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mothers day

OASIS day spa’s Offer for Mother’s Day!

May 3, 2017 by Inside Press

A one-day sale is on Thursday, May 4th.

A 15% discount for a massage or treatment at Oasis is a welcome thought any time, but as an idea for a Mother’s Day treat, well, it really inspires one long, ahhh, from this mom. So act fast tomorrow to secure your discounted service. 

Per Oasis owner, Bruce Schoenberg:  “With the April showers now behind us, and the May flowers blooming thoughts turn towards sunshine and the beauty of New York in springtime. Mother’s Day is May 14th, and Derek Jeter Day is no match for the power of mom. Our best gift certificate sale for the holiday is tomorrow. Thursday, May 4th.”  Visit www.oasisdayspanyc.com  or call either of two locations:  One Park Avenue, NYC, 212-254-7722, ext. 2380;  at the Dobbs Ferry location, 914 409-1900, ext. 2381. –– Grace Bennett

 


 

 

 

Filed Under: Lifestyles with our Sponsors Tagged With: Massage, mothers day, Oasis Day Spa, Pamper Mom

Lasting Legacies

April 24, 2017 by Dana Y. Wu

Four young women share what they learned or inherited from their mothers and grandmothers.


KRISHNA PATEL

Krishna Patel

A Horace Greeley High School junior, Krishna Patel realizes that she has a very different reality than her grandmother’s experience at 16-years-old. “My life consists of scurrying from one extracurricular to the next, staying up late to get my homework done, and spending the weekends with my friends. My grandmother dropped out of 10th grade to get married and start a family of her own, as was common in the 1950s in rural India.

I will never forget when she presented me with two thick silver anklets.  I was 14 and she was visiting from San Francisco.  She called me into the kitchen of our house in Millwood.  She said she had something for me.  “The same ones I wore on my wedding day, 60 years ago,” she said.

“I wasn’t much older than you.”

Krishna’s grandmother

Krishna appreciates how her grandmother found the courage to break from tradition to become a strong, outgoing, powerful woman, and set the precedent for the other women in the family to do the same. “When my grandfather, a prominent Assemblyman, was imprisoned due to his political views, my grandmother continued to be an activist for reform, against his wishes due to concerns for her safety. My grandmother was very brave when, at 40, she had the chance to join her brother in the United States.

She taught herself English and took up a job at a perfume factory to finance a new life here.”


MADDY CHEN

Maddy Chen

Similar to Krishna’s grandmother, Maddy Chen’s grandmother also had little to say about her marriage. Both her grandmother and her grandmother’s identical twin sister, who was born first in 1938, had arranged marriages in Hainan, China.  The firstborn was promised to a village boy who became a rice farmer. Maddy’s grandmother, was also betrothed in 1940 to a village boy, but he later immigrated to America and became a doctor. “This two minute difference between my grandmother and her twin has extended across the generations.” Maddy, a senior at Centennial High School in Maryland, reflects.

“My grandmother’s twin had a son who became the local village butcher. Every day, he wakes up at 4 a.m. to slaughter a pig. He spends the rest of his day selling pieces of meat in a hot, crowded, smelly, open air market.  My mother is a dermatologist who uses her hands only to perform delicate skin surgeries. I often ponder what would have happened to my grandmother, my mother, and me if the second born twin married the rice farmer.”

Maddy Chen and her family

HANNAH FENLON

Our author, Hannah Fenlon and her Great Grandmother, Yuan Lau Chan Man

It is possible be both the same and wildly different from the women in one’s family. In Hannah Fenlon’s family, Hannah learned cultural traditions by cooking with her great grandmother and grandmother, just as her mother and aunts did. “Whatever the size or shape or “mistakes” my little hands made when we gathered to make dumplings, I also saw my great-grandmother’s expert, lovely hands pinching the dough just so, plopping them in boiling water and then, scooping the delicious dumplings as they floated to the top of the pot.”

Hannah, a junior at Horace Greeley High School, also inherited creative abilities and attention to detail from her grandmother and great-grandmother who were talented seamstresses. “Ever since I was a little kid, I liked arts and crafts.” says Hannah. “And I loved learning to quilt.”


ALEXIS DRAPER

Alexi Draper

Teaching yoga, sharing a laugh and traveling are among the many things that connect Alexis Draper and her mother, Susan, of Armonk. Alexis, now a freshman at Texas Christian University, recalls a special summer in Todi, a small village in the hills of Umbria, Italy.

