Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

Dubai

Monday, May 20th, 2013

We’ve been having a great time in Dubai, mostly seeing far-flung family that converged for an amazing weddig, then continuing post-wedding partying and EATING until LATE each night with ambitious plans in the morning.

Last night I had the pleasure and honor to speak to parents and some staff at the American School of Dubai in between many festivities, including a party on a dhow that set sail around the Dubai “Creek” from around 10:00 pm for dinner Then pretty early in the a.m. we set off for the old gold souk (market).

I had hoped to post photos on the blog but right now it’s not working from my mobile phone, which is my only option while traveling. So, I’ll try to post at Facebook.com/growingupglobal.

On my packing list: Multiple ‘gowns’, a duffel bag full of books, and a permission slip from the hubby. Traveling to Dubai with a 9-year old – tonight!

Tuesday, May 14th, 2013

 

I’ve wrapped up a BIG project – the draft manuscript for The K-5 Global Education Toolkit (with my wonderful co-author, Becky Morales, www.kidworldcitizen.org).  Yippee. Yay. Sigh of relief. Trepidation…  Now I’m turning my attention to the big trip I’m taking tonight with “Tiny Dancer,” aka “the tiny one,” aka Soph Soph, aka the almost-10 y.o. 4th grader who was just a pre-schooler when I was writing Growing Up Global, Sophia.  I will be visiting two international schools while there (not disclosing their names yet, as I need to make sure they are ok with that!), speaking to an audience of parents, and last, but not least, attending a wedding extravaganza for my dear cousin’s daughter who is getting married on May 17, which also is the 50th wedding anniversary of my parents.  Yes, I am feeling a sensory overload!

So, the packing is a bit complicated.  The actual wedding calls for not one, but TWO “gowns” – a short one for the ceremony and a long one for the party which will probably go all night.  My understanding is that we will attend the ceremony then go back to our hotels for a nap and change of clothes, to return to the party a few hours later.  This is the sort of wedding party where dinner is served probably between 11 pm -12 midnight and children are most definitely welcome!  I’m also packing two more long dresses “just in case,” one for my sister who is meeting us from Berlin (can’t wait to see you!).  And the shoes and other accessories to go with each. Then there’s what to wear during the daytime, accounting for cultural sensitivity (but not too much, I am told, for Dubai); and what to wear in the evenings, which will mostly be comprised of dinners for the bride and groom, hosted by various family members.

I have a large duffel bag filled with copies of my book, to take to my talks. It was too complicated to try to order the books to arrive in Dubai on time, so I will be schlepping them across the planet — of course, isn’t that what every author would do?!?!?

Another important thing I am packing: a notarized letter from my dear husband, attesting that I am not kidnapping Sophia and he has our blessing to travel without him.  Parents: if one of you is taking the kids ANYWHERE on a plane, domestic or international, you need one of these.

All the packing of items for different categories of activity make this trip even more exciting to me. I am so grateful to be able to combine these elements — global education and family celebration — in one action-packed week!

Stay tuned for more updates (and follow my Twitter and Facebook for more frequent posts).

The Day After Mother’s Day – Honoring the ‘Invisible Mothers’

Monday, May 13th, 2013

I loved seeing so many photos friends posted of their mothers, often from a bye-gone era, and the love and kindness expressed to moms on Mother’s Day, which takes so many forms, from breakfast in bed to letters of gratitude for birth mothers from adoptive families. It may have become a high-pressure, materialistic holiday, but if there is a day that gets people to say and act on ‘I love you’ to the person who probably loves them more unspeakably great than any other – so be it.  In its essence, Mother’s Day cherishes boundless goodness.

As I browsed through social media today (after a sort of hiatus for Mother’s Day), two posts struck me:

This photo, allegedly of a little Iraqi girl laying in the arms of the chalk mother she drew on the ground, the mother she has never met, but loves deeply:

And this article by Vargha Taefi, called The Anguish of Separation, a title which conveys the emotion this loving son feels as his mother is locked away in a tiny, dark,  damp Iranian prison, having already served five years of a baseless 20-year sentence. He knows her health is severely deteriorating, but her spirits hang on to something deeper and stronger. This keeps her going and it keeps him going amidst false charges and glaring injustice.  His emotions straddle the big picture — a regime’s repressive policies toward a minority group — along with the molecular, conveying personal anxieties felt by children everywhere:

For a very long time my nightmare has not been of the past but of slowly losing memories of my mother.

I reassure myself that in the absence of my mother, at least her loving company can be bestowed on inmates who do not have their own mothers or sisters with them.

So, on this day-after Mother’s Day, here’s to the motherless children and the children who can’t see their mothers because so many in power still have it so wrong. Here’s also to so many mothers who are returning to low-wage jobs that barely feed their children, who can’t afford childcare facilities they feel right about, who might be fleeing violence, and so many countless other cruelties that keep too many on the margins or far away from their beloved children.

