Bio

Ursula Reel Hennessey was born and raised on Staten Island, New York. She is a graduate of Davidson College in North Carolina. Ursula worked as a reporter for the New York Post, the Associated Press, and the Staten Island Advance, covering the World Series, the Super Bowl, the U.S. Open, the NYC Marathon, and everything in between. Since 2002, she has been an elementary school teacher and tutor. Ursula and her husband, Matthew, have four children, ages 8, 6, 4 and 1 month. They live in Connecticut.


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Ursula Hennessey's Profile

Ursula Hennessey
Name:
Ursula Hennessey
Joined:
May 17, 2010

Recent Comments

Ursula Hennessey
AUMom: Thank you for posting this. I needed to remember that good still lives in this world.  · 6 hours ago

Agree, AUMom, and, after the horrors of this week -- including the despicable ways media members have acted/spoken/tweeted, etc. -- I might edit your statement slightly to say, "I needed to remember that God still lives in this world."

One of the many gifts that has come our way because of our daughter is a pair of God glasses, if you will, which allows me to see and revel in the many ways that good/God graces us when we least deserve it.

And, EJ, did *not* know Frazier was part of that Toms River team. Great fact.

Thanks, EJ for posting about this. 

Ursula Hennessey

Gosh, I'm loving these depictions by Roman. Such a fantastic addition to Ricochet.

I was worried I'd missed a discussion about the medium (media?). Would love to hear more about the process. Would you (or have you, on Ricochet already?) entertain questions about your work? 

Barkha Herman: Water color pencils + water color?  Do you scan them or take a  picture? · 12 hours ago
Ursula Hennessey

Amen to all you've said, Peter.

(...revealing my own intense impulse to comment and meddle ... )

Ursula Hennessey

Michael Hinton

Sandy

Michael Hinton: Expecting baby in mid March. We're not doing the stay-at-home thing, but we found a fantastic caregiver.

I hope you and your wife will keep an open mind on this...

We're both on the brink of earning PhDs (in real disciplines), and we both want to balance a career with having a largish (4) family ...

Good luck, Michael. I'm sure you'll make it work and everyone will be happy. If you have a great caregiver, congrats. There are amazing folks out there (we had one once) who can help you get through this tough period. Your kids will be fine. My very best friend in the world has worked all through both her children's early lives, and they are very happy and smart and well-adjusted. She is successful and happy. I worked through the first two, and stayed home for the other two. There are huge upsides (and, of course, sacrifices) with both choices. I wish you and your expanding family many blessings!

Ursula Hennessey

I could go on and on about working vs. not with kids. I've done both and I find staying at home, with all its challenges, to be more peaceful for my soul. The extra money from my job was eaten up by too many dinners ordered in because of our exhaustion and lack of time. Also by the laundry service. And part time babysitters. For us, it wasn't worth it on so many levels. I felt guilty, pulled in too many directions, and, worst of all, I felt that I was suddenly quite mediocre at two things -- my job and parenting -- instead of somewhat acceptable at one. So, for me, staying at home was our only choice. We have no money and probably never will. But, I'm relatively happy on a daily basis. There's a lot to be said for that. Good luck. Definitely write up your feelings/experiences here. We are interested! That will also keep you busy and your mind (somewhat) sharp!!

Ursula Hennessey

Mollie Hemingway, Ed.:

Oh, and another good thing is that once you get going, try to make sure you get at least 15 minutes truly alone -- and outside the house -- each day. · 1 hour ago

Congrats, my dear, on the new little one on his/her way and on writing this post! I just had No. 4 and only now feel like I sort of  know what to do. Sort of. Barely. Some days, not so much.

But seriously, I really agree with what Mollie writes above. The key to remember (at least for me) is that most days you will not want to leave. You will be tired. You won't want to change out of your hole-y sweat pants. You won't want to interact with strangers -- small talk takes too much energy, etc. BUT, you must force yourself to go. For some of my fave moms, it was forcing themselves to go running, to Weight Watchers' meetings, to AA or AlAnon meetings, to the Bible study.

You have to find a regular way to get out of the house. It can be challenging, especially while nursing, but it must be done for your own sanity. 

Ursula Hennessey

From one Cardinal to another. Dolan weighs in.

