Posts Tagged ‘Family’

When I was growing up, we had stuffed lions from Harris Bank. We had enough Hubert Harris lions to make a whole zoo.  The lions made sense to me, because I thought of the bank as a warm and fuzzy place.

Really, to understand what I’m talking about, I need to tell you about money in my family. And what I learned about money from living the life of a rich kid

1. Big money comes from areas of big chaos.
The money started coming to my family when my great-grandpa got a law degree in the 1920s in Chicago. He didn’t have any clients, so he hung out at the jail, looking for people who needed a lawyer. It turned out that the only people who landed in jail who could reliably pay for a lawyer’s help were prostitutes.

My great-grandpa did a good job representing them, and consequently, he met Al Capone, who was the money behind the prostitutes. Soon my great-grandpa became Al Capone’s lawyer.

2. You can buy luxury but not family.
As you can imagine, there was a lot of money to be made. My great-grandparents did what rich people did in Chicago at the time: They bought a big house in Evanston, IL and they hired black people to serve them.

If you think story in The Help was a only southern thing, I can assure you that the same stuff was going on in the Chicago area.

Sula was five when she became a servant to my grandma, who was also five. It was a fine line between servant and playmate, but Sula was black and her mom was hired help. Sula worked for my grandma for her whole life. My grandma, who slept on ironed sheets her whole life, always said that Sula was like family.

I always believed her, until I went to college and realized that other kids did not have a black laundress who only came into the house via the back door. I also realized that you cannot pay someone to be family.

3. It’s difficult to have both high moral ground and high income.
My grandma married a guy who was soft-spoken and smart enough to get into University of Chicago even when there were quotas at universities to keep the Jewish population low.

It makes sense that if your dad is a lawyer for the mob, you’d react by marrying someone who is a stickler for morality.  But of course, my grandpa was no match for my great-grandpa, so he called the shots.

4. The people with money control the shots. For people who want the money.
This became very important when my dad went to graduate school. He wanted to get a PhD in history. My great-grandfather wanted him to become a lawyer. “Just apply!” he told my dad. So, reluctantly, my dad applied to law school and got into Harvard.

“No one turns down Harvard law!” my great-grandfather told my dad. Everyone in the family repeated that. And my dad went to law school.

He was not a good lawyer. Which, maybe, is the genesis of my obsessive writing about how you shouldn’t go to law school if you can’t market yourself to potential clients.

5. Lots of money means lots of false relationships.
The biggest — and maybe only — client my dad landed was my mom. She was in college with him. On scholarship. Her parents were both invalids and she knew it was a matter of survival to marry someone rich. She would tell you that she loved my dad.

Unfortunately they saved all their love letters in a box, to give to one of their kids one day. The love letters are a documentary of what it looks like to marry for money. My mom is the hot, popular girl who is too much for my dad to keep up with. My dad is the annoying social outcast she can’t stand. He grovels, she pushes him away.

There is nothing in the love letter box about what makes them ever decide to get married. So it is an easy leap to think my mom had a financial issue at stake and my dad had no social IQ to know the difference.

6. Rich people are never happy just being rich. They want to look smart.
Harvard was really important to my great-grandpa because the history of my family is, perhaps, the struggle to look classy when all your money comes from the mob. To this end, my great-grandfather subscribed to the Book-of-the-Month club.  If you could buy learning, my great-grandpa would have done that. The library in the Evanston house was huge and well-stocked.

The book collection became mythic in the family. Who would inherit it? That was the prize. Forget the museum-quality, yellow-glazed porcelain imported on ocean liners between the wars. People wanted the books.

My dad got the books. After all, he got the law degree. The books were stored with the dust jackets in a separate box. The books were all first editions—first edition Hemingway, Steinbeck, Wharton. The books were in pristine condition, of course, since no one had ever read them.

The day my dad went to go collect his reward for doing what my great-grandpa told him, we realized that no one knew where the dust jackets were. The value of the books was gone: it’s all in the dust jacket.

7. The money never lasts as long as you think it will.
So my dad gave the books to me, since I’m the only person in the family who reads fiction. I shipped the boxes to my apartment in LA. I found, underneath Finnegan’s Wake and Tender is the Night, a collection of pornography.

