Saturday, January 24, 2026

Stand Up! (stand by me)

We have not yet begun to fight! 

I want to say, it makes dismayed and even angry when people say things like, our country is doomed, democracy is dead.

No!

 The mood here in Minneapolis is united and strong – angry— and frightened, yes—but mostly, I see,  fiercely resistant!

A friend was saying “We can do it.  and —I can’t believe I said this! 😄— I replied, “Yes! Remember the spirit of Valley Forge!”

Valley Forge??? 🙄 Lol 

I but yes, I am calling up my 5th grade American 🇺🇸  history , and I claim that spirit. And I thought of Valley Forge because it was damn  cold there – – and it is here too!

I went out signing for about 20 minutes at a near busy intersection  before I got too cold with my handmade sign – – I decided it was not a time for clever signage, so I made this as blunt as possible.

MOST passing traffic honked and waved—including the city bus driver!!!

– and I’m about to go out again to the 7 PM rallies held all across the city and state at everybody’s local park.

Don’t be a doom sayer. Show some spirit!  Light a spark for us—and yourselves! Fire 🔥 it up!

Honestly, I could use you at my back, friends.

Unreal

When I heard of the murder by ice today – – just a couple blocks from where I used to live for 17 years – – I just shut down. I went to bed and slept for three hours. 

Woke up and thought,  This murder feels like retribution by desperate men.

I texted with a lot of friends – – one of them sent me this SNL news skit about ICE falling on ice.

 I really didn’t think I wanted to laugh, but I did laugh, and I felt a little oxygen return to my collapsed brain. So I’m sharing it here with you too:

And now I’m going to bundle up and go outside in the cold sunshine and look for sticks to wrap yarn around. Because I believe the universe when it signaled that I should keep doing what I’m doing – – trying to “Stay, and be beautiful.”

Wherever we are, we’re all in this world together, and I send love and oxygen to you all.

"Good skating weather"/ "Keep doing what you're doing"

Well, my friends, I tell ya, I'm feeling a little shaky this Saturday morning. 
As the ICE occupation of my city and state goes on and on--
I remember the first big raid near my workplace before Christmas-- having come here from Chicago, LA, Portland, etc. 
...and as it spreads to other places––(Maine, now)––
my very cells feel jangled.

I. ICE Out Strike and Rally

Yesterday, I did not brave the subzero cold and go to the rally downtown, but thousands did--as many as 50,000. 
Imagine how many more of us there'd've been if it'd been above zero! 

I was afraid of literally freezing my toes, of I'd have gone.
A friend who went pooh-poohed the weather:

"Negative fifteen? Good skating weather!"

I love that Midwestern attitude. 
There was a sit-in at City Hall in Duluth. Marz said she'd made a protest sign on a snow shovel.

A pal from work sent me this poster from the rally--you remember the Morton salt girl?
(She's carrying the new state flag.)


Another friend sent this--the MN state bird, the loon, fashioned into the Star Wars resistance emblem.


I was impressed with Big Boss. He decided to close the thrift store–– AND to say why. This is not his usual way--he has always avoided  involving the store in anything political. But signs on our door read,

 Closed in Support of Our Neighbors.

I told him, "You did a good thing, boss"
Always love to use a movie quote when I can.
 (Whoops--looked it up and it's, "Boss, you did a beautiful thing". Eh, close enough.)

Casablanca, you know? Above: Sasha, the Russian bartender,  says it to Rick and kisses him, after Rick lets a refugee win at roulette (so the refugee wife doesn't have to sleep with Claude Rains in exchage for exit visas).

II. But I didn't do nothing. 
In the morning, I went with L & M to a multi-faith service at a major synagogue, Temple Israel.


It kicked up my acceptance that THIS IS REALLY HAPPENING, to see a pewful of politicians, including Senator Amy Klobuchar-–(she's  running for governor, since Walz has withdrawn), and former mayor Rybak. 

On the bima (platform) were around a hundred Jewish, Muslim, Christian clergy. 
Many had come from other states. 
After the service, I talked to a woman rabbi about her snow pants--I was wearing my bright lemon-green ones.
She said she was from California but is a skier. 
She'd been skiing in Colorado when she got the call to come to this event, so she left her car and flew here--with her ski clothes.

