Checkin’ in on Aaron…

Posted March 23, 2011 at 8:36 am by

That's Aaron (left) and Adam with their mom & stepdad Cynthia & Gordon Elliot, a couple of days before the accident when they all went out for the guys' birthday in town.

Last week I ran into Adam D’Errico & asked him how Aaron’s rehab was going…it’s hard to believe it’s been a whole month since the accident. He said his twin brother is coming along, and that made me want to check in with Aaron himself, so I sent him a note asking what I could tell Update readers about how he’s doing, and this is what he wrote back:

Thank you to everyone for your love and concern. I’m thankful to be home now.

I’m still dealing with headaches and I have to take frequent rest breaks because of them. I’m also using a cane for balance.

Though I’m unscathed on the outside, (no broken limbs or major scars, thankfully), I have to deal with the injury internally. I’m happy I can communicate clearly, but I’m dealing with the results of this concussion, as well as the previous three traumatic brain injuries that I had. One at birth that caused my cerebral palsy, a fall at age ten, and another fall at age 11.

I’m getting used to daily life again. It’s gonna take some work, yet as always I’m maintaining my positive attitude and I’m hopeful for the future.

Song for comin’ home…slandered, libeled…

Posted March 23, 2011 at 8:10 am by

Last weekend when I was standing on the ferry deck waiting to walking off as we rolled into Friday Harbor, I was kinda humming/singing this little song in my head (or, probably, out loud) as someone asked me, “What song is that?”

This is the song I have running in my head for years now whenever the ferry pulls round the corner at Brown’s Island…love the first line: “Gee but it’s great to be back home….”

See what you think:

A little different, time-wise…

Posted March 23, 2011 at 7:52 am by

Couple of meetings & shows that will be at different times than we first told you:

Maude from the school district says the meeting that was set for the 17th at 6 is now tomorrow at 7, at the elementary school cafeteria (I think this is so folks won’t have a problem with the already scheduled teacher conferences):

To ensure the maximum possible public participation and to respond to some concerns that have been heard about sufficient notification, the March 17 Thursday night San Juan Island School District Special Board of Directors meeting is being rescheduled to one week later, to Thursday evening March 24th at 7:00 pm. The new location will be the elementary school cafeteria.

An agenda will be sent out prior to the meeting.

PRIOR ANNOUNCEMENT

There will be a special meeting of the San Juan Island School District Board of Directors on March 17, 2011 at 7:00 pm in the Friday Harbor High School library to seek input on improving communication with the public.  The meeting will be facilitated by Liz Illg and Jim Hooper and will focus on fostering communication in our community.   The public is encouraged to attend, of course.

• Meanwhile, Ryan Cole’s meeting about getting a community greenhouse happening is now set for tomorrow at 3, not today:

Community Greenhouse Presentation March 24th at High School at 3:00pm

Hello! This is an opportunity for you Community Members who want to help support our youth here on the Island. We are trying to get a greenhouse built to grow fresh produce that will be sold to our High School’s Chef 1.0 program to be fed to our students here at the High School. We are doing a presentation to the community at the High School in the commons on March 24th, @ 3:00 P.M. We would love to make this happen but we need YOUR help please show up to this meeting for more information or Contact us……or find us on Facebook!

Ryan Cole: 360-378-3006 or 360-610-0850; ryanpcole (at) gmail.com

• The middle school play Still Life With Iris is Friday-Sunday this weekend, not on Thursday, as I reported to you…guess I was hoping it started earlier, ’cause I really want to see it! Get you tix now!

Morning song: The movement you need is on your shoulder…

Posted March 22, 2011 at 7:45 am by

You remember when you were in high school & if anyone could play the piano, this is the song that we’d sing, as a mob…then & now.

Paul said he likes the part where it says, “Don’t carry the world upon your shoulder,” and that John threw in the line, “The movement you need is on your shoulder…”

Fun to see it sung with Elton & Pete & Eric & Phil & a mob of his own. Shoulder it & sing along:

Around the isle…

Posted March 20, 2011 at 10:26 pm by

Whenever you need a smile, be sure & drop in on David & Kathryn at San Juan Cellars next to the ferry landing. I'm sure glad that these two are the first folks that visitors to the island see...sets the tone for the island as a friendly place.

Let’s see what’s going on…

Zumba!

