Oh, I see! moments
Travel Cultures Language

Raising Global Citizens

by Joyce McGreevy on November 28, 2018

Maria Surma Manka, Workation Woman, and her family of global citizens find inspiration as digital nomads Edinburgh, Scotland. (Image © Maria Surma Manka)

At home-from-home in Edinburgh, Scotland: Joram, August, Baron, and Maria.
© Maria Surma Manka

When Mom and Dad Are Digital Nomads

Not all who wander as digital nomads are twentysomething, unmarried, and mortgage-free.  Some digital nomads live in rural Minnesota with lively kids and full-time jobs.

Just ask author and public-relations strategist Maria Surma Manka. She teaches parents across the U.S. how to live and work abroad as digital nomads while enriching—not uprooting—family life. No selling the house, homeschooling the kids, or ditching their day jobs.

It’s about expanding cultural awareness and creating wonderful family experiences while meeting everyday responsibilities.

The key to this family-style cultural immersion?  “Workations”—work + vacations.

At an airport, Maria Surma Manka and her family of digital nomads set off for a workation in London. (Image © Maria Surma Manka)

London-bound: Maria’s book has numerous resources on how to talk with
your employer about working remotely.
© Maria Surma Manka

The idea, explains Maria, is to combine a love of travel with the stability of work. For Maria and husband Joram, the home-from-home travel began when sons August and Baron were two and five years old. That was five years and several countries ago.

At the time, Maria couldn’t find good resources to help guide a typical family on such an adventure. So, she developed the resources herself. The result is the highly practical book, Next-Level Digital Nomad: A guide to traveling and working from anywhere (even with kids and a day job).

The book Next-Level Digital Nomad by Maria Surma Manka, a.k.a. Workation Woman, is a guide to traveling and working from anywhere (even with kids and a day job). (Image © Maria Surma Manka)

Known to her followers as Workation Woman, Maria Surma Manka teaches parents how to
live abroad for several weeks or months without quitting their regular jobs.
© Maria Surma Manka

As insightful as it is delightful, Next-Level Digital Nomad covers such topics as getting schools and bosses on board, finding (and funding) where to live, securing safe childcare, and much more.

It’s also a cracking good read, an enlightening portrait of one family’s day-to-day life in Minnesota, Spain, New Zealand, Scotland, and England.

Maria Surma Manka’s son August discovers the joy of being a digital nomad at Lake Wakatipu, New Zealand, during a family workation. (Image © Maria Surma Manka)

Small pleasures amid big adventures: Skipping stones at Lake Wakatipu, New Zealand.
© Maria Surma Manka

Have Kids, Will Travel

I recently spoke with Maria about the experience of immersing one’s family in the daily life of another culture. As someone who grew up traveling with seven siblings, I was particularly keen to know one thing: How does she respond to folks who postpone travel because they’re waiting for the kids to grow up?

Maria laughs warmly. Challenging assumptions is second nature to her.

“I would say, ‘Well then why do you read to your baby?  Why do you talk to your kid or bring them to the pumpkin patch? Why do anything if they’re not going to remember it? It’s to instill a norm in them when they don’t even realize it.  Even if they don’t remember it, there are going to be things that they pick up on.”

“It’s the feeling of being in a totally foreign place and watching to see how your parents react, being in a situation where things [may] go wrong or the adults in your life don’t know what’s going to happen next, and seeing that Oh, it’s calm, things are fine, they’re going figure it out.”

Maria Surma Manka’s sons August and Baron explore the Isle of Skye during a family workation. (Image © Maria Surma Manka)

The rewards of working remotely: Exploring the world more closely.
Baron and August hike to the Fairy Pools on the Isle of Skye.
© Maria Surma Manka

For their part, August and Baron have made friends in many cultures as they share local playgrounds and routines. Maria recalls a bus ride in London when “a little boy was asking our boys where we were staying. He thought we were staying in a hotel room and the boys said, “We have a yard and a kitchen,” and they just began exchanging stories.”

