Longtime
bloggers sometimes disappear without a trace, their blogs left hanging
in the air like a torn spiderweb. Where did their creators go?
I am grateful that Pat, the blogger of Weaver of Grass, has written a farewell post, "Final".
Pat
has been living with end-of-life care for cancer, and now as her
"faculties begin to fail", she is bowing out with an exhortation to "be
of good cheer" to readers in her position healthwise, and a thank you, and good-bye.
Graceful and gracious, as ever.
As of this morning, 130 people have left comments on Pat's post, most
saying thank-you, that she has been and remains an
inspiration. Several people said they'd never commented before. I
thought it was nice they came out to say good-bye. (I'd only found
Weaver in the past year and had only commented a couple times myself.)
Pat has the strengths of her generation, like my Auntie Vi, that I'd just written about.
"Look for the silver lining; don't grumble;
always find something interesting, even if you are housebound". She
didn't tolerate unkindness towards others but was patient with inane
opinions.
She wrote about the view from her window--her garden,
dogs and their walkers--her enjoyment of a "two-finger Kit Kat", and as
she writes in her final post, she "often got ideas for a post from reading my daily paper".
This reminds me of advice I got when I started my first blog in 2003, inspired by a pal, Tim, of the long-gone Primate Brow Flash.
Tim said, "If you can't think of something to write, write about something in the New York Times."
Marz showed some of this grace yesterday, in response to the news:
She looked up from the Internet last night and told me someone had shot at Trump.
I admit my first thought was regret that they'd missed, but her reaction humbled and recalled me.
"I don't want us to live like this," Marz said. "I want to be part of the calm in the craziness."
Part of the calm in the craziness.
Yes.
I am of the generation who grew up during the Vietnam War and Watergate and Civil Rights, spurred to cultivate the strengths of questioning authority, experimentation, righteous outrage, and rebellion.
Yay, us!
Let us rage on!
As I age, I also want to fold in some qualities that I had disdained in the older generation when I was young.
What I condemned as passivity may be grace under fire; what I'd considered repression, wisdom in choosing your words and thoughtfulness toward others...
Learning goes both ways.
Auntie Vi could, in fact, be a little too passive for me--and, maybe for her too.
At the age of 92, for the first time in her life she made a public political statement. She asked me to order a "March for Our Lives" shirt for her (after the Stoneman Douglas High School shooting).
On the day when students across the United States demonstrated for gun control, she wore the shirt around her village center--at the coffee shop, in the library, stopping in all the places where everyone knew her.
"I had to say something for the kids."
Outrage, expressed with care.
Calm in the craziness.
Thank you, that generation.
Yes, I had exactly the same instant regret....and then shame at even in my own mind being a person who would think such a thing. Still so much learning to do!
ReplyDeleteCeci
Well, but I think it's natural of us to want the problem GONE, don't you? Just not THAT way.
DeleteBut if aliens were to descend and take him away? Bring it on!
Aliens have been idsappoining over the years.
Deletececi
Right? And where are our flying cars?!
DeleteWeaver of Grass has been on blog for longer than I can remember way back in the day when I had my first blog, then My second, then third and now...Weaver has always been there. There have been four of my favorite , bonded, relationships in blogworld go to the great up yonder- none of them said goodbye.
ReplyDeleteAll of them the sweetest, smartest most lovely - hurts the heart, doesn't it. We do not expect that...
As the thing with the Orange guy, I thought it was a stunt. There was not enough injury to the "target" and he did stand up for an excellent photo op. I dunno I smell fish...
Also we have the girlettes to save us from too much crotchety seriousness. And Marz to lead us into calmer waters.
I didn't know you had earlier blogs, Linda Sue. Are they still available to look at? I deleted my first one ("flightless parrots", 2003–2005)--now I link noodletoon to my old blog (l'astronave) so it's not really gone...
DeleteI am grateful Weaver said good-bye---it's hard when people just vamoose into thin air.
I am trying to ignore the whole orange thing and make toys and prints... CHRISTMAS GLITTER IS THE WAY FORWARD, I say!
3 COMMENTS, cut-and-pasted here from my old blog l'astronave, where I double-posted this:
ReplyDelete1. Tororo July 14, 2024 at 12:32 PM
I applause to what Marz and you are saying. Let's express outrage (as, anyway, it's not a good thing to brush outrage under a rug) yet with care.
Fresca: Hello, Tororo! So nice to see you.
Yes, that’s it—there’s an art to the Care and Handling of Outrage.
Reply
2. gz July 14, 2024 at 1:26 PM
Thank you Auntie Vi. You and Marz too.
Listening to the radio news report, I heard the sound of the crowd afterwards...chilling.
Listen to 1930s rally recordings..you can guess the ones I mean. Far too similar....
Reply
FrescaJuly 14, 2024 at 1:34 PM That is chilling, GZ. I have avoided the news because I don't want the direct blows to the emotions. I hear about it from friends and bloggers, which softens the blows a little.
3. AnonymousJuly 14, 2024 at 2:03 PM
Lovely and thoughtful. I will miss Pats measured voice as well. I initially had the same thought as you when I heard the news, Marz is spot on and wise.
Xoxo Barbara
Fresca: Thanks for saying, Barbara--it's really a tribute to Pat that at 90 (91?) dozens and dozens of people pay tribute to her. Says a lot about the power of blogging too, even in this era when more people are on the zippier social media sites.
Heh, I figured I was also not alone in my first response to the news that Trump was not harmed...