Monday, July 1, 2024

Systems with Food in Albania

There are many things that are different here in Albania. In this article, I’m going to discuss a few things pertaining to food.

Their coffee is stronger and served in tiny espresso cups.

It is made either in a moka pot like the one on the right, or a Turkish coffee pot which is on the left. They don't sell half and half, but you can buy fresh milk and it's creamier than the milk sold in grocery stores in America. Our younger kids have become quite good at making coffee with foamy milk.

Food coloring is a little hard to come by. It comes in these little packets with little colored granules. Don't believe what you see pictured on the box. The red is actually orange which does limit me when I try to decorate my children's birthday cakes.

Last summer I broke down and made tomato sauce from scratch because I couldn't find any canned or jarred. I have since found a store that sells it for a good price.

Here's a meal that we have often. Fresh, local vegetables with fresh bread and homemade butter, rice topped with qoftë(chohf-tah), their version of meatballs, and xaxiq(zah-zeech).

We have a really sweet lady that we buy our vegetables from in our neighborhood. She also sells many other things there in her small shop., including eggs. Unless we are buying 30 at a time, which we have been recently, we would not be given a container. We just have to carefully transport them home in a bag. 

What's very different from store-bought eggs in America, is that the shells are dirty. They might have blood, poop, or mud on them. This is purposeful and normal. (When we were raising chickens in America, my kids were always so eager to bring the eggs in that the eggs didn't have a chance to get dirty!) Eggs can last for about a month at room temperature, as long as they haven't been washed. This allows the stores to be able to store them on their counters.

In America, we all know that a lot of our trash problem comes from product packaging. I Albania and Romania their packages are simpler and less substancial. Spices come in packets, as well as baking soda, baking powder, and salt. Coffee comes in vacuum sealed packages. Plastic wrap and foil are often sold without boxes.

These things aren't dramatically different, but it is something to get used to. Having spice shakers, coffee cans, and electric coffee makers is convenient, but it's also interesting to experience another way of doing things.



Wednesday, May 22, 2024

What Else is There to Do in Bucharest, Romania?

Our time in Bucharest, Romania is coming to a close. We are scheduled to leave here in a week. We will have been here for three months, if God is willing.


What else is there in Bucharest, Romania? It's a very large city, with a population of around 1.83 million people. It is 93 square miles. If you look up Bucharest, you will almost surely see a picture of the Palace of Parliament. It is the world's second largest government building. Believe me that you really can't imagine what it's like unless you are there in person. It is massive. It's the biggest building like this that I have ever seen. Apparently it goes as deep into the ground as it is high. In order to get the whole building into a photo, you have to be pretty far from it. 




In the center of the city is a large rotary, about half a mile from the Palace of Parliament, with pools and fountains in the middle of it. From there, the road leads straight to the palace. Down the center of the road is a strip with pools and fountains shooting water into the air. At night, there are colorful lights to change the color of the water. It is a well organized and planned area of the city. It is neat to look online and see aerial photos of it.



Behind the giant palace is The People's Cathedral. It is another huge building still being built by the Orthodox community since 2010. We are on the 10th floor, so we can see a good ways out. As I am writing this, anytime I look up and out the window, I can easily see it protruding from among the buildings surrounding it on the horizon a few miles from here. 




Not far from the Palace and Cathedral is a section of the city called Old Town. If you look up things to do in Bucharest, chances are, you will read about and see pictures of Old Town. It is an area with stone streets. There are many restaurants there and it gets very lively at night.




There are certainly many other things to see and do in Bucharest. My husband is very sweet and likes to get me sweet treats! We both enjoy good chocolate quite a bit. He came home a couple of hours ago and brought me this box of chocolates. On the box it says "Premium Chocolate."



I opened it, and out dumped these!!!!



 I was completely shocked! He had already opened it himself and been surprised. Putting the candies back in the box, he brought them to me so I could receive the same surprise. It was really quite hilarious! 



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God bless you!





Monday, May 13, 2024

Exploring the Largest Park in Bucharest


There is a huge park which is about a half hour's walk from where we live. It is 462 acres, a third of that being a lake in the midst of it. The city of Bucharest has done a great job trying to make it a pleasant place for the people here. There are many large playgrounds. Most of those, if not all, have exercise equipment for adults. There are ping-pong tables, concession stands, bike paths, an obstacle course, bike and paddle boat rentals, and much more. 


Thousands of people flock to the park on the weekends. It is a wonderful place to escape the busy city streets and be able to move around beyond the walls of their apartments or offices.






There is a Japanese cherry tree garden. Crowds are drawn to it in the springtime. People have birthday parties there. On the day when we went to see the flowered trees, there were many groups of people there posing for professional photos.



