Saturday, November 23, 2024

This is a hard one

 It's difficult to face the facts when they are very very uncomfortable. I squiggle in my seat, don't I need to get some water? Maybe go to the bathroom before tackling this subject...

But here it is.

The Hate Groups are loose from the zoo.

This is not a joke. They aren't waiting till January when Trump takes office. They heard that hate had won the election, and so they can strike back at whoever they imagine has wronged them. Especially the favorite groups of minorities.

Each evening news shows a new group has attacked someone. I imagine the editors have to choose which group deserves coverage.

I also am aware that the groups of those who didn't vote for Trump are establishing a support system, as Starhawk says:

"... probably the most effective and safe way to organize in troubled times is to get together small groups of trusted friends to study the situation together, participate in campaigns and generate actions, and offer support to one another.  Such groups can then band together into larger organizations and coalitions.  One hopeful sign in the past week since the election has been the formation of such groups.  Some of the larger left-leaning groups such as Indivisible and Move-On have been encouraging people to form neighborhood groups.  Progressive Rabbi Arthur Waskow of the Shalom Center recently sent out a post urging Jews to form Freedom Cheders or study groups, modeled on the Freedom Schools of the Civil Rights Movement.  As I mentioned above, forming affinity groups can be a powerful way to assure support and connections for organizing in troubled times."

Source: Starhawk's Substack

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My personal opinion is based on a couple of circumstances my son and his family in Columbus OH had to face.

First I must ask that your respect the privacy of all involved, even if I didn't use correct names. Please don't repost this. I am not including this blog on my FaceBook page.

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Two separate events in Ohio.


I saw this first on Facebook the day it happened (I think 11/16/24). It wasn't until the next day, Sunday that I texted my son (who doesn't do FB) and asked if he knew about it. He said yes, there had been 8 men wearing masks and calling out on a megaphone slurring phrases that are prohibited by most print or broadcast outlets. My son's wife said she'd been at a meeting about 10 blocks away from this "demonstration." Both the Mayor of Columbus and the Governor of Ohio spoke negatively about this occurrence, indicating hate has no place in their town or state.


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This is the hard part. My son and his wife (and probably their high-school age daughter) attended the funeral of a child of a family that lived near them, and that had helped them adjust when they first moved into town. The death was sudden, and to have known the child was only part of their sorrow.

Let's call her Jennifer...who was 14 and in the same high school as my granddaughter who's a senior, so they didn't really run into each other at school. But at some point (this wasn't made clear in my conversation with my son by phone) Jennifer came out that she wanted to be a boy called "J.D." or something like that. With all the speeches by the Christian right (and I don't know if that family had any identity with it) against any LGBTQ+ folks, it was a very brave thing that J.D. decided to do. He must have really felt strongly about coming out. I don't have any information about the high school's attitude, or even the children, but my son said it is a heavily Red State and City. That translates to me that there's a lot of hate speech against LGBTQ+ people, which children will echo, whether from political leaders or their parents, or teachers. I have no idea what J.D.'s home life was like.

But my son said that with the political atmosphere around him, and the results of the election, he wouldn't rule out suicide for J.D.


Then he said at the graveside, the preacher had a basket, and following the ceremony he released a white dove. It flew up into the sky, and was suddenly attacked by a hawk.



I must have said "wow" a dozen times as we talked about this very personal experience my family had due to a child's effort to feel his identity, and then the dove being caught by a hawk. 

Then the preacher said, "let us consider that J.D. was the hawk." I'm pretty sure he was still the dove!

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Asheville and Black Mountain, North Carolina. We're still in recovery from two storms that knocked our communities sideways.

I drove around a lot on Monday, going to exercise, getting groceries, going to a dermatology appointment in Asheville. And I was looking at various decorated/painted pick-ups, one of which also had two big flags standing in the back, and it reminded me that there are some hate groups that feel they can do anything now. (I couldn't see what the other one was but it wasn't a confederate flag, while the American flag was flying opposite it). The red white and blue paint on the sides of the pick-up stated something MAGA related.

For the last two months, when several pick-ups and or SUV's gather and a few men are having a conversation it has meant they are involved in the hurricane recovery efforts. No more do I think that!

I must be dense. People were not joking when they said on Facebook that boys were going around girls and saying "your body, my choice!" or something like that. 

The youth of our country rely upon social media. They're already way ahead of me.

My first inclination was to hide. Never post another thing, because historically I've certainly said enough to identify myself as a very blue oriented free thinking liberal!

