Don’t Know Where to Start

What a year this has been. I wrote my last post in May, back when we had the summer and outdoor socially distanced functions to look forward to. Since then, things have changed, and yet, they haven’t really.

Part of me would like to take this opportunity to lay out in detail what I believe about some of the things we’ve been dealing with: the pandemic, unrest, deepening political divides, disasters, and so much more. Part of me feels like it would be pointless.

I’ve been wrestling a lot this year. With my beliefs, especially politically, and how politics interacts with my faith. With what to do about racism in my country. With loneliness and isolation because of the pandemic. With how to help my students from the other side of a computer video chat, and how to help people affected by disasters like wildfires and hurricanes and war. There is so much. But I have done what could when I discovered a way to help in these areas.

I’ve also been trying to find the silver linings, the opportunities afforded by my current circumstances, or at least allowed by them. Almost every day, I’ve gotten a nice walk through a wooded park nearby. I finished writing a short story, had help from writer friends to revise it, and submitted it to a publisher. I’ve been working slowly through online guitar lessons. Over the spring and summer, I went to some beautiful outdoor places with friends and family. I’ve reconnected with some family and friends with Zoom game nights. And I have worked hard to make lessons for my students to get an education despite not being in a school building. I’m determined that this year will not have been wasted.

But it’s still been hard. I know my brain is stressed because I’m making the same dumb mistakes at work over and over again. I can’t seem to keep some things straight in my brain. And now I have grief to add to that; my “bonus grandma” (close friend’s grandma that I adopted long before my last grandparent passed away 10 years ago) recently died. I knew it was to be expected eventually. But it’s still sad, because she was the nicest grandma I ever had, and I’m sad for my friend and her family who are all going through a lot. And my friend and former coworker Meranda died of cancer this summer. Praying for her family and friends as well during this holiday season.

A friend wrote in her most recent blog post that despite the enormity of everything, she feels that there is light at the end of the tunnel. I am hanging onto that. Hanging onto hope. Despite the despair around me, I believe that God still loves us and is still guiding us.

This journey of life is hard sometimes. I feel like I’m wandering in the wilderness, and I don’t mean a scenic National Park wilderness with a sturdy trail. I mean wandering through tough terrain with only a compass. But I will press on, seeking God’s guidance constantly. Thank you for joining me in this journey.

Categories: Miscellaneous | Leave a comment

Two Young Queens

Hello readers! I’m excited to bring to you the journeys of two remarkable young women. Quick update: I am getting my full salary, and am thankful to God and the director of my school for this. I hope you are all doing well and staying safe! Here are a couple inspiring stories of journeys of women to keep you going.

The two young women I want to introduce to you are separated by a century in time. Bessie Coleman, known as “Queen Bess, Daredevil Aviatrix,” was a young African American aviator in the 1920s whose life was cut short doing what she loved. Phiona Mutesi, better known thanks to a Disney movie as “The Queen of Katwe,” is a champion of chess in her home country of Uganda, and is now a student in a Christian college here in the Pacific Northwest.

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Bessie Coleman, public domain photo from Wikipedia

I’m going to let some short videos do most of the talking for me this time, because they are very well-done and speak for themselves. (And because I have a lot of paperwork to do for one of the local school districts, but don’t want to keep putting off this post). You are also welcome to research these two amazing ladies on your own.

All I will say about them is that they both overcame incredible odds (between the two of them- racism, classism, and poverty), and used their talents to change their own lives and the lives of others. I’ll let you find out for yourselves what they did.

This video is an artsy look at Bessie Coleman’s life, found on PBS: https://www.pbs.org/video/aviator-bessie-coleman-ztdgjl/

I also learned about her from a history book I have:  “Great African Americans in History” by Carlotta Hacker, Crabtree Publishing Company, 1997.

For Phiona, check out these two videos done by ABC news and a recent radio interview with her on WBUR:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FEcxNpd3WQA

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xGC0MrWuUTk

https://www.wbur.org/onlyagame/2019/01/11/queen-of-katwe-phiona-mutesi-chess

And of course, check out the Disney movie! It is now my favorite Disney “princess” movie! It actually sticks to the real story pretty well instead of “Disney-fying” it.

