My first reaction to being called an Activist was "I'm no Jane Fonda". But after some time to think, anyone with a passion to make change has the potential to hold the title "Activist".
As is often the case, each generation holds their own belief system toward what a perfect world would be. As Courtney Martin reflects on the 8 subjects of her book "Do It Anyway - The New Generation of Activists", each of those individuals has their own passion for change, and their thoughts and feeling are based on the impacts they felt from their individual life experiences. They each found their passion.
Every one of us has the ability to make change. It does not have to be monumental, as I often say, every pebble makes a ripple. I don't march w/ PETA yet I still have strong feelings of compassion for the ethical treatment of animals. I raise my own hens for organic pasture raised eggs, and research the farming practices of the farmers who raise our meats and dairy products, as I do not in any way want to support "Factory Farming". One pebble making a ripple.
I recently purchased my first honey bee hive, becoming a Honey Bee Stewart, in an effort to support the critically declining honey bee population being affected by Colony Collapse Disorder which is being linked to the use of herbicides and pesticides the world over. One pebble making a ripple.
In the past I would have never called myself an activist because of these actions, but if attempting to make change happen is what is considered activism, then yes, I guess I’m an activist.
Power to the pebbles!!!
Sunday, December 7, 2014
Monday, October 20, 2014
Film Response - "The House I Live In"
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Sunday, September 21, 2014
Why Not "Work" Passionately?
Something I find myself asking from the
readings of both Mike Ross in “Blue Collar Brilliance”, and Mike
Rowe’s personal reflection in “Why “Work Smart, Not Hard” is
the Worst Advise in the World”; is higher education worth the
price? Answer: If you are happy… yes!
According to Mike Rowe in his “Lessons
from the Dirt” website, lessonsfromthedirt.com, “We have a
massive skills gap. Even with record unemployment, millions of
skilled jobs are unfiled because on one is trained or willing to do
them. Meanwhile unemployment among college graduates is at an
all-time high, and the majority of those graduates with jobs are not
even working in their field of study. PLUS, they owe a trillion
dollars in student loans. A trillion! And still, we push a four-year
college degree as the best way for most people to find a successful
career?” All this because career paths are being manipulated by
others?
Hard Working Man! |
If it were not for the blue collar
workers, America would not be the country it is today. The
infrastructure of the United States was built with the hands of the
blue collar worker, the universities that we all seek our college
educations were built with the hands of the blue collar worker, the
foods on our tables were grown by the farmers of this country, most
of which did not seek a four-year college degree, yet society today
seems to put so much weight on obtaining a higher education in order
to “succeed”.
I guess the bigger question is… what
is success?
We cannot disregard the great triumphs that have been the result of individuals who have gone the path of higher education. Feats in science, medicine and engineering, etc. supporting advances in the understanding of our existence within the world we live and the universe itself.
Great minds can be observed every day.
I have worked pretty hard over the past few decades to get where I am today. Some jobs I loved, some jobs I hated, but each job provided me with a learning experience. “I have been to the University of Life” is my typical response to the question “what college did you attend?” I can’t say that I personally have been treated any differently by not pursuing a college education, but then, I worked smart AND hard to get where I am today. Mike Rose stated in “Blue Collar Brilliance”, “Given the ridicule heaped on blue-collar speech, it might seem odd to value its cognitive content. Yet, the flow of talk at work provide the channel for organizing and distributing tasks, for trouble shooting and problem solving, for learning new information and revising old. A significant amount of teaching, often informal and indirect, takes place at work.”
Life is full of lessons. Whether
college educated or educated by life lessons, never stop learning.
Find your passion and doors will open for you. If your passion is
picking up a tool or picking up a scalpel, you are working with your
hands, your mind is engaged and learning. I feel the decision to
pursue a career should be driven by what an individual loves, and not
the control of what others feel is the “smarter” path.
Sunday, September 14, 2014
I sit here reflecting on both the
research paper written by Jean Anyon, “Social Class and the
Hidden Curriculum of Work” and the article by Professor X “In
the Basement of the Ivory Tower”, I am struck with a profound
thought. I have been asking myself some of the very same questions
from the Professor X article. Have I screwed up? “I am trying
desperately to get to a place where I do not have to”? “I am
showing up for class exhausted from working my full-time job,
carrying a briefcase overspilling with the contents of my hectic
life”. So many of his statements rang true. The most profound
thought I’ve had recently, even prior to reading these two papers,
“Am I prepared educationally to enter into the college learning
experience?
As I sit in class some nights thinking
“why does this sound so foreign to me”, “I’m not really sure
what they mean by that”, “I really don’t ever think I’ve had
to write an essay” or “I don’t ever remember talking about that
in school” I start to question my preparedness. Then, enters
Anyon’s “Social Class and the Hidden Curriculum of Work”.
BINGO!!! No, I was never prepared for this…
I was actually eleven years of age when
Anyon’s study was underway. How ironic that I could have actually been
one of those elementary school students she was researching.