My second thought was to remember when I was in college, the Russians set up some missiles right in Cuba, aimed at the US. I was in a conference with other schools, and the buzz was that Russia might win a war against us, and then we'd all have to either be Red or be Dead. With that choice, I chose to be Red. I could very well survive by being agreeable and helpful, and perhaps sabotage whenever possible, but to look as an ally to the invaders. I didn't want to fight for what I believed in. I wanted to resist.

After the election I also had to figure out now how to feel towards my cousins who supported Trump. Of course they're happy. Part of me knows this is not going to last for them as the reality of this incredible landslide of excrement happens. But I stopped posting the "we'll survive, we're strong, we'll resist and it's ok to be angry" sayings to Facebook.

But then I remembered my spiritual path...teaching love is the way to combat hate. (I hadn't known that Buddhist idea back in college, but there was a heavy emphasis on love from the Christian point of view.) So I dropped my anger, and really worked to lessen my sorrow, and became "Barbara who walks in beauty." I learned that from a Navaho writer of mystery books, that being in balance with the world means walking in beauty.

May all be free to walk in beauty. I know, we've a long way to go.

Today's quote:

All [of which the] zoos actually offer the public, in return for the taxes spent upon them, is a form of idle witless amusement, compared to which a visit to the state penitentiary, or even a state legislature in session, is informing, stimulating, and ennobling. 

-H.L. Mencken, writer, editor, and critic (1880-1956)

H. L. Mencken, journalist and editor, called Puritanism, "the haunting fear that someone, somewhere, may be happy."










Friday, November 22, 2024

Some info on Lake Tomahawk

 The Lakeview Center for Active Aging was housed in this building, which was flooded during the 2 storms on 9.25-27, 2024 (ending with Hurricane Helene). There has been no lunch program with Council on Aging, nor any of the recreational activities by Black Mountain Recreation. That's a lot of seniors doing nothing, surviving I hope, and waiting. This was the set-up for the Thanksgiving Lunch Pot Luck in 2018.



During Hurricane Helene,the Lake Tomahawk dam held with the spillway working well, however there was water over the dam also. (sorry, these photos have been used before.)



During Hurricane Helene (following 2 days straight of rain).


The Lakeview Center taken from the old gazebo. You can see that it's downstairs is just a couple of feet above normal water level.

A Facebook message from Melinda Pilotes, the director of senior programming, dated Oct. 7, 2024:

The good news is that the upper floor at Lakeview Center is mostly unscathed with only a few leaks in the ceiling. The downstairs, however, is mostly a total loss due to flooding. The water line was at 5' inside. At this time we have been unable to access the downstairs at any length. There is a lot of work to do before we will know whether there are electrical problems downstairs that will prevent us from turning the power on to the building. Whether we are able to use the upstairs while the downstairs undergoes complete restoration is also too early to be determined. Please know we are working on getting everyone back together as soon as possible both for the meal site program and all our other classes and games. We will also keep you posted with any important updates as we progress.

But the good news is that people can walk around Lake Tomahawk again!

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And this old senior hobbled her way around Sunday, a sunny day at the lake (which unfortunately won't happen, sunny I mean, again for a while.)


Somebody has shoveled out the mud and then pressure washed this picnic shelter. Look above at the flood version where only the roof was above water. I guess since most of it is concrete block, it didn't harbor mold after the water receded.


The tennis courts also have been cleared, as well as part of the path scraped down a bit.


It's still covered with the dried mud though. But the new gazebo in the distance looks fine.


 Mallards of the lake don't seem to mind.


Though the sturdy bridge is in place, the path leading up to it hasn't been cleared, and it means some muddy choices of steps even on a sunny day. I wonder why this area wasn't shoveled out as well as others.



Of course many four footed friends go for walks here.


Up above the lake's parking lot I saw this team has parked, and will probably be back at work on the weekdays.

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PS If you read this after 8:30 am Friday, I'm adding the news that we had our first snow!




Today's quote:

Gratitude for the present moment and the fullness of life now is the true prosperity.

ECKHART TOLLE

Thursday, November 21, 2024

Where I used to Meditate

 It took me over a month. I just knew I would be shocked. And I also knew there were the responders and various construction crews in that area. Their empty pick-ups were parked across the creek, where the construction and earth moving vehicles had left.

These same vehicles had made a bit of progress, as the parking lot by the Remembrance Garden was cleared of debris. The stones I drove over had been buried before under some gravel, which has washed away.

Looking towards the space where the foot bridge used to be.


The deck of the bridge can be seen over against the far bank. Some engineering has happened to Flat Creek here, to stabilize the banks. 

The leaning tree has been there through many years...I used to capture it from standing on the bridge.

Taken February 2024. I notice it used to lean more...or at least that's how it looks from these two shots.