The Rev. Mariann Budde, Episcopal bishop of Wash. DC, had come too. The crowd stood and applauded her for a couple minutes.

Meanwhile, other clergy had gone to the airport to join a protest against ICE flights transporting detainees to other states, like Texas. Dozens of the protestors were arrested, many of the clergy while singing on their knees in the freezing cold.

The audience at the multifaith service was mostly well-coiffed (extremely), and well-off. 
Seeing all these politically and socially powerful people gathered, I accepted at a deeper level that it isn't just my poor old beleaguered workplace and its scrappy, tattered neighborhood that is under siege.

 Yes, I knew that intellectually,
 but it takes a while for radical change to soak in, all the way down.

Meanwhile, I had a reality check: 
I'd been waiting for the week's Economist, thinking we would feature big. 
Of course not. 
The lead story is, rightfully, Horror in Iran.
ICE in Minnesota got a half-page article about the legal issues surrounding bringing federal agents to trial for murder.

We are just a blip of distress in a distressed world.

III.
Worst of all was finding out a couple days ago that a former coworker--the sweetest, hardest-working person imaginable-- has been hiding at home for a month with their family. 
They have LEGAL papers to work here, but a lawyer told them it's not enough to stop ICE from deporting them. 

The day we found out, I gathered donated personal-care supplies from the store--toothpaste, kotex, dish soap, etc.–– and some of us added some cash--to send along with their groceries (someone outside the store is delivering).

I know their kid likes Hello Kitty, so the Toys dept. dug up a couple of HK toys, and I put them in a gift bag. 
I felt like I was sending a package to Anne Frank.

So, with that,  I'm reeling.

IVI just wrote to a dear friend who sends me smart political videos:

"Thanks for thinking of me, to send me videos – – I should let you know that I'm not watching political videos. 
They just upset me further, and I’m trying to limit that! 

It’s so shocking, being under attack by one’s own government.
 It’s not something foreseeable, unlike the Covid pandemic – – even a slight acquaintance with science or science-fiction let us know that was going to come someday (and will come again).
 
Or George Floyd's murder, which was for me, a white liberal, an eye-opening racist event, yes––an intensification; but I did already know racism was prevalent in my city.

But this? 
No. 
Even though before the presidential election we made references to a coming Civil War, in truth, no, I  did not foresee being under attack by my own government, with federal troops wreaking havoc, sowing fear and economic disaster. 

I imagine my workplace will muddle through, pleasegod, though sales are way, way down,
 but we give the profits (slim but not nothing) to the church groups that then distribute them as rent and food helped to individuals – – I doubt we’ll have any of that…

So, please feel free to send me videos of funny animals! 
I do appreciate ❤️your thoughtfulness and friendship!!! 

___________________
 

 Above: Sunrise God's eyes on the fence by work

V.
Amid all that, I also got a most welcome message from the Universe:

Keep doing what you're doing.

I think I've said (many times?), I wrestle with the pull to DO MORE, Be Bigger, More Important.

While there is, of course, genuine Big, Important Work to be done, 
for me that pull is a pull toward ego satisfaction--
a magnet to draw attention and praise to myself (the force that seems to be Trump's whole raison d'etre).
It feels icky, and I just don't believe it's my real calling.

In recent years, I've felt that I'm in the right place, under the radar, working at my crummy job I love. 
But sometimes I can feel a stab of envy of my age-and-class cohort's worldly standing. 
It can be galling. 

And the envy comes with a message: 
You are doing it wrong

(Possibly you have gotten this message yourself?)

To keep it short---about 20 years ago, a man did me a small kindness. It was a tiny thing, but he did it with such an open heart, so unthinkingly, with such grace, I was stunned, even in the moment, and I never forgot it. 
It has remained near the top of my 'Humanity Is Not All Bad' list.

I see I'm trying to avoid saying what he did, 
but I'll just say it:
At a fundraising dinner, I'd been working the door, and when I was done, the buffet was almost empty.

My pal introduced to to this man, who had a skewer of chicken satay on his plate, and I said, 
 "Oh you should give me your chicken". 

And he did. 
He just handed it over as if it were the most natural thing in the world.