Not smutty, cheap porn, but famous, specially-bound books like Lady Chatterley’s Lover illustrated by Rockwell Kent.

I sold the books to a used book dealer. People always ask me how I supported myself while I was trying to get on the professional beach volleyball tour. Now you know how.

8. Stability and sanity make better memories than luxurious excess.
The whole time my brother and I were growing up, we heard about The Trust Fund. It was where all the money came from. It was what all the family meetings were about. It was why my parents could buy overpriced 70s art and a BMW E21—they didn’t have to save for our college. “The trust fund is paying for it.”

My brother got a PhD in economics. Surely my great-grandfather would have favored law school again. But he was dead. When I told my brother that Harris Bank was sponsoring a post on my blog, he wrote to me, “I love thinking about life as a rich kid back in the days of interest rate regulation and no interstate banking. You know, I really thought that every kid walked into a bank and was greeted by a private banker holding a stuffed lion.”

We had a lot of lions. We had a lot of mayhem. The family seemed to be in constant turmoil over money, and who was getting it and who had it, and how to get more. But everything was calm at Harris. The bankers were sane. There was never screaming about money at Harris. It was safe there.

For a while I thought my memories of Harris were so nice because it was the only place my parents couldn’t bite each other’s heads off. After all, who wants to be removed from the trust?

But as I get older, I realize that our Harris bankers (believe me when I tell you that my family had a bunch) were a calming, dependable force for our family. My family needed outside help to think through money issues in a rational way. Harris Trust provided that.

And those lions. Which, I noticed are selling for 0 each on eBay. I could have never predicted that the only money from the trust that would trickle down to me as an adult would be in the form of a stuffed Harris lion.

Penelope Trunk Blog

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Got this e-mail from a camper today, letting me know she was signing up…

“Hi Dave!!


Happy New Year!


I can’t put in words how happy I am that we’re coming back! We took last year ‘off’ to try to save a little money and rented a condo in Vermont. BIGGEST MISTAKE EVER. lol. We we there about 20 minutes, trying to unpack, get the lay of the land, and Nick starts with “I’m bored”. And I wanted to say ‘Go up to the barn and find someone to play with” And I couldn’t!! We joked with them the whole rest of the week ‘just go to the barn’. And boy did I miss having a dinner bell ring and just coming to the table. :)


On the way home started talking about saving for family camp in 2012!!”

It was a nice sentiment.   We hear a lot that the kid’s preferences are the main driver in coming back.  But it’s not like the parents don’t want to come back as well.  I think it is just parents sometimes have different considerations when making vacation plans from year to year.  But a happy kid often equals a happy parent, so “family camp” it is!  And to be sure, the kids having fun is really what allows you as the parent to relax and unwind.  So it’s a win-win.

Advice on Family Camps from a Family Camp Director

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In a relationship, specifically in marriage, troubles occur which lead to broken families. Indeed, there maybe changes in the wedded life, but the couple will still have their humanity. Couples can make mistakes in their relationship. Heck, some couples believe that their marriage have been a mistake in the first place! As a result of this, the relationship of the couples are threatened with various issues. Due to these problems, some relationships will end up in divorce.

In reality, divorce proceeding is very complicated. The sole thing that makes divorce much more complicated isn’t the feelings nor the separation but it’s the assets of the couples. Why is it complicated? Who will own what and which item, becomes difficult because couples would probably fight for the assets they want. Be it the house they lived in, the cars they drive or the money they’ve saved, couples will fight over it. Like in movies or TV series, couples will also fight over the basic items they’ve inside the house.

Could It Be possible to have a less complicated division of assets in divorce proceedings? Research will be necessary in divorce proceedings, particularly in dividing assets. In fact, one will know which are the real assets and the assets hidden by partners. The bad thing about dividing assets is that, couples would probably lie and cheat simply to keep or gain the assets they want.

Couples may have various assets to divide with, however the most vital thing to look at are the banking assets. including the Toronto family lawyers. It’s natural for any couple to maintain a bank account. No matter what kind of banking account it is, it has to be checked. Ask your divorce lawyer Toronto for further information. To prevent confusion, every banking asset has to be legally supported by important documents.

