Archive for April, 2012

Tuscon in Photos

April 30, 2012

Geek Fran Ready to Ride! About to take off on our early morning 22 mile ride to Sweet Water. I am wearing my new bike jersey sold by Seattle company Kaidel Sportswear http://www.kaidelsportswear.com Super cool ride and sportswear. It was hot out, but the jersey actually kept me cool via the breathable fabric!!

Tucson author Byrd Baylor and Jane Wright. I was ever so lucky to have the opportunity to meet Byrd Baylor! She is the author of many children's books as well as the novel, Yes is Better Than No. I had her sign my books! She is incredibly lovely and I feel lucky to have met her!

For Fran,
Happy Places--
Byrd Baylor

Exhibit: Frida Kahlo through the lens of Nickolas Muray.

Cactus in bloom

Casting Shadows

Fran and Jane at the remnants of the stone house on the Yetman Trail

The White Dove of the Desert

April 28, 2012

Jane has been showing me a great time around Tucson.  Yesterday we went to the San Xavier Mission also known as the White Dove of the Desert and I put together a very short slide show below.  It is a special place,  a peaceful sanctuary surrounded by desert blooms.  The mission has recently restored frescoes (and some not yet restored as you will see in one of the photos).   Its white stucco walls against the blue desert sky is breathtaking.

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Tucson Hatha Yoga Workshop

April 28, 2012

Jane did a fantastic job of organizing and pulling together a group of her friends here in Tucson for a two day Hatha Yoga Workshop!  I met Jane (who used to live in Ellensburg, WA) through Brian and Elizabeth at our annual Tumble Creek Yoga Workshops in Washington.  I consider myself very fortunate to have been invited to teach this week’s workshop.  Below are two group photos, one taken by Jane and the other taken by me with Jane in it! The group shots are followed by various photos of some of the yogis enjoying time together at the end of the workshop yesterday.

How do I describe the essence of this workshop?  It was designed for Jane’s Tucson friends, for people who are busy, for people to whom yoga is very important.  It would have been too hard for the workshop participants to take for a weekend away from their families, so the time frame we did worked out perfectly for them.  The group had mixed levels of yoga, yet everyone had a fair amount of yoga experience. The workshop wasn’t advertised.  Everyone who came had a connection to Jane.  They trusted Jane and knew they would be practicing yoga in a safe and supported environment.  My challenge was to be very intuitive in working with a group I had never worked with before, to provide safe alternatives for those with various injuries or physical conditions, as well as to provide a challenge to those who had the green light to explore the asanas and yoga practice at a deeper level.  We practiced at a beautiful studio called the Movement Shala.  The workshop was a great experience and I hope to offer it again next year!

Our lively group at the end of the workshop at the Movement Shala Studio in Tucson

The photo I took of the whole group with Jane (tallest kneeling person) and her wonderful friends who took the workshop!

Sentinel Peak

April 27, 2012

Loving being here at Tucson!

I met the yoga group yesterday for the start of our yoga workshop here in Tucson.   We will all be together again from 9 to Noon today for yoga.   I really enjoyed meeting everyone and am enjoying leading the yoga workshop for this group of 14.  I will write about our yoga experience later.  For now, I want to post some photos I took yesterday in Tucson:

Tucson: This bird at the top of the saguaro cactus sang its heart out to it mate across the way. Its song was melodious and perhaps one of the most beautiful bird songs I have every heard.

Pink House

Light Play

Door Decorated with Saw Blades

Public Art

Bike Shrine

Bike Shrine close up! t is almost entirely made of bicycle parts. This shrine is dedicated to a person who was hit. It is a powerful site and structure. I stood in it and couldn't even read the name of the person to whom it is dedicated! All I could feel were the gusts of wind coming up out of nowhere, reminding me of the countless cyclists to whom this shrine is surely dedicated.

With the good weather here year round, Tucson has a very committed community of bike commuters and biking enthusiasts. El Tour de Tucson takes place here every November, drawing thousands of cyclists.

Bike Shrine and Sky

Tumamoc Trail, Tucson, AZ

April 26, 2012

I arrived in Tucson this afternoon.   Jane picked me up from the airport and zipped me over to her and Gordon’s lovely house.  It’s great to be here and great to see Jane and Gordon!  We took a beautiful hike up the Tumamoc Trail under cloudy skies around 5 pm.  We then came home and had a wonderful dinner and sat in the court yard enjoying the quiet desert evening.   I am off to bed now.  I am here leading a two day retreat for Jane and her friends starting tomorrow!  Here are photos from this evening’s hike:

Shrine

Vista from the trail

Arizona!

