Saturday, August 26, 2023

A summer of collywobbles

By Mary Kay Roth

I’ve been thinking lately about extra virgin olive oil.  I mean, is it really better than plain virgin olive oil?  Is there such a thing as an … extra virgin? 

And, as long as I’m wondering … 

Why does Lincoln suddenly need so many carwashes – are all our vehicles suddenly dirtier?  Is there someone with a notion of how algorithms really work?  Why doesn’t anyone under 30 ever listen to voicemail messages?  And is the sun truly the culprit in erasing Neptune’s ghostly clouds – something astronomers recently determined – when the main suspect is 2.8 billion miles away? 

Although these may sound like crazy ramblings, I believe the squirrels and bees would understand.  Every year, sometime around late August, or early September, they become completely unglued and amped up. Apparently, I do as well, my soul wigged out in a sudsy brew of unease and muddle.

Of course, as summers go, this has been stranger than most: Presidential indictments, Ukraine’s battles sadly raging on, wildfires lighting up the certainty of climate change. 

In the past few months, flesh-eating bacteria have killed people at the beach. Amateur detectives planned to convene in Scotland in serious search of the Loch Ness monster. People who testified at an official Congressional hearing on little green men – talked of recovered alien bodies and crashed extraterrestrial spaceships. And true scientists discovered a cosmic symphony of gravitational waves, reverberating through the universe, as millions of supermassive blackholes – collide. 

This kind of thing keeps me up at night.  Can I hear those gravitational waves?  And, if not in Lincoln, where can I go to hear them?

Perhaps the heat has baked my brain, but recently I am indeed sweating the small stuff.  The world simply confounds. 

I mean, come on, how does anyone get Wordle on the first try? 
How come they call those wacky shoes, crocs, and not gators?
Anybody understand all the settings on your dishwasher, your remote control?
Who decided to change the recipe for Girl Scout cookies?
Oppenheimer or Barbie?
How does anyone keep track of where you can only use cash – and where you are limited to plastic?
And, good grief, after I’ve traveled south Lincoln for more than six decades, why did they decide to blend Highway 2 with some hellacious thing called Nebraska Parkway (where I now get hopelessly lost)?

I was watching a favorite detective show last week and one episode featured a hapless fellow who suffered from something called the collywobbles.

The minute I heard that bewitching word, I knew.  Bingo.  That’s what I have. “A feeling of fear, apprehension, nervousness.”

The collywobbles are all around us.

Why, just why.
Why bitcoins?
Why cotton candy grapes?
Hot yoga? 
Leaf blowers?
Fake pockets?
SpongeBob SquarePants? 
Justin Bieber?

Why, just why … 
Do my forks disappear faster than my spoons and knives?  Why have all my wine stoppers vanished? (Ok, the plumber did discover one, plugging up my sink). 
Why are there pharmaceutical ads for medications that don’t name what they cure? 
Why are people afraid of sweet honeybees, and not terrified of melting polar ice caps? 
And why do we really need coffins?  (Think about it…)

In fact, I can’t stop thinking about it.

Of late, I’ve wondered if some wicked wizard lurks behind a curtain, making random decisions that govern our lives. 

After all, who decides that those sweet, lovely violets – are weeds?
That liquid laundry detergent is superior to powder – that manual cars need to be discontinued – that ridiculously oversized boxes are chosen for Amazon deliveries – that painting over brick is a good thing?
And who decides we must declare bankruptcy to buy printer ink these days? 

Really, does anyone ever get fitted sheets – to fit? 
Why is a small cup of coffee no longer called “small?” And what is the purpose of super-sized beverages, especially when they won’t fit in your car’s beverage holder?
Historical fiction, why? Gotta be history or fiction, choose one.
How come the street I live on – Woods Avenue – is located between L and M streets?

In fact, I know there are actual answers to many of these questions.  But frankly you don’t need to share. I think I prefer to … let the mystery be.

For instance, is all gasoline secretly contained in the same tank underneath the ground (because when I see supply trucks at the service station, I swear I only see one hose)? 
Who conducted research that found people are taller in the morning than at night? 
Why do they make it impossible to pry open cottage cheese, juice boxes and every child’s toy? (There’s actually a term, called “wrap rage” for those desperate souls who turn to razor blades, boxcutters, egads, ice picks.)

