Thursday, December 21, 2023

Hello, I must be going.

UPDATE, 1/24: I am now blogging at Noodletoon:
https://noodletoon.blogspot.com.
____________________

Did  you see that my state, Minnesota, has adopted the blandest whitewash redesign of our old, racist state flag?
It's like the winner in the Race for Inoffensive.


Kinda puts me in mind of... IKEA?

Lt Gov Peggy Flanagan, a Native activist, said,

"Dare I say anything that isn't a Native person being forced off their land is a flag upgrade?!"
How's that for faint praise? "It's better than genocide!"

Yay, us.
_____________

Friday, December 15, 2023

Post #268: Welcome

 . . . One more post than last year!

_____________

#2024Goals

Reading Wil Wheaton's memoir last night, I felt my loss of contact with creative thinkers and makers, seekers and healers over the years--partly the normal loss of friends through time; partly because of working a job where a lot of people all around me are undernourished in every way; partly fallout from the isolation of Covid and the stress of social turmoil.

Also, honestly, partly me being cantankerous and complacent--sometimes for reasonable reasons, perhaps, but, eventually, aren't they self-defeating ones?
I think I should take that in hand--not to force myself to be gregarious, ohgodno, but to reach out a little more to people, even, eek, to ask for help.

I not just only "should" do this, I admit I want to. My “reasonable” reasons not to include a heightened irritation with people arising from a kind of social PTSD, like many of us developed in Trumptimes and Life in the Time of Covid. Plus, for those of us up and down Lake St. in Minneapolis, there's a special flavored PTSD from having witnessed (second-hand, but on streets we walk on) state-sanctioned murder in broad daylight, and the explosions of people's anger and frustration afterward, met—not by the powers-that-be with empathy and attempts at reconciliation—but with more state-sanctioned strong-arming.

I remember the day conveys of armed US troops in camouflage rolled past me as I walked home from work--I stopped at the little garage-gym I was going to at the time and wept with the owner.
The next day, Asst Man said, "How do I explain to my kids why there are soldiers with machine guns on the corner?"
At work, I was on my knees cleaning up shards of windows smashed by legitimately angry and frustrated (and sometimes just opportunistic) people.

So, maybe I want to try again to get some help/ to talk about all that with someone who understands the complexities? 

Which, I am remembering, is what blog friend Darwi who lived as a teenage girl through the BOSNIAN WAR urged me to do…

I know there’s plenty better than that clueless therapist I saw once last year. Someone who doesn't gaslight me, brushing off my feelings and thoughts as "overthinking" or telling me that “everyone is doing their best".

No wonder I don't want to socialize when these are literally some of the responses I get from people.

My dear coworkers mostly operate in survival mode--a
grin-and-bear-it which can even be jolly and wise, in its way, but not what I'd call... healing? expansive?

This is a TINY door (2 inches high) in the outside wall of Dreamhaven bookstore. An invitation...
Welcome. Well come.

Thursday, December 14, 2023

laughter and tenderness

I had a fun day out, though it started with the nursing-home staff informing us that bink's mom has Covid after we'd walked into her room. She seemed well--up and alert. There was a notice posted on her door, but it was one of a couple pale Xeroxes crowded with print--I hadn't even registered it.

We were wearing masks, at least, and I expect/hope the exposure is nothing to worry about. An aide said we could stay and visit if we put on PPE, but we'd had time to say hi and to give her the little Xmas tree, and that was good enough. She clearly had no idea who I was--no flicker of recognition when I introduced myself, which wasn't surprising. She did light up when bink introduced herself though––"I'm your daughter...". (It can be good to remind people with dementia of who you are. Quizzing them, "Do you know who I am?"  may set them up for feeling they've failed.)

Then bink drove me to the grocery store, and I stocked up on everything to make holiday food. So nice to get a ride for heavy and bulky things like that!
The cashier was wearing a headband that dangled a piece of plastic mistletoe in front of her eyes, like those deep sea fishes dangle lanterns off their foreheads...

In the afternoon, I took the bus to the sci-fi bookstore Dreamhaven, where  a bumper sticker at their till made me laugh out loud:
STAR TREK: Woke Since 1966.
They weren't selling them--the owner had gotten it at a con--or I'd have bought one for my bike.


I bought the new Murderbot, another book as a gift, and Wil Wheaton's 2022 memoir Still Just a Geek [see, Wheaton's books website], an update-by-annotation of his 2004 Just a Geek.
I'd been one of "dozens of people" who'd read the original, by Wheaton's comical count and had "seemed to like it".

I'd never gotten into Star Trek: The Next Generation though, so I didn't know Wheaton's character, Wesley Crusher, well enough to have an opinion about him, much less to virulently hate him as many people did. Wheaton has written about how horrible it was for his character to receive so much hate and mockery. So I'd been moved recently to see Wesley appear briefly in the second season of ST: Picard (the season I loved best) in a cool and heroic, kind and wonderfully geeky way.
Yay, Wil, for bringing it home!

I've always admired how Wheaton has long chosen to be incredibly public, vulnerable, honest, and sincere on his blog, Wil Wheaton dot net--talking about his struggles with his "brain goblins
" (mental health), his survival of abuse and "emotional smog" from his parents, the doubt and near-despair after leaving TNG, and also, all along, boldly sharing his joys and bravery and gratitude and love. What a geek!

Also, he loves me. He said so in this speech!
"Are there any librarians here today? How about booksellers? I love you."
Revisiting his memoir after almost twenty years, Wheaton said, was "uncomfortable, embarrassing, awkward, but ultimately healing and surprisingly cathartic", which I think is true of a lot of the personal writing he has shared online for years. Of updating it, he said:
“Many times during the process, I wanted to quit. I kept coming across material that was embarrassing, poorly-written, immature, and worst of all, privileged and myopic.

. . . I physically recoiled from my own book. Those moments [of] privilege and [the] ignorance that fueled them filled me with shame and regret. They still do.”
I never did clean the apartment, but I'm not going to now--I'm going to read this book. Even as I'm thinking/writing lately more about Big Picture stuff on Earth, I never forget, I hope I never deny, that we each have our own tender selves to care for, and it matters that we do that. Otherwise, what's the point of being here?

