Sunny Days

Caroline and Mama Uta
Caroline and Mama Uta sitting outside towards the end of summer

This photo was taken a few months ago when Caroline had been at our place for a visit. We were sitting behind our house for morning tea. Peter and I always love to have a cup of tea outside enjoying a beautiful sunny day in our backyard that is overgrown with trees. We just love to sit under these trees and listen to a variety of birds who usually chirp happily close by. It is such a peaceful place. We always call it our little paradise.

Caroline and Papa Peter
Caroline and Papa Peter
This is what the table looks like without the table cloth.
This is what the table looks like without the table cloth.

We are in the midst of winter now here in Australia. After a long rainy period in June, the month of July is promising to be full of sunshine. However the nights are extremely cold. All the rooms in the house are extremely cold too, not just during the night but during the day too unless we put the heaters on. We usually switch our electric heater only on in the rooms we happen to use for a while. The warmest room is usually the computer room for it is small and does not require a lot of heating to get it comfortably warm.

Outside in the sun it is much warmer today than inside. So, naturally we had morning tea as well as lunch outside.  We sat there for quite a while, absorbing the lovely sunshine and listening to the birds. How lucky we are to have such a lovely spot behind our house. As I said, we feel this is our little paradise! 🙂

Lunch on Sunday

The Twins with their Aunty Caroline for their Birthday Lunch on Sunday.
The Twins with their Aunty Caroline for their Birthday Lunch on Sunday.
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We are the early arrivals at the Restaurant. We are the early arrivals at the Restaurant.
We met at this Chinese  Restaurant.
We met at this Chinese Restaurant.
Another photo with me, Ryan and Ebony and Baby Lucas.
Another photo with me, Ryan and Ebony and Baby Lucas.
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We're still waiting for Mark to arrive. In the meantime Lucas plays with his books.
We’re still waiting for Mark to arrive. In the meantime Lucas plays with his books.
Our daughter Monika has arrived. She is the twins' mum. She proudly holds her little grandson, Lucas.
Our daughter Monika has arrived. She is the twins’ mum. She proudly holds her little grandson, Lucas.
Two of Monika's daughters with Troy
Two of Monika’s daughters with Troy
Caroline took this picture of us with daughter Monika and the twins.
Caroline took this picture of us with daughter Monika and the twins.

Resume of AnnaMaria’s Father, another Reblog

Resume:

Jorge L. Oyola

LOGISTICS MANAGEMENT

Extensive Experience in the Day to Day Operations Managing Integrated Logistics Support including, Supervising, Training and Delegating Operations.  Capable in Establishing New Client, Managing Vendors Relationships, Negotiating, Administrating Contracts, Deliverables, Work Orders, Controlling Costs and Improving Efficiencies.

PROFESSIONAL SUMMARY

  • 33 Years of Customer Relations with Integrated Logistics Support (ILS), Project Sales Manager, Point of Sales Retail Manager
  • 3 Years of Human Resource Personnel Activities Involving Updating, Migration, Filtering and Tracking Enlisted Personnel Classified Data.
  • 13 Years with The U.S. Army Managing 10 Classes of Supply      Involving The Integration of Information, Transportation, Inventory,      Warehousing, Material Handling, Packaging, Distribution and Security
  • 8 Years of Physical Training Instructor

ORGANIZATION & CUSTOMER RELATIONS

  • Resolved Customer Complaints, Applied Diplomacy and Followed Up with All Customers Request
  • Maintained Extensive Financial Records, Equipment Purchasing, Budget Monitoring, Fund Allocations, Contract Review, and Financial Disbursements
  • Initiated/Closed Financial Liability Investigation of Property Loss and Accountability Reports
  • Trained, Managed 30+ Personnel In Leadership Development and Career Progression
  • Managed Inventory Monthly, Quarterly Expense Budgets In Excess of $1,500,000 With 100% Accountability
  • Human Resources Operations, Personnel Actions, Retirement Benefits, Career Changes, Leave and Earnings
  • Monthly Inventory of  Durable/Expendable Property to include HAZMAT with Zero Losses Total Value $50M+
  • Maintained Accurate Filing System In Accordance with Required Policy and Procedures
  • Point of Sales Close Out, Bank Deposits, Credit Card Reconciliations and Record Keeping Annual Sales of 34M+
  • Established and Maintained Client Relations with Invoices, Customer Support, Upgrades, Product Presentation, Marketing and Day to Day Operations in Reselling Mobile Wireless Product/Services in the Tri-State Area
  • Customer Relations, Employees Scheduling, Cross Training, Mentoring, Established Team and Support
  • Conducted Quarterly Training Seminars for 25-30 Employees In Sexual Harassment, Alcohol and Drug Safety, Driver Safety Course, Driving Under The Influence, Supply Operations, and Supervisory Mentorship Training

PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE

  • 2011-2012         Senior Logistics Manager
  • 2009-2011         Human Resources Manager
  • 1999-2009         Logistics/Operation Manager
  • 1985-1987         Independent Reseller Agent PageNet
  • 1981-1997         Retail/Supermarket Assistant Manager

EDUCATION/TRAINING AND CERTIFICATIONS

  • 2013             Kansas State Life Heath and Life Certification
  • 2009             Army Records Information Management System
  • 2009             Human Resources Certification
  • 2006             Property Book Unit Supply Enhanced (PBUSE)
  • 2003             Primary Leadership Course
  • 2002             Field Sanitation Certification
  • 2002             Certified Warrior Tae Kwon Do Instructor
  • 2000             Unit  Armorer Certificate
  • 1999             Logistical Support Certification
  • 1979-1983    Park East High School, 230-34 EAST 105 ST.

COMPUTER SKILLS

Microsoft Office (Excel, Power Point, Word, Out Look), PBUSE (Army’s Web-Based Property Accountability System), Bilingual Spanish/English

Home: 3142 Lundin Dr., Manhattan, KS 66503/785.320.3655/ jorge_oyola@yahoo.com

Donation Web Site:    http://oyolagroup.com/

AUNTY UTA’S COMMENT

Peter and I just watched the follow-up of Chris Master’s documentary on the Great Depession in Australia before WW II. It is so very upsetting when people have no right to work and are being evicted because they can’t pay their rent.

Today I already did another reblogging about the father’s letter to his little daughter. Can anyone understand why this American citizen presumably doesn’t get help from anywhere? How is this possible? I mean it’s not the 1930s any more, is it?

Rainy Weekend

So far it has been another rainy weekend (“ein verregnetes Wochenende!”). It’s raining ‘Cats and Dogs’ so to speak. And this after it had been quite wet for most of last week. Well, maybe tomorrow, Sunday, is going to be a bit better. 🙂

President Obama in Berlin

This is an article in the German magazine DER SPIEGEL , Wednesday, 19th June 2013:

 

Fifty years after John F. Kennedy’s legendary Berlin visit, Barack Obama wowed the city with a rousing speech at the Brandenburg Gate, saying all oppressed people are “citizens of Berlin” — and urging the world to help free them.

Not even the unseasonably hot summer haze could damper the enthusiasm as crowd members clutching fluttering German and American flags filed into Berlin’s Pariser Platz on Wednesday. It’s here, on the east side of the Brandenburg Gate, where President Barack Obama was to make his first public speech in the German capital city as the leader of the United States.

 

“The flag-lined square was flanked with secret service and police, who perched on the roofs of buildings and weaved in and out of the some 4,000 invited audience members braving the glaring sunlight. In the crowd, there was an almost American vibe, with copious brimmed hats, women lithely fanning themselves and men in short-sleeved button-ups and suspenders. One bleacher, holding some 600 high school-age students of the local John F. Kennedy international school, showed particular ardor by chanting “Obama” in unison and doing the wave as the 3 p.m. start time neared.

A violinist warmed up the crowd, beginning with a vaguely celtic version of the American national anthem and then segueing into Michael Jackson’s “Smooth Criminal” over a backing track. He announced that his next song was at the president’s request. “It’s Bruce Springsteen’s ‘Born in America,'” he said before breaking into a rendition of “Born in the USA.”

Finally Obama took the stage, together with German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Berlin’s mayor, Klaus Wowereit.

