Connecticut
Where do we go from here?
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Thu, 07/10/2008 - 09:22As I reflect on my birthday yesterday, the lyrics from one of the songs in the Buffy the Vampire Slayer Musical comes to mind, “Where do we go from here?” Fiona loves that musical.
Yesterday was a wonderful day. I really appreciate the great messages I received from friends on so many social networks. Some people found it was my birthday from notices that these social networks sent out. Others saw from my post sent from ping.fm to many different networks that I’m part of. Ping.fm has really helped me stay up to date on many of these networks.
But, back to Buffy. Where do we go from here? Today, I’m going to Hartford to hear Sen. Edwards speak about his Half in Ten effort. The goal of Half in Ten is to cut poverty in the United States in half in ten years.
Hartford Press Conference with Senator John Edwards
Thursday 7/10, 11:45 AM
Boys and Girls Club
1 Nahum Drive, Hartford
Later, Sen. Edwards will be speaking in Bridgeport. However, I’ll probably not make it to that event.
Bridgeport Rally with Senator John Edwards
Thursday 7/10, 2:00 PM
Steel Point
East Main Street and Stratford Ave, Bridgeport
Friday, hopefully, will be a day of recuperation, catching up and then packing for vacation. On Saturday, we will drive up to Springfield in a circuitous route to our vacation on Cape Cod. Our first stop will be Memorial Service for Lori.
Because of this, we will not be able to make it to the Open House at www.alpacahillfarm.com. This is the Alpaca farm in Seymour, CT that I’ve written about in the past. They have two, by now, probably three new baby alpacas. The open house will be from 10 AM until 4 PM, 8 Willow Street, Seymour, CT 06483. We will find some other opportunity to see the alpacas. However, if you are anywhere near Seymour, I would encourage you to attend.
Another event that I’ll have to miss, but wanted to comment on is the Mark Warner fundraiser in Old Saybrook on Sunday. Mark Warner is former Governor of Virginia and is currently running for U.S. Senate. The fundraising luncheon will take place on a yacht in Old Saybrook. The honorary chairs of the event are Sen. Dodd, Sen. Lieberman, and Rep. Courtney. Guests are asked to contribute $1,000.
While I have a lot of respect for Gov. Warner, I don’t have that sort of money, nor do I have any interest in contributing it at a fundraiser where Sen. Lieberman is one of the honorary chairs. Oh well. I wish Gov. Warner luck anyway.
As we camp on the Cape, I will have limited Internet access. We’ll see how often I get on during the week. However, I should note that on Wednesday, July 16th, we will be going to a concert by Stage Door Canteen. It will take place at the Eastham Windmill Green, Rte 6A, Eastham MA. It is part of the Cape Cod Arts Foundation Music in The Parks Concert Series. My online social media friend, Beth Dunn works for the Cape Cod Arts Foundation and I hope to run into her at the concert.
I would love to write more about all of this, detailed thank you letters to everyone who wished me well on my birthday, and so on, but I need to hit the road to get up and see Sen. Edwards.
The 2008 Democratic National Platform
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Tue, 07/08/2008 - 21:19Four years ago, today, I uploaded to a site that I was running, a draft copy of the 2004 Democratic National Platform. You can find a copy of my blog post, with links to the draft in archive.org.
A few weeks earlier, I had written an introduction to the website (archive) where I said,
The purpose of the site is to promote open dialog about the platform, the process, and all aspects of the convention. . . . you can click on Platform Committee to get a listing of members of the platform committee. There is information on the state they are from and whom they are pledged to. You can find everyone from a given state or pledge to a specific candidate, by clicking on the state or candidate name below each entry.
As platform planks become available, you will be able to view the planks, as well as provide comments and the planks.
All of this led up to the Platform Committee meeting in Florida on July 10th. Many of us used the site to share ideas, to find platform committee members to lobby, and to report of the successes in adjusting the platform.
In particular, Marla Camp wrote about being a member of the platform committee and some of the efforts behind the scenes to get a more progressive platform. (see archive). I had met Marla through the Dean campaign. She spent a bit of time talking with Charles Lenchner, whom I believe had been coordinating the platform activities for the Kucinich, and talks a bit about her experiences on the now archived blog.