• For the equinox, this is your chance to take a Zumba class for free – Cynthia Burke is offering a free class tonight (Monday) from5:30 to 6:30pm  – she says Zumba for free when you bring cans of food for the foodbank! That’s at XYZ Movement Arts, just above Ravenhill, and down the way from M&W Auto.

• The middle school play “Still Life With Iris” starts this Thursday…do you have your ticket yet?

Baby central: proud grrandparents Mike & Jeri Arhenius tell me Vera gets to be a big sis because Alisa & Scott are exprecting…congrats, too, to Courtney & Kaal Oldwyn, who also have #2 on the way.

Brad's here from Olympia...

• I got a chance to drop in last week over at Islanders Bank to meet Brad Williamson, the new CEO there (he took a few months ago over after Bob Coleman stepped down last July).

I could tell you all kinds of cool stuff about his background, but mostly I think it’s a good sign for the bank that he was the state’s Director of Banks & chose Islanders Bank to move to, since he knows the inside skinny on them.

His family & he decided to move to San Juan Island because we’re small here with good schools & a tight community…and to get out of the big city. His wife & kids will move up here when school’s out in June.

Really enjoyed meeting Brad, and I think you will, too. I got a strong feeling he’ll be a good fit for our island community.

Going to college in the same state - FHHS grads Kyle Schaeffer & Stephanie BArnes are both in school in Arizona, and dropped by last week's soccer game during spring break.

The Great Island Clean-Up is on track for April!

Posted March 20, 2011 at 8:41 pm by

Stephanie has a lot of folks aboard, but needs you! Here’s how things are going:

I thought I would give you a little update on the Great Island Clean-Up project.  The steering committee has targeted six major roads for which we’re trying to get enough groups to clean.  They are:

1. San Juan Valley Road (this road is already covered)
2. Cattle Point / Little Roads
3. Beaverton Valley Road
4. Douglas Road
5. Bailer Hill Road
6. West Valley Road

If you would like to help clean up roads 2 through 6, please contact David Dehlendorf, [email protected].  The more the merrier!

As for the streets of Friday Harbor, Mayor Carrie Lacher recently proclaimed April 9th as Great Island Clean-Up Day, encouraging all Friday Harbor residents and business owners to clean up the streets in front of their homes and businesses.  Volunteers from the Rotary Club will be working on the town’s streets that day, but the more help they have, the faster it will go and the greater area they can cover.  To “sweeten the deal,” King’s Market has offered a free donut for every bag of litter picked up.  Contact Tom Kirchner (chamber (at) sanjuanisland.org) for more info on this and to say “YES – I want to help clean the town’s streets – count me in!”

For those who would like to clean a road of their choice anywhere around the island – or even to help the groups on the roads listed above – there will be a sign-up kiosk at Marketplace from April 1 to April 8.

One generous islander is donating money to cover the cost of the Ace Hardware special package (grabbers, vest and 3 bags), to support individuals who would like to participate, but don’t have or can’t afford to purchase their own materials.  If any business would like to make a similar donation, please contact Lori Stokes at 378-4643.”

We hope ALL islanders will join the party to welcome the warm weather by doing a little spring cleaning and helping restore our island to litter-free beauty.

As always, feel free to email me if you need more information, Stephanie (at) tuckerhouse.com.
Stephanie Prima-Sarantopulos

Last Thursday at the Town Council meeting, Mayor Carrie Lacher reads the proclamation about the Great Islland Clean up as Tom for the Chamber of Commerce & Stephanie listen.

Featured Pilot: Malcolm Heath

Posted March 20, 2011 at 2:57 pm by

Dr. Heath, checking his plane...

Dr. Malcolm Heath is this year’s Featured Pilot at the San Juan Aviation Museum, with the exhibit for the longtime island doctor opening next Sunday at 1pm. Fred Schumacher shared these thoughts:

Presentation Set for March 27, at the Roy Franklin Terminal, Friday Harbor Airport

On D-Day, June 6, 1944, more than 1,600 American gliders launched from Chartres, France to land at Normandy.  According to a 1978 edition of the Journal of the San Juan Islands, parachute infantry surgeon Dr. Malcolm Heath rode in on the only surviving glider of a group of four.   At that moment he likely imagined his death just a few minutes from landing, instead of decades later on San Juan Island.

Arriving on the beach...

