Friday, December 28, 2007
Late November - clean up with help!
Late November again
Late November
Paladin, aka Tubby or Tuba
Lighted Christmas Parade - November 24
Friday, December 21, 2007
My Birthday Purchases
Thursday, December 13, 2007
Renaissance Faire weekend
Wednesday, November 21, 2007
High Mountain Desert Weather "Patterns?"
Forecast Conditions | High/Low °F | Precip. Chance |
| High not valid after 2pm | ||||||||
| 51°F | ||||||||
| 49°F | ||||||||
| 43°F |
Yuck. I guess it's time to pull out the sweaters. And here are a few choice sentences from a "special weather statement" we get:
STRONG COLD FRONT EXPECTED TONIGHT... ...WINTRY WEATHER AND THE COLDEST TEMPERATURES OF THE SEASON THIS WEEKEND...
A COLD FRONT WILL PUSH INTO THE AREA THIS EVENING WITH STRONG EAST WINDS EXPECTED...
INCREASING CHANCES FOR MOUNTAIN SNOW SHOWERS AND LOWLAND RAIN SHOWERS ARE EXPECTED OVERNIGHT FRIDAY NIGHT... YET ANOTHER COLD BLAST IS EXPECTED DURING THE DAY ON SATURDAY ... THE RESULT WILL BE CONTINUED CHANCES FOR SHOWERS AND THE COLDEST TEMPERATURES THUS FAR IN THE SEASON...STRUGGLING TO MAKE IT INTO THE LOWER 40S IN THE LOWLANDS.
AS TEMPERATURES FALL LATE SATURDAY AFTERNOON...LOWLAND RAIN SHOWERS WILL BEGIN TO MIX WITH SNOW BEFORE TURNING OVER TO ALL SNOW SATURDAY EVENING. OVERALL...SIGNIFICANT SNOW ACCUMULATIONS ARE EXPECTED ACROSS AREA MOUNTAINS...
Thursday, November 15, 2007
Holiday Crazies
Last night I couldn't sleep b/c I was thinking about all the gifts to purchase & make in such a short time. I watched The Polar Express last night and I'm listening to Handel's Messiah right now, again, for the 10th (at least) time this season. I think I'm ready for Christmas!
Saturday, October 20, 2007
Cyndi Cargen, 1962-2007
When I was pregnant for Simon 2 1/2 years ago, I started going to our local yarn store on Monday nights to knit with whoever showed up. The group has shifted some over the months & years, but it's been a relatively consistent group for the past year or so. A few months ago I joined the local Chamber Singers choir which meets on Monday night at the same time, and I got a little teary at my last Monday night knitting - I felt as though I was leaving a family. I was, in effect.
Last night I got a call from one of my Monday knitter friends. She wanted to let me know that Cyndi, another of the Monday knitting regulars and a friend of all of ours, had had a stroke on Tuesday. She lost half of her brain function within a day or two and by yesterday (Friday) morning Cyndi was declared completely brain dead. She was being kept on life support for a short time because Cyndi was an organ donor. Her generosity continues even though her life will not. She was 45, a wife, a mother of two pre-teen boys, a loyal and generous friend.
When I first met Cyndi it was about halfway through my pregnancy with Simon. I know I was more emotional and sensitive than usual, probably due to the pregnancy hormones, and Cyndi's manner of speaking her mind, boldly, whether you wanted to hear it or not, was abrasive and offensive to me. I didn't like her at all.
Within a few months this same manner grew on me, and became part of what I most loved about her. She was unflinching in her honesty, which is actually a rare and respectable trait. And while I was initially turned off by her because she seemed to have something to say about every single thing, I realized in due time that she actually KNEW something valuable about almost everything.
One day there was a woman who came to knit and spoke about her international travels - I don't remember which country, but I do recall that it seemed to me like a slightly more obscure one. And Cyndi piped in about some town she'd been to - and I thought "is she serious? How is it possible?" but it was. And quickly she became the person whose opinion I most valued about so many things - because she really had done it, been there. Whether it was making homemade croissants from scratch to delicate perfection, organic gardening and composting, building things, home schooling her two boys, or coming up with a clever way to earn income by having a sharp eye for quality, she continued to amaze me.
