Update about blogCa

Who knew all this would happen afterwards! The tallest tree with lights in Black Mountain NC. At the Peri Social House on State St, US 70. (Taken through car window with a bit of reflection!)

Wednesday, December 17, 2025

Thanks Starhawk

Constellation of Pain by Starhawk

A Response to a Time of Murders 


Dec 16, 2025

reposted for my blog Dec 17 in the evening - I finally read this, and it helps consolidate some of my feelings of rage, sorrow, and confusion about the many events of people hurting people.

Sunday night was the first night of Hanukkah. it was also a night that capped a weekend of horrors: the shooting a of a Hanukkah party on the beach in Australia, another mass shooting at Brown University, and the more personal horror of the murder of Rob Reiner and his wife.

And in the same week, as people in Gaza shivered in cold tents, Israel assassinated more Palestinians, and at least fourteen children in Gaza died of cold.

These events circulate around each other like random stars that seem as though they should be linkedIn some kind of discernible, awful pattern. Stars sprinkle the night skies, and depending on what lines we draw between them, we make different constellations. But what do we make out of all of this, at a time when in our various ways we yearn to celebrate the rebirth of light out of darkness?

It’s only human to want to draw lines of simple cause and effect. We yearn for clear meanings and moral lessons. And the lines we most love to draw are those that encircle one group or another, that we can then label ‘all good’ or ‘all evil’.

But people are complex and so are groups of people. A Muslim father and son shot into the crowd at the Hanukkah party on Bondi Beach. A Syrian Muslim immigrant risked his life and single-handedly disarmed one of the gunmen, taking two bullets in the process. Many Jews do support the assaults in Gaza, and this terrible attack will inflame their fear and sense of victimhood. Yet many, many Jews, including me, have spoken up, organized and stood up against the genocidal policies of the Israeli government.

Many years ago, when I had just returned from doing solidarity work in Gaza, I was trying to explain to a friend, and to her ultra-orthodox rabbi and his wife what I had seen and experienced there: the targeting of civilians by snipers, the bulldozing of homes, the daily restrictions and humiliations inflicted on the population, and at the same time, the warmth and welcome I had received from the people there. At the end, the rabbi’s wife looked at me in great confusion. “I don’t understand,” she said. “We’re good! So if we’re doing it, it must be good!”

But we are not all good or all evil. We carry within us the capacity for both.

And we do the worst evils when we forget that, when we label another group as evil or subhuman, when we taint all the members of one group with the actions of a few, and when we refuse to take responsibility for the actions we support or the ways we benefit from harm done to others.

Anti-Semitism is real and deadly as we have just seen. And the genocide in Gaza is real and continues to be deadly. Conflating opposition to that genocide with anti-Semitism simply opens the door to all Jews being blamed for every death in Gaza at a time when the Jewish community is deeply split and no longer unified in support of Israel’s every policy. And failure to condemn the murders on Bondi beach reinforces the callousness and cruelty that are fueling discrimination against Jews and Muslims both, against all targeted groups that someone has drawn a circle around and labeled ‘fair game’, and reinforces the lethal cultural idea, one that infects our politics and our uniquely personal moments of breakdown, that the gun or the knife or the act of violence is the ultimate way to relieve our deepest pain.

I believe we are capable of better. I believe our hearts are large enough to hold the pain for the children of Gaza and of Bondi, without constantly needing to compare the two or rate one against the other. We can hold the pain of the families of the students at Brown, and the many, many families who have lost children to violence, and the very personal pain of the Reiner family, and the vast, unfathomable pain of the hundreds of thousands who fell victim to the murderous DOGE cuts to food and medical aid in Africa and beyond, of the immigrants and trans folks and all those who’ve had targets painted on their backs. And we can turn that pain into action, to build a better world.

And if all that seems too much, if your heart is breaking under the weight, look up into the night sky. Find three stars in alignment: name them Empathy, Compassion, Courage. Draw a line between them, make it a laser beam to cut through false boundaries and carve a new circle, one big enough to include us all.


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And to echo my earlier post on joy:

"Even a wounded world is feeding us. Even a wounded world holds us, giving us moments of wonder and joy. I choose joy over despair. Not because I have my head in the sand, but because joy is what the earth gives me daily and I must return the gift" ~Robin Wall Kimmerer


The joyful season

 Some happy memories...

Me as a Mud Buddy in 2011/ (My pottery life was from 2008-2020)

Selling pottery at the tailgate market with friends Cathy Babula, Bette Potter Jones and Marsha  Cozart. 2011

And more recently...
Barbara Baker bakes Macarons (not macaroons!) and sells them at lots of St. Petersburg and Tampa outdoor festivals. (And a few indoor ones as well!) moonlitmacaraons.com


Barb and her hubby, my son Marty, a few years ago.


