Tag Archives: Reflective

A Lot to be Grateful For

There are some days when you realise that you have a lot to be grateful for. Today is one of those days. On Sunday I was ill and slept nearly all day, eating nothing. When I got up on Monday I felt so much better and wanted to catch up on everything I had missed. Now I’ll be honest. In recent weeks I’ve been a bit of a misery guts and that has affected those around me too. Sometimes it takes one simple thing to shock you out of your self-pity and make you look around you and be glad. So, here are the things I feel glad about:
I have good health
I have enough money to survive
I have two beautiful daughters whom I adore and who adore me back
I have two amazing grandsons who are the light of my life
I have a husband who would do anything for me and tells me every day that he loves me
I have a father who, although quite old, is in reasonable health and who I can spend time with whenever I like
I have a lovely home with everything I need
I’ve had a rewarding job and seen many generations of lovely children grow up into brilliant adults
I live in a country where I can be free to speak my mind
I have coped with any difficulties that have been thrown at me though happily there haven’t been too many
The sun is shining
I think we need to remind ourselves every day just how lucky we are – not just on a day which comes round once every 4 years.

Comments Off

Filed under Feb 29th Blogs

Press day in the newsroom

Today is – so far – the most peaceful day I’ve had this year working as a journalist at the Times Educational Supplement (TES) magazine in London. That’s weird as Wednesday is our weekly press-day, and the other reporters are busy trying to make sure we’ve got the latest news before we go to press this evening. Some are on the phone now, interviewing people and scrawling down notes in short-hand.

But my work for this week’s issue is done – I hope – and for the first time in a few months I feel like I’m not running late for a deadline on an article, or for sending across pages for the mini-magazine I edit (I mentioned this project and @DeputyMitchell’s great work on blogging in it recently: http://ow.ly/9m4zH). So I’ve had an opportunity to clear the huge mess of paper proofs off my desk and actually do some planning for upcoming issues, coming up with ideas for articles I’d like people to write for me about education.

This morning a colleague handed me a copy of a new book about the Flat Classroom movement, one of the approaches to linking schools via the internet. The book’s now under some coffee cups on my desk. Perhaps we should run something about that movement – or at least broader ways schools are now connecting globally? Then I check on this site, and see all the contributions pouring in from all over the world and think “Yeah – there’s something in that…”

Just as I typed that one of the sub-editors came over with a pile of proofs to check and correct for next week’s issue. Oops. Better get back to work.

1 Comment

Filed under Feb 29th Blogs

A Lot to be Grateful For

There are some days when you realise that you have a lot to be grateful for. Today is one of those days. On Sunday I was ill and slept nearly all day, eating nothing. When I got up on Monday I felt so much better and wanted to catch up on everything I had missed. Now I’ll be honest. In recent weeks I’ve been a bit of a misery guts and that has affected those around me too. Sometimes it takes one simple thing to shock you out of your self-pity and make you look around you and be glad. So, here are the things I feel glad about:
I have good health
I have enough money to survive
I have two beautiful daughters whom I adore and who adore me back
I have two amazing grandsons who are the light of my life
I have a husband who would do anything for me and tells me every day that he loves me
I have a father who, although quite old, is in reasonable health and who I can spend time with whenever I like
I have a lovely home with everything I need
I’ve had a rewarding job and seen many generations of lovely children grow up into brilliant adults
I live in a country where I can be free to speak my mind
I have coped with any difficulties that have been thrown at me though happily there haven’t been too many
The sun is shining
I think we need to remind ourselves every day just how lucky we are – not just on a day which comes round once every 4 years.

Comments Off

Filed under Feb 29th Blogs

A reflective thought.

Leap Years are needed to keep our calenders in alignment with the Earth’s revolutions. If we did not have an extra day every four years we would loose 6 hours from our calendar every year, which means that after 100 years our calender would only be 24 days. Leap Years were invented by Julius Caesar over 2000 years ago and were reflected in the Julian Calendar. In 1752 Great Britain changed and adopted The Gregorian Calender

I am sometimes in amazement of the things that just are. As a genealogist I am aware of the Calendar changes and often ponder on the wider implications things such as this, impacted onto the life’s of my ancestors.

We live in a modern, technological advancing world. A teacher friend, once told me that in order to teach her subject, which happens to be French, she had to first teach several of the students how to tell the time. I was amazed. When I asked why, she replied that the children had learnt to tell the time using digital displays rather than a traditional clock. That issue had never occurred to me.

We present to the future, a generation of children who regularly use computers, Playstations, iPhone and iPods,and much more. Basics things can become forgotten, and technological advancements are seen as the norm and perhaps taken for granted.

