Categories
Something Wonderful

Something Wonderful: An Early Version of Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat

album art from Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat
This groovy album art gives you a good idea about what to expect from the cantata.

You may be familiar with the musical Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat by Tim Rice and Andrew Lloyd Webber. But did you know that this musical was originally a cantata written for an English boys’ school? I was fortunate enough to grow up on the 1971 Scepter Records release, and I listened to it so much that at one point I could practically sing the whole thing through from beginning to end without referring to the lyrics. Of course, the cantata is much shorter than the musical. The version I first knew did not yet include “One More Angel in Heaven,” “Grovel, Grovel,” or “Benjamin Calypso,” and many songs were shorter than their counterparts in the musical. (Note: The original 1971 recording does not have a track listing, but that was added when the album was converted to MP3. According to the MP3 version’s track listing, “One More Angel in Heaven” and “Benjamin Calypso” are on the album, but I assure you that they aren’t.)

The differences between the early recording and the musical go far beyond length. In the older version, the accents are British, a boys’ choir plays a major role, and many of the songs have a distinctly ’60s feel that isn’t present in the modern musical. Compare the “Go, Go, Go Joseph” sample from the 1971 recording, complete with electric guitar and Hammond organ, to the version from the 1999 movie. While the musical tries to evoke the ’60s in the setting and costumes, the original version feels far more authentic… because it is.

The cantata is raw and, if you buy the MP3 album, you get treated to breaks between tracks that remind you that this originally came from an LP. But I far prefer the freshness of this early version to the slick Broadway production. After all, if you’re going to listen to something with the word “technicolor” in it, it might as well have the groovy vibe that word brings to mind.

This week, return to the early days of Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat. Take some time to at least sample the Scepter album, and consider buying a track or even the whole album.

Categories
Make a Difference

Make a Difference: Put Your Name on an Email List… or Two

Put your name on some email lists

Adding your name to an email list is a great way to get regular suggestions on how you can make a difference. Here are some of my favorites:

New Dream enewsletter

I almost didn’t recommend the first newsletter on my list, because the organization that publishes it, the Center for a New American Dream, is in transition. The center will be renamed New Dream and will streamline its mission to focus on the issues of kids and commercialism and simplifying the holidays, as well as directing more resources to promoting its alternative gift registry, SoKind. In the end, I decided to mention the “In Balance” newsletter anyway. It’s a valuable resource and will hopefully continue to be one under New Dream’s evolving structure. The newsletter comes out on an irregular basis, generally no more than once a month. You can read past issues through December 2015 on the organization’s website; note that they have not posted issues since then. To add your name to the email list, submit your information through the “Stay Informed” box at the top of any page on their site.

Climate Caretakers enewsletter

Climate Caretakers is a Christian organization committed to prayer and action on climate change. They send out two monthly newsletters: one focused on action steps and a second, prayer-focused newsletter. The screen shot I’ve included is of the November action letter. This is the first time I remember them using the newsletter to solicit donations, so it isn’t the best example of the usual action steps. There are always three levels of action presented, so that you can take a baby step or dive in, depending on your comfort level. You can see more action newsletters or sign up for both the action and prayer letters (I cannot find an option to sign up for just one) on their Act Now page. Like New Dream, Climate Caretakers has not posted their most recent newsletters.

End Slavery Now enewsletter

End Slavery Now sends out weekly newsletters that include ways you can act against slavery. Tips include changing your buying habits, signing petitions, and printing out hotline numbers to make available to others. They used to include three action items every week, but more recent newsletters have contained fewer items. You can find past action items in their action library, and you can sign up for the newsletter on their “act” page.

Life Vest Inside enewsletter

Life Vest Inside is the organization behind the “Kindness Boomerang” video; its mission is to promote acts of kindness. The organization sends out daily emails. Each includes a quotation about kindness, an action step, a positive affirmation, and a short video about an act of kindness. You can sign up on their “Get Involved” page. You can also sign up to be a Kindness Ambassador; you’ll get an additional weekly email if you do that.

Simpler Living Nudge enewsletter

Simple Living Works! is a Christian organization that originated in 2012 after its predecessor, Alternatives for Simple Living, closed up shop. The organization offers online resources, a biweekly podcast, a monthly email newsletter (not featured in the screenshot above), and a daily “nudge” email (pictured above). To subscribe to the nudge, send an email with the subject line “NUDGE” to SimpleLivingWorks AT yahoo DOT com. You can subscribe to the monthly newsletter by sending an email to the same address, using the subject line “SUBSCRIBE.”