This house is part of a group of actual old homes that were brought in to form a museum village.



These trees were home to ducklings whose mamas had made nests to hatch them in.

A couple of my children were at the park and witnessed the ducklings dropping out of the tree one by one and heading into the water for the first time.





You can take a ride to another part of the park on a ferry, or you can spend hours walking around the water.



There are many flowers planted throughout the park, and different pools with fountains.



We choose to go on a weekday to avoid the weekend crowds. We nearly have the park to ourselves. It's a wonderful place where the kids can run around and play and not have to worry about disturbing people.



You can check out our other works! If you like them, you can help us out by sharing our links on your social media accounts and asking your contacts to do the same! Thank you!


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Saturday, May 11, 2024

Thoughts about Mothers

Each person in the world was made in the image of God and is extremely precious and valuable. We all play a part in the function of the world. It is stated beautifully In 1 Corinthians 11 (As a side note: earlier in this chapter is where I get the basis for wearing a head covering, for those of you who have wondered why I do that), verses 11-12, "Nevertheless, in the Lord woman is not independent of man, nor is man independent of woman. For as woman came from man, so also man is born of woman. But everything comes from God." 

We live in a society where people are spending a lot of time and energy fighting for equality. We could just accept who we are, appreciate the way God has made us and the role that He has given to us, and live at peace!


What does this have to do with mothers? I guess that before I write about the wonderful nature of mothers, I feel the need to have a disclaimer. No mother is without fault or weakness- not we as mothers, nor our own mothers, right? However, I was thinking about the general nature of a mother, at her finest


When I was in the hospital, after just having our first child, I was very concerned that my son might not like me. My mother had often told us the story of the time when she was in the hospital after having my older brother, her first child. He was screaming and screaming, as newborns generally do. Much to her surprise, he stopped crying immediately after the nurses handed him to her. She couldn't believe that he apparently knew her and that being with her had such a powerfully calming effect. Perhaps I was so insecure because I didn't have the same effect on my son there in the hospital. I told my insecurity to my father, as he was visiting there at the hospital, and he reassured me by saying, "Why wouldn't he love you? You're the source of everything good!" 


God gave us a strength, as women, to be soft and gentle in nature. Because we tend to be very emotional, we are also able to be tender and compassionate with others. We want to comfort when there is pain. We want to give care and affection, in good times and bad. We are devoted and loyal. We have a great love for our children, even with their faults. It takes a lot of work, but we want our homes to look and be pleasant. We want our families and our homes to be neat, orderly, and beautiful. We want our families to be healthy, happy, and whole. 


In reality, we are busy, and at times get tired, grumpy, lazy, selfish, hurt, frustrated, anxious, and angry. Jesus said, "Blessed are the merciful, for they will be shown mercy." Do we want our children and God to be merciful with us and our weaknesses and failings? Do you have a merciful attitude towards your mother, whether she is alive or not?


God said in Proverbs 23:22, 'Listen to your father, who gave you life, and do not despise your mother when she is old." It is a rather interesting statement. It seems to be common for people to have bitter feelings towards their mothers. As a mother, we are responsible for doing our best to make sure that our children turn out well. Because of that, we are often having to correct them. Perhaps children, and even we, misunderstand our mother's chastisement, and see her as being against us, when it's really the opposite.


“Honor your father and mother”- which is the first commandment with a promise- “so that it may go well with you and that you may enjoy long life on the earth.” Ephesians 6:2-3. Let's not underestimate the importance of honoring our parents!


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Saturday, May 4, 2024

Obtaining Dual Citizenship

To those of you who don't know, we are hoping to apply for and get dual citizenship in Italy, through descent. My maternal grandfather (pictured on the front of my last post, "The Lonely Graves") was 100% Italian. His parents, both born in the same town in Italy, both moved to the United States as children around 1905. I grew up knowing my great grandmother. She passed away at the age of 92, back in 1994.

While we were taking care of my maternal grandmother in South Carolina, my husband was looking at different places with affordable land. One of the cheapest places that he found was in Sicily. I said, "That's where my relatives are from!” A couple of days later, he came to me and announced, "You could become an Italian citizen, and then the children and I could become citizens through you!"


The more that I have researched this, I have found out that there are actually quite a lot of Americans with Italian descent that are also trying to do the same thing. There are many reasons why doing this is advantageous. Typically, you are only allowed to stay in the EU for 90 days in a six month period. It allows people to freely live, travel, work anywhere in the EU, and more. This was appealing to us. 