I don't know how to convey how weird that was. 
Usually a person would make a little joke or something, but his response was so entirely without ego, it made me realize that I never experience that, much less DO it myself.

I've never been face to face with him again--until yesterday. 
I saw him in the pews at the faith service. 
He's recognizable because he looks like a Charlie Brown character, grown up, in a bow tie.

Afterward I looked for him at the coffee-and-scones gathering, but I didn't see him. Resigned that he must have left, I was getting ready to leave myself, standing by the exit, when he came walking toward me.

I had stuffed a few God's eyes in my bag as I was leaving the house that morning, thinking I would give them away if I saw anyone I knew. (I did, too.)

So I got them out and went up to this man in great joy, reminded him of his kindness in giving me his chicken skewer (knowing it was so fleeting he wouldn't remember it or me, and indeed he didn't, though he was very sweet), and asked him if he'd like one.

"It's also on a stick!" I said.

He was so unguarded, just like I remembered. He said he was sure I'd thanked him sufficiently at the time, and he chose one of the sunrise eyes---which I've been making because a friend asked for one in hopeful sun colors.
And he gave me a hug.

And so, twenty years later, at the right time and place, I got to give thanks for a gift--and received another--a counter-message to Envy:

Keep doing what you are doing. The threads will come together.

Thursday, January 22, 2026

bad things, stop/ Lake St. Photos/ Lady Whistledown Regrets

I. bad things—stop

How you know things are different now:
You ask a Minnesotan how they are, 
and they don't say, "Fine".

Now, they, and I, say things like, 
"Well . . . ".

 A famously touchy customer at the thrift store where I work, snapped at me, "How do you think I am?"

"Probably like the rest of us," I said, and she apologized.

All my Hispanic and African coworkers are US citizens, some born here to immigrant parents. But ICE is picking up anyone.

A favorite coworker grew up in Mexico. She is always teaching me bits of Spanish (which I barely retain). 

At work, I myself often used to say I was "super great!"


"How you you say 'super great'?" I'd asked her.
Super bien!"
That I remember.

 Yesterday I asked how her family is. She grimaced.
"I want this to stop."

"How do you say 'stop' in Spanish?"

"Parar", she said.

Another coworker added, "cosas malas parar".
bad things stop

_______________ 

II. Some photos from East Lake Street
 

East Lake has long been home to immigrant communities--Scandinavian, one hundred-plus years ago.
 Five blocks down the street from the thrift store, Ingebretsen's Nordic Marketplace remains. Mr Ingebretsen from Norway established it in 1921. (It does lots of its business online--which is how it survived Covid.)
[Their history: ingebretsens.com/our-anniversary]

In recent years, Hispanic and Somali small businesses line the street. They took a big hit during the George Floyd uprisings--literally. Windows broken (as were the thrift store's), fires, loss of business. And Covid, of course.
Lake Street had only recently started to feel really vital again--new murals, lots of little shops and restaurants--food trucks. Real 'mom-and-pop' establishments.

ICE has seized customers and workers with no concern for their legal status) in the past months. 
Many shops are closed and dark, . . . for now. 



The sign's circle-dotted i's ^ make my heart clench. 
They are like a girl would write in her diary.
___________

BELOW: Signs posted all around Midtown Global Market for the statewide ICE Out for Good strike tomorrow, Friday, Jan. 23:
No Work, No School, No Shopping.
A rally downtown is planned, but temps will be well below zero F (–18ºC).
Amazingly, even the thrift store is closing. They rarely take a stand. As much as anything, I expect they figure it's pointless to stay open.

Besides being an act of solidarity for us on the ground floor...

 "Organizers hope that 'the CEOs of all these corporations that are based in Minnesota take notice'. 
Large US corporations headquartered in Minnesota
include Target, Best Buy, United Healthcare and General Mills". 
--"Economic blackout day planned in Minnesota to protest ICE surge", The Guardian, 1/20/2026, 
theguardian.com/us-news/2026/jan/20/ice-immigrarion-minnesota-economic-protest

__________
BELOW:   The white star on blue is the Somali flag.
A little square on the "WE ARE FAMILY" poster reads:

LOVE 
HOPE
R I S E


I can't find anything about the origin of the ^ FAMILY poster, but it showed up after ICE agent Jonathan Ross shot Renee Good through her car window.
 The butterfly pattern looks to me like glass cracked by a bullet.

