Saturday, November 1, 2025

Intentions for a New Month

New month! New time (2 a.m. tonight, clocks go back.) Fresh start!  

What would I like to focus on this month?

1. Most important of all: 
Replace energy I spend on my job with more fruitful expenditures.

I work 20 hours/week at the thrift store. Not even a full day/night cycle. I love the work, I love the place. Every time I've tried to expand there, I've run into the management's roadblocks.
I've pulled way back, which is great,
but I can still get emotionally hooked by the dysfunction there--(yesterday's staff meeting was a doozy).
It is not my life. 

What's called for now is more SUBSTITUTION.
 Get on with other things in my life.
Like....

2. TOY Creations
Getting back to Toys Recreate Paintings* has been great! More of that. Maybe other things.
I'd like to share the photos further, maybe... How? I don't want to go back to Meta social media. Maybe look into alternatives...
That's not the most important thing.
DOING them is.

Also, I have a Bear Repair for someone else I have forgotten about!
And more for myself, too...

I've thought it'd be fun to teach a one-night Basic Stuffed Animal Repair/refresh class in community ed... Maybe this spring?

3. Social connections

a. Today I'm going to a Needle-work group that meets twice a month at a nearby library. I'd been once and liked it but haven't been back. It's open to any craft-work.
I'll take a bag of God's eye–making supplies. 

b. This Sunday will be my fourth Church visit. If I feel good about it again, I will ask about meeting with someone (the pastor?) to learn more about the church. 
Who are these people?

It's Christian, and it's evident there's no specific creed--the pastor mentioned 1/3rd of the congregation is atheist/agnostic, for instance-- but there is a culture, and expectations.
(Creeds don't have to be written or spoken.)

c. M and Q are coming down for Thanksgiving!
That's great because I'm eager to see them, and also it gives me a goal...

3. Rearrange my apartment/Art-making set-ups... 

This involves some decision making:
Am I going to do more printmaking
In theory, yes! But I've done none in a year and the supplies are taking up a table.

IDEA: Design a holiday card to print (like GZ's lovely little robin print card!). If that gets me going, I'll keep the printmaking set up.

Also, I need to look into a cheaper printer if I am going to make a Girlettes 2026 calendar
Am I?
The printer I've been using for 5 years only gives discounts if you order 10 or more, and I don't think I need 10 this year. 
Or do I?

Making artwork challenges me because I am such a nonstarter at selling or disseminating my work--do I want to change that?
_______________


*I'd half-forgotten that last  Halloween the girlettes had also recreated a portrait of a Boy--Goya's Red Boy: Portrait of Manuel Osorio Manrique de Zúñiga.
What a fun duo (quartet) with the Boy King James!


I was going to fuzt with the Boy King James, but they said, no.
Start something new with us.
Quite right.

Friday, October 31, 2025

The Presentation of the Boy King James

Happy Halloween! May we present…

 “King James I as a Boy – – Aged Eight”

I had to work fast! I would futz some more, but I have to go to work for a store meeting!

———

Earlier this morning:

6:43 AM. Already I have spilled red paint…



Thursday, October 30, 2025

Split Screen

 “Let’s see what’s out there.”
 
—Captain Jean Luc Picard

Below, top image: I chose this book from a library display about AI yesterday—for its good cover, half church dome, half digital orb; its opening quote (above) from a Star Trek captain; and for the  mix of two things I’ve been thinking about, which surprised me —AI Goes to Church (2025). 


Above, bottom image:  I’d taken this photo at the art museum recently. Half-and-half Hindu divinities Shiva and Parvati as one 
(opaque watercolor, India, early 1700s).

Wednesday, October 29, 2025

Frond Forward

Photo show and tell

I. Fronds


Babies! Fern babies!
I'd ripped my Boston fern into four and chopped the greenery all the way back earlier this fall, you may remember. It'd all felt so brutal, I'd wondered if I'd killed the fern. 
But no! A while ago fresh new fronds appeared in each pot.

This morning, this one in front looked like a lamb, its little green face framed with ears:


Life returns, if it can.

II. Spirits on the Move


Out life goes, too...
Yesterday the 95-year old husband of a neighborhood pal died. Not a surprise, but...  We only die once, so it's always sort of a shock.
They'd been together more than 50 years. His loss is  a great sadness to her. 
She's 15 years younger than he was--'only' 80. She feels lively to me--she may sprout some fresh fronds.

I phoned her last night--(I rarely phone anyone anymore)--and she told me  about the arrangements she's in the middle of. She and her husband had already signed up to donate their bodies to the U Medical school, and they will take his body. 

This is a great deal--the U handles everything (free, of course)--including cremation--and you get to help out Team Human, even though you're dead! (Medical students get their own cadaver for a semester, I think is how it goes.)

 I should sign up for this. Godforbid I need it very soon, but you never know. Good to be on record.

Personally, this feels like a good time of year to depart. 
Lots of traditions say the "veil is thin" between life and death 
around now.  
In more mundane terms, yesterday was the last Farmers Market on the walk/bike Greenway path near work. Fallow time begins.

I was kind of shocked that someone told me there are "lots of evil spirits" around now. 

I don't literally believe in Life after Death, but The Dead always seem like friends to me--having dropped their attachments and illusions. I feel they are on our side, with a mix of awe and angst.

But I shouldn't be naive--no doubt there are some pissed-off energies out there. There certainly are among The Living!

Here are some Happy spirits:
The Global Market near my workplace has a Dia de Muertos offrenda (Day of the Dead altar). Walking through the other morning on the way to work, I liked that this big skeleton wearing a skirt of monarch wings is by the pop-up Voting tables--the guy holding the US flag is helping set up. 
Good citizens.


Toys at Work and at Home

I sent the above photo ^ of Panda to Marz who said, 
"No! I'll take him!"

I am excited that she and her sweetie, Q., are coming here for Thanksgiving. 
(They are not toys, of course, they are humans.) Q. is her first serious, long term sweetie. 
They were here for the bonfire this fall, but that was just a few hours. 
I'm looking forward to a family Thanksgiving--that's what it feels like to me.
Low-key, I'll make the standard basics.
_____

I counted the God's eyes remaining on the fence yesterday. 
There are 87.
A month ago I'd hung 125 with friends, and I have added at least 25 since then... So, people have taken 60+ God's eyes.
Nice!

Must make more, but today is Costume Day.
MT gave me some green and gold fabric for it.
 I may have enough to make a trio of Boy King Jameses--Age 8.

Tootle-oo to you all!
As Auntie Vi always signed her emails:
Enjoy life! 
________________


I have been intrigued with philosophy and religion since I was a kid, I kid you not, but I know some readers do not care for talk of church and God, so here's a 
CONTENT WARNING

This Is the [sort of] Theology Bit Ahead

 I haven't mentioned church yet, so–– re the call to Enjoy Life–– I'll add that the pastor had said that these are such hard times, there are people who say we shouldn't smile, we shouldn't savor life. 

He thinks it's okay to savor life. 
But I felt he was struggling a bit to affirm that. That's what I mean about the Puritan-within remaining. I like it, actually, wrestling with the sinful nature of humanity. 

Liberals don't talk about 'sin' anymore; 
we talk about our carbon footprints, our cholesterol, 
historical reparations, "we are on stolen land", 
epigenetic trauma,  
emotional regulation, healthy boundaries,
cognitive biases, implicit biases, microagressions,
animal suffering in our food production, 
being complicit in capitalistic structures, imperialism, 
. . .  “are we doing enough?”—
and all that stuff like that. 

Different ways of talking about the damage we inherit, and do, and pass on.
We print this stuff on bumper stickers to display on our cars.
"If you're not [x, y, z], you're not paying attention." 

