My Type of Gratitude List, No. 11

December 2, 2023: I am grateful for the light of friendship, of pets like Pearl and intelligent people working on behalf of those without much privilege or power.

December 7, 2023: I am grateful for technology, even if it makes me curse and swear at least once every day.

December 11, 2023: I am grateful for Pearl and for sunshine in Winter.

December 18, 2023: I am grateful for vacuums. I love the felling of a freshly vacuumed space.

December 19, 2023: I am grateful for color–color can bring so much comfort and joy. I’m relying on the benefits of color more every day.

December 31, 2023: I am grateful for Pearl, and for friends who understand Pearl. Maybe because that feels like they understand me. Pearl is an extension of my spirit.

My Type of Gratitude List, No. 10

November 4, 2023: I am grateful beyond measure for Drift Creek Camp and beloved friends to share it with.

November 9, 2023: I am grateful for sun breaks on rainy days in November.

November 16, 2023: I am grateful for cortisone shots in the heel. That’s right–you heard me. Anything to help plantar fasciitis.

November 17, 2023: I am grateful for friends who can help me move large items when I really need help. #dumbdelivery.

November 24, 2023: I am grateful for friends who accept me as I am.

November 29, 2023: I am grateful for sunlight.

My Type of Gratitude List, No. 9

October 9, 2023: I am grateful that I learned how to sew simple things and how to repair clothing.

October 17, 2023: I am grateful for Lisa and Nathaniel. Seeing them at Goodwill tonight made my whole day. {here my typewriter ribbon gave out} I am also thankful for typewriter ribbon.

October 20, 2023: I am immensely grateful for cotton, and all the people involved with growing, harvesting, dying and sewing pieces of clothing that I wear.

October 24, 2023: I am grateful for having a mop, because that means I have a floor to clean, and that means I have a home.

October 25, 2023: I am so grateful for friends and co workers that I can invite over for cocktails.

With Gratitude

Today I am so grateful for everyone who visited my Neurographic art display at Imagine Coffee in Corvallis, Oregon! Thank you for taking the time to talk with me and view my art. I am fortunate to have friends and mentors who show up for these important moments, not to mention the cutest of babies.

If you couldn’t come today, you still have a couple of weeks to view the art (and get a good cup of coffee) during the month of February!

My Type of Gratitude List, No. 8

September 2: I am grateful for melons and the ones who grow them.

September 4: I am so grateful for walks along the river with friends, both human and canine.

September 5: I am grateful for my landlord, David Livingston.

September 8: I am grateful for friends who walk with me when I really need their help. Friends who are also doing the work of speaking truth and who communicate well.

September 9: I am grateful I was not hit by the motorcycle that did not stop as I was crossing the street in the crosswalk.

September 11: I am grateful for these plums from a friend of a friend’s garden and also for this Oregon geode, cut and polished by a friend who is moving away.

I am grateful I know what to do when I see a dog in a dark vehicle on a hot summer day, with very little ventilation.

September 12: I am grateful to have found this professional french fry cutter second hand. Now I can make my own sweet potato fries in the oven.

September 18: I am grateful for this down comforter, King Size, for my Queen size bed.

September 19: I am grateful that when I took Pearl’s medicine accidentally this morning , I did not suffer ill effects (or start barking).

September 21: I am grateful to collaborate with Janet on her mural design at church. The opportunity to be a part of her art like this is a gift.

September 22: I am grateful for friends with gardens. I’m also grateful for handmade wooden drums and googly eyes.

September 26: I am grateful that I have been given the opportunity to work with and spend time with kids. They are the best version of humans.

September 29: I am grateful to live in a relatively quiet town, with relatively short rush hour spurts.

September 30: I am grateful for this brilliant Fall day.

My Type of Gratitude List, No. 7

August 3, 2023: I am grateful for friends who will drive me places I do NOT want to go, but need to go.

August 4, 2023: I am grateful for washing machines that work.

August 12, 2023: I am grateful for my dog Pearl and her Squirrel Scout friends.

August 17, 2023: I am grateful for lawns, projectors and ping pong tables.

August 18, 2023: I am grateful for cool morning walks through the trees with friends and our four legged friends. I am grateful for a good and a surprising dog who can scale a 4 ft. cement wall without any trouble.

August 20, 2023: I am grateful for an upstairs neighbor who is also a friend. Her kindness includes inviting me to do my laundry at her apartment when mine is broken.

August 21, 2023: I am grateful for smooth paved roads between my dad’s house and my home.

August 25, 2023: I am so grateful for the Willamette River. And the Great Blue Heron that I see there.

August 29, 2023: I am grateful for retirement accounts and potential home loans.

My Type of Gratitude List, No. 6

July 1, 2023: I am grateful for the number one, which does not exist on this typewriter. I use the Roman Numeral. Of course this leaves me so grateful that I am able to improvise.

July 4, 2023: I am grateful for friends who understand my sensitivity to sound as well as Pearl’s special sensitivities. This is a challenging day for us and I am grateful for friends who respect us and understand.