I'm put in mind of this because of the crazed hole in our store window. From a gunshot in the night--drug dealers, most likely. Accidental it seems--someone doing street business told a coworker they had nothing against us, and I believe that. They shop at the store!

It's been there a couple years. 
From outside the store at Christmastime:
 Poinsettias frame the bullet hole 

III. Lady Whistledown Regrets


A friend sent me this--their neighbor was going to have a party for the opening of season 4 of Bridgerton, but cancelled because of ICE.
The neighbor sent out this notice:

Lady Whistledown
SOCIETY PAPERS 


Dearest Gentle Reader,

It is with a decidedly heavy quill that this author must share news most unwelcome.

Circumstances beyond the control of even the most carefully governed household have arisen. A foreign invasion upon the kingdom—unexpected and deeply unsettling—has rendered the realm quite unjolly indeed, casting to the wind some who are most dear to us and dampening spirits that ought instead to be lifted in good company.

In light of this disruption, the forthcoming Bridgerton viewing party must be postponed.

Society may rest assured this delay is not born of indifference, but of care. Merriment, after all, is best enjoyed when all may attend freely, safely, and with hearts inclined toward joy rather than worry.

Fear not, dear reader. The candles shall be relit, the cushions fluffed, and the tiaras returned to their rightful place in due course. When the kingdom is once again settled—and when all who matter most can gather beneath one roof—this author fully expects our revels to resume with even greater enthusiasm.

Until that happier moment arrives, take care of one another, keep those you cherish close, and remember: the season is merely paused, not concluded.

Yours sincerely,
Lady Whistledown 🪶
_________________________
I understand this person is too distressed to hold a party, and I sympathize. 
 I don’t agree that merriment is best enjoyed in safety though – – we need joy in these conditions. 
But I 100% understand if a person isn’t up for it! Often I’m not either.
________

Okay, Precious Spirits--I'm off to work. Will try to take more photos. I would do a Photo Walk, but it's so damn cold!
You take good care of yourselves and one another!

Wednesday, January 21, 2026

Sun Rise

I've been making Sunrises since a friend in another state asked for a sunny God's eye, for hope. (Did I already say? Besides everything else, one of her former students had been killed in December's mass shooting at Brown U.)
I'm sending her this one.

I don't usually add tassels. 
At first because I didn't want to spend the time, since I was making so many for the first fence installation.
Do you like them?

I've been wondering about weaving yarn into the fence where I hang the eyes--the side facing the busy street...
A local yarn-bomb artist, HOTTEA (www.instagram.com/hotxtea), has woven in his signature font in bright yellow-green yarn on the chain link fence of a major intersection:
RENEE NICOLE GOOD. 

I was thinking of weaving in yarn,
 God Is Watching
The phrase is both a comfort and a threat, depending on what you're doing...
It also fits the neighborhood:
many (most?) people under direct threat are Catholic & Muslim (same God).

And it goes along with the vibe of people saying to ICE agents things like, 
"See you at Nuremberg". 
(Such good timing that that movie about Göring on trial recently came about.)
____________

My neighborhood association held an open meeting this past weekend for neighbors to coordinate action plans and other responses to ICE. 
I went to Needlework instead, but I was happy to get their resource list on email today. 

I want to make a new sign to join street corner demonstrations in my neighborhood. 
Since Trump's inauguration last year, people have been signing on different busy corners during rush hour. Now another site has been added--a pedestrian bridge over the highway.

"God" would not fit as well in this mostly Anglo white, middle-class neighborhood.
Maybe Karma Bites Back.

Or, less threatening, because karma is everything, not just the unloving acts.
Karma Doesn't Miss.

KARMA .   
…WAIT FOR IT.
Or something. Short is best.
I will ponder...
(Ideas welcome.)
__________
I mentioned the busy street by the store. 
It's not so busy now--many immigrant-run store fronts are dark as either workers or customers are at risk, and stay home.

The thrift store's business is down 50%.
Not good. 
(ICE has not descended on us ...yet.)
How is this going to play out if they stay very long???