Assuming his survival, he probably imagined a civilian life stateside, with a comfortable practice, out of harms way.  In reality, his landing at Normandy would be challenged in intensity by night flights to Bellingham, beach landings and house calls by boat, in all kinds of weather.

 

The Port of Friday Harbor, San Juan Pilots Association, as well as friends and patients will gather March 27 to recognize Dr Heath’s contribution to The San Juan Islands.

Dr. Heath’s post-war practice began in Boston.  But, by 1949 he was living on San Juan Island and was its only doctor. He learned to fly, bought an airplane and a boat and put cars in Bellingham and Orcas, as well as Friday Harbor.

And, for more than 30-years he was the medical system for the San Juan Islands, caring for all the families and all the visitors.  He took calls at home at night, and visited patients dressed in a tie and jacket.  He took the occasional fishing trip, but painted his boat pink, so that he could be found, if needed.

He delivered all the babies, escorted the hard cases to Bellingham, sutured the cuts, and calmed the families.

Sally Myser Wadhams’ mother, Mary, was his Medical Transcriptionist in the 1960s.  Listening to Dr. Heath’s recorded dictations, her fingers flew on the Medical Center’s electric typewriter.

Norma Smithrud saw Dr. Heath from the time she was in the fourth grade.  When she grew up, he took care of her children.  Her memories include a nighttime emergency call, complete with jacket and tie.  And the time, with his hand on her shoulder he said, “Your family has been through so much.”

Al “H” wrote that Dr. Heath was, “A friend and damn fine Doctor.  Saved my life when I had malaria.”

Nancy (Nash) Hanson remembers Dr. Heath saving her father John from a bleeding ulcer, accompanying him on a night flight to Bellingham.  John lived a decade longer, saw three of his children married, and became a grandfather eight times over.

John Patz worked for Dr. Heath as a Physician’s Assistant and called him a “Marcus Welby” type.  He described calling a sick-at-home Dr. Heath for help with a patient with a bad laceration.  Heath was there in 45 minutes, wearing a shirt and tie, spent 20 minutes on the laceration.  Then just said, “That was a bad one,” and went home.

Dr. Heath was in on the delivery of Joyce Buffum’s 4 children.  Number 4 arrived during a strong windstorm.  Unable to fly, Dr. Heath delivered the last child via the telephone at a church, guiding the nurse through the process.

Lynnette Guard remembered the birth of son, Frankie.  “He stopped by my home (on his way home) and as he looked out the window he say, “You can’t have the baby tonight, Lynette – It’s foggy!”

Margaret Mortenson worked as a pharmacist in Friday Harbor.  “I worked with Dr. Heath for a month or more without ever seeing him in person.  I began to visualize him from his voice, a Southerner tinged with an English accent.  One day a tall, athletic man with the demeanor of a person who had just jumped out of an airplane and repacked his chute right there in a grassy field strode into the drug store.  Selma Stoney touched my sleeve and said, “That is Dr. Heath.”  He didn’t look any more like the man in my imagination that Princess Grace resembled Dr. Martin Luther King.”

Dr. Paul Chiles worked for Dr. Heath in the mid 1970’s.  He remembers seeing the first patient at the new clinic.  It was a lady with a broken hand.  He installed the cast during the inauguration ceremony.

Dr. Heath started the first EMT Training Program in 1974, and after his second retirement in 1980, he helped build the fire station at Hanna Heights.

Frank and Sandra Brame lived near him and had the pleasure of spending time at his home often in the 1980s.

There are big-city medical specialists who might say that a doctor who chooses to have a family practice out on a tiny island at the remote edge of Northwest America must be in the witness protection program.  The hours are long, the weather at times cruel, and the finances aren’t rewarding.  But, those doctors work, retire and die without Dr. Heath’s legacy.

To three decades of Islanders, he was the doctor.  There are San Juan Islanders today who might not have been born but for Dr. Heath’s saving a parent’s life.

Dr. Heath’s exhibit will serve as a memory for people who knew him, and an education for those who weren’t so fortunate.  The display will remain in place for a year, beginning March 27.  The unveiling reception at 1pm is free and everyone is encouraged to attend.

Supermoon over the island….

Posted March 20, 2011 at 8:26 am by

Last night's moonrise...photo by Bob Stavers

Where were you when the moon came up? I was on the stern of the ferry coming home from Seattle last night, and it was awesome, reflecting off the water.  I really like Bob Stavers’ shot as the supermoon rose in the early evening, as the night fell.