After brief comments by the mayor and the chancellor, Obama approached the microphone. It’s been pointed out that Merkel and Obama have very different public personas, and this couldn’t have been clearer than in the contrast between the chancellor’s somewhat subdued introduction and the president’s booming “Hello, Berlin!,” which was met with thunderous applause.

Yet Obama was quick to point out a similarity between the two leaders: “Angela and I don’t exactly look like previous German and American leaders,” he said after thanking the first female chancellor for her friendship. He then removed his jacket, citing the weather. “We can be a little more informal among friends,” he quipped to cheers from the crowd.

‘Ich Bin ein Berliner’

As expected, President Obama, who gave his speech behind dramatic panes of bulletproof glass as sweat dripped down his forehead, made heavy reference to Kennedy’s iconic 1963 Berlin speech. He recalled the former US president’s historic sound bite before asking the audience to look past it.

“That’s not all that he said that day,” he said. “Less remembered is the challenge that he issued to the crowd before him: ‘Let me ask you,’ he said to those Berliners, ‘let me ask you to lift your eyes beyond the dangers of today’ and ‘beyond the freedom of merely this city.’ Look, he said, ‘to the day of peace with justice, beyond yourselves and ourselves to all mankind.'”

Obama went on to apply Kennedy’s notion of “peace with justice” to the contemporary world. He referenced poverty and the mass unemployment that has followed the global debt crisis, and touched on race, religion and gender discrimination, specifically mentioning equality of sexual orientation less than two weeks after a German court ordered that same-sex partnerships be given the same tax benefits as married couples.

“And if we lift our eyes, as President Kennedy called us to do, then we’ll recognize that our work is not yet done,” Obama continued. “For we are not only citizens of America or Germany — we are also citizens of the world. And our fates and fortunes are linked like never before.”

Obama then discussed — albeit vaguely — on the NSA spying scandal, the closing of Guantanamo Bay and the American drone program. He was more concrete on the subject of nuclear disarmament, which he pledged to tackle in the coming years in cooperation with Russia. But the parallels between the issues of today and the history of Berlin, in particular, seemed to go over well with the crowd, which remained in good spirits despite the unrelenting heat.

‘It Felt Like They Were Standoffish’

I really liked how he tied in the history of Berlin with current issues,” said Esther Stern, a 16-year-old from Braunschweig who had come to Berlin with a group from her high school. “In spite of the heat, it was great! He’s a very good speaker — different than when you see him on TV,” she continued.

Some were slightly more critical, however, like Will Giles, a 20-year-old political science student in Berlin on a semester abroad from Duke University in the US. “It was interesting to observe the Merkel-Obama dynamic,” said Giles. “You can tell by body language what people really think of each other, and it felt like they were kind of standoffish.”

At the bleacher of local international students, however, the take-away was undoubtedly positive.

 

“It was definitely worth the six hours of waiting and boiling,” said 14-year-old Emma Defty, standing in a rare shady spot as her fellow students filed out behind her. “It was also great that he talked about Kennedy, because he and Kennedy are a lot alike I think. They’re on the younger side and they really speak to the public. They seem somehow… human.””I think he really earned sympathy points when he took off his jacket,” added her friend Elisabeth Evans, 13. “It’s like we’re all friends!”

“And I liked that he talked about global warming,” Defty said. “Yeah,” Evans rejoined, “because it never gets this hot!”

 

 

The Twin’s Birthday this Month

Twin's Birthday 2011

And this is Ryan with Grandma
And this is Ryan with Grandma

These pictures were taken on the twins birthday in June of 2011.

Two months ago I published the above pics and in one reply to a comment I said these grandsons looked like little angels when they were kids. And Munira said that she can’t imagine them as kids. Ha, ha! So I replied:

“All right, Munira, as soon as I can scan pics again, I’ll show you how they looked when they were little! The twin’s birthday pics were taken just a few days before I started blogging. My profile pic that I still use, was cropped from that birthday pic where you can see me with Troy.”

Well, their birthday is coming up next week. So here I am publishing what they looked like as kids.
I went through all our photo albums this morning and unfortunately I could not find this special picture of the twins where they really look like little angels.