July 5, 2023: I am grateful for language. Also, I am grateful for a certain 2 year old who loves language so much that the words cocoon and raccoon, when said together, makes him laugh.

July 10, 2023: I am grateful for children who tell me what they think. I trust children to be real with me, which means when one tells me I smile ‘like God’ I feel like I’ve been given a gift.

July 12, 2023: I am grateful for walls. Being able to paint on them as a canvas brings me great joy.

July 17, 2023: I am grateful for wood, bicycle spokes, rake tines and railroad tracks, not to mention the trains that ride them. All of these materials and tools make good ingredients for kalimbas (if you know a creative soul who knows how to make them).

July 18, 2023: I am grateful for the ocean and sea life; for the moon that creates the tide; for the sun.

July 21, 2023: I am grateful for toilets. Life would be shitty without them.

July 22, 2023: I am grateful for antibiotics.

July 24, 2023: I am grateful for avocados and those who harvest them.

July 25, 2023: I am grateful for perfect, ripe blueberries.

July 26, 2023: I am grateful for rivers and the water that defines them.

July 27, 2023: I am grateful for tea, and Japanese made glass tea pots that allow me to watch the leaves unfurl.

July 31, 2023: I am grateful for fresh figs, ripe and straight out of my friend’s yard to my door. I have never tasted candy so delicious.

My Type of Gratitude List, No. 5

June 2, 2023: I am grateful that I can walk out my door and find friends to walk with at lunch time. I am also grateful for friends who ‘feed’ me names of other writers like A.R. Ammons and John Steinbeck to learn from. Steinbeck I knew, but never read. Ammons I never knew, but will as soon as I acquire his book, Tape, which was originally written on a roll of adding machine tape, just like this.

June 7, 2023: I am grateful for mornings that I get to wake up and visit Nathaniel. He is a bright spot in my life.

June 8, 2023: I am grateful for my friend Sara — she is creative, kind, smart and loves animals as much as I do. I have learned a lot from her and the friendship we share.

June 10, 2023: I am grateful for change and all the unexpected blessings it may bring.

June 11, 2023: I am grateful for Pearl. She is such a sweet, fuzzy girl with lots of love.

June 12, 2023: I am grateful for my friend Wolfgang who is one of the most kind and considerate people I know.

June 14, 2023: I am grateful for this typewriter — I enjoy using it to record gratitude. Muscle memory lets me remember good days at Western Mennonite School, like using my watch to reflect sunlight toward John Fillmore.

June 15, 2023: I am grateful for fresh peas from the garden, with lemon, ginger and garlic. I am also grateful for the friends who serve them in a cast iron skillet.

June 19, 2023: I am grateful for cool summer mornings. Pearl and I get to walk in a quiet city, before traffic begins to intensify. She sniffs, I watch store deliveries. I am also grateful for Juneteenth. I am inspired by the strength of my black and brown American friends.

June 21, 2023: I am grateful for good memories of growing up on Eicher Road — playing in the creek, picking mint for iced tea, eating summer sausage sandwiches with Dad in the field he was baling that day. Grandma’s house was only a hop, skip and jump away. I loved her house.

June 25, 2023: I am grateful for water color art. Looking at it makes me feel somehow refreshed.

June 26, 2023: I am grateful for garbage service workers who take what we’ve thrown out, allowing us to distance ourselves from our own messes. Also, these important workers could have their hands crushed in the machines they work with. . . like today. May your hand heal swiftly.

My Type of Gratitude List, No. 4

May 1, 2023: I am grateful my eyes can see and my feet can take me places I want to go. (how’s that?)

May 8, 2023: I am grateful I can spend time visiting with my dad during this season of his life. Pearl is also grateful to sit on his lap.

May 10, 2023: I am grateful for Pearl. She keeps me on my toes. When she sleeps on the bed with me, I am comforted. I feel very lonely when she decides to sleep in her own bed.

May 11, 2023: I am grateful for Crystal Lake Park and the native plants that grow there– Fringe Cup, Native Plum, Trillium, Solomon’s Seal, Hawthorn.

May 12, 2023: I am grateful for old friends and neighbors who stay in touch with me and who invite me to the Uke Cabaret.

May 13, 2023: I am grateful for honest friends who acknowledge when things are painful and hard to understand.

May 15, 2023: I am grateful for challenges in life because it means I am continuing to grow. I am grateful for parents who wanted to help others and who taught me to care for others.

May 17, 2023: I am grateful that I grew up camping–Metolious, Beverly Beach, Seal Rock, Drift Creek. It’s not easy to get reservations these days and it seems so complicated. I am truly grateful for all the times I’ve had the chance to wake up in the cool, clean air and sleep in the comforting nest of a sleeping bag.

May 19, 2023: I am grateful for friends who share meals with me. Also, for friends who drive me through traffic jams without getting aggravated.

May 20, 2023: I am grateful for cool water on a hot day–the river and the misters at a friend’s yard in the evening.

May 26, 2023: I am grateful that I have learned I have no control over many, many things in this life–but that I can control or direct more than I think I can.

