Tuesday, September 11, 2012

Remembering September 11, Remembering 1973

This is what we should never forget. The words of Salvador Allende for a free Chile, duly elected in a democratic election by his people, saving the economy of his country, destabilized by Richard Nixon and Pinochet representing the USA. These words were to inspire democracy and sovereignty of his people. If we never forgot these words, then we would take back our democracy from the plutocracy of tea party fueled corporate greed in 2012.

Thursday, September 6, 2012

Friday, August 24, 2012

The . Worst . Generation .

This was sent out to me by a friend:
His friend, the original sender, called it The most honest three and a half minutes of television, EVER...
The reference was to the beginning scene of the new HBO series "The Newsroom" explaining why America's Not the Greatest Country Any Longer... But It Can Be.




My friend commented, "that's not all." I agree.

Here begins my rant:

I would add Cuba as a free country to the list of European free countries listed in this show, a list which came out of this all white panel, I might add (yes, I know it's just a tv show but that's the way producers see this country unless we demand change) -- Cuba . Cuba has caught my attention with 100 percent literacy, a doctor and psychiatrist per 100 people, a human rights based constitution with an extremely low GNP which has caused them also to be an organic eating and clean water country lacking the funds to get pesticides.

Most of all, I beg to differ.

The young person who asked the question whom the central figure of the new HBO series, "The Newsroom," dismissed with the label "sorority girl," and who stood stunned while he ranted, with accusatory forefinger jabbing at her emphasizing each "dot" in my opinion does not belong to what he called the "worst.generation.ever."

I do. HE does. WE are the generation who had the biggest dreams forged out of our coming of age in a nationwide struggle for end to war and justice. Many of us whose youthful dreams were not destroyed in war, put themselves on the line, including returning vets, I might add, for what was right however angrily. We knew we'd been lied to. We knew who didn't care. And, sad to say, after all that youthful sacrifice, by droves whole segments of our generation "grew up?" and joined the "takers" to get their share, then doom our children and grandchildren into debt in order to go to college, when we were given a boost up with national defense loans which we did not have to pay back in full if we worked in "poverty areas." And knowing the TRUTH what is our excuse for George W., Bill Clinton, Warren Buffet (yah, I know that one is a liberal President, but, a liberal who put us into wars, and another is thought to be a philanthropist but he gives as many of his ilk by amassing wealth for greedy reasons at the expense of the survival of the earth, benefiting from Reagan's legacy of corporations being human beings and spawning showy funding endeavors of THEIR choice which must be done THEIR way.) What a legacy. So let's not point fingers at the younger generation. I did not mention our present President because he is of the next generation. That is for them to say. We have done enough damage, we have not passed on to the next generation what was important enough to fight for; we have not stayed in the good fight for as long as it takes. Where is the authority for any of us to be pointing fingers at another generation. For those of you of our generation who never gave up the struggle, I don't think you're taking this personally because that's one thing we learned. Not to take the USA and politics personally, but to take personal action, big or small, and keep that fire alive and eyes open as to where we start and where the system begins. As Jose Marti said, "I have lived in the monster and I have seen its belly." People may not like our rhetoric, call it outdated, but it still suits me fine in trying to say what it is (my rant). What America is is the country which uses the most. What America also is is the most incredibly diverse country. It's time we used our great resource, the people, ourselves, and it is time we USE LESS/GIVE MORE, speak out more to the lies we are being told, reach deeper and find our commonsense as human beings, stop the fear, cause some ruckus in what craziness our media, our political parties, our so-called leaders are up to and do more . . . goodness

Instead of objectifying the young girl and everyone in her age group with his self serving rant, the pompous ass character of this new series on the Newsroom could have done as one of our elders must have when we were young, coming to them with our questions after learning we've been lied to by a nation, by everyone. Each one of us have in our personal history someone who treated us with respect and put themselves with us, not at us, and simply asked back, "Let's look at your question first, 'What makes America the greatest country in the world?' shall we? IS American the greatest country in the world? Why? . . ." and so the questions flowed, and we began our journey together. My mentors, both men, neither pompous asses, but my best teachers: John Goettsche, second generation German American high school government teacher, Caldwell High School, 1962 - 1963, and Jay Jones, African American counselor and adult education class instructor at Lane Community College, 1970, "Black Experience."

