Saturday, June 12, 2010

Home Again, Home Again




And just one week ago about this time, I was driving the final miles to my parent’s house in Lincoln, the first stop on a short vacation that ultimately took my mom and me to Colorado to visit our respective friends. Now, one week later, I have returned from my trip, had my first days back at work, tucked my suitcase back in my closet, and restocked my refrigerator with lots of fresh veggies.
Here are a few highlights from my whirlwind trip!

Having breakfast with my brother and sister-in-law Sunday morning. I saw Brooklyn’s recently finished nursery, save for the closet door, and all the little baby things they have for her so far, including a half dozen pair of Air Jordan’s in all different sizes – my brother’s contribution to her wardrobe! She should be set for a year or two at least.

Driving too and from Colorado with my mom. At seven hours each way, one would think it a long and tedious drive, especially since the Western Nebraska landscape isn’t inherently exciting, although we did see a camel out in the panhandle, but the drive seemed to go quickly as we had lots of talking and reading to do!

Cooking with Clarissa. No sooner had I arrive Sunday night then she put me to work helping her to finish our dinner of beans and rice. Monday night we had our “official” cooking date, making rigatoni, oatmeal bread and banana cake. Yum! Good thing I brought my Wii along. We had several less than stellar games of tennis and bowling after dinner. (This is the only picture I have of my time with Clarissa; I'll have to remember my whole visit with her by our oatmeal bread.)


Visiting the Byers-Evans House in Denver with Clarissa. We were given a personal tour, because no one else was there to take the tour with us, by one of her classmates of the Italianate-style home, which was built in 1883 by William Byers, who was the editor of Denver’s first newspaper. William G. Evans, the son of a Colorado territorial governor, bought the home in 1889. The house was restored to the period between 1912 and 1924 – I loved the bold Art Nuveo wallpapers! The Evans women led very intriguing lives. For example, Josephine studied art in Paris, specializing in weaving and leather work. She also served as a nurse during WWI. Her boyfriend died during the war, and she returned to her family’s home in Denver, devoting herself to her art, never marrying. 

Reading a 1922 Larimer County Extension Report at the CSU archive. Clarissa stumbled across it as she was doing research for one of her classes and took me to see it as a surprise! Several millinery classes had been taught in the county, and the report contained several pages describing the number of hats that were made or refurbished and the number of silk and organdy flowers made by the various participants. As evidence of the participant’s success, the woman preparing the report also listed the awards several won at the county and state fair for their millinery work. My favorite anecdote was about an older woman who prior to the class wore quite “unbecoming” hats, which were from 1908. However, she made a new hat and wore it into town that day, receiving many complements on it. (Several other women also work their new creations into town that day also.)


Being with Halley. I last saw Halley and her family in September, and it was delightful to see her again. Halley and I were able to catch up on many recent happenings as we knitted and played with her daughter. Livi just recently turned one and has started walking! It was fun to see how much she has grown and how her little personality is emerging.

Tuesday, May 18, 2010

And the baby is....

May 18
6:05 P

From: Peter Simmons
Its a little baby girl

Monday, May 17, 2010

Niece or Nephew?

My brother, sister-in-law, and I have been exchanging a flurry of texts over the past few hours about little Baby Simmons. Today they went in for their ultrasound to find out if they are having a boy or a girl. They’ve decided to keep it a secret for 24 hours, so I wont actually find out until tomorrow, but here are the texts we exchanged in the meantime…

May 17, 2010

3:05 P
From: Liz Simmons
Guessing time! What do you think our baby is?

3:28 P
To: Liz Simmons
Dreamed you had a girl, but I think you are actually having a boy. Am excited to find out!!

3:28 P
From: Liz Simmons
so your guess is Boy?

3:31 P
To: Liz Simmons
Yes indeed! What is the current tally for boy vs girl?

3:33 P
From: Liz Simmons
6-boy 9-girl.

3:34 P
From: Liz Simmons
7-boy 9-girl * just got an update

3:37 P
To: Liz Simmons
Oh, it is getting close! You two must be having fun with this – leaving us in suspense! 

3:38 P
From: Liz Simmons
Yes! I’m going to put this in the baby book too!

~ ~ ~ ~ ~

5:41 P
From: Peter Simmons
The baby looks very healthy

5:48 P
To: Peter Simmons
So glad to hear that! Must have been exciting to see your baby again.

5:51 P
From: Peter Simmons
Yep

5:52 P
From: Peter Simmons
Saw the little hands open and close

5:52 P
From: Peter Simmons
9 ounces

5:57 P
To: Peter Simmons
Oh, wow, that is so amazing! Makes my heart so happy to hear that! I am still smiling thinking about Baby Simmons’ little hand.