Barrel Cactus

A saguaro cactus puts out its first "arm" at 60 years of age! This guy's been around for a while.

Barrel cactus and lichen

April 25, 1948

April 25, 2012

Today is my mom and dad’s wedding anniversary.  They got married on April 25, 1948.  How I miss them!  They lived to celebrate 59 years of marriage!

Theirs was a love marriage.  My dad first saw my mom on her family farm and told his best friend that he had spotted the girl he would marry.

“Have you spoken to her?”   Dad’s friend was quite practical.

“Are you kidding?”  Dad was shy.

“Well, do you at least know her name?”

“No, but I can tell you where she lives and what she looks like.”  Dad went on to describe where mom’s family farm was.

“You fool!  That’s my uncle’s farm.  You haven’t got a chance!  Not right away…my uncle does things the old way.  You know, he marries his daughters off by age.  The eldest one gets married first and so on.  The one you spotted is Giuseppina (Pina) and she’s got two older sisters my uncle needs to marry off first.  Besides, she just turned 15!  She’s just a kid!”

“Well, since she’s your cousin, help me.  What should I do?”

“I guess I can arrange for you to talk to the old man!  Not sure how it will go.  He’s quite strict and correct, if you know what I mean.”

“Please arrange a meeting.  I need to talk to him and tell him of my honorable intentions.”

Dad told us this story many times while mom looked at him with that crazy love-look in her eye.  Before Dad met with the old man, he went by the farm many times and made eye contact with my mother.  The look she gave him encouraged him to go forward with the meeting of the old man!  And Dad’s friend, mom’s cousin, also conveyed to my mom that this handsome admirer had honorable intentions.  Dad actually got my mom to talk to him just before meeting with the old man and she told him in so many words that she was interested.  He was 24 and she was 15!

Dad met with my Grandpa Licata and spoke of his love for Pina.  I can’t even imagine my dad going through this ordeal. First of all, he hardly knew Pina, but he knew she was the one!  All he had was this stern old man before him, a Sicilian father of 10 children!  Grandpa Vincenzo Licata: this was the man who forbid his daughters to cut their hair so they could never follow the fashionable short hair cuts of the mid 1940’s.  On Sundays, he forbid his family to do anything but read the Bible after attending morning mass.  He was stern, according to my mother, but was known to tell funny stories and he played the role of “mother” in the Licata family. He did the coddling while Grandma Licata meted out the punishments and disciplined the 10 children.

My dad thought the meeting went pretty well.  Grandpa Licata encouraged my dad to wait due to my mom’s young age and other pending circumstances. Dad secretly met my mother later and told her, “It went well!  Your dad said that after your sister gets married, you and I can start our formal engagement.  At that time, he will meet my parents and will allow us to go out for chaperoned walks.  Once we are engaged, he will allow me to come over and sit with your family in the evenings!”  By the time he was finished with his spiel, my mother was in tears.

“What’s wrong?  Have you changed your mind?  Do you not like me?”

“No, it’s not that!  You just said that all this is possible only AFTER my sister gets married!  You don’t understand.  We will have such a long wait!  Weddings don’t happen overnight.”

This worried my dad, but he reassured my mother that in due time, he and my mom could begin their formal engagement.  Time would be their friend and give mother time to grow into a woman.

The good news is that, soon after, my grandparents did everything according to plan.  My aunt’s marriage gave way to my parents’ formal engagement two years later!

We children were always told that mom and dad were never allowed to be alone together before their marriage.  They told us that their “dates’ were a lot like the scene in The Godfather where the engaged couple goes for a walk in Sicily and behind them is a line up of relatives!  Their “dates” became processions.  The told us countless times that back in 1948, there was no chance to even reach for the hand of your beloved.  In the film, The Godfather, the woman feigns a stumble so that her beloved can reach out for her and actually touch her.  How we loved that scene! I always imagined my mother feigning a stumble, so dad could catch her by the waistline!

“But ma, did daddy ever kiss you before you were married?”

“NO!  No kisses.  The kisses waited for our honeymoon! Back in the old days, that’s how things were done.”

Fast forward to 1998.  It was mom and dad’s 50th wedding anniversary.  All of us sisters converged at my parents’ house in Valparaiso, Indiana.  We planned a celebration that would seem more like a wedding.  On the morning of April 25, 1998, Zina, Nora, Toni, and I all barged into mom and dad’s bedroom (Jeanie was at the nursing home and would join us later for the festivities).  We had spent the night.  “Happy 50th Anniversary!!!”  How fragile and sweet they looked!  My mom was pulling the sheets up to her chin and my dad was all teary eyed, moved by his grown “girls”.  We all jumped onto their bed and said, “Tell us the story about how you met!!!!”