A playground near Edinburgh Castle is the first stop for digital nomad Maria Surma Manka and her family during a workation in Scotland. (Image © Maria Surma Manka)

One of the first steps in each new city, says Maria, is to find the nearest playground.
© Maria Surma Manka

The Universal Language

On one extended visit to Spain, the family stayed with a longtime friend whose son, Dante, was then two years old. “The same age as our youngest,” says Maria. She loved seeing how her English-speaking children and the friend’s Spanish-speaking son quickly established rapport.

“You know, at two years old you barely speak your native language. So it was really fascinating to see them realizing they were able to play cars together or race around with each other and that they didn’t always have to understand what each other was saying.”

“They did learn the Spanish word for Mine, mine, mine!” She laughs. “That translated very quickly.”

 

A bilingual English-Spanish phrase list helps young global citizens talk with each other during family workations in Spain and the U.S. (Image © Maria Surma Manka)

The ultimate “playlist”: Maria created a bilingual phrase list for a recent reunion
of Dante, August, and Baron in Minnesota.
© Maria Surma Manka

Growing up culturally aware has also prompted important discussions. Back in the U.S., one of Maria’s sons was troubled to see a bumper sticker that said, “You’re in America. Speak English.” Maria recalls “trying to explain stuff like that to the kids, [the fact] that some people are scared of people who don’t have the same color skin as them or speak the same language as them.”

“And my youngest son, August, said, ‘But we know Dante. He doesn’t speak English and he’s not scary.’ They have a personal reference of someone who comes from a different culture who doesn’t speak their language, but who is a great person, someone with whom they’ve had tons of fun and tons in common.”

It Takes a (Global) Village

Maria appreciates the enthusiastic support of school principals and teachers. Like Mrs. Petron, who taught a lesson on London so Baron’s first-grade class would have the context to learn from his extended visit there.  When the family arrived in London, Baron casually pointed out a local landmark to his parents. “He was teaching us.”

On days when Maria and Joram needed to work from local offices, the boys explored London with their nanny, Sophie Hitchcock. They loved regaling their parents with all they had learned about the city.

Maria Surma Manka’s sons August and Baron, young digital nomads, test their backpacks during a family workation in London. (Image © Maria Surma Manka)

Learning in London: The boys test their backpacks to discover
how much they can realistically carry.
© Maria Surma Manka

U.S. Workations

Maria points out that a workation “doesn’t necessarily mean something big and sexy overseas.”  At one of her talks, a woman in the audience shared, “My husband has to go work in Omaha for three weeks, and I can do my job from anywhere.  He’s been trying to get me to bring the kids and work from there.”

It was an oh-I-see moment: Instead of missing out on precious family time, the family could stay connected while getting to know another part of their own country. Instead of forming stereotypes about a city they didn’t know, they could meet the locals as neighbors and develop a broader sense of home.

Digital nomads, Maria Surma Manka (Workation Woman) and sons August and Baron walk along Rose Street, Edinburgh during a family workation. (Image © Maria Surma Manka)

A morning’s routine in Edinburgh. “A workation is a feeling of normalcy and novelty
at the same time,” observes Maria.
© Maria Surma Manka

Growing Up Without Stereotypes

Stereotype busting is a constant theme of Maria’s own family workations. Because the boys’ home base is 85 rural acres, it’s important to her that they also have the experience of living in urban areas. Learning the etiquette of sharing public transportation has instilled in August and Baron respect for the idea of sharing one world.

Maria recalls how after one London Underground ride she had been prepared to offer cultural context about their fellow passengers, figuring that her children might have questions about, say, the guy with the studs and mohawk or the woman in full burqa.

Only it took the boys a full minute to even recall who she was talking about. It soon emerged that yes, her boys had noticed the many people around them. But these young global citizens simply took it for granted that we may dress, speak, and look differently from each other. No big deal.