Spring is just around the corner…

Posted March 19, 2011 at 1:57 am by

These are some daffodils I saw yesterday just round the corner at Harbor Rentals, where I took my lawn mower to get it ready for the season….beginning to look like spring around here, with equinox in a couple of days.

Sign up for naturalist training this spring!

Posted March 18, 2011 at 11:54 pm by

Here’s the scoop from The Whale Museum:

Marine Naturalist Training Program Spring 2011

Stellar sea lions....photo by Jim Maya. Take the class & you'll be able to tell folks how they got their name....

The Marine Naturalist Training Program, presented by The Whale Museum, is now accepting registrations for the spring class.  The program dates are Saturdays, April 30, May 7, 14, 21, and 28, and Sunday May 29.
The object of this program is to provide a learning experience that assists adult graduates in becoming qualified regionally as professional or volunteer naturalists.

 

The main focus of the training is the ecology, current status and conservation of Southern Resident killer whales and other local marine species as well as discussions about the environments in which they live. Continue Reading

You got that right….

Posted March 18, 2011 at 11:46 pm by

This CNN reviewer has good taste - congrats to Gretchen & the crew at Duck Soup Inn!

In this online story on CNN, about places to be sure & go to in the Seattle area, the reviewer mentions how awesome it was to eat at The Duck Soup Inn here on San Juan Island. Right here.

Scroll down the page to see what he says….

And yes, the restaurant opens again for the season on April 8th!

Island news….

Posted March 18, 2011 at 11:40 pm by

Let’s see what’s up:

Due to a 'Snow Day' on Feb. 26th - IMA will be holding another Open House / Auction Preview this Saturday, March 19th from noon - till 5pm at the IMA's new spot next to the Little Store. The auction ends this weekend, so be sure & swing by! (Check the calendar to the left for details!)

Annette & Mallory are having a garage sale today (that’s Saturday!) all day at 291 Fairway Drive off of Golf Course Road

Tyler Pruitt turned 18 yesterday!

Spring Street International School’s Maddy Hance won a multi-school spelling bee – wahoo! The sixth-grader nailed “karma” to win – here’s the rest of the story, sent to me by SSIS’ Louis O’Prussack, the head of school (thanks, Louis!)

Sam Ford is having a great time with his band as they tour the US and Canada for the next month …the band is called Wizard Rifle, and here’s an interview with them, and a review which includes a vid of one of their songs.

Here’s more from proud mom Carol:

Islander & ace drummer Sam Ford (right) and Max Dameron make up Wizard Rifle as they begin their tour this month......

Hi Ian;
Thought you might be interested in hearing that Sam and his band, Wizard Rifle, are on a month-long tour which began in Portland, down to Austin where they’ll play at the South by Southwest festival, across the south, up the east coast, into Canada, then Chicago, and back to Portland. For most of the trip they’ll be opening for a band from Norway called Arabrot. I’m attaching an interview with Sam and his bandmate Max, featured in the Oregonian last week.  I’ll also send you a review written by “Seattle Rock Guy” where you can see/hear a Wizard Rifle original, “the Organ Donor Song.”

• When you clean up this weekend, keep this in mind – here’s more from Mo:

Support Project Grad Night: Donate to Friday Harbor High School PTSA Rummage Sale!

Are you ready to do some early spring-cleaning, or looking for some good quality used items? You can do both! Help us raise funds for the Friday Harbor Class of 2011 Project Grad Night by donating toys, furniture, tools, and more. A community tradition since 2007, your donations support a healthy and safe grad night for our high school seniors.

Donations will be accepted at the Friday Harbor High School Commons on Friday 3/25 from 12-6:00. If you want us to pick up your stuff, please call Mo at 298-0489.

Nice used furniture, antiques, collectibles, tools, toys, jewelry, household and kitchen items, fabric, linens, sporting equipment, books, and quality miscellaneous goods will be happily accepted.

Sorry, we are unable to take office machines, computers, base board heaters, console TVs, electric blankets, encyclopedias, fluorescent lights or fixtures, garment or golf bags, homemade VHS movies, kerosene heaters, large appliances or exercise equipment, old paint, sinks, toilets, sofa beds, or venetian blinds.