Last year I began gathering the necessary documents, such as the birth certificates and marriage licenses which prove my Italian ancestry. Over the past week I have spent most of my free time learning as much as I can about the requirements and the process. There are many different things that can disqualify a person with Italian lineage. We don't want to move our family to Italy with high hopes and then be turned away, especially after giving up our rental home in Albania.


I realized last night while I was in bed, that there are a lot of similarities between this earthly scenario and the heavenly one. Heaven is a place that most people want to go to after death. Most people assume that they will be welcomed in by their maker. 


Jesus said, “Enter through the narrow gate. For wide is the gate and broad is the road that leads to destruction, and many enter through it. But small is the gate and narrow the road that leads to life, and only a few find it." Matthew 7:13-14


Jesus said a few verses later in Matthew 7:21-23, “Not everyone who says to Me, ‘Lord, Lord,’ shall enter the kingdom of heaven, but he who does the will of My Father in heaven. Many will say to Me in that day, ‘Lord, Lord, have we not prophesied in Your name, cast out demons in Your name, and done many wonders in Your name?’ And then I will declare to them, ‘I never knew you; depart from Me, you who practice lawlessness!’  Would a want to be before Him after our death, or His return, expecting to enter into heaven with Him, only to have this happen to us?


The apostille Paul exhorted the Christians, "continue to work out your salvation with fear and trembling," in Philippians 2:12b. How carefully should we be checking the Scriptures to make sure that we understand what the King and Judge of heaven"s requirements are? 


Shouldn't we be looking into the Bible thoroughly to learn more about this wonderful King and His Kingdom? Shouldn't we be talking to others who are also citizens of this great land and find enjoyment that we share the same hope and homeland? Shouldn't we be trying to urge those who aren't interested or assume that they will automatically enter in?


"Therefore, since we know what it means to fear the Lord, we try to persuade men." 2 Corinthians 5:11a. Christians are sometimes considered odd or hateful. When you're reading God's Word, you want to save others from the destruction that you know sin will bring, and help them to know how wonderful God is as well as the life and hope that He gives.



You can check out our other works! If you like them, you can help us out by sharing our links on your social media accounts and asking your contacts to do the same! Thank you!


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God bless you!







Wednesday, April 24, 2024

The Lonely Graves

 This is a story that I was inspired to write in the middle of the night, just before my grandmother's funeral last year. I ended up writing it right then and didn't go to bed that night!

The Lonely Graves



Maria and her first husband, Toddy, met in Baltimore working at an ammunition factory during WWII. They were very much in love with each other during their whole marriage. They had their first daughter, Mary, when they were 22. She was an only child until Mark came along 4 years later. It was another 6 years before Denise came along and delighted everyone. All of a sudden, it seems, they had child after child. Michael, rather known as Mike, came along a little less than 17 months later. Last, but certainly not least, came David. 


On their 17th wedding anniversary, October 2, 1959, Maria and Toddy, both age 37, learned that he had cancer, They only had just over three more months together before he died on January 11, 1960. Mary recalls that, "Mother" would go in to see "Daddy" in the room he was in. No one else would be allowed in. 


Maria was now a widow who ended up claiming and often quoting the scripture, "He has given me the oil of gladness for mourning," from Isaiah 61:3. She had been a homemaker and he had been a stone mason, having recently completed their second brick home in Waterbury, CT. She was now a widow with their five children, Mary 16, Mark 12,  Denise almost 5, Mike 3 ½, and David was 18 months. 


Maria felt particularly bad for David. After all, he was so young, yet he would most likely have had a very close relationship with his Daddy. Maria would show him Toddy's pajamas frequently to remind him of his Daddy. Maria has shared the story of when she would go shopping with David. When he would see a man, he would say, "Daddy!" She was so embarrassed, wondering what they thought of her!


David had a hard life. Almost exactly ten years ago this month, in March of 2013, David's friends informed Maria and Mark, with whom he lived,  that no one had seen David for a couple of weeks. It wasn't unusual, for he often came and went without always saying what he was up to, so they hadn't given much thought to his absence. 


After a couple of weeks, his body was discovered. He had been murdered, then buried in the dirt, right here in Lexington, SC. What a tragedy for Maria and the whole family. Her baby!


Throughout her life, Maria talked so fondly about Toddy, even after she got remarried, almost 16 years after his death. Her granddaughter, Amy, said that she always loved the name "Toddy" because of how wonderful everyone made him seem. When Amy called to tell Maria that she had just given birth to their third child, and third son, she told her grandmother with whom she was very close, that she had named him Toddy. It is the only time that Amy ever remembered hearing Maria cry, or choke up.


