Wednesday, June 06, 2012

Hollins: The Art Gallery

When I received my MA from Hollins in May, I promised myself that I would take every opportunity to avail myself of the campus and the college community. Hollins offers a lot of free activities, if some woman will just get off her duff and drive the 20 minutes over there.

This morning I visited the Eleanor D. Wilson Museum in the Richard Wetherill Visual Arts Center. I knew it a long time ago as the library, but that was before a major renovation. Now it is the arts building.

The Museum currently has three separate exhibits.

1. Alice Hohenberg Federico, Hollins Class of 1967. She is a ceramic artist and the museum had a room full of her art, almost all vases. Some were quite elaborate.




2. Andy Warhol.



I confess I am not a big Warhol fan. I have never gotten the whole tomato soup thing.



I approached the manikin from the rear and thought it was a real person.



Soup cans and naked woman outline. Hmm.


Marilyn Monroe, right?

3. Clement Hurd's illustrations of Goodnight Moon. Goodnight Moon is a beloved children's book written by Margaret Wise Brown, Hollins class of 1932.




A copy of the book along with activity items in a room set up to appeal to children.



An illustration of one of the pages.



Another illustration of one of the pages.


Cover art for different versions of the book.


The Museum is open to the public Tuesday - Friday 10 a.m. - 4 p.m.; Saturday 1 - 5 p.m.

Check it out. It is one Roanoke's hidden jewels.

Tuesday, June 05, 2012

Happy Birthday, Brother

Today is my brother's birthday. He is 46 years old. When we were young, we often celebrated together because my birthday is Friday.

I was on the verge of turning three when he was born, but I vaguely remember when it happened. I recall my mother telling my father she didn't feel well. My grandfather came and got me and took me to their house. I recall talking to my mother over the telephone; it seemed to me she was gone a long time.

And then she came back in time for my birthday with this wailing little thing:

Me and my brother. Don't I look happy?

A newspaper photo of my brother, when, around age 4,
he caught a big fish at the Salem pond during
a fishing rodeo.


My brother at approximately age 7 with his
Christmas toy. Rock 'em Sock 'em Robots.


My mother, my father, me, and my brother at my
wedding in 1983. My brother would have been 17 in
this picture.


My brother this weekend at his daughter's
dance recital; he is in costume for
the daddy daughter dance.


My brother has two children of his own and a stepson; he runs a corporation over in southeast Roanoke. He lives adjacent to the farm where we grew up, where he raises chickens, peacocks, and other birds. He likes to hunt and takes big game hunting trips every year. I don't say it often but I am proud of him.


Happy birthday, Bro!

Sunday, June 03, 2012

Dance! Dance! Dance! Dance!

This weekend my niece participated in the multi-show, many-hours long Floyd Ward Dance Recital at the Roanoke Civic Center. The thing begins on Friday night and continues into Saturday evening. It is a massive production involving hundreds of people, with dancers ranging from three to 18, plus the fathers of some of the dancers in a special "daddy daughter dance."

My brother this year decided to do the "daddy daughter dance," so I went Saturday to see both of them. Zoe danced in seven dances during the three hours I was there.

One of the local TV stations did a story on Floyd Ward's work with special needs students, which I think is spectacular. You can see that at this link.

Flash photography was not allowed at the recital, but I had my pocket Nikon and turned the flash off to take some photos. I have had to crop these significantly and many failed because of the low lighting and movement. So while these are not the best shots, they are all I have of the event for reasons not within my control.

The show began with a series of dances that told the story of Beauty and the Beast (Disney version). Zoe was not in those dances but she was in a number about children of the coal mines ("Children of the Coal"). Then it progressed into "Night at the Museum." The "daddy daughter dance" featured the fathers dressed as night watchmen at the museum, with the daughters in masks being the little thieves.

Zoe in costume, the one time she slowed
down long enough for me to try to get a picture!

My brother is third from left.