I hope these two women inspire you as much as they did me. Since I’ve been stuck with the same 10 mostly educational DVDs I checked out from the library in March (it’s been closed and keeps extending the due date; I think soon I’ll own these DVDs! Anyone need some Bill Nye the Science Guy?), I’ve watched “The Queen of Katwe” twice. It is so good! I hope I can meet the real Phiona Mutesi someday. And I wish I could have been around to watch Bessie Coleman fly. But for now, I will celebrate their lives, and endeavor to develop my own talents and help others.

 

 

 

Categories: Journeys of Women | Leave a comment

15 Ways to Enjoy the Journey from Home

Note: I had originally posted a version of this at the end of my previous post, but kept adding to my list, and it got overgrown. So here it is in its own separate post for your convenient reference (when you’re getting cabin fever!). Enjoy! And coming soon will be another post about two more women with amazing journeys, called “Two Young Queens.” Stay tuned! 

For those of us who love journeys and adventures, this Coronavirus Quarantine we’re all in is tough, even if we’re lucky enough to not be sick or laid off work right now. My heart goes out to all of you who are affected by Covid-19, and I do want to take that seriously. I imagine that many of you are looking for new jobs, caring for sick relatives, trying to home-school your kids since school is out, or other important tasks, and of course just trying to survive emotionally with all the isolation. As for me, my hours/income has been cut in half and I’m trying to figure out how to teach online. It’s tough, but not as tough as it is for those of you on the front lines (health care professionals, grocery store workers, social workers, etc.) I’m praying and cheering for you! Safety is first, of course! But we all need some fun, too, in order to make it through this. So this list of fun activities is for any of you who are feeling the Coronavirus Quarantine Cabin Fever.

When I lived in a conflict zone in Central Asia, we had fun ways of dealing with “compound fever” when we weren’t allowed to leave our school/home compound for extended lengths of time due to security situations in the city. I think our favorites were playing Wii Just Dance, having fun parties (masquerades, murder mystery parties, themed movie nights, etc.), planning trips and outings for the future, and of course keeping busy teaching our awesome students. For your amusement or benefit in any way, I’ve made a list of things you can do to tide you over until you can get out. Some of these have more educational/cultural value than others. But they’re all fun. And they can even be done if you’re sick, with Covid-19 or anything else (but I sure hope you’re not!). 20200216_111929

15 (at last count) ways to enjoy the journey from the comfort of your own home: (in no particular order)