One of the most exciting things to hear about was their house project. Cyndi and her husband and two boys have been renting a house in town and building a "green" house on some land for the past few years. They're doing permaculture and rain catchment and all sorts of sustainable practices - and building this property up to be as sustainable as they could. This is the kind of thing I'd ideally love to do, but I feel daunted by it. Cyndi demystified so many things for me - she'd quickly shrug and say "oh it's easy" to almost anything. It's because of her we finally started a compost pile in the backyard. She was right - it is easy. By next spring we'll have fabulous compost. She was going to help me with our garden in the spring...first by bringing llama beans (poop) for fertilizer, and then by helping with some of the planting strategies. She had given me an envelope of seeds from her loofah plant, which grows some squash-like vegetable that can then be cut and cleaned and used as loofahs for bathing. The llama beans came from our local llama rescue where she took her boys on a regular basis to help care for them.
Cyndi was one of those people you can't help but watch and learn from. Through the knitting group I realized how widely her vision and generosity reached. I don't know what her personal financial situation was, but she was truly a philanthropist at heart. Last fall she started knitting baby hats - not because she knew people who were having babies, but simply because she knew that there would be babies in need of hats. She began making two at a time, and recruiting other Monday night knitters to make them as well. Cyndi was hard to say no to when she got an idea in mind. A small pile of baby hats began to accumulate on the table. I mentioned this to my First Born home visitor - First Born is a local program developed to support first time parents and their babies prenatally through the child's third birthday. Every client receives a hand knit hat from their visitor once the baby is born, and the elderly woman who had been knitting most of them was no longer doing so. So Cyndi found her recipient. I don't know how many times she went to the First Born office, delivering a variety of lovely hand knit baby hats, but she certainly kept many a Grant County baby head snug.
Then just after Christmas last year she started talking about a Red Scarf Project. She came in with 8 or 12 inches knit already of an intricate and beautiful pattern that would become a lovely red scarf. Again, she began recruiting others to join her in the project. Scarves made in any shade of red - or with some red accents - were being gathered by a certain date and then she was shipping them to an organization who distributed them for Valentine's Day to high school aged children in a foster home who had not been adopted.
Later in the spring or early summer she began collecting old cell phones. I don't even remember the details surrounding it, but she collected a small quantity of them from our little group of knitters and shipped them away to yet another organization - which recycled the phones and somehow made them usable & gave them to people in yet another challenging situation.
Cyndi had a passion for giving to the more vulnerable populations. I don't know what it was that drove her compassionate and humanitarian urges, but in retrospect it strikes me as being very Christ-like. Who else did Jesus most tenderly reach out to but the poor, the elderly, the children, the crippled? Jesus gave the most loving compassion to those who hadn't experienced it in abundance, and those were exactly the groups of people Cyndi seemed to be constantly seeking out in order to give what she could of her time, talents and treasure. If only more of us could be as passionately compassionate!
I loved watching Cyndi with her boys. In the past few years whenever we've gone on vacation we've hired her boys to watch our cats. Cyndi would water our plants and sometimes even clean up a few things in the kitchen we'd not gotten to before leaving, and the boys would scoop the litter, feed and water the cats, and give them some attention and affection. The first time we hired them, she came over a few days before our vacation with both boys in tow. They had a notebook with certain prompts and questions already written in it, and they proceeded to ask us a variety of questions. What was the vet's number? What time of day should the cats be fed? How much food do they get at a time? Can they go outside? We answered their questions and Cyndi encouraged them to write everything in their notebook. I could tell that she had talked to them at length in preparation for this responsibility of cat-sitting, and I admired & greatly appreciated her thoroughness. Every day of our vacation Cyndi would drive her boys over to care for the cats while she puttered about. She accepted nothing from us for this service, and we paid the boys an amount that she, and they, and we felt was fair for their help. Our cats were never better cared for than on those vacations where the Cargen family came over.
I keep coming up with more stories and things I'd love to share, and maybe tidbits will continue to show up here. But for now, it's time to wish Cyndi well on her incredible journey to whatever lies beyond.