Aside from banking accounts, the salary, bonuses, stocks or shares of both parties has to be represented. Even if the person is required to pay the taxes or is tax-exempted, it has to have supporting papers to document it. Vacations, trips, or any costly spending has to be researched. Couples should never fail to make a research about pricey collection pieces. Most of all, there has to be reports on any loans or legitimate debts.

Before one could get their hands on the records, it may take a lot of time and preparations. It will depend on how fast was it to uncover all the assets. Of all assets, the bank accounts must have all the necessary information, statements and data to easily track it. By having the necessary data about bank accounts, it will be simple to check if there are any sudden changes like huge withdrawals. It’s also important that the Toronto divorce lawyer will verify every single information. With the help of the research, a simpler and less troubling divorce is not impossible.

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    Relationship Advice

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    Reposted


    Below is an article that we wrote for the American Camp Association’s (ACA) magazine that gets sent out to parents interested in sending their children to summer camp. The purpose of the article was “play up” the benefits of family camp. The recommendation, I think, applies to any camp running a true family camp program. Also, I would point out that full-season children’s camps that also happen to run a “family camp” program are, in this particular instance, a great idea if you are looking for a family camp program to serve the purpose of getting your child comfortable with the idea of summer camp (especially if it is that particular camp).

    Training Wheels for Sleep Away Camp

    Over the past five years families have become more cautious when it comes being away from each other. It is not uncommon to see young children with cellular phones with the sole purpose of being able to be in constant contact with mom and dad. The days of helicopter parents are here and no one can blame them when it comes to their children’s safety and well being especially when they are away from mom and dad for an extended period.

    Parents attach training wheels to a two wheeler in order to provide a safe and easy transition from a tricycle to a bicycle. For the same reasons parents can now do the same to prepare their children for a one, two, four or seven week session of summer camp. American Camp Association accredited Family Camps offer children the opportunity to attend a week long camp away from home for the first time with the security of knowing that their parents and siblings are along for the fun.

    Pam Ehrenreich’s two children specifically asked their mom to find a sleep away camp that they could all attend together. Pam’s seven and nine year old resisted the idea of leaving home and attending two separate camps. After doing extensive research on the web this single parent, from Ellicott City MD, chose our camp, located in the mid-coast area of Maine, for her family’s first camp experience,. After attending a week of camp together this past summer Pam now feels both of her children are ready to spread their wings and attend a camp solo next summer.

    Family camp is a perfect opportunity for children to gain a sense of what camp is. They learn what to expect and what is expected of them. We have found that at our camp kids who attend morning activities with other campers their own age, such as archery, tennis and sailing, gain the familiarity of a traditional sleep away camp. The morning sessions provide our youngest campers the opportunity to interact with campers their own age. After lunch the entire family spends time together lakeside. Fathers and daughters can fish together, siblings’ tye-dye shirts, entire families enjoy an afternoon sail, while some parents read that neglected novel while their children swim under the watchful eye of the lifeguards. Even grandparents get into the spirit of camp pointing out constellations to the youngsters by the nightly campfires. By the end of the week friendships are formed and kids often choose to sit with their new found friends at meals and at campfire instead of sitting with mom and dad.

    While the kids get to try on camp, the parents also get the opportunity to see what safety measures and procedures are in place as well as the level of professionalism in the staff that ACA camps strive for. Both parents and kids get to rid any insecurity they might have about sleep away camp while having a memorable fun family vacation together. When the next summer rolls around, and the camp registration process is complete, parents will have peace of mind while their campers will have the confidence necessary to make their camp session a memorable as well as positive experience. Camp training wheels is a safety net that is a win-win situation for families.

    That wind in your face feeling when riding a bike independently at full speed is the same freedom children feel at camp when paddling their own kayak, hitting the bulls eye in archery, developing their own photos in the darkroom, making that special memento in arts and crafts or receiving thunderous applause for a well preformed campfire skit. It is at this moment parents realize that the training wheels are ready to come off.

    Advice on Family Camps from a Family Camp Director

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    Reposted

    There are of course a number of reasons, but here is one I came up with a few years ago when I started the blog…

    A family vacation has two, sometimes competing, interests going on:  1) What is fun and relaxing to the parent?  2) What is fun and relaxing to the kids?  A great family vacation finds a way to make those interests intersect.