The deck of the bridge lies against a tree that used to designate a trail.


I studied these white rocks for the longest time. Where had they been before the flood waters? My best guess is they may have been there all along, under the dirt and grass and plants (lots of Rhododendron are gone).  Maybe man put some of them there, but there are pretty big trees growing through them. I think they dredged the creek some, as the water is flowing much lower in relation to the trees on the banks.


Where are all the pretty rocks that were in the creek, where it tumbled over them? I think either dredges up or washed away. This pool is caused by a new dam just below out of this photo.


The little dam is on far left in this photo, with some of the repositioned huge boulders. You can see the unpaved roadway still exists on the far bank. 
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Here is a video of Jennifer Berezan and others of the making of her 2- hour long CD 10 years ago. "A Song for All Beings" Video is just six minutes.



In these Arms

A Song for all Beings © (p) Jennifer Berezan I cannot turn my eyes, I cannot count the cost Of all that has been broken, all that has been lost I cannot understand, the suffering that life brings War and hate and hunger And a million other things When I've done all that I can And I try to do my part Let sorrow be a doorway Into an open heart And the light on the hills is full of mercy The wind in the trees it comes to save me This silence it will never desert me I long to hold the whole world in these arms May all beings be happy May all beings be safe May all beings everywhere be free
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And here's the 2:15 hour concert: Song for All Beings


It's absolutely lovely, but needs some time set aside to enjoy it.

Wednesday, November 20, 2024

And getting back to climate change

 "Our mother spanked us and sent us to bed without dinner."

 There. That was finally the feeling as I drove past the horror of Swannanoa's crushed buildings again and again. I'm not going to immunize myself to it. They may scrape up the mud turned to hard clay, and the many branches and roots of trees. They (our really great workers) are making some places be able to operate almost as normal. I drove through the Dunkin Donuts and picked up a Boston Cream Donut yesterday! Then looked across the street at the decimated buildings next to the Swannanoa River.


Mother nature is definitely mad at us. Here we are, the people who love the woods, hiking, fishing, swimming...working just in order to have weekends and vacations enjoying her bounty. But we sure forgot how to live in harmony with her. (And this goes up to a much higher chain of responsibility...not only political but religious!)

It started maybe a hundred years ago...commerce along highways. People wanting to live closer to their work sites and thus building nearer and nearer waterways. Not making laws to protect the steep slopes as people built up and up on the sides of mountains.

Yep, Mother Nature, our mother just spanked us good! Western North Carolina was a really safe climate change habitat from all intents and purposes. We had to learn our lesson though. I don't mean causality, that the people themselves who suffered made this happen. It is the fault of our civilization, our communities doing just what they wanted without having nature in the equation.

I don't mean to berate anyone. I just want to share that I feel like I've been sent to bed without dinner after that shameful spanking of Hurricane Helene.  We who kind of were working to help the problem of disassociated humans perhaps coming awake enough to save our planet from climate change...as well as many completely unaware people...boom, we're back to horse and buggy life. No water or electricity, many without safe homes, and get this... days without internet or cell service! That's a big BOOM to all of us.

I'm sooo very grateful that after 52 days of using bottled water to drink (I hadn't before, because of the plastic thing of course) we can now drink safely out of the tap. I'm just doing dishes and showering for now with tap water. Lots of these bottles in my house to use anyway.

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From Heather Cox Richardson last Monday:

On Sunday, speaking from the Amazon rainforest in Brazil, President Joe Biden said that it would not be possible to reverse America’s “clean energy revolution,” which has now provided jobs across the country, primarily in Republican-dominated states. Biden noted that the U.S. would spend $11 billion on financing international responses to climate change in 2024, an increase of six times from when he began his term.
But President-elect Trump has called climate change a hoax and has vowed to claw back money from the Inflation Reduction Act appropriated to mitigate it, and to turn the U.S. back to fossil fuels.
His intended choice of Secretary of Energy is a laugh...an oil czar!

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I must take a deep breath and pay attention to the "things I can control in my life." Politics has left the building. But I read, and listen half-heartedly to the news, and console my friends. And look and listen around me.

Folks, there are some dangerous things happening out there now, just around the corner from you, from me, from my relatives in the bigger city. It's as if the hate groups have been let out of the cages and they are going rampant.

I'll go more in depth about my thoughts and their experiences in another post, trying to keep climate change the focus on this one. It's so easy to digress...

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A bit of good news: all the Black Mountain and Asheville plastic water bottles - are they recyclable?

YES!'
We have plenty of capacity to bring all of those bottles into our facility to process and ensure that they are properly recycled,” Lawson said via email. “Markets may go up and down on plastics and other commodities. However, we have and will always accept plastic bottles for recycling.”

