Pinks on the Patio at La Cantera Resort & Spa

Pinks on the Patio is one way La Cantera Resort & Spa is honoring Breast Cancer Awareness Month. Photo: La Cantera Resort & Spa, used with permission.

This month, La Cantera Resort & Spa is going PINK in honor of Breast Cancer Awareness month and names WINGS its beneficiary of a month-long campaign.  Last year, La Cantera Resort donated $16,000 to WINGS from the overall resort wide donation initiatives. (La Cantera Resort & Spa, 2020)

Every Thursday evening from October 1 through 22, the La Cantera Family will be raising its glasses, and donations, to the efforts and actions of WINGS. Pinks on the Patio, just off the main lobby entrance, will feature live music every Thursday from 6p.m. to 8p.m., with $11 cocktails, $10 Chandon Brut Rosé and One Hope Chardonnay available with complimentary pink popcorn with $2 from each drink special will going back to WINGS. Social distancing and mask requirements will be enforced.

GLOW, a night under the Texas stars at Loma de Vida Spa & Wellness, from 7p.m. to 10p.m. October 14 and 28 also benefits WINGS. Guests will enjoy a co-ed experience with live music, individual charcuterie and a mini bottle of Chandon in a socially distance setting. Masks will be required upon entry and throughout the spa. Guest will be able to explore the Himalayan Salt Saunas, Herbal Steam Rooms, Vitality Pools and outdoor infinity edge pool and heated Jacuzzis. Tickets are $100 per person with $5 of each ticket going to WINGS. Ages 21 and over only, swimwear required at all times.

The landscaping on Plaza San Saba just off the resort’s main lobby will have a rosy hue at dusk, as PINK LED lights bring focus to the Breast Cancer Awareness Month.

WINGS’ mission is to bridge the gap between diagnosis and treatment of breast cancer, providing comprehensive breast health services to uninsured women in Central and South Texas because everyone deserves a lifetime. WINGS is the only program of its kind in the country providing this kind of support for women with breast cancer. The program has provided support to over 900 South Texas women with breast cancer and over $12 million in healthcare services. Over 95% of the women treated through WINGS are still living as a result of the program. WINGS maintains an efficiency rating of 94%, which is above that of the average non-profit organization.

Spicy Chicken Sandwich and Hatch Green Chile Bacon Burger at Whataburger

The Hatch Green Chile Bacon Burger is available for a limited time at Whataburger. Photo: Whataburger, used with permission.

Whether you like some spice or a roasted smoky heat, Whataburger has you covered with two new menu items. For a limited time only, fans can treat their taste buds to the Spicy Chicken Sandwich and Hatch Green Chile Bacon Burger. (Whataburger, 2020)

The Spicy Chicken Sandwich brings the perfect combination of flavor and heat to spice up your next meal. The sandwich starts with a meticulously marinated, crispy chicken filet, topped with fresh, cool leaf lettuce, tomatoes, pickles and mayo, finished with a toasted four-inch bun.

The Hatch Green Chile Burger has everything Whataburger fans love-double meat, double cheese and crispy bacon, plus the smooth, roasted heat of Hatch green chiles. It features two fresh all-beef patties topped with Hatch green chiles, crispy bacon, one slice of American cheese, one slice of Monterey Jack cheese and creamy mayo, all atop a signature five-inch toasted bun.

Whataburger has been making burgers since 1950 when Harman Dobson opened a humble hamburger stand in Corpus Christi, Texas.  He wanted customers to take one bite and say, “What a burger” so he named his stand on Ayers St “Whataburger.” Whataburger now has over 800 locations across the country and continues to deliver fresh, made to order meals every day with superior customer service.  Community support includes charitable giving and volunteerism to nonprofit organizations that focus on children’s charities, cancer research, hunger assistance, disaster relief and military support.

 

Book review: ‘Family in Six Tones’ by Lan Cao and Harlan Margaret Van Cao

Photo: google

Lan Cao is the author of the novels “Monkey Bridge” and “The Lotus and the Storm” and a professor of law at the Chapman University School of Law, specializing in international business and trade, international law and development. She has taught at Brooklyn Law School, Duke Law School, Michigan Law School and William & Mary Law School. Her latest book “Family in Six Tones: A Refugee Mother, an American Daughter” is the dual first-person memoir by the acclaimed Vietnamese-American novelist and her thoroughly American teenage daughter, Harlan Margaret Van Cao, who just graduated from high school in June 2020 and will be attending UCLA.

In the Introduction, Lan Cao views motherhood and being a refugee with equal trepidation because of how uncertain she still feels about both. Even after forty years of being in the United States and seventeen years of being a parent, she still feels inadequate in both. This is the central theme throughout this memoir as she explores being a refugee and being a mother with the help of Harlan, her teenage daughter, who is half Vietnamese. In short alternating chapters, they show how different and yet how similar they really are.  Lan relates her immigrant experience including war, past traumas and tragedies and the struggles and discriminations she faced while getting an education, especially in law school, while Harlan deals with culture clashes, bullying and going through life coping with synesthesia – a condition in which people often see sounds, taste word or feel a sensation on their skin when they smell certain scents – she often relates about having a purple cat following her.

Being an immigrant is never easy and too often the Vietnamese viewpoint is left out of the conversation.  This is what makes this memoir unique; not only is it told through the perspective of a mother/daughter relationship, but it is told through the Vietnamese point of view, not a solider or a politician, even though it touches on the sensitive topic of the war. Readers get to witness Lan’s transition from naïve immigrant to law student, especially the moment she decides to study law – when she was working in a video store and the police questioned her regarding missing money. The insight into Vietnamese culture is interesting, especially the system of ranking people, i.e. calling relatives Father Two, Sister Three. Her shared immigrant experiences of discrimination makes her relatable: “We may have Americanness officially documented in birth certificates, passports, or naturalization papers. But despite the seductive panache of the American Dream, the message that we can never really be American has curiously been passed down from generation to generation.”  Harlan also has this conflict about being too American versus not being Vietnamese enough and her writing is more poetic: “This life isn’t meant to be a race. It is meant to be a long, slow dream of perfect confusion, loneliness, deep friendships, and ambition. I’m ready.” When she writes “You can be American outside, but not in the house” it speaks to what children of immigrants sometimes deal with at home. They are expected to be Americanized outside the house, but at home they are expected to speak the native language and adhere to that culture’s expectations, leading to an emotional tug of war.  Overall, “Family in Six Tones” is an impressive and poignant exploration of the mother/daughter relationship which often has the same struggles and insecurities passed on from generation to generation. It is recommended for readers who appreciate a distinctive perspective on the struggles of refugees and familial bonds.

“ I wanted to bloom wherever I was planted, in this present tense where I had found myself, like a lotus flower that grows in mud and turns to face the sunlight.”  – Lan Cao

*The author received a copy of this book for an honest review. The views and opinions expressed here belong solely to her.