They started telling us the story we knew so well.

At some point, I said, “I still think it’s so AMAZING that you had your first kiss on your wedding day!”  All my sisters nodded in agreement.  And then I noticed my mom and dad look at each other and they started laughing.

Apparently, there was a hidden portion of the story!   Dad explained:  “See, I got really sick when we were engaged. I took to bed and was running a very high fever.  My mamma was worried that I was dying and so she sent for your mamma and her parents.  They all came at once.  Your mamma was crying and I said to my mamma that before I died I needed to see my fiance alone.  My parents and your mamma’s parents discussed this and decided to let Pina sit with me along my bedside, unchaperoned.  So your mamma came into my room and we were alone while our parents were sitting, waiting in the sitting room having coffee.  That’s when we kissed!!  And my fever went away and I lived to marry my your mamma!”

Incredible!  My parents chuckled at our gullibility! It’s now so funny to think that we had swallowed their long standing story hook, line, and sinker all those years, only to be set straight on their 50th wedding anniversary!  Of course, after hearing dad’s confession, I am now willing to concede that there were several kisses exchanged between the engaged couple the day my father had a fever (feigned or real?) while his parents and his future in-laws waited innocently (or knowingly?) outside the closed door!

That day, in 1998, I loved them even more for being so real and so incredibly in love with each other!

That day, in 1998, I learned that a kiss could cure a fever.

Happy Anniversary, Mom and Dad!  May you kiss another gazillion times x 100,000 or more into eternity.  Your love for one another is so inspiring.

I wish I could snuggle up onto your bed again and hear your beautiful love story just once more!  Thank you for teaching me about love and commitment. How I miss you!

Earth Day Hatha Yoga Retreat

April 23, 2012

Today is Earth Day and we celebrated this weekend with our annual Earth Day Hatha Yoga Retreat!

We were treated to unbelievably beautiful weather at the beach.  And, as incredible as this may sound, the snowy owls are still here in Ocean Shores! We walked out to Damon Point and looked and looked, but didn’t see any snowy owls  Just as we were about to give up the search and head back to the house, Rick spotted one.  We were like children on Christmas day!  We saw a total of three snowy owls yesterday!  I am guessing they won’t be here for too much longer.  Their breeding season is coming and they breed in the Arctic.  It is surprising they have stayed this long!

Here are two photos Rick took yesterday at Damon Point in Ocean Shores:

Breathtakingly beautiful!

Snowy Owl

It was a perfect weekend in every way!  Brent Matsuda, a biologist from Vancouver, B.C. joins us every year for this event.  He did a slideshow on the origins of Earth Day and showed photos from his travels in Africa.

Highlights from the weekend include:

  • seeing the snowy owls when we were beginning to believe they had already left!!
  • enjoying warm weather in April on the Washington coast
  • eating lunch outside in the back yard
  • restorative yoga
  • our regular yoga sessions and making the om circle with joined hands
  • getting to share a weekend with a wonderful group of yogis
  • eating good wholesome homemade food
  • doing shared readings and being introduced to great books: My Grandfather’s Blessing by Rachel Naomi Remen, M.D., Vis Major by Martin Burwash,  The Sense of Wonder by Rachel Carson, and Wild Bouquet by Harry Martinson
  • Brent’s Earth Day slide show

I put together a slide show of this weekend.  The African music I set the slide show to is for Martha’s son, Tosten, who is in the Peace Corps in Guinea:

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Never Say Never

April 21, 2012

My brother-in-law Jim was diagnosed with Non-Hodgkin’s Lymphoma about 3 years ago.  He was told that of all the various types of cancer, Non-Hodgkin’s Lymphoma is the most treatable.

The treatment was aggressive and the outcome looked bleak.  It seemed Jim had to get worse before he could get better.  One of the tumors was on his lumbar and was so large that it crimped Jim’s spine and left his lower body paralyzed. He was hospitalized at Johns Hopkins in Baltimore, Maryland for cancer treatment.  While he was hospitalized, I flew to Baltimore to see him and spend time with my sister.  Leaving Baltimore a few days later, I fought back the tears, thinking that I might not see Jim again.