Opening of Children of the Coal. This production one awards. The placards say, "1906, West Virginia Coalfields. Boys, as young as 6, started their careers in the mines. Young girls were hired to follow the track lines and pick up fallen coal. Many boys lost limbs or were stricken with black lung. Poverty was the driving force pushing child labor in the mines. For those that survived ... love of family and faith in God, helped them carry on.

Children of the Coal. Zoe is the girl on the far left, in the floor.

End of Children of the Coal.

I don't know the name of the other dances (I didn't get a program.) Zoe is the third from the left.

Zoe is first on the left.

Zoe in the middle.

Zoe is the one on the floor.

Zoe is first on the right.

Zoe is first on the right.

My brother is second on the right.

Zoe is second from left.

My brother and his daughter.

Daddy Daughter Dance

My brother and niece.

I don't see my brother on a knee very often. :-)


My brother after the dance.

Saturday, June 02, 2012

After the Storm

Yesterday the area experienced severe thunderstorms. We were under a tornado watch. My friend Cathy, with whom I used to work and who is a reporter for The Roanoke Times, caught a picture of something that looks like a tornado. Click on the link to see it.

After the bad weather passed through, I went outside to take photos of the storm as it was heading off into Bedford.


My favorite fence with dark skies in the background.


The storm moving toward the Peaks of Otter and into Bedford.



My rock lilies (or yucca) with the storm as a backdrop.


An hour or so later, a rainbow.

Friday, June 01, 2012

Making a Cake - A Poem

By Anita Firebaugh



"Beater!"
"Bowl!"
My brother and I jostled for position
hearing that whirr of the mixer
knowing Grandma was baking.
Her mixtures of sweetness dripped
with egg and sugar, softness against
delighted pink tongues.

Not once did we ask.
We claimed.
Not caring if she might want a taste,
not knowing if she wanted to keep bowl
and beaters close and for herself.
The mixture was ours,
our alchemic summer delight.
She gave the gold over to us.
Willingly. Every time.

But I am old now, and I tell you the truth.
She wanted those beaters, my grandmother did.
She yearned to cover her fingers
with the batter coating the bowl sides,
stuff those sticky digits in her mouth,
taste that sugary sweet mix,
feel it ooze against her teeth.

She ached to break the moral code,
keep that treat for her own.
And when the government said
"Do not eat raw batter," she breathed
a deep sigh. Now she had a reason,
she could tell those grandkids
"You cannot eat the cake mix."
Another voice had said, "No."

Thursday, May 31, 2012

Thursday Thirteen

I have had, for some time now, a major procrastination problem. I have a lot of unfinished projects, ideas, ... stuff ... that I look at, move around from place to place on my desk, or otherwise ignore.

I thought I'd list 13 of them. That there are more than 13 is rather scary, but there you go. These are things that pertain to my writing career, so I am not including stuff like clean out the attic or paint the bathroom. That also needs to be taken care of but it would be a terribly long list if I added household items. Maybe I will list household items another time.

These are not in any order of importance, just as they come to me. In all of these projects, my options are to keep procrastinating, do it, or decide it isn't viable, and finally let go of the darned thing.


1. Revise my thesis and turn it into something for publication.

2. Finish my research and the book on the history of Cloverdale.

3. Do my genealogy. Some of this is done. This is rather a time consuming project, and one I was saving for when I was old. Am I old now?

4. Listen to and transcribe some cassette tapes I have of dead relatives and turn that into books for family members. I have had this on my desk since 2006. Apparently I am just not ready yet to revisit those voices. Maybe I should give this to another relative.

5. Gather up the poetry I have written over the years and turn it into a chapbook.

6. Revise the first novel I ever wrote to completion (which is sitting on the shelf by my desk). It's a Gothic romance, which is pretty much a dead genre.

7. Finish the fantasy book I started that reached 100 pages before I abandoned it. It has magic in it, is a quest book, and has a number of characters, like Lord of the Rings.