And … aren’t the eyes on Black-eyed Susans – closer to brown?
Is there anyone left un-murdered in the tiny villages where TV murder mysteries take place (St. Mary Mead, Grantchester, Midsomer County, Brokenwood)?
And why on earth do 70 percent of my fellow citizens prefer toilet paper “over,” when clearly it is meant to go “under?”

Now, in truth, I’m a glass-is-half-full kind of gal.  So, it’s a fair question to ask: “Mary, is there anything in the world that doesn’t confound you?”  

Well, a daisy doesn’t confound me, a daisy is pretty darn perfect.
A rocking chair is perfect.
Fresh corn on the cob.
A baseball cap. 
Birdsong. Moonlight.
Redwoods as the snow falls.  The first blush of crocus in the spring.
Live music – outdoors – at night under the stars.
A book. A dog. A spider web. A grandchild.
Twilight.  Sunrise.

And autumn is perfect, a much more reasonable season.  

Autumn waits for us, patiently, gently tendering an uncomplicated time of year, a time of golden leaves, sweatshirts and heading for apples in Nebraska City … on Highway 2 … where I inevitably will get lost.









Sunday, August 13, 2023

It's Because You Care...



by Mary Reiman

To those of you who won’t get enough sleep tonight....

It’s because you care. 

Some students are thrilled that tomorrow is the first day of school in Lincoln Public Schools. Some are not. A new school year brings about all kinds of feelings and emotions.

If you are a parent like my mom, the first day of school is the hardest day of the year. Mom always said she hated to watch us get on the school bus that first day. She liked having us home all summer...who knows why! 


For many, the first day of school also brings a photo moment. So many pictures posted on Facebook! Photos have been a great way to document fashion trends throughout the years. What was your favorite first day haircut/outfit? 

And school supplies! They are everywhere. In every store, in every aisle. Oh how I wished for a box of 64 crayons. What I would have given for magenta, cerulean, bittersweet and azure. It took every ounce of restraint yesterday at the grocery store to not buy a giant box of 120. Imagine all the color names in that box! 

Today, we celebrate students and teachers. We celebrate learning. 

Administrators, teachers and many staff play a role in designing a successful first day of school...with the plan to keep everything running smoothly EVERY day until the end of the school year.

There may be new textbooks that has never been opened. Maybe new laptops. Definitely clean whiteboards and shiny floors. Breakfast for some and lunch for many. Signage to welcome everyone.

And I would like to tell you that when students walk into their classrooms tomorrow, those spaces will have been magically organized to prepare for a room full of energy. However, do not for a moment think it was magical pixie dust that created those sparkling classrooms. 

Yes, it takes more time than you would think to get ready for the first day....

* Take out the old textbooks, unbox and check in the new...and then learn the new curriculum.

* Number laptops and organize with color coded cords for recharging each night, and learn any new technology that will be used this year.

* Arrange desks and tables with names and learning materials in place.

* Create new bulletin boards for the hallway as well as the classrooms.

* Attend meetings, workshops and staff development, to learn new policies and procedures.

Being a new teacher in a building adds another layer of what you need to learn by the first day.

Moving to a new classroom means more packing and un-packing. 

Those are just a few of the things that teachers and staff and administrators have been doing this summer. The list is long. 

To those I know most dearly, and to those I have not had the opportunity to meet, know how much I appreciate you. Thank you, thank you, thank you for being there. For showing up. For caring. For teaching. 

I wish you a 2023-2024 school year filled with engaged learners,
classrooms full of joyful minds, with enough laughter to complete each day with a happy heart.  

Sleep well tonight.  You are ready.






Sunday, August 6, 2023

The Case Against Travel?



By JoAnne Young


We all are travelers of one kind or another. 

 

Not just we humans but also those migrating birds and mountain lions, sea turtles and whales, caribou and monarch butterflies.

 

One human named Agnes Callard, a 47-year-old with a PhD in philosophy, has riled some travelers with an essay titled The Case Against Travel, published in June in the New Yorker magazine. 

 

She quotes other writers, travel contrarians such as Ralph Waldo Emerson, Socrates and G.K. Chesterton, who disparage travel as narrowing the mind, as having a dehumanizing effect, and worse, as being only for those with such poverty of the imagination that they have to move around to feel. 

