Archive for the 'Year-in-Review' Category

40 Days ’til Sydney on our 4th anniversary

This whole past year can be summarized in one word: hoagies. Of course, that doesn’t really tell you a whole lot, now does it? We’ve been busy busy busy selling hoagies and assorted other fundraiser items in preparation for our trip to Sydney, Australia for World Youth Day. It really hasn’t left us much time for anything else, so we’ve spent some time reorganizing.

With a little help from some new friends, we discovered that we do in fact have a YMCA 10 minutes from our house, so we finally signed up there & I’ve been going to aerobics classes for about three months now. Knowing that I need to leave the house on certain days at a certain time has helped me learn to get my housework done more efficiently.

I taught CCD again this year. This class was probably my most challenging, but we made it through and I haven’t given up. I was asked to serve on Pastoral Council so I’ll be teaching an earlier class next year but it’ll still be 5th grade. In addition, we’ve also been chaperoning Youth Group nights more regularly. It’s been great getting to know some of the teens from our parish and the community in general. It’s been especially nice having an opportunity outside of hoagie making to get to know the ones who will be joining us in Sydney.

We went on the March for Life again this year (that makes 13 trips for me). Our parish actually didn’t have a bus this year (our involvement with WYD made me reconsider wanting to organize a bus) so we went with the parish where my cousins go to school. Next year, I really do think I’ll organize a bus for our parish because I’ll have a lot less going on.

The cats continue to grow by leaps & bounds. Ratzi’s got his weight back under control but Linus is a porker. They’re cute & we think we’ll keep them :)

We didn’t acquire any new pets this year, but we did acquire some godchildren. John Jordan and Mary Elizabeth are the children of our good friends, Brian & Laura. They’re cute & we think we’ll keep them, too :)

Reviewing last year’s goals:
1. We had to pay some money out of pocket for our trip but I think we did manage to raise more than we expected to, so I’d call this goal a success.
2. I think I might have been more organized. Maybe.
3. The house is still standing, but we really haven’t done any work to improve it.
4. I absolutely failed to start scrapbooking again.
5. The photo gallery is mostly caught up.
6. The care replacement fund continues to grow slowly
7. PMI is GONE as of the end of May :)
8. DONE
9. We have some money ready to invest for retirement, we just have to actually invest it.
10. Paper’s still not done.
11. I planted a few seeds… we’ll see what happens.
12. We’re still working on the walking.
13. On hiatus.

Goals for Year 5:
1. Have fewer goals ;)
2. Get our Roth IRAs started.
3. Survive trip to Australia
4. Plan & execute a successful trip to the March For Life.
5. Continue to encourage Matt to finish his graduate paper.
6. Get back to scrapbooking. For real this time!

Marriagometer Reads Four Years and Counting

This year seemed to go fast!

As such, there isn’t too much new for me to report. Work’s going well. The wheel-dresser project I mentioned last year has been successful, resulting in two new orders for the same thing. I also got to install a new motion sequence to the aluminum furnace I did right after moving in to our current house, and from feedback, the operators and the company itself love it, so much so that they want the unload car rolls fixed. Hoorah! Presently I’m working on a big project for the same company, along with other coworkers, and am learning a lot about C# as a result. I love event-driven programming so much.

Other than that, I feel like I am more busy! I somehow ended up chaperoning at Youth Group along with Amy, and it’s been fun getting to know the kids and help them grow in fellowship and spirituality. However, this has lead to me being more tired, as we get back after our bedtimes. But mostly just the endless hoagie fund raising has kept us busy. Soon World Youth Day will be upon us and hoagies will be but a thing of the past. I will watch out for night snakes (No I will not explain that).

Amy continues to be a wonderful wife, and seems content to continue to be a wonderful wife. I foresee this continuing in the future, because she is a wonderful wife. Sharing life with her helps me grow and I will always smile when I think of the wonders she brings to me.

Since I’d like to stick around longer (okay, okay, I think Amy came up with the idea), and in addition help us prepare for the rigors of low sleep and lots of walking in Australia, we got a membership at the local YMCA. As far as weight training goes, I have made more progress than I did while at the Grove City Y, but not as much on cardio. Why is running so dang hard? Totally unfair.

For my goals this year, I hope to grow in faith, grow in love, and finally develop the ability to fire lasers out of my eyes. With luck, two out of three of those will be met.

Cheers!