Wednesday, August 22, 2012

Let's try it Pinky, the Cat's way

Let's try using cartoons and cute kitties to teach the truth.



















Monday, July 30, 2012

A Good Mother

I've just returned from a trip back east seeing Will's family. We were going to a Memorial for his mother, Anne "Pete" Baker and along the way stopped to visit his eldest daughter Josina in Minneapolis. Josina calls me one of her mothers.

It was a week to think about mothers, to ponder about what is a good mother -- is there such a thing as a good mother, therefore a bad mother?

I have come to this realization -- self-realization -- because I am a Mom formed by my daughter Maki. Every mother has the choice to be the doting mother, the proud mother, the spoiling mother . . . before they become a mother. Maki taught me that motherhood has nothing to do with any prior thoughts I may have held what a good mother does, what a good mother proudly shares with all her friends about her sons and daughters, how much of her life a mother focuses upon her children, even as they become adults. I say that Maki taught me because the mother I had planned to be was doting and proud and focused on my children. I was ready to support whatever they may want to be. I was completely comfortable to be pleased with average grades and encouraging of passions. As a school teacher for 20 years before becoming a mother there wasn't a "difficult conversation" which could stymie me. Any prejudices I may have harbored had already been taught out of me by my beautiful students. I was ready to be that mother!

And completely without tools for Maki. Every child has needs. And what Maki needed was a mother who was Black and White about everything. She needed a mother who would tell it like it is and not sweeten it up. She needed a mother who could not be maneuvered. She needed a mother who could stand up to perverts even if their attention was craved by my daughter. They all seemed to be sooo nice and attentive and had such nice gifts. She needed a mom who would check every time to see if there were things which belonged to others mixed in with her stuff and coached her to return them each time, a mother with eyes in back of her head, and a mother who never forgot.

Who wants to be that!

We desperately needed help. We found a safe place to go, a little home with a garden, lots of kitties and chickens and puppies and one angry rooster, a lots of places to play without perverts, no serious troubles because you can't steal from a puppy and hurt their feelings. There we were surrounded by four elderly people between 80 and 90, and they being Winnemem Wintu, had seen it all, and they being spiritual actually could read a little girl's mind, and they being elderly did not panic about anything. So mommy could finally have a good rest.

Maki needed a mom who knew Indian Doctors and her mom happened to know three of them and every one of them took her under their wing.

Where was I going with this.

Yes, Good Mothers.

At her Memorial, I heard a lot about Pete Baker as an iconic woman -- artist, life learner, potter, pioneer in 15th century home restorations, mentor, gardener, environmentalist, a woman ahead of her time. My husband wrote on behalf of her grown children, about Pete Baker as Mother, and he read it filled with the pride he had in his mother and his abiding love and understanding for a mother, married at 18, fitting into society, then discovering Simone de Bouvier, discovering underneath the plaster of her inherited home the skeleton of the beautiful 15th century fireplace and firing up the passion and gift she had for restoring old 15th century houses. And she discovered her lifelong love, Bob Baker, builder of wooden boats. In each case she did bring along he flock of five children, until she left with Bob. And then she told them the truth. She loved them and she would always be their mother and she was leaving with Bob. She was honest above all to her children.

At times like this, the children go through difficulties. One's mother stands for so much. So with the seven children Pete had, each grieved her death in their own way.
Some of them felt abandoned in death as they felt when she left with Bob Baker while they moved with their father to England. Some felt loved less because Pete, as she always had with fears, and aches and pains, hid it from them. I believe that she probably hid it from herself, ignoring the signs. Because she was so "out there" with every thing she was passionate about, or believed, the fact that she was silent and died without warning left a bruise.

Her friends who had a life which allowed them to dote, to talk about their children as the focus of their life, to be that kind of mother cannot understand Pete as I probably could not without Maki. But I am Maki's mom. All I can truly say I did successfully was to have hung in there no matter what. In doing so, I earned my adult daughter's affection as her mother and I have this very honest, friendly relationship. She is the person I can express my whole true feelings to. Remarkable. The two of us went through such hell, Maki with her anger and distrust of all human beings, no relationships of any worth and my resentment at never ever being able to be a mom to my liking -- clashing mightily together -- and eventually growing enough to trust each other with our truths like best friends.