We Monday night knitter friends (family, really) are planning meals for a week or more to bring to Cyndi's family who are left behind. We are also knitting squares of various colors to string together into a prayer flag that we will give to Cyndi's husband and boys. Prayer flags are a tangible way of acknowledging our connection to the Divine Mystery, and as the flags blow in the breeze and fade - or even disintegrate - by the effects of the elements, we can visualize our prayers for Cyndi's journey and the peace of her soul being carried far on the wings of the wind.
Blessings on the journey of your spirit, Cyndi. Watch for an ofrenda from your friends and touch down to say farewell during the Days of the Dead before you head off for good. Our needles are busy, our hearts our hurting, and our yarn and our prayers will follow you for a long, long time. Monday night knitting group, Silver City and the populations of those in need of compassion will never be the same. No one who knew you remained untouched, and we were blessed to know you. We love you.
Sunday, October 7, 2007
Wednesday, October 3, 2007
Guinea (pigs...and otherwise)
Sometimes we are the guinea pigs for his dessert creations. Most of the time we are thrilled by this opportunity. It's a good night when Rob calls up and asks if we want dessert because he was baking all weekend and can't eat any more. Sometimes we get a perfect little two-person-sized portion, sometimes he brings over an entire cake. We eat what we can, and sometimes end up sharing it with more friends too. Rarely do we get a gomer, but we'll give a "thumbs down" if we think it necessary. This is a good arrangement.
This past weekend we had Rob & Tyler over to eat a sort of "finger food appetizer" dinner, and watch a movie. They walked in completely laden with containers and bags full of food items. Tyler rolled his eyes and said "they're all desserts."
I often tease Rob for being overly obsessive/compulsive and anal - but I feel I can say this without malice (in fact, with love and humor) as I see the same characteristics in myself. Actually, we've grown to calling each other "brother" & "sister" because we are curiously similar. This particular evening is one situation where I ribbed him mercilessly and told him I'd have to write my parents about it - "Guess what Rob made us do?!" - and yet, silently I was a little jealous I hadn't come up with the idea.
He brought over 4 different desserts: flan, chocolate surprise, almond genoise (which is pronounced "jhen-wah" but we persisted in calling "jeh-noisy" just for Rob's cringes & laughs), and some kind of custard. All of them were small enough servings, so it wasn't too bizarre that he would have brought four different things.
The crazy/interesting part was that for each of the four desserts he had made three different recipes - changing only one ingredient: the egg. His experiment was to discover the effect of using duck, chicken, and guinea eggs.
Before we got a plate or a fork, we were handed a pen and a paper with a chart on it. Four desserts listed along the left with space for tasting notes ("comment on texture, flavor, favorites," etc. I don't remember the whole list b/c I don't speak "pastry chef") and across the top of the page were the numbers "1, 2, 3" so we could make distinguishing notes & observations in each "box" as we tasted.
Twelve bites of four desserts later, we were told which eggs were used in which desserts. We compared our notes, Rob said "fascinating," and smiled, and we told him which ones he should never make again.
Tuesday, September 18, 2007
Dodging the Blog
I've been busy with various house projects lately - trying to get a little less dependent on my e-world. It's kind of nice to work with real pictures instead of just digital pictures, and to read books on paper instead of blogs and essays on screen all the time. I recently came across the following quote by Elton John:
Let's go out in the streets and march and protest instead of sitting at home and blogging. I do think it would be an incredible experiment to shut down the whole Internet for five years and see what sort of art is produced over that span. There's too much technology available. I'm sure, as far as music goes, it would be much more interesting than it is today.I don't know about music, but I'm thinking in my personal life at least this is true. I may have to start setting a schedule of time online. Sometimes I may have to push myself a little to get on the computer, but sometimes I may have to cut it off earlier than I otherwise might for the sake of my personal health & creativity. All that blue light isn't good for me anyway.
Thursday, September 13, 2007
My Shamanic Son
According to Wikipedia, shamans are
"people who have a strong interest in their surrounding environment and the society of which they are a part."Simon is VERY interested in his surrounding environment and society. Also,
a "shaman" being the Turkic-Tungus word for such a practitioner and literally meaning "he who knows."I'm regularly stunned by all he knows. Again:
One of the most significant and relevant qualities that separate a shaman from other spiritual leaders is their communications with the supernatural world.
