I have this black skirt. I'm wearing it today. It's 15 years old. How is that possible you ask? I don't understand it myself.
Dana and I went to Target, we were preparing to go to the Wallflowers concert at the University of Florida in the fall of 1997.
Now we'd started our friendship in an odd manner. We had a mutual friend. This mutual friend said "let's all be roommates" so we moved in together - having never met each other.
Said mutual friend - dropped out of college - just weeks into the first semester. There we sat - not knowing each other - terrified of our future living situation. Basically we stayed out of each other's way. Except for one thing - weekends and the "woman channel". We were stuck together on the weekends...secretly crying over the most ridiculous made for TV movies.
Slowly our friendship blossomed over our tears. Finally to officially become friends - I bought us Wallflowers tickets. Then to solidify it - we decided we needed to shop for a new outfit. We decided to go with matching clothes. Now, that I really know Dana - I'd say she probably forced me to wear something so she'd look good standing next to me. Hmmmm SUSPICIOUS.
We had a great time. We found the most wonderful friendship that has lasted for 15 years - through living in different houses, happiness, different states, sadness, different countries, fear, through marriages, guilt, divorces, anger, children, grateful, jobs, secure, crazy styles, proud and a long soundtrack of our lives.
Every time I put on this black skirt. It makes me happy and reminiscent. I'm sure Dana doesn't have hers - she has always been the more stylish friend....but wherever she is right now - I love her - as I wear my black skirt.
And so it goes...
Thursday, May 10, 2012
Monday, April 30, 2012
Strong women
I come from a long line of strong women. In fact my Minnesota heritage has a story of the Strong family name associated with Atwater Minnesota where my great grandmother Grace lived. Supposedly her step brother (Sidney Strong) stole the family farm....lots of history in all the land stolen from us. Tracing our lineage back to Ireland.
Thinking about family I've had and friends I've known...women have come out the strongest. I'm amazed by the ability of these people to live lives, hunker down over dreams, come to grips with other people's realities and submerge themselves for survival.
I sat with a girl I met over the weekend. Her first question to me was - how old are you? I said 35 she said "I'm 22." Then she ranted on about a man she broke up with 4 months ago who she'd dated for 6 years. In as few words as possible, since it was a frustrating conversation, I told her she'd find herself but probably not for another few years. It was hard to not project how I thought her life was going, until I took a step back and thought - she'll get there. The development of another strong woman. Sisters, cousins, nieces, mothers, aunts and friends.
They say 97% of literary fiction books are purchased by women. It sounds startling until I think, each of these women I've know, could write their own story. Not only would it be a struggle for each of them to find their true glory - it would be interesting.
To do exactly what one needs to - to survive, may leave people hurt, may leave people doubting, may leave people not trusting who you are. This is all only a projection of who they think you are in opposition to their own lives. Everyone wants to put you in a perspective, one they can admire or justify. Staying true to your path - doing what you want - may never gain understanding or friends, in the long run - only you can create your own joy.
Dan just said - "are you writing some feminist propaganda over there". I smirked and said "yep".
And so it goes....
Thinking about family I've had and friends I've known...women have come out the strongest. I'm amazed by the ability of these people to live lives, hunker down over dreams, come to grips with other people's realities and submerge themselves for survival.
I sat with a girl I met over the weekend. Her first question to me was - how old are you? I said 35 she said "I'm 22." Then she ranted on about a man she broke up with 4 months ago who she'd dated for 6 years. In as few words as possible, since it was a frustrating conversation, I told her she'd find herself but probably not for another few years. It was hard to not project how I thought her life was going, until I took a step back and thought - she'll get there. The development of another strong woman. Sisters, cousins, nieces, mothers, aunts and friends.
They say 97% of literary fiction books are purchased by women. It sounds startling until I think, each of these women I've know, could write their own story. Not only would it be a struggle for each of them to find their true glory - it would be interesting.
To do exactly what one needs to - to survive, may leave people hurt, may leave people doubting, may leave people not trusting who you are. This is all only a projection of who they think you are in opposition to their own lives. Everyone wants to put you in a perspective, one they can admire or justify. Staying true to your path - doing what you want - may never gain understanding or friends, in the long run - only you can create your own joy.
Dan just said - "are you writing some feminist propaganda over there". I smirked and said "yep".
And so it goes....
Friday, April 27, 2012
Baby talk
I spend my entire day, talking in a low manly voice. This is to ensure the idea that I am in control and dominant. That my voice is actually heard in a roomful of men.
When I get home, I wander into simple womanly baby talk.
"ooooh can't you get me a drink of water?"
I find it interesting this duplicate life women must lead.... professional versus home. On the one hand I dominate a conversation on the other baby talk.
I look at the crinkles around my eyes.... telling tales of sunlight beaming and laughter bringing.
I live these two lives so I can be to you the observer, interesting and alluring.
and so it goes....