 

She calls much of what travelers do, such as flying to Paris, going to the Louvre and standing 15 feet in front of the Mona Lisa for about 15 seconds, nothing more than "locomotion."

She argues that more than wanting to experience something new, travelers want to be seen experiencing something new. 

 

If I am interpreting her and the other writers she uses to prove her point correctly, she seems to be saying that travelers seek to be enlightened, to do some human bonding with those who they consider as the "others." Instead, they end up not bonding but relating to them only as spectators. 

 

They view them in the abstract. In reality, the human bond they are seeking is right there at home, in feeling the presence of those “others” nearby who they traveled so far to see. 

 

When your friends return from their summer adventures, she says, they may speak of their travel as being transformative, but will you be able to detect a difference in their behavior, their beliefs, their moral compass? Any difference at all? 

 

As much as we may want to beg to differ with Ms. Callard, her essay was thought provoking. Many of my family and friends are hardier travelers than I am, but I can count among my travels and visits and temporary living spaces a good number of locations both in this country and a few others. 

 

I am thinking about my own reasons for travel: To break out of the confines of everyday life; to explore the origins of our American culture and that of others; to experience new influences and get a view of how people become who they are. 

 

I have learned a lot about other states and their residents by spending a few hours at their Capitols, looking at the architecture of those buildings, the art they treasure, the words they display. When I can, I spend a few minutes talking to a senator, a reporter, a lobbyist or just a wanderer. Then I go to a nearby restaurant and sample its food and décor, and listen to what wait staff can tell me about life there. 

 

For me, the good that has come from travel are those standout moments I bring home in my head. They're implanted there as some bit of pleasure or peace or amusement, crafted by the feelings and experiences that have already made themselves at home. 

 

A few of those moments are these: 

 

* Kneeling in the water at low tide on Cannon Beach in Oregon on an overcast afternoon to glimpse the large pink and smaller orange sea stars clinging to the underside of large rocks with just one arm visible. It’s a sighting I had never seen before or since, and I got to share it with my daughter. 


 * Walking through Juneau, Alaska, and stopping to talk to a man with a ruddy face and a seafarer’s cap, his grandson on his shoulders. They had just sailed up the coast from California to this place that is only accessible by boat or sea plane because of the rugged terrain which surrounds it.

 

* Exploring the house of Emily Dickinson in Amherst, Massachusetts, peeking into a drawer in her bedroom where she stashed her poems, many of them rejected by publishers until after her death. Seeing where she wrote, where she walked, and setting a token on her gravestone in a nearby cemetery as many other devotees had done. 

 

* Sitting in Farrell’s Bar & Grill in Brooklyn with a brother-in-law who grew up in the area, and who told us stories about going into the bar as a child to fetch his grandfather because women were not allowed to darken its door at the time. And hearing fascinating tales of a firefighter who worked in Manhattan on Sept. 11, 2001, and was thought to have died until several days later he walked back into the bar to the cheers and tears of the regulars.  

 

* Walking the several blocks where George Floyd was murdered by a Minneapolis police officer and his colleagues and which has now become a memorial to the black Americans who have been killed across our country by law enforcement officers whose job it is, rather, to protect and serve. 

 

We all have our memories and moments. Travel may be a status symbol for some, or a notch in a globetrotting belt, but for most of us it is memories of sights and sounds that we have long wanted to experience for ourselves. Those visits make our daydreams and thoughts come to life. 

 

Mostly I travel for inspiration. Different sights and scenery make my wheels turn counterclockwise and ideas just spring forth. I visit as many bookstores as I can to see what the local writers are publishing and what the booksellers can recommend as “must-sees” in town. 

 


One of my favorite quirky books was found in Minneapolis, a city with some of the best bookstores I’ve encountered. Things That Are by Amy Leach. I love this book. 

 

“‘We are Trappists like the creek,’ thought the raindrops as they filled the pond with fresh cloud water, or mixed with the juice of a fallen cherry, or came to rest deep in the dirt, and everywhere neglected to introduce themselves.’” 

 

So thank you to Agnes Callard for sending me on a thinking tour of my travels, and my reasons for doing so. I wish it were possible to hear about the travel adventures of sea turtles and mountain lions and butterflies. 

 

It’s not. So I will be content to hear about yours. 


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