Yearly Archives: 2014

Whoa, Alaska!

I hate cruises. The thought of sharing a floating city with five thousand or more people simply does not appeal.

Nor did my first cruise experience change that sentiment.  We were supposedly on the newest, grandest, largest, baddest cruise ship ever built, which would sail the eastern Caribbean seas for a week.  The ship was truly over the top, typical of super-size, super-everything America.

By the middle of the cruise, for whatever reason, people began suffering from some kind of gastroenteritis maladies and by the end of the journey most of the passengers had been sick or were well on their way to being sick.  I don’t think anyone was spared, including the crew.

So, I swore never to travel that way again.  

Until an opportunity to see Alaska by cruise came my way. I made an exception and am tremendously glad I did. 

As a further testimonial, I met a woman from Anchorage, Alaska on the cruise, and she told me that this was one of the best ways to see her state.

Seward’s Folly“, so named because of the large sum of money ($7.2 million!) that the then American U.S. Secretary of State, William H. Seward paid the Russians to purchase Alaska, which became the 49th state of the Union. And possibly the most spectacular state when it comes to nature’s bounty. Absolutely no one thinks it’s a folly now!

If an urban-dwelling, urban-loving person can extol this state’s glorious natural beauty, I can just imagine what the nature freaks think of Alaska. For those who are choosing where to travel, I would definitely consider this as one of the places to see before you die. A must for your bucket list, in fact.

Here are some pictures taken by an amateur that provide a taste of the beauty and the bounty of Alaska –

Mendenhall Glacier,  Juneau, Alaska

Mendenhall Glacier, Juneau, Alaska

Alaskan Sunset

Alaskan Sunset

 

Glacier Bay, Alaska

Glacier Bay, Alaska

Simply. Alaska.

Simply. Alaska.

A word about cruises…this second cruise changed my mind. I don’t despise cruises any longer. I merely dislike them. The beauty of Alaska balanced out the distaste of being on a humongous, hedonistic floating vessel.

There’s something about the decadence of these cruises that is unhealthy for mind and body.  Any longer than seven entire days must truly suck.  Also, for those who can’t help but indulge during this journey on a massive, “all-inclusive” boat (unfortunately I’m one of them), a word of caution to you – I’m finding that it’s very easy to start resembling one of those hump back whales you will most likely see on the trip.  Fair warning.

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Mom.

Why would I be writing about Mom this close to Father’s Day?

It just turned out that way.  Someone very close to me  lost his mother last week. It was a time of sadness and reflection for him.

He could be happy that she lived a full life and that it ended with very little suffering on her part. But it was also a time when he could not help but  reflect on everything about his life with her, from being a child all the way to the last time that he was with her a few months back.

He said one thing about her that stood out for me –

When I think about it, of all the people in the world that I have any connection with, I know one thing. There is no one who will ever treat me and look at me in that deeply special way that my mom did. No one.

Any one of us who can echo this feeling can thank our lucky stars. Really, is there anything  more sacred and special than a mother’s love?

Mother and Child