So, yeah, just glancing at Wil's book was a good reminder. Everything connects, it's not always obvious how, it's not all going to resolve when you want it to (or, maybe, ever), but your life matters, you're a piece of the whole.
Keep 'er moving!

Fresh-Ginger Cake recipe

The fresh ginger makes this cake amazing. My tip: don't grate your knuckles when you're grating the ginger like I did last year...


Christmas Break


Some cheering seasonal stuff.
I rewatched "Philomena Cunk on Christmas, 2016", last night––she makes me laugh out loud.

Yesterday was my work's pot luck lunch. It was scattered and disjointed, but nice--just like us.

This morning, bink and I are taking a little Xmas tree I got at the store to her mom, who lives in a nearby nursing home. Her mom's dementia is pretty well progressed. I haven't seen her since before Covid--I wonder if she'll recognize me.

The tree is a bit squashed but we can straighten its wire branches.


After that, we're going shopping for Christmas supplies. I'm making pot roast as usual for Xmas Eve, and, this weekend, ginger cake. (Oh--I'll post that separately, as Kirsten requested.)

And then I'm taking the day to finish putting my apartment back in order--still half-pulled apart from when I moved my bookshelf a couple weeks ago. This afternoon I'll take a break and go to Dreamhaven books to treat myself to
System Collapse, the new Murderbot!

I think I'll also buy a replacement copy for the first in the series, All Systems Red, to replace the one I lent to mattdamon, who has vamoosed. I could get both books far cheaper online, but I love Dreamhaven and want to support my local sci-fi bookstore.


_________________________

The Comfort of Confirmation

Also last night, weirdly cheering/calming to me, I read most of a donated book, published this fall, 2023--it's rare to get such a new book:
  “Trauma Sponges: Dispatches from the Scarred Heart of Emergency Response,”
by Minneapolis fire captain Jeremy Norton [MPR interview].


I bike past the author' firehouse on my way to work!
In his work as fire captain, Norton tends to the same people I see at the store. For me, having someone creative, smart, angry, and in the know say, Yes, this is happening, I see it every day too, is so, so helpful, its a balm to my scarred heart.

The book is not only about this event, but Norton's unit was called to the scene of George Floyd's murder––too late.

The book centered/calmed me because the way Norton talks about what happened on 38th & Chicago is exactly how I see it too, but closer up, plus he fills in gaps in my knowledge. 
Sadly he confirms my suspicions about what's happened since to improve the city's policing:
pretty much nothing.

"Hope is not an action plan" he says. Yes! It's not!
I think I'll write him a thank-you note.


But now I need to write a shopping list.
Have a lovely day, everyone!

Wednesday, December 13, 2023

First plant the sapling


I. Like a Turner Sunset


Isn't this photo beautiful, like a Turner painting?
"The finest sky, to my mind, ever put on canvas," written of a Turner sunset at the Tate.

You can see the movement of colors––dripping, blowing, bubbling–– some emerging,
some obliterating...

 
I took the photo as I was biking down the Greenway path this spring.

It's the remains of a fire
under a highway overpass, where people living outside were cooking or keeping warm.

There can be beauty in the breakdown, as it reveals new realities.  There's for sure discomfort in it.

II. Dissonance Reduction

I finished reading Collinson's Reformation last night.
When reality doesn't match people's beliefs and expectations,
writes the author, historian Patrick Collinson,
people don't usually change their minds, they (we) change how they see the reality.

What's the name for that? It's a reaction to cognitive dissonance...

*quick google*
Oh, here--it's called dissonance reduction.
Neat! It's the name for how we seek to reduce the unpleasant feelings when belief and reality clash––naturally, but probably not logically...

Even if we change our beliefs, do we change our actions?

Most of us will choose to keep doing what we're doing––
I had a hamburger last night––and, who ordered Christmas presents from Amazon?

III. First plant the Sapling

There's a saying in the Talmud,
"If you have a sapling in your hand and they tell you 'The Messiah is coming' first plant the sapling, then go to see him."

"From this moment despair ends and tactics begin"

Above: Banksy mural at the Marble Arch, London, April 2019, in support of Extinction Rebellion actions

I was thinking about that--how we choose our old beliefs & habits over new realities-- as I hear people complain about actions by the climate crisis group Just Stop Oil (an outgrowth of Extinction Rebellion).

I haven't seen such actions here in MN (yet?), but they involve people blocking gas stations, throwing paint on famous works of art, etc.
Their idea is to draw attention through nonviolent protest to the need to take drastic & immediate action to stop environmental destruction and social breakdown.

I see and support their point; I admire their guts;
but I'm not sure the tactics of these eco-activists will be very effective, given how we practice dissonance reduction.

Still, what the hell? What have you got to lose by doing something?
At least you can say you tried.

Tuesday, December 12, 2023

Here in the future, Let’s build a yurt!

I have to go to work soon, but I want to blog briefly first. I'm aiming to blog every day for the rest of December for the silly? reason that I want my year-end count to be a bit higher than last year's--and it almost is. I feel sad when I see declining numbers of yearly posts on blog sidebars.

For my last three years, my number of posts goes:
379 [Covid/George Floyd year, 2020]
277
267
This year (2023) I've published 262 posts, so I can certainly bump it past 267!

"And, Fresca, tell us, will it be all heavy stuff you blog about?"

Maybe, kinda, sorta? But I always want to focus on What Helps, though. That's kinda cheering, isn't it?

And really--I am not resigned to an apocalypse or anything like that!
Star Trek always held (holds) that some smart science is going to rescue us from ourselves, and that is certainly not inconceivable.
As a good Trekkie, I am going to choose to hope for that!


I was just emailing a friend about how I feel like I live in different worlds in my one life.

I was comforted to read the quote,
"The future is already here. It's just not very evenly distributed"
––from William Gibson, whom the New Yorker called "the great prophet of the digital age."
(Author of Neuromancer, Gibson first used the word “cyberspace” in 1981.)

