Tuesday, February 12, 2013

I Adore You, Deer

Found photo. Name on back: Will Pfeffer. From the '70s?
Last weekend I found this photo at a thrift store. I got it for a buck (heh). It was stashed in a bin on the floor with several other photos and an old menu. The rest, trash. This image, a treasure.

The scene feels familiar. It is, really. It was almost certainly taken in the Pacific Northwest. I can smell those trees, blasted and dry from the late summer sun. My feet trample the fallen pine needles.

I feel like this deer is calling me back--to what, exactly, I'm not sure. I like to think that if I walked toward him, he'd turn around and lead me somewhere. Back. But back in a way that's really forward.

Friday, January 25, 2013

Kittens on a Screen

Photo of contact between bare feet and dog fur. Do not mistake for the real experience.
A couple of weeks ago, a friend posted a link to a web cam trained on a cat and her kittens. I clicked, and for five minutes I watched the mother cat sleeping. (The kittens were out of view.) That's five minutes of my life I'll never get back. I don't even know this cat, and I was watching her on a screen, sleeping! Later, I clicked to watch the kittens feed and tumble. Of course I did. Bet you would have, too. Kittens. Cute, cute, cute. "Kittens" is even a cute word.

There's nothing wrong with watching kittens on a screen. Except, recently I realized I'm mortal and that my remaining years are almost certainly fewer than the ones I've lived so far. So, maybe watching kittens on a screen is not the best use of my time. I'm not sure why this mortality thing just sunk in, but it did.

Mortality. Not cute. Not cute at all.

Phones, computers, readers, televisions, and other screens are indispensable to me for communication, work, and entertainment. I'm just worried about what I'm missing while I'm staring at things through a screen, always at the same distance, always from someone else's point of view. The problem with watching those kittens is this: I can't hear one purr in my ear, or feel one knead my face to wake me. I don't have to clean up their barf or clean out a litter box. Screen experience is extremely limited experience, and I sometimes lose sight of that.

Given, you know, that mortality thing, I'm shifting my screen/reality balance in favor of reality. The more time I'm online, the more I find myself comparing things, letting others determine priorities, and using only a fraction of my senses (primarily vision, at "indoor" focal length). I never use my phone while driving, but off the road I'm a frequent message and Facebook checker, online shopper, and TV series watcher. I see lots of screen fat I can cut, but I won't be too radical about it. I'll do it gradually, like a reasonable shift to healthier eating, not a quickie diet.

I hope my number is not up for a very, very long time. I'm blessed with curiosity, and there's a lot I want to do, give, and understand. I happen to like being alive. And when my number is up, I certainly don't want images of celebrity baby bumps (horrible phrase), photos of what people had for lunch, and lines from "The West Wing" flashing through my head. I want memories of true contact: touching someone I love, crunching through hard snow, eating a bowl of pasta, unedited voices...

Saturday, December 22, 2012

Monday, December 17, 2012

Recipe for Giving


Cookies. Ramen noodles. Cocoa mix. Soup packets. Maybe something warm to wear. From Mom. My mom. During our college years, she sent dozens of care packages to my siblings and me.

Most valued in each package were the home-baked cookies. My mother is an excellent baker. She doesn't bake much these days, but she passed on to her kids her love of baking and her recipes. Now, for holidays, special events, and yes, care packages, we make the cookies. We roll Butterfingers in sugar, thumb-print My Mother's Cookies (actual recipe name), and chop nearly-neon candied cherries for Cherry Chip Cookies.

My mother not only passed on the baking gene, but also the giving gene. Last Christmas, we started a Cookie of the Month club for my parents. Each month for a year, one of us bakes and sends them a batch of home-baked cookies. We just completed the first year, and we'll do the same for them through 2013. Happily, they seem to enjoy receiving these care packages as much as we did in our college years.

Friday, November 30, 2012

Office Corner

Somebody's Place
It's not so much the corner office I want. It's the one corner of an office where people collaborate. I want a place at the table, or on the sofa, in the space where creativity explodes.

Ideas dart out from the creative huddle like cartoon arrows. Most are waved away, dismissed as done befores, not quite its, or cool but impossible due to laws of physics and such.

Then somehow, someone hits upon The Idea. It might rise vaguely over the group in the first half hour of discussion. It might come after months of emails, research, and sketches. One of the group members might dream it. But there it is. Now the work begins. Sometimes we'll lead The Idea, and sometimes we'll follow it, to a destination we can only imagine at this point.

Thursday, November 22, 2012

Thanksgiving, 2012


"Gratitude is not only the greatest of virtues, but the parent of all others." --Cicero 
Yes.  
Happy Thanksgiving

Tuesday, November 13, 2012

Autumn Beauty, 2012

Just a few non-tree fall photos today. Hope you're enjoying the season!