Digitally reminiscing with Google Maps and Streetview

Posted By on February 21, 2010

lagoondrivegoogleviewAfter reading an article by Kathleen Hughes in this weekend’s WSJ, I just couldn’t help myself in reminiscing about where I grew up … they were wonderful memories for me – I couldn’t have asked for a better childhood.

Nevertheless, noting the comment about digitally visiting home, I “re-experienced” memories from my childhood taking the Internet journey with Google Maps and Streetview – well the home I remember most, since I moved while in high school. Sadly, the “Streetview” drive was disappointing. The old oil-sprayed gravel road is ‘now paved’ and looks very little like I remember. Several cottages and homes have been torn down as well as the old garage and several trees. I can certainly relate to the “mixed emotions” paragraph of the article, but feel tremendously fortunate to have grown up an lived on the lake in the 1960s and 70s – thanks mom and dad.

Finding Our Way Home

Technology is helping more of us return to the places where we grew up. But when you arrive, will it measure up to your memories?

By KATHLEEN A. HUGHES

‘You can’t go home again,” Thomas Wolfe concluded in his novel of the same name.

But what if you insist on trying?

Visiting a childhood home is something that almost everybody thinks about, and many people eventually do. In fact, in more than a hundred interviews, I found that all but one of the people I talked with had gone back to visit their childhood home. At the very least, many people drive by; some stand outside and stare. Still others write letters to the current owners or are brave enough to knock on the door, requesting a few moments inside.

“It’s a way to re-experience all the feelings of childhood just by being in that space,” says Esther Sternberg, a rheumatologist and author of a new book, “Healing Spaces: The Science of Place and Well-Being.” “There’s a kind of memory that focuses on place.”

Today, the Internet may be inspiring more people to return. Google Maps allows people to see a street view of their old home. Bloggers are posting photos of childhood homes and lengthy stories on sites such as Apartment Therapy (apartmenttherapy.com). And on YouTube, some people are posting videos chronicling the search for their childhood home. One takes the viewer through a forest in Germany, and another travels along a desolate road in Pittsburgh.

While most people say they want to return simply out of curiosity, psychologists say the visits reflect a subconscious desire to bring childhood into perspective as an adult. For baby boomers stressed by aging parents and teenagers, the visits may offer a quick route back to memories of a better time—an era when parents were healthy, families were still intact, children felt loved and the world at least seemed safer than it does now.

Mixed Emotions

Yet when adults finally arrive at their childhood homes, pleasant memories are often mixed with surprising disappointments.

Most homes don’t measure up to the memory. For one thing, childhood homes are usually owned by strangers who have remodeled. But the memory of the original childhood home, just the way it was, never seems to lose ground in the psyche. Discovering that the house has been altered—or worse, torn down—can trigger much greater feelings of loss.

About five years after her mother died, Dr. Sternberg, who lives in Washington, D.C., went back to see her mother’s home in Montreal. She had wanted to go back for a long time and finally had the courage to drive up and ask the owner for a tour. The house had been remodeled, but the front rooms were almost identical to the way they had looked in her childhood. That gave her “a good feeling,” she says, “a warm, happy feeling.”

Visceral Reaction

But as she walked to the back of the house, she discovered the owners had ripped out the old kitchen. That was where she had made Russian pastries with her mother, using sour cherries she picked in the backyard. The space was now a mudroom for the dog. Dr. Sternberg says she had a very powerful reaction to the missing kitchen. “It was a visceral feeling of revulsion,” she says. “It was something I couldn’t control.”

When John Beebe, a Jungian analyst in San Francisco, was invited to speak at a conference in China, he decided he would try to find the house he had lived in there as a child. His father had been a military attaché in the 1940s, and Dr. Beebe remembers living in a “rather grand” house before the family was evacuated and before his parents divorced.

But when he finally found the spot, the house was gone. It had been replaced, in his words, by “drab communist housing.” That visit—and watching “Empire of the Sun,” a World War II movie about a boy separated from, and then reunited with, his parents—triggered overwhelming feelings of grief, Dr. Beebe recalls. “Twenty-seven years of Jungian analysis, and I didn’t mourn my childhood until then,” he says.

There can be an upside to such disappointments. “A lot of people haven’t fully left home,” Dr. Beebe says. “Some people need to go back [in order] to move on.”

