Kate's Point of View

The Product of Creative Frustration

Month: June 2011 Page 2 of 4

Reunions

This past weekend was my high school reunion. To celebrate having graduated fifteen years ago.

When my five-year reunion rolled around the scars of high school were still too fresh and I elected not to go. When the ten-year popped up, my school stopped having reunions for individual graduating class and instead had one large reunion for everyone celebrating that year. This struck me as a thinly veiled attempt at raising money and I didn’t go. My fifteen-year reunion was more tempting. The school is still doing the crazy lumped together reunions but girls from my class planned a separate cookout and happy hour for people. That way folks could bring their families and just mingle with people who graduated in 1996.

Then I remembered two very important things:

  1. I don’t remember names well and especially not names of people from high school. Socializing with people from then would just be an illustration of my bad memory.
  2. I keep in touch with very few people from high school because I am friends with very few of the people with whom I went to school. I don’t need to go to a aschool-sanctioned event to see those people!

So last Saturday, the day I would have been awkwardly hanging out with people I haven’t seen in fifteen years, I went to breakfast with one of my best friends from high school, Mart Girl, who was in town from Chicago. We reunited over eggs. And her sister who graduated 2 years behind us was there, too. So it was almost like the lumped together reunion my school was splanning. Only I knew both of these girls names and didn’t have to look like an idiot. And I never had to have fake conversations about kids and husbands and how great everyone looks. Much nicer!

This post originally appeared on Kate’s Point of View. © Kate. All rights reserved.

A Glimpse In to the Vietnam War

Give me a free hour and I’ll make my way up to bed with a good book in hand and be content. Give Wonder Boy a free hour and he’ll dig into a game of Call of Duty. Typically these are very different activities. For the last two weeks I’ve been reading Matterhorn: A Novel of the Vietnam War by Karl Marlantes. This hefty book holds a story more lifelike than what Call of Duty presents and is a challenging read in many aspects, but well-worth the struggles.

I am not familiar with war. I cringe at the idea of people fighting to their death over just about anything. I do understand that there are times war is justified and even necessary, but I do my best to remain distant from it. Marlantes takes his readers and plops them right down in the middle of the Vietnamese bush with fighting all around.

While the setting is described in exquisite detail, what Marlantes accomplishes best is creating characters that the reader gets invested in. Lieutenant Waino Mellas makes for a unique main character. He is an ivy league grad with liberal tendencies. When he enlists with the marines and goes to Vietnam, he finds himself surrounded by many men of color and most people of a lower socioeconomic status than himself. The reader accompanies him as he navigates, and at time stumbles, through the different social groups, race relations and mores of the military. And also when he enters into the heat of battle.

Although not something I think about often, I have an idea in my head of what war is like. This vision is likely influenced by what I see on the screen every time I walk by Wonder Boy playing Call of Duty. Matterhorn added a whole other dimension to what I think of war. I don’t think I ever adequately factored fear into the setting. And I know, Matterhorn is just a book. But Marlantes was a marine during the Vietnam war so I imagine that what he’s writing gives at least some insight into war.

Each battle scene in Matterhorn is terrible. Men die violent deaths. Men watch their friends die in front of them and then have to go collect their bodies so families back home have something to bury. Politicians at home make wartime decisions that sometimes result in strategic successes and usually mean the death of someone – be they Vietnamese or American.

I could go further but struggle to do so without seeming to make a political statement, which is not my point. The point I do want to make is that Matterhorn was an emotional read that I found powerful and insightful. I would recommend it to folks, and also think it would make a nice last-minute Father Day gift idea.

This post originally appeared on Kate’s Point of View. © Kate. All rights reserved.

Discoveries

Last Saturday I made a few important discoveries:

  1. Over the last year I have drank less and less, which I view as a healthy change. I cannot, however, go from drinking very little to going for it with my friends. So alcohol may no longer be a part of my life at all. This is an even healthier change but I’m curious to see how it goes and what it means for social events. Especially social events with dancing.
  2. Wonder Boy has made the disturbing calculation of how few years we have until we turn 50 which has thrown him into a third-life crisis that seems to parallel the crisis many of my friends are going through. Saturday we went to a wedding and we going to leave shortly into the reception to go to a concert btu were conflicted because we were having fun. Our friends advice, as I remember it – do what it is you want to do and don’t feel guilty about it. We skipped the Iron and Wine show for which we had already purchased tickets. It turned out to be a good move because all reviews of the show focused on how The Madison Theater oversold their venue, which made for a lousy viewing experience.
  3. I’m always on the lookout for good music but the last place I ever expected to find it was during a wedding ceremony. I attended a friend’s outdoor wedding and during the ceremony Shadwick Wilde sang a song called Kentucky Tobacco. When I got home I immediately bought his album Unforgiveable Things and I love it. You should check it out – you will love it, too.

Last Sunday I also made a discovery. I faced serious ramifications from Saturday night which led to the decisions mentioned in point #1. Such a long, long day.

This post originally appeared on Kate’s Point of View. © Kate. All rights reserved.

Thyroid Issues Righted

Earlier this year I was diagnosed with Hashimoto’s Disease, a form of hypothyroidism. Hypothyroidism means my thyroid is not making enough hormone on its own. I was alternately horrified with the diagnosis and relieved to know the cause for my hair falling out and fingernails breaking. I was put on a synthetic thyroid hormone, levothyroxine, and told to come back for semi-regularly blood tests so my doctor could monitor my medicine levels. Two blood tests later, my levels are normal.

I’m still taking folic acid to assist with my hair and nail growth and it seems to be working out pretty well. My hair is coming back full force. I am now back to regular hairbands instead of child-sized ones. I’ll be a little happier when everything gets a touch longer so it will all stay back in a ponytail rather than the mess of flyaways I get now, but I have no room to complain. At least it’s coming back!

Hypothyroidism occurs in 4-5 out of 100 people in the United States. One of my main risk indicators for hypothyroidism is my sex. Females are twice as likely to have it as men! There are certainly worse things to have, though. All it takes is one little purple pill a day to keep my healthy.

This post originally appeared on Kate’s Point of View. © Kate. All rights reserved.

Examining the World

This past week I started photography classes. Through a local nature center I’m taking a series of six classes from a professor at a local university. There are only 10 of us in the class and we meet for two hours once a week. I have a really nice camera and feel like I’ve gotten some beautiful shots with it, but I rely too much on luck for those images. My teacher says I should discard the power of luck, but we agree it would be nice if some skill was involved.

The first class was about while balance and lighting. We did cover a few other things but they were review for me. White balance is something I’ve always understood but just adjusted for in Photoshop. One of my good friends was horrified when he learned that I edit every. single. picture. with Photoshop. I have a system and it’s fast to do, but still. If the color balance was any better in the original photo, I’d be a lot better off.

After each class period we will be turning in five to ten of our favorite images and they will be used in a calendar for the nature center. Do you know what that means? My photography could be appearing in two 2012 calendars. Also, by taking the class, I am working at checking another thing off of my 100 list.

Some of my favorites from the first class:

This post originally appeared on Kate’s Point of View. © Kate. All rights reserved.

Page 2 of 4

Powered by WordPress & Theme by Anders Norén