  1. Make a dream/wish/bucket list of all the places you want to go. Choose one that is possible to go to in the next year. Plan the trip. For big trips, make a savings plan, and if you haven’t been laid off work, start saving. If you’re not able to work, plan to start saving when you can.
  2. Go for a walk in your neighborhood, if you can. Try to notice something new you’d never noticed before. This one, of course, is dependent on the level of the “stay at home/shelter in place” policies that your city/state/province/country has placed you on. Don’t do anything you’re not supposed to do.
  3. Watch travel shows or National Geographic episodes online.
  4. Watch movies or read books that take place in areas of the world that you’d like to visit (preferably by people who have actually been there). Since my previous blog post was about Afghan women, I highly recommend the book A Thousand Splendid Suns by Khaled Hosseini (the man that wrote The Kite Runner). I also recommend the film “The Secret Life of Walter Mitty” with Ben Stiller, where he travels around the world (including Afghanistan!). Another option: read a book by/about a real person who has been on a journey. I’m currently rereading Berlin Diaries by Marie Vassiltchikov, a Russian princess who worked in Berlin during WWII. And hey, if you need books, consider ordering online from Powell’s City of Books (in Portland) instead of Amazon. They were at risk for closing for good because of the stay at home orders, but good news; everyone who bought online helped them hire back all their employees! Here’s a link to a site with a button at the bottom to order in a way to help their Worker Relief Fund: https://ilwulocal5.com/?fbclid=IwAR0MsxRl4hOQylBLV5b2vJxhILD92TjyYDYC1BIvz9Gx_Uba8ZNaNUnzgMg
  5. Chat on the phone or online with friends who live far away from you and ask what it’s like there. Don’t forget to chat with your close-by friends, too! We all need each other right now! And of course, take time to call people who may be extra lonely right now, including those who have lost their job/livelihood, people living alone, and the elderly.
  6. Take this time to organize your collection of travel things: maps, brochures, postcards, etc. Okay, maybe you don’t have an extensive collection of these things like I do. I may or may not be a hoarder of such things. I’m sure there’s a 12-step group out there for people like me. “Hi, my name is _____, and I’m a compulsive collector of maps and other things related to travel…” If this is true of you, perhaps set aside some items that can be given to others.
  7. Order some photos online, break out your old scrapbook or art supply stash, and make some scrapbook pages, greeting cards, or other artworks of places you’ve been. Remember when we used to do that? Before we just posted photos on Facebook or Instagram? Reminiscing about past travels reminds us how much we’ve gotten to experience already, and can help us be content during this time of staying home. If you’ve lived/traveled places with other people, call them to reminisce together.
  8. Break out that puzzle you got years ago of some beautiful place in the world, and put it together. I recently did a Dollar Tree puzzle of Strasbourg, France. My parents have been there.
  9. Do lunges and other workout activities to keep in shape for hiking/exploring. This is good for you anyway, even if you’re not missing traveling. Of course be safe and consult a doctor first if you should.
  10. Break into your kids’ toybox (or your own stash) and build a Lego replica of a place you want to go. My friend Chris just finished Big Ben, which he’d been working on for months.
  11. Visit famous museums virtually! Or other cool places! https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/ten-museums-you-can-virtually-visit-180974443/
  12. “Explore” the world on Google Earth. It’s super fun to zoom in on a famous place and look at it from different angles. Several years ago I made a geography “passport” project for students based on this. I’m not sure where I have the digital files for it, or I’d share it. But I remember it involved writing latitude and longitude for the places they “visited” (and drawing them, because that’s fun), and a map in the back that’s divided like a coordinate plane (X and Y graph like in math class) and some questions to get them thinking geographically.
  13. Journal what your life is like right now! It’s part of your journey. Write about your thoughts, hopes, fears, relationships, and anything else that’s part of your life. Don’t be afraid to write about the trivial things: what little (or big) things are you doing to cope with being cooped up?
  14. Check out these activities about USA’s national parks that you can do from home! https://www.nationalparks.org/connect/blog/park-activities-you-can-do-comfort-your-home
  15. Explore my home state of Oregon! Whether you’re from here, been here once, or only dreamed of coming here, this is one way to check out some new places.    https://traveloregon.com/things-to-do/trip-ideas/parents-guide-oregon-activities-home/

Whatever you do with your time, you have my best wishes for your health (mental, physical, emotional, etc.) and happiness. Enjoy the journey, however you can! And please share your ideas for doing so in the comments below! And in case you’re wondering about the photo, that is my neighbor’s goat, peaking his head through the fence by my apartment. It has no official purpose for being in this post besides being adorable. And I’m glad he’s right next door so I can see him during this worldwide quarantine!

Categories: My Trips and Tips | 1 Comment

An Athlete and an Artist

The good news is, I should be able to post more often for the next several weeks! The bad news is, practically the whole world’s shut down. (Don’t worry; I’m still employed for the time being; my private school is keeping the teachers on and planning to teach online starting very soon, so I’ll keep busy planning for that.) I’m processing this pandemic crisis in a paper journal my friend got me, and in bits and pieces on Facebook posts. So I won’t elaborate on my feelings about “staying home” in the current world of Covid-19. But I will take some time to highlight some women’s journeys since that’s what this blog is about, just in time for National Women’s History Month (and bit late for International Women’s Day).

First, though, I will give an important update. I finally saw the new Harriet Tubman movie (Harriet)! And it’s awesome! Talk about a woman’s journey! Epic! (Don’t worry, since I mentioned her in a previous post, I’ll still focus on different women for this one.) The movie highlights how she relied on hearing God’s guidance to show her the way to freedom, and the strength she had to keep walking and face her enemies when fear or fatigue threatened to stop her from saving lives. So good! That’s all I’ll say about the movie and about her. If you’re not interested in the movie, do a little research to find out more than you know already. I guarantee you’ll find it interesting.