I look at Pete Baker and what she gave her children -- wealthy children who do not live a life of privilege which glut our Cable TV Programming in 2012. Every one of her sons and daughters work with their hands, fix their own cars, build things, jerry rig things, have pride in their work, make the best compost if they decide to, do anything they want with confidence without going to college, independent. As for Will, when I met him, lived a life no different from anyone I knew including myself, immigrant, working class, struggling family, my generation being the first to go to college. That freedom from the American caste system is what their mother gave them. This is 2012. They are prepared for life in a way children of their class are not prepared for by following 'the book.' They have less to lose because they want less. Will can build a fire for warmth without matches. He can build shelter. He can live off the grid if he chose. And in this great time of cataclysmic climate change, he is a warrior. He does not need to cling to the American Dream which made his family wealthy and privileged. This is what Pete Baker gave her son -- the permission to be whomever he passionately believed himself to be. Nothing -- not class, color, not fear, not personal history -- nothing can stand in his way.

Long time ago I told Maki that my goal as a mom came down to this, as an older mom who cannot bury my head in the sand because I won't be here for a long time. I want her to have the empowered authority to know with her whole heart that she is able to take care of herself no matter what. She doesn't need anyone to do it for her. She doesn't need to manipulate, lie, steal, and be fearful. I had to say to myself, someone else gets to spoil her -- and I did tell her she spoiled herself enough -- and someone else gets to be the "good mom." But this Mother must believe in her ability to take care of herself even more than she does right now. I believe that she has the ability to do whatever she may want, and the tools I want her to have and which I model for her and which I encourage in her is to rely on herself, not on the backs of others.

I, as a Mom, may have been forced into this condition, but I really don't want it any other way if I really think about it. Pete had no choice but to follow the Time she was born into, a time when women were being born into being free human beings in her class. She could not be tamed into the Fifties when she was made for a timeless time for women, a boundaryless time, a borderless time, a time of creation, a time to respect and honor, in her case as a restoration expert, both ruin and art, the past and freedom. So rest in peace, and hear! hear! Mother Anne "Pete" Baker! I am a mother cut from the same cloth, although awkward about what you do with great class, confidence and panache! Your son and I are proud of you!!

Following, the full text of Will's remembrance of his Mother, Anne "Pete" Baker

Mom Remembered

Delivered at the memorial gathering held in Westport, Massachusetts, July 28, 2012

Hello, I'm Will Doolittle, Pete's eldest child of seven in all. With her first husband, Duncan Doolittle she had me, Harriet, Abby, Elisha and Nicole. With Bob Baker she had Ben and Sarah. Interestingly, Sarah and I have the same birthday, fifteen years apart.

I experienced my mother as an intensely curious and creative person with a keen intellect, for whom every activity was an adventure. On every visit with her I could count on being taken on a mission of discovery in her passion of that moment. She had a deep respect for the natural world and was a passionate advocate for living lightly on the Earth. She spoke against the excesses and destruction caused by greed. And she rarely met a rule that she didn't break, or at least try to.

Abby outlined our Mom's early years, which hint at the person she later became, but, as Mom outlines in her book Collecting Houses, it was our move to a new home in 1957 that was to be the catalyst for a profound change -- for her and for all of us. It had been her grandmother's house, a large rambling mansion that concealed at its heart a pre-revolutionary-war post and beam house.

In that era, my sister Harriet remembers Mom as being really good at getting us involved in creative activities. For example, in local horse shows our family consistently won in the costume category, as Mom would came up with imaginative story ideas and costumes.
It seemed like she always had a project going, like refinishing an old toy chest and painting a beautiful design on it, or taking the paint off of an old door. But the creative focus that changed everything was the house itself.

I remember coming home from school one day to a kitchen with air and surfaces thick with plaster dust. And there was a gaping hole which revealed an ancient cooking fireplace, in a wall which that morning had been neatly plastered over to hide the enormous old lintel and baking oven that someone had considered too old-fashioned.

