Since the holidays I have fielded several inquiries as to my health and wellbeing. Two occurred just today. I am touched by the thoughtfulness.

I am well, and this is a good time to give an update:

Upon our return from Norway in September I underwent surgery to remove the kidney stones that almost derailed the trip. The recovery was tolerable.

In late October we spent a relaxing week in New York City, lodged near Times Square.

We enjoyed a special “hardhat tour” of parts of Ellis Island not open to the general public,

This room was used for surgeries, autopsies, and served as the morgue. The medical care was first rate for the time.

Visited Liberty Island,

Attended Broadway performances of “The Book of Mormon”, “Wicked”, and La Boheme at the Met,

At “Wicked”
The “Wicked” stage
The “Book of Mormon” stage
At “The Book of Mormon”
The Metropolitan Opera, the “Met”
The Metropolitan Opera, the “Met”
The Metropolitan Opera, the “Met”

Spent an afternoon in Central Park watching the New York Marathon,

New York’s Central Park
The 2025 running of the New York Marathon
True courage, grit, and determination!

And of course there were museums to see, food to eat, and crazies to watch.

China Town

The Metropolitan Museum of Art.

Museum of Natural History

Van Gogh at the Museum of Modern Art
Van Gogh at the Museum of Modern Art
Picasso at the Museum of Modern Art
Picasso at the Museum of Modern Art
Andrew Wyeth at the Museum of Modern Art
“Christina’s World” (1948), by Andrew Wyeth, has long been a favorite image for me. I had considered it a surreal portrayal of a peaceful life in contemplation. However, I had never seen the original. The closer examination revealed painful swollen and arthritic joints. hair turning grey, and an aspect of emotional pessimism with security beyond her reach. It is now even more a favorite.
Some of the Halloween craziness.

 In the past I have not been an advocate for travel insurance, but the experience of suffering a back injury in Spain (2024) that necessitated an early return to the States and surgery, my age, and the kidney stone problems last September changed my perspective.

Christine and I purchased an annual “all trips” policy last year through Allianz Global Insurance. It was money well spent and compensated us for the extra costs incurred due to the kidney stone problem during the Norway trip. We have renewed the policy this year in anticipation of major travel ahead.

Sunday we depart for Hawaii. We have been to every US State and every Canadian Province (plus the Yukon Territory), except Hawaii. We will be there for a little over 3 weeks. In another departure from the typical for us we will be traveling in a small group with Road Scholar, formerly known as Elder Hostel. The trip will include 4 islands, with each day plotted out as an in-depth learning experience. How Christine and I will adapt to being told when to be up, where to go, what to see… getting along with the group, remains to be seen. People who have travelled with Road Scholar are typically very positive. If that is our experience then who knows, Egypt and even Antarctica might be in our future with Road Scholar.

In March I plan on taking 3 of the grandsons skiing for a week in Colorado. I plan to ski… not well, not fast, but free. Ski Monarch near Salida waves all fees for “super seniors”. I qualify.

Salida is a delightful western town with good lodging and dining options. Our two-room suite for the 4 of us is $150 a night which includes a simple breakfast.

The big trip on the calendar is a return to Spain for grandson Britton and me to complete our aborted 2024 Camino.

Me and Britton on the Camino in 2024

He and I will resume from Burgos and hike 300 miles to Santiago de Compostela. But that is not the half of it:

We will be joined on our departure flight by Christine and our daughter Alexis’ three children (the “Cook kids”), arriving in Madrid. The 6 of us will travel by train for a 3-night stay in Burgos. After sending Britton and me on “The Way” Christine and the “Cook kids” will return to Madrid where they will meet granddaughter Delaney (Britton’s “quad” sister) who will have just finished walking the Portuguese route of the Camino with her school group.

Christine with the 4 grandchildren in tow will then wander through France to Amsterdam where the three Cook kids will fly to meet their mom in New York. Christine and Delaney will continue together to Portugal where they will meet our daughter Renee and her other 2 children.

Finally, Christine, Renee, and the three grandchildren will be on hand in Santiago to welcome Britton and me at the end of our trek. 4 days later Renee will depart for travel with her children while Christine and I head for a couple of weeks in Paris, Brittany, and Normandy. Whew!!

Christine spent nearly 2 hours on the phone today with the airline representative coordinating the 5 separate flight itineraries.

Hawaii should provide some great pictures and a wealth of information. Stay tuned… and Thank You!

Peace Everyone. Pete

PS. By design the Statue of Liberty is hollow. These words are still a part of “Lady Liberty” and were never meant to be hollow. My grandparent, 2 who were Germans from Russia (now Ukraine) and 2 who were Arabs from Lebanon, were welcomed to America through Ellis Island. How things have changed in a little more than a century.

“Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to breathe free, The wretched refuse of your teeming shore. Send these, the homeless, tempest-tost to me…”. From “The New Colossus”, the 1983 poem by Emma Lazarus.

 

12 thoughts on “Alive and Well

  1. I am exhausted just reading about all. you will be doing! I have extended my stay in Louisville to have cataract surgery and maybe another one on my hand (the Dupuytren’s Contracture). I look forward to your reports along the way.

    • Peter, it’s great to hear from you and an honor that you read my posts. I follow you although I don’t always comment. I hope you heal quickly and are back on your own “treadmill” soon. Peace. Pete.

  2. Thank you pete for your wonderful update. Always and enjoyable read. The photographs are a delight, i appreciate you taking me with you

  3. Christine E Rankin says:

    Wonderful to hear from you Pete (and Christine). I marvel at your tireless energy. To hear you say “relaxing” week in NYC. Only you two. Have a terrific trip to Hawaii. A whole chunk of peace all its own. We will look forward to pics – only if you are up for it of course.

    • Thank you, Christine. Maintaining connections through my posts is part of the motivation for putting in the work. It’s really good to hear from you. I hope life is smiling upon you.

  4. lsnyder43e7bf588a says:

    I am glad to hear of your travels and that you are doing well. I am curious to know if your tremors have returned after the surgery bleed that stopped them. (Did I get that right? It was a while ago now and I can’t remember if they completely stopped or just some.) How are you doing?

    • It’s been nearly 3 years… Time really flies! There’s perhaps some small increase in the tremors, but then I drink a ton of coffee these days and don’t hold back on the caffeine. I could never have done that before. It’s only the right hand that was remedied. The left hand is as bad, or worse, than ever. Thank you for asking!

  5. Nancy Antonette Wallingford says:

    Wonderful to hear from you!! My experience with Road Scholars has been fabulous (Cuba, Southwest USA – Grand Canyon, Zion). I think your family travels coming up sounds absolutely wonderful!! Be safe and have a great time!

  6. It is wonderful to hear from you! My mom was from Brittany and we spent many summers with my grandmother in La Baule. It is a beautiful and enchanting place if you have the opportunity to go there. The home built by my great grandmother, where I used to stay, “Villa Arghy” is still there about a block from the beach!

    • Wonderful! We look forward to the visit of an area new to us. We have heard so many good things about what we will see. I understand that you have retired. I hope it is as rewarding to you as you have been to thousands of people in your professional role.
      Thank you, Nathalie.

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