Others, while claiming to be “just curious” about seeing their childhood home, may have a deeper motive, he suggests: a desire to reconnect to the way they felt as a child before life—school, careers and families—required so many compromises. “In adapting to the world, we all lose some of our soul,” Dr. Beebe says. “When we make the journey back, we find some of our soul again.”

Oh, That Color

The memories of a happy childhood can prompt some people to try to buy back the past. Or at least re-create it. Walt Disney, for instance, in designing his first theme park, made no secret of his desire to replicate the look and feel of his boyhood home. Thus, Marceline, Mo., became the model for Disneyland’s (and, later, Walt Disney World’s) Main Street.

Memories of Home

But again, such efforts don’t always have predictable endings.

Allen Hammer, a management consultant, was driving through Pennsylvania on a business trip when he suddenly decided he wanted to find the family farm his grandparents had sold several years earlier—and make an offer for the property on the spot. He and his siblings had spent most of their summers there as children, and they used to run around the fields, sneak up on deer, throw stones at groundhogs and steal eggs from the chicken coop.

“It was a total paradise,” says Mr. Hammer. His grandparents had been forced to sell the 100-acre farm for financial reasons, and he didn’t even know how to find it. So he called his father from the car on his cellphone, and his father guided him through the unnamed dirt roads until he lost the connection.

He finally found the property. “I just sat there, looking at it, thinking, ‘This is nothing at all like I remember it,’ ” recalls Mr. Hammer. “It was like a slap in the face.” The dark brown wood of the home had been painted a bright blue-green. The barn looked so small that he wondered how three kids had ever been able to get lost hiding in it.

“I was so deflated, I didn’t even want to see inside,” says Mr. Hammer. He drove away and dropped the idea of buying it back. Instead, he and his siblings are looking for land in Virginia with the idea of building three houses together for retirement.

“We want to recapture that experience in our old age. We’ll be kids again,” he says with a laugh.

A Thrill for Everyone

Of course, driving up to a former home, as Mr. Hammer did, is one thing; knocking on the front door is another—a line many people hesitate to cross.

Jody Akeson, a therapist in Rockville Centre, N.Y., says she drives past the house she lived in 40 years ago every time she visits her mother in Newton, Mass. She always has the same thought: “It’s beautiful. Why did I ever leave?”

But she never even considers knocking on the door. “It’s a boundary issue,” she says. “It’s not my house anymore.”

Homeowners, not surprisingly, find it unsettling to see someone staring at their house from the sidewalk. One day last spring, Betsy Styron, president of a Gainesville, Fla., nonprofit, noticed a man in a baseball cap outside her home taking pictures with a cellphone. He walked a little farther down the street and circled back. Concerned, she called her husband, who went outside and said, “Hi, I’m Bob. Can I help you?”

“I think I lived in this house for a year when I was little, but it has changed a lot,” the man replied. The couple invited him in, and he introduced himself as Benmont Tench.

Ms. Styron, a huge fan of Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers, recognized him as the band’s keyboard player. “Would you mind showing me the room where I first learned to play the piano?” Mr. Tench asked. Ms. Styron was thrilled.

Mr. Tench, who now lives in Los Angeles, explains that he was “too shy to knock on the door.” Whenever he visited his parents’ home in Gainesville, he searched for the house because he had such vivid memories of falling in love with the piano there. The visit, he says, “was a wonderful, great big wow.”

Last summer, a neighbor of mine in Rolling Hills, Calif., called and asked if a friend, whose family had built our house in the 1950s, could come over. I agreed, and Janet McCaman, a medical sales representative, soon arrived with her mother. The two women politely complimented me on our remodeling. Standing in our backyard, Ms. McCaman related a long string of memories: Her father, an airline pilot, built a small racing plane in our garage. She used to watch her mother put on makeup at the vanity table we had ripped out.

After an hour, she thanked me and headed for the door, but her eyes filled with tears. When I called a few weeks later, she explained her feeling of loss.

“Other families have moved, but a lot of them have passed their homes down to their kids,” she said. “It was so emotional to go back there. It just leaves me wondering, how would my life have been different if we hadn’t moved?”

Ms. Hughes is a writer in Rolling Hills, Calif. She can be reached at encore@wsj.com.