From where I stand, I could even say,
"The end [of empire] is here, it's just not evenly distributed yet."

And that's why I feel like I straddle different worlds, only a few miles apart---
from where people are living in tents to where people are living in luxury--because I literally am.
And it can make me feel a little crazy.

But really, I'm not crazy at all:
There ARE NO MAPS for this.
Of course there never are maps for the future, but in certain times you feel like you can see clearly ahead, even if that's an illusion, and other times, you're aware that every step is a step into the unknown.

Ya just gotta light out for the territory.

Mostly it helps if I focus on WHAT HELPS? here, wherever I am.
And, WHO HELPS?

Like Mr Rogers's mother said, "Look for the helpers".
Or rather, as grown ups, we should look to BE the helpers.
It helps to see others being that.

I was cheered to run into Abe at the store the other day--a young man who used to work at the store, he now works with a local Harm Reduction (HR) group.

Harm Reduction folks  are among my heroes---along with sanitation workers! Shit is happening, they acknowledge. Drugs, homelessness, mental illness, mass incarceration, climate crisis--the whole rodeo!
Let's keep it from killing us too much.
Like, Abe's group is our source for the store's free Narcan (for opioid overdoses).

[Harm Reduction Principles] "Your Life Matters"
Logo ^ from Texas HR Alliance.

I asked Abe what he's up to, and he showed me a photo of HR's project BUILDING YURTS on empty land, to shelter people who are forced to live outside this winter.

Yes, we here in the future are back to nomadic practices. They worked  for thousands of years, of course.

These yurts are heated with a barrel stove in the center.
"One of my Lefty kombucha-drinking coworkers got the barrels donated," Abe told me.

"You could make a lotta kombucha in one of those barrels," I said.
A throwaway comment, but he laughed, and that made me happy because this guy is always so sad.

He went on to say, "People are mammals--we should know how to handle ourselves out of doors." And he added, rather sweetly, to be inclusive of me I guess, "Even white people."

It was my turn to laugh.
Abe is mixed, and I think the default image of "people" in his work/world is not-white people--like on a film negative, the reverse image from the world I've always lived in, until this job.

People should know how to handle themselves out of doors. Yes.
I'd said to Em that the people on the street are getting a head jump on surviving without fossil fuels, should it come to that (say, that we run out or lose access, and can't produce the massive amounts of electricity we're used to--which is not inconceivable).

"They will all die," she said, "because they're addicts."

"Well, yeah, they're dying now," I said. "True. But people like Abe who are building yurts are getting a head start on the apocalypse."

She agreed.

But really, the cool thing about Harm Reduction practices is, if you don't need them--great! They won't hurt you.

Yurts, Not Hurt.

Meanwhile, here's a PDF: Build Your Own Yurt. Print it out, in case the power goes out.

Monday, December 11, 2023

Ringing the Changes

I'd said I'd lighten up, but there's just too much to think about at this time in history that is not light in weight or wave length. Sometimes it is terrifying, but overall it is fascinating, don't you think?
And we are inside it.
What do we see? What do we do?

I did a Christmas thing!
Abby, the puzzle volunteer, is one of those people who is always going to events around town, scouring out free or cheap ones. I've always turned down her invitations because I don't generally like entertainment for its own sake, and she generally goes to entertaining things.

I accepted one to a hand bells Christmas concert, however, because I knew nothing about hand bells (which Abby plays in her church--one of her many civic engagements). It's not entertainment, it's education!

I went with her yesterday evening, and the bell playing really was fascinating, like watching a multipart organism:
fourteen bell-ringers at their stations = ONE musical instrument.
Besides ringing the bells, the players thumped them on the table, tapped them with mallets, and set them singing round their rims like Tibetan bowls.
It was cool to see the close coordination--the whole is greater than the sum of its parts.
Also, it sounded nice.

That was an effort to lighten up for the holidays.
The concert was in a Lutheran church in a rich suburb, Edina. (My mostly-quiet neighborhood drifts that way--that suburb is just a few miles from me.)
A respite, I thought.

But before it started, the mayor of Edina gave a little speech
, meant to be inspirational?
He told us that a few weeks ago, a man with mental illness had stabbed a local man to death at a bus stop.
"We have an epidemic of untreated mental illness and lack of services," he said, "so people ride public transportation to keep off the streets, and that's how this man came to be in Edina. We need to be more empathetic and address this issue..."

Merry fucking Christmas, ya'll!


The troubles I see everyday at work make their way into wealthy, white, supposedly safe enclaves like Edina too. Of course they do.
So I was thinking about that during the concert--
How do we live in times of enormous change?

How did other people live in times of enormous change?
Or create change themselves?
I didn't set out  to read about reformers, but it only makes sense that as I read more nonfiction, I'm encountering them. They make the news.

I'm reading a fantastic book now, The Reformation, by Patrick Collinson (Modern Library, 2004). I know only the scantiest about the topic--and what I know is mostly about Henry VIII and his six wives, which is a side branch.

Oooh--look at these good Dutch covers of Hilary Mantel's Wolf Hall trilogy:


Collinson reminds me of Hilary Mantel in that, like her, he reminds us that people never know what's coming next––what now seems inevitable was in its time one of a swirl of possibilities ––
and, that the main players who created the modern world were not themselves modern people.

Theological niceties that are remote and seem ridiculous to us were as real to them as our debates about, say, Covid vaccines or the Confederate flag.

And, "It is the beginning of wisdom" he writes, "to understand that the Reformation was not, in its own eyes, a novelty."

Luther was not a Lutheran any more than Christ was a Christian. Luther amplified changes already in play, which would lead to the modern world, but he himself, says Collinson, had the mind of a late medieval Catholic.

Collinson is funny too:
"Ignatius Loyola, a soldier recovering from his wounds, was converted by reading religious books (there being nothing else to read) and this was followed by a series of intense religious experiences, out of which the Society of Jesus [the Jesuits] was born.
What if he had been killed in that battle, or had found some novels to read?" [ital. mine]
He's talking about historians in this quote below, but it's an invitation to anyone in history, which is everyone:
"It is not so easy to change the ... structures within which we historians operate, although they must not be allowed to become airtight boxes in which we cease to think."