Ursula Hennessey

So much to love about Stan Musial. And so many fun tidbits to read about him here and here. But, I think this is my favorite way to remember The Man ... something about watching the old footage ... something about the wonderful coincidence of his final at bat, linking him to the next generation, for better or [and] worse ... 

Take a watch:

Ursula Hennessey
Metalheaddoc: What if PEDs were available in other walks of life? I would love to ask one of these sanctimonious sports journalists what they would do if I could give them a needle of unicorn whiz that would increase their readership by 8% and increase their chances of winning a Pulitzer by 4%. Would they take it? Or would they whinge about their "purity"? Because some of their competitors would probably do the deed. Welcome to the competitive jungle.  How many of us wouldn't give a thought to something that would increase our competitiveness in our chosen field? Especially when you are talking about salaries in the millions. · 8 minutes ago

Fair question, Metalhead.

Ursula Hennessey
Terry: .....  But, if I had to bet, I would wager that they will announce today thatnobody is being added by the BBWAA this year.....

Hey, Terry, that's pretty good!!!!

According to MLB twitter feed, no one has been voted in. First time no one elected since 1996.

Ursula Hennessey

Trace: Baseball's history is littered with bad behavior and shameful moments just like our nation's history. How appropriate is it that Negro League players are excluded even as their lesser, whiter compatriots stand as champions? Surely those omissions are morally worse than the inclusion of juicers whose steroid use helped their play but did not guarantee success.

The Hall of Fame is first and foremost a museum. Let the fans hold the players in individual judgement but let the sportswriters who (Ursula excepted) are far from being blameless in all things put the best players in the game into its halls. Leaving these players out amounts to a whitewash -- and a rather sanctimonious one at that. I don't need the sportswriters of America to pass moral judgement -- let them judge the talent.  

Sounds about right, Trace (as usual). And, in Klapisch and Posnanski's defense, they totally agree with you as well.

Ursula Hennessey

EThompson

jarhead: But Sosa,Clemens, and Bonds would likely never get my vote.

There was certainly some controversy in the Apple when David "the Warrior" Wells was traded for Clemens.

I wonder if Ursula was covering the Yankee beat in those days? · 21 minutes ago

Yes, I was, E. I wasn't a huge fan of either Wells or Clemens in the clubhouse, but it was sure fun to cover their pitching performances.

Ursula Hennessey

Mister D: I dislike the juicers. I get why they did it, but I hate that they made a mockery of the game's history, and especially hate that they put so many players in a position of using themselves or being forced out of a job.

But this wasn't something that happened in a vacuum. I remember when the "home run chase" was going on, the debate over juiced balls, and the frequent snide and public remarks that the balls weren't the only things juiced. The players sure knew what was going on. The union knew. The owners knew. The reporters knew. Informed fans were at least aware of the rumors. But few poked or prodded or even asked. And that allowed it to grow.

That widespread, cultural complicity makes it hard for me to hold up a few players as scapegoats, even ones I dislike as much as Bonds and Clemens. Add in the uncertainty of not just who used, but what they used, when they used it, how they used it, and how long they used it and I don't see much point in taking a principled voting stance. 

Very convincing, Mister D.

Ursula Hennessey

Thanks everyone for the well wishes! Baby Sally and I are getting along well, and her three siblings are all quite gentle. My 4yo guy is a little out of sorts -- I guess it's a textbook reaction to a new attention-seeker in the home, but ... ah .. I'll save it for another post.

Ursula Hennessey

Joan of Ark La Tex: Is it worth paying $70 babysitting fees for? Or should I wait for the DVD? · 23 hours ago

Edited 23 hours ago

My question exactly.

Ursula Hennessey
Ken Owsley: Let me revisit.  I was driving along to work this morning and the more I thought about the "big deal" the government just struck with itself, the more angry I got.  And I thought "You know, the only good thing about this is we can finally stop calling them 'The Bush Tax Cuts' "  And I thought "I really need to stop following politics, it makes me so angry."  But this guy, he really gives me hope.  I think there are a lot of folks just like this guy, in fact I know some of them.  And I realize that we humans are pretty OK, so long as we understand that it's about loving each other, and we just forget that too often. · 37 minutes ago

I'm right with you, Ken.

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