It's been extremely cold here lately--well below freezing. When it warms up to above 32ºF, I will go make God's eyes at the Whipple Federal Building. 
There is an ongoing protest there. 

People warn you to come prepared with mask, goggles, and a plan in case you're arrested. ICE isn't supposed to use tear gas and pepper spray anymore, but who believes they won't?

My friend KG said she'd like to go with me--she could bring camping chairs! 
I'll have to check if that's legal--I never see people sitting. Is it obstruction of the sidewalk or something? 

So, just brief this morning...
Off to work now.

Keep your hearts up, wherever you are!

PS. Update 
At the bus stop, on my way to work  

Tuesday, January 20, 2026

History on the Hoof: "Suspended in Confusion"


Another of the Minnesota resistance badges by Bryan Hansel, a photographer in Grand Marais. 
This is a favorite: SUSPENDED IN CONFUSION

It fits my mood.

"You should be writing a literary Diary of an Occupation," I say to myself. "You should be coordinating with creatives who are plugged into the action".

Ha, as if I had this poetic clarity, floating above it all.
As I've said before, this is the opposite of a Hollywood movie where the camera is always placed and the actors positioned and the action choreograpahed so you, the observer, know who's who and What Is Happening.

This is not that!
This is history on the hoof.
I am collecting bits and pieces for later reflection.

Anyway, that voice--"you should be more important" is temptation talking.
Hold steady.
Trust Penny Cooper. [Penny Cooper is the lead Girlette. She is eight-and-a-half years old.]

Penny Cooper says, 

"Don't bother throwing rocks at those boys. 
Sneak in and rescue the frog."
__________________________

Oh! I think she's thinking along the same lines as Isaiah Blackwell, the Black man who stepped in an ushered the cornered white supremacist Jack Lang away from an angry mob.

(The water might look harmless if you don't live here. 
But in these temps, flesh will freeze in minutes.
Remember that scene in A Christmas Story when the little boy licks a frozen pole, and his wet tongue freezes to the pole?)

Let us not underestimate our own ability to descend into barbarity.
I can imagine that if I were in that mob, I'd have wanted to rip Jack Lang apart. 

I am old enough that I don't think I would, 
but
 sometimes I avoid crowds just because of that:
I DO NOT ever want to do such a thing, to become just like him and his ilk at the US Capitol on January 6. 

Blackwell told the Minnesota Star Tribune that he stepped in because
 “I’m a man, and I believe all humans should be treated the same. It doesn’t matter.... I took my voice, and I told them, ‘Don’t touch him. Let him go.’ I made a space so he could get out of there.”

Blackwell said he came to City Hall at that time because,

 “God, my Father, told me to stop by. I just had to stop by.”
---Via msn.com/en-us/news/us/man-reveals-why-he-rescued-right-wing-influencer-jake-lang-from-crowd-outside-minneapolis-city-hall/ar-AA1UxkQm

God invented irony.

                            Also God:

                     
While I’m loving all our creative responses, I see our wolf in the shadows too. And I’m so interested in how God shows up in these things—on all sides…
 _______________

Meanwhile, ICE is literally falling down on ice.
You've maybe seen the18-second video:
youtube.com/watch?v=eiThiPGTbOk

Marz says they need to go to their room and think about their lives.

______________

Anyway... 
Literary? As if writing were a sausage factory? 
That's an approach suitable to AI.

The Action?
This is looking at life as if it were a Hollywood movie, where the important parts are stuff blowing up. 

If you consider, as I do, that the 'important stuff' is what is happening in our own hearts and minds, and the social connections grow organically out of that, it's a different movie.* 
A very slow movie, mostly. 

Though not always.
My favorite thing--and our strongest bet---is creativity, and sometimes it's noisy and visible and not slow at all.

To meet ICE with the same mentality they have is simply to amplify it. Gotta THINK DIFFERENT.

I love this video showing that, from a woman in Portland, OR:
 "Minnesotans show us what American Resistance looks like."
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eD4WMIBGc4g&t=118s


She says it's "Effective acts of nonviolence resistance that you might not be hearing. Nonviolent direct action is not peaceful... 
Effective nonviolence must be highly disruptive."