You can attend this HUGE rummage sale, on Saturday, March 26 at the Friday Harbor High School Commons from 9 am to 1 pm.

If you leave it up to Bill & Rita Ament, there will be more dancing – here’s the scoop:

Bill and Rita Ament are excited to announce the expansion of their Dance Happy and Zumba business.

Bill will be presenting Zumba for children called Zumbatomic, a fun, Latin inspired fitness program for children ages 4-7 (L’il Starz) and 8-12 (Big Starz).

The goal of Zumbatomic is to develop a healthy lifestyle and to incorporate fitness as a natural part of children’s lives. While dancing and moving to the Latin beat and music from all over the world, children participate in classes that are designed to teach confidence, pride, memory, creativity, balance, leadership, team work and respect in a very fun-filled environment. Continue Reading

Around here….

Posted March 18, 2011 at 8:20 am by

Much of the island went green yesterday for St. Paddy's Day, including the folks at Islanders Bank - that's Amanda (her shirt says, "I'm Irish!" on the back) at the bank, ready to help you out.

Here’s what’s happening:

Build it, and they will eat (that's a quote from either "Field of Dreams" or "Field of Food," I can't remember.....)

Ryan Cole (along with Parker Satin & Cody Pierce) are going to build a community greenhouse as part of their FHHS community project – what a great idea! Here is their Facebook page about the project, and here’s more about the meeting at 3pm on Wednesday, March 23 in the high school commons:

This is an opportunity for Community Members who want to help support our youth here on the Island. We are trying to get a greenhouse built to grow fresh produce that will be sold to our High School’s Chef 1.0 program to be fed to our students here at the High School. We would love to make this happen but we need YOUR help! Please show up to this meeting for more information!

Have you gone by the Hungry Clam to see their re-decorated place? Looks good!

• Looking for music tonight? NPO (No Particular Order) is playing at Herb’s!

• There’s the Third Saturday Contra Dance at the Grange tomorrow night – get your dancin’ shoes on!

Time for a portrait of your dog or cat (or other pet!)...Alan Niles is shooting pictures today through Sunday for the Animal Shelter....

• This is a great way to help the Animal Shelter AND get a great picture of your pet (I’m taking my goldfish….)! Here’s the deal:

Calling all pets!  Animal Protection Society of Friday Harbor is hosting Alan Niles, pet photographer & 4 time winner of best in state, to create fabulous portraits of island dogs this Friday, Saturday and Sunday. There is no session fee and no obligation to purchase. Prices for photos start at $25  and part of the proceeds benefit the APS-FH.

Call Alan (360-480-5000) to sign up.  You must have an appointment.  Jaime Ellsworth has donated her studio at Market and Mullis for the event shoot and will be helping pose your furry best friends.  Come join the fun and get a great portrait and help support the cause.

 

 

Island artists in California

Posted March 17, 2011 at 7:15 am by

They're regulars at the Arts Fest - Danielle joins husband sculptor Jason Napier each year at La Quinta. Photo by Mark Gardner.

Just got this nice note from Mark Gardner about the islanders he ran into in CA, along with his cool pictures:

Hi Ian! Here’s something for the Update.  Three artists from San Juan Island are exhibiting at the LaQuinta Festival of the Arts in La Quinta, CA (Palm Springs area). Fiber artist Mary Sly, assisted by Sue Evans, won an award for best in category.  Jason & Danielle Napier displayed his bronze sculpture.  And, last but not least, Dona Reed, offered her prints and vessels. The La Quinta Festival of the Arts is among the top rated art shows in the U.S.

San Juan Islander Bob Stavers, who’s visting the area to cycle, also dropped by. BTW, the weather is perfect; it’s in the 80’s and sunny.

Mary (left) and Sue, with her colorful fabric art (drop by Island Studios in Friday Harbor to see more!) Photo by Mark Gardner

Dona is displaying her art in the festival as well! Photo by Mark Gardner

Handling it, in Japan…

Posted March 16, 2011 at 12:42 pm by

Each day, so many things come our way….but are you the boss of your own energy? Anna Kunnecke is in Japan in the middle of all that’s going on there, and her writeup about how she’s handling it moved me deeply. I’m re-printing the whole piece here…I believe it will touch you like it did me.