By acknowledging these realities, I don’t believe I am taking away from the joy that I felt with my own mother and my children on Mother’s Day. In fact, I feel as if I honor my blessings by the act of remembering the invisible mothers.  If I can contribute any deeds, words or finances on behalf of any of these mothers anywhere, I hope this helps bring them toward visibility, toward the light, and a hearty hug from a child that loves them deeply.

 

 

From Boston: A World Citizen’s Reflection During Lockdown

Friday, April 19th, 2013

I have a cousin who continually inspires me, and who happens to be a life-long Bostonian.  She lives close enough to the shootings in Watertown that they woke her up at night, and as I write this, I learn that my brother and his wife can hear sirens surrounding a home  in their neighborhood in Cambridge, and they are sheltering a dear friend, evacuated from his home, just two doors from the suspects’ residence. Events of this week have all been so unsettling. One response people may take is to hold on tighter to their prejudices and reactive judgements, resolve to never leave their familiar environs and forsake anything smacking of global citizenship. My cousin the Bostonian, a creative, who adores her city, instead posted this reflection on her Facebook wall as she waits in her home on lockdown for resolution to this horrible and tense stand-off:

I am a world citizen. Humanity is one. No one life is more important than another, and there are acts of brutality, terrorism and war occurring everywhere in the world, every day. I am aware of this and I feel compassion for the suffering that the people of this world are going through, every day. However, this week, it is happening in my home, in the city of my birth, where I live and work, starting with an attack on a beautiful, diverse global event. Friends of mine, including a little boy, were meters away and narrowly escaped injury. About one million of us in the Boston area are on lockdown this morning. This (and much, much worse) is what many people go through as part of their daily life. I think, however, that any one of us would discuss it with great concern and attention if it was happening in our own home. It is possible to do both – to feel compassion for attacks on innocent people around the world, and concern for those near you – and at the same time to refuse to make violence and the loss of life into a competition, or a game of moral equivalency.

Earlier in the week, just after the media turned all it’s attention on the shocking developments in Boston, I was seeing angry posts on social media, that US media ignores the tragedies playing out in other parts of the planet.  I responded via Twitter:

Rather than curse myopic media, I’m grateful (& sad) tragedy also shines light on 4/15 bombings in Iraq & Afghanistan.

And also:

Tragedy on a grand scale far away doesn’t take away from real concern, sadness, anger that rush out when we .

I believe our hearts have the capacity to care about what takes place near and far. This is not a zero-sum game.

As news about the suspects in the Boston marathon bombings and the horrific crime wave later in the same week emerge, we will see more and more connections between a conflict that has been raging far away, in Chechnya, that few Americans paid attention to, and what is happening much closer to home for many of us, in a city and region that hosts more university students than any other — a place filled with intellectual attainment, creative breakthroughs, where people are continually making new friends from near and far, and where trusting parents from all over the world send their bright children.

Just as Bostonians’ grit and determination won’t be deterred as they plan a bigger and better marathon next year, let’s resolve to not let the fury that might have sparked last week’s horror turn us against compassion and connection.  We need these now more than ever. Peace.

Photo credit: washingtonpost.com

Happy Spring! Happy New Year!

Monday, March 25th, 2013

I love the start of spring, particularly as it marks one of my all-time favorite holidays, Naw Ruz (which also has dozens of spellings).  Here’s what I wrote about it for the Huffington Post:

Nowruz is the primary holiday for Persians, and it is the only holiday celebrated by all Persians, of every religious background, whether Christian, Muslim, Jewish, Zoroastrian, Baha’i or of no religion.

(To read the entire story, click here:  Happy Nowruz to All!)

 

Growing Up Global for Parents in Palo Alto – Join Me!

Sunday, March 3rd, 2013

 

If you’re in the Palo Alto, CA vicinity on Thursday, March 7, please consider joining me for a discussion on raising global kids and Growing Up Global!  This is free and open to the public, with book signing and international treats from the PTA to follow.  Thanks to the great community at Ohlone Elementary in Palo Alto for your terrific organization!

Here’s a link to the flyer:  Palo Alto Ohlone Flyer

And here’s the text info:

Thursday, March 7, 2013, 7:00-9:00pm
Ohlone School MP Room – Address: 950 Amarillo Ave, Palo Alto, CA 94303
7pm Presentation, 8:30 Book signing and global treats

In this highly interactive presentation, Homa Tavangar, author of
the acclaimed Growing Up Global: Raising Children to Be At Home
in the World
(Random House) will share some of her learning and
best practices around educating responsive, resilient, curious,
creative, kind, compassionate global citizens. Take away fun,
simple ideas for instilling an appreciation of cultures and global
perspectives on a daily basis, conversation prompts, and thoughts
on making a dierence, near or far – starting with what you love.
Brought to you by Global Awareness Week, a program of the Ohlone PTA

Sacrificing All for Children’s Education in China + The Irony of It

Sunday, February 17th, 2013

I was riveted by Keith Bradsher’s NY Times piece on the front page of the print version of the paper today: In China, Families Bet It All on College for Their Children.