Tuesday, May 4, 2010

What do you write?

Tonight I attended a writing group at a local bookstore. It was a feeble step in my attempt to become more connected to other writers in Des Moines and perhaps find some motivation to write more consistently on my own. In college I wrote all the time. I had too. I was a History and Writing & Rhetoric major which meant semesters filled with research papers and essays. After graduation, the deadlines disappeared, and my writing lagged. It’s not that I don’t want to write, but there are always so many other things to do. (I don’t know whether or not I should take comfort from the fact that most writers say this.)

I wasn’t quite sure of what to expect from this gathering. I knew we wouldn’t be workshopping any pieces, but I wasn’t sure what type of discussion we’d have. So, I can’t exactly say I was disappointed by my experience – let’s just say it was interesting.

There were ten of us there, all were forty something and older expect for one girl who was my age. The atmosphere was perfect. We were tucked in the corner of the bookstore, so we were surrounded by shelves upon shelves of books! The gentleman in charge of the group began by passing out plastic champaign glasses of Sangria and handouts about writing quarry letters, cover letters and blogs. We didn’t talk much about them. From there the conversation wandered as participants asked questions and shared experiences. One gentleman is in the middle of writing a sequel to a novel he published last fall. Another is expecting a book out next month. One writer offered some suggestions about working with agents. Another talked about an authors’ conference coming up in September. Another talked about her appointment with an agent at a Wisconsin writing conference next week. This will be her chance to sell her book!

Of course, since I was new, they wanted to know what I write. Who are you? and What do you write?

I was dreading this question. Write? What do I write? The who I am is easy enough, but how do I describe what I write, what I want to write and more importantly that I don’t really write which is why I have such a vague notion of what I write in the first place. I know that what I say will push me into a genre box of sorts, which is ok, but in my first meeting, how do I want them to think about who I am. If I told them I wrote memoir or romance or mysteries, they would readily understand that.

I told them I write essays. Nice broad brush stroke. I should have known it wouldn’t be enough. Well, what kind of essays, they want to know. Ummm…essays about some of my life experiences, I say, I’d like to write about the museum where I work and history and my own experiences working in the past although it really isn’t like what it was like in the past. It sounds flimsy, like I have no idea of what I’m doing, which would be accurate. I really don’t.

To be honest, most of my recent writing has just been writing exercises. Some of my writing prompts have resulted in fiction. Some have the feelings of an essay, others are autobiographical and some are just descriptions of things. I’m just trying to put in some training miles, trying to make writing a habit, something I need to do everyday.

Of course, now that I am home and writing about my experience, I’ve figured out what I should have said to the question of, What do you write?

I write creative non-fiction, I'll say next time. Are you familiar with Annie Dillard? She writes brilliant things about life by writing about insects and clouds and sand. I want to do something similar, but by writing about historic moments and objects and connecting those objects to the past and the present. I wrote about a fountain. I want to write about hair and desks and penmanship. I wonder what they will say then.

Saturday, April 24, 2010

A Rainy Day

Tonight as I was driving home from work in the pouring rain, tires splashing through overflowing gutters, slowing to a stop for two rain soaked girls to run barefoot across the street, I was reminded of something that a friend and I did years ago……

Back when I lived in Ft. Collins, CO, on another rain filled afternoon, my best friend Halley and I were playing at my house. (My guess is we were in kindergarten, but even if we had only been in preschool, we were only in school in the mornings.) As it was nearing the time for my older sister to get out of school, my mom decided to let Halley and I walk the two blocks to school to meet her. Because it was so rainy, we decided we should wear boots lest our feet get soaked. However, we did have any rain boots, so we decided to wear my parents’ moon boots.

Off we set. Instead of walking on the sidewalk where our feet would have been sure to stay dry, we found it more adventurous to slog through the overflowing gutters. It was probably an accident at first that some water got into our boots. They were too big after all, and we were splashing through the gutters, but after the little bit first got in, we began to plot. We decided it would be funny to fill our boots with water, so that when we took them off when we got home, water would spill all over the floor. Of course, we would pretend that we had no idea there was even any water in our boots! We started doing knee bends, dragging our boot tops through the water to fill them up. I pictured little worms being swept up inside the dark corners of my boots. I could feel the water squishing around my toes.

We met my sister and walked properly home with her.

