Filed under: Political | Tags: Election, Hope, Human Rights First, Obama, Presidential Campaign
Filed under: Political | Tags: Corruption, Femicide, Juarez, Mexico, Murder, Politics, Unsettled Dust
Revisiting the Dust
I’m looking back at Juarez, and it seems overdue for an update. 2.5 years have slipped by since my time there, yet I have never left it behind. Never forgotten.
For those of you who don’t know, in 2005, I was a delegate with the Mexico Solidarity Network, joining a small group journeying to Juarez to learn about the femicide situation.
We met with lawyers, grassroots organizations, visited the prison, gravesites….
Mostly, we spent time with mothers of victims. Listening as they chronicled their unreal last weeks, months, years…. They were tired, stoic, determined, sad. They miss their girls. Many of them found their voice through the struggle; empowered by the effort.
The accounts were horrific – so much so, that I found it was hard to communicate to people. When I returned, I realized that even in the telling, it seemed the stories had to be dulled to be palatable enough for anyone to care about. No one wanted to listen to ugly truths. I guess even imagination knows pain and puts up walls.
There was hope when the presidency turned over – but as elected officials have come and gone in the past without change – so with this. 12 women were already found murdered in just the first 3 months of 2008. “12 women killed. Things don’t change,” my friend in Juarez emailed me in April. “Nevertheless, we continue putting our souls and hearts in the cause….”
My own personal testimony to the unchanging attitude came in the form of a comment I received recently on my narrative that’s posted to YouTube. I didn’t allow it to be shown. My first Death Threat.
At least I knew it was getting out there.
The issue is highlighted on the site for the International Museum of Women:
http://www.imow.org/wpp/stories/viewStory?storyId=1202
Filed under: Political | Tags: Arizona, Election, John McCain, McCain, Politics, President, Republican, Senator
Filed under: Musings, desert life, seasons | Tags: family, food, happy new year, Japan, new chapters, Philippines, tradition

Akemashita Omedetou*
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I reached out to cling to some old, ancient traditions – spanning across time and the oceans to my ancestors – from here: the Arizona desert.
Here I stand with an entire open slate of possibility before me marked by open calendar days and pages of journals yet unscribed. Looking forward while still grounding myself with pieces of our old, ancient past. Remembering having stood at these chapter markers of my past. Jumping up and down at midnight to grow tall. With grapes for bounty, noodles for long life. Omochi, Sake, Natto, Kobumaki, Kuromame, Kazunoko, Kurikinton… all kinds of osechi. Full salt and rice containers in the house. Japanese flute music in the morning, and sometimes kimonos. This has been our story. The story of generations. For my family growing up, Japan’s traditions combined with those of the Philippines.
And now, from the desert, we add American football. Ode to merging the old with the new….. It’s a beautiful journey.
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Cheers to New Beginnings. To endless Possibility, Potential, Hope, and Inspiration.
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Happy New Year Everyone!
Ahhhhh…. Beautiful fall in the Pacific Northwest. A breath of fresh air.
Crisp.
Inspiring as spring for naming new Crayola colors. Elaborate swatches of spent life. Wobbling, dancing on the wind.
Oh that we could all live, grow vibrant with age, and let go with such grace….
Filed under: Musings | Tags: bulldog, curiosity, dogs, explore, fall, seeking
There’s something fantastic about the simplicity of dog days.
For a week in Portland, I got to hang out with Oden. A bulldog. On our late-morning walks, Oden would invariably find sudden interest in that which I would otherwise pass by without a second thought. What caught him ~ a smell, a shape, movement… I can’t say. But suddenly there would be a tug on his end and he would be sniffing, prodding, sometimes tasting…. No matter how many times we would pass along the same route, there would always be so much new, giving further reason to explore and seek out what others might have left undiscovered. He was reminding me to explore-the-already-explored. I wondered on how to employ such a continuous drive-to-seek in my everyday, on the paths both known and unknown.
In the most abstract way, I would think of him later, when I listened to the biography of Einstein along my drive. Einstein simply employed Curiosity, which he deemed the greatest of his traits – to wonder upon that which everyone else simply accepted as unmarvelous and As-Is. Staring at a compass as a child changed Einstein’s life forever; wondering on the unseen forces that forced the northward pointing arrow. What other unseen forces might there be, guiding and shaping this world? He decided that it must all be explored and grappled with.
And so it was, to go for a walk with Oden. Perking our ears at the crunching leaves underfoot and the distant birdsong, pushing past the limits of leashes to give notice to the easily unnotable; to remember and sniff out the details.
Later, comfortable in being cared-for and loved-on (another beautiful quailty), Oden would tiredly snore away the afternoon, spent with the day’s investigations.