As I write this, I am in Tokyo.  It’s been 48 hours since the biggest earthquake that’s ever been recorded in Japan.  Ever since the sheer terror of those five minutes in which our building shook and swayed and groaned, and I didn’t know if my daughter and I would make it out alive, I have been glued to the public lens—tv, facebook, text messages, photos—with a surreal combination of horror and paralysis.  The devastation north of us is shocking.  The normalcy of Tokyo is shocking, too, except that water, rice, and batteries are disappearing from the supermarkets.  And looming over everything is the very real chance that a nuclear reactor will melt down and release unfathomably toxic substances into the air, water, and land.

I have been afraid—terrified, really—for 48 hours.

People, I am here to say, that is long enough.

Here is where my fear got me: my head aches.  My shoulders ache.  My jaw aches, from clenching it.  My breath is short and shallow.  My heart aches at every sad photograph, and my nervous system is at the mercy of every authoritarian voice broadcasting worry.

In that condition, I am no more useful to the world, my family, or myself than a very anxious marmoset.

So here is how I am changing my frequency.  If this stuff is working for me today, it will work for you too—whether you are afraid about your finances, your future, your failing left tail light, or your embarrassing flail in yesterday’s meeting.

1.   I turned off the news.  I can receive up-to-the-minute information via text, and my heart is already with those who are suffering.  When I read information, it goes to my brain and not straight to my primal fight-or-flight response.  The music and images of TV news are geared to trigger panic and an empathic flood; I’ve decided not to let myself get triggered.

2.    I cleaned my house. This grounded me, calmed me, and got me back into my body, which is a much more reliable navigation system than my shrieking reptile survival brain, what Martha Beck calls my ‘lizard.’  My lizard tells me that we are DOOOOMED.  My body tells me that we need to stretch, to sing, to self-soothe with quiet rhythms.  (Folding laundry works nicely.)

3.   I faced the worst-case scenario. My partner and I came up with a plan for what we would do if the reactor begins to spew, or if there is a serious food crisis in Tokyo, or any of the other frightening scenarios that have been haunting me.  Now that I know what I will actually do if any of those events come to pass, I can dismiss them when they clamor for my attention.  And the last line of every plan is: “And if none of that works, we wing it as well as we can.”  This is actually a pretty good plan.

4.   I questioned my scary thoughts. My underlying thought, the one that was making my heart palpitate and my fists clench, was: “We are in danger right this very second!”  I asked, “Is this true?”  And the answer is, Who the heck knows?  We could be, for sure.  But then any of us could be in danger at any minute of any day.  But what I know right now is that I am sitting in my apartment with running water, electricity, heat, and very fast internet.  My loved ones are safe.  We are getting the best information we know how to get.  So I choose to live in the blissful sense of safety that most of us inhabit when we’re not acutely aware that the sky could fall at any moment.  Believing that I am safe is no more arbitrary, at this particular moment in time, than believing that I am in danger, but it feels a lot better and it makes me more insightful, more courageous, and more wise.  It lets me think more creatively and compassionately.  And all those things, paradoxically, will work to keep me and the ones I love safe.  If I am in real physical danger, my system will flood with adrenaline and I will be able to act on the terror I’ve been feeling and suppressing these last two days.  I will run, or fight, or negotiate, or do whatever I need to do.  Until then, I choose to keep breathing deep, calming breaths (Thanks, Terry DeMeo) and asking myself, “Is that scary thought even true?”

5. I took constructive action. I made up a backpack full of emergency items and our important paperwork.  Maybe your constructive action is making a phone call or getting something checked out.  Maybe it’s opening the scary envelope or looking at your online balance.  You’ll feel better if you just do it, I promise.

6.    I let my body release. Because I was with my daughter during the most frightening part of the quake (lying on the floor of our 16th-floor apartment as it pitched and creaked like a ship in a storm), I spent significant energy holding it together for her.  We talked a bit about how scared we both were, and she seemed okay, but later she had a major sobbing meltdown about something inconsequential.  Then she was perky again.  Little kids are very wise that way.  I waited until I was alone in bed that night to sob and shudder.  With each heave of my shoulders and shuddering quaking tremble, I let some of my fear and tension release.  Animals tremble and shudder to shake off trauma; we need to do it too, even when the trauma is only visible to us.

7.   I consciously flooded myself with beauty. I listened to music that makes me want to move my body and heal the world.  For me this means Christine Kane, The Dixie Chicks, and other things too embarrassing to write here.  I also bought flowers today, a big gorgeous bouquet of them, in a flagrant act of flipping the bird at fate.  I am buoyed and nourished by their blooming faces as I make my way through my home.