He made it through the treatment, beat the cancer, and came home using a wheelchair.  He was told he would never walk again due to the nature of the spinal injury caused by the tumor.  The home he returned to had undergone some changes.   In Jim’s long absence, his friends from work had built ramps leading to the house.  They remodeled the main floor bathroom to accommodate Jim’s wheelchair and put in a special shower for him.  They converted the den on the main floor into a bedroom.  Jim’s sons made accessible shelves and work benches in the garage so that Jim could work on making birdhouses.  The family dog, Sonny, a black lab, became the best helper dog a person could dream of having.

Two years ago, Rick and I organized a fundraiser for Jim in Maryland.  I taught a yoga session and Rick sold his beautiful postcards and greeting cards featuring the best of his photography.  Zina and other family members organized a raffle to contribute to the fundraising.  100% of the proceeds went to a special fund for Jim. My nephew, Adam, designed a website for the fundraising event. Family and friends were incredibly generous in their contributions, and with the funds raised, Jim was able to go to the Kennedy Krieger Institute in Baltimore, an institute specializing in spinal injuries, for intensive rehabilitative work.

Jim and Rick

Kennedy Krieger Institute offers the most innovative therapy for people who have paralysis.  It is also very expensive.  The staff at KKC told Jim that, with a lot of work, there was a good possibility that he would be able to walk again.  Fueled by hope, Jim started the hardest work he has ever had to do in his life and started learning how to walk again!

Here is more on the incredible Kennedy Krieger Institute:

Spinal Cord Injury (SCI)

Spinal cord injury (SCI) causes damage to nerve roots and fibers that carry messages to and from the brain. Spinal cord injuries can result from physical trauma, tumors, developmental disorders or a number of different diseases. In 1995, Christopher Reeve known for his role in all three Superman movies, was thrown from his horse and landed headfirst into a fence shattering his first and second vertebrae. Reeve’s cervical spinal injury paralyzed him from the neck down. Reeve sought the aid of Dr. John McDonald, who was working at Washington University in St. Louis, Missouri. After extensive activity-based therapies, Reeve was able to wiggle his toes and move a couple fingers. Christopher Reeve died in 2004, however his achievements shined light on everyone affected by spinal cord injuries. Dr. McDonald left St. Louis and officially opened the International Center for Spinal Cord Injury (ICSCI) at Kennedy Krieger Institute on June 14, 2005. ICSCI is one of the first centers to have a focus specifically on children with chronic spinal cord injuries and paralysis. The center utilizes innovative activity-based therapies such as FES cycling, aquatic therapy, and partial weight supported walking to help patients regain sensation and feeling in their bodies. The center combines clinical research with a focus on restoration and rehabilitation for children and adults with chronic paralysis.

Over the years, Zina has sent me video clips of my brother-in-law, assisted, treading water, learning to move his legs again at the Kennedy Krieger Institute.  It was incredibly moving to see the latest video clip last week in which Jim is walking using a walker!  The doctor working with Jim believes he will walk unassisted someday.  Jim’s goal is to walk with the walker around the house by the end of April!

Never Say Never to this wonderful person, Jim, who will soothe your mind with his rural Pennsylvanian accent, who can have you riveted to your seat or laughing aloud with his stories, and who has one of the kindest hearts I know.

Never Say Never to anyone!  Jim’s story has forged this truth into my life.

Bearded Tree at Jim and Zina's house

Exciting Gig!

April 11, 2012

I have an exciting gig coming up next month!

My nephew, John (photographer and film maker), hired me to be an assistant producer for a photography book project he has been working on for 6 years.  I will be helping him with the final phase of his book which is about Sicily. The book draws inspiration from various family members and from the Sicilian culture.   John and I both grew up in Indiana.  John’s mother, Jeanie, was ill for so long and so early on in her life, that John and his brother Vince spent a lot of time at our house with my mom and dad, as well as with their other set of grandparents.  John and Vince, as well as the other grandchildren, adored my parents and were always enthralled by the stories my parents told of the “old country”.

John went to Sicily for the first time with me about 6 years ago.  He instantly felt a deep connection to our home village, Grotte.  I introduced him to all my first cousins, aunts, and uncles.  John also immediately fell in love with my very animated eccentric hat-collecting-singing-funny Uncle Charlie (one of my mom’s older brothers) who raises chickens, grows fruits and nuts,  tends his own vineyard and makes the best wine on the island, has the olive orchard that has been in the Licata family for a very long time and which produces the most exquisite green fragrant olive oil on the planet, is an ace cook who makes his own sausage, gardens and grows most of his own food,  preserves vegetables of all types, cans tomato sauce with his sweet wife, Zia Tota, AND makes the best minestrone (called “minesha” in the Sicilian dialect) and “machu machu” (pronounced “mah-koo mah-koo”, a fabulous -and dangerous if-you-know-what-I-mean- bean soup that is considered to be the best comfort food any Licata family member has ever dished up!  Uncle Charlie can rattle off about 30 tongue twisters in the Sicilian dialect.  He insists on teaching tongue twisters to his nieces and nephews who live abroad and raucously laughs at our feeble attempts to imitate him.  At 85 years old, this guy never stops!  Need I say more?  I would have to say that Uncle Charlie is one of the principal muses for John’s Sicily photography book.

