Sunday, December 26, 2010

Christmas Celebrations, 2010

Christmas Eve at Mom & Dad's. Here Mom is serving up herself,
from a delicious array of food.
Jeff (mostly) & Heather made a delicious apple pie to share.
The two shepherd boys, Anders & Garrett
Jim & Erin Barnes with Wyatt & Garrett
Blowing out the "Happy Birthday Jesus" cake
Still a happy couple after 32 years! :-)
Heather & Jeff looking at Grandpa's new autobiography
that he gave us all for Christmas.
Wyatt entertaining himself with Gma & Gpa's tangerines.
Robin, Daddy, John Jensen & Uncle Elmer singing Christmas carols.
Our tree on Christmas morning
Christmas dinner with Jeff, Heather, Abby, Philip, Kirk & Jerry(Stevens)
The "kids" with their gifts
Jeff showing off his Nike golf balls & gift certificate
Philip's new loppers have HUGE blades!
These should really work on the junipers at church!
Philip made this beautiful arrangement for Kirk.
The kids standing by the "light blob".
This is how we hung up the lights this year, all at once! :-)
I made a collage of pictures for Jerry from this year.
It included Heather & Jeff's wedding & his 90th birthday.
Abby modeling her new work-out outfit.
It was such a joy to be together with family members that we can relax with.
Such lovely celebrations!

Sunday, December 5, 2010

Decorating for Christmas

I was feeling kinda blue about Heather not being here this year to help me decorate for Christmas. Then she & Jeff said they would come over the Saturday after Thanksgiving and help. Yahoo! At the appointed moment, Philip & Abby also arrived. I have NEVER had that much help! We did it all in 2.5 hours- a record!!
Here Heather is holding a goofy angel she made when she was in Jr. High.
Abby put together our old-fashioned angel chimes,
which I had not used in years-so special!
Lovely!
They all brought in the 24 boxes from the garage attic.
Here we are putting together our 20-year-old tree.

Aw yes, and the angel goes on top!
Thanks kids for helping us!
I so enjoy having our home decorated for a whole month!
I'm gong to invite our neighbors over for cider &
to see our nativity sets (we have over 30 now).

Monday, November 29, 2010

Redecorating Heather's Old Room & the Guest Bathroom

Our guest bathroom had green walls and a pine cone/cabin theme to match Kirk's cool "Man Hut" office. But since the rest of our house is going toward the European/French Cafe look, it was time to redo this bathroom. First Kirk primed the walls (over the oil base paint).
He painted the walls red & a light taupe. We had new flooring put in to match the cobblestone color on the shower curtains.
He installed all new copper piping. When Abby saw it, she said,
"Wow, that is really good sweat-fitting!"


He replaced the faucets & dropped in new sinks
(after cutting out new shaped ovals in the counter top.)
Voila!
The shower curtains are a French street scene with awnings & cafes.
Here's a messy view of Heather's room with all of Kirk's
camping junk on the bed. (This is a bad "before"picture)
It was blue. Here the ballet pictures are already off
the walls and the mini-blinds have been thrown away.
Nick came and painted the 2 colors on the wall and we waited
2 months for the border to arrive!
I got this bed set at Anna's Linens. It feels like taffeta and is burgundy & gold.
There is turquoise in the border which goes with the carpet. Grandma made me 2 velvet pillows for my birthday from my bridesmaid's fabric!
The cool lamp was Grandma Schlappi's, which Kirk remembers seeing when he was a boy.
We've ordered faux wood 2" blinds for the window and I have a valance to hang.
Almost finished!

Monday, November 1, 2010

Our Halloween

The handsome couple!
(Actually, Jeff is supposed to look unkempt in this costume)
Jeff, Heather & Jeff Livings dressed up like the three
characters in the new Sherlock Holmes movie.
Notice the leather "tool kit" hanging on Jeff's belt.
Suzy was "Robin Sparkles". They all went to Red Robin's for
dinner before coming over to our house to show us their costumes.
Old-fashioned and poofy!
Didn't Heather do a good job making this hat? Lovely!

After church we went out to eat with Philip & Abby.
So a lovely day it was for us!

Friday, October 29, 2010

Our CI Stories with Pictures

We took a few pictures in Philip & Abby's garden at church.



The House Ear Clinic is celebrating it's 65th year in 2011 and asked Daddy & I if we would write 500 words about ourselves and send in a picture for their publicity. They are calling the celebration "65 Faces" and want us to be two of them. :-) Here's what we sent in:

My mother and father met in a Los Angeles lip-reading class in 1919, which mother had earlier helped organize. She had a hearing loss and was able to wear a crude aid with a liquid battery. Dad had gone completely deaf at age 20. His three brothers and father all had hearing problems. When I entered high school, mother convinced the school board in Whittier (Calif.) to begin lip reading classes for hearing impaired students. Each student (2600 at the time) took an audiometer test, which produced 120 kids with problems. Four classes began, with 30 kids in each; the program continued for over 30 years. For me, World War 2 came along and I went into the service; just barely squeaking by the hearing test.