May 27, 2023: I am grateful for music–harmonicas, guitars and washboards; singing swine; dancing uninhibitedly with children.

May 30, 2023: I am grateful for the person who donated three pair of FLAX pants in my size to the Humane Society Thrift Store. I really love them.

Trampling

My philosophical quandaries often come from interactions I have (or observe others having) while at the city dog park. This week has left me a feeling unsettled due to two interactions between myself and one man. To begin, I’ll say that the dog park is like my backyard; I live in an apartment and my dog Pearl and I go the three blocks just about every day so that she can say hi to her friends, especially Bob, who gives her treats. Bob is one of Pearl’s first human friends–it only took her about a year to accept him as a friend. For the year prior to this acceptance, Pearl was skeptical and kept her distance because she’s afraid of men.

This week was a rainy one and few people showed up with their dogs at the usual time. While watching Pearl investigate the empty park, I watched as a car parked, a man walked toward the dog park entrance without a dog. I stood near the gate because I know Pearl well. She is not a fan of 1. men, 2. people who come into the park without a dog, and 3. any sort of barrier. On cue, Pearl began barking at the man, who now stood inside the area between the outer and inner gates; the place where, if he’d had a dog, he would be taking off its collar before entering the main park.

The man glared at me. I assured him that Pearl is friendly, she just really hates that barrier and that once he was through the gate, she would be able to relax. What I got back was unexpectedly angry. “It looks like an untrained dog to me.” The man continued to stare at me until I said, “You could use the other entrance.” To which he replied, “Why should I? I have as much of a right to be here as anyone.” Then he walked through the gate and Pearl jumped to his hip. “Get your damned dog off of me.” I corralled Pearl and said, “Dogs pick up on your aggression.” The last thing I heard him say as he touched his thumb and forefinger together, “Dogs brains are this tiny. They don’t know anything.” Steaming, but not wanting to engage any more, I encouraged Pearl to walk to the other end of the dog park with me. As the man returned to his car and entered the street traffic, he slowly passed by while raising a finger in my direction.

Next, on another day, while at a nearby coffee shop with a friend, I watched this very man, with his Service Dog (a Rottweiler) say goodbye to the barista and my thought was, “Oh, he has a service dog, I can see that this dog may be of some help to him.”

Today, while Pearl and I were at the dog park alone two things happened at once: this man parked, got out of his car, and walked his dog to the fence while a regular dog park visitor made his way to the gate with his two large Huskies. Pearl barked at the man and his unfamiliar Rottweiler and I calmed her down and held her as the men took turns entering the park. The man with the Rottweiler said to me, “If you push down on her rump, she won’t do that anymore.” Thanking him for his advice, I walked with Pearl to the other end of the park. Pearl investigated the park with the Huskies while their owner and I chatted. The man with the Rottweiler stood against the fence for about 5 minutes. Then he came towards me and from a distance of about 20 feet said, “I remember you from the other day when your dog jumped on me.” I acknowledged him with eye contact, nodded and thought, ‘okay Jaqui, get ready to be kind and friendly because I think this man is about to acknowledge his responsibility in our first interaction days before.’

Instead, the man stared with flashing eyes, and pointed at me saying, “That day my friend was in the hospital and nearly died.” There was a pause because I didn’t reply, I just watched him. He angrily put the leash on his dog and exited the park. Not wanting to see another raised finger from him, I stood with a tree between the parking area and myself. I comforted Pearl until I was sure the man had driven away.

What I haven’t described (because I’m attempting objectivity) is how angry this man was–it came out of his pores; it was visible. I also haven’t described my physical reaction to our exchange, which was a minor panic attack (throat constricting, heart racing). I knew Pearl would pick up on my demeanor, if not also this man’s angry stance (hence the keeping her close by and comforting her).

So what I’ve been sorting out since this exchange are these questions: Why do people have to share their anger, and why at a dog park? Why do people who think dogs have tiny brains and don’t read human emotion and behavior have dogs? Why do people come in to a dog park and not expect to potentially be jumped upon by dogs? Why was this man so clearly still angry at me for the first interaction? And why does having a friend in the hospital explain poor behavior and anger toward strangers?

Follow up questions I have asked are: Why did I react so strongly? Why did I panic? What am I afraid of? Why did I let a stranger’s anger affect me? Why am I still thinking about all of this? Why do I feel such anger toward this stranger whose friend was recently in the hospital?

What I think is: I have a distaste for conflict, I am fearful that someone like this will entice Pearl to nip them and then turn me in for having a dog that bit a human, I don’t think it’s fair for such anger to be out running rampant and I think people use excuses to explain their anger toward perfect strangers. I’m also feeling upset that I am allowing someone else’s anger to color my entire week.

The truth is also this: I’m weary of attempting to understand everyone else’s reasons for their anger toward me; trying to see things from the other’s point of view; understanding where they are ‘coming from’. I’m feeling weary in this area because I sometimes feel as if others are not making the same attempt to understand or listen to me and my views. It really does come down to not feeling heard, but instead being trampled.