This year, hopefully, will be a bit different. Today, I received an email from Sen. Obama, sent out on behalf of the DNC which starts,
Every four years, the Democratic Party assembles a platform that outlines the party's position on a number of issues.
Traditionally, the drafting of the platform is not open to ordinary people.
This year, that's going to change.
For two weeks in July, people all across America will hold Platform Meetings in their own communities to discuss the issues and share their input. The outcome of these meetings will be reviewed by the Drafting Committee as it creates the final Platform.
This is a step in the right direction. Exactly what ‘reviewed’ means is a little ambiguous and disconcerting and I would love to see this taken much further. Will the DNC publish the list of Platform Committee Members and encourage people to contact those members? Will drafts of the platform be available online to look at and discuss? Will people be able to see suggestions from other supporters and discuss those suggestions?
The Obama campaign has set up a site to organize community meetings to discussion the platform. It includes a link to the 2004 platform. Organizing a community meeting to discuss the platform is a great first step, and I hope many of you do this.
Clarence and Lori : Foreclosure, Bankruptcy, and Suicide
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Tue, 07/08/2008 - 09:08Regular readers of my blog will know that it is named after the house that I lost in foreclosure a few months ago. This past week brought the next step in the saga. We met with our lawyer to finalize our Chapter 7 bankruptcy filing.
There is sadness. I have lost something I loved. There is shame and guilt. I grew up always avoiding debt and repaying those that I had. In addition it isn’t just big evil corporations that are affected by my bankruptcy. There are small business that I am friends with the proprietors that I cannot pay back. Then, there are my children. I cannot give them everything I want to. It is easy to see how this can be very depressing.
Lightning hits Transformer in Harwinton
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Sun, 06/29/2008 - 19:51Sunday afternoon, I drove up to a graduation party for Avery Doninger, the young blogger who was disciplined for her criticism of the school administration at Lewis Mills High School in Burlington, CT. On the drive up, my daughter and I saw lightning hit a transformer, and we captured various parts of this trip with pictures, videos and audio messages from my cellphone.
Leaving from Woodbridge, it was a sunny, pleasant day. We drove up Route 8. After passing Waterbury, we saw large storm clouds gathering in the west. I was struck by how picturesque they were, so I took two photographs.
I also recorded this message on Utterz:
I noted the ominous feeling of the coming storm, without knowing what I was really about to encounter.
As we approached the Harwinton exit, the rain started coming down, hard. After I left the highway, I found an opportunity to put the cellphone on the dashboard and get a brief video of driving through the rain. By then, the rain had slowed down a little, but it was still substantial.
We were driving along Route 4, almost in Burlington when I started seeing lightning. I wondered if I could find a good way to set up the cellphone to capture some of the lightning. All of a sudden, in my rear view mirror, I saw lightning strike a telephone pole. I pulled into the next parking lot and prepared to take another video with my cellphone. Just as I started taking my video, the transformer exploded and the power lines came crashing down, almost hitting the car we were in.
I called 911 to report the explosion and the small fire the downed power lines had started. Then I drove down the road across the street from the downed power lines. I hopped out of the car and took this picture of the smoldering grass and the downed lines.
Soon the emergency crews showed up.
I recorded a quick commentary:
I also posted a quick update via Twitterfone. Twitterfone transcribed the voice and sent it on to Twitter which in turn sent it to Facebook and FriendFeed. At this point, I continued on to the party.
It was a good party, but we had to leave early for Fiona’s Blog Talk Radio show. Needless to say, we talked a bit about the party and the transformer explosion on the show.
On the way home, I posted one final comment via Utterz:
Mobile post sent by ahynes1 using Utterz. Replies. mp3
Summer Camp
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Thu, 06/26/2008 - 13:54Summer time, and the living is easy . . .
I knew this place I knew it well . . .
Can it be that it was all so simple then . . .
It’s life’s illusions I recall . . .
Say the words “Summer Camp” and a flood of thoughts, memories and feelings come flooding in, and perhaps we would be wise to explore some of them.