    And speaking of intersections, try thinking of family camps as the intersection of two streets…one is named ‘family vacation’ and the other is ‘summer camp’. Recall your fondest memories of both and this is what family camps strive to provide for vacationing families. When you think about it family camps take the convenience and relaxation of a quality all-inclusive family vacation spot and mix it with the wholesome fun and treasured friendships of a well-run summer camp.  Admittedly this concept isn’t obvious and still takes a lot for people to completely wrap their heads around. I’ve been advertising my camp for years and I still regularly get the question, “so where do I send my kids?” I will tell you this: If you have heard of family camps before and you are sort of skeptical or on the fence, I can tell you that our most satisfied customers are those that took the chance and gave it a try. And when you don’t know what to expect or even better, you get dragged in by a spouse and have low expectations (I’ll bet you’re thinking mosquitos, fish sticks and camp cots aren’t you), family camp comes through big time. The first realization is usually, “hey this bed is comfortable and the showers have hot water.” The second realization is about the food and any quality family camp understands that the food had better be good. The last realization usually comes mid-week when the parents step back and recognize the harmony of it all: the kids are not complaining (having a blast, actually), the parents are relaxed from not having to plan anything or cook and clean, and are even having fun doing the things they loved to do as kids. Family camp is wholesome, good, clean fun that believe it or not, the whole family actually agrees on.

    Advice on Family Camps from a Family Camp Director

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    Reposted

    …also a call to the powers that be to better define the term “family camp”. 

    Based on talking to other family camp directors and countless prospective family campers, I propose a set of variables that when present, will define a family camp as most people understand it to be.  And hopefully this list will help you sort through all the information on the web (trust me, there’s a lot and much of it is confusing) to find the family vacation you are looking for.

    1) Family camps should be full-season, that is it operates as a family camp for the entire summer, just like a childrens camp (usually June-August).
    2) A family camp facility should be at least partially designed with the interests of its adult campers in mind as well as its children campers. This means comfortable sleeping arrangements (real mattresses with boxsprings, one family-to-a-cabin privacy) and ready access to clean bathrooms and hot showers, preferably in the cabin itself.
    3) Family camps should serve 3 meals/day and food should be of a standard that is satisfying for its adult campers and easily pleasing of its child campers.
    4) Family camps should provide activities that appeal to its adult as well as child campers and ideally should provide qualified guidance and instruction in those activities through the use of trained staff.
    5) Family camps should recognize, as expressed through their programs and facilities, that they function to provide a quality and meaningful family vacation, usually modelled in the style of the traditional childrens summer camp and that this unique distinction is what defines them as family camps.

    Advice on Family Camps from a Family Camp Director

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    Camp’s over!!! Hurray for a great season with great staff and neat families. I’ve got mixed emotions about being home from Maine, namely I’m glad to be back home with my wife and I miss the northeast’s weather, but I’m adjusting quicker than usual.

    A quick list of things I’ll miss about Maine:
    Contes 1894 (google it or check out the Anthony Bourdain Maine episode)
    The fresh air
    The cooler temps
    The healthier way of life, i.e. walking everywhere, eating veggies from our garden, staying active…
    Catching (and eating) trout on the lake
    Spotting the bald eagles
    Seeing the milky way in the night sky
    A quick list of what I like about being at home:
    My wife
    A movie theater and restaurants down the block
    Decent pizza
    Decent chinese food
    Diversity

    Advice on Family Camps from a Family Camp Director

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    Cheshire is a style of cheddar.  It is actually the cheese used in Welsh Rarebit, which I always thought involved “rabbit”.  Up until recently that was enough to keep me away.  Now I will happily eat rabbit, especially after Neal and Kathy Foley of Claddaugh Farms in Montville, Maine cooked me up the most delicious paella with rabbit, sausage and lobster.    But anyway, Welsh Rarebit has no meat in it.  It is simply cheese (Cheshire) melted with beer, some flour, mustard powder and worcestershire sauce.  Mixed together after melting, spread on toast and broil or bake.  Sounds delicious, right?  Just as delicious as that rabbit paella.  