It’s very frustrating after looking for hours for one particular picture it still is nowhere to be found!
We just have too many pictures. Well, the pictures of the twins that I can publish today are all more than thirty years old or at least close to thirty years. The twins are going to be thirty-four years old in one week. When they were kids they were often together with our daughter Caroline. So Caroline is in these pictures here too. The boys loved to call her “aunty Caroline” just for fun. But she really is their aunty. Unbelievable! Sometimes people thought the three of them were triplets. However we had to explain then that Caroline is more than six months older.

T one

T three

T four

T five

An Anniversary and lots of Birthdays

9th June 2013
9th June 2013

Last Sunday, the 9th of June, happened to be my brother Bodo’s birthday. He turned seventy-five. For a few months now he has been  in an aged care home in Berlin. Peter happened to take this picture of me hugging the tree. I can’t recall having thought of my  brother’s birthday  at this instant.

Here's the tree I hugged yesterday. I hope nobody is going to cut it down!

Last Sunday when I uploaded this picture I remembered the other photo Peter had taken of me hugging a tree. I looked it up and I was surprised to find that the other picture had been taken on my birthday, the 21st September 2012, when we were on holidays in Berlin.

I don’t think I have any other pictures of me hugging a tree. Just these two. One taken on my birthday, the other a few months later on my brother’s birthday. As far as I’m concerned this is totally coincidental, but still quite remarkable!

Just for good measure here is the other tree hugging picture again which was taken on my last birthday..
Just for good measure here is the other tree hugging picture again which was taken on my last birthday, 21.September 2012

This month some more birthdays are coming up of some of my grandchildren, there are also quite a few birthdays in the family coming up next month. In July is also going to be the anniversary of the death of our eldest daughter, Gabriele.

Hugging Trees

There were three birch tress standing together in the Tiergarten in Berlin. I hugged one of them on my birthday last September. This is the tree that was cut down soon after! Who made the decision it had to go? No idea. I remembered this tree hugging picture because yesterday I published another tree hugging picture which found great response.
There were three birch tress standing together in the Tiergarten in Berlin. I hugged one of them on my birthday last September. This is the tree that was cut down soon after! Who made the decision it had to go? No idea. 

I remembered this tree hugging picture because yesterday I published another tree hugging picture which found great response.

Here's the tree I hugged yesterday. I hope nobody is going to cut it down!
Here’s the tree I hugged yesterday. I hope nobody is going to cut it down!

Sunday Lunch

This was our place for morning tea in the sun.
This was our place for morning tea in the sun.

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A bit later this  place would be filled with people having lunch.
A bit later this place would be filled with people having lunch.

I noticed this beautifully decorated reserved table.
I noticed this beautifully decorated reserved table.

I had dumplings for lunch.
I had dumplings for lunch.

Peter had noodles.
Peter had noodles.

Our friends had spring rolls and a rice dish.
Our friends had spring rolls and a rice dish.

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Peter doing a bit of meditating.
Peter doing a bit of meditating.

He found some companions.
He found some companions.

While I'm hugging a tree.
While I’m hugging a tree.

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Peter is rushing to take some pictures of the pond while our two friends walk ahead to the car. Sadly it's already time to drive bck home.
Peter is rushing to take some pictures of the pond while our two friends walk ahead to the car. Sadly it’s already time to drive back home.

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This weekend is called ‘Queen’s Birthday Weekend’ here in Australia. This means tomorrow, Monday, is a public holiday.
We were lucky with the weather today. There was plenty of sunshine in the morning. So it was a good day to go out for lunch with our friends who picked us up from home at 10 o’clock. By 2 pm we were back at our place for afternoon coffee and some more talking. It’s always good to see some friends whom we have known for a long time.

Pictures from Good Friday 2013

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Recently a great deal of care went into beautifying the surroundings of the church. There’s a little pond with goldfish and wooden benches invite people to sit down to take a rest and maybe do a bit of reflecting.

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On Good Friday at 10 o’clock the Stations of the Cross started. A great many children gathered in their costumes to take part in the Stations of the Cross. I only remembered today that I had not yet published the pictures I took on that day.

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Near the school I noticed the above poster. The Catholic Primary School is right next to the church. There was plenty of space for the Stations of the Cross in the school grounds.