The book pays homage to my parents (John’s grandparents), to my sister Jeanie (John’s mother), to our ancestral village, Grotte, to extended family which includes Uncle Charlie,  to Sicilian culture, and to the beauty of Sicily.  John is wrapping up the project in May, but focusing on capturing the “missing images”.  This job will take me out of the country again from May 7 until May 29th.  I will be in Sicily  helping John get the last images he needs for his book.  Since John already has lots of photos of Grotte and of our family members, we will start our work in Palermo where we will photograph Franciscan monks who live pretty much the same way they lived in medieval times.  We will also go to the small Sicilian island of Favignana where the annual tuna fishing takes place. The fishing tradition is called the Mattanza and it has been happening annually for thousands of years.  In fact, on some nearby smaller islands, there are prehistoric cave drawings depicting scenes of tuna fishing!  John will document the fishermen.  I will serve as John’s translator and interpreter using the dialect with the fishermen and other villagers, and am organizing our itinerary and managing the various bookings and reservations for our crew of four which includes John, Reynaldo (producer), Salv (the other assistant producer) and myself.

Favignana fishermen (found on line)

John also would like to get more photographs of the old men who carry their chairs from their houses to the piazza (!!) where they sit with their friends for much of the day socializing and watching the world go by.  Apparently, they are very difficult to photograph.   John says he gets the stink eye every time he tries to photograph the old men in the piazza, so my job will be to chat with them in the Sicilian dialect and make sure they are comfortable and permit John to photograph him.

Hanging out in the piazza on the Sicilian island of Favignana (found on line).

The book has about six pages of John’s written work, which I edited and am also in the process of translating into the Sicilian dialect.  Translating and writing in the Sicilian dialect is tricky.  I am working from memory here.  I have to think about what John is saying and recreate that dialog in my head, imagining how the words would flow in Sicilian if my mother were telling the story!  How I wish I had my parents to look over my translations and give feedback on my work!  However, I will be seeing Uncle Charlie in September and I will have him go over my translation at that time to make sure it is 100% perfect!  Knowing him, he’ll probably try to sneak in some tongue twisters.  I am pretty excited about this project.  I am busy as ever as I start working on finding subs to cover my classes while I am away again.

Oh, and we do not YET have a working title for the book.  One of my jobs is to help John come up with a title.  I have a feeling it will come to me while we are working away at our project in May!

This is a non-yoga-related job…unless I lead some early morning yoga classes for John, Rey, and Salv!  Now there’s a thought!

I know I am doing this work for John because I believe he is a great artist and I am proud to collaborate with him, but I also think I am doing this work for Jeanie.  Why else would I come back from Peru, and turn around 5 weeks later and leave the country again?  Since losing her, I feel myself taking life by the horns and wanting to do everything I can possibly do!  I feel this great surge of energy that I’ve never had before.  It’s as if I am living for her, as well as for myself.  I imagine her smiling at John’s project and watching his project come to full fruition.

Cat Prayer Flags

April 7, 2012

Cat-less: I never knew what an empty word that is.  It comes off the tongue choppy and awkward.

Bear-less: Like the word “unbearable”, this word denotes a state of existence one does not choose willingly.

Bottom line: I miss my Little Bear!  Reality has hit like a ton of bricks as I experience my first sunshine-drenched spring day of the year at Ocean Shores without Little Bear beside me as I garden, as I read on the sofa, and as I do my yoga on my worn mat.

We received a beautiful gift of Cat Prayer Flags from Julie and John!  I never knew such a thing existed.  Rick put up the prayer flags today near the Bear Cairn he built for Little Bear.  Our furry guy loved being here at Ocean Shores and his spirit will continue to grace this special sanctuary.  Below are some photos of the Cat Prayer Flags, as well as some poems Rick wrote for Little Bear throughout the years:

Kitty Prayer Flags!

Paw Prints on our hearts....thank you Julie and John!

Bear Cairn Memorial

The wind now gently blows across the prayer flags and reminds us of Little Bear's gentle spirit.

In Memory of Bear: Click once, and when image appears, click again to enlarge.

You can click once, then click again to enlarge. Rick's muse: Little Bear