Says their mom, “They’re growing up with a very broad personal view of the world.”

To learn more about workations, get Maria’s book here. Follow her family’s adventures here and here.

Comment on this post below, or inspire insight with your own OIC Moment here.

Cultural Traditions of the Japanese Tea Ceremony

by Meredith Mullins on October 15, 2018

Japanese woman presents a tea caddy for the Japanese tea ceremony, showing the cultural traditions of Japan. (Image © Meredith Mullins.)

The Way of Tea
© Meredith Mullins

Ichi-go Ichi-e: Life Lessons

Let the tea be simple and your hospitality heartfelt.—Sen no Rikyu*

When I entered the tea house, I suddenly felt reverential—a guest of some greater spirit.

The simple wooden walls, tatami floor, and perfect Ikebana arrangement created a sanctuary so serene that the only sounds were that of the birds in the garden and the simmering water for the tea.

I met Kozue, a student who was dressed in a silk kimono of muted tones of lilac and plum that had been passed through generations of her family. I asked her how long she has been studying the Japanese tea ceremony.

She bowed her head slightly and said, “Only 27 years.”

Japanese woman bows in front of utensils for the Japanese tea ceremony, showing the cultural traditions of Japan. (Image © Meredith Mullins.)

A lifetime of study
© Meredith Mullins

I knew then that there was a more profound layer to the seeming simplicity of the tea ceremony.

Some art forms take a lifetime to master. The tea ceremony is one of those arts—part of a rich heritage of Japanese cultural traditions.

An alcove in a Japanese tea house, the setting for the Japanese tea ceremony that shows the cultural traditions of Japan. (Image © Meredith Mullins.)

The simple elegance of the Japanese tea house
© Meredith Mullins

From Mozart to Chadō

In the interest of full disclosure, I must admit to my tea inspiration. I was reminded of the elegance of the Japanese tea ceremony recently in an episode of “Mozart in the Jungle” (Season 4/Episode 8) directed by Roman Coppola. (Yes, television can be enlightening.) After watching this mesmerizing segment, I went in search of more knowledge.

I was fortunate to find a local class in the art of Japanese tea taught by Mrs. Matsui, who has been studying the tea ceremony for most of her life.

She has built a tea house in the Japanese garden behind her modern California home and teaches those who wish to learn more about the graceful and meticulously choreographed steps in chadō, or the “Way of Tea.”

Japanese teacher Mrs. Matsui oversees a student in the art of the Japanese tea ceremony, showing the cultural traditions of Japan. (Image © Meredith Mullins.)

Mrs. Matsui guides her student in the graceful choreography of the ceremony.
© Meredith Mullins

The Heart of the Ceremony

In Japanese, the tea ceremony is called chanoyu, sadō, or chadō, and is noted as one of the classical Japanese arts.

The ceremony is not just about serving tea. It is a study of philosophy, art, aesthetics, calligraphy, and literature.

More importantly, the ceremony is a traditional way of strengthening the bonds of those participating. It also inspires a commitment of time to the contemplation of beauty.

Japanese woman at door of tea room preparing for a Japanese tea ceremony, showing the cultural traditions of Japan. (Image © Meredith Mullins.)

The host enters the tea room through a sliding door.
© Meredith Mullins

Ichi-go Ichi-e

Every tea gathering is a special experience. Each occasion calls for unique preparations, depending on the season, the time of day, the guests, and the theme of the ceremony.

The flowers and the hanging scroll in the alcove of the tea house (tokonoma) represent the season and the theme. The tea bowls are selected to match the character of the guests.

The host decides whether to offer a meal or just the traditional sweets, which are served to complement the mild bitterness of the green matcha tea.

Japanese sweets for the Japanese tea ceremony, showing the cultural traditions of Japan. (Image © Meredith Mullins.)

