by Marlena Fiol | Dec 5, 2017
Thanksgiving Day. While many of you sat around a table with family members on November 23rd, Ed and I tried something different. It was 92 degrees in Tucson that day. We sat at one of about a dozen tables temporarily set up in the interior courtyard of a large apartment…
by Marlena Fiol | Nov 21, 2017
Yesterday my 10-year-old grandson interviewed me for a school project. He had a list of questions about my ancestors, my childhood. His heritage. Where did your ancestors come from? Were there any naming traditions? Where did you grow up? I responded and he took notes on his iPad. So serious…
by Marlena Fiol | Nov 7, 2017
Our tai chi master, Dr. Paul Lam, said something to us a few weeks ago at the end of a workshop we attended that has stuck with me: “Endings are simply the moment of new beginnings.” I’ve always hated goodbyes. All the way back when I was a little kid…
by Marlena Fiol | Oct 24, 2017
I sat thinking about what I should write in this week’s blog when Ed approached me with an idea. “Why don’t you write about some common myths that have turned out to not be true in our lives,” he said. “What myths are you referring to?” I asked. “If you…
by Marlena Fiol | Oct 10, 2017
I recently wrote an essay titled An Unreasonable Couple that describes my brave parents, Clara and John Schmidt. They left their small Mennonite community in rural Kansas in the early 1940s and traveled to Paraguay to provide medical services in an area largely considered inhabitable. Why? They were devout Christians,…