Lightening Our Footprints – New Cars

This week, we sold our 15-year-old Toyota Camry 4-door Sedan and our 10-year-old Ford Expedition 8-passenger SUV, and we bought two new cars: a Smartcar Passion Coupe Cabriolet (2-seater convertable), and a Mercedes GL350 BlueTEC SUV (which seats 7). We traded in the Toyota on the Smartcar and sold the Ford on Craigslist. After so long nursing along old (very old) cars, it was a wild week.

We spent last weekend visiting car dealerships, mostly along Stevens Creek in Santa Clara, California.  It was surprising how few offered cars that would fit my tall husband in comfort.  We told salesmen that we wanted to test sit the cars before we test drove them.  We visited Mercedes, Toyota, Cadillac, Ford, Lexus, Chevrolet, Smart, and Porsche.  After sitting in 20 cars, we found that only four really fit John: the Mercedes GL (SUV), the Toyota Sienna (minivan), the Ford Flex (SUV), and the Chevrolet Traverse (SUV).

Besides wanting cars that were not falling apart bit by bit (I think the Camry’s door handle breaking off in my hand told me that the time had come…), we wanted cars that were not so wasteful. The Smartcar has an EPA estimated fuel consumption of 33 city/41 highway (compared to the Camry at about 20 mpg). It is for me to run errands and commute to work when my husband John and I are not driving together. For such a tiny car, the Passion has a surprising amount of headroom for John.

The ultra-low-emissions diesel Mercedes has an EPA estimated fuel consumption of 17 city/23 highway miles per gallon (compared to the Expedition with 13 mpg at best). This will be our family car, used in hauling yard and building supplies for house and caboose work, taking our big dogs to the vet, driving groups of children on field trips, and taking the family on our annual camping trip into the mountains. Our hope is that the Mercedes will last us much much longer than the Ford, so we will save the energy of creating materials for a new vehicle every ten years.

Many years ago, when our friend Max was a very little boy, he stared at our Ford Expedition and christened it the “Too Big”.  We now have both a “Too Big” and a “Too Small”.

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Images Copyright 2010 by Katy Dickinson and John Plocher

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Comparing College Costs

Yesterday, I paid $193 for my son Paul’s first Freshman quarter at Foothill College (Los Altos, California). Foothill is a community college where Paul will be taking a light load for his first term and living at home. Today, my daughter Jessica in her organized way sent us a detailed breakdown of the costs for the first semester of her senior year at Carnegie Mellon University (Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania). Tuition at CMU is $20,590 and other expenses (food, housing, books, travel) come to $4,525 for a half-year total of $25,115. I think that works out to CMU costing about 100 times what Foothill College does.  CMU is a great school and Jessica has done very well there (she is on the Dean’s List again, with High Honors!).  It is worth the cost.

Here are the kids having fun together during Spring Break in Egypt:

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Images Copyright 2010 by Katy Dickinson

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4 Bishops in Gloucester

Last Sunday at Saint Andrew’s Episcopal Church (Saratoga, California), we heard a presentation by the Reverend Channing Smith’s about his recent trip to Gloucester, England, to participate in a meeting of four Bishops. Channing is the lead priest, or Rector, for St. Andrew’s.

Three of the Bishops, the Right Rev. Gerard Mpango (Bishop of Western Tanganyika), the Right Rev. Mary Gray-Reeves (Bishop of El Camino Real, our own bishop), and the Right Rev. Michael Perham (Bishop of Gloucester) have been a triad since they meet at Lambeth in 2008. They have all met in England, Tanzania, and the USA several times since then. (You can see pictures of their visit to San Jose California on my blog.) Joining the triad’s meeting because he was visiting the area was his Lordship Rev. Thomas Dibo Elango (“Bishop Dibo”), the first-ever Bishop of Cameroon.

In a long joint letter released today addressed to The Most Rev. Rowan Williams, The Archbishop of Canterbury at Lambeth Palace in London, the triad Bishops wrote about celebration and diversity, culture and risk, and keeping it small and personal. Here is the letter’s section on “Culture and Risk”:

Our partnership has always been associated with risk: risk of misunderstanding from those from our own cultures as much as those from another culture. We have sought to recognize how much of our theology is bound up with our culture. This is, of course, especially true of the debates surrounding gender and sexuality, where notions of what is acceptable, normative or even a justice issue vary widely between us. However, it is also true of our other debates – as we have explored orders of ministry and the doctrine of salvation, we continue to debate how our theology relates to our cultural context, as we have lived out building the Kingdom and the Church in ways which witness to the work of the Spirit in languages whose differences go so much further than just words. All of us believe that all cultures should be subject to judgment from the scriptures, but we come to differing conclusions about what that looks like in practice. We have risked our security in the adventure of faith, allowing the possibility that God will lead us into unfamiliar and alien ways of witnessing to his saving love. We have built a new community culture each time we have met, under the direction of one host diocese or another, around the common discipline of scripture, worship, prayer and honest discussion.