My favorite bit of muddled  thinking is the bumper sticker that says,
 LOVE YOUR MOTHER, 
 with a photo of Earth.
 I can’t think of anything much worse for Mother than cars.
Well... nuclear war. 
There's a new movie out!

What's the carbon footprint of a Hollywood movie?
Oooh--Time magazine reports. It's big. One "tentpole" production uses 
"up to 3,370 metric tons of CO2 , the equivalent of powering 656 homes for a year".

We are a confused species. 
Mea culpa. Mea maxima culpa.
No kidding.

But those people who say we shouldn't savor life in these times are not Sicilians like Auntie Vi who know life is always awful. If it's not awful for you at the moment, it is for someone, somewhere. If you wait till it's not, you will never smile. 
You will never peek your fronds out.

I walked past a feminist sex shop, Smitten Kitten, the other day. Their signage advertises that they are 
"Pleasure forward, Trauma informed."

(Language of our times, it would be obscure even twenty (ten?) years ago. And still is to plenty, no doubt.)

Borrowing from that, I say with Auntie Vi... 
in traumatic times, which are all times,
Enjoy life! Frond forward
!

Tuesday, October 28, 2025

A Thought of Owl

Linda Sue posted a photo of a northwestern pygmy owl today (below, left). Those colors would make a nice God's eye, I thought. 
But... there's the problem of spots again! 
Oh well, I'm not going for veracity: I held it in my mind as I worked.

An owl is a pleasant thought, if you are not a mouse.


I was commenting to a neighbor yesterday that the leaves are late to turn. Then this morning, after a rainy night, you can see they have turned to gold.

People are taking the eyes off the fence, slowly, I noticed when I left work yesterday--so I'm not able to fill the fence up, but am filling gaps. That's okay. They're still all along the fence, a vibrant presence.

Sulfur & Marshmallow

I hadn't made any for a few days, and so I still have a couple hours of the audio book on Roger Williams.  Listening again after a break, I
'm putting something together:
the pastor at the church I've gone to 3x now reflects his denomination's Puritan roots. 
And I like that.

With rainbow flags & solar panels mounted on its old, fortress-like stone building, 
I'd worried this liberal church would be all ooey-gooey sweetness and light, like an Unity Church a friend goes to, which advertises itself as "uplifting and affirming", like a bra.
I don't want that.


The pastor commutes by bike, for instance. 
At first I thought that was a ridiculous affectation--big whoop--but then I though, Who do I know (who can afford a car) who chooses to bike? 
I can count them on one hand.
So, I get the feeling he has some passionate intensity to him.

Those Puritans were intense. I wouldn't want to know them, but I admire their ferocity. 
They are not the ancestors of the New Age movement.

I suspect the pastor is restraining ghosts whispering that he cut off the ears of those who refuse to hear.

I like that he preaches and acts on the belief that what we're doing matters.  Or so it seems. I'm new--I'm gathering data, for now.

There may be a whiff of sulfur about the pastor, but as I've mentioned, the Spiritual Director comes trailing clouds of marshmallow fluff.
I have to leave the sanctuary so I cannot even hear her goo-ily guiding us in "gentle reflection". 
It goes beyond eye rolling.
 To use a word suggested by Micahel:
 she makes me writhe

Monday, October 27, 2025

Life in 100 Objects: Among the Childhood Library-Card Holders

If I were to illustrate My Life in 100 Objects––
 (is that prompt modeled on the British Museum's History of the World in 100 Objects? --podcast at the BBC)
–– key objects from my childhood would be my first library card--(I remember the children's librarian denying me a card because I didn't know how to write my name--I was shocked--but I soon learned and went back and got one); 
and also the blank Journal my mother gave me for my tenth birthday.

I was thinking about that after attending 
the liberal church for the third Sunday, yesterday. 
(I must name it something, here, if I'm going to keep going...)

Why are these people so familiar? I wondered.
It isn't just that they're white, middle-class, college-educated liberals. They are, but that's a huge swath of the population. 
They're a subset.

