Everyday Heroes


31
May 10

Memorial Day… I’m a Farmer, Darn it! And the Parade of Motorcyles.

 

My zucchini

 

The motorcycles had already passed by the house for another year.

I wanted a wee sprig of mint for my iced tea. Out to the garden I tromped.

As I went out past the zucchini, I looked under the mammoth leaves to see if anything was growing. This was a little hard after my raging garden disappointment yesterday with the radishes.

Holy Garden Shiska! 

Look what I harvested in the next three minutes.

I had no idea all that growing was going on underneath that canopy of green. What a difference a day makes. So I can’t grow radishes…but I can grow the heck out of a squash seed.

So now we get to add zucchini to our Memorial Day menu. 

A life lesson to never give up. No matter how bleak things appear. You never know what good is growing right under your nose — that remains hidden for the moment.

Now for my second attempt into vlogging.

Along with seeing the first firefly, the passing of the motorcycles on their way to Madison’s Town Park means summer officially arrived.

Neighbor Jud Knight was having cup of coffee with us on the porch when we heard the telltale roar coming down Main Street.

Here’s some video. I need to get better about  SHUTTING UP!

Let’s all remember those all who gave the ultimate gift for our freedom.

Peace be to their families and loved ones this day.

Everyone be sure to have a hotdog (and some zucchini) with me.


3
Mar 10

The Sky’s the Limit. A Chat with MCT’s Kathleen Bryant.

Last week, I sat down for a moment with Kathleen Bryant, Artistic Director of the Madison Community Theater. She is quite the busy woman. We talked during her lunch break at Morgan County Middle School where she is the drama teacher. This school year, Bryant was named system-wide Teacher of the Year.

Okay, how did all this start: The MCT was incorporated in 2005, but we started in 2002. We started under the name Children’s Community Chorus. Our first show as “The Tale of Three Trees.” It morphed from there. Our Board decided to change the name to Madison Community Theater to include all ages, especially the older children. Shortly after we changed the name, we got non-profit status. 

After 25 performances, is this what you envisioned when you started: Honestly, I went to a very large Methodist Church in Louisville, Kentucky. They always had a children’s musical camp. They produced a children’s musical that was Christian-related. I thought ~ I’m going to do this in Madison. For several years, we just did a summer show. It was crazy, working everyday, all day for two weeks to pull it together. But there was such interest, we added more shows.  We have evolved into having an actual season with a straight play in the fall, big musical in the winter, sometimes something smaller in June, then a July camp.

So if  wasn’t a vision at the beginnging, could you articulate a vision now? “The Sky’s the Limit,” we always tease. We have so little as far as space. We don’t really have a theater. WE don’t really have the technology that the other counties have, but we pride ourselves on finding a way to make whatever we need to make on stage happen ~ happen. We’ve had flying people, pyrotechnics, minimal sets and elaborate ones. It doesn’t matter where we are or what we have ~ the skies the limit.

You’ve given so much of yourself to this program for a number of years, why? What drives me in this whole thing is finding good stories and presenting it to the community. Growing up in Moultrie, Georiga, we had a very developed Fine Arts and Cultural Center program, but we had to wait till high school to do anything. There was nothing for kids. This is a theater program to open the door for younger kids. The vision is to keep the door open for younger kids.

What is your theater background? My training is vocal and performing, so I come to this as a performer. But anytime I go to an International Thespian Society (ITS) or InternationalTheater Association I am in training and going constantly to any professional workshop I can to learn. All that has helped me grow as a director.

It is not about becoming a star; it’s about personal growth on stage. Building something that is maybe bigger than somethings they could do by themselves. To see young people develop is unbelievable.

Check out the MCT website http://www.mctheater.org/.


8
Feb 10

Your daughter is welcome over for laundry anytime she wants to reduce her carbon footprint!

The following is an e-mail I received in respose to posting my 1930′s laundry column. Mary Kay is an Atlanta friend from way back. We met at Peachtree Road Methodist when we had no babies; we were just babes ourselves.

MK kids lawra

 

 

 

 

Mary Kay and Charlie Jackson left the States for Ghana with their two boys a few years ago. Mary Kay uses her engineering background (she specialized in water waste treatment plants) to help those she serves in Ghana obtain clean water to drink, cook and do with whatever we take clean water for granted.

Her blog…http://www.jacksons-in-ghana.blogspot.com/  

Take it away Mary Kay…

“OK, Charlie and I are totally cracking up over your laundry day blog – you could research 1930s laundry practices or 2010 in Ghana! 

We personally don’t make our own soap, but my NGO trains women on how to make it to sell for extra family income.  We use shea butter, palm oil and commercial caustic, rather than lye from wood ash, but it is still basically the same – and a hot messy process! 

Laundry day- we have a washing machine that works – sometimes.  If the power is on.  And if the water is flowing.  

Then everything gets hung out on the line.  The first couple of times, I had the romantic memories of being a small child and helping my mom hang the laundry.  I love the sound of snapping out the sheets to get them straight before hanging.  And the smell and feel of the fresh, damp laundry.  Playing hide-and-seek among all the sheets.  But, after the laundry all gets re-soaked in the sudden afternoon downpour that you didn’t see coming…  Or your whites turn a dingy grey because of all the smoke and dust in the air… Well, maybe a dryer would be nice. 

Then comes the ironing – not because we really care about being neatly pressed, though everything is cotton and needs to be ironed.  But there is a lovely mango fly that lays its eggs in cotton clothing.  Then once the clothing is put on, your body heat hatches the eggs and the larvae will burrow under your skin to live and grow, until they come popping out like in Alien.  Fortunately, the heat from ironing will kill the eggs, so everything gets ironed – even your underwear.

The only thing I can say is, “Thank goodness labor is cheap here and I don’t have to do the laundry!”  It is basically half to two-thirds of our housekeeper’s job to keep up with our laundry.  The remainder of her time is spent in mopping the house every day to keep the dust under control.

So tell your daughter she is welcome to come visit and do laundry at our house anytime she wants to reduce her carbon footprint! 

Thanks for the day brightener! 

Mary Kay

Mary Kay Jackson

Serving Christ in Ghana with

The Mission Society


27
Jul 09

LMBforTheBestTransplantEver; A Virtual Community Built with Love

lauar

Home.

During my five day stint in the hospital this spring, I missed my husband, my children – who behaved as angels my first few hours home, my food, my bed. Though thankful for good medical care, feeling sickly and not with those I loved got really old, really fast. Continue reading →


28
Jan 09

Everyday Hero: Rick Spence

     
Way to go, Rick!

Way to go, Rick!

Meet Rick Spence. Rick is responsible for my spectacular entry into the world of triathlons. He and his wife, Karen, have become very good friends of ours with all the swimming, biking and running we have done together. Some folks’ motto is “My house…your house.” Rick’s is “My pool…your pool.” That is why we all were shocked in October 2007 to learn that Rick was battling brain cancer. For the next nine months Rick fought this horrible foe. But praises to God, Rick was pronounced cancer free in summer 2008.

            Let a small thing like a brain tumor sideline an Ironman Triathlete? Well, to pick on a guy who for fun competes in races by swimming 2.4 miles, biking 112 miles and then finishes by running a marathon – cancer picked the wrong dude.

            As the following column mentions, Rick and his wife completed the 2009 WDW Marathon and a Half Goofy Challenge this January. The Goofy Challenge requires running the half marathon (13.1 miles) on Saturday, then running the full marathon (26.2 miles) the next day. Goofy, maybe? Amazing, absolutely! Cheers to you Rick. Keep us posted on your racing challenge.

 

For more about Rick’s amazing story read my September 2008 column.