Since I’m way behind on blog posts, I’m going to showcase two women this time. It’s only right, since it’s National Women’s History Month. Earlier this month was International Women’s Day. And since I discovered International Women’s Day while living and working in Afghanistan, I’m choosing two talented women of Afghan heritage to write about. Side note: I love International Women’s Day! Feel free to look up its history yourself. It’s fascinating. Also, happy late Nowruz! (Happy New Year to the Persian world).

Anyway, back to women’s journeys! This will be brief because I really don’t know that much about the journeys of these two women. But they’ve both been around the world and here in Oregon for the sake of their work, and that’s cool! And they are both public advocates for women’s rights, fitting for this month. One is an athlete and the other an artist.

Nadia Nadim is a professional football (called soccer in the USA) player. I got to watch her play for the Portland Thorns (the sister team to the Portland Timbers) here in Oregon. She was born in Herat, Afghanistan, where her father taught her how to play football. After he was killed by the Taliban, her family fled to Denmark. She grew up playing soccer there and eventually played professionally. She then played for a couple teams in the USA, including the Thorns. More recently she played for Manchester City, and was just signed for Paris St.-Germain. She was recently designated as UNESCO Champion for Girls and Women’s Education in 2019 in recognition of her role in promoting sport and gender equality, her contribution to UNESCO’s educational action in favour of young people, advocacy for girls and women’s education and support for the Organization’s action worldwide.” She is publishing an autobiography, which I hope to read! For more information, check out her webpage http://nadianadim.com/ and information about her UNESCO designation at http://www.unesco.org/new/en/goodwill-ambassadors/champions-for-sport/nadia-nadim/ .

Shamsia Hassani is officially my favorite painting artist. I’m usually more into photography and writing as art forms, although I do like some of the classic painters like van Gogh and Monet. But last summer during an Art Walk here in Eugene, I discovered Hassani’s work in a brochure of the 20X21 mural project in the city. Her mural is literally down the street from where I live! She painted it on my birthday a few years ago. I wish I’d known about it; I’d have walked down and watched her paint! I’ll post my own photo of the mural here, but also check it out on her website. It’s the first one shown on the “Graffiti Works” page at https://www.shamsiahassani.net/Graffiti-works.html#header1-2o Keep scrolling down that page to see one that I’d love to see with my own eyes, done on a sidewalk. It makes me think of the scene in the old Mary Poppins movie where they draw on the sidewalks and then step through to a different world. Ms. Hassani is a professor at Kabul University, and is the first female graffiti artist in Afghanistan. Art is her “friendly way to fight” the bad memories of war as well as for the rights of women (see her interview in http://www.streetartbio.com/shamsia-hassani-interview ) and the “About” page on her website (https://www.shamsiahassani.net/about-shamsia-hassani.html ).

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Mural in Eugene, Oregon, USA by Shamsia Hassani, photo by Jessie Johnson

Originally I had posted a list of ways to “enjoy the journey” from home since most of us are not able to get out and travel, explore, or have adventures right now due to Covid-19. But I kept finding fun things to do to add to my list, and it was getting pretty lengthy, so I will now make that into it’s own separate post for your convenient reference. Also watch for the next post about women’s journeys, coming soon. It will be about “Two Young Queens:” Bessie Coleman, aka “Queen Bess, Daredevil Aviatrix” and Phiona Mutesi, “The Queen of Katwe.” If you can’t wait to find out who these two amazing young women are, feel free to look them up on your own.

 

Categories: Journeys of Women | 1 Comment

2020 Vision; Hindsight of 2019

Hello friends and family! Happy 2020! My cat, Arwen, politely informed me that she wouldn’t be writing my annual end-of-year newsletter this year. Do your own dirty work, she told me. Like I don’t do hers every time I clean her litterbox! But oh, well. She knows I love writing and need to do more of it, so here goes. I did not get this done before Christmas or even before New Year’s, so this will be a blog post recap of 2019.

2019 was a pretty exciting year! Unlike 2018, I didn’t go on any road trips to Oregon’s Outback to visit my college roommates or raft the Deschutes with friends or hike above timberline on a bunch of giant volcanoes, but I did have some great adventures and sweet times with family and friends.