I. The 
People-Who-Grew-Up-with-Library-Cards Set

I think I'm among People Who Grew Up with Library Cards. 
Further, the type who might’ve been encouraged at a young age to write down their thoughts and experiences. 
SO MUCH flows from the belief that not only should you read about other people's lives, but you, your life, is worth writing about, and that you  can do that 
yourself.

Like David Copperfield, you can write yourself as the hero of your own life.

The pastor said that the church membership is 1/3 members of the denomination, 1/3 people who used to be something else, and 1/3 atheist/agnostic. But I’d warrant they share membership in the above club.


I'm sensing these people come from that class because...
First, last week I saw my famous neighbor, the Children's Book Author (CBA), there. 

Second, yesterday, an 82-year-old member of the congregation gave a personal-reflection about his life as a gay activist, including working with Harvey Milk. 

 At one point he said, We have a hero right here--and pointed out a man in the pews who'd been a city council-member involved in passing the 1974 non-discrimination ordination prohibiting discrimination based “affectional or sexual preference”.  *

[You can read a personal history of the Gay Rights Ordinance, here, not by either of the people above, but interesting.]

Also from that era--the church seems to include the sort of people who would start a Feminist Bookstore in someone's house,
 like the first Amazon Bookstore [not you, Jeff Bezos], here in town, in 1973: [via "The Pride Behind Pride"]


Third, the pastor weaves quotes from writers, thinkers, and ethically motivated do-ers into his sermons.

 Last week, Andre Dubus and Paul Farmer; this week, E B White,  Carl Jung, Dietrich Bonhoeffer, and Ann Patchett. 

And there's (always?) a non-scriptural reading--so far, poems by Mary Oliver and Rumi (or, rather, Coleman Barks, the "interpreter" (he doesn't know Persian) of Rumi).

This is a
 little too much, for my taste. I ROLL MY EYES, "omg these old chestnuts", but have to admit that these writings have shaped my life too. 
It's probably just that in this quadrant of my life, I am tired of them being trotted out. But if you're a pastor, you need material, and they are the go-tos for A Certain Class. My class.

I can even predict what others are coming up.
 James Baldwin. Dorothy Day. MLK. Bishop Tutu. ee cummings. Louise Erdrich. Mr.Rogers.

Robert Frost?

I guess Robert Frost because of EB White--this church has New England roots, which is not the dominant European culture here. This area was settled by farmers and laborers from Germany and Scandinavia. To an outsider, they might look the same, but they're  quite different from New England Puritans like Roger Williams who cofounded the first Baptist faith.

(I lived in New Bedford, Massachusetts, for a year, while bink taught illustration at a college nearby, and I was shocked at how different the culture was. I hadn't realized.) 

Should I add Herman Melville, who shipped out of the 
whaling capital of New Bedford, to my list of predictions?
I think that's a stretch... As is Nathaniel Hawthorne.
But I'd place a bet on Emerson showing up. Louisa May Alcott. Maybe Thoreau?

Definitely Emily Dickinson.

I AM NOT MOCKING! 
I am rolling my eyes a little, but these aren't just well-meaning quoters of other people, these are obviously people who themselves act for Good in the world, effectively;
who were (probably) raised to feel empowered to take action, and trained in the skills of being effective, and have learned how to make moral and ethical judgments and act from them.

It's a bit shocking to be among them, after eight years among people whose mothers taught them to survive by holding their tongues--holding up Emmett Till as a counter-example. 

II. The Turmeric Water Set

I'd worried I'd be among the Turmeric Water subset of liberal white people at church, but I think not so much.

Do you remember that? 
It's from Ass't Man, my middle-aged white-guy coworker who was so clueless Mr Furniture called him Opie, a nickname that stuck. 

Ass't Man was far more clueless about race than I, but we shared the shock of being totally out of our
 depth in 2020 when the police murdered George Floyd ten blocks from our store. 