Traditional sweets are served to complement the slight bitterness of the matcha tea.
(Mrs. Matsui diplomatically reminded me to unwrap the one in paper, as the paper is not edible.)
© Meredith Mullins

The host also decides whether to serve thick tea (for more formal occasions, served in one bowl to be shared by all guests) or thin tea (for more informal occasions, with individual tea bowls, chosen for each guest). If the host wishes, both thin tea and thick tea can be served in the same ceremony.

Bowl of matcha tea in a Japanese tea ceremony, showing the cultural traditions of Japan. (Image © Meredith Mullins.)

Thin matcha tea in a carefully selected bowl for the occasion, the guest, and the season
© Meredith Mullins

All of these preparations ensure that the experience will be completely unique. And that sharing a cup of tea in this moment can never be replicated and, thus, should be treasured.

The Japanese saying Ichi-go Ichi-e means “One time. One Meeting.” Savor the moment, as if it were a once-in-a-lifetime experience . . . because it is.

Japanese symbols for Wa Kei Sei Jaku, the foundation for the Japanese tea ceremony showing cultural traditions of Japan. (Image by Meredith Mullins.)

Wa Kei Sei Jaku: Harmony, Respect, Purity, Tranquility

Wa Kei Sei Jaku

Although each ceremony is different, the four principles of Wa Kei Sei Jaku are always the foundation.

Wa: harmony
Kei: respect
Sei: purity
Jaku: tranquility

These principles ensure that the host and guests show respect for one another, that everyone leaves behind the thoughts and burdens of outside life, that the ceremony is performed from a pure heart, and that, hopefully, everyone finds some inner peace during the ceremony.

Japanese woman offers sweets in a Japanese tea ceremony, showing the cultural traditions of Japan. (Image © Meredith Mullins.)

The sharing of a unique moment . . . from the heart.
© Meredith Mullins

The Poetry of Silence

The ceremony is filled with the sensory pleasures. Not only the graceful movements of the host, as the tools are carefully placed and cleaned and as the tea is prepared, but the heightened sounds, since most of the ceremony is performed in silence.

Japanese woman cleaning tea scoop for a Japanese tea ceremony, showing the cultural traditions of Japan. (Image © Meredith Mullins.)

The tea scoop, carved from a single piece of bamboo or ivory, is cleaned
with an intricately folded silk cloth.
© Meredith Mullins

The pouring of the tea water from the ladle brings to mind the sound of nature’s flowing water.

The ladling of water during a Japanese tea ceremony, showing the cultural traditions of Japan. (Image © Meredith Mullins.)

During the silent preparation, sounds are a sensory pleasure.
© Meredith Mullins

The whisking of the powdered tea and hot water, even though the most frenetic part of the gentle ceremony, is so rhythmic it seems to soothe the soul.

Hands whisking matcha tea in a bowl during the Japanese tea ceremony, showing the cultural traditions of Japan. (Image © Meredith Mullins.)

The powdered matcha tea is rapidly whisked together with the hot water.
© Meredith Mullins

The rustling silk of kimonos is a reminder of the depth of tradition.

This is not a chatty social gathering. The conversation is limited to guests asking about the provenance of the utensils, remarking on their beauty, and, perhaps, discussing the theme of the ceremony.

Japanese woman displays the utensils of the Japanese tea ceremony, showing the cultural traditions of Japan. (Image © Meredith Mullins.)

The host often displays the utensils for the guests to examine more closely.
© Meredith Mullins

“Oh, I See” Moments from “The Way of Tea”

I was mesmerized by the tea ceremony—hypnotic and elegant. It reaches into the depths of Japanese heritage and cultural traditions.

It reminded me of the beauty you can see when you take the time to appreciate the small details of the world and when you spend moments of quiet time being in the present.

Close up of the tools of the Japanese tea ceremony as the host pours the matcha powder, showing the cultural traditions of Japan. (Image © Meredith Mullins.)

Every element adds to the harmony and beauty and the experience.
© Meredith Mullins

What impressed me the most are lessons that could be applied outside of the tea ceremony.