Then the moment arrived - the moment when we would execute the final piece of our scheme. Off we pulled our boots. Out poured the water…all over the linoleum of the entryway floor, into a puddle between the long, pseudo stained glass window and our hall tree. My mom’s surprise and dismay, our shoulder shrug and “We don’t know how that happened! It was really wet outside.” Mom grabbed some towels to begin mopping up the mess. I don’t think we were punished for it. Perhaps Mom really did think it an accident, after all, why would we intentionally fill our boots with water?

Several years later when Halley and I were reminiscing about this incident, Mom said she had absolutely no memory of this ever taking place. Nothing we said could even jog the slightest hint of this memory in her mind. If it happened, she must have blocked it from her memory. Were we sure we really did that? But if Halley and I both remember it, it must have happened, right?

Sunday, April 4, 2010

He is Risen!

Now after the Sabbath, as it began to dawn toward the first day of the week, Mary Magdalene and the other Mary came to look at the grave.
And behold, a severe earthquake had occurred, for an angel of the Lord descended from heaven and came and rolled away the stone and sat upon it.
And his appearance was like lightning, and his clothing as white as snow.
The guards shook for fear of him and became like dead men.
The angel said to the women, "Do not be afraid; for I know that you are looking for Jesus who has been crucified.
"He is not here, for He has risen, just as He said. Come, see the place where He was lying.
"Go quickly and tell His disciples that He has risen from the dead; and behold, He is going ahead of you into Galilee, there you will see Him; behold, I have told you."
And they left the tomb quickly with fear and great joy and ran to report it to His disciples.

Matthew 28

Friday, April 2, 2010

When I Survey the Wondrous Cross
By Isaac Watts

When I survey the wondrous cross
on which the Prince of Glory died;
my richest gain I count but loss,
and pour contempt on all my pride.

Forbid it, Lord, that I should boast,
save in the death of Christ, my God;
all the vain things that charm me most,
I sacrifice them to his blood.

See, from his head, his hands, his feet,
sorrow and love flow mingled down.
Did e'er such love and sorrow meet,
or thorns compose so rich a crown.

Were the whole realm of nature mine,
that were an offering far too small;
love so amazing, so divine,
demands my soul, my life, my all.

Monday, March 29, 2010

Japan: Kingdom of Dolls

Last Friday I saw an exhibit of 70 Japanese dolls currently on display at the Iowa State Historical Society Museum. (By some crazy coincidence I happened to be there at the same time probably 75 to 100 Japanese students were touring the museum. Almost everyone who was viewing the exhibit with me was speaking Japanese!) I’ve always been fascinated by dolls. Growing up they were one of my favorite things to play with, and even now, when I spot a doll in a museum exhibit or antique store, I am drawn to it, wondering about their lives when they still belonged to someone. Japanese dolls are not exclusively play things, as they are in America, but the have a rich heritage in the country, thus making Japan, a “kingdom of dolls.”


There were over a dozen different categories of dolls on display: Hina and Gogatsu dolls are used in the celebration of the girls and boys festivals each spring, Noh and Bunraku dolls that depict different aspects of Japanese theater traditions, Oshie Hagoita are cut from thick paper and then wrapped with silk or cotton, Hakata dolls are molded from clay and then brilliantly painted, Ichimatsu dolls specifically depict Japanese children.

Despite all these different categories, nine times out of ten, Japanese dolls have very serene expressions and their clothing will point to the richness of Japan’s ancient costumes and pageantry. (Also, one interesting tidbit, the dolls’ faces are made from layers of pulverized oyster shells.) There was one doll which should have had anything but a serene expression on his face as it appeared he was about to be blown away by a gust of wind! He was balanced on the toes of one foot with his other leg kicked up at an angle in front of him, almost if he was preparing to step to the right with a flourished kick. The blue and white paper umbrella he was holding was thrust almost completely horizontal. There wasn’t a hint of shock or surprise registered on his face. He just looked like he was out for a pleasant stroll.

I was most drawn to the Kokeshi and Oyama dolls. The Kokeshi dolls are made from blocks of wood using Japanese woodturning techniques. The traditional dolls have long, rounded bodies with large rounded heads placed squarely on top. They are all uniform in size, shape and expression, and look like bowling pins all lined up, just with a slightly different silhouette! I like the creative Kokeshi dolls better. They began to be crafted after WWII, born of the craftsmen’s desire for free imagination. Some of these dolls are cylindrical while others are round and others are more square. Some have distinctive heads carved above the body, while others have a face that is just carved into the one piece of wood. Many of these dolls had intricate designs carved into their bodies. I was amazed to see the variety of emotions created in these dolls with a few lines and dots of paint for their facial features. The Oyama dolls wore elaborate hairstyles and costumes, depicting the fashions of Japanese women. Their clothing was vibrant made from reds and oranges, patterned with elaborate embroidery.