There was lots of family fun this year. I got to have fun with my stepsiblings and their kids doing things like exploring Mt. Angel Abbey and Opal Creek and watching the kids play baseball and American football for their high school. There were lots of mini-hikes in the Ridgeline Trails and a coast trip with my mom, eating Afghan food at the Saturday Market with my dad, and frisbee golf with my brother. Then there was the Schmidt Family Reunion, where I was the President last year. Lots of cousins came to this part of the state to play in a pool and a treehouse and eat potluck (mostly desserts) and catch up with family. I even camped in the treehouse with my cousin and his kids! In autumn, Mom and I drove the Aufderheide Memorial Drive loop to see the fall foliage. That had been on my Oregon bucket list for a few years, and I kept getting thwarted by forest fire damage. It was beautiful!

I also had some great adventures with friends. For Memorial Day weekend, I drove to Montana to surprise my friend Jessica for her birthday (pulling it off with the help of her husband and teenage daughter). We got to watch a show at the opera house in Virginia City (a smaller but very similar cousin to the Virginia City in Nevada). In June, I backpacked in the snow with coworkers (we took the senior trip for the kids, who opted not to go on it) along the PCT near Willamette Pass. I frequented the bouldering gym with friends from church who have memberships there, and even got to go rock climbing at the Skinner’s Butte columns, which I’d never done before, despite growing up here! I also partook in local festivities, like eating good food at the Scandinavian festival with friends, watching Lifehouse perform at the county fair (we got spots in the free section, of course!), watching one of our church friends perform with his up-and-coming acoustic punk band, and even going to an artist’s fair focused on writers, where one of my childhood teachers was selling books he’d written. Then I got to go camping at good ol’ Honeyman State Park (lots of memories there from my youth) at the coast with one of my other best friends Jas and her family. Her cousins’ kids are so cute and fun to play with! The other big summer highlight was camping and kayaking at Waldo Lake with church friends. It’s one of the world’s purest lakes, isn’t far away, and had been on my Oregon bucket list for over 15 years since my ex and I tried to go there but got chased away by mosquito season. It was so beautiful! And such a blast to camp with friends. And of course the year was filled with waterfall hiking trips with friends old and new, as well as fun activities like murder mystery parties (we rang in the 2020s with a 1920s-themed one!) and watching the World Cup at local establishments. I’m sure I’m forgetting something important and awesome that I did with people special to me, so please don’t feel bad! I do that every year! It’s because I’m so blessed with so many great friends and fun things to do. And if I haven’t gotten to hang out with you in a while, please call!

As for work, I finally left the military charter school and went to teach at another school. I miss the staff and kids at WLA, but it was time for me to move on and work in a “civilian” school. Now I teach in a Special Education classroom at a private school. It’s very different from my last school. It’s hard, but I love the kids and the staff. And I like not having to iron and wear a military uniform to work every day, although it made it easy to decide what to wear to work!

In December, a few writer friends and I wrapped up meeting together to go through the book The Artist’s Way by Julia Cameron. It was a great experience, and helped me with my writing. I started working on a short story in the fall that I hope to finish soon (Christmas break flew by with friends and family, and I can’t believe it’s almost over!). This year I hope to focus on learning guitar. Last year I was given a nice one from a friend who’d gotten a new one and didn’t need this one anymore, so I want make good on the potential musician he must have seen in me. Please feel free to ask me if I’ve been practicing! I fell off the bandwagon in the autumn with all the stress from work, so my one New Year’s resolution is to get back on and practice and learn.

In response to my previous post, I kept so busy during fall and winter breaks that I still haven’t seen the Harriet Tubman movie. But I did just get to see the new Star Wars last night, so my Christmas vacation is complete and I can go back to teaching this week! 🙂 There are other cool things happening in my life, but I will save those for personal conversation. I have a good feeling that 2020 will be a great year, even if it turns out to be a tough one (because life happens).

Happy New Year! Please get in touch if you haven’t heard from me in a while. I love you all! And so does Arwen, even if she doesn’t always show it when you come over!