  • Being present in the moment to appreciate the beauty of simplicity and tradition.
  • Thinking only of others—your guests—and doing everything for their benefit.
  • Showing ultimate respect for one another.
  • Sharing something from the heart to strengthen bonds of friendship.

There are many profound elements to the Japanese tea ceremony. For me, the philosophies that could be applied to the rest of life will be the lasting treasures.

*Sen no Rikyu was the Japanese Tea Master who raised the tea ceremony to the level of art in the 16thcentury.

Thank you to Mrs. Matsui and Kozue Knowles for their guidance in understanding the depth of the tea ceremony and to Cha-Ya tea shop.

Comment on this post below, or inspire insight with your own OIC Moment here.

Savoring Summer

by Joyce McGreevy on July 30, 2018

A woman sitting by the Oregon shore suggests why savoring summer can be a life-changing experience. (Image @ Joyce McGreevy)

When’s the last time you took a breather?
© Joyce McGreevy (Featured: Margie McGreevy)

The Life-Changing Experience
of Celebrating the Season

Having a good summer? Or did it register merely as high temperatures while you went about your daily business? Considering the seriousness of world issues and the stress of busy lives, does it even make sense to celebrate this season?

Yes! Savoring summer can be a life-changing experience.

A sun-themed collage evokes the beauty of savoring summer. (Image @ Joyce McGreevy)

Summer sun appears in countless ways.
© Joyce McGreevy

Our brains respond to summer, even if the rest of us ignores it.

Studies have identified two neural responses to summer that seem contradictory. When summer’s heat is on, our brain responses really do slow down. Yet the brain’s ability to respond to tasks that require sustained attention actually peaks in summer.

Does that mean we should turn up the office A/C and focus our high-functioning attention on GTD—Getting Things Done? Or could it mean that summer offers a two-fold opportunity? One, to let our brains slow down. Two, to apply summer-peak focus to more than just mundane tasks.

Sunset on the Oregon shore suggests why savoring summer can be a life-changing experience. (Image @ Joyce McGreevy)

When’s the last time you took a walk by the water?
© Joyce McGreevy

“Smell the sea and feel the sky.”

Maybe you’ve seen that recent study on the benefits of extended “forest-bathing.” Or the one about standing barefoot on grass for a moment. “Big Duh” Spoiler Alert: Being outdoors is good for you.

Poets have known this all along. “Smell the sea and feel the sky. Let your soul and spirit fly,” sang Van Morrison. Even Ralph Waldo Emerson, a philosopher one pictures barnacled to a desk, declared, “Live in the sunshine. Swim in the sea. Drink in the wild air.”

In summer, sensory experience is amplified. It’s the warmth on your skin, reminding you that, “Oh right, I have a body!” That there’s more to you more than a suit of clothes with a head poking out at the top.

Bare feet on grass suggest the pleasure of savoring summer. (Image @ Joyce McGreevy)

Hello, silly toes! It’s nice to see you again.
© Joyce McGreevy

It’s the rumbling roar and briny scent of ocean waves. The chorus of birds broadcasting nature’s morning news. A sunset so vibrant it practically cries out, “Aren’t you glad you didn’t miss this?”

Craft your own summer.

Summer also meshes with the sensory appeal of what we humans carry. The smell of cocoa butter. The thwack of a baseball bat hitting a home run. The itch of sand in . . . interesting places. The overheard music that transports us to other summers. There’s even a song about that, Eric Church’s “Springsteen”:

“To this day when I hear that song
I see you standin’ there all night long
Discount shades, store bought tan
Flip flops and cut-off jeans”

What were your artifacts of summers past? What human-made objects are part of your summer today?

A street scene on Waikehe Island suggests the pleasure of savoring summer. (Image @ Joyce McGreevy)

When’s the last time you sipped lemonade?
© Joyce McGreevy

Savor summer foods.