Mary, Mike, and Amy all remember Maria often talking about her plan to be buried with Toddy back in the Riverside Cemetery in Waterbury, CT. 

The extra lot had been purchased. The gravestone reads, "DIBLASI," on the top. Beneath it, on the left is a purposely lighter color square than the darker brownish gray stone. On it says Toddy's details, "October 14, 1922- January 11, 1960." Opposite that square is a matching one, left blank for whoever would be buried there with him. At the bottom reads his favorite scripture, "Absent from the body, present with the Lord." There it's been, empty for the past 63 years.



Don was a widower for a matter of months before he married Maria. He was to be buried next to Rene, his first wife. As far as the DiBlasi family was concerned, it was "set in stone." However, when Don died in June of 2011, a few days after his 86th birthday, he ended up being buried here in SC at the Ft. Jackson cemetery. 


A few hours before Maria's death on March 1, 2023, Amy and Mark were going through her organized folder labeled in her handwriting, "Funeral." Amy had been told earlier in the day by a friend who is a doctor at Columbia's VA hospital, that Maria probably wouldn't make it another day, or even though the night. He was right. He also told her that she would need to tell the EMT people, when it came time, which funeral home they would be using. 


As Amy and Mark studied the papers, they realized that Maria and Don had purchased funeral packages back in December of 2003. The instructions written by the chosen funeral home. They were to have their bodies buried in the local veterans cemetery there in Rhode Island. Simple and identical caskets were chosen. Their plans were also identical. How could this be? Why didn't they go with their lifetime plans to be buried next to their first spouses?


Amy figured that Maria, when sitting in the funeral home discussing the facts with the director, nearly twenty years before, decided to be practical. The veterans cemetery gives you a plot, marker, and burial for free. Shipping a casket to Connecticut and having to pay the receiving funeral home in Connecticut thousands of dollars, plus the thousand dollar fee to be buried at the cemetery there, probably seemed unreasonable to her.


Mike said that he remembered a few things that Maria had said about her burial. One was that she wanted to be buried in Connecticut with Toddy. Another was that he remembered that she really didn't want to be cremated. She also didn't want to spend a lot of money on funeral type things. After all, what does it really matter in the end? 


The big question to help the family determine if they should share the estimated $8,000 cost to have Maria's casket shipped to Connecticut and buried in the Riverside Cemetery, which they all knew that she wouldn't have been opposed to was this: was there anything written in her will about her being buried in Connecticut? 


There was a brochure from the Riverside Cemetery within her funeral folder, but that was it.


While discussing this, Mike brought up the fact that the boxes containing David's ashes were to be buried with Maria. They then discussed it with the funeral home. 


When Denise brought the ashes to the funeral home, they were surprised and confused as to why there were so many ashes and why it was so heavy. It's possibly because his body had been hidden in the dirt for a couple of weeks before being discovered. The director said that the boxes with David's ashes could be put in Maria's casket and buried with her. 


One issue was that his name couldn't be on Maria and Don's marker, most likely because he wasn't a veteran. As the family discussed this issue, Mike reminded us that, at least, there is a brick in his name and honor at the Riverbanks Zoo in nearby Columbia. 


As Amy was searching through the DiBlasi family photos that night, for pictures that could be used for Maria's memorial service, she came across the familiar picture of her grandfather's gravestone. This time, she noticed the blank spot on the right, and became a little sad that after all, he would not have the body of his beloved wife buried next to him. His body would remain alone in Connecticut, while Maria's body would be with Don's and David's. 


A little while later, while she was busy with other pictures, it suddenly came to her. These problems could be solved if the boxes of David's ashes could be removed before they got buried with his mother. All of this was a matter of time. The ashes could be shipped to the Riverside Cemetery in Waterbury, CT and buried there next to his Daddy that he so missed and had to grow up without. He could have the honor of having his name and dates engraved on a stone, rather than being buried with no recognition. Toddy's stone would no longer have an empty spot, but would have the name of his precious son that he wasn't able to raise and see grow up. 


Perhaps, if people are taking a walk in that cemetery, reading the names and dates on the different stones, trying their best to figure out the story behind it all, they will put the dates together and realize that Toddy DiBlasi must have tragically died at the young age of 37 years old, leaving behind a precious and impressionable 18 month old. Maybe they will wonder how it was for David to all of a sudden not have his father around, and not have any idea where he went or when he would be coming back home. Wouldn't that be any 18 month old's reaction? Maybe not, but with the wonderful father and man that his other children and Maria always lauded him to be, it would make sense that David would have been longing for his sweet Daddy.


And that is what happened. Maria was buried next to her second husband, Don, and David was buried next to his dear daddy, Toddy.