Reading Senior High School |
Born and raised in Reading,
Pennsylvania, I entered into my educational experience in an
intercity school system made up of clusters of elementary schools
throughout the “Urban Jungle”. The daughter of two blue-collar
workers, dad a candy line worker and mom a sewing machine operator in
a local mill, they did the best they could to get me into the
Northeast section of the city as we just moved into the home that
would turn out to be the one I grew up in and to which they still
live, just before my kindergarten years
The Northeast section was thought to be
the more affluent section of the city, but, it was still the city. I
would categorize it into a combination of “working class schools”
and “middle-class schools” from Anyon’s research. And looking
back on the quality of my education, it is very much the building
blocks contributing to who I am today.
12th and Marion Elementary School |
It saddens me to think that the path of
children’s success can be based on the “class” their parents
find themselves in, which in many cases is the result of the “class”
of their parents and grand-parents, etc. To find facts behind
research showing the lack of encouragement for creativity,
self-thought, and quite frankly, free-will in the working and middle
class schools, I’m not sure why the need to “control” the
learning experience in this way was encouraged. Is it any wonder I
sit and question myself even to this day?
I stated at one point that I felt I
lacked guidance from my school system. I was never really encourage
to pursue anything other than enter into the working class, take a
few business courses, general accounting, typing (computers were not
on the scene yet) and dictation, “you can become a secretary, it
will keep you out of the factories”. I was not prepared to be a
Doctor or Lawyer or Executive, but prepared for the “cubicle farm”.
This is why I’m trying so desperately to get to the place I WANT
to be. To prove that the classification you were labeled with as a
child is just that, only a label. Labels can be ripped off and
replaced. But it is a very eye opening experience to begin to
understand a little more each day how children are most often times
products of their environment. Again the question arises… Nature
or Nurture?
Thursday, September 11, 2014
I had the pleasure of getting to know Jee hyun Lee the other night during my writing class. I found her to be so very fascinating not only in her life experiences as a young child in South Korea, but also her passion and enthusiasm for her chosen field of study; Nutrition with a minor in Psychology. Here is an irony... my chosen major is Psychology with a minor in Nutrition... it's amazing how circumstance brings people with the same like minded philosophies together.
Something I admire most about Jee hyun, she is grasping the opportunity to learn abroad here in the U.S. as an exchange student. At her age I hardly left the borders of Pennsylvania let alone travel to another country. Also at her age, I had no idea of the direction I wanted my life to take. Jee hyun seems to have a very specific target in mind. "Help people understand the benefit of good nutrition to better improve their abilities to live healthy lives"
Jee hyun spoke to me about the fact that many in South Korea are influenced by the media and it's effects on the culture and the need to be thin. Her experience in the U.S. has been somewhat different, in the U.S., obesity seems to be an epidemic and she is interested in using her studies to understand the nutritional deficiencies that lead to obesity and the psychological and/or genetic components involved.
At this point of the conversation, our talk shifted from less of an interview to more of a in depth conversation of the topics that have captivated both of us. Psychology and Nutrition. How funny is it that though generations, cultures, and oceans separate us we find a common interest.
So, this young woman from South Korea, who traveled first to the U.S. at the age of 8 years old, returns once again far from her family and much loved Yorkie, "Pepper", to pursue her passion in Allentown, Pennsylvania, U.S.A. at Cedar Crest College. I wish her many blessings and I'm sure Jee hyun Lee will be very successful in anything she sets her mind to achieving.
Something I admire most about Jee hyun, she is grasping the opportunity to learn abroad here in the U.S. as an exchange student. At her age I hardly left the borders of Pennsylvania let alone travel to another country. Also at her age, I had no idea of the direction I wanted my life to take. Jee hyun seems to have a very specific target in mind. "Help people understand the benefit of good nutrition to better improve their abilities to live healthy lives"
Jee hyun spoke to me about the fact that many in South Korea are influenced by the media and it's effects on the culture and the need to be thin. Her experience in the U.S. has been somewhat different, in the U.S., obesity seems to be an epidemic and she is interested in using her studies to understand the nutritional deficiencies that lead to obesity and the psychological and/or genetic components involved.
At this point of the conversation, our talk shifted from less of an interview to more of a in depth conversation of the topics that have captivated both of us. Psychology and Nutrition. How funny is it that though generations, cultures, and oceans separate us we find a common interest.
So, this young woman from South Korea, who traveled first to the U.S. at the age of 8 years old, returns once again far from her family and much loved Yorkie, "Pepper", to pursue her passion in Allentown, Pennsylvania, U.S.A. at Cedar Crest College. I wish her many blessings and I'm sure Jee hyun Lee will be very successful in anything she sets her mind to achieving.
Tuesday, September 9, 2014
Greetings!!
Hi All!
Welcome to my Blog. Yes, I said Blog... I never thought I would consider myself a "Blogger" but, thanks to my writing class... yes, I also said "writing class" as I have decided after almost 30 years of being out of school, to return and pursue my BA in Applied Psychology. I guess if one is going to have a mid-life crisis, this is not a bad way to have one.
This blog will be my story from this point out. Enjoy the ride! I sure will. ;-)
Welcome to my Blog. Yes, I said Blog... I never thought I would consider myself a "Blogger" but, thanks to my writing class... yes, I also said "writing class" as I have decided after almost 30 years of being out of school, to return and pursue my BA in Applied Psychology. I guess if one is going to have a mid-life crisis, this is not a bad way to have one.
This blog will be my story from this point out. Enjoy the ride! I sure will. ;-)
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