 

Categories: My Trips and Tips | 1 Comment

Happy Veterans Day

Happy Veterans Day, to my parents, relatives, and friends who have served their countries in the military! Thank you for your service. Most of you have sacrificed much. In your honor, I bring you this short post (you’ll need to read the article attached in the link to get the most out of it) about one historical figure that most people don’t realize was a veteran.

Right now in the theaters is a movie that I hope to see soon. Harriet Tubman was always one of my heroes growing up. Talk about a woman’s journey! Or several of them, all dangerous rescue missions! But as I got older and became a history teacher, I realized that she was even tougher than I’d ever realized. And much more fascinating. After her time as a conductor on the Underground Railroad, she worked for the Union army in a number of capacities. That makes her my favorite famous veteran! Check out this article, by the Smithsonian Institute, about the movie and her real life. https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smithsonian-institution/true-story-harriet-tubman-movie-180973413/?utm_source=smithsoniandaily&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=20191030-daily-responsive&spMailingID=41005509&spUserID=NDc3OTk0NTI0ODU1S0&spJobID=1622803703&spReportId=MTYyMjgwMzcwMwS2

Enjoy! And please tell me what you think of the movie if you’ve gotten to see it! I hope to soon!

Categories: Journeys of Women | Leave a comment

Fastest Journey Around the World (at the time)

I’m finally catching up on some of the amazing women’s journeys I’ve been wanting to write about. I’ll write one today and hopefully the next few soon. Thank you for your patience! I did write a post for my church blog recently, and you can read that here https://www.citysalt.org/blog/2019/9/13saltandlight-jj  if you’re interested.

For this post, I bring to you an early American superstar reporter. She even pioneered her style of investigative journalism. I recently discovered Elizabeth Cochrane, better known by her pen name Nellie Bly. After I read about her, I couldn’t believe I’d never heard of her before!

Remember the classic Jules Verne book, Around the World in 80 Days? Well, Nellie Bly decided to beat it. In the late 1800s. By herself. This was after multiple career-defining experiences (I don’t want to sound like the encyclopedia articles I’ve read, so I’ll just briefly mention them) such as living in México for several months to report on government corruption and the plight of the poor there, and going undercover at a mental institution (by faking her own insanity) to report on the conditions there. Dang, girl! For a single woman in the 1800s, that was pretty gutsy!

She decided to race around the world in nearly every kind of transportation imaginable, except airplanes, because they didn’t exist yet. The story would be covered in the newspaper she worked for, Joseph Pulitzer’s the New York World. She left in November 1889. A rival journal, Cosmopolitan, sent their own woman traveler, Elizabeth Bisland, in order to beat her, but Bly kept on her own plans, not interested in beating anyone except the fictional hero in Verne’s novel. Is this the same Cosmopolitan that I see in stores nowadays, that seems obsessed with fashion and makeup and other things that don’t interest me? I hope they go back to cool stunts like racing women around the world! Anyway, back to the story. Bly beat Bisland, making it around the world in 72 days. Her newspaper had made a board game and public contest out of her trip to keep readers engaged.

I’ll let you do the work of looking her up and finding out the fascinating details of her journey, but I just had to give a shout-out to such an awesome woman. Especially back then. Girl Power! As soon as I have the money to replace my dead Kindle, I’ll be buying her books (they’ll definitely be free since there from the century before last!) which seem to be mostly collections of articles about her travels.

Here are some websites I found information on, and others for further reading:

https://www.britannica.com/biography/Nellie-Bly

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nellie_Bly

https://www.womenshistory.org/education-resources/biographies/nellie-bly

https://www.pbs.org/newshour/nation/how-nellie-bly-went-undercover-to-expose-abuse-of-the-mentally-ill

Categories: Journeys of Women | 1 Comment

I have been writing! I promise!

Hello out there in Blog-land! Welcome back to the Compass Rose Queen, where we celebrate the journeys of women (sometimes historical, others fictional, and sometimes my own journeys). Sorry it’s been so long! It’s not that I haven’t had ideas of things to write about. I’ve been finding lots of stories of amazing journeys of women that I would love to share with you. But a couple things have kept me from writing. Only one of them is a good excuse, but I’ll discuss them both here. Keep reading to get to the good stuff (actual writing about the journeys of women, including links to things I’ve written lately, and an announcement about my day job/career if you haven’t already seen it on Facebook!).