The next summer, after the first Covid vaccine, Ass't Man had gone to the wedding of an old college friend. He told me later that it'd been hard to re-enter that social class, after what he'd seen and learned.
His prime example was that at one point, he heard some people complaining because the caterer had not stocked enough Turmeric Water, and there was none left.

So we shared that--coming from people who not only drink Turmeric water (could have been Perrier in my young adult life), but EXPECT it to be on hand for them. 
Not because they're bad--they're not! And they're certainly 'well-meaning'.
[I see I am not done fretting about that term.]
It--the availability of Bottled Water of the Moment--has simply been their experience of Normal Life, 
and if they never broadened that experience, they're stuck in it.

(while I'm glad Ass't Man left, (after his alcohol abuse started to affect our relationship), I still miss him, someone who went through that learning with me.

(And also--unrelated to that-- he was the only person I've worked with at the store who was great at displays. Man-oh-man, I didn't realize what a gift it is to assemble stuff into a pleasing display.)

So that's the Turmeric Water class, and no doubt they are represented at the church. But another factor is that most of the people there appear to be around my age--and they seem to have figured out that the world not only doesn't always supply their specialized wants but, more importantly, the world doesn't supply even the most fundamental needs of many, many people. 
(Age is no guarantee that people have figured this out.)
And that maybe you should not just weep into your latte, but DO something about that.

At least, that's the vibe I'm getting. 
And, cautiously, I say, I am liking that vibe.

Okay-- now, having written in my Blank Book of Blog for the morning, I am off to do some assembling of stuff at my workplace.

Ciao, ciao! Have a good drink of water!
____________

*In 1975, the 1974-ordinance's phrase “affectional or sexual preference” was defined as people “having or projecting a self-image not associated with one's biological maleness or one's biological femaleness,”--that is, not just gay or lesbian but trans and gender-nonconforming people, making it the first ordinance in US history to protect that group.

--"The 1975 Minneapolis Non-Discrimination Ordinace", at the MN historical society) 


Sunday, October 26, 2025

Substitute

I. A brontosaurus is as good as a hawk.

I showed the portrait of "James I as a Boy" to BOOK's Girl Amina yesterday.
"My dolls are going to dress like this for Halloween. I need a small bird, a sword, and some green velvet".

She rummaged around and found a few small rubber animals.
How bout a frog instead? she said.

Yes! She gets it!
But the brontosaurus looks more like a hawk (it's its ancestor!), so I took that.
We also found some Target sports mascot with 
green velvety legs--"I hate materialism," Amina said--"These just came out in stores last week, and one already shows up here."  I cut the legs off for pantaloons.

And then, Amina had saved a set of tiny Toledo cocktail swords, and I borrowed one of them.
 (I assume they were tourist tat--googled them--they are, and also expensive! Like $100 on ebay.)

Ta-da!

The props are sitting on top of another find from the store--1950-60s fruit/dessert bowls by Russel Wright, for Iroquois China.
There are two each: "ice blue" and "ripe apricot". 
(I've always liked Wright's design --it reminds me of the Guggenheim, by another Wright--Frank Lloyd).

Someone had put these in the to-be-priced 69¢ bin at work.
Sigh.
They're around $10 on ebay. Probably wouldn't sell for much at our store... Still, more than 69¢. 

II. Nothing Is Not Effective; Trying Is a Start


That's the thing with being Well-Meaning, which I keep thinking about. For it to benefit others (or oneself), you gotta add in Effectiveness.

We recently got some nasal-spray doses of Narcan donated. 
Instead of the old kits containing a little bottle and an empty needle to inject someone who has overdosed, you just stick this tube up their nose and push the pump.
Easy!

A coworker took one to put in his car.
Once, he told me, he had injected someone he'd thought had overdosed. (Narcan won't hurt you if--if you aren't overdosing, it's  inert).
Turns out, the man had not overdosed, he had just passed out and soon came to.