“I always like summer
best
you can eat fresh corn
from daddy’s garden”

So says Nikki Giovanni in the poem “Knoxville, Tennessee.” What tastes like summer to you? A luscious peach warm from the tree? The salty, syrupy crunch of fairground snacks? The heirloom-tomato and lime-kissed gazpacho your mom used to make? The sour-cherry pie that always held enough slices for everyone?

Summer like a child.

When we were kids, summer marked the beginning of adventure. Boredom was our ally then, because it spurred us into devising games, stories, lemonade stands, and neighborhood track meets—anything to avoid the dreaded alternative, Chores.

We climbed trees, sat under them for hours with books, and turned the stories into plays, casting them with any available siblings, dolls, and pets.

A tree house evokes the pleasure of savoring summer. (Image @ Joyce McGreevy)

When’s the last time you saw the world from a treehouse?
© Joyce McGreevy

We did not “set goals” or work on “self-improvement.” We gave into obsessions. Like reading every Nancy Drew mystery or book about ancient Egypt.  Learning to skateboard, draw a horse, do magic tricks, blow chewing-gum bubbles, craft a lanyard, or make up dance routines to radio songs.

Now that we’re all grown up, why settle for staring at phones and online episodes?

Imagine taking out the teeny-tiny key to that little pink diary you kept in fifth grade. Picture the “Bestest, Funnest Day Ever!!!!!” What simple pleasure or Big Adventure is written there?

Sandcastles on the beach suggest the pleasure of savoring summer. (Image @ Joyce McGreevy)

Give yourself a hall pass and rediscover recess. You’ll be the better for it.
© Joyce McGreevy

Cast summer magic.

When I was a kid, summer nights were for suppers on the patio, outdoor concerts, and coming home from the beach so drowsy that our parents carried us in from the station wagon and put us to bed. Okay, maybe some of us pretended to be asleep, cherishing the safety of a parent’s TLC.

One summer my sister Carolyn and I investigated The Mystery of The Fast-Growing Zucchini. For several nights, we went on stake-out, setting up sleeping bags in the garden and staring intently, determined not to . . . (yawn) . . . fall . . . asleep . .  . . .

Although we never did crack the case, we had delightful conversations, made up the silliest songs, and even experienced the thrill of star-diving: We’d lie on the grass and convince our brains that the sky was below us. Then we’d “dive” in.

What magic are you making time for? When did you last look up at the sky? Or carry supper outside? Or swap family anecdotes as sunset deepened into inkiest night? Until you could no longer see each other but sensed and appreciated each other’s presence?

The full moon over a desert suburb in Palm Springs evokes the beauty of savoring summer. (Image @ Joyce McGreevy)

When’s the last time you stopped for the summer moon?
© Joyce McGreevy

Share summer abundance.

But what does it matter? In a world that can feel as cold and uncertain as an iced-over alley at midnight, isn’t it frivolous to celebrate summer?

Here’s the thing:

  • Those outdoor summers remind you that the environment is not a concept, but where we all live.
  • The summer garden you savor feeds your persistence through the winter.
  • Summer cooks know that the secret to sweetening sour-cherry pie is to share it.
  • Summer nights, when you gather in a circle of belonging, reveal real-life magic: Your circle has the potential to expand. Your circle can grow as big as the Earth is round. Your circle can welcome as many people as there are stars in the sky.
A vintage house in Illinois evokes the beauty of savoring summer. (Image @ Joyce McGreevy)

When’s the last time you sat on the porch and watched the world go by?
© Joyce McGreevy

So why give your summer brain a change of focus? Why invite your body for a visit?

Oh, I see: To refill the well.

Only then can you draw strength to do what needs to be done. Only then can you refresh yourself with the clarity to know what that is.

Can savoring summer be a life-changing experience? Goodness, yes. And not just for you.

Need a reminder of summer-night magic? Listen to Allen Toussaint’s “Southern Nights” here.

Comment on this post below, or inspire insight with your own OIC Moment here.

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