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Local Table
A Guide To Food And Farming In Middle Tennessee
Spring 2013
Views from the table and beyond

Publisher’s Blog

Posts Tagged ‘neighbors’

Winter Ponderings

Friday, January 29th, 2010

We’re having a blizzard outside as I write this – it’s beautiful outside – finally a real storm to cover the mud and brown gardens and add some new perspective.

This time out, I thought I’d share with you a recent blog by a music client, Tom Gray, of the band Delta Moon. I thought it was a perfect thought for a winter day and I believe sharing a meal is as connective as sharing a song.

“The largest living organism in North America isn’t a tree. It’s an aspen forest in Colorado. All the trees are connected through the roots, so the whole forest is considered a single organism.

On some unseen level humans are like that too. Call it what you want to – and people call it many things – the connection is there.

Too often these days we take the opposite direction. Modern American houses are designed so that each family member can eat dinner in a separate room with the door shut. Our highways are filled with rolling steel fortresses, the people in them listening to angry radio, everybody giving everybody else the finger. Who needs that? The more you separate yourself from everyone else, the unhappier you become.

Our mission as musicians is to reestablish the connection. When we see people at a show, old and young, black and white, dancing and smiling and singing together, when everybody’s looking each other in the eye and sparks are flying and nobody wants it to stop, that’s a good gig. Of course not every venue lends itself to that kind of mixing it up. But even in the most restrictive seating arrangements it’s possible to create a wonderful sense of unity. It’s a feeling older than civilization. Rhythm, melody and harmony have the power to pull us out of ourselves and make us realize that we, like the aspen trees, are part of a greater whole.

When people ask what kind of music we play, I say roots music.” ~Tom Graywinter

Don’t Lose Your Joy

Monday, May 25th, 2009

Lots of folks are struggling right now and in a lot of ways, it’s been a difficult spring. No more so than for one of our local farmers, The Vaughns at Rocky Glade Farm in Eagleville. Their place was hit by a tornado on April 10 and I wanted to share with you Julie Vaughn’s recent email to her customers.
Lisa

Don’t lose your JOY!

Once again I was inspired by one of Dylem’s library books…really it doesn’t take much for me! This one is called the “Pout-Pout Fish”, and basically he is a glub, glum little guy who cannot even swim, he just sinks. His motto is “I am a pout-pout fish with a pout pout face, so I spread the dreary wearies all over the place.” So he continues sinking along in the ocean with all of his other buddies trying to cheer him up, but instead he leaves them blue, with their smiles turned to frowns after talking with him. UNTIL…this beautiful fish swims down out of the blue and without asking plants a big smoooooch right on his pout pout face. Then the pout-pout fish flips right side up and says: “My friends, I should have known it all along, I thought I was pouty, but it turns out I was wrong. I’m a kiss kiss fish with kiss kiss face for spreading cheery-cheeries all over the place”

Now this beautiful fish never said a word, she just saw a fish in need and went and did what she could to help him out. This is exactly what we have experienced from friends, neighbors and folks just like you since the April 10 tornado. I want to express our appreciation for those of you just brought a cake, who just gave money, who just brought food, who just came to be with us, who just came to help us out cleaning up. You did not ask, you just saw people in need and did what you could to help us out and we are forever grateful.

One of the biggest things we have learned through this process is that Nike was right…we all should “Just Do It”. Honestly, if you see a person in need and feel the urge to help do not question yourself about whether you should help or not…just do it. Just go and help. Send the food, send the check if you can spare it, do something. Folks in need do not know what they need and honestly anything and everything is appreciated in a crisis. You will help to change the pout pouts to cheery cheeries in a shorter time span…things will still be hard, but there will be hope and YOU will have been the conduit for helping bring that hope in a very dark place.

Again thank you…may each of you never lose your JOY in the struggles of life. Things and times are hard, but do not let your JOY be stolen!

Have a super week!
Julie
www.rockygladefarm.com