    Anyhow, when I say cheddar, cheddar refers to a process called “cheddaring”.  Without going into it too deeply, all cheese pretty much starts out the same.  Milk, bacteria, rennet and salt.  And even as you innoculate milk with bacteria, add the rennet to gel the curds and cook the curds, most cheese is still pretty much the same thing from batch to batch.  Cheddaring refers to the what you do with the curds.  Once your curds are ready, you basically stack them on top of each other and heat them at a temperature of our 90 degrees for a few hours.  What you are doing is creating acid in the curds…you are getting the bacteria to eat the lactose in the milk and create lactic acid.  This is what gives cheddar the sharp flavor (aging does that, too).  Once the curds are “cheddared”, you put them in a press and with time and pressure, you create a wheel of cheese that you can age. 
    So we just made a wheel of cheshire.  It will now age until camp, which is 10 months away, which means that it will be excellent.
    On tap for the next make is brie, gruyere and manchego.

    Advice on Family Camps from a Family Camp Director

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    This is a draft of a letter I wrote to our family campers a few years back…I just came across it and thought it was blog-worthy. Just some heady thoughts on why people come to family camp as a vacation.

    When was the last time you labeled a specific vacation you took as “important”?

    It struck me today when I looked in my inbox. Two responses to an e-mail I had sent out earlier in the day. My message to them: This is the week you are registered to attend our Family Camp next summer and this is how much you owe. The responses back varied. One wished me congratulations on my wedding, both said they were excited to see us next summer. One word struck me as interesting, however. Both used the word “important”. Paul and Gerriane C. said, “thank you Dave, you and everyone else have made it a special and important place for us.” Pat and Cindy B. wrote, “Thanks for making it such a wonderful place that has become an important part of our lives.”

    Maybe other Family Campers have used this term to describe their time at Medomak and I just didn’t notice. Camp people are notorious for their superlatives describing their camps. “Awesome”, “Amazing”, “Best summer of my life” say many a 9 year old camper. And so often in reading evaluations what you are really looking for are negative comments about things you ought to improve or correct. So maybe “important” got lost in the many words of praise and today, it was the two e-mails (one right after the other) that made me think.

    Family vacations are important. Time off from work and school, the rare opportunity for every member of the family to spend time together, rejuvenation and relaxation are why we cherish our family vacations. But think about it for one second. When was the last time you took a vacation and the actual place, the actual activity was what you found important? I think the fact that many families are always looking for something new to do speaks to the fact that it often isn’t the place or the activity, but the block of time that is important.

    So consider that the families that return to our Family Camp year after year are coming back because the camp is important to them. Not just the valuable chunk of time, but the actual thing they are doing.

    I can’t tell you why these families consider their time at our camp important. We don’t engage in family counseling or therapy. We are not experts in family studies. Programming isn’t specially designed to be of benefit for families per se. We are simply a summer camp that caters to families. And while we certainly have families ourselves and pay attention to what other families want, like and need in a vacation, this is the extent of the influence in our programming. We started a summer camp as adults because we liked summer camp as children and figured that other families might like it, too. Not only were we right, but we found out what children’s camps have known and have harnessed since the beginning: camp is important to people that have experienced it. It plays an important role in their up-bringing and their identity.

    In some ways, this sounds like therapy. And while some may find Medomak therapeutic, I can assure you that no group sessions are taking place. No trained psychologists or social workers are on staff. Just people that love summer camp and like to see others have a good time.

    Advice on Family Camps from a Family Camp Director

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    So the perennial problem for family camp is getting the word out to families. These next two weeks we are sponsoring the local NPR affiliate WAMU in the D.C. area. The thought is that this is our target audience. I know that to be the case as I get to know my families pretty well. I don’t know their politics per se, but I do know get to know them on a somewhat personal level. It is one of the joys of what I do and where I work. Medomak is small and everyone is there to have a good time. Anyhow, let’s see if that sponsorship drives some traffic to our site. We need more people to know about what family camp is. I really believe that the more people really “know” about what we are, they more they go, “duh, why haven’t we been doing this all these years.” If you really like spending time with your family, you just can’t beat what family camp offers in the way of a family vacation.

    Advice on Family Camps from a Family Camp Director

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