As I fall asleep over the book, I am reminded that reformers (usually) have tremendous ENERGY.
Surely some bumbled into it sleepily though, like Ferdinand the Bull...
Examples?

Sunday, December 10, 2023

Zombie Waif Girl; & "the mere things that make us Human"

As Emmler and I left the store yesterday, one of the corner girls approached us--one of the drug-blasted girls who wander the block selling their services--you see them emerging from bushes in Slob Knob alley, getting in and out of cars, doing tricks for the price of "something for the pipe".

They buy their drugs from the nest of vipers across the street from the store. I haven't mentioned our dear neighbors for a while, but they are
still very much there--all of us together in the armpit of Lake Street.

Are they ever there. A week ago Sunday, one of them shot another dead, and there was another shooting on Monday evening across the street. [News report: "7 shootings in Minneapolis in 24 hours".]
"It happened at 5:40," a coworker told me. "
We'd just closed--Big Boss was about to unlock the door to let me out."

"Did you hear it? What did you do?" I said.

"Oh, yeah!" he said. "I just waited five minutes, and then I left."

I tell ya. There are so many shootings, we barely register them anymore. Though it must be affecting us, we at work in the center of it remain remarkably intact, or most of us do... Perhaps partly through our ability to joke with one another about it. I suppose like MASH. Also,
for anxiety, a lot (most?) of my coworkers smoke a lot of weed. Dolls and bears are my anti-anxiety meds (not that I wouldn't be with them anyway).

This girl who approached Em and me was like the others: so blasted, with opaque eyes, robotic speech, and open wounds on ashy skin, they are like zombies.
You get to recognize them, like the feral cats in the alley. Like the cats, you don't see them
for more than a season or two.

"You know that nice girl who always used to steal from us?" Manageress will say. "She got stabbed."

Mostly you don't hear what happened to them though, you just notice you haven't seen them.

Once in a while, they get clean. One will come in with clear eyes, happy to shop for furniture for their first apartment in years--a crummy thrift store couch!
"How'd you get off the street?" I asked one.
"I don't know..." she said, genuinely puzzled. "God, I guess."

Anyway, this latest waif asks for money, always saying the exact same thing to everyone. It's as if she's a programmed AI:
"There are ten of us living in a house, with a lot of kids. None of us have eaten in two weeks... I'm in middle school." [She looks like she's thirty, but who knows.]

Em, who knows the scene, looked at her.
"There's too many extenuating circumstances in that story," she said to the waif. "I'd give you some cash, but I just spent it all on thrift. There's free bread inside, and there a lot of food shelves around.
Or just go steal some shit from a grocery store.
That's what I do when I don't have food."

Lol, I remain such a middle-class white lady: I NEVER THOUGHT OF THAT, stealing food! When mattdamon ran out of food one weekend,  I scrounged up some cans and gave him $20, but it simply did not occur to me to suggest he go steal some. Not like he couldn't have thought of it himself. But somehow, I don't think he did.

(Sadly, he has since gone away and not come back. I'd lent him money another time for rent too, but I don't care one whit about that––I just wish he'd given me back the copy of Murderbot I'd altered. Also, I liked him.)


Anyway, of course it's not food the waif is after. I'd told her the store would give her free clothes too, but she's barely wearing anything warm in the cold.
She doesn't seem to register anything incoming except cash, doesn't seem to speak except for her script, and she simply wandered away without a response.

Walking down the next alley, Em and I stopped to read aloud this graffiti poem on a garage across from a non-denom church [transcript below]:


Making a Mockery out
a soulful, intact, God oriented being
for the intertaiment (a shallow, unsubstancial, and a disease
        of the mind), So as to get a praise theft––)
that is unworthy in the eyes of God, and any fair, and rational person.

Luckly, this soul is held intact, by the mere things that make us
Human (–blood, flesh, bones and eys), which are made of 100%
DNA of the most high.



P.S. The vintage wood-handled fishing net sold yesterday.

Saturday, December 9, 2023

P. S. The Color of Bears

Having said in this morning’s post that white, pastel, & caramel stuffed toy bears far outnumber brown and black toy bears, I decided to do a count of the bears in my Toys section today. I’d say this collection is average.

BEAR COUNT:

13 white, pastel, or caramel; 

4 brown or black.

(6 white, 2 black) 

___________

UPDATE: Good statisticians, of which I am not one, always factor in all possible factors (and never leap to conclusions). 

Emmler came and helped me at work this afternoon—so nice—and afterwards we went to her place so she could cut my hair. I’d showed her the bears lined up by color at work, and she’d  said, “Let’s dye the white ones!” which was also Julia-Happify’s response. 

At Em’s house I showed the bear photo to her boyfriend, and he said, “you’re a thrift store—maybe you get more white bears because people give those ones away more.”

Neat! I’d never thought of that! Lots of reasons people might give away more white bears, starting with the dirtiness factor.

I looked on Amazon, and at a quick glance I’d say pastel and honey-colored bears predominate, and the vibe I get from them is not of race but of the babyfication of nature. “It’s cute!”

Another friend raised the question of the difference between bears and dolls, which is also interesting.

Anyway, I’m excited to try dyeing them—Julia uses natural dyes like turmeric and black walnut. I used to restore stuffed thrift bears, now I will try rewilding them.

 

Above: Another Emmler look-alike. The teapot face wearing a cap lid was an Xmas present from me.

Donations: Fabric, Toys, and the Whiteness of Bears

First, an article in the Guardian with stories about funny photos of wildlife (not staged pet photos): "The wild true stories behind the 21 funniest animal photos of all time".
I like best the mice squabbling in the London underground.
_______________

I. Barkcloth.

An unusual and cool donation came in this week:
three large pieces of never-used, vintage barkcloth. Mid-century modern (MCM) design is still in, and barkcloth sells for a lot online.

