Tuesday, May 3, 2011

The day after.


Our Missouri college-shirts hang over a chair as a silent testimony....
On the airport
our family together with a Canadian friend as a bonus stood waiting, and after we had good strong coffee we drove home.
Everything is definitely smaller here I noticed on the way to Nijmegen...
Our neighbors welcomed us home, including instructions on the pavement how to get to our door, we had a good meal and then we caved in!
Before you fall asleep there is this film with all these images that keeps playing in your mind...

Now it's the day after.
I am still grinning!

Did this all really happen?
It did!

Thank you all!
Thank you Saint Louis!
Wow, thank you for the ride....

Saturday, April 30, 2011

And then...

....it hit me like a sledgehammer.
My kid is called a geek back home, like apparently the other kids in his group as well, I never realized that, it was never an issue.
But here he apparently is amongst his peers, they all get each-others jokes, they only need half a word to understand each-other.
As we are in this huge stadium-ballroom waiting for "some adult people to stop talking" ( as the kids see it), these talking heads are actually starting to make sense to me.

They, the FLL, tried to make science look hot and happening, and it actually worked.
Here in this giant dome, with thousands of people into this robot-stuff, the biomedical engineering and robotics-challenges are considered "über-cool".
Here the ability to compete at a cerebral level is celebrated.
From Kinder-garden to college, four competitions, from all over the world, kids in all kinds of weird outfits, having a ball, because they live, love and learn.
It is pushed to the level of grand sports here, with the most powerful muscle possible involved: the brain.
Here the ability to think and possibly improve other peoples lives is seen as important.
Wil-I-Am and the Black Eyed Peas performed here last night...not my cup of tea but not even the Superbowl had that privilege!
Next year the challenge in bio-engineering will be about food technology, how to prevent contamination for instance, which is also meant to keep people safe.

I was not sure if I would do this ever again, not that my son has these doubts...and ideas are already bubbling up, so if he and his team pull this off once more and he wants to go...I will comply..
Besides: I am so humbled and amazed by my kid!
Here my kid is part of a bigger thing than just being smart and a little bit shy.
Here he is considered a significant part of the future.
As our kid is considered a nerd back home, here he is part of a cult, a phenomenon.
This whole show...it is all very American, very OTT, but I am falling for it like a log, I now actually even think it all is "kind a cool"....

Friday, April 29, 2011

78.

But this could all still change, for now 78th place is...well...not last place!
Worldwide 17000 teams competed, these are the Worldfinals, we shouldn't take that for granted!
We didn't come to win.
A perfect score is around 400 and the team had an average score of 100.
Not bad! Not bad at all!
But if we win anything it is confidence, language-skills, friendships and a lot of good will!
I was amazed to see how my kid walks up to the guy with the jojo-act, he was pretty amazing!, his name is Patrick and my kid shook his hand, telling him how awesome he thought that was.
So there's confidence.
We made a lot of friends with a lot of "dropjes", apparently licorice is popular, even though it is "an acquired taste", but many americans have dutch ancestors and the luggage is a bit lighter, thank heavens for that, after all the licorice we left behind!
The kids are fluent English by now!
Good will hopefully for our coaches which is a mother and son team, ever percevering, boldly going where noone and so forth, it is such an effort for them to pull this off!
The games are more or less finished, we now hang on for the rest of the show and the amazing finals of the highschoolteams.
I am still a bit of a nitwit when it comes to robotics, but I love being here, in the big-boys-pits.
Dedication, concentration and the ever present gracious professionalism.
Truly magnificent!


Thursday, April 28, 2011

Antfarm


So two days into it all, time flies by with the speed of light.
All around us tornadoes cause havoc, this time people are in serious danger and there are casualties.
But is is around us...
We are safe and sound, so the homefront needs not to worry.
I understand that the national newsprogramme for kids mentioned us once more in this context.
All these impressions are a bit much to take in at times.
It is so overwhelming, more than a thousand contesants, times three leagues, small lego-robots and huge contraptions that resemble tanks and rise up far above me.
My son is running around on adrenaline and candy, normaly I would not aggree but in this case : "when in Rome do as the Romans!" .
Or here we would have to apply Saint Louis in to that sentence, so there you go.
The whole world is here in this arena!
From South Korea to Toronto, Taiwan , Israel, and ehm well...The Netherlands.
It's like a giant antfarm in here....

The sequence of practice runs, Body Forward-presentations, the actual competition is getting familiar now, though the kids are very very tired.
And there's two more days to go.

Monday, April 25, 2011

One Jetlag to go, please!

It is even more unreal than I thought.
Being here is like a dream, it looks familiar but everything is so much larger than life.
The coffee, the pizza, the views...My kid has the time of his life!
He never flew before, and he is slightly apprehensive about the whole experience of being in the States, but manages to bluff his way through it all...

We "did" the Arch today, and the most spectacular Saint Louis Zoo.
We also saw the storm damage from last weekends tornado that touched ground and blew away whole housing blocks, factory walls, trucks, powerlines and trailer-parks, a very daunting sight...
Back at the hotel more and more teams are arriving, and conferring their strategies and tactics for the games, whilst our team is enjoying the hotel-swimming-pool, which counts as preparation as well in our humble opinion: Work hard, play hard!
Tomorrow the kids are off on their exchange with the American team, that just delivered twenty pounds of candy for the kids from Nijmegen!, and I am off on my mission to buy records if all goes well.
Or I wake up, and I am not sitting here in the hotel-lobby, with a huge Starbucks caffee-latte, next to an open fire...
Somebody pinch me already!

Saturday, April 23, 2011

What was that?

"A tornado you said? Now? Uh....I see....Well...uh...ok, thank you..."
I forgot about that...never mind earthquakes and tsunamis!, serves us right for having our fingers crossed because we didn't get a wild-card for the finals in Tokyo, but for the nice and most of the time dry city of Saint Louis instead.
I was applauding to soon.
Straight through tornado-alley we go and Saint Louis been hit!
There's bad and good news, and usually I'd like to hear the good news last, but I am not so sure it is definite good news in this case...because here it is: good news is that that has happened and what are the odds it will happen twice in a week?!
However; as it happens those odds turn out to be quite big, but that is our secret, ok?, because my son is already a bit apprehensive about it all, after watching storm-chasers...
The bad news is that Lambert Airport is well trashed, and KLM is still figuring out what to do next...but the KLM-lady also said they would get us there somehow, and that was in fact good news...
And if all happens to fail and we get stranded in Detroit...well...at least we are over there, somewhere.

I believe in Karma, sometimes, and I suppose all will be well.
Weird thought though...

Friday, April 22, 2011

National television...

Nearly there, zero hour: take off!
The team has had it's appearance on national television, and all grandparents are well and truly chuffed!
The bags are packed (yes, insane, two days ahead, but it would be good to have a quiet day before the havoc starts) and all there is to do is...wait once more.
And decisions to make, important ones as to what snacks to bring on the airplane and how to fit them in our hand-luggage.
Or minor ones like what to do with twelve hours of sitting in a chair: adults should be fine with a book and mp-3's, but what if you are a bouncing kid, who can hardly finish it through a normal meal without running around the house at least a few times?
We'll see...