Liege looks LOVELY! This week the city seems to be in full party-mode~ maybe because it’s the last week of summer before school starts again. There are fireworks, outdoor bands and performances, street fairs, and noisy parties at our neighbors’ houses. Even the anglers are more numerous than usual, competing to get the biggest bite on the line. In the park next to us some of the trees got decorated. When I asked Sarah about it today at the annual club fair, she said, “It’s to make the town more fun!” OK. Smile for the camera now Sarah. I need to get a picture of your beautiful sweater!
Author Archives: womanofpeace
SPEAKING WHAT’S HIDDEN ~ searching for a model of growth and development
We gather, we talk, we argue, we share. We risk it all and open our hearts, and THEN the magic happens. What is it that we NEED to talk about, and why does it feel so risky so much of the time?
I am searching for a model for human relationship, growth and development, both in my personal life and in the organizations and communities that I belong to ~ my family, workplace, neighborhood, and church. In a way, it’s like searching for the buried treasure. X marks the spot.
Margaret Heffernan, in her TED Talk Dare to Disagree, said that 83% of CEOs are afraid to bring up concerns about their companies because of the conflict it might cause. http://www.ted.com/talks/margaret_heffernan_dare_to_disagree.html
This reticence to speak up or out can happen in any organization, and not just to the bosses. I am sure you are familiar with the feeling. Maybe you were like me and afraid to challenge your father until you were finally a college graduate and decided it was time to say what you really thought when he made fun of your decisions. Or maybe you had a hard time telling your employer that you couldn’t come to work one day because there were workmen in your house and you felt very uncomfortable leaving them alone there with the key. Why is it so hard to be honest?
Authority figures can sometimes be intimidating, but even authority figures themselves have trouble bringing up problems that might rock the boat.
The question, “How can we create a forum for safe and honest discussion?” is really important to me.
Well begun is half done.
This was the topic of our conversation today with Philippe and Yoko. Speaking what’s hidden is important~ and it can be easier than you think. Making a place to share is a good place to start. You might learn something important. Realizing how sensitive your daughter is to criticism, for example, may help you change your approach to her. Knowing your students’ needs can change the focus of your lesson plan. Giving your employees the freedom to ask for what they need can motivate them to contribute more.
The leader who asks for input from her constituents is a collaborative leader. Collaborative leadership is an exciting new paradigm for me. I first encountered the term while reading about Wisconsin 2020 Health initiative. I was out on the veranda, and felt like I had just discovered the key to the universe! ( http://www.dhs.wisconsin.gov/hw2020/pdf/collaborativeleadership.pdf)~ A way leading to greater growth and more sustainable development.
But it takes time to find out what people are really thinking and feeling. There are reasons why they are not participating more, or coming at all, but they aren’t just going to tell you unless you make it safe for them to do so. Maybe there’s a simpler solution than we realize. If there is one, I’m on a mission to find it!
RIGHT AROUND THE CORNER ~ or What I Like About Our Neighborhood
I read recently that many people are moving back towards the cities, not away from them like we once did. The main reason? Convenience. It’s so nice to be able to walk out the front door and down the street 3 minutes and be at the grocery store, or the hairdresser, or the post office, or the bakery, or the ice-cream shop, or the dentist, or the optician, or the thrift store, or THE MALL. Heavens, who wouldn’t want that?
On the other hand, people want the best of both worlds. They want to have all the convenience of living in the city, but the beauty of GREEN, and NATURE ~ trees, gardens, grassy lawns, mountains, rivers, streams, ponds, birds, and QUIET. Ahhhh….who wouldn’t want all that?
The BEST place is one that combines the two, wouldn’t you say?
You can find such a place here in Angleur, a little hamlet on the south side of the city of Liege. I think I can safely say that this is a neighborhood that’s got everything, along with some extras: a castle with a moat, fountain, hedges and rose gardens, for example ~ nicely maintained by the city so one has nothing to do but enjoy; a sports center where the daring can do Tai Chi or play basketball (I’d probably go for the former) and listen to the sounds of children’s voices at play (recalling the unrestrained joy that life once was and still can be); a forest trail leading here and there, but definitely not into town; the sound of slow trains passing by, reminders that there are still places to go; and of course, the birds and the bees and the flowers and the trees….
Angleur ~ it’s right around the corner. Where are you?
PLUS FASHION for 60+
I am 60+ and it never ceases to amaze me how often clothes for plus-size women of my age are modeled by women 40 years younger and 40+ pounds slimmer! I’m getting ready to campaign for older, heavier, and more beautifully mature models. YES!
On a search for the fashion that suits me, I recently came up with the belted shirt look.
I found the shirt in the pajama section at PRIMARK (9 Euros). It’s a soft flannel that is perfect for this time of year in Belgium ~ it’s starting to get chilly, but you wouldn’t want to wear a sweater yet. It’s long enough to cover certain areas 🙂 and big enough to wear something underneath when cold weather arrives. The belt (Carrefour, 6 Euros) is a nice contrast, and accentuates the smallest part of my figure ~ my waist. I love the way I feel when I’m wearing this look. It’s super comfortable and totally casual, and I can forget completely about myself and still feel confident that I’m looking good.
I think a long tunic top looks best paired with slim or skinny jeans and flats. Try it and let me know if you feel as good as I do!