This trip was in preparation for Alexis’s first year of Italian study at Byram Hills High School.  Each morning, Alexis said, she and her mom “left their little apartment and walked down the cobble stone steps to the pastry shop in town, and then went to our classroom to learn Italian. Though we lived there for only two weeks, we progressed from just waving “hello” to having small conversations with the lady who would feed the stray cats, with the woman from our favorite boutique, and with the servers in the restaurants.”

She and her mom took the afternoons to drive to different ancient towns, exploring places like the grandiose Basilica of San Francesco in Assisi, hiking up the mountain at Cascata della Marmore (waterfalls), and riding a birdcage-like funicular to the top of Gubbio. “All the sites were spectacular, but the magic of the trip was really in Todi itself because my mom and I learned something new together every day.”  On one of their last evenings in town, Alexis and her mom participated in a cooking lesson at a local woman’s home. “We stumbled a bit through our recipes in our new found language but we enjoyed the fruits of our labor, dining under the stars with other travelers from around the world.”


As Alexis, Hannah, Maddy and Krishna shared these formative experiences with me and what they learned from the women in their families, I was reminded of a trip I took in 1995 with my grandmother to Weihai, China. It was the first time I met my great grandmother and my great aunt, who had been sent to a re-education labor camp during the Cultural Revolution.

My grandmother left behind her family at age 20 when she fled Communist China with my mother and her infant son. Her life journey took her from China, to Hong Kong, then Brazil and finally the United States.  When we were returning to New York, my great aunt gave us bundles of seaweed to take home.  She had roamed the shores surrounding Weihai, a city on a peninsula, to collect the seaweed. She dried the pieces in the sun and then wrapped them in scraps of cloth. She didn’t  have much money but arduously gathered these fragments culled from the sea of their hometown. Somehow, we made it through customs with those pungent bundles the size of pillows.

That seaweed connected three generations of women. That gift to my grandmother from her sister’s gnarled hands was my inheritance of courage, love, and hope.

Filed Under: Armonk Cover Stories Tagged With: Family, grandmother, Legacies, Memories of Mom, mother, mothers day

For Mother’s Day: Family Memories Shared by our Sponsors too!

April 23, 2017 by The Inside Press

A Family who Golfs Together Stays Together!

Miyuki Shirakura, Business Administrator of Dr. Aki Shirakura and Associates Dental Practice in Armonk, with her beautiful children Douglas (14) and Maya (12).

“Golfing with my kids is something wonderful we all share a love for and enjoy doing together. I hope they will keep golfing throughout their lives and with their kids someday.” –Miuki Shirakura


What it’s All About

“It’s not always about burping, feeding and diaper changes Sometimes it’s about having fun. Thanks mom for hanging out and playing with me at World
Cup Gymnastics
Romperee Class!”


Chappaqua Grandmothers

“Mom Jean (Jean Bueti) and and Mom Marge (Marge Cullen) as she is ready to make a wish…They both live close by, a hop and a skip through the Greeley woods and over the stream.”

–Sandy Bueti and Teresa Cullen Bueti, Bueti Brothers Builders, Inc.


Celebration Time

Daughter and granddaughter, Gail Marie and Daniella Victoria Delbalzo, enjoyed time together celebrating with Mildred Rose Politi on Mildred’s 104th Birthday.

Gail Marie Brow Studio & More

Filed Under: Sponsor News! Tagged With: memories, mothers day, Words and Wisdom from our Sponsors

A Special Three Course Mother’s Day at Bistro 146

April 26, 2016 by The Inside Press

Tell MOM How Much You Love Her with HUGS, KISSES, and a SCRUMPTIOUS 3 Course DINNER at Bistro 146 In Pleasantville!

happy-mothers-day-hd-771086Thank you for choosing Bistro146 The Seafood Grille! We Pride Ourselves serving the best Seafood around. Please come and have a taste of Quality and Freshness of the Seasonal Premium Fish And Shellfish in the Market at very Affordable Prices.

We are very Confident in what We do. Bring Your MOM and Spend sometime together,While Indulging in a very special 3 course Dinner Menu! Featuring: Soft shell crabs, Maine Lobster, Baked Oysters, Raw Oysters, Halibut Filet, Chateaubriand Steak,Colossal Scallops and Moore! Is the best time to give some love back to Her.