Snow beautified picturesque Glendale Cemetery in Akron Ohio

Posted By on February 20, 2010

gendalecemetery1

While traveling to NE Ohio this week, and waiting to meet with my daughter for lunch in Akron Ohio, I drove through the gates of snow crusted Glendale Cemetery founded gendaletower1as Akron Rural Cemetery in 1839.  While steering through the snow-covered drives in serene park-like setting, I took the opportunity to capture the snow surrounding a couple of historic building with my Palm Pre.

If you enjoy historic cemeteries, this one offers both an honorable burial place for Civil War veterans and stately mausoleums for turn of the century industrialists and notables from the Akron Ohio area. Two of the many building that caught my attention were the 1876 Civil War Memorial Chapel (above) and the 1883 Bell Tower (left), but there is much more.

Glendale Cemetery
150 Glendale Ave.
Akron, Ohio
Phone: 330-253-2317
Added to Register of Historic Places 9-27-1980

A Profile of Glendale Cemetery in Akron Ohio

By Cindy Orley

Glendale Cemetery is Akron’s oldest cemetery, dating back to 1839. It is entered as a historic landscape by the National Register of Historic Places. Takronglendalecemeterymaphe picturesque landscape, monuments and burial sites tell the diverse history of “The Rubber City.”

History:

Historic Glendale Cemetery was charted in 1839. It was registered in the National Register of Historic Places in 2002 for the Historic Landscape and bear the tag line of “The Guardian of Akron’s Heritage Since 1839.” Within the cemetery, the story of Akron unfolds. Past citizens of Akron’s are all buried here from the prominent figures to all social, ethnic, and economic groups. Located right outside of Downtown Akron, the cemetery was originally located in a rural setting. However, the city has grown around it. The preservation of the cemetery is a continuing effort.

The Cemetery Grounds:

Glendale’s 150 acres are hilly with mature trees shading the landscapes and curving roads winding throughout. The "great meadow" is a grassy open space that once held Swan Lake. During summer months, people are often found picnicking in this area. There are also many statues scattered throughout, including angels, grieving poses, life-size statues of the deceased, and symbolic forms such as a draped urn and little lamb. There are memorials, headstones and mausoleums from the past and the present. Four thousand sites are still available today, including locations near Simon Perkins, son of Akron’s founder.

Buildings and Structures:

Glendale’s Civil War Memorial Chapel is one of the country’s most prominent Civil War memorials, and was built to honor the Akron natives who served in that war. This 18,000 square foot historic Gothic chapel has exterior walls of broken ashlar stone and a porch supported by six columns of polished granite. The European rolled cathedral glass windows were imported from Scotland. Tours and rental of this recently renovated chapel are available by calling 330-668-2205.The Bell Tower was built in 1883 of rusticated stone and exposed timber and holds a 700 pound bell. A must-see are the numerous mausoleums located throughout the cemetery, and which are designed to look like Egyptian, Greek and Roman temples, or Gothic churches.

Glendale Cemetery Residents:

A tour of the Glendale Cemetery is filled with stories of the notables, veterans, and politicians buried there. Many important residents of Akron are buried here, including the founder of Goodyear Rubber, Frank A. Seiberling, and the inventor of Quaker Rolled Oats. At least one person from the Spanish American War, World War I, World War II, and the Korean and Vietnam conflicts are represented and buried at Glendale Cemetery. Politicians buried here include Elsworth Raymond Bathrick, George Washington Crouse, Charles William Fredrick Dick, and William Hanford Upson.

Public Use :

People can be found driving, jogging, painting, bird watching, picnicking, and walking the historic grounds of the cemetery daily. Glendale Cemetery also hosts public events throughout the year. Each summer, the West Hill Neighborhood holds a Jazz festival in the great meadow. On Memorial Day, the local VFW and American Legion host a service with 21-gun salute and raising of the flag at the chapel.

Hours:

Glendale Cemetery is open daily from 8:30am to 4:30pm, weather permitting. Office hours are Monday through Friday from 8am to 4pm.

About.com: Cleveland

CinciTDI Volkswagen diesel GTG tomorrow in Cincinnati

Posted By on February 19, 2010

Slipped my mind, but wanted to make a note on my blog to be sure all Cincinnati area VW TDI people knew about the CinciTDI.com / TDIClub.com GTG tomorrow — 8am February 20th.

Feb 20th GTG @Dubwerx


Its official, Dubwerx is hosting our GTG on Feb 20th, at 8:00 to whenever we get kicked out.Dubwerks is being extremely gracious allowing us to use their space and associated tools and equipment (and heat!).