[Effective politically, I think she means. 
Though creativity is also by its nature somewhat disruptive---from Latin disruptus,  "break apart, split, shatter, break to pieces," 
This ^ describes a seed emerging from the ground--do emergent thoughts look like this too? 
Maybe more like lightning storms?]

BELOW: Hippocampus neuron, from Scientific American:
"All the external world coming into our brain has to be filtered through that system,"
scientificamerican.com/article/how-your-brain-detects-patterns-without-conscious-thought

_______________________ 

In the video about resistance above, the brass band musician says Audre Lorde said to make revolution irresistible. 
She did say that, but she was quoting Toni Cade Bambara.

TCB said various forms of it. Here, 
"The job of the writer is to make revolution irresistible." 

Kennedy Prints, by Amos Paul Kennedy, , Jr.
From Library of Congress: www.loc.gov/item/2023634995

These writers, below, all gone now, were well known (in my circles) when I was young. I don't know if they still are, but I loved hearing Lorde quoted, so maybe... in some circles.
_________________________

*Who said that a movie about writing poetry would show someone lying on a couch for hours?

Here! Polish poet Wislawa Szymborska––from her Nobel lecture, no less:
"It's not accidental that film biographies of great scientists and artists are produced in droves.
... Of course [they are] all quite naive and [don't] explain the strange mental state popularly known as inspiration, but at least there's something to look at and listen to.

"But poets are the worst. 
Their work is hopelessly unphotogenic.

"Someone sits at a table or lies on a sofa while staring motionless at a wall or ceiling. Once in a while this person writes down seven lines only to cross out one of them fifteen minutes later, and then another hour passes, during which nothing happens ...

"Who could stand to watch this kind of thing?"
 

Ha. And who could stand to live it? 

Small Boy Frozen in ICE / "This object took three billion years to emerge."


ABOVE: Objects gathered in the exhibition "Szymborska's Drawer",
via culture.pl/pl/superartykul/szymborska-gdyby-rzeczy-mowily


. . . To me, the small boy in the poem below is trapped in ICE...

"A Film from the Sixties"
--by 
WisÅ‚awa Szymborska 
Trans. Stanisław Barańczak and Clare Cavanagh


This adult male. This person on earth.
Ten billion nerve cells. Ten pints of blood
pumped by ten ounces of heart.
This object took three billion years to emerge.

He first took the shape of a small boy.
The boy would lean his head on his aunt’s knees.
Where is that boy. Where are those knees.
The little boy got big. Those were the days.

These mirrors are cruel and smooth as asphalt.
Yesterday he ran over a cat. Yes, not a bad idea.
The cat was saved from this age’s hell.

A girl in a car checked him out.
No, her knees weren’t what he’s looking for.
Anyway he just wants to lie in the sand and breathe.

He has nothing in common with the world.
He feels like a handle broken off a jug,
but the jug doesn’t know it’s broken and keeps going to the well.

It’s amazing. Someone’s still willing to work.
The house gets built. The doorknob has been carved.
The tree is grafted. The circus will go on.
The whole won’t go to pieces, although it’s made of them.
Thick and heavy as glue sunt lacrimae rerum.

But all that’s only background, incidental.
Within him, there’s awful darkness, in the darkness a small boy.

God of humor, do something about him, okay?
God of humor, do something about him today.


-- WisÅ‚awa Szymborska (1923 - 2012),
 
Polish woman, winner of the 1996 Nobel Prize in Literature

   
WisÅ‚awa Szymborskaw with mask, photo by Adam Golec 

Monday, January 19, 2026

Eyes on the Prize (Hold on!)

1. Below: God's eyes, made by bink yesterday 
at the 1st Crafting in Icey Times. Watching! 

The two eyes are not attached, and I don't think she made them as a pair---I saw that they went together when they were in the jumble of twenty eyes I'm taking to hang on the fence today.
Twenty, yay!

Oh--wait--maybe I'm not taking them in just today.
I just checked the weather. 
Wind chill "feels like" temp is –28ºF / –33ºC
I will rearrange my work schedule for the week, because that's awful--even dangerous--weather to stand at bus stops. I have to transfer buses too, and connection times aren't reliable, especially in bad weather.

2. This Friday, Jan. 23 is a Day of Truth & Freedom
for an economic blackout (no work, no shopping) in Minnesota, 
and a march downtown Minneapolis at 2 PM, so I'll be taking that day off too.