When I get home, I wander into simple womanly baby talk.
"ooooh can't you get me a drink of water?"
I find it interesting this duplicate life women must lead.... professional versus home. On the one hand I dominate a conversation on the other baby talk.
I look at the crinkles around my eyes.... telling tales of sunlight beaming and laughter bringing.
I live these two lives so I can be to you the observer, interesting and alluring.
and so it goes....
Sunday, April 22, 2012
Fire
Tall pine reduced to ash. Not without a final grand gesture. The teepee of material we used to capture the right amount of oxygen and heat sits atop a small bed of needles and birch bark kindling. Long ago before I become this good at making a fire, I'd use paper to start the fire. In fact, often I'd have to keep shoving paper into the bottom of the fire to keep it burning. I was a novice fire starter. No more, I'm part of this forest.
The flames reach a crescendo of dancing, blazing higher higher and higher. The bark of one of the logs has separated ever so slightly, the gap keeps widening. Heat pushes it further and further up in the air, threatening it to leave the log. Small flames lick up and under the bark. I imagine the flames rising underneath it, lifting and floating it into the sky. It would hover above me like a lantern, floating until it melded with the stars - who are always worshiping the moon.
My knees are burning, my back is cold. I want to rotate, but I'm stuck here looking deeper. It's mesmerizing. As a child, we almost always had a fireplace. The years past and a TV was brought into the house, now when I return for the holidays, a blazing fire is played on the screen. It's not the same, and it makes me laugh - in a childlike manner - for fire, is still a delight.
There is a fundamental draw of men to fire. Ancient cave drawings show men killing deer, antelope and buffalo. The stick figures slowly raise their spears and plunge them deep into the animals, providing sustenance for their families through the winter. Those drawings flicker in the fire light on the cave walls as the first motion pictures. I burn the rubber off the soles of my boots, being as close to the fire as possible without falling in.
The smoke burns my eyes. "I hate white rabbits" I choke out - in a strange statement that is suppose to ward off the smoke from my direction. I get up and hang the kettle for coffee over the flames. Tonight I write by this light, barely able to visualize the straggling sentence of redemption scrawling across the page in a downward slope.
Ash, coals, branches and logs layer upon layer make this fire burn. Many years of fires have been burned here, each providing a return of the pines to the ground. I just found out my sister-in-law has cancer. It swirls and smokes the conversation tonight. It makes me choke on the intensity. She's too young. It's bullshit. A person is suppose to live a happy full life - somewhere in the unforeseeable future have to deal with concepts of pain, age, death. No now. Not with a beautiful child, who's just learning what it means to live. I wish she was one of these towering pines. I wish you all were. Your grand gestures would continue on forever. I'd use you to warm me. You all look so beautiful with the dancing light on your faces.
The coffee fills my brain with a love buzz. My tears don't quench the coals. They sizzle and pop telling me be happy for this warm moment. Have faith that pain is only the fire, breaking our metal down to liquid so we can be reformed into a stronger metal.
The colors of the rainbow can be seen as I look hypnotized by this fire. Black. White. Red. Orange. Yellow. Purple. Blue. Green sparks shoot away, threatening to light my papers on fire, I lean away and stare at the cool night sky. The fire reaches out to capture bits of fuel outside the ring I've bound it to. I've spent a long night arguing why we make fires in ring. Why not squares? Why not triangles?
My skin, hair and clothes take on this smokey nature perfume. The wind shifts, pulling the fire from its vertical flow to a horizontal slant. The sound is hollow and full. At the edge of one of the logs, a bit of sap drips down like lava.
Fire is not required for life. For centuries it has allowed us to consume more than we need. Cooking food, washing clothes, brewing beer, sterilizing the tools that will cut away this disease that threatens to take from us what it does not deserve to have. I'm angry and scared.
Close to the fire I feel safe. I slip into the edge of the woods for relief - gazing back at its warmth. I want to get back to the safe glow as soon as possible. It's an obsession that we have had as a human race, since the well documented dark ages, extending the day, warding of the spirits that threaten to pick us off one by one - when no one is looking. I howl at the moon. The wolves howl back. I love to hear them, as long as I know, they're at a comfortable distance and I have my fire.
And so it goes...
The flames reach a crescendo of dancing, blazing higher higher and higher. The bark of one of the logs has separated ever so slightly, the gap keeps widening. Heat pushes it further and further up in the air, threatening it to leave the log. Small flames lick up and under the bark. I imagine the flames rising underneath it, lifting and floating it into the sky. It would hover above me like a lantern, floating until it melded with the stars - who are always worshiping the moon.
My knees are burning, my back is cold. I want to rotate, but I'm stuck here looking deeper. It's mesmerizing. As a child, we almost always had a fireplace. The years past and a TV was brought into the house, now when I return for the holidays, a blazing fire is played on the screen. It's not the same, and it makes me laugh - in a childlike manner - for fire, is still a delight.