Bistro146

146 Bedford Road
Pleasantville, NY 10570

Call 914 495-3992 for a reservation.

Filed Under: Sponsor News! Tagged With: Bistro146, Dinner, Inside Press, Mothers, mothers day, theinsidepress.com, three course

Of Flowers, Mom and Memories

April 17, 2015 by The Inside Press

flowerbarMay. It’s a month we all know and love for flowers (thank you, April Showers), and know and love too for that special day each year when many of us bring or send those flowers to Mom! Yes, May is famous for our celebration of flowers and women. Quite the dynamic duo.

Maybe it all starts with celebratory flowers when baby is born. Before long, those babes are starfish-fingered pre-schoolers earnestly drawing flowers with fat crayons and all their love. Mommy is their world. A little older, a little more independent, elementary school-aged children and pre-teens still sign their cards with hearts and flowers. But they’re, perhaps, a little more careful when they color, trying hard to stay inside the lines on their construction paper while testing lines and boundaries elsewhere. Mom may be cool one day, annoying the next. Teen years are a challenge for most parents–forget flowers, moms are often just grateful to be given the time of day! But, come college and after, smiles return. And so do the flowers. Circle of life stuff, my friends.

From my slightly clichéd meditations on motherhood above, to others’ somewhat more provocative inferences regarding women and flowers, connections between the two abound. Christian Dior is quoted as saying After women, flowers are the most divine creations. And who has not blushed, even slightly, at Georgia O’Keeffe’s resplendently feminine floral paintings?

Extending the metaphor, I suggest you think of this issue of Inside Armonk as a hothouse for exceptional blooms! Yes, the women we highlight on our cover and inside the issue are each unique and special. They’re mothers, daughters, sisters, wives. They’re friends, they’re co-workers, they’re women of courage, inspirational yet often very humble about all they’ve done and all they do.

In fact, speaking of our cover story, who doesn’t love a hero? Or, in this case, four dashing local SHEroes! Volunteers all, these wonder women serve in Armonk’s combined fire and ambulance service (one of only nine such combined services in the county) with the singular goal of helping others. They may not leap tall buildings in a single bound, but then again, they’re not comic book characters, but, rather, the real deal! And that’s our kind of superhero. All hail!

Helping others was young Arielle Levy’s goal too. As she prepared to become a Bat Mitzvah (that milestone event in a Jewish girl’s life as she transitions to adulthood), this graceful young woman decided that her lifelong love of dance could serve as a lifeline to others less fortunate. She gave of herself, and asked others to give on her behalf, as she worked with local schools to help create and sustain a dance program for children with special needs.

Treasures Thrift Shop volunteers are a committed crew too. Their purpose? To re-purpose clothing, jewelry, furniture, books, dvds and useful and decorative household items. A fixture in town since 1968, this St. Stephen’s Episcopal Church fundraising shop is a regular stop for so many. From those-in-the-know locals to antiques dealers who come often from far and wide, people hope to discover hidden treasure at Treasures. And very often, they do.

What else? Well, let’s not forget that May is also the month in which we honor, salute and celebrate the men and women who serve and have served our country. The stars and stripes fly high as American Legion Post 1097 hosts the annual Memorial Day Ceremony. The Byram Hills High School band plays patriotic music, names of memorialized soldiers are read, wreaths are laid and an invited speaker shares insightful thoughts and stories. It’s a moving and memorable event and all are most welcome to attend and show support.

Speaking of memorial observances, I too pause and reflect as this holiday approaches. Two years ago, I lost my father right after Memorial Day. A veteran, as well as a man who fought a brilliant fight against the horribly debilitating disease Parkinson’s, dad was inspirational to the end.

So, as we head into May, and its alliterative M-holidays, Mother’s Day and Memorial Day, I want to wish everyone a marvelous month! Tell mom how much you love and appreciate her. If you’re having trouble finding just the right card, may I suggest turning to our Et Cetera page and taking a tip from Dan Levitz’s homage to his mom. Even if you’re not inspired to put pen to paper (or tap a keyboard on your preferred device), at the very least I promise you’ll smile. And sharing a smile is as great a gift as any. Especially if you bring flowers too.

Peace, Beth

Filed Under: From the Inside Out Tagged With: Memorial Day, mothers day, Spring

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