Personal

Personal reflections, comments about things I've been doing, etc.

Cousins



Rae, Fiona and Sarah, originally uploaded by Aldon.

A few years ago, we were heading up to a family reunion. As we explained the purpose of our trip to Fiona, she asked, “Who died?” Our extended family gathers too rarely, and typically only at funerals, which over the past few years have been a bit too frequent. We told this story at our most recent family reunion, the wake and funeral for my Uncle Fred.

Fiona is getting older now, and she understands these events better. She went over and gave Uncle Fred’s oldest granddaughter a great big hug saying it looked like she needed one. Fiona understands very well the importance of grandparents in people’s lives.

Later, at my cousin’s house, she came to understand that this was a cousin she had hugged. In this case, a second cousin, a nuance few understand or really care all that much about. For Fiona, what mattered is that she found new cousins to play with, and there are few things as important to her as playing with her cousins.

Everyone seemed to have a good time, and it made me think a bit more about the family dynamics. I’ve always felt a little awkward and out of place at our family gatherings. My mother was the youngest of seven children, and I was her next to youngest child. This meant that all of my cousins on my mother’s side were older than me, and I always felt like my older cousins viewed me as either a toy or an annoyance. Neither role was one that I particularly enjoyed.

This time, however, things felt different. We talked about what a hard year 2007 had been for so many of us. We laughed about cellphones that had been dropped in chicken soup, we talked about healthcare and politics, and as Fiona played on the couch with her cousins, we were all family.

I will miss Uncle Fred, though probably not as much as his children and grandchildren will. I thought of the great line from John Donne.

any man's death diminishes me, because I am involved in mankind, and therefore never send to know for whom the bell tolls; it tolls for thee.

All of us are diminished by the passing of Uncle Fred. Yet as I listened to his granddaughter talk about how much he will be missed, I reflected on how we all carry part of Uncle Fred with us. For Rae, Uncle Fred was that part of the family where there was always compassion, forgiveness, a caring hand to help, and a smile to laugh. We all need people like that in our lives.

So, what I take away from this funeral is that while I can never become the father or grandfather to my cousins that they have lost in the passing of Fred, I can at least try to bring some of his compassion, forgiveness, caring and laughter to them, and to everyone I meet. We can all do that, and take the tolling of the bell of sadness and transform it to peals of joy. I will do my part, will you do yours?

So, Fiona will enjoy playing with her cousins, and to these cousins, I say, “I am here to help in whatever way I can.’

Rest in Peace, Uncle Fred.

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Agenda

Thursday, January 3rd, 2008. Today was supposed to be the big demonstration in Uhuru Park in Nairobi Kenya. I wasn’t planning on attending, but I was hoping, that if I could find time between this event and that to write up more about what is going on in Kenya. I checked the usual Kenyan blogs this morning, and didn’t find any news. However, according to Bloomberg the Associated Press is reporting the rally is cancelled, and Agence-France Presse is reporting that it is postponed to January 8th. The Washington Post, the LA Times and Voice of America are all reporting that Kenyan Riot police fired tear gas on supporters of the opposition party and William Ruto, a top official with presidential candidate Raila Odinga's party, has called on supporters to peacefully disperse. I find it interesting to note that the demonstrations had been scheduled to take place on the day of the Iowa caucuses. They have now been postponed to the day of the New Hampshire primary.

I also hope to get some time to write about the Iowa caucuses. I am an Edwards’ supporter and I hope to see Sen. Edwards do well in Iowa this evening. As I find time, I hope to write about this. Tomorrow, we will head up to campaign in New Hampshire through the primary. I am unlikely to be responding to most email between now and after the primary. Depending on my schedule, I would love to get up there in time to greet Sen. Edwards plane as he arrives from Iowa. I’m just not sure there are enough hours in the day.

Also, this evening at 9 PM Eastern, George Lakoff will be appearing on Virtually Speaking, a progressive show broadcast from Second Life. Next week, Ned Lamont will be on the show and I hope to attend tonight as well as help build crowds for both tonight and next week.

However, the top concern for me today is my uncle’s funeral. I will try to write a blog post about the wake yesterday before hitting the road, but I need to leave fairly soon, so I’m not sure I’ll get it done.

Stay tuned!