8. Finish the second part of that fantasy series, which I also started and abandoned. This one is more focused on a single character, and is actually the story of a secondary character in the first book.

9. Write that other book that would also be a fantasy of sorts but is also historical, the one that keeps floating around in my mind from time to time. This one would cover hundreds of years and start out in Dr. Johnson's time in London, which is to say, the 1700s, and progress forward. There is moonshine involved.

10. Write that other story that is apocalyptic, which might be a short story or a novel, not sure. The one about garbage.

11. Write that other novel that is apocalyptic (yes, I like those kinds of stories), the one that starts out in the Greenbrier bunker. This one also has magic.

12. Write a 20th century history of Botetourt County. It needs to be done before the information is lost (meaning before the stuff I have gathered gets thrown out when I have turned to dust).

13. Read all of these books I have laying around. I have never had such a backlog of reading as I have now. Maybe next week I will list 13 books I have on my shelves to read. Or not.



Thursday Thirteen is played by lots of people; there is a list here. I've been playing for a while and this is my 244rd time to do a list of 13 on a Thursday.

Wednesday, May 30, 2012

Like A Rose

My flowers this spring have suffered from an abundance of rain and not enough attention from me.
The rain has been a bit more constant than normal; I think it rained for nearly 18 straight days in May. That, combined with an unfortunate spate of poor health on my part, has meant my flowers have been left to their own devices more often than not.

My roses have bloomed but rain quickly blemishes the rose petals. Plus rain washes away insecticides, dust, and plant food before any of it does that for which it was made and applied.


However, we had a few days of sunshine and the rose above bloomed out. It is the only one blooming at the moment.

It is my special orange rose, given to me in 2001 as a birthday present from a friend.

I have mentioned before that I took it as a sign from my mother, who had passed away the previous August from pancreatic cancer. We had a conversation about the after life a few weeks before she died. She had promised to send me something orange as proof that there is something more than what we see.

And so came this rose, which blooms around my birthday (and usually in August) to remind me of my mother, my friend, and our souls. (Today is not my birthday, though. That is next week.)



You might note that in this photo there is an inch worm hanging from the side. It was in the other photo, too, but I cropped it out. I didn't see the worm when I was shooting the pictures or I would have removed it from the plant.

For some reason the little inch worm amuses me and I decided to share it, too.


Tuesday, May 29, 2012

I'm No Decorator

Every now and then I have a hankering for something new around the house.

I don't redecorate often. We are simple people. Once we find a good spot for the couch, there it stays. Besides, the house is small and there isn't a lot of room for maneuvering things around.

But it is time for a little updating.

This is my current bedspread:


This is the bedspread and matching curtains:



I like that they match. I don't like that they are almost 20 years old.

I bought them from Sears and they have held up remarkably well, considering I didn't pay that much for them to begin with. They are machine washable, and I wash the curtains about twice a year; the bedspread much more frequently. I like that I can wash them whenever I like.

But the fabric is starting to look washed out, and some of the stitching in the bedspread is coming out.

Neither my husband nor I like comforters, and comforters are all I can find in the local stores. No one carries these bedspread and curtain sets any more.

A few of the major department stores have them online, but I am unimpressed with their offering. Not to mention the lack of quality available. Some of the comments make me cringe; they certainly aren't conducive to making a purchase. Apparently most of these are supposed to be washable but they shrink.

So I am thinking I might need to find separate items. Maybe a solid bedspread and different curtains. But finding the bedspread is the hard part.

I hate redecorating!


Monday, May 28, 2012

Memorial Day

"It sure takes a lot of rough knocks and fall downs for a man to learn how to live and get along. And about the time you learn how to live and what is important in this old world, you are about ready to leave it and pass on to a higher plane of life as God has chosen for you. And each of us no matter how great or small leaves behind a part of our self in one form or another. I want to leave a good image of myself to all of my kids and grandchildren. I think I have or I hope I have."  - Joe Bruffy

My paternal grandfather, before he passed away in 1989, sent me an old, small book that my mother had given him. The book was a little series of short stories. He had written all over the white space in the book and he wanted me to have it.

