Erosion of the Lip and Tongue
Where the Swiss place their hopes
swissfuture and weiterdenken.ch have again conducted their end-of-year survey to determine where the Swiss place their hopes and how optimistic they are for 2013. Simply put, we’re optimistic; we’re more optimistic about Switzerland than about the rest of the world, and at the same time, place our hopes squarely at the feet of…
…Barack Obama. It’s enough to make me pessimistic about Switzerland.
As an average Swiss, my top ten sources of hope are
62% — the many unsung heroes of everyday life
43% — Barack Obama
41% — myself
39% — my spouse or partner
27% — God
23% — my children / grandchildren
23% — Jesus Christ
17% — my parents / grandparents
13% — the Dalai Lama
10% — Alain Berset (the youngest, best-looking, and most recently elected member of the federal council)
Why we place our hopes in someone paid to look out for the interests of a foreign country, or in someone who embodies the identity and culture of a central Asian region, eludes me. Any ideas?
More photos
There are more photos up in the usual place, with the usual sign-in, and the usual option of writing me for a higher resolution copy.
I’ll add a quote from Boileau, discovered in David Nichol Smith’s amiable volume “Some Observations on Eighteenth Century Poetry,” which is available as of now for anyone interested in Pope and his contemporaries.
What is a new thought? It is not a thought which nobody has had, and perhaps nobody ought to have had, but it is a thought which everyone might have had and someone has been the first to express.
Qu’est-ce qu’une pensée neuve, brillante, extraordinaire ? Ce n’est point, comme se le persuadent les ignorants, une pensée que personne n’a jamais eue, ni dû avoir : c’est au contraire une pensée qui a dû venir à tout le monde et que quelqu’un s’avise le premier d’exprimer.
A Christmas helping of videos
The Christmas gift to you is that videos are up. The Christmas gift to me is that the post is bare-bones. The videos are from October 27 to November 21.
Joseph:
The end of the ABC song. The full song. Writing and identifying 332 and 55. Zahlemonschter (number monster – count up one and say RAWR). On camera (after Vivienne’s domino-playing video). 5+1=6. Two zeroes. “Zwei.” Joseph and the versatile number. 100 and an addition. Baa baa, black sheep. The ABC song again.
Vivienne:
Playing with dominoes. “Reading.” Creeping and flopping. Playing peekaboo. Tick tock tick tock. Speed creep. Blackboard work.
Both:
Hi’bommus Part 1 and Part 2.
More videos
Videos from October 5 to October 27.
Vivienne went through a phase where she wrinkled her nose in a cute way. The wrinkling was ephemeral and unpredictable, which is why we only have imperfect videos.
More an more, the two play together. Here we have them playing dominoes, with Joseph kissing Vivienne as a bonus. Sometimes it’s more of a side by side: Vivienne on the sofa, and Joseph in the baby-free nook, or both on the bed at family time. Dominoes are popular because Joseph can do addition and Vivienne can chuck them around, I think.
Here’s an example of fairly typical dinnertime behavior for Joseph. Only the “boom-shakalaka” is unusual.
And of course, we have a variety of number-related videos. Joseph counts by tens to 1000, writes fours on the chalkboard, writing several numbers from 4 to 11, does addition problems with dominoes, . And when he’s not playing with numbers, the States puzzle will do, too, or a good book.
He’s also started quoting the Book of Common Prayer: here are two examples from the early evening reading, the opening (O gracious light…) and the quote from Paul’s letter to the Corinthians (“It is not ourselves that we proclaim…”). But sometimes he refuses to perform for the camera.
Of Vivienne, we have a laughing video, one of her playing with books, and playing with a board book.
Books and CDs set to disappear!
The books and CDs on the Book and CD giveaway page are set to be dropped off at a second-hand bookstore this Saturday, unless someone intervenes or we end up in a time crunch on the day.
More videos
I keep thinking one of these days we’ll actually catch up, but I guess we just take a lot of videos and keeping up with our two-month delay is all we can manage. These videos are from September 24 to October 1, 2012.
We’ll continue where we last left off: Vivienne rocks. Joseph can bang building blocks rhythmically and she’ll rock. Or he can play with them and she’ll join him.
The following videos are from our stay in Ticino, a long weekend in Vernate with Grossvater and Grossmutti. Vivienne decided she’d try climbing stairs on the steep flight of marble stairs leading to the first floor. Joseph spent a good amount of time counting with Grossvater, but refused to count without Grossvater. Here he is counting again. And again. But Joseph didn’t only count: he also used Grossmutti’s exercise mat for somersaults. And while Vivienne watched herself on the camera display – ok, bad example. The last three clips show Vivienne playing ball with Grossmutti and eating paper, and proving that she doesn’t eat paper the way Bill Clinton smoked marihuana.
More Photos
On Eternity Sunday, more photos of the ephemeral youth and constant change of which we are the blessed witnesses. If you don’t know the login, just contact me.
Videos in time for Thanksgiving
With us the only ones missing from the family Thanksgiving gathering, the best we can do is post a few videos of the kids. They’re from September 12 to September 23.
Joseph’s at work completing the US States puzzle (10′ long video), arranging his building blocks, reading the Greek alphabet, exploring his math magic board, playing with his math magic board, counting in French, singing Grandma’s song, quoting from the Book of Common Prayer, reading the BCP with Bappe, quoting it quoting Paul, and quoting the Collect of the early evening reading.
Bappe sings to Vivienne at bedtime. Vivienne is much more excited about the stairwell. She gets excited about a number of things and often shows it physically. Here, she’s rocking to the music from the play cell phone (thank you, Dot!), rocking to the number bug, rocking to the musical instruments bits, rocking to the keyboard – twice – if it has a beat, she’ll rock.
They have begun sometimes playing together. Here they are both spinning on the office chair, jumping, running and creeping in the bedroom.