Yesterday, as I drove to a client’s office, Frank Deford was offering his commentary on National Public Radio about summer camps. For him, they were wonderful places where you spent time outdoors learning such essential skills as making potholders. Now, it seems, many of them are highly specialized resume building camps, quarterback camps and the like.
So, I thought I would try to dredge up some of my memories of summer camps long ago. I have vague recollections of a camp in Williamstown, where I grew up. It was a day camp and I only have the vaguest of memories. There was the pond where we swam. There was arts and crafts. I think I learned to play steal the flag there. Beyond that, I don’t have much for memories.
The first overnight camp I went to was Camp Takodah in New Hampshire. It was probably after third grade and I stayed there for a week or two. I remember the cabin, a large field, making a trinket box with a bronze portrait of an Indian chief on top. I remember the lake. I think we had buddy tags, little markers we would hang on a board to indicate who our buddy was in the pool. This was to make sure that every camper had at least one other person paying constant attention to them as they swam.
The whistle would blow for a buddy break, and we needed to find our buddy and raise our joined hands in the air. If you weren’t with your buddy you lost your swimming privileges.
Years later, I would go to Camp Chesterfield, a Boy Scout’s camp in Massachusetts. I was in Troop 9, a troop that enjoyed doing lots of things together, but wasn’t really focused on advancement. One night at camp Chesterfield, they were talking about some insect borne disease that had made a few people very sick at a camp in New Hampshire.
I remembered a girl at school who had contracted Eastern Equine Encephalitis and had substantial neurological damage as a result. I wondered if it was Eastern Equine Encephalitis they were talking about. I wondered if the camp was Camp Takodah. It put me into a funk which others took to be homesickness.
There were other years that I went to day camp. I think a lot of it was because my parents’ marriage was falling apart and they needed some place to put the kids during the tough times.
So, no, the memories, for me of summer camp aren’t all that idyllic, their I still recall, and perhaps long for, their illusions.
Which brings me up to today. Last night, Kim and I went to parents night at Camp Mountain Laurel. Fiona is camping there and loving it.
The head of the camp looked very familiar, and I finally remembered, I had had a good discussion with him at a party up near Hartford as he was just leaving a job up there to come down to run this camp. He is young and idealistic. The staff he has surrounded himself with is all young and idealistic as well.
At one point, all the counselors, parents and kids sat in a circle in the pavilion. The counselors were all wearing red t-shirts which said Staff on the back, and then below it, “Professional Role Model”. It was great to see a bunch of people committed to being positive role models.
Each person was asked to say a little something; the kids were to speak about what they liked most about camp and the parents about what their hopes for the kids at the camp were. Unlike the quarterback camp that Frank Deford spoke about, the kids and the parents here were not interested in resume building. The closest anyone came to that was hoping that their kids would become better swimmers.
Perhaps some of the people there were looking for a little time away from their kids as they dealt with their own problems, but the most common sentiment expressed by parents was a desire that their kids would have a fun time, a great summertime experience outdoors as part of a happy childhood.
The counselors, several of whom are teachers during the school year, spoke about the importance of developing and nurturing friends, about kids learning more about their commonalities and what it means to be part of a caring community. They talked about the importance of this kind of learning, which gets lost in the world of standardized achievement tests. Some parents talked about coming to this camp when they were younger.
It was all so idealistic, a small local day camp, where people cared about one another, where they cared about enjoying life and not just getting ahead.
As I write this, my mind drifts back to politics. Who do we have on the political landscape that will help us return to these ideals of caring for one another, enjoying life and not just struggling to become wealthy?
Perhaps this is a good way of thinking about the ‘beer primary’. The idea of the beer primary is to ask which candidate you would must enjoy having a beer with. Perhaps what we really need is to judge our candidates on which one would be the best counselor-in-training, the person you would want to help twist the pipe cleaners to make your simple little butterfly., the person you would most want to share your snack with at the rickety old picnic table in the aging pavilion.
No, it wasn’t all that simple then, and it isn’t now, either, but perhaps, if we can all recall a few of life’s illusions, a simpler life, a more caring life, a day at a local day camp, we can help make a few of those illusions a little more real.