Often the shaman has, or acquires, one or more familiar helping entities in the spirit world; these are often spirits in animal form, spirits of healing plants, or (sometimes) those of departed shamans.I wonder if my cat doesn't have a spiritual counterpart that helps Simon. Those two have a special bond.
I genuinely don't mean to trivialize shamanism...actually, as I skimmed the article there was a lot that stood out to be true. I have long ago learned to seek truth wherever it may be found, and not limit it to one culture or religion or denomination or government.
And I supposed Simon could have some shamanic capabilities. I've heard lots of people say that small children are more closely connected to the Divine than any of us for a few reasons:
- they only recently joined this earthly life and may have some memory of being a spirit in the company of the Divine previously
- they don't have all the "baggage" from living in this world yet
- they are open - deeply open - and accepting of things adults might explain away or ignore
Wednesday, September 12, 2007
Economies and Boats
At what point does a person’s dim financial situation reflect his or her own choices and shortcomings as opposed to a societal indication of trouble? Or at what point is it no longer the fault of the individual if they are being beaten by the system?
We're having a rough time right now, financially speaking. I have a great part-time job with pretty good pay, but I only get paid once a month and not always in a timely way. Even so, it's only part time, so there's limited income potential. Adam's self-employed, but there haven't been enough medium to large sized jobs, and the little ones don't pay very well. So he's looking for employment.
I guess we'll join the ranks of families who attemped to be self-employed, and then our small business will go out of business after just a few years. This in itself isn't such a big deal, really. We both knew it wasn't probably going to be a long-term situation. It's just frustrating that Adam's working his way through school to get his degree, but now due to our economic situation we're being forced into looking for a job anyway - about 2 years before his degree will guide him to employment.
So I've been thinking a lot about jobs and the economy.
Whenever I read about universal health care I am highly interested, because we're in that pot of people who need it. We make little enough to qualify for Medicaid and most sliding scale situations, but we don't have the right sort of documentation to prove our meager income, so we can't get it. We can show our tax information from last year, but that's not really accurate to this year at all. So we get stuck.
And I'm not trying to get out of taking personal responsibility for our tight and stressful situation, but since taking it on myself & trying to fix it comes all TOO naturally for me, I thought I'd try a different approach.
What if I let go a little?
What if it's not completely something that we have control over? What if we are simply an unfortunate product of our small town economy? What if we are a symptom of a national illness - a widening gap between the rich and all the rest of us? I used to be upper middle class, or at least middle class. I'm clearly now very much lower middle class, if there is such a thing as a middle class. And is this something we can change on a person or family level? Or is it more systemic?
Do I just have to learn to get better at the rules of the game, and then play to win like the rich do? Is there another option?
And then I think of another way for me to step back a little and let go. What about trusting the Divine? When we first moved here to Silver City most of our friends practised a very earth-centric spiritual life. The Universe provided for our greatest needs - and it always did. Since that time I have come back to my familiar home within the great, diverse, welcoming family of Christianity. So maybe I can learn somehow to trust God.
Then my question becomes - at what point can I just step back and trust God to provide for us, and at what point is God shaking her head and saying "I've given you the tools to pull yourself out of this - don't give up!"
I'm reminded of this story:
A religious man is on top of a roof during a great flood. A man comes by in a boat and says "get in, get in!" The religous man replies, "no, I have faith in God, he will grant me a miracle."
Later the water is up to his waist and another boat comes by and the guy tells him to get in again. He responds that he has faith in God and God will give him a miracle. With the water about chest high, another boat comes to rescue him, but he turns down the offer again because "God will grant him a miracle."
With the water chin high, a helicopter throws down a ladder and they tell him to climb up. Mumbling with the water in his mouth, he again turns down the request for help for the faith of God. The man drowns. He arrives at the gates of heaven with broken faith and says to Peter, "I thought God would grant me a miracle and I have been let down." St. Peter chuckles and responds, "I don't know what you're complaining about, we sent you three boats and a helicopter."
So now I'm wondering - what boat is right in front of me that I'm failing to climb into?
Tuesday, September 11, 2007
Sushi Success
On Saturday I attended a sushi class at The Curious Kumquat. Our good friends own the store, and sometimes I help out when they need shifts covered, so I am getting quite familiar with various ins & outs of the store. Last month they hired a chef to teach a sushi class on a day that I was running the register - and I heard peals of laughter, regularly, coming from the kitchen. When the class was over I watched everyone emerge with containers full of sushi rolls they'd made, and then most of the participants bought several ingredients to presumably go home & make some more.