My son, Russ and his wife Michelle, hosted my trip to visit them and their daughters for Christmas!

 

Tai and his wife Kendra. I had to search to find photos of these outdoor people not wearing sunglasses!

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Byron Ballard gave an uplifting talk at UUCSV in Black Mountain a few weeks back. (Unitarian Universalist Congregation of the Swannanoa Valley) Poor quality of photo taken from my monitor where I watched the YouTube of the service (https://www.youtube.com/@uucsvproductions).

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First time back at the original Ole's Guacamole Restaurant in Black Mountain.

 They've completely renovated following the flood with Hurricane Helene in Sept. 2024.


The lunch prices are still reasonable (my Enchiladas Suisa were $8.99 and I had enough to take home for another meal!) There are many new items on the menu also...like the one my friend had across the table from me.

All the furniture is new, with each chair and table and booth backing having different Mexican paintings.

I had to get a photo of the parrot! I know that guy sitting below it I think, and I didn't even notice him till later. I hope he didn't think I was taking his photo!


I missed taking a photo of their tree in the lobby, so will have to return sometime before Christmas!

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Another dearly loved restaurant also reopened that week, but I won't have a chance to go there till maybe this week. I'll try to remember to take photos before eating my bar-b-que!!

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Today's goddess: Vinča,  Neolithic Period

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Winter Solstice is 4 days away

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Today's quote:

'Pagan’ is a term that includes a diverse spiritual paths and communities who believe in a wide range of deities and ethical codes. Yet there are some things we hold in common: that the sacred is manifest in nature and in human beings, that we strive to live lives of honor and integrity, that we value human life and the lives of other living creatures, and cherish the beauty and diversity that makes up this living world. Pagans believe that we must each be our own spiritual authority and follow our conscience. The vast majority of us hold to those traditional American values of freedom of belief, freedom of speech, of liberty and justice for all. Many branches and organizations within the Pagan community have struggled for years to win the rights of Pagans in the military to freely practice their faith in life and in death to be buried with a pentacle, a Pagan symbol to mark their grave.

Source: Starhawk

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Christmas Decorations

I was told this was originally a firetruck.

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Spiraling dance...






Tuesday, December 16, 2025

The McClure home in Smyth County VA



It's great that a lot of the history of the McClure family has been preserved.


This could be considered one of the most historically-important, recent discoveries in Southwest Virginia - a log fort house built in 1768 by Nathaniel McClure, Jr (1747-1796) located in the St. Clair's Bottom area of present-day Smyth County, Virginia. This frontier-era landmark had been effectively "hiding in plain sight" until I [Robert Reid Edmondswas fortunate enough to purchase it from Nathaniel's direct 5th great-granddaughter. Amazingly, this property had remained within the original McClure family for the last 257 years - a family seat bravely established on the Virginia frontier during a time when the colonies were still under the thumb of the British monarchy. This discovery effectively rewrites what we thought we knew about the oldest still standing (in situ) structure in Smyth or any of the surrounding counties.



According to family lore, sometime in the late 1760s several members of the McClure family of Rockbridge County, Virginia would make the decision to head out towards the state of Kentucky in search of a better life. The settling party would consist of Nathaniel McClure, Jr and his cousin, Halbert McClure along with his wife and children. Along the way, somewhere on the frontier, Nathaniel would meet his first wife with whom he would have his first child, Sarah, born in 1770 in the fortified log house that he would eventually build two years prior to her birth. Eventually the party would make their way to the area in Virginia known as St. Clair's Bottom, which was located in Augusta County at the time (current day Smyth County) - this area had previously been explored and settled some years prior, led by a man named Colonel James Patton who in 1748 had erected a substantial home a short distance away known as "Town House".




The story goes that Nathaniel and his new wife were so enamored with the area around St. Clair's Bottom that they would make the decision to stop their journey and put down roots there, a decision which didn't sit too well with cousin Halbert - this would cause a heated argument between the two men resulting in Nathaniel staying put and Halbert going on towards Kentucky without him. Halbert wouldn't make it to Kentucky - he would make it as far as nearby Rich Valley, stopping there and establishing a homestead for himself and his family, a decision which would end up being a fatal one years later when he and much of his family were killed by Native Americans - read about that terrible tragedy here: https://www.facebook.com/groups/HSWCV/posts/3658269327600747/





Nathaniel built his fortified log house out of large chestnut logs, using hand-chiseled limestone blocks for its massive chimney. He decided to build the house as a typical one-over-one setup with only a front door, a back door with two gun ports located in the loft above - he knew the dangers of the frontier and this setup was his safest option for him and his future family. This layout is extremely similar to the Kilgore Fort House located in nearby Scott County, Virginia.