There is a fundamental draw of men to fire. Ancient cave drawings show men killing deer, antelope and buffalo. The stick figures slowly raise their spears and plunge them deep into the animals, providing sustenance for their families through the winter. Those drawings flicker in the fire light on the cave walls as the first motion pictures. I burn the rubber off the soles of my boots, being as close to the fire as possible without falling in.
The smoke burns my eyes. "I hate white rabbits" I choke out - in a strange statement that is suppose to ward off the smoke from my direction. I get up and hang the kettle for coffee over the flames. Tonight I write by this light, barely able to visualize the straggling sentence of redemption scrawling across the page in a downward slope.
Ash, coals, branches and logs layer upon layer make this fire burn. Many years of fires have been burned here, each providing a return of the pines to the ground. I just found out my sister-in-law has cancer. It swirls and smokes the conversation tonight. It makes me choke on the intensity. She's too young. It's bullshit. A person is suppose to live a happy full life - somewhere in the unforeseeable future have to deal with concepts of pain, age, death. No now. Not with a beautiful child, who's just learning what it means to live. I wish she was one of these towering pines. I wish you all were. Your grand gestures would continue on forever. I'd use you to warm me. You all look so beautiful with the dancing light on your faces.
The coffee fills my brain with a love buzz. My tears don't quench the coals. They sizzle and pop telling me be happy for this warm moment. Have faith that pain is only the fire, breaking our metal down to liquid so we can be reformed into a stronger metal.
The colors of the rainbow can be seen as I look hypnotized by this fire. Black. White. Red. Orange. Yellow. Purple. Blue. Green sparks shoot away, threatening to light my papers on fire, I lean away and stare at the cool night sky. The fire reaches out to capture bits of fuel outside the ring I've bound it to. I've spent a long night arguing why we make fires in ring. Why not squares? Why not triangles?
My skin, hair and clothes take on this smokey nature perfume. The wind shifts, pulling the fire from its vertical flow to a horizontal slant. The sound is hollow and full. At the edge of one of the logs, a bit of sap drips down like lava.
Fire is not required for life. For centuries it has allowed us to consume more than we need. Cooking food, washing clothes, brewing beer, sterilizing the tools that will cut away this disease that threatens to take from us what it does not deserve to have. I'm angry and scared.
Close to the fire I feel safe. I slip into the edge of the woods for relief - gazing back at its warmth. I want to get back to the safe glow as soon as possible. It's an obsession that we have had as a human race, since the well documented dark ages, extending the day, warding of the spirits that threaten to pick us off one by one - when no one is looking. I howl at the moon. The wolves howl back. I love to hear them, as long as I know, they're at a comfortable distance and I have my fire.
And so it goes...
Trees
The golden leaves
fall
on my face.
I'm lying in a puddle of leaves. I raked them together just for my pleasure of jumping in, falling backwards and scattering the pile across the yard, again. The leaves on my face rush upwards away from me. They rise back to the trees reattaching themselves.
They turn from brilliant reds and oranges - back to green. The tree branches stretch and groan beneath their weight. Each leaf feeds the tree with a mixture of chloroplast, converting the sunshine into sugar - the building blocks of carbon. When a tree is cut, the remaining nutrients rush from their veins, just like blood from ours - and surge into a neighboring tree. Many people don't know the trees intertwine and graft their roots together, sharing in the bounty of other trees.
We've all been told, you can tell how old a tree is by the rings inside. Each ring has a width, some wide some thin. The thin rings tell a history of the year, very little water and nutrients. The larger rings when the tree had exponential growth. You can count back to a specific drought or a bountiful year of rain.
I close my eyes and gently caress the bark like a blind girl reading braille. I can hear and feel the history as I push my fingers into a wound. A family of ants run over my hand, wondering where I've come from, this alien form on their path home. Their antennas wiggle as they pause on top.
If I could stand still here, silent, I'd be absorbed. The tree would hold my hand and we'd grow old together. I imagine the surprise of a random person's face when they crossed this path and see a skeleton in an embrace with this tree.
The leaves are turning lighter shades of iridescent green. They are growing smaller, rolling back into their buds. The stretching limbs recede. The trunk grows thinner. The giant tree I love is just a small fragile sapling. I caress the top of it. It feels like soft grass. It disappears into the ground, just a random seed that fell from its mother. How it found its way into this soil, in this place, where a small sparrow had fallen from its nest providing a bed of fertilizer, is the mystery I am confounded by.
The giant elms line the drive leading up the white farm house with the red barn and the giant grain silo. The kids have strung a pulley inside the silo, across the top, beneath the arching dome. They jump on and swing from side to side. I'm scared of drowning in the barely. I hold on tightly, until I'm on the other side. Everyone is cheering.