The coworker said, "That's good, because I think I was supposed to have filled the needle with the liquid in the little bottle."

Ya think?
Well-meaning, he had injected nothing into the man.
Still, if he hadn't been well-meaning, he wouldn't have even tried--and trying is SOMETHING... It is the beginning of wisdom: you can try, try again.
Next time, he'll have the nasal spray!

Reminds me of the teaching (attributed with no source to Teddy Roosevelt or the Marines):
Best thing to do is the Right Thing.
Second-best thing to do is the Wrong Thing.
Worst thing to do is No Thing.


It takes so long to learn how to be in the world!
I definitely vote for reincarnation--I want another go.
Actually, jeez---I don't know that I'd want to Do Life again...
Would you???

I will just try harder for the time I have left now, and call it a day.

III. Placebos work, even if you know they're placebos.

One tactic I'm trying is: to treat my sister as if I were an A.I.
I got the idea because I liked how Chat was so nice to me--complimenting me on my questions and observations. 
I felt special!

I had to forcefully remind myself that it would compliment me no matter what I said--it's designed to make you feel loved like a warm apricot in the sun.
It works, even if you know it's a performance.

So, I thought, I'm going to try a drop of that, like a lubricant on some of my most stuck relationships. 

Often, it doesn't work to just STOP.
 You have to SUBSTITUTE.
Stop smoking.
Start knitting.
That sort of thing.

I never had a good replacement strategy in this case--and that's where channeling AI tactics comes in. I've started to pick up on something she said and mirror it back, with praise.
"You've got such a good eye for choosing quilt patterns!"
Like that.
It's not lying, it's the expansion of a small, true-enough thing.

And it seems to work. (It worked on me when AI did it.)
I want it to work. I want to make it to the end of my life (or hers) in a mutually p
leasant relationship with my only Family Member. That would count as success.

____

I'm off now, this Sunday morning, to Week 3 of my Lively Experiment, going to the nearby Church Founded by Roger Williams. (I wonder who there even knows or cares about this...)

Have a lovely day/evening, wherever you are, Blog Friends.
You're so good at being you! (Ha-ha, jk. But, actually, also, really!)

Saturday, October 25, 2025


 Trying different color combinations inspired by a Pakistani quilt—sample, top, above here.

 (My sister is a quilter and sent me a photo of it).



Friday, October 24, 2025

A Lively Experiment

This morning I was not experimenting--I was copying the colors of my Hudson blanket (left) in a God's eye. 
And I've already made several in the colors of Greek protective eyes (right).

Sometimes I've made the eyes with color patterns from nature-- mushrooms or monarch butterflies--but not copied color patterns much otherwise. 
I'd like to start looking more at other textiles (etc.) for colors.

Is copying is a form of experiment? 
Sort of. 
"How would this look in another form?" 
Or, "How might I transfer this into another medium?"
How might I run this through my own life?

Anyway, everything we do is new, because we have not done THIS one before.
One thing I've learned (but not always done) is, to be more careful with the color black. Here, it is too dominant in the Hudson eye. Just a thin line would do, and a much smaller pupil in the center. 
I'll try it again. (Also, find a better gold/yellow...)
__________________

"You know what matters."
 
 I like the idea of life as a lively experiment.
That was Roger Williams's proposal to the English for the establishment of Rhode Island as a place where the state and church were entirely separate: 
it would be "a lively experiment" that the English could watch from afar.  How's that going to work?

Williams wasn't motivated by niceness, (though people said he was a personally nice guy)-- and certainly not by the idea that there are many valid ways to God. 
NO. 
He believed in Soul Freedom, which sounds modern, but he believed Christian Scripture was the one and only true Truth. 
I'm not sure, but I think he meant with St. Paul that within that, we have to Work out your own salvation.