For us kids this was a time when we came home each day with anticipation of the new discovery that would be waiting as fireplaces and mantlepieces and beams and passageways were released from their 50-year entombment.

But this fire of creative energy was also the flame that burned up her marriage, which began for Mom at age 18, and produced 5 children within 12 years. She began listening to Peter, Paul and Mary, one of their songs being "If I Had a Hammer", and I remember at about age 11 seeing "The Feminine Mystique" by early feminist writer Simone de Beauvoir on her bedside table.

She started a business selling the old floorboards, molding and mantlepieces that she would acquire by various means, not always exactly legal. Often, one or more of us kids provided an innocent cover for her trespass of crumbling old buildings. With crowbar and hammer in hand, she would ease the beautifully handcrafted woodwork off of the walls and into her car to save them from certain decomposition. If anyone questioned what she was doing, she was not above using charm and cluelessness in the service of rescuing old things from oblivion.

So, this new woman my mother was becoming was outgrowing a marriage based on conventional forms and expectations. She and my father divorced and she ended up marrying Bob Baker and continued to solidify the life she had begun.

My sister Sarah notes that Mom was self-taught in every one of the many disicplines and endeavors she took on. Sarah remembers Mom crouched over a pottery kick wheel (she wanted to learn first with a kickwheel, before going to the easier motorized wheel) with a book propped up in front of her, learning to throw pots, through research and trial and error. She had taken up pottery because she wanted to make pieces like the shards she had found in old houses. And she traveled to Egypt and Turkey to study arabic ceramic designs.

Mom developed many interests and skills, some of which you will hear more about this afternoon, but the list includes photography, old boats, historic woodwork, historic preservation, architecture, archeology, carpentry, stone- and brickmasonry, waterpowered mills, drawing (freehand and architectural), pottery, Middle Eastern design, gardening, beekeeping, house and boat painting, computer skills, database development, photoshop, community organizing, writing, dendrochronology, Norman Isham, kayaking, and even studied dogs and their care... and I'm sure I've left out a lot, to which each of you could add something.

While she loved her children, being a Mother was not the focus of our Mom's life, and she didn't allow many people to get close to her. She didn't want to be constricted by anyone's concern for her wellbeing, as I found out when I reacted with horror when she casually told me (at 80 years old) that she had crawled under the house to check on a leaky pipe. When I told her she should at least tell somebody where she was, she got angry and said she didn't want even me to interfere with her activities. And thus she lived, and died, on her own terms.

Our mother was in many ways a woman before her time, who earned respect in many fields through her own efforts, with the power of her intellect and her enthusiasm, as well as her charm and just plain stubbornness.

But I believe she has left a legacy in the many people and places that she has touched with the love she shared, both for the natural things that the Earth gives us, and the beauty we add to those things through our hands and our hearts.

Saturday, July 14, 2012

Hateful

I just ran into a hateful blog -- hateful toward the Winnemem tribe, most specifically the Chief. It is written by anonymous folks who don't use their name. Begrudging. Slanderous. Granny always told me that the Winnemem life is a hard life but still the best life. The Winnemem who are following Granny's vision and way of life have a very tough life. But the accomplishments are many.

In a single generation, they have 100 percent sobriety in the next generation.

In a single generation, their young people are believers in the Winnemem way of life, strong people. Several are going to college. Several others are stepping up to their traditional roles.

I credit these accomplishments which goes against the trend to the Chief Caleen Sisk and her faithfulness to her Aunt, Florence Jone's vision. She brought people back to the Village, living together. The children are surrounded by strong Winnemem loving adults. Now that the young ones are in their 20's and 30's and some becoming parents who also bring up their children around the Village, participating in the ceremonial life, they will also bring strong children into the world.

Caleen has brought back the puberty ceremonies for men and women.

She is a Chief who sacrifices to take care of her people.

She is known in many countries, and respected by the many she meets.

I find the accusation that she runs a cult laughable. If ever, she welcomes input, opinion, another perspective to hers more than she needs. but that is her style.