The street trees wait patiently for the rain to trickle through the grate. Their stunted growth makes them into bonsai for us to drive our bicycles under. I'm a bit tipsy as I weave down the sidewalk ringing my bell with an open bottle of wine in my basket.
The trees on my property are aspen. They grow together as one giant organism, like a field of very tall, strong grass. I feel guilty when one of them is cut. I hope its like a haircut and they feel no pain, but simply strut around feeling sharp, knowing room has opened for one more of them to grow.
The giant firs tower on the mountain side. They grow up the slope until the ridge line stops them saying: "No further. Our peaks must rise in grandeur to greet the sun. We beg you to retreat, there are no nutrients here for you to take." A big horned sheep jumps past the trees and looks back as if to say "join me as I play and cavort in my surefooted ways".
The size of the trees in the Olympic National Forest off the coast of Washington State are hard for anyone to fathom, unless you've stood beneath their glory. The pacific temperate rain forest allow these trees years of moisture and constant nutrients. Stretching wide, their branches hang with moss, dripping with the beauty of age.
Together each ecosystem takes our human pollutants and transforms it into new clean oxygen, as the lungs to our planet.
I hold my tree with baited breath...just to hear it whisper and sigh. And so it goes...
fall
on my face.
I'm lying in a puddle of leaves. I raked them together just for my pleasure of jumping in, falling backwards and scattering the pile across the yard, again. The leaves on my face rush upwards away from me. They rise back to the trees reattaching themselves.
They turn from brilliant reds and oranges - back to green. The tree branches stretch and groan beneath their weight. Each leaf feeds the tree with a mixture of chloroplast, converting the sunshine into sugar - the building blocks of carbon. When a tree is cut, the remaining nutrients rush from their veins, just like blood from ours - and surge into a neighboring tree. Many people don't know the trees intertwine and graft their roots together, sharing in the bounty of other trees.
We've all been told, you can tell how old a tree is by the rings inside. Each ring has a width, some wide some thin. The thin rings tell a history of the year, very little water and nutrients. The larger rings when the tree had exponential growth. You can count back to a specific drought or a bountiful year of rain.
I close my eyes and gently caress the bark like a blind girl reading braille. I can hear and feel the history as I push my fingers into a wound. A family of ants run over my hand, wondering where I've come from, this alien form on their path home. Their antennas wiggle as they pause on top.
If I could stand still here, silent, I'd be absorbed. The tree would hold my hand and we'd grow old together. I imagine the surprise of a random person's face when they crossed this path and see a skeleton in an embrace with this tree.
The leaves are turning lighter shades of iridescent green. They are growing smaller, rolling back into their buds. The stretching limbs recede. The trunk grows thinner. The giant tree I love is just a small fragile sapling. I caress the top of it. It feels like soft grass. It disappears into the ground, just a random seed that fell from its mother. How it found its way into this soil, in this place, where a small sparrow had fallen from its nest providing a bed of fertilizer, is the mystery I am confounded by.
The giant elms line the drive leading up the white farm house with the red barn and the giant grain silo. The kids have strung a pulley inside the silo, across the top, beneath the arching dome. They jump on and swing from side to side. I'm scared of drowning in the barely. I hold on tightly, until I'm on the other side. Everyone is cheering.
The street trees wait patiently for the rain to trickle through the grate. Their stunted growth makes them into bonsai for us to drive our bicycles under. I'm a bit tipsy as I weave down the sidewalk ringing my bell with an open bottle of wine in my basket.
The trees on my property are aspen. They grow together as one giant organism, like a field of very tall, strong grass. I feel guilty when one of them is cut. I hope its like a haircut and they feel no pain, but simply strut around feeling sharp, knowing room has opened for one more of them to grow.
The giant firs tower on the mountain side. They grow up the slope until the ridge line stops them saying: "No further. Our peaks must rise in grandeur to greet the sun. We beg you to retreat, there are no nutrients here for you to take." A big horned sheep jumps past the trees and looks back as if to say "join me as I play and cavort in my surefooted ways".
The size of the trees in the Olympic National Forest off the coast of Washington State are hard for anyone to fathom, unless you've stood beneath their glory. The pacific temperate rain forest allow these trees years of moisture and constant nutrients. Stretching wide, their branches hang with moss, dripping with the beauty of age.
Together each ecosystem takes our human pollutants and transforms it into new clean oxygen, as the lungs to our planet.
I hold my tree with baited breath...just to hear it whisper and sigh. And so it goes...
Tuesday, April 17, 2012
U Pick Farms
So...I'm setting up my calendar for the upcoming year. Not based on birthdays. Not based on trips and adventures. Based on U Pick Farms!