ABOVE: Methodist minister JaNaé Bates Imari led the conference calling for the Day of Truth & Freedom. She said...
"I believe that this is going to rock this state in the most beautiful and glorious of ways. 
It is going to open our eyes to what is possible. 

For too long we have been told nothing is possible, bow down, obey and do whatever it is that somebody at the top says to do. 
But we know that that is a lie from the pit of hell."

--CBS report: cbsnews.com/minnesota/news/minnesota-day-of-truth-and-freedom-economic-blackout-ice-operation-metro-surge
This is such a perfect action for the week of Martin Luther King Day.
Nonviolent tactics take coordination.

"
Only chain that a man can stand
Is that chain of hand on hand.
Keep your eyes on the prize.
Hold on! Hold on!"

Lotta people sing this folk song, "Eyes on the Prize". 
From childhood, I know it from Pete Seeger.

Here, a cover from PBS doc American Experience: Soundtrack for a Revolution.  
Doesn't look like that's streaming on PBS right now, but you can watch it on Vimeo, here: vimeo.com/87053287

Joss Stone (from above Soundtrack):

_________________________

3. Three people came to the first Crafting in Icey Times at my place, and with me, the four of us pretty well filled my living room. 
Crafting takes space...
 

I can rearrange the room to open up more space. Get a couple little TV trays or side-tables too, for people to set their tea and crafting stuff on.
Still, a dozen people squeeze into a smaller room at the library Needlework group. A bit tight, but that encourages chat.

So nice. Inviting people over was just the right thing. 
Being with people in tense times helps raise energy, opens airways to breathe, and reminds me that I am (we are) not alone.
(I'd often prefer to have people over than go out myself, too.)
_____________

4.
 If you're looking to help or need help:
 
Minneapolis Mutual Aid Link Tree rounds up live links to donate to or volunteer at Organizations on the Front Lines, Food and Rent Relief, School and Church Aid groups, Go Fund Me's, et cetera.
https://linktr.ee/mplsmutualaid

______________

Let's pick ourselves up and wade in the water!

Minneapolis Mutual Aid: link tree

Want to help or need help in these ICEy times? 

Look here:

https://linktr.ee/mplsmutualaid
 Minneapolis Mutual Aid Link Tree


 Mpls Mutual Aid link tree live links to Organizations on the Front Lines, Food and Rent Relief, School and Church Aid groups, et cetera.
You can donate, or get directly involved.

Sunday, January 18, 2026

Showing Up in Bodies (unarmed & disarming)

1. I decided to hold a weekly Open House for Crafting in Icey Times 

EVERY Sunday at my apt, from noon--2 pm, starting today.
If you're in town, come on by!
(Help with my God's eyes, or do your own crafty thing.)

I'm doing this "for the duration".
When "this" situation ends (it will, it will), I might move it to every-other Sunday, but for now, I'm committing to being here every week.
(I am anyway, mostly.)

I invited my Needlework group and some friends,
I don't know if I know enough people, honestly, outside of my workplace, which is not a Craftivism crowd.
Maybe it will grow slowly... Or, who knows?
In any case, it's win/win because I want to keep that time open for me to make God's eyes.

AND inviting people over makes me stay a little tidier.
Here's my stash tied up, as of yesterday. 
It looks ample, but it's dwindling, so I'm putting out the call to knitters to send me their leftover yarn.

2. I wanted to say, I regret that I'd described the  young woman (maybe 20?) I gave my hat to at the bus stop, underdressed in near-zero weather, as a "dumb ass".

She was like a tattered sparrow, scattered in body and soul. 

I was experiencing this icky phenomenon--do you know?--that sometimes I (we) can feel angry at someone for being vulnerable--a displaced anger, for sure.

 They are like carriers of pain we do not want to see.
I did NOT blame her, but I did want to shake her and tell her to get it together and stand up for herself! 
Which I know would make no difference.

But I did stay kind in my actions toward her in the moment.
When she told me she wanted to die, but that God wouldn't let her, I replied,
"Maybe God wants you here. You have some good work to do here."

Anyway, I gave her a warm hat... and a warm tamale too--
I'd just bought a couple from the steamtable at the Mexican grocery store by the bus stop.