The above words are on page 12, right before a short story entitled "Tennessee's Partner" by Bret Harte.

I have letters from my grandfather, too, that I have kept. Some of his stories I have shared here before, along with one of his poems. You can read them here, here, and here. Unfortunately, I have no digital pictures of him.

He served in World War II. That experience was one of two that defined him. The first was his birth, which killed his mother. Apparently he was blamed for that, and he never forgot it. There are traces of his pain about his orphaned upbringing throughout his letters.

But the war - that was something else again. My grandfather was a spitfire liberal, and he believed in things greater than himself. He loved his god and he loved his country, but he did not love greed. He saw the way the nation was turning and despaired to me in his letters. They were written in the 1980s.

The war taught him what happens when a country turns together, when it looks outward instead of inward, and how strong a society that gives to one another can be. He fought for his community and for his family, for good or ill.

When he wrote of the war, he often did it in the third person. He had a hard time personalizing his experiences. I think it was too painful.

In his stories, he talked about how it was during the war that his asthma began, how laying on the ground set off arthritis in his back, and how it felt when his friend died in his arms, his belly blown open by a German gun.

War is gruesome, nasty business. Death is never pretty. Today is a day to remember great sacrifices and debts unpaid. It is a lot more than the unofficial start of summer.


My grandfather's uniform, dog tags, and honorabilia.
Photo courtesy of my brother.

I asked my brother if he would like to contribute something about our grandfather to my blog for Memorial Day. I thought a different perspective might be interesting. This is what he sent me:

By Loren Bruffey, Jr.

My one regret in life is to have never participated in any branch of the Armed Forces.  Most of my family from my past served in some form. Growing up, my grandfather, Joseph Eugene Bruffy, instilled a deep respect in me for freedom. He was a WWII Vet. I got the privilege to spend my 15th summer with him in California. It was during those 60 days that I really came to understand what it meant to be an American. I also learned that freedom is never free. It always comes with a price.
My Grandfather was born June 10th, 1917 in Nettie, WV. He was raised by his Grandmother in hard times. The stories of his youth have always left me in tears, be it laughing or crying. He was a coal miner and an auto body repairman and finished his life as an automotive appraiser.

On August 28th, 1944, he was sent to fight in Rhineland, Central Europe. He spent time all over the war zones.  He was a lead Infantryman with Company K, 397th Infantry. He was awarded the Combat Infantry Badge, Good Conduct Medal, European African Middle Eastern Theater Ribbon and WWII Victory Ribbon.  He spent about 18 months or so in the war zones. He had no days lost even though he was wounded by some grenade shrapnel in a fire fight.
He would sit and tell me stories, good, bad and other, of his escapades in the war. He had two that always came up. The first was the time he was with a scouting party of 4 guys and they were ambushed. There were two foxholes and the team dove for cover. His three buddies in one hole, he alone in another.  A mortar shell dropped into the other hole killing all of his friends. In his hole was a large machine gun nest so he took up the weapon and opened fire. After killing many men, the rest surrendered. He was responsible for single-handedly capturing 24 Germans.


German swords my grandfather brought home from WWII.
Photo courtesy of my brother.
The second story tells of survival. Scurrying the countryside searching for food.  Stealing rabbits from local farmers and crops. One night his team had taken refuge in an abandoned church and a fire fight broke out. A grenade landed on the exterior wall of his hiding place and when it detonated, the interior wall crumbled away. Hidden inside the wall were jewels and money. Using his canteen, he placed all he could get into his canteen and sent it home. Some of the jewelry is still in the family.