As a test, I priced the smallest (3 yards) piece, below, at $32. It sold in three days.

Isn't it funny how our personal tastes change over our lifetime? 
This ferny piece is splendid! I might have bought it for myself when I was in my twenties. But these days I'm preferring the geometric patterns of old wool blankets.
I still might buy barkcloth with space-age
atomic
designs, though. These were all botanicals.


Barkcloth is a densely woven cloth with a rough texture similar to an older fabric made of the inner bark of trees, beaten into sheets.
By the late 1930's,
it was especially popular in Hawaii (taken over by the US in the 1890s),
replacing traditional Hawaiian kapa (bark cloth) made from wauke, the paper mulberry plant, in a time-consuming, labor-intensive method.
US military personnel stationed in Hawaii during World War II often sent barkcloth home. [per Handmade Jane, who has a round-up of prints].

 

BELOW From the British Museum, "A Tahitian Mourning Costume": A watercolor of the dress of the chief mourner, with striped barkcloth dress and cape, painted by Herman Diedrich Sporing, who accompanied Capt. James Cook on his first voyage to Tahiti in 1773.

II. DOLLS & Bears

This week we also got a gaylord (huge industrial box) of new toys from Costco. I was excited––new toys!––until I saw they were all RETURNS, mostly electric toys with return stickers on them saying Does Not Work.
Great. More plastic crap.

You don't know why they don't work--it could easily be the buyers didn't know how to set it up, or it could be something unfixable.
A coworker took home a set of Mario Bros. racing cars and said that they just needed batteries...

I priced all the boxed toys cheap--2, 3, 4 dollars--and wrote "As Is" on the stickers.
It should go without saying that everything in a thrift store is "as is"--and we do have a 7-day, return-for-store-credit policy. Some people are fierce about insisting on cash back, but this is the only hard and fast rule at the store: No cash is ever given out.

I got pretty well caught up with incoming TOYS, so yesterday I pulled out the box where I throw modern, plastic dolls donated without clothes. I set aside incoming doll clothes too. Naked dolls don't sell, so every once in a while I dress them. They're everything from baby dolls to fashion dolls (Barbies & Bratz) to big American Girls type (usually the cheaper "Our Generation" dolls).
Matching dolls to fashions and sizes can take some time.

I'd also set aside some vintage Dolls of the World type dolls. (I'm reflected in the cabinet mirror, below.) 



III. The Whiteness of Bears

Are Dolls of the World racially stereotyped?
Sometimes.

People aren't being touchy and 'over-woke' by pointing out that this can be hurtful or cause harm.
I can see that that's true--handling donated dolls & toys for a few years now, I can see how their message is "this is what normal looks like". And while this is changing, the repeated-over-and-over vision of normal remains Cute 'n' White.
So I'm okay with Dolls of the World.

Also, you know, sometimes we just love things, even if they have a difficult backstory. This includes loving people. So, fine!
Reality is complicated.

But even stuffed toy bears way, way more often come in white, pastel, or caramel colors than the dark browns or blacks of most real bears.
(In the wild,
more North American black bears exist––one million!–– than all other bears on earth combined. There are 200,000 Brown Bears, which includes grizzlies.
White polar bears? 20,000.)


I hear people say this is incidental. "It's just a toy."
I tell you, from where I stand, no, it's not. There's a thing going on here, oh yeah. It's relentless.
But I mostly hear  it talked about
(and experience it) from a white perspective...

In the store's neighborhood, where white is the minority, it looks different. I love to put out dolls and toys that look like the customers, even if in some political contexts these might be deemed racist.

I see Native people buying Native dolls like the one 2 photos up, for instance, that might make a white academic-type such as myself nervous.
Some coworkers ask me to save them Black dolls for the kids in their lives. There aren't that many.

Side note: EVERYBODY LOVES BABY YODA.

When racist toys and images clearly intended to be harmful come in (not that often), I save them for my art historian friend Allan, who gives it to a teacher who works in cultural representation.

I have to go to work so haven't read the article in the Paris Review: "Addy Walker, American Girl: The role of black dolls in American culture," 2015, by Brit Bennett, the Black woman author also of a 2014 essay, "I Don't Know What to Do With Good White People".

In that essay, Bennett writes this, below, which reminds me of how some people dismiss my question, "Why are toy bears disproportionally white?":
"I often hear good white people ask why people of color must make everything about race, as if we enjoy considering racism as a motivation. I wish I never had to cycle through these small interactions and wonder:
Am I overthinking? Am I just being paranoid?
It's exhausting."

And, Bennett addresses a phrase that drives me crazy (besides the above "you're overthinking"; and also, "they're doing their best"):
"They mean well."

Like, hurt that is not intentional doesn't count? Like, we aren't responsible for our actions if we DON'T THINK (or, god forbid, "overthink") about what they mean?
But isn't it a mark of the intelligence and humane-ness upon which a good society is built to think about what we do, and why we do it (and how we could do it differently)?
So doesn't that make "meaning well" an insult?

Bennett thinks so:

" 'You know what? He means well,' we say.
We lean on this, and the phrase is so condescending, so cloyingly sweet, so hollow, that I'd almost rather anyone say anything else about me...."

Btw, where are all these people who are "overthinking"?
I mostly meet the other kind.
__________________________

More things to look at and read:

Looking for discussions of race and dolls, I stumbled into the world of Black Dolls--here, an exhibit by the New York Historical Society. We get some of these donated sometimes, like the topsy-turvy dolls. Not usually antiques, but there have been a couple.

I'm excited to look more at the work of Leo Moss, a doll artist
in Macon, Georgia, working in the late 1800s––early 1900s. Moss transformed mass-produced white dolls into Black dolls--not just painting them but remolding their features. An article about X-raying Moss's dolls: aperturephotoarts.com/leo-moss.


And here, the National Black Doll Museum.

But now I must go to work!
Oh, darn--it just started to very lightly snow...
I don't care (I do)––I'm biking anyway.

Friday, December 8, 2023

Random bits of light

A coupla few things wandering around on my laptop...

