Photographs
Insta-Hufflepuff
ImageVietnam Memorial Moving Wall
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Back in the spring, the Vietnam Memorial Moving Wall came to one of our local towns. It is a smaller, to scale version of the Memorial Wall in Washington, DC. I’ve seen the replica wall before and it is still surprising at how moving and emotional it can be to visit.
If you have the opportunity to see it in your own area, take it. It is paid for through donations, so you can pay what you can afford and take as muich time as you need for your visit.
There is an area where you can look up family members or friends who may be engraved on the wall, and you can have the opportunity to take a pencil engraving.
There is the continual hum of all of the names being read while you visit.








Birthday Pics
StandardI celebrated my birthday whenever and wherever I was able to. We did things throughout the year, and my family was very accommodating. I had a spectacular birthday due in most part to them. I look forward to the next year.

Shane’s Free Rib Giveaway. I traded my number in line for #50 for my birthday. (c)2016
50 – Happy Birthday to Me!
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(c)2016
Travel – Star Trek Original Series Set Tour, Ticonderoga, New York
StandardIt hasn’t been a week since my birthday surprise, and at times I feel as if it were just yesterday or a year ago that we took the long drive to Ticonderoga, New York to visit the Star Trek Original Series Set Tour.
It was all the more wonderful to celebrate my 50th birthday among the stars that had been in our world for those same fifty years.

I was completely speechless and wide-eyed. I had no idea that this place existed. Upon entering and checking in (we’d bought our tickets online), we were led into a large warehouse space. The modern displays and wooden walls stamped with Desilu Studios 9 were wonderfully deceiving.
Insta-Advent
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Advent at my church. Clockwise, starting at the top left: Our Advent wreath near the altar, ribbon hanging over the holy water font, holy water font, banner for the Advent season. (c)2016
Insta-Umbrella
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(c)2016
Orange Crush
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Wandering through the grocery store, I found this box of PopTarts. I immediately became melancholy thinking about.Denise and Tara, who doesn’t even know that Denise is dead. That was six episodes ago!
Anyway, I can find fandom anywhere.
Keep your eyes open and you can, too.
Reflection at St. Kateri’s Shrine
Standard[Note: This reflection ended up encompassing many things: travel, spirituality, prayer, politics, and again part of my year of mercy. I hope you enjoy all that it is, and that you see the National Shrine in Fonda, NY one day yourselves. It is a very peaceful place to visit, to sit, and to pray.]
In the early part of November, just because I was in the neighborhood, I decided to visit the Shrine of St. Kateri Tekakwitha. I had a lot on my mind and in watching what was continually unfolding at Standing Rock in North Dakota, I felt helpless towards a people that had captured my imagination and inspiration since I was a child.
I remember playing cowboys & Indians. That was a thing in the 1970s. I always wanted to be an Indian. In college I chose a class titled North American Indians as my anthropology elective. As a preschool teacher, I changed the curriculum for Thanksgiving to avoid making headdresses. I added Native foods to our school’s Thanksgiving feast. Instead of the headdresses, we made more Native American crafts and listened to the drum beats and chanting of Native American music. I can still hear the cassette in my mind as I write this.
On the hill above the Shrine, I went up to the spring, but when I followed the signs to the spring, and walked through the crunchy leaves carpeting the path, I saw the way down and the supporting handrails. I could hear the water.
But I was alone and the rest of the way was steep and I was afraid I wouldn’t be able to climb back up, so I missed the spring. I chose not to go down on the slippery leaves. I still felt okay, though, because the spring was the cherry.
At the Shrine, I stood by St. Kateri’s plaque which included the dates of her veneration and canonization. I looked out passed the sign of the cross to the rustic looking buildings to the close knit trees, their narrow trunks rising into the sun. The sun was bright that day, coming down in rays through the pines. The green grass was beginning to be covered in their shedding pine needles.
The buildings themselves were closed for the season, but you can’t close the sky or the air or the land.
I stood there and I prayed. I asked St. Kateri for her intercession for North Dakota and the Sioux and their companions and their supporters. Water protectors. An end to DAPL. An end to the violence against them by more people trying to take their land. Again.
There were water protectors in Bismarck – the citizens and politicians. Dogs weren’t sicced on them. They changed the route to the pipeline. Maybe if there were water protectors in Flint, Michigan they wouldn’t have allowed lead to be in the water.
I guess you could call this a kind of pilgrimage; with purpose and spirit. It was spontaneous and it felt right and it fit in with everything I was trying to do in this past Year of Mercy. I was guided to action, something I could actually do and my heart swelled.
I prayed for peace and I prayed for resistance and strength and the outcome that protects the land and the spirit of the land for everyone who comes after us.
At the Shrine, at the Native American Peace Grove, is the following prayer:
Speak evil of no one, if you can say no
Good of a person, then be silent.
Let not your tongues betray you into
evil. For these are words of our Creator.
Let all strive to cultivate friendship
with those who surround them.
-Handsome Lake – Iroquois Prophet