Fruit/ vegetable Normal picking dates
Fruit/ vegetable Normal picking dates
- Apples Mid-August through November - see specific varieties, further down this page
- Asparagus May and June
- Beans July through September
- Blueberries July through mid August
- Carrots August through mid November
- Cucumbers Mid July through September
- Garlic August through November
- Grapes Mid August through September
- Greens May through October
- Melons August and September
- Onions Mid September through mid November
- Peppers Mid July to mid September
- Potatoes August through mid November
- Raspberries Mid June through October
- Rhubarb May through September
- Strawberries June and July
- Squash July through mid November
- Sweet Corn Mid July through September
- Tomatoes Mid July through September
Tuesday, April 10, 2012
Small town
I took a quiz the other day to see if I truly "understand America" - are you part of the 1%? Not California or Portland or NYC - but the real place where people live below the poverty line, don't eat sushi because it doesn't exist, don't buy coffee at starbucks and like to listen to country music.
After answering a long list of personal questions - it came out: I must live in a lower class community but have a wealthy person's "tastes". One of the key questions that made me chuckle: Have you ever attended a Rotary meeting or other local community organization? I checked YES. Today - it was voted unanimously that I become an official member. It's a sunrise meeting at 7am! I'm the only woman - which is never unsual in this line of work.
Why you say? Because I want to find a way to help people without being a regulator. Sure "I" think of my job as helping people. I'm protecting property rights, I'm making sure our water stays pristine, I'm growing the economy by being an out of the box thinker when it comes to high quality development, and I love seeing a building go up that I approved. In the end though - I regulate other people. With Rotary - I'm going to be able to give back and simply help.
The other reason? I get to listen to amazing "other programs" that I may never have enough time to help with - but just maybe instead of being an elitist - I can still love great cinema and good coffee - but also help my community.
Today's meeting was about the future of a community health center. Out of 87 counties in Minnesota - Beltrami ranks 87 for providing health services to the impoverished. A group is trying to get a community health program to be placed in this community.
About one in five people in Beltrami live in poverty — nearly a quarter of all children. The poverty rate in Beltrami County is nearly 21 percent and need is increasing, but resources are shrinking. Since the recession, the number of people getting some type of public assistance has climbed to approximately 6,000, up from around 5,000. 32 percent adults smoking, 29 percent adults obese, 22 percent excessive drinking and 44 percent having easy access to healthy foods. - MNPR News
If I could go back and do my life over again - I'd become a psychologist. I strongly feel that breaking the cycle of any health or poverty issues - is an understanding of who we are - what we're truly capable of and how to make the resources work. Extrodinary things have come from underated humans...
Oh and on being lower than the 1percent - my birthday presents included: A book on 1/4 acre farming. A camping knife. A kettle to brew coffee over the fire. A grill to set up over the fire. A gift card to Gander Mountain (thanks to my mother in law). A gift card to a local plant nursery.
I consider myself an eclectic redneck!
And so it goes...
After answering a long list of personal questions - it came out: I must live in a lower class community but have a wealthy person's "tastes". One of the key questions that made me chuckle: Have you ever attended a Rotary meeting or other local community organization? I checked YES. Today - it was voted unanimously that I become an official member. It's a sunrise meeting at 7am! I'm the only woman - which is never unsual in this line of work.
Why you say? Because I want to find a way to help people without being a regulator. Sure "I" think of my job as helping people. I'm protecting property rights, I'm making sure our water stays pristine, I'm growing the economy by being an out of the box thinker when it comes to high quality development, and I love seeing a building go up that I approved. In the end though - I regulate other people. With Rotary - I'm going to be able to give back and simply help.
The other reason? I get to listen to amazing "other programs" that I may never have enough time to help with - but just maybe instead of being an elitist - I can still love great cinema and good coffee - but also help my community.
Today's meeting was about the future of a community health center. Out of 87 counties in Minnesota - Beltrami ranks 87 for providing health services to the impoverished. A group is trying to get a community health program to be placed in this community.
About one in five people in Beltrami live in poverty — nearly a quarter of all children. The poverty rate in Beltrami County is nearly 21 percent and need is increasing, but resources are shrinking. Since the recession, the number of people getting some type of public assistance has climbed to approximately 6,000, up from around 5,000. 32 percent adults smoking, 29 percent adults obese, 22 percent excessive drinking and 44 percent having easy access to healthy foods. - MNPR News
If I could go back and do my life over again - I'd become a psychologist. I strongly feel that breaking the cycle of any health or poverty issues - is an understanding of who we are - what we're truly capable of and how to make the resources work. Extrodinary things have come from underated humans...
Oh and on being lower than the 1percent - my birthday presents included: A book on 1/4 acre farming. A camping knife. A kettle to brew coffee over the fire. A grill to set up over the fire. A gift card to Gander Mountain (thanks to my mother in law). A gift card to a local plant nursery.
I consider myself an eclectic redneck!
And so it goes...