Here are a few other looks I found on the internet ~ all with the same idea:

A THING OF BEAUTY is a joy to behold
I’ve always been making something with my hands: finger painting when I was 3, paper mache at 6, hay bale fortress building at 9, guitar fingering and strumming at 10, needle-threading and sewing at 11, crepe paper flower-making, more paper mache, and stringing beads at 12 (remember that, Adele?), Moonlight Sonata and stretching fingers to make an octave at 13, chair and building drawing at 14, calligraphy at 16, face drawing at 18, pottery making at 20, photo developing at 21, hubcap sculpting and other “found art” gathering at 22, pick-up truck camper building at 24, house painting at 25….the list goes on, and that’s just the first 25 years. But I think you get the picture.
Needless to say, seeing beauty and responding to it in my own personal way has always been like second nature to me. I love creating things, but I never really considered myself an artist ~ until now. Just today in fact. I said it for the first time to a man in the hospital waiting room where I was also waiting. When he asked me why I was taking pictures of the Matisse print on the wall above his head, I barely paused before the words came out, clear and calm: “I’m an artist. I think it’s wonderful to see artwork here in this otherwise very drab waiting room. It’s something beautiful for patients to look at, and I’m going to write about it on my blog.”
I want to record beauty. Especially when I find it in unlikely places. I am an artist, and I not only record beauty, I create it. I can’t help it. Wherever I am, whatever I’m doing, I’m creating something, and in my eyes, it’s always beautiful.
My office at Kookmin just popped into mind. It was like a home, and when people walked in, they were always taken aback. “Wow! Your office! It’s so beautiful!” To me, it wasn’t just an office. It was a place to MEET, to BE, to THINK, to FEEL, and to REFRESH. It was a place of beauty.
A few pottery pieces from college sat artfully on the bookshelves. An earth-tone carpet with a sort of Indian design that I brought from home because we got a new one made the floor warm and pretty to walk on. Hanging from the ceiling two paper parasols from Beijing, one blue and one yellow, transformed the florescent light filtering through them and swayed ever so slightly overhead.
On the door was a welcome sign, and right inside the door the tea and coffee pots were always ready to serve, along with an assortment of teas and unusual teacups and mugs gathered from my regular forays to the Beautiful Store. In the front part of the room was a large conference table that sat 6 comfortably, good for meetings with students and friendly get-togethers with colleagues. Anna and I kept a stash of Choco Pies at the ready for such occasions, and sometimes they managed NOT to get eaten before the guests arrived.
Behind the folding screen were our two desks, and what I always referred to as the ‘inner sanctum.’ Only intimates were invited to come through the screen to sit on the pink velour loveseat or the sling chair with the throw pillow and footstool. You could let your hair down there. You could take off the teacher persona, and RELAX. You could look out the window at the Bukak Mountain forests below and dream. It’s a wonderful memory, and comes along with the happy thought that Anna is still there to enjoy it.
Which brings me to the point about leaving something beautiful behind. When I came to Belgium I left my office to Anna, our apartment to Chiara, and the Coffee Morning to the IWK members. Life changes. We move on. It happens, and when it does it often feels like dying. But then there’s the satisfaction of knowing that someone is still being moved by the beauty left behind long after the creator has gone.
This summer was spent working intensely on moving out of our old place and settling into a new one. The new apartment needed “refreshing,” yes, but it also needed to be “beautified.” Whoever lived here before didn’t seem to have cared much about that. For me, it was impossible to ignore. From the moment I saw the place I was already redoing it in my mind. Then came the manual labor of turning the vision into reality: scraping, cleaning, measuring, cutting, tiling, painting, wallpapering, laying new carpet and linoleum, rewiring, and finally furnishing. My hands were confident, but my body was getting tired.
It was a DIY project from the beginning ~ one we’ve done over and over again wherever we’ve found ourselves living. When you start beautifying one area, suddenly the spot next to it looks worse than it did before, and you have to keep going. Four months and 700 Euros later, we’re basically done and we can live here now.
Jean has his office, and I have mine. I love my new studio/office/living room. It’s the most spacious room in our house. It’s where we meet friends and neighbors, and serve them coffee and Belgian tartes or chat on the couch (the inner sanctum). It’s where I make my Tea Talks, do artwork, talk on SKYPE to YOU, upload my photos and write in my blog. It’s where I pick up my guitar and work on new songs, where I sit and think and write in my journal, and where I light my candle and get down on the floor to pray.
It’s a place of beauty, and a joy to behold.
Tea Talks #37~ CONVERSATION STRATEGIES!
When I first discovered these books I was teaching conversation skills at a university in Korea. I was blown away the very first day, and have never looked back since. Try them. You will be glad you did!
Discussion Strategies: Beyond Everyday Conversation
Conversation Strategies & Discussion Strategies
Pair and Group Activities for Developing Communicative Competence
David and Peggy Kehe, Pro Lingua Associates (PLA)
Discussion Strategies, Beyond Everyday Conversation presents a series of strategies we all know and use regularly in everyday conversation (rejoinders, follow-up and clarification questions, comprehension checks, etc.) The course approach, where each lesson builds on the one before, provides repeated opportunities for students to practice what they have learned. The teacher’s role is one of facilitator and coach, while students practice initiating on their own. The goal is communication, not accuracy, and the topics are chosen for their high-interest and relevancy to students’ lives.
Task-based structure empowers lower level students, while providing a healthy challenge for all levels (lower-intermediate to advanced) so this series works well in a mixed level classroom. Fully engaging, this is a must-try conversation strategy course that works! Liberate your students to discover that they really can speak English!
A companion book, Conversation Strategies, is for lower-level students, and is FULL of great lesson plans for teachers who are not sure how to get their students talking. You and your students will love it!




