I promptly signed up for the next class, which was this past weekend. I'm not sure we were quite as rambunctious of a class as last month's, but we certainly had a great time. If nothing else, the class demystified the art of sushi making, while simultaneously elevating it into something we may never master.
I realized that it's relatively easy to make mediocre sushi. This is the part that is liberating. The ingredients are not complicated or expensive, and it really is fun to prepare and assemble. The part that is daunting is realizing that there are an infinite number of varieties and presentations, and I may have to attend Sushi II to get even a little start on that.
But when I got home we sliced up the sushi rolls I'd made and snacked on them as our first phase of dinner - and they were tasty. I was impressed with the cross-section view of the third & final roll I'd made, because I think I did it pretty much correctly.
Now I'm inspired to purchase the "staple" ingredients so I can have a "sushi kit" in my kitchen, ready to go. Just some wasabi, pickled ginger, rice vinegar, soy sauce, nori, rice and my rolling mat in a box and I'm good to go!
One interesting tidbit I learned: "Sushi" has nothing to do with fish. It's sushi if it's got rice, nori, and rice vinegar together. "Sashimi" is the term for the sushi-grade fishes.
Happy eating!
Friday, September 7, 2007
To Be Continued
Then just a few moments ago I ended up chatting with a friend about organized religion, for all its lovely and unlovely characteristics.
I intend to put some thought into this and write about it - maybe on Sunday after we've had the event. As it is, I still have a few deadlines in the next few days and just don't make time for blogging when non-virtual life is keeping me quite fully active.
Look for a blog with a little thought & soul by mid next week at least.
Wednesday, August 29, 2007
If You Give a Kid a Laxative, Don't Let Him Sleep In (TMI warning!)
Poop. Everywhere.
The pediatric nurse practitioner suggested that we continue to give Simon the Mira-lax till he effectively gets diarrhea. We gave it to him again yesterday, after he'd successfully pooped a few times. Because it's a powder laxative that goes in his drink, he only gets it when he drinks. He didn't drink much early in the day, so he effectively got a double dose at dinner. He didn't fall asleep till after 9pm, and we checked his diaper a few times right up until we heard him finally quiet down - no poop.
But this morning, I got up & got ready. I heard him talking in his crib, but he wasn't fussing so I took a few minutes to get dressed, put in my contacts & go to the bathroom. When I went in his room I was met with poop.
Simon was standing at the edge of the crib, poop covering him effectively shoulders to toes. It was all over the bed: sheets, crib rails, mattress pad. I stripped him down, gave him a quick "rinse off the poop" bath, dumped that water and gave him a clean bath. I called a friend to come hang out w/ Simon while I washed the bed, his pj's, diaper, everything. I had to take his sheet & mattress pad out to the curb & hose them off. For a moment I wished we used disposable diapers...I almost just threw the whole cloth diaper & everything away. But I didn't. I had to plunge & scrub the diaper in parts, and it took several flushes of the toilet to rinse it all away.
And then I didn't have enough laundry soap, so I had to stop & wash my hands, scoop up Simon & run to the Co-op to buy more laundry soap so I could finish washing everything.
It calls to mind images of so many movie scenes about the "tipping point" moments that make you pull your hair out as a mom. But I couldn't really get to that point, because I feel like I caused it. I gave the kid the laxative, put him to bed, and didn't get him up the first moment I heard him talking. Coulda, shoulda, didn't. Next time?
I have to say that Simon had more energy today than I've seen in a while. He weighs a few pounds less now, I think. And certainly his belly/guts feel better.
But it was probably the most disgusting thing I have ever - ever - experienced in my life.
Tuesday, August 28, 2007
Happy Vacation Moments, Chapter Eight - Some Views
After the car races were over, they did a big fireworks display. It was a well done show.
One of many gorgeous Lake Michigan sunsets, as seen through the trees from our cottage back porch.
When I was little, I thought sun beams through the clouds were glimpses of heaven. I don't have the same simple idea of heaven as I once did, but I think there may be some truth to that juvenile assessment.