During his talks, he always came back to the fact that most people really did not understand what it meant to be free, as they had never experienced what he saw in other countries. They did not experience the death and hatred he saw towards Americans while overseas. The crying children with no food.  The torture of anyone who stood their ground.  In his eyes Freedom is our God given right, but we always have to be ready to fight anyone who would try to tame this great country. So even though Free is in Freedom, there is always a price to be paid. Usually paid with the ultimate price . . . death.
 
Looking back now, at age 46, I fully understand what he was trying to say to me. Love your country. Appreciate what you have. Be glad for family. Help others before helping yourself. Be the better person. But above all, trust in God and trust in the USA!!!


"Every man and woman should take thirty minutes a day just to be alone with their self and enjoy the company of their own mind and thoughts, and to learn about themselves. For each one of us is our own best teacher. " - Joe Bruffy

Sunday, May 27, 2012

Books: Voices: Words From Wise Women

Voices: Words From Wise Women
(Leadership Tools for Work and Life)
By Kathryn L. Jordan, PhD
142 pages
Copyright 2011

It is no secret to me that the workplace experience is different for women than it is for men, and often not in a good way. But finding books that deal with the gender gap and that speak directly to women is often difficult.

Local author Kathryn Jordan, a professor at Radford University, has filled in some of that gap with her new book.

Each chapter addresses various issues or methods of being a more upwardly focused employee. If you are looking to make a lateral move in your employment, or seeking a promotion, or just looking for work in general, this book will help.

The chapters discuss the need to be positive and embrace change, how to build various skills, and how to understand workplace dynamics, particularly with regards to money, among other things.

In particular, most women will find the chapters on finding balance helpful. How do you balance your career, your personal life, and taking care of yourself? It is a hard juggle sometimes.

The author, who is also an executive career coach, advocates an annual review of your resume, and a review of your life goals no less than every two years. I think that is very good advice.

A series of worksheets in the back of the book, which I plan to utilize, should also be helpful in finding focus and creating a plan.

Dr. Jordan has a website, The Success Associates, with information about her work in helping women find good career matches. The website offers a few links to youtube videos with job-hunting tips.

The site offers a list of job-hunting resources at this link.

She also has a blog but it is not updated very often, only about once a month. In my opinion this is not often enough to be useful; I tend to forget about sites if I visit and do not find new information.

I was disappointed that I wasn't able to find a .pdf of the worksheets on her website. That would be a good and valuable addition for her readers, and, given that the book is a little on the expensive side for its small size, a nice tip of the hat. If she didn't want to give it away to the masses, she could make it accessible with a key in the back of the book or something.

As it is, I don't like to write in my books so I will be hunting up a photocopier for about 30 pages of worksheets.

I think any woman with ambition and a little drive, regardless of where she works, will find this book useful, but it is directed more at the educational and large corporate fields. I don't think she had small entrepreneurs or grocery check-out clerks in mind when she wrote it, but there is enough useful information in the book regarding the work world and working relationships that I feel comfortable recommending it to nearly any woman who is looking for a change in her working environment.

Saturday, May 26, 2012

Growing Up

I spied this little buck with antlers showing in the front yard the other day.


I think he is going to be at least a four-point buck.


He is not very big in body so I don't think he is very old. But I do wonder how big his antlers will grow.

Thursday, May 24, 2012

Thursday Thirteen

Today I offer up 13 random photos from my archives.


Cannons at Williamsburg, VA

Stylized photo of Mabry Mill on the Blue Ridge Parkway.

The remains of a barn built in 1859. It was demolished a few years ago.

The rear end of a strutting turkey.

The grounds at Hollins University

The farm.

A bee on a zinnia. Buzz!

July 4 fireworks.

The view when it snows.

A bear in the alfalfa.

Like a rose, under the April snow.

The Town of Fincastle as seen from Godwin Cemetery.

A photo of a painting by an artist friend.

Thursday Thirteen is played by lots of people; there is a list here. I've been playing for a while and this is my 243rd time to do a list of 13 on a Thursday.