DAY 5 OF GISHWHES

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Well, we are currently passed the halfway mark for this week of crazy.

On Tuesday, I told someone to have a nice weekend. Time has become irrelevant.

There are 156 items to complete.

So far, I have completed seven out of eleven tasks that I’ve volunteered for, although one of those is a team task/item.

Tomorrow, I should be able to complete two more, and start on my last item, which is a letter to a soldier in the Middle East. This last task/item is being coordinated through Random Acts, so I would encourage all of you to go over there and read about a soldier and his family and how to change a life. Help if you can. You might like to click through to some of their other activities that are looking for assistance at the moment.

 

There are several Guinness Book World Records attempting to be broken during this year’s GISHWHES. One is the largest online photojournal of hugs. Another is a gathering at this moment in a park in Vancouver (unfortunately our team couldn’t get anyone up there to participate). Participating in the scavenger hunt itself is part of a world record that they hold and are hoping to break this year, not to mention the amount of random acts of kindness pledges.

For many, there are small groups working together, but for me, I’m doing most of the tasks alone, recruiting my family to do crazy things like getting my kids dress up like postal workers, pay homage to shrines and for me, wear sock monkey apparel. There are twitter alarm clocks that spent one day making Star Trek’s William Shatner a little nutty and very, very snarky.

I am enjoying every minute of it and hope to do even more next year. I was worried about not knowing anyone on my team except for one person I’ve met online, but it’s been good. We’ve been communicating through Facebook, and it seems as though we’ve each taken on what we do best. No one’s fought over wanting the same item to do, and it is a good practice for real world things like doing things we might not normally volunteer for, working as a team, coping with social anxiety, using various media and so many other valuable things that I can’t possibly think of in the middle of it.

We’re cheering for other teams and helping where we can. I agreed to let my son give blood for his team because he needed a parent’s permission. The greater good is more important than the competition. I would encourage everyone to visit GISHWHES and see the video for last year’s hunt.

It’s exciting to be part of something so large, but also done on such a small group scale and it is that paradox (and half a dozen others) that make what seems like a crazy idea into a world-changing, world-building, individual-changing, individual-building adventure, and I look forward to being able to think straight again and share it all with you!

 

GISHWHES

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Beginning on Sunday, August 11th and going through August 18th, I will be participating in GISHWHES, the acronym for the Greatest International Scavenger Hunt the World Has Ever Seen. (https://www.gishwhes.com/what_is_gishwhes.php). It has broken three Guinness Book of World Records and I would expect it to do so again.

The teams are comprised of 15 members from all around the world, although in my case it’s more transcontinental. We can’t talk about our members (so I’m told) and I can’t share our accomplishments/activities/crazy off the Gishwhes website (so I’m told) until it’s concluded on the 18th.

I may pop in here to share some of my feelings and thoughts on what I’m doing during the week, but not what I’m doing during the week. Make sense?

I’m excited to be participating; this is my first year. My son is on another team (after refusing to join me, but you know, peer pressure) and my best friend is on another team which had no room for me. *frowny face*

The Hunt is run by Misha Collins, one of the stars of Supernatural, who really tries to only use his power for good. In addition to GISHWHES, check out his charity Random Acts. They do great things for people who need great things done for them. They also promote the random act of kindness that anyone can do for free.

The Grave Site of President Chester A. Arthur

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I recently took a drive out to the Albany Rural Cemetery outside of the New York State capital of Albany to visit the gravesite of President Chester A. Arthur, the 21st President of the United States. The cemetery is much larger than it appears upon driving through the gates. I’m told that the cemetery itself is 400 acres and I found it to be one of the more peaceful  places I’ve been to. It is spaced in a rolling way with hills and winding dirt/gravel narrow roads, large and small headstones and monuments, mid-19th century (some from before that had been moved there) to modern era as well as above ground burial areas. There is an abundance of nature with trees and creeks with natural stone walls, deep wooded areas and cool shaded spaces with benches and statuary. It felt a bit like some of the Gettysburg cemeteries for anyone that’s visited them, but I only felt the peacefulness rather than the spirits and ghost-like feelings reaching out that I feel in the Battlefields and Cemeteries of Gettysburg.

This cemetery began with 100 acres in 1841, and had its first burial in 1845, although some graves are from before that having moved from their original site at Washington Park. It is an active cemetery, and other than very famous names, I recognized my former Congressman’s father.

When I arrived at the President’s grave site, there was a groundskeeper trimming the grass. He chuckled and said to me, “My boss was right. Always weed whack over here first.” He then moved off so that I could get pictures. For all of the visitors you would think they get, there are no signs pointing the way. I did see one about the size of an interstate shield sign, but other than that, nothing. I ran into a jogger with her dog, and I asked her for directions to the President. She was not surprised that I could not find it on my own.

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Below is the Arthur family plot.

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Behind the monument with the angel and Presidential Seal is the actual grave where President Arthur is buried alongside his wife.

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It took me three tries to get the flag to wave just right behind the angel’s wings.

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I also have an affinity for taking pictures of things with a tree in the foreground.

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Some more photos from my day. The next two were where I happened upon the jogger. I saw a stone wall and flowing water and I needed to stop and get out of my car. I was really glad I did.

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This stone was under a copse of trees. There’s a stone wall layered behind it, the topiary plus a few statuary pieces. This person really liked frogs apparently. The bench right across from this has that little stone path and is under its own tree; it is also missing the seat. I can imagine that this person’s spouse or parent would come to sit and visit. Sometimes, I wish that there was a bench by my parents’ graves; something that my mother wanted to put in had she lived longer to visit my Dad.

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These last two are good examples of unexpected angles. Stand in just the right spot and it gives way to gobs of creativity and writing prompts. There is so much in the simplest photograph.

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