Source: Asheville Watchdog Answer Man interview with co-owner of "Curbie" (Curbside Management"  in August 2024

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Today's inspiration:

As a human being living on earth, it is important to learn to ground yourself in relation to your earth mother.



Tuesday, November 19, 2024

Alternative building techniques from New Mexico - two

 From my post several years ago when I visited my son and his wife in New Mexico, where we toured Earth Ships.

This was the Earth Ship headquarters, and having slept in one at a B&B for 2 nights, we had a free tour. For more information visit this link https://www.earthshipglobal.com

The tour starts...

We're going inside the largest structure here.


 This earth ship had to stop its construction due to some permit no longer being approved...and the guide said that with the political situation now, it is unlikely to be approved soon. (He didn't give any details.) This was planned to be a dorm for students/workers learning how to build earth ships.






Though the building is incomplete, it can still be used for gardening. This is a compost process.




These windows just have a double layer of plastic on them.



This fig tree had some fruits!

And some other buildings on the site.


There are a dozen or so buildings built here. This was our guide.



The building where students stay while learning how to build earth ships, had a little kitchen area.



My friends, Sue and Geoff Stone, built their own Earth Ship home here in Black Mountain at an intentional community, known as Earth Haven. I've visited it several years ago, and it reminded me so much of what I saw in New Mexico. 

Today's quote:

The earth
laughs in flowers.
- Ralph Waldo Emerson   


I've one more post about these Earth Ships, namely the B&B where we stayed for this adventure.

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This is the big news in Hurricane Helene recovery for Black Mountain NC...

“The City of Asheville has lifted the Boil Water Notice for all water customers as of 11 a.m. today, November 18.

Water Resources lab staff finished sampling the distribution system early Sunday afternoon, and results have confirmed that the water supply is free from contaminants. "

Monday, November 18, 2024

This and that....

 


I hope this doesn't offend anyone. But I figure by now, anyone reading my blog knows I'm not a good Christian, nor anything particularly.



And then there's a new Salvador Dali' that I hadn't seen before.

Dream Caused by the Flight of a Bee Around a Pomegranate a Second Before Waking, 1944

New name of Clingmans Dome is Kuwohi. Parking area at (then) Clingmans Dome in Sevier County in 1939.
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Personal note 11.15.24:
I haven't been out of the apartment for 4 days. Felt really achy after Wed. exercise, but picked up some salad and some hot "Chinese type food" at Ingles (grocery). They massacred the veggies with total salty soy sauce. I ate half my salad and some of the chicken.

The next day I was supposed to meet friends for coffee and snacks at one of our favorite restaurants. But I begged off with my achy body, took some Tylenol, and went back to bed. Was all this because I over-did it on exercises? Then dinnertime and I started feeling chills. Within 2 hours my temp had shot up to 101.8. I took the Tylenol (only second dose). I should have done the nebulizer, though at that point I just wanted to die. A long long night, and the fever did go down by dawn to 99. My regular temp is 97.

Some more bed time on through the night and morning of Saturday. I didn't want to get up. I'd roll over, cough a bit, and keep my eyes closed, and hope I could fall asleep again. There is the bliss of nothingness in sleep. I guess I wanted that. Did I mention that all day Friday, off and on, I'd take a breath and suddenly feel a sharp pain in my back under my left scapula. It would happen without warning and I got really scared, is this my heart? No, it only happens when breathing in. I did try to breathe into other parts of my lungs as much as possible. But I had to cry out the pain was so severe when it happened. Thank heavens it stopped during my hiding from life sleep before Saturday.

I've had this "intermittent" fever, which has no name before. I'm determined to get back on my feet. So tonight I'm aiming to sleep no more than 10 hours. I've got some other goals too, but don't want to tell you in case I chicken out and don't do them.

Next day: Sunday I woke up and felt myself again. No pains anywhere! There had finally been night sweats. That's how I know this bout is really over. 

Heavy frost outside on the car and the plants I left out. I'm sorry to say, I really had to let them go. I just have too many to keep inside all winter. 

So I'm trying to keep track to see if there's any causal factor to this recurring illness. I last had it just before the first storm, because I remember not doing dishes while I was sick, and then no electricity or water and the storms had taken care of my doing them at all. So I'd say maybe Sept. 22 or so, and Helene hit Sept. 27 and I was out of town "evacuated" for 16 days.


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Today's quote:

On writing, The first, of course, is to read. It’s surprising how many people think they want to be writers but they don’t really like to read books… The second is to write, every day, whether you like it or not. Screw inspiration. Octavia E. Butler