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From Beans to Stars: An 1890s Coffee Mill Shows Me the Way

Our 1940s coffee grinder gave up the ghost—no more flip of a switch.  So I unearthed our 1890s coffee mill, the one with a handle that turns only if I turn it. Being one thoroughly in love with my morning coffee, I turned that handle…with my left arm, my right, then back to left, and back to my right. I watched as the grinds fell excruciatingly slowly into the cup below forming little peaks.

spongcoffeemillWhile I was cranking, I had time to think of the process of making this grinder in England so long ago, the men who forged the metal and poured it into a mold, of the inventor who designed and patented the cranking/grinding mechanism, of the artist who painted the gold leaf trim. I had time to think of the coffee, where it was grown, the soil, the plants, and the workers who picked the beans.

And it was at that point that I remembered My Dinner with Andre, which I had recently watched, and the scene where Andre tells Wally about a Buddhist practice for mindfulness.

Andre: You know, if you go to the Buddhist Meditation Center, they make you taste each bite of your food…so it takes two hours, it’s horrible, to eat your lunch. But you’re conscious of the taste of your food. If you’re just eating out of habit, then you don’t taste the food, and you’re not conscious of the reality of what’s happening to you. You enter the dream world again.

Wally: Now, do you think maybe we live in this dream world because we do so many things every day that affect us in ways that somehow we’re just not aware of?

This Buddhist practice was spurred in me by manually grinding the coffee beans. I thought what if I take this idea and expand it to an exercise of being conscious of the origin and the processes of everything that I come in contact with for an entire day. That would take a lot of mental energy though, and it was to be a busy day.

spongcoffeemillhopperWell someday soon, I’m going to devote a day to contemplating origins. I’ll start by using the antique grinder, and continue by thinking of the water I’ll pour over the grinds, the fuel that will start the fire under the kettle, and where the water will go after it drains when I wash the cup; of the sand in the glass in the kitchen window, the rare earth elements in my phone, the threads in my clothes; of the wood and nails in my house, and the hinges on the door I’ll close; of my car, the gas in my car, the asphalt in the road I’ll drive, the road and the land that was there before the road; of the life of the checker at the grocery store, and everyone involved in bringing me the broccoli, from seed to bag. I’ll think of my origins, from seed to baby, kid to adult, of my passions—those hibernating and those I’ve awakened. At the end of the day, I’ll look to the night sky, at the stars and planets and moons, and wonder at how their origin and my origin are entwined.

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My Mama Taught Me to Say Thank You, So Thank You, Barack.

At the height of the Great Recession, unemployment reached 10 percent.

During the Obama Presidency, unemployment declined over 5 percent.

When Barack left office, the unemployment rate was 4.5 percent.

labor_statistics_graph

thank-you-cardMy Mama taught me to always say Thank You.

So, Barack, I thank you,

for leading America out of the Great Recession and into the Great Rebound.

 

 

 

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Our Journey to the Green Valley of Freedom

green-valleyWe will not benefit by furthering the political and cultural divide in our county. We have common ground and there we must stand. The map to that common ground shows routes around the slippery slopes of stereotype and detours away from the steep canyons of bigotry. We must be willing to wander onto the unfamiliar path of understanding and compassion even when the easier familiar path of self-righteousness is straight ahead. We must make our way out of the brambles of tribalism and find our way to the trail that leads to the land promised two centuries ago, where all people can share equally in the bounty of the green valley of freedom.