Start at 8am, CinciTDI will provide lunch (pizza) around noonish and coolers with water. Bring any additional non alcoholic drinks you want and we will keep them cold.

Small jobs are welcome, especially topside work, we want to get as many people in and done as possible. All work is done with your hands and guru assistance as necessary. This is not drop off your car for service day

Bigger jobs will need both Dubwerx approval and guru approval if you require assistance.

If you require parts you must bring them or work can not be performed.

Posted via email from richc’s posterous

Adding some “light” reading to my weekend: Windows 7 Secrets

Posted By on February 19, 2010

Windows 7 SecretsI’ve added  a little light reading to my weekend plans from Paul Thurrot and Rafael Rivera’s book, Windows 7 Secrets … it’s only 1080 pages. I’m hoping the book will help enhance an already satisfied Windows 7 user by teaching me a few tricks in using Microsoft’s newest OS. As regular readers know, I’ve been using the beta and release candidate of Win7 for over a year now and have found Windows 7 a ten fold improvement over Vista  … and yes it is better then Win 2000 and XP … although I doubt diehards will make the upgrade without grumbling.

As comparisons go, it now rivals the Apple Macintosh for ease of use and is ‘almost’ as reliable from the standpoint of crashes and freezes — of course this depends on the computer hardware and what other programs have been installed. I still prefer the Mac for most video and graphics work, but for software and corporate compatibility having Window 7 on my notebook is a great option. If you have a newer computer with Vista the upgrade is worth it … Windows 7 Secretsif you have XP on a slightly older computer, its a more difficult call, as you might just want to wait and purchase it pre-installed on your next computer.

According to the Amazon Windows 7 Secrets book description,Thurrott and Rivera’s book “tells you what you need to know to go from Windows user to Windows expert and doesn’t waste time with basic computer topics.” If Paul Thurrot’s weekly TWIT podcast and winsupersite are to be the judge, I’m looking forward to Thurrot’s advice in helping me to gain in proficiently with Windows 7. Generally I modify the system to my liking anyway and it will be good to know a few of the hidden functions and features. Maybe I’ll add a few of my own tips here in the coming weeks?

Cleaning out my closet, although I should do it again

Posted By on February 19, 2010

In a belated personal post, after reviewing a few photos from earlier in the week on my Palm Pre, I’m archiving a post of what was part of my Valentine’s Day gift to my wife. She has been threatening reminding me for the better part of a year to clean out my half of the closet — “either throw away or donate those old clothes.” My motto has been so long as there is room I’ll keep it – a bad motto.

closetcleaning clothestodonate

With cabin fever taking hold due recent snows, I begrudgingly decided that I should start the project on V-Day and finally went to work. Reality set in, and something told me to give up on ever fitting into waist size 33” and 34” jeans. I don’t need yellowed and ragged tee-shirts no matter what was printed on them and realized the couple dozen old shirts I haven’t worn in years (nor ever will) are better given to someone who might wear them. It is embarrassing to admit, but I found a few shirts dating back to college and several from our first decade of marriage – what was I thinking? It’s not as if I haven’t gone through them before, but the pack-rat in me has never been able to give them up until now. So finally the mood was right to just close my eyes and get rid of them before I start to contemplate their antique historical value!  
  😀

Bad timing: Lakota Schools are asking too much from voters

Posted By on February 18, 2010

It looks like the Lakota Board of Education has decided to place a new levy on May 4th’s primary ballot in our area – LINK – not a well timed request, in my opinion.

I’ve been mostly supportive and relatively pleased with the education my kids have received in our local public schools, but from my perspective it has come at a cost, since my property taxes are steep. My desire for ‘lower-taxes’ aside, the timing of a new school levy and property tax increases, with automatic increase again in 2012 and hints of yet another “anticipated” additional request in 2014 is absurd (article snippet below).

Incremental levies — “spread the load,” board members said Wednesday — using one vote by taxpayers to support two millage rates. In this case, if approved, the incremental levy would continue at the 6.9-mill level until 2012, then automatically increase by 4.9 mills from 2012 to 2014.

If approved, the levy would cost an additional $211 per year per $100,000 in home value from 2010 to 2012, then $361 — a $150 increase — per year per $100,000 in home value from 2012 to 2014. District finance officials said Monday they anticipate heading back to voters for another operating levy in 2014 or 2015.

The Pulse~Journal

With an economy sputtering and creating paycheck reductions for many residents along with some facing unemployment and mounting bills, it is not a good time for schools to be asking for more money. Don’t get me wrong, I don’t discount that our schools have announced cuts in spending and they have already eliminated positions, programs, some bus services and assistant this-and-that positions, but there comes a time when school employees across the board need to talk pay and benefit cuts just as in the private sector when business is in recession. Come back when we see the efficiencies of using our expensive facilities year around and school employees working without the excessive vacation, holiday and sick time … if and when that happens, then come to us with a school levy.

Stretching the focal length of the Palm Pre camera

Posted By on February 17, 2010

Palm Pixi and PrePalm Pre and Pixi webOS users have been patiently waiting for the soon to be released 1.4 software  OS update for their smartphones (it was expected Monday).  While waiting, I spent a few minutes fidgeting with the camera on my cellphone, wondering if there will be any tweaks beyond video. Rumor has it that we’ll be getting the camcorder (big deal, the old Palm OS already had it) and the ability to stream Flash video, a bigger deal.

Anyway, last year I tinkered with trying different techniques for macro photography, mostly using a pair of reading glasses, and have been wondering if its worth making a set of stick on contact lenses for my cellphone — I’m only half joking. Yesterday,  I took a couple telephoto style photos out the back window … one without and one using a 7 x 50 binoculars.

Without Binoculars With Binoculars
Click images for larger views

Breaking February snowfall records in SW Ohio

Posted By on February 16, 2010

clintoncountyoh Now that the worst of the couple of days of winter snow are over, I noticed that Clinton County (a county to the east) has just now declared a LEVEL 3 Snow Emergency (the one that closes roadways to non-emergency personnel – see below). I had thought that road crews were getting on top of the snow removal and that roads were pretty much just slushy and wet?

Interestingly we are only half way through the month and have broken the longstanding 1914 record for February snowfall. As of 6PM Monday night, any additional snow sets a new February record. Hmm … I thought “Global Warming” means more rain and less snow???

LEVEL 1:  Roadways are hazardous with blowing and drifting snow. Roads may also be icy. Drive carefully. Motorists must move cars from snow emergency routes.
LEVEL 2: Roadways are hazardous with blowing and drifting snow. Only those who feel it is necessary to drive should be out on the roads. Contact your employer to see if you should report to work.
LEVEL 3: All roadways are closed to non-emergency personnel. No one else should be out during these conditions unless it is absolutely necessary to travel or a personal emergency exists. All employees should contact their employer to see if they should report to work. Those traveling on the roads may subject themselves to arrest.

Video: A little “Bossy-Pants, Google” humor

Posted By on February 16, 2010

Google

“Google, are you playing nice … or do you need a little parenting?”
(WSJ Digits)
.

Windows 7 Release Candidate soon to expire

Posted By on February 16, 2010

windows7logo There are still a few of us running Windows 7 RC and putting off the inevitable reinstall headache. I suppose I’ve been hoping that there might be some kind of extension or that I might end up with a new computer? Alas, the time is drawing near to install either Windows 7 Home Premium or Professional (pre-purchased) before the release candidate starts shutting down. 

According to Microsoft …

Starting on March 1, 2010 your PC will begin shutting down every two hours. Your work will not be saved during the shutdown. The Windows 7 RC will fully expire on June 1, 2010. Your PC running the Windows 7 RC will continue shutting down every two hours and your files won’t be saved during shutdown. In addition, your wallpaper will change to a solid black background with a persistent message on your desktop. You’ll also get periodic notifications that Windows isn’t genuine. That means your PC may no longer be able to obtain optional updates or downloads requiring genuine Windows validation.

To avoid interruption, please reinstall a prior version of Windows or move to Windows 7. In either case, you’ll need to do a custom (clean) install to replace the RC. As with any clean installation, you’ll need to back up your data then reinstall your applications and restore the data. For more details about replacing the RC, see the Knowledge Base article KB 971767. For more information, visit the Window 7 Forum.
Thanks again for helping us test Windows 7.
The Windows 7 Team

Desultory - des-uhl-tawr-ee, -tohr-ee

  1. lacking in consistency, constancy, or visible order, disconnected; fitful: desultory conversation.
  2. digressing from or unconnected with the main subject; random: a desultory remark.
My Desultory Blog