BELOW: Donations at work with old television references.
"Just the facts/VAX, ma'am": Dragnet was before my time. But my parents liked The Avengers when I was little.
Memories of Emma Peel (Diana Rigg) surfaced when I first watched Detectorists in 2014, with Rigg's daughter, Rachael Stirling, in it. She looks and sounds so much like her mother--and Rigg appears briefly in it later, too.

____________________________

R.i.p. Bob Janssen (photo below from his Strib obit)
I worked with Bob at Steeple People thrift store for three years--my mending friend Julia-happify and he were good friends.
He was an expert on birds, author of Birds of Minnesota and other bird books.
I asked him how he was once, and he said, fine.
"How are the birds?" I continued.
"Things are not good for the birds," he said.
No doubt, no doubt. But not for the lack of his efforts. A good guy.

________________

BELOW: I'd come across this old photo recently and sent it to my sister--our father and me at my apartment at Christmastime, 2013, when he was 82. (He died four years later.)
He'd brought me wine and Grand Marnier as a present. 
No one in my family was a big drinker--I've been thinking how little I know of alcoholism from direct experience.
We weren't close, but I suppose we were fond of each other. At any rate, we're alike in many ways. He was playful, and he loved toys! He could be broody & touchy though, and so can I.

My father loved Christmas, which he spent alone, by choice. (My mother had left the family when he was forty-three and I was thirteen. Both of them had other relationships but never remarried.)

He always decorated a live tree, and he made himself roast beef with Yorkshire pudding for Christmas Eve.
He would approve of my Christmas Fern, below.

I know Boston ferns are sensitive to touch, but mine has thrived despite a lot of jostling over the past couple years... I'm hoping the lightweight garland of silver stars won't make it unhappy.
The glass tree topper is mounted on a stake.

I've been sad and slow lately. In my emotional lethargy, I have to sort of force myself to do them, but making these little lightful efforts does bring cheer up alongside the sadness.

Oh--a bit of good news:
Yesterday bink FINALLY tested negative for Covid, after two weeks. She still feels a little gunky but is overall well.

Thursday, December 7, 2023

Opening Night

Penny Cooper read the lease for Apartment 320, where we live now, and it says No Candles.

With Hannukah approaching, great concern arises.
Meetings are held, and a
contingent representing those who most love to set things on fire come forth.
"We request an exemption," they say, "because we are Zoroastrians!"

The delegates are hurriedly recalled, and hushed consultation ensues.
The delegation returns.
"... Because we are Jewish."
And for good measure they throw in, "Also, Orphans!"

(They aren't any religion, really, not actually caring about that human stuff. But they do love holidays.)

Today, with Hannukah starting at sundown, I find an electric menorah at work, and thus whoever controls Miracles & Wonders shows themselves to be responsive to the hearts of dolls and bears, and to subscribe to the old wisdom:
The show must go on!

Golda the bear and the girlettes struggle to untangle the cord of the electric menorah before the sun sets
"Silly bear!"


BELOW: A moment of panic. "This outlet was not designed for toys! We lack the height!"
But circus experience comes in handy, and a solution is found.

And, ta-da!

The bulbs twist on and off, so every night you can light a new candle.

P.S. 6:17 p.m. Oh, wow! I set the menorah in the window, and JUST NOW I heard children's voices, passing by on the sidewalk outside, and a woman--their mother?--said in a voice of happy surprise,
"Oh, look! They have a menorah!"

It brought tears to my eyes to think we've shared this little bit of light and hope and praise.
____________

And so, now it is dark, and I offer my personal favorite prayer for dark times.

Watch, Creator, with those who work or wake or weep tonight.
Give the angels and saints charge over those who sleep.
Tend Your sick ones, rest Your weary ones, bless Your dying ones,
Soothe the suffering ones, pity all the afflicted ones,
Shield the joyful ones, and all for Your love's sake.

Amen.

Some Things

 I. Introductions
Hey, darlings,
A few new people have commented lately--welcome!

If I haven't met you before, and you don't blog yourself, would you take a moment to introduce yourself, next time you comment?
Just a brief intro, like, how did you land here, where are you from? (Thanks, Ceci, for doing that.)
I'd enjoy that--thanks!

It's a funny phenomenon:
bloggers make themselves very visible, and readers may feel they know them--(I have almost 70
"about me" posts)––but to the blogger, new commenters arrive as total strangers out of the blue.
It can also happen with friends who read a blog but who don't blog themselves that there's an imbalance in how much info one person has about the other.
Not a bad thing, just something to watch for.

II. Thrift Things

1. In which I am entirely wrong about a price.


Every so often we get donations from a consignment antique store--things that didn't sell and that the original owners don't want back. They'll often come with the antique store's prices on them, which is helpful--if they're in my areas, I'll mark them maybe a quarter of that price.

These old animals made of real skins came to me as "toys". They had no price.
How much would YOU price them?

Manageress said she'd price them $2.99, but I went with $9.99 because the panda is so darn cute, and the wildebeest & zebra's eyes are hand-painted glass. But with their old skins, I found them a little creepy.

I came in the next day (yesterday) to see them repriced $19.99, and put on the shelves behind the cashier where special (stealable) things go--the work of Volunteer Art, who does art.

I didn't mind. Art & I have sometimes struggled for control (mostly over space), but this was fine--I was just baffled.
"If someone pays that, I'll eat my hat," I said to Louisiana.
"That man's crazy," she agreed.

A couple hours later, someone bought all three.

"If you eat half your hat, I'll help you eat the other," Louisiana said.

2. Faces

The camera on my old (new-to-me) iphone 7 is good but not great--it wasn't until I looked at this photo this morning that I saw it's out of focus. But Oceania: Art of the Pacific Islands in the MMA sold yesterday ($3.99), so I'm going to post the photo as-is because I love related-looking faces. Like the side-by-side Yoruba queen & the boy from Belarus.

Here, both faces have eyebrows set close above eyes, bulbous noses, thin lips, prominent chins...