(You have to ring the doorbell to be let in, now, and the store which usually has long check-out line was almost empty.)

I think the anger is also at how powerless I am in the face of such enormous need. And knowing how little any help I offer will actually be of help. 
Still, kindness is not nothing.

It's a hard thing. 
I keep coming back to HOLD THE FAITH. I was reminded of my friend Em who spent ten years on heroin, and was probably much like this girl. 
Some people make it.
And even if they don't, any little kindness along the way matters.
________________
 
3. You know how the people trying to defend 
the Venezuelan guy who got shot in the leg had hit ICE 
with a broom and a snow shovel?

I'd thought that was secretly hilarious, it's so Minnesotan––(it is snowing again as I write this.)---but it turns out it's not so secret...

Someone made up these patches, below
NORTHERN LEFSE & LUTEFISK INFANTRY.
 
[You know? Lutefisk is Scandinavian dried cod rehydrated in lye,---you love it or you hate it (I've never had it), and Lefse are Norwegian potato crepes/tortillas]

They are armed with the same 'weapons' (not that you couldn't inflict serious damage with a metal shovel! especially if the other guy was not covered in military armor).

(bink sent them ^ --no attribution--Lmk if you know. I assume AI-assisted? )
 
4. I was greatly heartened to read this article a friend sent me about how effective ICE Watch here is deescalating violence!
"The vast majority of men are only willing to engage in public violence if they feel like the people around them will approve of — and reward them for — that violence."

--"I’m a Minneapolis sociologist who studies violence. Here’s how ICE observers are helping." Nicole Bedera, MS Nowwww.ms.now/opinion/minneapolis-ice-watch-protesters-violence-research 


ICE Watch is regular folks keeping watch (on major street corners, or driving around in their cars, etc.) and alerting others on Signal and/or --I love this--by the simple act of BLOWING their bright orange WHISTLES. 
It works! I've even responded! 

This  de-escalates violence, this sociologist reports, because public disapproval punctures the Group Pride that ICE promises men.

___________

We're seeing this group response work---you saw this video?
When a woman near the Somali mall here calmly (so calmly!) keeps repeating that she doesn't have to show her ID to these ICE agents "in my home"--she is legally correct, of course---she is attended by people honking car horns and people on foot blowing whistles.
And the ICE guys just... drift away.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z2WKlRDZRWE

It makes me sad that there are so many disaffected men at loose ends--they need to bond and do men things---and that used to be... what? 

I don't know, what?
Like all the Human Monkeys... doing stuff IN PERSON. 
Showing up in bodies.

Even goofy things like marching in feathered hats in Knights of Columbus, or riding in mini-cars wearing fezzes, like the Shriners.

Vacuums of meaning & action make all of us of all genders susceptible to Group Think and being manipulated by people who harvest our healthy needs for bonding for their own unhealthy ends.
And we're seeing that.

Obviously men don't like this either!
You know Man Carrying Thing
This is his "probably how ICE hires people" 42-second vid from yesterday (Sat Jan 17) 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4FZzzmy51aQ

And there's Vincent Green-Hite, Political Crochet Activist, who crochets outside the ICE facility in Portland OR
 https://www.instagram.com/knot.bad 

I'd make God's eyes at the Whipple Federal Building here, if it ever warms up enough to take off my mittens!

And many, many other men, of course--I see some standing on street corners with their orange whistles.
__________________

And now, I must clean my apartment. It's cold and snowing--I wonder if anyone will come.

If not, I will try out this podcast a friend recommended just yesterday:
Nonviolent Jesus
beatitudescenter.org/the-nonviolent-jesus-podcast
 
 
“Blessed are the Peacemakers”

I also want to read Pope Leo's New Year address:
Towards an “unarmed and disarming” peace

Read:
vatican.va/content/leo-xiv/en/messages/peace/documents/20251208-messaggio-pace.html
 

Nonviolence--being unarmed AND disarming--is quite the art, eh? 
It's far more than obvious things like not hitting people with snow shovels (even if they deserve it), much less not shooting them in the face. 
It's not calling people as 'dumb-asses' or 'Nazi scum'. 
(Even if they are acting like it.)