The eldest family member I can remember is my Great Grandmother who was born in 1898. She died in 1973 and left a world that had experienced Wars during her lifetime, The Great War, The Second World War, The Boer War, Korea and Vietnam. She had known poverty, fear, worry and grief. During her lifetime she had buried her husband, three infant children and three of her nine adult children. Times were hard and to us, in this modern age perhaps incomprehensible. What would she has made of the world now?

The issues she felt in the United Kingdom are still in existence now in parts of the world. Parts of Africa and the Middle East torn apart by War, famine, and disaster. In many ways, the fact that these things still plague families is tragic.

I was therefore delighted last year to become part of a group called Genealogists for Families (http://genfamilies.blogspot.com/). The group is two fold. It brings together like-minded genealogists, across the globe who share a common interest and passion for their families.

Genealogists for Families supports a team which is part of the Kiva Organisation. Whereby, those who choose to, can loan $25 to a specific individual of your choice. The $25 is a loan not a hand out. It is repaid in monthly instalments and allows those registered at the Kiva site to access to funds when there is not the facility to access traditional banks. Our contributions are not going to stop Wars, famines and alike, but it does enable us to be part of someones future.

I made my first loan before Christmas in memory of my Grandmother and have three more loans that I plan to arrange in the memory of two deceased special family members and to commemorate a special birthday of my Mum’s. I plan to continue this process through the course of the year. If you want to take part visit (http://www.kiva.org/team/genealogists)

Julie 29th February 2012 (http://anglersrest.blogspot.com)

Comments Off

Filed under Feb 29th Blogs

A year is a long time

This time last year there was no February 29th and I was struggling to cope with going out to the almost birthday celebrations of a good leap baby friend of mine. In fact I only stayed out for about half an hour.

A year down the line and I have a new job, new confidence and have put a lot of ghosts to rest that I hadn’t even realised were haunting me. I’ve learnt a lot with many amazing people beside me on my journey.

In the words of one of my favourite songs:

‘I can be anything I want with this hope to drive me onward
If I can just believe in me’ (Lin Marsh)

Happy Leap Day everyone!

Comments Off

Filed under Feb 29th Blogs

Daffodils

February 29th is different because we only meet it every 4 years. But today is also Wednesday, and that’s not unusual at all. Today, as I do every Wednesday, I’ll work during the day, then go to my evening class later on. I work from home so I like to have things to do during the evening to get me out of the house sometimes. But right now this second, I’ve paused for a break to write this post, have a cup of tea, and smile at the daffodils bobbing their heads in the breeze in my front garden. Lovely!

Comments Off

Filed under Feb 29th Blogs

An hour in the life of my children

I wake at 7am to the thud of my four year old son landing on my bed. “Morning Mummy” he shouts, my one year one daughter who is sleeping in her room nearby wakes and starts calling “Mama Mama”. My day has started. I reluctantly get out of bed, my husband delibrately ignores all the noise and lies still, although he is now wide awake. I start to get the children dressed, although no sooner have I dressed one they have started to undress again and run away. This is their favourite morning game. This continues for ten minutes before my husband reluctantly helps me. Breakfast follows a similiar pattern by the time we get the kids out to the car both my husband and I are exhausted. I whole day of work lies ahead and I wonder where I will find the energy from. As I kiss the children goodbye at nursery I think to myself how very lucky I am to be woken up by such beautiful children. I cannot wait until the end of the day when I can kiss and hug them again.

Comments Off

Filed under Feb 29th Blogs

The ways we connect

Today was a day like any other…I slept in, mad rush to get ready for work, arrive at work just in time to a day full of more demands and expectations than I can hope to achieve. I’m so glad for this opportunity to reflect and mark the day. I am a teacher and my role is as an eLearning Coach working with teachers and students to use technology in meaningful and powerful ways in the classroom. I love my job!

Lots of people say that society is less social these days as people spend more and more time in front of screens. I have to disagree. Today I had experienced so many ways to communicate and connect with the people I know…..I met with people f2f and we planned and talked and learnt, I emailed my colleagues with a great web site I had found that I know will help them in their work, I sent a text to my sister to see how she is and she replied in kind, I tweeted this blogging site to spread the word and I skyped a friend. I chatted with kids in the playground and I laughed with a friend over coffee. I rang a colleague on my mobile to get some advice and I answered a request for help on Google Plus and tonight I will share my day with my husband. I am so glad that today was a day like any other and I have so many ways to connect with the people I care about.
Happy Blogging day – Feb 29th, 2012

Comments Off

Filed under Feb 29th Blogs