ABOVE, left: a Rembrandt self-portrait, 
and, right [full photo & more info here, and many more fab photos from the book]: "a whale ivory figurine of a woman, from the Ha’apai Islands of Tonga, known as ’otua fefine, a term used to describe prominent female ancestors who were venerated as divine beings".

 3. Candidate for Re-Writing Public Prose


Well, hell, I could finish a half-marathon in a few months too.

4. BELOW:
This antique hand-held fishing net makes me ache, it is so beautiful, the love of the machine––its bent-wood teardrop hoop with cotton net running in a runnel all around the edge (you can just see the indent on the left edge).


The maker's mark is worn off. I looked up nets--this is a "landing net"--for scooping up the fish on the end of your line--I see they're often for fly fishing in rivers, but from "any kind of watercraft" too.
I priced it $25, which is a good deal.

Things like this, I wonder if I'll regret not buying them.
But while I love this net as an object, I care nothing about fishing. It's better it go to someone who loves it for itself.

Wednesday, December 6, 2023

Bouillon Cup, & the presumption of good

“Etiquette requires the presumption of good
until the contrary is proven.” 
– Emily Post

___________________

I. Soup on the Rails

The mysteries of thrift! 
I brought home this double-handed cup, because the (defunct) Soo Line railway was based here in Minneapolis. 
I thought it was for drinking coffee on lurching trains, but bink informed me two handles = bouillon cup.


I was dubious, but she's right. From Emily Post’s “Etiquette”:

“Soup at luncheon is never served in soup plates, but in two-handled cups. It is eaten with a teaspoon or a bouillon spoon [ital mine], or after it has cooled sufficiently, the cup may be picked up.
It is almost always a clear soup: in the winter, a bouillon, turtle soup, or consommé, and in the summer, a chilled soup such as jellied consommé or madrilène.”
--From My Auction Finds

A bouillon spoon? NOW I NEED A BOUILLON SPOON!

And, from "Emily Post Etiquette" on substack:

 

The Soo Line wasn't primarily a passenger service. According to the MN Historical Society, it carried grain and timber thru the upper Midwest and connected with the Canadian Pacific (CP) Railway. 
On Soo + CP, you could travel from Mpls. to Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan [via]. I wish we still could.

The co. formed in 1888 as the Minneapolis, St. Paul & Sault Ste. Marie Railway Company--M.St.P.&S.S.M.--known as the Soo Line––after the phonetic spelling of 'Sault'.

I see cups like mine on railway-collectibles sites for $35. 
I paid 49¢ . . . because we know nothing and don't care.

II. Off the Rails

I feel alone at work.
I miss Ass't Man, I realized yesterday. I think that's underlying me feeling blue lately.
Ass't Man was kinda my work husband, and even though it was a bad marriage, we shared a good love:
we both delighted in and were curious about thrift--and no one else does.
(Not entirely true-- Clothes Alice loves vintage clothes and textiles, and I appreciate that.)

I'm still glad Ass't Man divorced himself from me and the store a couple months ago.
I wish it had been otherwise though. I wish that when I'd told him I was uncomfortable about what he did and said when drunk that he'd said, "I need to do--am going to do--something about my drinking", instead of what he did say: "You are the problem."

But that's what he did say, and then he quit, and that's the way it went.
You presume good until the contrary is proven.
And when it's proven, it behooves you to believe it. But that doesn't mean you're not sad about it.
You can't take the train from
Mpls. to Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan, anymore either.

I feel better admitting to myself that I am sad about it.

Monday, December 4, 2023

Xmas Camp, and Rearranging...

UPDATE: The opening of Christmas Camp under the Boston fern was deemed waaay more important than rearranging the apartment. 
Campers are starting to arrive!
They’re all going to need warmer clothes…

_____

Definitely I need & want to spend more of my energy on life OUTSIDE of work. Yesterday I tore apart half my apartment to move one of my bookshelves. And now I must put it all back together again.

Am I dawdling?
I am not.
(I am.)

These pictures don't capture how messy it is!
But--happy
in its new place, the massive Boston fern now has its own spot in the corner where the bookcase was. A Christmas tree skirt will go around its base, and the girlettes will set up Xmas Camp there!

BELOW: I'm putting the bookshelf (plus bins of art & sewing supplies) along my bed-room wall.
It's the one wall shared--naked--with the neighboring apartment. (Kitchen and bathroom cupboards line the other shared walls.)

My neighbor is very quiet, and so am I, but with my bed against the wall--the most logical space for it--I'd always felt aware that someone was sleeping on the other side of the wall,
so I'm finally putting non-bed furniture against that wall, and moving my bed to the floor...


When you tear your place up, it's not a matter of putting everything back the way it was, right? It's a chance, if you want, to look at every single thing and think, Do I want this? And, Where is the best place for this?
I am doing that.
No rush--as long as it's done in two weeks, before some old friends are coming over for holiday ginger cake (ginger cake!).

Sunday, December 3, 2023

Adventure Aging: Open your own coconuts

First: the girlette calendars have arrived, one week early. Yay! They look terrific--Mixbook.com did a great job.
(Not the cheapest, but they've printed four years of calendars for me. If you use them, search for coupons--they
often have some going, and always discounts for orders of 10 or more.)

If you haven't sent me your address, please do. (M, K, and LS, I have yours.)
If you said you want one, but now don't--no problem. I have no extras and would be happy to have some.

Update:
bink was pretty low with Covid after Thanksgiving--fever, headache, cough. She is feeling a lot better now--up and dressed--but
she still tests positive, after nine days, and her senses of taste and smell are off. Not gone altogether, but food mostly tastes salty, sweet, or bitter.
Luckily no one else at Thanksgiving has become ill.


I. Two Funnyish Reddits

Searching for local dolls-&-bears field trips, I came across the reddit for my city. These two posts made me laugh:

^ "[update] got some whole coconuts and learned how to open em!"
There ya go, that's the spirit.