I certainly felt like an outsider trying to look in and understand the Japanese culture in a bit better through the frame provided by these dolls, but they certainly kept hidden more than they revealed. I left wondering about other cultures where dolls were important and how something that is just a plaything in one culture can take on such significance in another.

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

My Favorite Flowers



Today was the gloomy variety of March days, and I was thankful to have these cheery daffodils, given to me by one of my friends, to brighten my table. I think part of the reason I love daffodils so much is because they seem to herald the beginning of spring. You can watch them bloom in a matter of hours, and they seem to be so full of eager life when their petals have fully opened.

Sunday, March 7, 2010

MOMCC in Kansas City

Yesterday I returned from three days in Kansas City, KS, where I attended the Spring MOMCC conference (Midwest Open-Air Museums Coordinating Council). Not only was I able to enjoy three days without looking at any snow, I was able to spend time with employees and volunteers from a variety of other museums and historical societies. Each spring and fall since I began working at Living History Farms, I’ve watched some of my coworkers head off to MOMCC and return excited about the people they’d spent time with and the workshops they attended. I was excited when my supervisor told me she wanted to send me this year. MOMCC ended up being a very different experience than I anticipated. A lot was packed into the three days, so the following are just a few highlights.

The conference was hosted by Mahaffie Stagecoach Stop & Farm Historic Site. (This is the only intact stagecoach stop left on the Santa Fe Trail.) On Thursday I took a slat sunbonnet workshop. I started sewing it while I was there, but it’s only about half finished. We were able to look at several historic sunbonnets while we worked on ours to see the variety of things that were done with them. My favorite bonnet was the doll slat sunbonnet, which was constructed precisely how we were making ours – just smaller! We also read some primary accounts of mid-nineteenth century women talking about how annoying it was to wear this large bonnet, with wooden slats in the brim to make it stand straight out from their faces, but how very practical it was at the same time.

Friday I attended workshops on the different costumed interpretation traditions, the history of “Bleeding Kansas,” and the importance of your museum’s mission in planning programming. I also went to the foodways, clothing/textile, and artisans resource groups. Saturday I went to workshops on how to incorporate research into your interpretation and on how to fold and pack nineteenth-century clothing for travel without it getting all rumpled and wrinkled. This is quite the feat if you’ve ever seen some of the fancy 1870s overskirts people wear!

Friday night we toured Mahaffie and rode in their reproduction stagecoaches. We crammed five women into our stagecoach, and it was quite cozy. I couldn’t even sit back in my seat. I can’t imagine traveling any sort of distance in one! My friend Lucy and I spent a lot of time in the kitchen looking at their cookbooks, several of which we have at our museum, and exclaiming over their tiny woodstove that they were managing to bake biscuits in. It certainly made me thankful for the large six-burner woodstove I get to cook on at Living History Farms. We discovered that they had a round woodpile also! We take great pride in our round woodpile at LHF, so I took a picture of Lucy next to it just as two Mahaffie interpreters rounded the corner. The gentleman proceeded to give us a hard time about it, saying we were only taking the photos to showoff to our co-workers how much better our woodpile was than theirs. They threatened to confiscate my camera later in the evening over it too! Honestly, I just thought it was neat that they also had a round woodpile, although it is true that ours is about four times bigger than theirs. However, they justified its size by explaining that they just butchered four pigs, so they had to burn through a lot of it. It was much bigger several weeks ago.


After several days of talking with other museum folk about where they work, I must say I am glad that I work at LHF. I love my museum, and I am thankful for my place there.

Monday, March 1, 2010

Happy St. David's Day!

I smiled when I turned my calendar this morning and saw that today is St. David’s Day! Whenever I hear of St. David, I am reminded of leeks, daffodils, and my semester abroad in Wales during my senior year of college. While there I studied at Trinity College in Carmarthen. There were about a dozen American students in my program. While we were encouraged to take classes that were apart of Trinity’s regular course offerings, thus getting to be in class with Welsh students, we were also required to take a Welsh culture class that was just for the American students. It was in this class that I first learned of St. David, the patron saint of Wales, and the tradition of wearing leeks on St. David’s Day.

St. David was born in Wales in the 6th century and made his mark by founding monastic settlements and churches as he helped spread Christianity among the pagan Celtic people of Wales. He also became the arch bishop of Wales. The leek became his symbol because of the strategic role it played in a battle between the Welsh and Saxons. In order for the Welsh to not confuse friend with foe, St. David told them to wear leeks in their hats to distinguish them from the Saxons. The Welsh were victorious as a result!