2007 Year-in-Review

MERRY CHRISTMAS
Welcome to the third annual Buchwald Family Newsletter! This year has been busy, bringing with it many new challenges and adventures.
BUCHWALDS DOWN UNDER?
We kicked off 2007 by making an 18-month commitment to plan to go to World Youth Day 2008 in Sydney, Australia. If you’re not familiar with World Youth Day, it is an international gathering of Catholic teens and young adults. Pope John Paul II started World Youth Day celebrations in the 1980s, with larger international gatherings happening about every three years.
Our parish is teaming up with another local parish and together we have approximately 60 people, including Amy’s cousin Beth, hoping to make the trip.
Since January, we’ve been selling, assembling and distributing hoagies almost continuously. When fundraising started, we were merely along for the ride, but we soon discovered that there were many areas where we could help. Amy waits for the delivery of hoagie supplies (they might arrive any time from 10am to 5pm!) and tries to get everything sorted & organized before the crew arrives while Matt works to make sure the assembly lines don’t run out of anything. We’ve very nearly perfected the process… by the time we actually figure it all out, we’ll be done fundraising!
In the new year, we hope to be updating our website more often with our progress on the road to Sydney. We’ll definitely have a full report with lots of pictures when we get back, so make sure to keep an eye out for it!
ALL IN A YEAR’S WORK
Almost immediately after the first World Youth Day informational meeting, we discovered that Matt’s feet were two very different sizes. After a full course of testing, x-raying and scanning and countless doctor appointments, we still don’t know exactly what was wrong, but his feet finally match again!
While all of that was going on, we learned the hard way that it’s always a good idea to shovel the driveway when it snows.
Matt has had a nice quiet year at I2T without any crazy three-week project start-up trips. It was a welcome change from 2006! He’s looking forward, though, to completing a few more projects in 2008.
The end of June brought with it the first anniversary of living in our house and of Amy’s new career as a full-time domestic engineer. In addition to everyday housework, Amy also teaches CCD and finally finished her Basic Certification courses through the diocese this fall.
We also learned a new craft together over the summer. Amy discovered an organization called Rosary Army, whose primary purpose is to teach people to make, pray and give away all-twine knotted rosaries. Amy’s been working on some rosaries to send to Rosary Army (they send a free rosary to anyone who requests one and rely on volunteers to help keep up with the demand) and we’re also planning to teach the World Youth Day group and take some with us to Australia.
YACHT CLUB AND YOUTH GROUPIES
As a result of our involvement with the World Youth Day group, we’ve also joined our parish’s YACHT Club (Young Adult Catholics Honoring the Trinity) and we’ve been chaperoning occasional Youth Group outings and retreats. Most recently, we spent a weekend at Camp Allegheny on retreat with over 100 teens from all over the Pittsburgh Diocese.
NORTH OF THE BORDER
In August, we visited Niagara Falls for probably the last time before the new passport laws go into effect. We spent the first part of our trip with Amy’s sister Lisa & brother-in-law David then met up with some of Amy’s friends for some extra sight seeing.
While we had Lisa & David with us, we explored Niagara Falls State Park, walked to Canada and back, and visited the Basilica of the National Shrine of Our Lady of Fatima.
At the park, Matt had his picture taken with the statue of Nicola Tesla for the second time, making it a new Official Buchwald Family Traditionâ„¢. We also spent a significant amount of time watching a duck attempt to swim upstream near the edge of the falls. Small things amuse us!
We visited the Shrine so that we could take one more picture with the statue of Saint Matthias to give to Father Ritzert before he retired.
After David & Lisa went home, we spent some more time at the Shrine, exploring the Avenue of Saints and the various gardens and taking in the view from the top of the Basilica.
We spent the remainder of our trip visiting with friends at both Niagara on the Lake and at the Butterfly Conservatory. Amy particularly enjoyed the butterflies! We also walked up Clifton Hill and rode the Sky Wheel, an enclosed ferris wheel that overlooks the falls.
CATS IN THE CORNER
Ratzi & Linus spent much of the past year sleeping and they’re quite proud of it! They also enjoy chasing each other around the house and pestering us for breakfast beginning at about 3:30 in the morning. Mostly, they’re just really loveable cats and we’re glad they’re ours!
UNTIL NEXT YEAR…
We hope that 2008 brings everyone happiness and many blessings. Please stay in touch & let us know how life is in your neck of the woods. Merry Christmas & Happy New Year!!
Love,
Matt, Amy, Ratzi & Linus Buchwald

Year 3: I Still Can’t Shoot Lasers From My Eyes, But Everything Else is Lovely

My previous ideas regarding time-dilation have failed to manefest super powers within me. While I’m not completely surprised about this, I am a little disappointed that I cannot actually shoot lasers from my eyes, despite claiming otherwise on numerous forums and such.