8.    I grounded back into my purpose. I had a brief panic about a class I’m teaching in a few weeks, The Queen Sweep.  http://www.annakunnecke.com/the-queen-sweep.html I wondered if clearing clutter would seem frivolous in light of global tragedy.  I questioned its ultimate value in the world and the worth of the work I do.  In other words, I freaked out.  Many people are layering their immediate fear with scary thoughts like this about their future worth and their careers.  Screw that.  In a crisis like this, I’m more glad than ever that I know exactly where to find my passport; that my papers are in order and I’ve declared a guardian for my daughter; that we all have clean underwear and clean sheets to sleep on; and that my home is an oasis of calm and beauty.   Whatever the crisis, the world needs people who are sharp, who know their stuff, and know what they can contribute.  Be ready to bring what you can  to the table.

9.   I gazed at my daughter. She is so beautiful.  She is so alive through her fear, her joy, her rage, her desire—she doesn’t shut any of it down.  It’s all right there, messy and inconvenient at times, but gloriously awake.

10.   Most importantly, I remembered that I am the boss of my own energy. I kept waiting for someone to make me feel better, to reassure me, to tell me what to do.  Guess what?  No one can declare dominion over my life besides me.  I have to be the leader that I was waiting for.  Chin up, deep breath, flowers on table.  Here we go.

Anna Kunnecke

http://www.annakunnecke.com/

 

After the deluge…around the island

Posted March 16, 2011 at 11:16 am by

Ryan Browne posted this bit of verse, good for starting the day:

All now seems at work. Slugs leave their lair,
The bees are stirring, birds are on the wing,
And Winter slumbering in the open air,
Wears on his smiling face a dream of spring.
– Samuel Taylor Coleridge

Let’s look around a bit:

Zipping around....

• Sure rained a lot last night, but what a beautiful day it is today….

• They’re looking at opening up on the first: Patrick & Stella & Zip San Juan will get underway April 1 in a couple of weeks – check out their website – you’re gonna love what they’re up to!

• Sorry to hear about the passing of Andrew Henry’s Meadow author Doris “Doe” Burn last week…the longtime Waldron Island resident was an island icon, and zillions of kids grew up with her books. Here’s more about her.

Dennis & Jerry Sears at San Juan Supplements have a new program that you can use to get into a regular rhythm for getting the supplements you need – here’s more:

Hey, Ian! Here’s the info: San Juan Supplements is proud to offer a new membership program!!! For just $20 per month our customers can get:

– Sports Nutrition products and equipment at wholesale pricing. Plus the opportunity to order products that we don’t carry.
–  Special discount pricing for Vitamins, Lotions, Health Foods, and Aromatherapy.

Depending on your purchases, our membership will save you more money than you pay for it.

If you have any questions, please come in and see us or call 360-370-5570

It's all for fun: It's the Ultimate Don Juan Challenge at the Hungry Clam - on Friday the 18th at 5:30pm, you can sign up to eat the Don Juan Burger - all seven pounds of it, with fries & a shake. You eat it, you don't have to pay the $30 it costs...if you don't finish, you pay. Either way, Lisa & Stacey will pay part of the meal to charity, and you get a chance to check out how they've remodeled the place - it's looking good!

• The Blood Drive is today – drop by the Mullis Center & give! They’re in action from noon to six.

• Michelle at Animal Inn has added to the services they offer – here’s more:

Animal Inn and Wellness Center
Dog Daycare Services

Although the visiting Falcolns rolled past FHHS yesterday in soccer, courageous sophomore keeper Michael Barsamian took the ball off the foot of this breakaway South Whidbey player....

We do dog daycare the “Animal Inn Way” – bring your dogs for a day of fun while you are at work. We are centrally located on San Juan Island, only 4 miles from Friday Harbor. Indoor/outdoor runs allow safe dog interaction and rest areas, with fenced play yards allow for safe play times for small groups (2 or 3) or individual play. Leash walks across 30 acres are also available on Animal Inn property.

Current vaccinations are required – cost is $30/day includes 2 playtimes and lots of safe fun! We’re at 25 Boyce Road  – call 360-378-4735 for reservations. See us on Facebook or animalinnwellness.com.