Random thoughts of a fiber enthusiast - mostly fiber related, sometimes coherent

Category: Life Page 10 of 30

When Two Worlds Collide…

Cindy Lair

I’ve promised Cindy, aka Spinning Wheel Goddess, a sail on the Bay for 3 years now.  I first met Cindy at SOAR in Tahoe City.  I was experiencing spinning wheel woes.  My Matchless was misbehaving.  I took it to the Schacht booth at the market.  Over the course of the next 2.5 days, Cindy worked on my wheel with unrelenting vigor.  But she still couldn’t get the wobble out, nor figure out the cause of the wobble.  On the last day, she caught up with me and offered to exchange her (working) demo wheel with my wheel.  This is prevented me from having to take the wheel home, pack it back in the original packing (yes, I still have the shipping box!), and send it to Colorado.  Since she already has to ship a wheel home, she could just as easily ship the defective wheel back.  (What great service!)

When I bumped into Cindy at this year’s SOAR, we talked about my promise to take her sailing whenever she’s in the Bay Area.  This time, the timing was perfect.  She was in town last weekend, and I was in town.  Originally, we had planned to go sailing on Saturday, but had to push off to Sunday due to some scheduling conflicts.  Whew.  We dodged a bullet.  We had monsoon rains with thunder and lightening all Saturday afternoon.

Sunday was a bit iffy, but we had a beautiful afternoon on the Bay.  We were so busy enjoying the weather (didn’t even need jackets!) that I forgot to pull out the camera when Cindy was at the helm.  Instead, I offer you a picture of Cindy, sitting back on the deck at the yacht club afterwards.

Cindy, you are welcome back on my boat anytime!

(The title of this post refers to my sailing and fiber worlds.)

Election Day

Go out and make your vote count!

These images are two of hundreds of posters from AIGA‘s Get Out the Vote 2008 campaign.

Opinions

I have opinions. Lots of them, actually. But I rarely voice them here. Unlike my sister, I want to keep my fiber activities separate from my views on politics, religion, environmental & fiscal issues.

I believe everyone should have their own views, as long as they are informed views, I have no issues with them. If I decide to only have friends and acquaintances that agree with my point of view, my world would be very very boring, not to mention limiting. There are lots of people that I like, and maybe even admire in some manner or another, but don’t agree with their political or religious views. But our shared interests keep them in my circle of friends. Going into these friendships, I know what their religious and political views are, and that they may be completely 180 degrees from mine.  That’s fine. We still have shared common interests. And I still consider them friends.

This is why I was stunned when I received a mass email from a friend of mine that regurgitated the scare tactics created by the supporters of California’s Proposition 8. I was flabbergasted. I didn’t know how to respond. I thought that we had gotten past this point in our friendship and agree to disagree on our views.

Don’t get me wrong. I’m not shy. I am more than happy to voice my opinions and have an exchange of ideas and opinions. But I’m also not confrontational, nor a masochist. I know that there are certain people that I will never be able to change their mind on a specific topic. I can talk myself blue in the face, and they won’t budge. They might as well be a brick wall. I don’t go there if I know that the end result is frustration and hurt feelings, instead of an intelligent conversation and exchange of ideas/ideals. I’m even willing to talk about the various interpretations of the Bible, differences in the Old vs the New testament, the Qu’ran.  (Martin was much better at this than I am.) As long as the premise is an open mind.

Back to the email. I reviewed the header. It appears that this person just sent it out to everyone in their address book, without regard to the context of why the person is in their address book or what their views might be. Yes, you might be able to change someone’s mind by discussing it on a one-on-one basis, but never in a mass email like this. I was insulted that she thought I could be swayed by an email such as this. If this was presented personally, then I would be able to talk to her and understand her position a bit more, and perhaps have a conversation about why Proposition 8 is wrong.  As it was, I was stunned silent. And I’m not proud of it.

Thankfully, there was at least one other that was able to provide a coherent answer.  You can read his answer on his blog. (His wife was the other one that provided a thoughtful response.)

And what about this friend? I haven’t decided yet. I do realize that I need to talk to her about this. But I want to do this in person, because I still value her as a friend, regardless of our views.

Oh, and in case you haven’t figured it out yet, I’m voting No on Proposition 8.  And if you care to keep an open mind and have an intelligent conversation, I’ll bring the wine.

Page 10 of 30

Powered by WordPress & Theme by Anders Norén