This year I found that it’s a lot harder to work out a topic for a paper that I would have otherwise thought. Finding other papers with interesting topics proved difficult, as just about anything related to the field I was looking at went way over my head. Presently I’ve been reading through my old college engineering texts, reestablishing fundamentals, etc. It’s amazing how things make more sense the second time through. So much from Circuits II suddenly tied in with later work that it was sort of an epiphany.

I’m switching a goal into “be a better person.” I’m not yet sure what all that means or involved, but it sure seems like a good thing to be. Sort of like a cranberry turning into a blueberry. Much tastier. I know, I know, somewhere along the way in this paragraph I completely lost the point.

Work has been fun, in various flavors of fun. I prefer the zesty ranch. Ay the end of June, right after we moved everything into the house (literally right after), I ventured off onto my first big project startup, where I learned that it really is possible to do four things at once while three people are trying to talk to you. When I first got there, motion control was the company’s priority (even though it shouldn’t have been), and since I did the motion control, I got flung right into, “make it all work right now” mode. Which was okay, becaues I made it work right then. More or less. Problems consisted of the electricians wiring the motor phases incorrectly (fun!), and a few little sequencing issues, along with one motion latch that somehow ceased to exists from the time I programed it to the time I got there. Whatever, it got moving quickly, and then they shifted their priorities to other things. While I tweaked the motion user units a bit, their priority bounced rapidly between heating and quenching, making things generally more complicated than neccesary. I ended up being in charge of the quenching part of the process, even though I did not do the code, purely luck (bad luck?), because when they mechanical guys needed something done, I knew how to do it. Also because if I didn’t do it, we had no spare engineers to do it. Luckily, I had gone through the code before, and it turned out well. Over the course of the startup, I got to work about19 straight 12+ hour days, including 14 hours on my birthday! At least it was holiday pay. All in all, it went well, and for the most part I was told that’s about a- busy as things can get, so if I can handle that, it should be good.

Next, I got to work on a machine that dresses grinding wheels in various (potentially complex) profiles. It was quite fun breaking out the ol’ trigonomety and learning CNC code do do the job. Since then, I’ve been working on some other projects for that company, including some ring millers that cut out crank pins in one rotation. I’ve been constantly amazed at how quickly I can leran C++ things when necessity arises. I found that I really like doing UI (user interface) design, even though it’s stressful at times trying to figure out what is easiest to use from a user standpoint. I feel a little bad admitting it, but the greatest tool I have is to stop and think, “If I were a total idiot, what would make the most sense to me?”

Taking care of a house removes a remarkable amount of time from life, but every time something needs to be fixed, I get to learn how to fix something, so my the time I’m say… 50 years old, i should be an expert, right? So far I’ve gotten to install a utility sink, do some kitchen sink repair (our kitchen sink is now a Frankensink, since it’s got one platic pipe and the rest is chrome), reattached the garage door to one of its supports, and installed a litght in our bedroom, among others.

The biggest projects was before we moved in Amy thought it’d be nice to have her dad refinish the hardwood floors (some spots were worn down to the wood) before we had all our furniture in the way. He suggested that I try it, and told me what he had done in the past, giving me some suggestions. Let me tell you, the work is exhausting. We rented a floor sander (orbital sanding pads), and I went through the living room, hallway, and bedroom ]five times, each time stepping down to a finer grained sandpaper. It was after 11pm that day before I finally finished. The sander itself probably weight more than me; at the end of the day, I’m not sure how I got it outside, down the steps, down the hill, and back into my car. The belt sanding around the edges took me the next two nights (I would go to this house after work and stay over night), and the hand sanding for the very close edges seemed to take forever. After all that, I learned that I never want to touch tack cloth (sticky webby stuff for getting up all the sawdust). I also learned that I should have done the polyurethane coats with a hand brush, as it was way too easy to inject air bubbles in with the floor brush. The coats also ended up a little thick and took forever to dry. Some day in the future (10 years? 15?) I’ll sand down the remaining air bumps and do a fresh coast, but it came out looking beautiful anyway.

Amy has been the most wonderful wife ever. Without her, things would be so much harder, and I’ve come to find that her work at home has been a true blessing.

I still don’t have anyone else to mow the lawn, however.

I’m going to let Amy’s goals also be my goals, but I’ll add two:
1) Paper
2) Continue my quest for super powers.
3) Get in better shape.

Or three.

Everything 3 in 2007

Happy third anniversary to us! As I sat down to write this entry, it occurred to me that a LOT of third things are happening this year. Spider-Man 3, Shrek The Third, Pirates of the Caribbean: At Worlds End, Beth graduating from high school (she’s the third grandchild to graduate on that side of the family), Maddy’s third birthday, Abby’s third birthday and of course our third anniversary. Next Easter will also mark the third anniversary of the day Matt became Catholic!

