
But the trip that was most memorable for me and happiest was going to Japan with the kids.
I'd met my mother's parents and family for the first time 26 years before when I went to Japan on a college trip and this was my first time back since then.
I spent three weeks at my grandfather's temple in Sendai. He passed away a year after I left in 1971.
And now here I was again back in Japan seeing my grandmother, aunt and uncles. My cousins were still babies and in nursery school back then. Now they were grown up and speaking a little English which was helpful for my kids and Art.
I've often written about how the older generation in Japan never says the words, "I love you." It's just understood. But the one thing I knew my mother would say was "Don't forget to eat your vegetables." I always equated it to caring and love.
On our last day in Sendai before traveling south to Hiroshima, my grandmother told me how much our visit meant to her because she said she probably wouldn't see us again. (She passed away a couple of years later.) She then turned to Tiffany and said, "Don't forget to eat your vegetables." I think my eyebrows went up at that sweet reminder. She then turned to Keola, looked at him up and down, laughed and said, "I can see by your strong body that you eat your vegetables and everything else."
I think this is also such a happy memory because it was the first time we actually introduced Japan to the kids. Growing up in Illinois, they didn't have a true feel for the culture of the country their grandmother was raised in.
And the other happy memory? My aunt who counseled me on my angst about my love life 26 years before, took me aside before we left and said, "You have truly picked a very good man."
And I know she still thinks that.
What was the happiest time of your life?