When I was a kid, we hit a coconut with a hammer until it cracked.
Seems "hitting it" is still the approved method.
Here's how, with and without tools, from the Art of Manliness:
Myself, I would hit the coconut with the rock, but perhaps this is the more manly-muscle way. :)
Also, doesn't that rock look like a cabbage? A cabbage will not do the trick.
___________________

And, the second reddit:

 

^ "They don't mind walking but nothing too crazy as they are in their late 40s." Oh, those old people...
Commenters replied with good but obvious suggestions (the art institute, the conservatory (for plants)).
But let's see...
What are some not "too crazy" local things to do
indoors? (The post makes it sound like age is the only impediment. )
I came up with a couple fun ideas (that I didn't post because they don't quite fit though):

Our women's North Star Roller Derby offers roller derby skating lessons for ALL SKILL LEVELS, with an emphasis on Safety. That could be good for someone who maybe doesn't heal as fast as a young person.
(But, whoops--but no classes until January.)

Vertical Endeavor "a cutting edge climbing facility for people of all ages" offers private lessons.
Facing a wall--maybe not the best sightseeing? Still, if the visitor learned how, they could return when it's warmer and climb outdoors.

Here's an article on starting to climb in your sixties, like Kitty below, who started at 67:


When I walked Camino at fifty years old, I met a woman in her sixties who worked with seniors. She told me that ADVENTURE is a key helper in aging.
And adventure is whatever is adventurous for you.

What is Adventure for me?
I've never been much attracted to physical feats. (Camino was a social and spiritual undertaking that was physical.) But I do want to keep up the spirit of adventure.
That takes some conscious choice (for me, anyway).
_________________________________

II. Adventures NOT at Work

My job is adventurous, often taking me into the unexpected. "I never thought I'd see THAT in a workplace." Sometimes even in the fun way.

BELOW: Santa Holding Dino & Shark, set up by coworker Grateful-J.

But, I want to invite some other adventures in.

And, I need to refocus at work. I was badly out of sorts earlier in the week, feeling really down--discouraged and disgusted.
A couple days off work helped, and when I went back yesterday, I was able to reset my mood by focusing only on MY areas (books & toys).

I always, always get thrown when I step outside my areas or try to improve the store. There are ogres or something, I swear, that protect the store from improvements.
The ogres are in myself, perhaps...? They lumber out when I get frustrated with other people (but also with myself). I have a low threshold there, which is not helpful.

I do not have a reformer's stick-to-itiveness.
I was reminded of that when I read Lytton Strachey's bio of Florence Nightingale. She reminded me of Abraham Lincoln--those people who wear themselves to a nub, working for change. They're constantly raging against the ineptitude and inertia of other people, but they don't give up. Of course, they also pay a high price.

"Choose your battles," my father always said.
Yes.
I decided to give up one of mine:
I am going to stop trying to keep TOYS in good order.

Every day parents leave their kids alone in Toys, as if it's an IKEA play area. The kids literally tear the area apart (ripping open bags and boxes), and I have to sort it out.

Except... I don't have to.
Toys were never in order when I took them on. I can let them sink back into disorder. Since there is no management, no one will say anything, if they even notice.

It's nice if Toys are in order, but honestly, I don't much care.
I care far, far more about the books, and they are not getting the attention I want to give them. Like, I still! haven't made new signs for the rearranged sections.
___________________

III. Adventures in NonFiction

Researching and going on Dolls & Bears Field Trips = a new adventure.
Also, I realized I've read--or don't want to read--most of the fiction on many "100 Best Novels" lists, but I have not read many of the books on the "100 Best Nonfiction" lists.
Starting to read some, also = a new adventure.

* * * ANYONE have Non-Fic Recommendations?

Eminent Victorians (1918) by Lytton Strachey is the first one I read from some list.
(There are many lists. Oh--it was the Guardian's < links to the article on EV--very fun! I'm going to read each article for the 100 books, even if I don't read the books.)

Strachey's book has been on the shelf at work for eons--I even marked it down to 49 cent, but it didn't sell.
I decided to try it because, as I've mentioned, I'd been reading Frances Partridge's diaries ––
(or despite that!--she's so boring--she says so, herself, complaining she had "one creative idea a month", I stopped reading her)––
and Frances's husband, Ralph P., had been one of Lytton Strachey's lovers and had also married LS's platonic love, Carrington.

"A diagram of their [the Bloomsbury group's] love affairs would look like an underground system where every train stopped at every station," writes Roger Ebert in his review of the film Carrington (1995).

Ralph is "Rex" in this preview of Carrington (1995), below.


I'd only known Strachey as a character and was surprised that he's such a good writer--and so funny in his wicked snarkiness.

And look, he used the word "apotropaic"! I only learned that word practically the other day. He's talking about General Gordon, who I know from the movie Khartoum (and from writing a kid's book about Sudan--my post about Gordon from 2008.
)
“Gordon’s fatalism … led him to dally with omens, to search for prophetic texts, and to append, in brackets, the apotropaic initials DV [Deo volente – God willing] after every statement in his letters implying futurity, led him also to envisage his moods and his desires, his passing reckless whims and his deep unconscious instincts, as the mysterious manifestations of the indwelling God.”
Eminent Victorians is Strachey's famous book that makes the lists--I wonder if his others are good too. I'll probably never know, as they're never donated to my workplace.

My choices of nonfiction so far are guided by what we have at work.

Last night I started The World Without Us (Alan Weisman, 2007), from a 'Best Nonfiction of the 21st Century' list, which is often donated, being a relatively recent bestseller and adapted to TV. I'm interested in the topic--what would Earth do if humans all of a sudden disappeared (say, from a human-only virus)?

The science is fascinating.
But I don't know if I'll keep reading the book--I don't like how emotional AW's writing is, as if in the style of War of the Worlds.
Bridges are "under constant guerrilla attack from nature"; plants are "accosted" by "invasions" and "fight to reclaim their birthright" from "alien species".

I felt manipulated into being frightened, which I don't enjoy. (I don't read or watch horror for its own sake.) It's as if the publisher said, "You must make this entertaining to the average reader of genre fiction".
I just want to know
How Things Fall Down!
____________________


BEST ADVENTURE: Write your own.
Open a coconut your own damn self.