I looked back over our last two anniversary reviews and saw that it was right around our first anniversary that we finished watching Star Trek: TNG Season 1. Two years later, we have Season 7 in our queue. We <3 Netflix.

This last year has been nothing short of a great learning experience. I learned how to survive all by myself in a relatively strange place in our new house – just me and the cat – for three whole weeks. Matt learned the hard way what project start up can be like. We discovered that mowing a 3/4 acre sloped yard with a pushmower is a lot harder than it looks and we found out that there is such thing as too much snow and sometimes you really do have to shovel out the driveway.

Our year has had quite a few car mishaps, too. Matt’s radiator cracked in August, right before his warranty expired. Then, my car needed quite a bit of work in order to pass inspection and now it’s broken again. It started leaking anti-freeze this past Saturday and we’ve been (and will continue to be) too busy to really figure out what’s wrong with it. Until life slows down a little, we’ll be experimenting with single-car living.

Having two cats has been wonderful. Linus came to us in September as a housewarming gift from the Hirth clan. He’s still such an imp of a kitten but he and Ratzi are great company for each other. As is par for the course, Linus is the “neglected” second child… I haven’t uploaded any new pictures of him since December. He has changed so much in these last 6mos… and the pictures exist… I just haven’t put them in our gallery. He is very much the spoiled second child as well. He follows us around begging for our attention and visitors dote on him because, well, he insists on it. He’s still naive enough that he lets 4-year-old JJ pick him up, carry him around and just generally abuse him as only a 4-year-old can. Ratzi, on the other hand, has decided that Matt and I are about the only acceptable humans. He runs for cover when he hears the door bell.

Matt has now had just about every type of medical imaging test. In January, his foot mysteriously became swollen. After numerous tests and a few different prescription drugs, his foot is still just a little bit puffy and all the doctor has to say now is walk on it & call him if it gets worse. Thankfully, it hasn’t gotten any worse.

We’re really enjoying becoming involved at our new parish.

I went back to teaching 5th grade because I’m just not ready to do Confirmation prep with the 8th graders. I had a great group & can’t wait to meet next year’s class. Sister Genie, our DRE, is trying to talk me into grad school with the idea that someday I can have her job. She’s supposed to be getting me some information about getting full scholariship from the diocese. I’m not sold on the idea because we all know I drive into Pittsburgh as little as possible, but I told her I’d look at the information.

I attended my 12th annual March for Life with the group from our parish and I think I might finally be ready to do more than just fill a seat on the bus. After 12 years I’m starting to feel confident that I can at least help coordinate the trip a little.

Together, Matt & I are going to try to attend World Youth Day next July in Sydney Australia. Our parish is ogranizing a group of about 60 people from three parishes. Beth is planning to go, too, and we’re really excited about sharing this experience with her. We’ve been selling hoagies like crazy people to try to fundraise.

Last night, we started our celebration by going to the drive-in to see the new Pirates of the Caribbean movie. Today, we’ll have donuts, maybe some waffles, too, and watch The Princess Bride as usual. Later we’re going bowling and to Outback Steakhouse for dinner.

And now it’s time to recap my goals from last year:
1. Thyroid is mostly fixed… my bloodwork results still aren’t quite where I think they should be but I feel OK and the doctor thinks the numbers are good so here we are.
2. No job for Amy! As it turns out, when one is careful to create a manageable budget, money seems to appear out of thin air. Sometimes the extra income would be nice, but we’re both much happier with the current arrangement, so I’ll continue as a domestic engineer until we have a reason to re-evaluate.
3. Matt spent his Monday nights working on the paper while I taught CCD, but it’s still not done :(
4. I’ll have to find the house goals post & see how we did, but I’m sure our plans changed at least 10 times.
5. Ratzi has a friend! He’s still a little pudgey but he’s not fat! Yay!
6. Still workin’ on it.

Goals for Marriage Year 4:
1. Fundraise enough to pay for our WYD trip
2. Be a more organized & effective CCD teacher
3. More house projects – another post for another day :)
4. Get back to scrapbooking – I have no excuses to not scrapbook
5. Get caught up and stay current with gallery pictures
6. Continue saving money to replace my car
7. Get our mortgage ready to have the PMI removed
8. Get life insurance
9. Start really saving for retirement
10. Continue to encourage Matt to finish his paper
11. Plant something in my flower bed next spring
12. Walk a lot to get ready for the big hike in Sydney
13. Top Secret Project yet again

P.S. Matt is the best husband a woman could ask for.

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