Monday, April 9, 2012
Turning 35
Last week - I took a break from the blog. I was at a training to learn to install and design septic tanks. Now before you think of me slopping around in sewage....I look at it as saving the pristine water that is Minnesota's lakes. Oh and ya, using my soil and water science degree. The science behind septic systems is fascinating. Soil is titillating if you're a soil scientist. The ability for water full of pathogens to be cleaned by filtering through 3 feet of soil and come out the other side - ready to meet back with the hydrologic cycle is amazing! Most people when they think of building a home or a cabin retreat just want to know - everything is going to work - and what's the dollar amount. Really, you're figuring out how to preserve the natural systems so you can fish, drink fresh water and relax on a summer's day. Brilliant.
To truly enjoy the adventure - instead of staying in a stuffy hotel - we rented a cabin. But not any cabin! This one was at the top of Spirit Mountain. It had an overlook to Duluth. A beautiful city on the shores of Lake Superior. We could see for miles all around us (when we weren't fogged in). A great experience leading up to a momentous birthday.
Then we ventured home to our wonderful house in Bemidji. Where I graciously welcomed another year... With some dancing! If you must get older - stay light on your feet... and so it goes.
To truly enjoy the adventure - instead of staying in a stuffy hotel - we rented a cabin. But not any cabin! This one was at the top of Spirit Mountain. It had an overlook to Duluth. A beautiful city on the shores of Lake Superior. We could see for miles all around us (when we weren't fogged in). A great experience leading up to a momentous birthday.
Then we ventured home to our wonderful house in Bemidji. Where I graciously welcomed another year... With some dancing! If you must get older - stay light on your feet... and so it goes.
Friday, March 30, 2012
Email Marketing
Ya know how when you're on some website looking at something fun....or buying something....at the bottom there's that pesky little series of buttons that are usually already checked?
Everything comes to us! Streaming TV, streaming movies, the garbage pick up, pizza delivery and most of all THE NEWS. It's everywhere - even check out lines at walmarts now have streaming news while you wait in line (which I try to never do if possible).
So I agreed. Let's go to the people. We will tell them what the new planning and zoning cases are. We will invite them to meetings (haha) and will tell them what they want to hear...
It will pop up in a (wait for it) newsletter email.... Imagine trumpets and the heavens shining light on me.
Patted myself on the back - signed up to an instant contact website and thought this would be easy.
I tell you - it's NOT. They think I'm a spammer or something. I'm being interrogated about "where I got my list". aggggghhhhhhh. Oh no - not the list. Listen person in a tiny office in NY NY - I've got a list - let me send my email...
So for now...our concerned citizens remain unknowing...in the dark....fearful.
I will meet the challenge and bring them into the light.
Barnaby! My steed...
And so it goes.
- Sign up for this magazine
- Take our quiz
- Want a lollipop? (um yes please)
Everything comes to us! Streaming TV, streaming movies, the garbage pick up, pizza delivery and most of all THE NEWS. It's everywhere - even check out lines at walmarts now have streaming news while you wait in line (which I try to never do if possible).
So I agreed. Let's go to the people. We will tell them what the new planning and zoning cases are. We will invite them to meetings (haha) and will tell them what they want to hear...
It will pop up in a (wait for it) newsletter email.... Imagine trumpets and the heavens shining light on me.
Patted myself on the back - signed up to an instant contact website and thought this would be easy.
I tell you - it's NOT. They think I'm a spammer or something. I'm being interrogated about "where I got my list". aggggghhhhhhh. Oh no - not the list. Listen person in a tiny office in NY NY - I've got a list - let me send my email...
So for now...our concerned citizens remain unknowing...in the dark....fearful.
I will meet the challenge and bring them into the light.
Barnaby! My steed...
And so it goes.
Thursday, March 29, 2012
Winter and Spring dance to bluegrass
Winter grabbed Spring and pulled her roughly onto the dance floor.
“this is our song baby…it’s a shit kicking, heel stomping tune – dance with me dance.”
“ah Winter, it’s cold in here – I’m freezing, but if we dance – then it will warm and you will go away sooner”.
“that’s foolish talk my beautiful woman – I’m strong and bend the weight of trees with my winter gales. Hell just last week, I snapped an aging poplar in two. Oh and along the shores of lake Bemidji, I heaved the ice right into people’s yards, tearing through their soft pathetic yards.”
“you are strong and beautiful….my love – but I was close behind you opening up the lake as you raged across the shore. Have you noticed? The ice is out and people are fishing…in boats – not those silly ice houses” she teased him.
“I noticed and so I’ve pulled the gray clouds over my head morning after morning, trying to send the frigid wind into the coats of everyone walking the streets. I can’t hold on much longer. They still see, hear and feel me. I’m not gone yet” he said with a thrust of his fists into the air!
“I know you’re not” spring looked at him through lowered lashes.