My first excuse category is about the writing process. I have too many ideas and don’t know where to start. Whose story is most compelling or timely? And then, how do I go about not just sounding like a Wikipedia page and insulting your intelligence because you could look her up yourself? If I have a book about her, how do I find the time to read it? Yeah, yeah, I told you they’re terrible excuses! But that’s what’s been going through my easily distracted and discouraged brain.

My second (and much more fun) excuse is that I have been writing for other forums. I’m on the blog team for my church, so about once every couple months I write an article for it. Also, I’ve had two written pieces published in the new online literary magazine Illumine: Collective Light. The last things I wrote for each of these forums were both focused on the journeys of women (one is about a friend of mine, and the other is my own personal journey of discovery), so I’ll post links to those here.

The first piece I’ll include is my blog post for church about a young friend of mine that I met while visiting my old church camp five years ago. She is an inspiration to me! The theme we were all writing about was adventures with God, and I thought of her because her camp name was Adventure when I met her! So yeah, not to be punny, but I wrote about Adventure in more ways than one.  http://www.citysalt.org/blog/2019/7/19adventuringwithgod-jj

The second piece is my latest work for Illumine: Collective Light, and is an unusual format for me. I normally write prose, either fiction or nonfiction. I haven’t written anything resembling poetry since I wrote a prayer/song years ago, and I certainly haven’t had any training in it. So please don’t judge it for any literary merit. Also, I have mixed feelings about sharing it, because I’m afraid it can come off like I’m bragging about the places I’ve been. That was not my intention when writing it. The theme was “Wonder” and when I sat down to write about the concept of wonder in my life, this is what came out. It’s about my journey of discovering that it’s not the amazing places but the people in our lives that are the best wonder of the world. It’s dedicated to a former student who was killed in a terrorist attack in Kabul last year, just one of the wonderful people I’ve met in my life’s journey. https://illumine.collectivelight.org/volume-3-wonder/what-a-wonderful-world/

That’s probably enough for one post for now. You’ll have to wait for the next post to find out about at least one of the awesome famous/historical women I’ve discovered. But I’ll post below  links to some of my other articles and blog posts in case you want to read more (and proof that I have been writing something!). Oh, and I promised you a job update! Most of you know that I’ve been teaching for the last several years at a military-style charter school. Well, I will miss it, but it was time for me to move on, so I’m happy to announce that I was recently hired to teach at a private school for students with special needs. I’m excited for this next step in my career! Many thanks to those who supported me through this, by being a reference, giving me advice, praying for me, and other ways.

Happy journeying!

My other submission to Illumine: Collective Light:  https://illumine.collectivelight.org/volume-2-stillness/stillness-that-elusive-gift/

Other blog posts I’ve written for my church:

http://www.citysalt.org/blog/2019/5/24perpetualcreativity-jj

http://www.citysalt.org/blog/2019/3/22beautyfromsuffering-jj

http://www.citysalt.org/blog/2019/2/1ahamoment-jj

http://www.citysalt.org/blog/2018/10/19tension-jj

http://www.citysalt.org/blog/2018/6/15interruptible-jj

 

Categories: Miscellaneous | 1 Comment

Happy late National Park Week!

I meant to write a post last week to honor some of the women who have explored and championed national parks. But life happens and gets busy, as it always does. So this will be a belated and short post.

First I want to honor Willa Cather. In college, my favorite book from American Lit class was O Pioneers!, which to this day is my favorite prairie romance novel. I should tell you that the class was taught by a man, and he had no qualms in making us read it. It’s not like the modern cheesy prairie romance novels at all, but it may well make you cry. It also helped me feel closer to my Nebraska roots.  So imagine my surprise when I was hiking Arizona’s Walnut Canyon National Monument, and found an interpretive sign with a quote from her about it! She loved exploring America’s national parks, and let them inspire her writing. You can read more about her from the National Park Service’s website here: https://www.nps.gov/people/willa-cather.htm

And then in doing an internet search, I found this cool lady. https://www.expeditions.com/why-us/women-explorers/annie-fiske/  I’m not going to write much about her for now, because I’m hoping to write an article soon about the topic of wonder, which she is evidently an official advocate for (I didn’t know that was a thing! But I like it!). It makes sense, though, because national parks are one of the things that bring out the wonder in me. But again, more on that in the future.