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New Year's Resolutions

Rabbit, Rabbit, Rabbit, a new month begins. Happy New Year, 2008 begins. I haven’t come up with any New Year’s resolutions yet this year, everything seems way too uncertain at this point. I wrote 572 blog posts last year. Some of the NaBloPoMo are talking about trying to write a blog post every day for the whole year. Should I resolve to write at least one blog post every day? Two? Where would vacation fit in? What would happen if I get a job that takes me away from writing. I wrote over 270,000 words in blog entries last year. If I sought to write a novel’s worth of blog posts each month, that would be 600,000 words. That seems excessive.

Beyond that, there is the question of “to what end”? For some reason the old joke about women grousing at a restaurant comes to mind. One complains about the food not being very good, and the other concurs and adds that the servings are too small as well. Do I need to write more? Do I need to write better? Do I need something different?

The old saying insanity is doing the same thing over and over again, and expecting different results. Is writing this blog insanity?

Perhaps not. From a NaNoWriMo perspective, there is the aspect of simply writing everyday, the importance of discipline. There is a discipline to my writing, and it has been becoming more disciplined over time. Then, there is the aspect of a favorite word of mine, palimpsest. The words pile up, to provide a palimpsest of a digital social political life. Where it goes, I’m not sure. Will any great insights emerge? I don’t know.

I read the political blogs, I read the technology blogs. I read books I received for Christmas, William Blake, Jean Baudrillard, and Rudy Rucker. How does all of this weave together? I don’t know.

Then, there are the greater questions. What are the parallel processes taking place between my family life, the mailing lists that I’m on, blogging communities that I’m part of, and our nation and the world? Is there some sort of master narrative that can be found? Where do dreams and ideas like Social Dreaming fit in?

Perhaps that is some of the core angst that I face. As I look at 2008, it appears as a blank page, the blank page that terrifies so many writers. There is no clear master narrative at this point. I have no resolutions, other that to persevere, or, as a philosophy professor once suggested, to live each moment more fully and more lovingly than the previous.

Yet perhaps, that is the best that any of us can do.

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Chasing After the Wind

2007, the year that wasn’t. At least it feels, in many ways, that way to me. I’ve gone back and looked at the year. I wrote over 4,500 emails during 2007. I wrote 572 blog posts, totaling over 270,000 words. Over 2,000 people a month read something out of my blog.

I wrote my first draft of my first novel, adding another 50,000 words to the total. I went to Washington to blog about the Libby trial. I wrote extensively about the Avery Doninger trial. I went to the National Conference of State Legislatures and wrote about their annual conference. I wrote about various marketing conferences. I wrote about Second Life, and especially the developing financial markets.

Yet in the end, I find myself in a small rented house on the verge of bankruptcy without having made any discernable difference during 2007. The words of the prophet comes back to me, “I have seen all the things that are done under the sun; all of them are meaningless, a chasing after the wind.”

I know I’ve written other posts recently that are not all that upbeat. I don’t want to drive people away by being a downer. Nor, am I looking for sympathy. Yet I also feel that I should write about things as I see them and I can’t seem to find my rose colored glasses right now.

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RIP Fred Lemieux

Fred Lemieux was my uncle. This morning, I got a phone call from my mother. Uncle Fred has died. Uncle Fred was my mother’s sister’s husband. I’m not sure how old he was, but I’m going to guess he was in his 80s. My understanding is that both he and my Aunt Susie have been fairly ill, so this didn’t come as a great surprise. The wake will be Wednesday and the funeral Thursday. I’ve spent some time figuring out my travel plans. It isn’t all that far from where we live, but I have to figure out how to juggle everyone’s schedule.

When I was young, we would see Fred and Susie and their kids a few times a year. My mother was the youngest of seven kids. Susie was the next youngest, so Fred and Susie and their family had the cousins that we closest in age. When my grandparents grew too old to live by themselves, they moved in with Fred and Susie. My memories of the visits are vague. There was a mulberry tree and we would eat mulberries. There were large bamboo stocks. They lived on a long road and we would walk or ride bikes. There was an old house behind the main house which is where my grandparents initially lived when they moved down there. Later, they moved into the main house as their health declined.

I remember that the TV was usually on in one room or another, that many of my relatives smoked and that there was an endless supply of food. I believe it has been thirty years since my grandparents died, one soon after the other and I can’t remember the last time I was at Fred and Susie’s.

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