Winter gazed at Spring with so much longing. He was a brute for sure. He knew it. Maybe because he was such a scoundrel, no season enthralled him like ethereal spring did. Sure fall was lusty and full of color. Summer he rarely met, although occasionally he’d come in for a visit – because it made him laugh that in June or July it could still snow. Yet for all his grandeur and strength and ability to kill like none of the other seasons could – he had a sense of beauty and awe about him. The soft snowflakes drifting down in a hypnotic dance and beauty. He made the last few snow storms just for Spring. She’d wake from her long 9 month nap and feel the cool touch of a snowflake he’d carefully crafted. He knew they could never coexist – the 6 weeks they overlapped each year – were the happiest of his life.
Spring nudged him out of his sadness. “You’re gonna be gone soon, dance with me this slow southern waltz, I promise to let you stay a little longer.”
Winter put his cold arms around Spring and could feel her warmth enveloping him. Outside the wind howled like a 1,000 witches cackling around a brew pot. Yet, in the background a soft smell of jasmine drifted on a warmer breeze. They both moved gracefully around the dance floor, knowing this was all they’d ever have.
And so it goes...
Wednesday, March 28, 2012
You've come a long way baby...
“Without compassion, we will never know anyone or anything, not even our own story. Too much judgment, too many ideas and attitudes will stand in the way of the fundamental principle that we are similar to, connected with, and part of everything else.” - Deena Metzger
Too often, we see everything as black/white - good/evil. It flashes in an instant. Suddenly you're hit with a statement that throws you down and all you can think..."all of this is crap - what am I doing here - how did I get here - I wish it was over." Then the next moment you're riding a high - "wow life has never been this awesome". You walk around feeling impervious to whatever is going to strike next.
The real thing to look at....how much work you've put into your life - to get you here. When you rest on your heels and look around carefully - more often than not - you'll be amazed. No one has a white bread life. We can all rewrite our story. Not in a pollyanna ridiculous fashion - no - more like the intricate folds of origami.
FLORIDA
WYOMING
MINNESOTA
And so it goes...
Tuesday, March 27, 2012
Poultry Wars
With an early spring...I've got a lot of construction projects getting ready to start. Our local hospital is adding over 150,000 SF of space. We have a lake shore "planned unit development" that has 2 hotels in a dead heat to see who will get in the ground first. One of them has a restaurant (buffalo wild wings) which will be attached to our event center. I've got businesses moving into the downtown. I've got future sewer expansion proposals. I've got a massive community brainstorming session I'm planning for the fall. A few large lake homes being built.
But then I have chickens.
Yes, the trend in modern sustainability is having "urban agriculture". Of course Herbert Hoover once said that he wanted every American to have:
“A CHICKEN IN EVERY POT AND A CAR IN EVERY GARAGE”
I'm not sure he meant a "live chicken" in everyone's back yard? I've been researching a past case with one of these applicants that had their chicken permit revoked a few years back. How was his permit chicken revoked you ask? His neighbor produced a doctor’s note that said she was allergic to chickens (birds in general).
The politics of chickens is quite exciting and mysterious.
To top it off our local sustainability group has decided to conduct a “how to raise your own chickens” seminar at their local “sustainability Mondays”.
Drum roll. I’ve been asked to come as a guest speaker to talk about chicken regulations.
I love city planning – truly amazed by this physical structure that acts like a living organism. The day to day paperwork is only a record of what’s really swirling beneath.
And so it goes…
But then I have chickens.
Yes, the trend in modern sustainability is having "urban agriculture". Of course Herbert Hoover once said that he wanted every American to have:
“A CHICKEN IN EVERY POT AND A CAR IN EVERY GARAGE”
I'm not sure he meant a "live chicken" in everyone's back yard? I've been researching a past case with one of these applicants that had their chicken permit revoked a few years back. How was his permit chicken revoked you ask? His neighbor produced a doctor’s note that said she was allergic to chickens (birds in general).
The politics of chickens is quite exciting and mysterious.
Drum roll. I’ve been asked to come as a guest speaker to talk about chicken regulations.
I love city planning – truly amazed by this physical structure that acts like a living organism. The day to day paperwork is only a record of what’s really swirling beneath.
And so it goes…
Monday, March 26, 2012
The red canoe.
Tenacity is a pretty fair substitute for bravery, and the best form of tenacity I know is expressed in a Danish fur trapper's principle: 'The next mile is the only one a person really has to make.' -- Eric Sevareid (Canoeing with the Cree)
I finished reading Canoeing with the Cree a few weeks ago. Well, actually I devoured it in my reading prowess style. I love a book that makes you want to leave your laundry undone, the dishes unwashed and in general makes you leave your present condition to travel with someone else.
The story is 2 young men (17 &19) who decided after they graduate from high school to spend the summer canoeing 2000 miles from Minnesota, through Canada and ending up in the Pacific Ocean. They were not experienced canoeist - but just kids on an adventure. Their triumph was most likely due to no fear because they were young and didn't know what lay before them.