The three Bishops also wrote about the unfortunate controversy that arose last month in London over Episcopal Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori being asked not to wear a symbol of her office:

As we were meeting, the statements regarding the visit of the Presiding Bishop of [The Episcopal Church] to England placed some strain on our friendship and communication, providing an unfortunate background to our meeting. When there is adverse or controversial publicity nationally or internationally, it does undermine the best efforts of those working more locally. We ourselves see our partnership relationship as a gift from God, and seek to celebrate the Anglican Communion in the same terms.

Knowing all of this, it was particularly interesting to see Channing’s photos and hear first hand how the Gloucester meeting of the four Bishops went. Channing spoke about the thousand-year-old Gloucester Cathedral and the wonderful connection he felt to the tradition and history of our church. He said that each culture has a different starting point to enter theology; that is, theology is tied to our culture. The Anglican Communion is looking at why this particular partnership of Bishops is so strong. Channing said he saw the incredible affection the Bishops have for each other, their acceptance of differences, and their deep regard for the other person’s faith. It was an inspiring and encouraging presentation. We are so proud of Bishop Mary! With permission, here are some of Channing’s photographs from Gloucestershire:

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Images Copyright 2010 by Rev. Channing Smith and Katy Dickinson

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My son is going to college!

OK, you would think that all of the graduation-from-high-school stuff last month would have tipped me off but I was still very excited today when my soon-to-be 18-year-old son Paul finally registered for his Fall classes at Foothill College today! Foothill is a 53-year-old community college set on 122 wooded acres in Los Altos Hills, California (south of San Francisco). Their web-based registration system is still messed up so Paul finally gave up and went to the school to register in person but it is done at last. He will take Intermediate Algebra (lecture and lab), Ceramics, and a study skills class. He met with a college counselor at the Disability Resource Center who recommended this light load his first quarter so he could get used to being in college.

I am so proud! When your kid has disabilities, you take every little progress as a triumph!

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Images Copyright Katy Dickinson 2010

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Not Very Yes

My husband John just accepted an offer of work from Huaweihooray! I am very happy for him to get a good job as a Software Engineer after so long.  John and I are in different groups but are at the same company together for the third time. Huawei is a leading telecom solutions provider based in Shenzhen, China (near Hong Kong). John and I are working in their Santa Clara, California, center.

I have been working as Huawei’s Chief Analyst, Software Development Trends, for the past month. It is an interesting place. In the thirty years I have worked in research and development, I am used to being in the minority because I am a woman. At Huawei, I am also one of a small group whose primary language is English, and I am even more unusual in being a born American.

Despite our cultural and language differences, my new co-workers have been helpful and welcoming. The lady in the office next door has shared her honeysuckle tea and her cookies. I brought in some of the roses and nandina from my garden for her and others who have helped me. I am learning how to work with both the Chinese nationals and my fellow “foreign experts”.

As in many cultures, saying a direct “no” seems to be impolite in China. I have started listening for the ways in which my co-workers give an indirect negative response, such as:

“Not very Yes”
“Not exactly”
“Not so much…”
“I have a suggestion…”
“Not very good”
“Maybe, but…”

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Image 2010 Copyright by Katy Dickinson

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Gilroy Gardens Visit

We visited Gilroy Gardens with nine inner city San Jose kids from the after school program at Santa Maria Urban Ministry yesterday. This was the second of our three summer field trips – we went to the beach with them last month. Lewis and John and I drove the kids to the theme park at Hecker Pass and had a good time going on rides, getting wet, and admiring the gardens and Axel Erlandson’s fascinating circus trees. Next month, we take the kids to Raging Waters water park.

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Images Copyright 2010 Katy Dickinson and John Plocher

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Roof Dog and Squirrels

With the help of a company called Critter Control, we just finished evicting three families of squirrels which recently set up housekeeping in our roof insulation here in San Jose, California. We set up a trap and checked it daily. The trap remained empty for several weeks: the squirrels moved out on their own. We stuffed the holes they dug under our ceramic roof tiles with steel mesh fabric (“hardware cloth”) to discourage reentry, then repaired the roof from below. Fortunately, there was very little mess and the roof damage was minimal.  We hope they stay away!

While we were sorting out our squirrels, our neighbors had a dog on their roof. They were pet sitting for a friend and while they were out, the pooch went through their upstairs screen window so that he could bark at us neighbors down in the street.  He seemed very happy about his brief break for freedom.

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Images Copyright 2010, Katy Dickinson

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