Connecticut

Post posts about what is happening in the State of Connecticut.

#ff @MiddnightOnMain @InnatMiddletown @jenfromkidcity @MattJPugliese @Oddfellowsplay @SteveSongs @slambovia @JohnWhelanMusic

This week's Follow Friday List is focused on Middnight On Main, a New Year's Eve celebration in Middletown, CT. I've been working a lot with Middnight on Main and want to highlight some of the other folks involved.

The @InnatMiddletown is where many people that are coming a long distance for Middnight on Main will be staying. @JenfromKidCity is one of the people who helped organize Middnight on Main and has been on various radio and television shows talking about the events.

Joining Jen on some of these broadcasts has been @MattJPugliese who heads up @Oddfellowplay Both KidsCity and Oddfellows Playhouse are important venues in Middnight on Main.

One of the performers that will appeal greatly to the younger set is @SteveStongs. Steve performs on PBS as has quite a following. Gandalf Murphy (@slambovia) is another group with a large following. I've often heard them at the Falcon Ridge Folk Festival.

Rounding out the list is @JohnWhelanMusic who performs Irish music and Catie Talarski (@scuttlebuttt) from WNPR who will be hosting the Radio Adventure Theatre.

A lot of great things to listen to and do at Middnight on Main, and I didn't even mention the food….

R.I.P. Rich Sivel

The last time I saw Richard was Detroit in '68
And he told me all romantics meet the same fate...

I sat on a wooden pew in the Hartford Quaker Meeting House. The windows were clear glass and the light illuminated a simple room with white walls and a white ceiling. A little wood work and some light grey curtains did not take away from the simplicity. A fire crackled in a fireplace at the front of the hall as people slowly trickled in.

By my guess, the room could probably hold around 125 people. The space would not be large enough to hold "eight hundred and sixty-two members of the Amalgamated Clothing Workers and Cloth, Hat and Cap Makers' Union", but it needed to find room for Friends from the Quaker Meeting House, Brothers and Sisters from the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees Council 4, as well as assorted other friends, family and few progressives of Rich Sivel.

The participants were welcomed and the structure of the meeting was explained. People would speak, as they felt led, and time should be left between comments to ponder what had been said. Neither Kim nor I had been to a Quaker service before, so we sat quietly, waiting.

Yet one of my keen interests has been Group Relations, a school of psychoanalytic thought applied to organizations, growing out of the work of Wilfred Bion and John Rickman. Rickman had been born into a Quaker family, and I found the quite sitting of the memorial service strongly reminiscent of my experiences as Group Relations conferences.

Besides the crackle of the fire, there was assorted coughing, perhaps due in part to the respiratory ailments one often finds in New England winters and perhaps due in part to people sitting uncomfortably with silence at a memorial. This was compounded by the occasional rustling of papers and babies crying at one end or the room or another.

As I sat there, I thought about what I would write in my blog, and whether or not I would have anything to say. It seems strange to blog memorial services, but it seems like many good friends have died and that it is important for me to write my remembrances.

I didn't know Rich all that well, but we had many common interests, particularly around communications about progressive causes. Checking on Facebook, I find one message from Rich:

It was good to see you the other night at Common Cause!

Are you interested in doing some live blogging from the Wesleyan Anti-war conference on 4/12? And/or perhaps interviewing former Brig. General Janis Karpinski, who will be the keynote speaker, to generate some advance publicity?

With that, it only seems appropriate that I blog about his memorial service.

Eventually, close friends of Rich started speaking. They told stories of his great smile, his fierce pacifism, is intellectual brilliance, his love of his family, and his heart. It was his heart that failed him and took him too early from us.

The service ended with everyone signing "When I'm Gone" by Phil Ochs; "So I guess I'll have to do it while I'm here", and we headed downstairs.

It was the typical reception after a memorial service, though it reflected some of Rich's influence. I spoke with labor organizers and peace activists; friends I had met through various political campaigns. I spoke with a couple noted politicians about their current or potentially upcoming coming campaigns. Yeah, it seemed an appropriate homage to Rich, "So I guess I'll have to do it while I'm here".

Memorial services can be sad, dreary events, and everyone I know is deeply saddened by Rich's death. Yet there was an undercurrent of hope, as people spoke about troops leaving Iraq, the occupy movement, and social justice.

There was the story of Rich's new grandchild playing the role of the infant Jesus in the Christmas pageant and is eager awaiting for the arrival of the infant. There was the story of the close friend who saw a hawk the day Rich died and felt a sense of the closeness of Rich's spirit.

At the Christmas Eve service I attended, there was the story of the struggling monastery that became revitalized when they were told that the Messiah was amongst them, and they started looking for signs of the Messiah in the people around them. Whether we are looking for signs of The Prince of Peace amongst us, or signs of a great man who worked hard for peace, we would all be better off if we could find more signs of such spirits amongst us.

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The Church Christmas Pageant

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Joe's Ghost

It was the holiday party for the staff of the Town of Woodbridge, along with board and committee members. Seventy or eighty people gathered in a small Italian Restaurant down in the flats. They had their cocktails, ate their appetizers and main courses and chatted. In the background there was music; a lot of it from a generation ago.

I sat with my wife, whose grandparents had lived for many years in Woodbridge. Her grandfather had done a lot of stuff for the town; I think it was in public works and as part of the volunteer fire department. Some of the folks there remembered Joe. They talked fondly of the great work he did and how he treated everyone with respect.

Kim commented about how some of the music include songs her grandfather would sing to her and about how he most be pleased to have old friends telling kind stories about him to his grand daughter and her husband who are now both on town commissions.

Joe had lived near the golf course and had sledded on the hills when he was young. Now, people were talking about the referendum and what would happen next to the golf course.

Kim had to leave early to pick up Fiona and I quickly followed suit. I need to be up early tomorrow. I don't know if anyone got up to say kind words to all the people that help make the town run as smoothy as it does, both the employees as well as people serving on boards and commissions.

Yet they should be praised, for it carries with it an echo of old New England Towns where people worked hard together to make sure everything ran smoothly and everyone was properly cared for. It was an echo of a New England town where my wife's grandfather did his tasks to make a mark, and where everyone can follow in his footsteps.

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Referendum Recap

This evening I had a committee meeting in Orange, so I rushed home, let the dog out, ran to the committee meeting, and left in time for the referendum results at the Woodbridge Center. Many of the usual suspects were there to watch the results, about 30 in all. A couple represented local news organizations and the Bethwood Patch and the Milford Orange Bulletin both have stories up about the results already. The reading of the results was recorded for WGATV79.

The referendum was clearly defeated, 588 votes for, 1190 votes against. I tweeted the results from the gymnasium. Then I chatted with various people about what comes next. As best as I can tell, a new committee will investigate different options and the process is likely to continue for a while.

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