No one really knows what happened to Nathaniel's first wife but in 1780 he would marry a woman by the name of Dorcas Cole, who was the direct 4th great-granddaughter of the Mayflower passenger Stephen Hopkins. They would end up having several children together, effectively ensuring a long-term presence in the area for the McClure family.



Over the years Nathaniel's fortified log home would go through several changes; the first change would come in the 1830s when a large wood-frame addition was added to the rear elevation. Then, in the 1890s, a man named John Dolinger, a local woodworker, would marry one of the McClure girls and update the rear sections with his own touch, adding an amazing walnut staircase inside the rear addition and covering the log section of the house with clapboard siding; he would also remove the original winder staircase out of the log section, add extra windows to this part of the house, including enlarging the front gun port to insert a paned window.
The house would then be passed down to several more McClure family members until it was last lived in during the late 1980s.




Two entrances


Since purchasing the home, I've started peeling back some of the layers of the more contemporary remodels, removing old drywall and drop ceilings to reveal the original tongue and groove which is still covered in its original old milk paint. After removing the old drywall in the first floor of the log section, I was amazed to uncover the original cock-beaded beams in the ceiling and the old hand-scraped and square-nailed planks on the walls, still covered in their old butternut yellow paint. Amazingly when the old exterior wooden siding was removed from the logs under the porch, several names were revealed that had written in pencil on the old chinking, also showing where children had been practicing their ABC's.









The McClure family has also generously donated several items original to the home including the original rope bed that belonged to Nathaniel and Dorcas. Many items have also been discovered in the attic, including an oval portrait of Squire McClure and another red-washed rope bed. The portrait that hangs over the fireplace is of Nathaniel's son, John James McClure (his name is inscribed on the reverse). The palace-sized Smyth County loomed rugs seen on the floor of the blue bedroom are believed to be original to the house - these were sold out of the house decades ago but were graciously returned to me by a very good friend and local historian in nearby Seven Mile Ford, so they're now finally back in their rightful place.

Thanks to FaceBook page Robert Reid EdmondsEarly American


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And wait till you see  more "McClure homes" I found when searching for this one before posting!

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Today's goddess:


Goddess on the Throne from the Vinča culture circa 5100 BC

Thanks Jenny Mendes Ceramics on FB
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Winter Solstice is just five days away. Some cultures call it Yule.



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Thanks Girl Scouts!

Monday, December 15, 2025

Some Holiday decorations

 

Sassafras on Sutton offers a decorated tree.

The trees decorated by businesses and various community groups used to be displayed in the Monte Vista Hotel...but now are throughout the town. When they were displayed side by side, we would vote on the ones we liked by putting dollars in their little gift contribution boxes. But it is hoped this way more will be donated. Not as much fun trying to see all the trees though!



Three Gnomes and a larch!


Some of our beautification committee got inspired!

And just look, AC, I now know what a larch looks like!

A tree in a window at Town Hardware



The Seven Sisters Mountains are decorated a bit with snow. More may be on its way!

Last week some goodies were left from a weekend event, and were offered with lunch as part of our pickups.  I needed them like a hole in the head!!


My branch from my Ohio son's tree...and some goddesses.

Winter Solstice is 6 days away!


Today's quote:



I went to a storytelling performance About Hanukkah stories yesterday afternoon. I was surprised to see The auditoriumhalf empty. They’re also were no decorations or examples of menorahs or Dreidels on display. Instead The entrance and lobby were completely focused on Christmas. I recognized some Jewish people in the audience That I knew. And it wasn’t until I saw the news at home about the shooting at Bondi Beach in Australia of a Jewish Hanukkah celebration that I realized maybe people were afraid to be in public with interest in Judaism.  A newsman did a video interview And commented to me about the lack of any Decorations related to Hanukkah with that being the topic of the performance. It didn’t make for good video. The Black Mountain center For the arts Failed some of its best supporters.

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Today's the birthday of The Bill of Rights of the US Constitution. See the background and George Mason's contribution on Open Yesterday's Pages.

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There are so many horrific stories of violence from yesterday. May all the families of those hurt or killed find some solace while grieving, and may we all support one another for better laws, better gun control, and better education and mental health support for those disillusioned souls who think that killing is the way for them to express themselves.

Sad at loss of Rob Reiner, so here's a photo of the cast of The Princess Bride.