• Obama's tightening the rules about segregation
in housing. But he's at least 50 years behind the times. Yes, you can still be
kept out of certain suburban or gated neighborhoods if you're not the right color. But what goes
on more is people of color being pushed out of their neighborhoods to make room
for gentry Legolands.
• My wife and I went downtown on one of our rare
trips for Friday happy hour. Droves of the gentry passed us, on their way to a
Rockies game. Why would anyone pay to go to one? Except to watch the other team.
• Old downtown Denver once served combination
appetizer platters featuring bits of all the munchies. Those are gone.
Everything's a la carte. Thank the hipster bistros for that.
• Yesterday, finished my daughter's custom table
to go behind her sofa. It's 8 ft. long and 6 inches wide, for putting drinks
on. An engineering nightmare: how to keep it stable. I learned some things.
Like the limits of my furniture-building skills. Make it'll look cute.
• The Portland-rainy season in Denver is not
over, yet. 5 of our fruit trees died so the Koch brothers can get filthier
rich. Global warming forces me to learn or invent new methods of
planting trees. And flood control.
• With July 4th fireworks over, my ACD wants to know when the thunder and lightening stop. I don't want to tell him the global-warming truth. He's already going to be 14, anyway.
• A neighbor cut a major branch off my maple
out front. I think it died from roots being severed by the utility company.
Years ago they came out and marked where the gas line was buried. Marked it
wrong. From being severed, they came out to replace it. And maybe cut
the maple's roots. There's probably no cheap way to prove this. So, the
utility monopoly half-killed a great tree. Birds and insects will miss it. Me
too.
• Donald Trump is a distraction, but am I the
only one who sees that? As long as he's clowning away with insane racist
comments, the real contenders are campaigning without as much worry. Voters are being trumped.
• In Denver and other inner-city areas,
developers buy their way out of building low-income housing. Like a fine
imposed for being a racist. Segreration is profitable, so they pay it. Development
encouraging historical regression is not progress. It's something worse.
• The mexicanos and Chicanos in my targeted
neighborhood aren't just selling their coveted property. They're losing our
people's wealth. What they buy in the near suburbs will never be as valuable.
Plus there's the added costs of commuting, loss of time and irreplaceable
community. The developers who buy those inner-city homes are laughing all the
way to the bank--rupting of city life's diversity. Welcome to "America."
• People who've read my children's story, A Cradle for Abuelo, generally like it. Some
cried over parts they were supposed to. A teacher suggested I change the title
because boys won't be intrigued by the word, cradle. To boot, the story's about
a boy nagual-spirit. Have to think more about the title. But I choke up every time
I read it, so what follows is fine.
• Received a rejection of one of my stories--Fatherly, motherly, dragonly love, luck
& touch. "Ultimately, we decided not to use it," it read. I
call it a "cross-genre work of mestizo/Mexica/alien/Diné/folklore/Sci-Fi
& fantasy." Did I cram too much into the title and genre? Or did it
just suck?
• What to make next? Bird baths from half-split
spruce lodge poles? Bat houses for me and others? The bats will need cedar,
requiring some trips down alleys to find pallets. But last night, drinking out
back with the neighbors, one gave me a great design idea for tabletops. I wish,
I wish, I wish…
• Decided to put the wood-burning stove in the
work shed. Then come global-warmed winter, I can do my woodwork. To keep the mind
cleansed.
• I'm rewriting the first children's story I
wrote, a Mexican folklore retell. Some Anglo got the same story published,
years ago. It was heartless. Mine can't risk that.
• I've taken wild plants from the Rocky Mts. for
my garden. I let patches of clover spread, wild cosmos have their own beds,
sages too, various prairie grasses abound. I don't know all the names of the
wild plants, but it doesn't matter. I give them to family, friends and
neighbors, to spread the wealth. By their propagating, I feel the battle's not
lost.
• I'd better get the chicken coop and aquaponics
pond-vegetable garden built soon. And an air-heat exchange system for the
house. Then there's the greenhouse, and solar for the roof. The dry, lightening
storm last night was like to make you believe in the gods. They're coming for
us. Better to shore up the ramparts.
• Received a message from Rudy Anaya, author of Bless Me, Última. He's going to join me,
and others. I feel blessed and honored to be a part of something he'd join. That's
a good-feeling, non-outrageous place to end, today.
RudyG, a.k.a. Rudy Ch. Garcia, the only one on the Internet
3 comments:
i'm scared too
Just so we don't stay scared, Colleen.
- RudyG
Rudy, I enjoyed reading your miscellany of observations and ruminations. Like chatting with a neighbor on the porch, rocking in an old chair, relaxed and without deadlines. Thanks for letting us see how the Denverites cope with global warming and keeping up with writing. Continued successes to you.
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