St. David was canonized in the 12th century, and as the Welsh began celebrating his feast day, it became tradition to wear a leek on March 1 to commemorate him. At some point, though, the women started pinning daffodils to their bodices, perhaps deciding that wearing a type of onion was not very feminine. (Our instructor told us that if we were in Wales during the spring semester we would see fields and fields of daffodils blooming.) Our instructor told us of a humorous contest that eventually became part of this leek wearing tradition – that of the longest leek! It was quite simple; the gentlemen would measure their leeks to see who was wearing the largest/longest one. I’m not quite sure what you received if you won or even what it proved to win this contest; I can’t quite see it being a mark of your masculinity, although I think that’s what it originally signified!

(I have a great photo of one of my friends holding a leek, but I can't find it right now, so I put in a picture of St. David's Cathedral in Wales instead. It was a beautiful place to see!)

Oh, I should also add that remembering St. David and leeks also reminds me of cock-a-leekie-soup and my dear friend, Clarissa, which makes me smile too!

Monday, January 25, 2010

Time to be Active!

If you had told me a week ago that I would buy a Wii, I would have laughed and said that I would never have any reason to spend that kind of money on a gaming system. Well, that reason came in the form of snow and ice upon snow and ice which has prevented me from going out for my daily walk for much too long now. I like being active and dislike going to a gym. Last week I reached the breaking point. I’ve been doing way too much sitting recently, so I started looking at compact exercise equipment that would give me a good work out without taking up much space in my small apartment. I talked with one of my friends about what I was thinking about getting. He told me I might think it a crazy idea, but he thought a Wii Fit might actually be the best option. His family has it and loves it. As I looked into it further, it seemed like it would be the best fit. It’s compact, has variety, and would get me moving again. So off to the store I went. I set it up successfully last night, which is a small feet in and of itself since I am not too technologically oriented, and I love it! Last night I went for a short run and played some tennis and baseball. This morning I did a hula-hoop activity and some strength training. The Wii has confirmed that I still have bad hand-eye coordination, a poor sense of rhythm, and not the best balance. Ah well, things to improve on I suppose as I watch the 50mph winds swirl the falling snow around outside once again. Perhaps I should try some yoga!

Thursday, January 21, 2010

The Lion King

Last night my sister and I attended The Lion King. I’d seen the Broadway musical when it was in Des Moines four years ago and was excited to see the performance again! My sister and I were about a dozen rows from the stage – far enough away to see the entire stage and close enough to see the performers’ facial expressions as well as the details of the costumes and puppets! It is amazing to think of all the individual talent that went into the creation of the show and was shared with us.

After the performance we stayed for a short Q&A session with four of the performers: two individuals from the ensemble, Tony Freeman who played Zazo, and Ben Lipitz who played Pumba. From them we learned that they actually have two complete sets. While one is being used, the other is in transit to the next location and assembled so when the show closes in one city, the performers can fly to the next city and be ready to rehearse/perform the very next day while the set is being torn down in the city they just left. Something usually goes wrong every performance. Last night, for example, the black curtains blocking the backstage from the stage quit working. The performers had to be extra quiet and had to be careful to stay out of the audiences’ line of sight. While one of the ensemble members, who is single and doesn’t have a mortgage, loves to travel all of the US performing, Freeman expressed how hard it can be to be separated from his wife and daughter for long periods of time. With their performance schedule, if the performers want to see their family, their family has to come to them. The performers only get two weeks vacation a year and often aren’t able to make it home to celebrate the holidays with their families. Despite these challenges, they love what they do. Freeman has been Zazo for nine years, and Lipitz has been with the show for seven years. They each mentioned what an exciting experience it is to tell this story each night in live theater. Hearing more about what it takes each individual to perform their part made me appreciate the show all the more.

Oh, I should also mention the other exciting component of our evening – the weather. When I bought our tickets about six weeks ago, I did so with the realization that with it being January, we could have a lovely evening for the performance or we could have a terrible storm which would prevent Rachel from driving to Des Moines from Lincoln and from us attending the performance at all. I crossed my fingers that it would be the former rather than the later. Unfortunately it was the later. Rachel came a day early to make sure she arrived before the forecasted ice storm. Yesterday morning we woke up to a world encased in ice. We had to skate, quite literally, across the parking lot to my car to chip all the ice off of it so we could go to dinner and then the performance. Fortunately, the roads were not slick, and we did not fall traversing the ice going to and from my car. The storm certainly added an element of danger to the experience, turning it into an adventure