I like that--like Noam Chomsky says when people ask him what they should do politically:
That's for YOU to decide.
Chomsky went further--the very question, "What should I do?" reveals a pathology in society.  "That's not the way it works, you have to find out for yourself. 
...You know what matters."

("Noam Chomsky - What Should I Do?" 1:46 minutes)

Williams is not Chomsky. But he did believe you have to figure it out yourself (within Scripture). 
He ended up leaving all religious denominations, including the Baptist church, which he co-founded. 
He called himself a Seeker.
Again, sounds lovely, sound modern, but he would have believed modern "Seekers"--people like Ram Dass, et al.––were hideously wrong, and eternally damned. But he’d say civil authorities had no right to punish, banish, or execute him.

STILL, even if he came to it by a different door, his new idea of separation of church and state is a great idea, which we're still wrestling with.
The experiment continues...

And this current president, mygod, what a crass user he is, of religion and everything else. Roger Williams would be horrified.
____________________

I am feeling better this morning, day four of a cold, but still honking like a goose. 
I left work after two hours yesterday, feeling wiped out. 
Also, Manageress said, "Don't come near me! Go home!"

She is funny. She doesn't want to get my germs, but she also didn't get a flu or Covid vaccine because she doesn't believe in it...
My coworkers are probably not more inconsistent than most people, but our inconsistencies sure are on full display at work.

"I don't believe in Big Government, but I think the government should come sweep these people off the street," a coworker said. He doesn't even vote.

Yes, I said, it’s frustrating, but that 'solution' doesn't turn out so well: you are handing Big Government powers they will use on you.

He sort of agreed.
I actually am sympathetic with his frustration (though not his solution):
the problems of people who carry the "sins" (brokenness) of our society are very … annoying.
You know what I mean?
The desperate, drug-addicted people in our neighborhood act very badly and dangerously--
one had spit on my coworker recently.

We have had two people wave machetes at the cashier. Two different people!

They are acting out the ills of society--not that they aren't also individuals.
 Yes, but at a certain point, they seem to have lost access to their individual selves (souls) and only act out of the drugs and misery in their systems...

But the idea that 
getting rid of the people-acting-badly will get rid of the root ills is a trick, which my coworker seems to fall for.

Noam Chomsky again:

"The issue is whether we want to live in a free society or whether we want to live under what amounts to a form of self-imposed totalitarianism, 
with the [people] marginalized, directed elsewhere, terrified, screaming patriotic slogans, fearing for their lives, and admiring with awe the leader who saved them from destruction, 
while the educated masses goose-step on command and repeat the slogans they’re supposed to repeat...." 

--via, from Media Control, 2002

(I would like to better overall understand —be able to better articulate—the overarching political/psychological patterns I see at my workplace.
In the middle of it, it feels like a mish-mash scramble! 
But there are repeating, traceable patterns--like in a complicated tapestry.)

And now, off I go, into the coldest morning yet this season, 29ºF.

Have a good day, Beautiful Souls! 
Enjoy your experiments!

Thursday, October 23, 2025

Better Angels Crochet

 My cold seems to have gotten worse... or, at any rate, it's moved around... But I'm going to work anyway after two days off at home.
So just a quick share this morning of a terrific article K. sent me (thanks, K!) about crocheters and other crafters joining the inflatable frogs & co. outside ICE in Portland.

oregonlive.com/portland/2025/10/craftivism-draws-knitters-crocheters-to-portland-ice-protests.html

ABOVE: Vincent Green-Hite crochets during protests outside the ICE facility in South Portland on Oct. 16, 2025.Samantha Swindler/ The Oregonian

I love this stuff so much! 
It's like an answer I relate to, to this good question:
 "If you're going to lose, what would you DO ANYWAY?"

Losing and winning aren’t quite the right concepts: I mean, we never know if we're going to "win" in the end, (in fact, what we do know is we face The Big Lose: death), or even what "winning" is,
but we "win" by trying to … um, to accept the invitation from the better angels of our nature. Whatever/whoever that is (they are).