In 1950 I bought my first hearing aid and have had many since, each more powerful than the last. In 2005 I spoke to my HMO doctor about a
Cochlear Implant (CI) and he sent me to the local ENT, who
said my hearing was too good to justify one. Later on, daughter Gretchen met an
audiologist on a plane to Hawaii and got busy getting a CI for herself. She thought I ought to try it again and by this time my hearing had deteriorated to
the point that I qualified. Incidentally, her older sister wears aids in both ears, but it missed our middle daughter.

The question: Does the HMO want to spend big money on an 85 year old, and they did. I went for an EKG and there was a heart anomaly. Just a few days before the CI surgery, I was able to see a cardiologist where I was given every test they had, stressed in every direction. He faxed over to House that I was OK for the CI. What was the anomaly? I have been in good physical condition over the years.

Dr. Rick Friedman did the surgery in February of 2010. When the day came to get the Sound Processor in place, a totally new way of hearing, Gretchen and wife Barbara got out the Kleenex as I suddenly heard what I had not been hearing for a long time. Dr. Donna Mills, the Audiologist, ran me through a series of oral tests in which I could not see her face, and I scored very high. Pretty emotional to suddenly get back what you have not had for 40 or more years.

I used the listening rehabilitation CD for a time but discovered it was not needed that much. I have always been an intense listener, not only because I needed to be, but because I have a strong interest in people. In any case, when we went back for a further check on how the CI was doing, Dr. Mills, after rigorous testing, said the acuity level had gone up a bit, from 11% to 91%. Moses only took his people across the Red Sea on dry land; I got a Cochlear Implant at the House Ear Clinic at the age of 86!

For years my dad and I had heard that our hearing was not bad enough for a cochlear implant (CI) so I never thought that it was possible until July of 2008. As a Junior High School teacher, I was facing the last year of my career because of my hearing loss. My audiologist told me that I had the best hearing aids and could not expect any better sound.

On a flight to Maui I was chatting with my seatmate about hearing aids when a lady in the seat in front of us popped her head over the top and said, “I’m an audiologist in the San Diego area, and I’ve been listening to your conversation! You sound like a perfect candidate for a CI!”* Wow, was I surprised!

We chatted the rest of the trip and I called my own audiologist as soon as I returned home. I soon realized that getting a CI was a possibility and I was so excited! I started the process and was eventually recommended to the House Clinic, where the surgery was scheduled for June, after school was out. I knew I had to be ready to teach again at the end of August so I had lots of work ahead of me. Dr. Eric Wilkinson did my surgery and I went home that evening with the turban wrapped tightly around my head.

On July 17, 2009 I was hooked up with the sound processor. My sister and I went and had a celebratory lunch at Phillipe’s in downtown LA. On the way home I could hear her talk to me in the car with a minimum of lip-reading. Dr. Mills gave me a copy of the “Sound and Way Beyond” CD to ‘train my brain to hear digitally.’ I finished the last of fifteen levels two days before school started! My students were curious about the surgery and I showed them a sample CI. One of them told me that my class wasn’t getting away with as much now that I had a CI! It was a thrill to hear every word at my parent-teacher meetings. I also noticed the students did not have to constantly repeat themselves, or just give up when I couldn’t understand them.

I can now hear owls hoot on a quiet summer night, listen to talk radio in the car, and even watch a movie with my husband, things I haven’t done in over 20 years. I am so grateful for the audiologist who spoke up on the plane, Dr. Wilkinson and Dr. Mills’ expertise and the HEI’s years of research. I hope to have my right ear implanted within the next two years.


*If you are that tall, blonde audiologist who was traveling with your family to Hawaii in July, 2008, please contact me through Dr. Donna Mills at HEI. I would love to thank you in person!






Sunday, October 24, 2010

A Few Photos

This is where our old single bathroom sink/counter was. Kirk ripped it out & our handyman replaced it while Kirk was on his 2-week (which became a 1-week) canoe trip.
This is a picture of it in our closet door mirrors. It's from Costco & we really like it.
We got new flooring in both bathrooms as well.
I had planned to spend the weekend playing with Robin while Kirk was gone. But Kirk came home a week early because he & his canoe partner capsized four times. So one week was enough. Robin and I decided to go to Shinoda's Floral Design Center and then to Balboa for lunch.
Beautiful day & beautiful scenery!
Granada had a Cardboard Testimony portion during the opening Sunday of our Missions Conference. The theme was "Christ's Transforming Power." See this link.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MbbXU-rXSt8
(While you are at you tube, look at the Cardboard Testimonies from around the world. We showed this first, and there weren't too many dry eyes!)
Here I am lettering Grandpa's sign which read:
Selling Life Insurance/ Telling of Life Assurance.
The kids came over for Heather's 24th birthday after going out for dinner together. Here there are ooing & awing at our new sinks.
Birthday Time