The articles written against her are based on hate and envy from a comfortable place without the Winnemem wage (zero), the Winnemem daily struggle for human right to ceremony to carry on sacred responsibilities, and being more independant than a village can be. I'm sure sometimes Caleen must wonder how would it be to not be the successional leader for life. I'm sure Marisa has the same reluctance Caleen had while her Aunt was alive to step in front. Being Chief means thinking and caring for everyone and everything. How must it feel to be a leader through elections, have privileges, power, and a payroll to go with it?

Traditional way, the people should take care of the Chief because she takes care of them, but these are modern times, and very few get the concept.

Anyway, I am very proud of Caleen. Granny was kind enough to ask Caleen to continue to take care of me, and she has kept that promise. She didn't have to. She didn't know me that well. But like everything else, she did what Granny said. Brought back the family to the village. Brought back ceremony which lay dormant since before the dam was built. She may be a reluctant doctor, but she does it anyway, and has helped me as well as others who have come for help.

The young ones following her are proof that Caleen is a great leader, leaving the tribe stronger and in a better position. Now, she is fighting for the human right to exist, to simply be Winnemem and this struggle will make it easier for the next generation.

I know there is this ugliness between "family" as there are in many families. How sad that is the case. There is really nothing she can do. I had wished once that good could happen and prayed to see the truth. As if by magic, perhaps because we were on sacred ground, one of them called me over and without any rhyme or reason began to use the word hate, and hate dripped from everything she said, old grivances of when they were children and Caleen ate the best part of the watermelon.

Wow.

That is a grudge. Well, you should be glad to know that she makes sacrifices each day on behalf of the tribe, the salmon, the Winnemem way of life. She works, prays, and leads with all her heart. Really, it is time to let go of hate and evolve into goodness. Life would be happier for the hateful people. The world needs them. That is the hope, that they can let go of petty childhood grievances and as granny says, "right is right, and wrong is nobody" step up and give.

Addendum: I have vague memories of this newsletter, come to think about it. They wrote about me in a derogatory manner because of my ethnicity coupled with my belief system. But Granny is the one who brought me in. I call myself a nature-a-lized member of the Winnemem Wintu. And they accuse the Chief of being lesbian as if that is a bad thing. The Chief is not lesbian and being lesbian is not wrong, so the writer is also sadly homophobic as well as enthnocentric. As far as I remember I did nothing to this branch of the family whenever they came to visit Granny while I was there except be respectful and friendly. And as for my following the Winnemem way, I don't pretend to be born Winnemem, but I believe in the sacred lands, Granny's legacy, the Chief, the ceremonies, the Sacred Fire. I do not believe in the administrative model the federal government imposes on tribes and see the wisdom of the ancestors that there is successional leadership. I do not believe in casinos as a good way for the Winnemem. Granny says it rots the tribe from the inside out and I believe that. I believe that the Winnemem way is a hard way of life, but it is the best way of life for me. From my preference for the succesional traditional leadership, my pride in the accomplishments of Chief Sisk and my commitment to the sacred responsibilities to sacred land, to water, to the "Nur" which I keep by following her lead, as she follows Granny and the Chiefs before her, I am Winnemem. Those who express such hatred follow another way, and that is fine. They have their elections. They do not accept Caleen as Chief and do things their own way, following their own selves rather than Granny. They have not spent any time, energy or material on helping Caleen through this long arduous journey to justice we are still on but have put her down, sometimes cutting in front of her to spread malicious gossip in an attempt to derail her. Granny said "right is right . . ."

So I will continue to pray for them, that they will settle their hearts and minds and think only the good things, see only the good things, speak only the truth and gain the power and strength to ward off all evil, as well as for their grown children for whom I still have great fondness and hope they can grow without hate and resentment and jealousy. The world needs good strong brave people with the light of life within their hearts and are dedicated to goodness.
"from Outside the Belly" was also known as "TBAsian" from 2008-2010. Thank you for reading.

from Outside the Monster's Belly

from Outside the Monster's Belly
. . . following Earth instead (Rakaia River, site of Salmon Ceremony, photo credit Ruth Koenig)

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Eugene, Oregon
I am a citizen of the Winnemem Wintu Tribe. I am a Nikkei descendant sansei (third generation);retired teacher, involved in the Winnemem tribal responsibility to Water, Salmon, and our belief that the Sacred is our Teacher. Working locally for human rights and supporting youth leadership.