In the spirit of those two...I'd like to try my hand at a few longer canoe trips this summer. In order to accomplish this the canoe I will need must have room for 2 rowdy dogs – 1 rowdy man and a bunch of gear. Plus it needed to be light enough to portage for at least a ¼ mile. No longer than that – because after all we are not voyageurs, only a kith that likes to paddle.
Sure sure we have another canoe and a kayak. Those 2 pieces of equipment are on the property and never leave. That is their home. Besides, the canoe at the property probably weighs close to 200 lbs and is more of a duck hunting boat.
And so it goes….
I finished reading Canoeing with the Cree a few weeks ago. Well, actually I devoured it in my reading prowess style. I love a book that makes you want to leave your laundry undone, the dishes unwashed and in general makes you leave your present condition to travel with someone else.
The story is 2 young men (17 &19) who decided after they graduate from high school to spend the summer canoeing 2000 miles from Minnesota, through Canada and ending up in the Pacific Ocean. They were not experienced canoeist - but just kids on an adventure. Their triumph was most likely due to no fear because they were young and didn't know what lay before them.
In the spirit of those two...I'd like to try my hand at a few longer canoe trips this summer. In order to accomplish this the canoe I will need must have room for 2 rowdy dogs – 1 rowdy man and a bunch of gear. Plus it needed to be light enough to portage for at least a ¼ mile. No longer than that – because after all we are not voyageurs, only a kith that likes to paddle.
Sure sure we have another canoe and a kayak. Those 2 pieces of equipment are on the property and never leave. That is their home. Besides, the canoe at the property probably weighs close to 200 lbs and is more of a duck hunting boat.
So Dan researched many a canoe. We did our taxes (received a refund) and we’ve put in the hard work of being frugal and focused on savings – so the purchase of a canoe won out. We were looking around and voila the old craig’s list did it’s trick again! We found a red canoe. 17feet long. Plenty of space. Light enough. Did I mention? It also came with 2 paddles made by the native American community and an anchor. We happily brought her home yesterday and she is awaiting her first voyage.
I’m predicting a minimum of two longer trips this summer! Camping at water access only sites. Catching dinner over the edge. Above all – going downstream.
Sunday, March 25, 2012
At the start...well kinda...ya betcha
I've had many blogs in the past. Some successful - some private - some real horrible 2 day blogs. What I'm getting tired of is the stupidity of facebook and twitter and all the reasons we have to mince our words into 160 characters. It sometimes feels like we're losing the english language.
I thought I'd start this blog mainly to inform my family,spread across states and continents of the ongoings way up north! Don't worry - you don't even have to check it - I'll send you an email with the new posts - so you can follow my journey on becoming Minnesotan.
You are all aware of that little show called "prairie home companion"? Well maybe not all of you, but as a child growing up without a TV the radio was one of our primary forays into modern society. Sketches and stories about people and places that seemed so foreign specifically that place called Lake Wobegon:"the little town that time forgot and the decades cannot improve ... where all the women are strong, all the men are good-looking, and all the children are above average."
Well then I moved there.
I guess there is something to be said about 'train a child in the way which he should go. even when he is old he will not depart from it'. So here I am. This weekend epitomized the culture of this community.
We attended a program called Out of the Hat. What is it you ask? On Friday night 5 playwrights get together. They pull 5 things out of a hat: 1. An opening line 2. An object 4. A location 5. Actors They have the night to write the script. The next day the actors are assigned plays and they have 1 day to get the show to work. I must say - it was brilliant and extremely funny. It was held at our local Paul Bunyan Playhouse. The space is a 1930s theater with amazing acoustics.
I love old theaters... in fact all historic buildings are never out of style. And so it goes...
I thought I'd start this blog mainly to inform my family,spread across states and continents of the ongoings way up north! Don't worry - you don't even have to check it - I'll send you an email with the new posts - so you can follow my journey on becoming Minnesotan.
You are all aware of that little show called "prairie home companion"? Well maybe not all of you, but as a child growing up without a TV the radio was one of our primary forays into modern society. Sketches and stories about people and places that seemed so foreign specifically that place called Lake Wobegon:"the little town that time forgot and the decades cannot improve ... where all the women are strong, all the men are good-looking, and all the children are above average."
Well then I moved there.
I guess there is something to be said about 'train a child in the way which he should go. even when he is old he will not depart from it'. So here I am. This weekend epitomized the culture of this community.
We attended a program called Out of the Hat. What is it you ask? On Friday night 5 playwrights get together. They pull 5 things out of a hat: 1. An opening line 2. An object 4. A location 5. Actors They have the night to write the script. The next day the actors are assigned plays and they have 1 day to get the show to work. I must say - it was brilliant and extremely funny. It was held at our local Paul Bunyan Playhouse. The space is a 1930s theater with amazing acoustics.
I love old theaters... in fact all historic buildings are never out of style. And so it goes...
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)