Personally, I’m inspired by the women (and men, but I focus on women’s journey’s in this blog) in my life that love to explore national parks. I have several good friends that have joined me in visiting them. And I’m always inspired by my neighbor gal, a young woman from Minnesota who backpacks in national forests and parks as much as she can. What women do you know who have inspired you by exploring national parks? Where have your national park journeys taken you? Please leave comments!

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Journeys by Force

It’s been a long time since I wrote about the journeys of women. I haven’t figured out exactly why, because there are millions of amazing stories out there to write about. I think I stopped because most of the stories I know about are already told somewhere, and I felt like I was rehashing them for little purpose.

Last night, however, I found a story that reignited my passion for sharing the journeys of women. My friend Sarah had invited me to join her at the Asian Celebration, a local festival. We ate good food, wandered the art exhibits and artisan booths, and watched Taiko drummers and Balinese dancing. But the highlight for me was the Minidoka Swing Band. It’s exactly what it sounds like, a big band playing ’30s and ’40s jazz standards, but with a twist. It’s dedicated to the Japanese-Americans who were interned during WWII, and named after an internment camp in Idaho. Some of the members were interned there or other places, and others are the descendants of people who were.

I’ll highlight here one of the vocalists, Nola Sugai Bogle. Her official band member bio can be found at http://www.minidokaswingband.com/index.php/meet-our-minidoka-swing-band-musicians/  I learned only a little about her from the concert, namely that she had been interned at Minidoka. But her bio tells much more about her journey. She was born in 1938 in Detroit, Michigan to a Japanese American father and Chinese American mother, and grew up loving music. Then her family was interned at Minidoka in Idaho, where she remembers hearing big band music over the radio. It doesn’t say where she lived after that, but in the late ’50s she won a talent/beauty contest in Ontario, Oregon, and moved to Boise, Idaho, where she moonlighted as a drummer/vocalist. She later moved to Portland, Oregon, and married  pianist/jazz club owner Sidney Porter. Years after he died, she married Dick Bogle, the first African American TV news anchor in the Northwest (among other things; his fascinating bio can be read at https://oregonencyclopedia.org/articles/bogle_dick_1930_2010/#.XGnkuehKjIU ) She has been performing in a variety of groups and places all along aside from when she took time off to stay home with her children, and joined the Minidoka band in 2008.

She and her son took turns being the vocalists for several of the songs performed by the band last night. They were both fantastic. After the concert, I thanked her for sharing her voice with us. She said I was sweet, and proceeded to pack up the band things. I’d have loved to talk to her more, but didn’t want to keep her. So I’m grateful to find her online bio and see a bit of her story.

I love to hear stories like hers, because even though her journey was forced, unjust, and shouldn’t have happened, it was part of her story, and part of what makes her who she is. And she found something beautiful (music) to keep her going, which is a huge part of her life. Granted, this is all what I am reading into her story by what little I saw and read about her. But from what I saw, that’s what I felt she would say. That and to learn from history and never let mistreatment of an entire ethnic group happen again in our country.

I wish very much that I had recorded the stories told to me by some amazing people that I met years ago when working at a school in Salem. Like Chella, a Holocaust survivor, who came to speak to my students when I was an instructional assistant in Salem. I got to pick her up and take her home to her apartment in Portland, where she showed me the three photographs that survived her childhood. Then there was Channary, a Cambodian woman whose amazing and heartbreaking story I heard bits and pieces of from other fellow coworkers at that same school, and the custodian from Laos who told me a bit of his story too (I know; he’s a man and this blog is focused on women, but his story deserves to be mentioned just the same).

These journeys were not by choice, and had traumatic aspects to them. But they all share something: courage and hope for a better future. Their stories need to be told and retold. Because sometimes our life’s journey includes places we don’t intend to go, but they can still bring us to places of beauty if we have the courage to go on. And of course, to fight for justice and peace in the world so people can choose the journeys they take.Minidoka Swing BandNola Sugai Bogle is on the left, singing with heart and soul. Photo by the blog’s author.

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