Through the journey of one family’s incredible, heart-wrenching sacrifices that the Times has been tracking for seven years, the piece showed how millions of Chinese sacrifice heavily for their children’s education.  The reality is that as graduates saturate the job market, the security they seek is increasingly elusive.  The story was sad, sobering, and a sense of overwhelming injustice pervaded my thoughts, as I read how rigged against less privileged families the bounties of education can be for hundreds of millions of young Chinese from poor families.  Bradsher also compared costs of U.S. college for families that must sacrifice to send their children on for higher education, to get a sense of relative terms.

As I was processing the overwhelming odds against students like Wu Caoying, I continued to read and turned to the next page, with the photo of the family, some text, and then a half-page ad for a luxury hotel in South Beach, Miami. The ultimate in pleasure and privilege.  I just gasped at this and had to share. ….The irony of it!  I think it also makes for great discussion fodder for high school and college students to consider:

  • What are the sacrifices their own families have made to get them to where they are, and ensure an education for them?
  • What do they think their own prospects for education helping them to “get ahead” might be?
  • What do they think about this juxtaposition of images – both contemporary and both reflecting either the realities or aspirations of large swaths of the world’s populations.
  • In the context of the Chinese family, and then the imaginary frolickers at the Hotel Fountainbleu, what does the word “deserving” conjure in your mind? Does learning the story of the family in the NYT piece impact your idea of “deserving”?
  • What might the juxtaposition of these images say about scarcity or abundance of the earth’s resources?

page A15 New York Times Sunday, February 17, 2013

 

Expressing Love in So Many Ways

Thursday, February 14th, 2013

Happy Valentine’s Day! Whatever you think of this holiday – manufactured, commercialized, depressing, it also brings much joy to many.  I like it as a reminder of love in so many forms and the fact that it’s all around us, if we’re willing to look for it.

I posted on Facebook and Twitter:
Amor, amour, lieben, אהבה, حب, 爱, kisses, kindness, gratitude, chocolate, flowers…so many ways to express love. How do you show/say it?

Thinking about how we communicate love – so simple and so complex can be a terrific exercise for children. Get beyond pink hearts and dig deeper – what really shows love? What does it look and feel like? And in how many languages can you express it? Or how many would you like to learn?  All you need is love!

That Fleeting Moment When My Children Are Under One Roof

Tuesday, January 22nd, 2013

I have a running list for an article I want to write one day that I think of as “The Dirty Secrets of Growing Up Global.” This basically covers the anguish, expense, and sleep deprivation (due to emergencies that arise in various time zones) parents experience when they send their babies (of any age) off into the world to explore and grow.  We know the experience is a good thing, so that knowledge takes the sting away, but we still really, really miss them – and maybe worry a bit, too.

Our big girl recently returned from one of these trips, going to Shanghai and Hong Kong during three of the four weeks of her university winter break.  She had just under 48 hours at home after the trip which mostly consisted of an internship shadowing a physician (and dear friend of ours) in a hospital.  She’s such a trooper, immediately bouncing back to our US time zone, 13 hours different from where she was.  It’s so great to be young, where, as she says: “time zones don’t matter to me; I can sleep anytime, for as long as possible.” About 60 hours after her return she starts classes, so we’ll see how that works out for her (I feel like that sounds like it would be said in a Sarah Palin accent, as in “how’s that hope-y, change-y workin’ out for ya?”).

Here’s a picture we managed to get of our three girls just minutes before walking out of the house to take her back to school.  I’ve avoided sharing family photos on this blog but it’s a new year, and I’m thinking, “why not?!”  I shared so much about the girls in Growing Up Global. Maybe 2013 is time for more of that.  This photo just makes my heart sing. It captures joy, sisterhood and the spontaneity that comes with it. Gratitude wells in my heart for our healthy, lovely girls, warts and all.

Tender Sapling’s Global Kids Gift Guide: 50 Ideas for Wee to Teen World Citizens

Thursday, December 6th, 2012

Emily and Scott Norris are two of the most sincere, creative, thoughtful parents striving to raise global citizens that I have ever met.  They have started a lovely new website and product line called Tender Sapling (www.tendersapling.com), with the tag line “have fun, grow noble.”  Global citizenship is one of their core values, and they came out with a terrific global gift guide with 50 (!) suggestions.  I’m honored they chose Growing Up Global to be on the list, and they’ve got lots of new and fun products sprinkled throughout the 50.  Click on their icon to see the full list: