My Opa |
My favorites:
- Whenever someone in my family talked about traveling, he would ALWAYS say, "why would you want to go there? The houses there stand next to each other just like they do here!" I guess in a way he was correct. People are people wherever you go, and even though things may look a little bit different, you'd be surprised at how much things can be the same. I took this to mean that I should also take the time to enjoy my home, wherever that was at the time, and now I take the time to really find the hidden gems in my local area instead of always longing to go somewhere else.
- Always make sure your gas tank is half full. You'll never, ever run out of gas.....how true! I don't think I've ever run out of gas in my life.
- Don't drink cold stuff. My opa used to heat up a pot of water and dunk his beer bottle into a warm water bath before drinking it. He never drank anything cold in his life! He always thought that all the stomach cancers and abundance of stomach problems of Americans were caused by cold drinks and ice, taking off the mucous layers in your digestive system, damaging it he used to say. I have personally found no medical evidence of this....but you know, it does make sense. I'll let you draw your own conclusion on this. I guess this may explain why Europeans are not so fond of ice cubes and really cold drinks and have less instances of stomach issues and cancers? Maybe?
- Drafts coming in windows can make you sick, and if you have wet hair, you'll get really sick. I still remember driving around Germany in the summertime....with ALL the windows closed! This was before cars had air conditioning in Germany! I can't believe I survived that without dying of heat stroke....either I was much hardier back then or Germany was not so hot in the summer before global warming turned European weather upside-down.
- Even though opa made the comment about traveling, it didn't stop him from being one of the first Germans to board a commercial flight to Italy, and just in time for his honeymoon in the era before WWII. He was also the first man in his village to have a car after the war. How did he do that when everyone else was broke? He was always a master of wheeling and dealing. He taught me (and mostly my mother) to always look two steps ahead in any business deal. For example, he saw that after the war, everyone wanted...err...needed chocolate. He saw the Jewish businessmen who were left in his part of Germany (with help from the Allies), had the supplies, so he struck a deal with them as a whole. He knew they wanted tea, so he figured out how to collect and package it....sold it to them (because no one else was, and darn they wanted that tea)...bought the chocolate from them...and sold the chocolate at prices-to-make-a-profit to the average German. The profits were so tidy over the long-run, that he was able to buy the first car in his little village after the war, and a Mercedes at that (he only mentioned later that the thing didn't have a floor...kind of like the Flinstones I'm thinking). He got his business going again while everyone else was out of work and still scratching their heads! His "two steps ahead" thinking also saved him from being killed on the Eastern Front....almost his entire unit was decimated, and he survived. Obviously I'm not anywhere near that good in trying to always look ahead, but I like to think I at least TRY to do this myself in day-to-day life and make him a little bit proud!
I miss you Opa and happy birthday! I know you and Oma are looking down and watching over us this holiday season, and thank-you for all the wonderful opa-isms which I am now teaching my children!
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