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Betsy's avatar

I,too, remember those drunken storms but from a young girls eye view. I thought is was hysterical when I walked into the room to see fresh pasta hanging from the curtain rods and every other ledge available both inside and outside!

The light in the house was full of laughter and it was contagious. I felt it in my soul then and now when I think of that day.

Another very fond memory I hold close, is the family gatherings with my mom at the piano and my dad singing and on occasion he busted out the spoons!! This was the only instrument he played.

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Susie Kaufman's avatar

And always in his bathrobe! Your mom's gift for playing any song anyone requested on the piano was a huge feature. She could not be stumped and if she didn't know the song, she asked you to sing a few bars and then she'd play the whole thing off the top of her head.

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Annette Laing's avatar

I'm one of two Brits married into an Asian-American family, and we stretch from Sacramento to London. The one and only time a lot of us were in California together was a happy coincidence! Far-flung families can be a challenge, but not new to me as a Scot, since we travel everywhere. It's just how it is.

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Susie Kaufman's avatar

What's the origin of the Scottish love of travel?

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Annette Laing's avatar

Poverty. Lack of opportunity. And then it becomes part of the culture. It's not travel, but migration.

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Susie Kaufman's avatar

Those are two very different words, aren't they? Especially now when climate migration is a huge demographic change all over the world and only becoming more so.

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