The email newsletter is full of links to different resources on simple living; the nudge is very short. I wish the newsletter and website were streamlined, making these resources as simple as the organization’s name. There’s also a distinctly old-fashioned feel to many of the resources. You may think of them as “retro cool,” but I find myself wishing for a more modern feel. I don’t think “simple” means “stuck in the ’70s.” My complaints aside, I wouldn’t recommend this resource if I didn’t think the newsletters provided useful tips related to simplicity.

Sometime over the weekend, sign up for an email newsletter or two. Just remember: You can only eat an elephant one bite at a time, so if you sign up for all of the emails (as I have done), don’t expect that you’ll be able to follow all of their tips for making a difference… or even that you’ll have time to carefully read each email as it comes in!

Categories
Something Wonderful

Something Wonderful: “Haven’t You Heard? I’m Sakamoto” (“Sakamoto desu ga?”)

I think it’s safe to say that most American adults don’t watch anime — with the exception, perhaps, of Hayao Miyazaki’s films. I don’t plan to try to convert my readers into dedicated viewers, but there are some gems out there. One of them is a short series called “Haven’t You Heard? I’m Sakamoto” (“Sakamoto desu ga?” in Japanese).

What makes this series worth your while is the completely over-the-top title character. Sakamoto is the coolest, most stylish kid in high school, worshiped by females and males of all ages. He regularly wins over his most jealous foes with his unflappable ability to handle any situation that is thrown his way. He is a fantastic student, but he is never awkwardly nerdy. He is aloof but usually kind (there are a couple of weird exceptions, like when he refers to a fellow student’s “zit face”). He is good without being a goody-goody. He is, in a word, Sakamoto.

My daughter pulled me into this one. After the first episode, I said, “They can’t possibly keep this up.” The situations Sakamoto faced and the ways he handled them were so outrageous that it would be easy for the creators to push the concept too hard and end up falling flat. But they kept it up for 13 episodes and then gracefully brought the show to a close before it got old.

I’ve shared the show with a couple of people who don’t watch anime, and they found it entertaining enough that I feel confident that it has broad appeal outside of anime nerds. That said, your appreciation of it will only deepen if you’re an anime watcher. Sakamoto’s “secret techniques” are funny, whether or not you are familiar with anime; however, if you’ve watched certain shows like “Hunter x Hunter,” you’ll recognize the techniques as a trope.

My daughter, who has taken two years of Japanese, has an even deeper appreciation of “Sakamoto” than I do. In providing the subtitles, the translators try to let English-speakers know that certain characters are “bad boys” who swear a lot, but my child says that these kids are speaking a sort of “bad boy” slang.

Episodes are approximately 24 minutes long. The show falls into the PG/PG-13 range, so parents will want to review it before sharing it with young kids. This week, when you need a laugh, take in an episode. Like everyone around him, you’ll fall in love with Sakamoto. You can find the show on Crunchyroll.

Categories
Make a Difference

Make a Difference: Approach Christmas Shopping Thoughtfully

Do your Christmas shopping thoughtfully.

With Thanksgiving a week away, it seems appropriate to post about Christmas shopping. For those of us who exchange Christmas gifts, this time of year can be filled with purchasing decisions. One way we can make a difference in the world is to approach these decisions thoughtfully.

Think About Who You Are Buying For

We’ve probably all received an “obligation” gift – a present that a person bought for you because they felt that they had to give you a gift, but they clearly didn’t put any thought into it. The shirt that isn’t your style. The scented candle you’ll never use. These are the gifts that say, “I don’t know what you like, and I can’t be bothered to find out.”

Don’t be that giver.

If you’re going to buy someone a gift, try to get something you think the recipient will love. There’s no point in giving something just to check an item off your list. A real gift is given out of consideration for the other person. What are their interests? What are their needs? What do they love? What should you avoid buying, because the receiver will absolutely hate it?  Sometimes, despite your best efforts, you get it wrong. But most people can tell when you bought a gift to please them instead of buying a gift because you felt you had to. They’ll appreciate the effort.

Think About What You’ll Spend

In a previous post, I mentioned the concept of “margin” – leaving room in your life, including in your finances, from which to make your contributions to the world. Many people have chosen to spend less at Christmas in order to have more for the things that really matter to them.

Some of my most treasured gifts were inexpensive but very thoughtful. One anniversary my husband located a copy of Space Battleship Yamato, a Japanese cartoon we had both treasured as children. He made breakfast, and we watched the cartoon together. It’s one of the best gifts I’ve ever been given.

I won’t pretend there aren’t people who care how much you spend, but gift-giving is your choice. Decide ahead of time where you values lie and how much you can afford to give, and spend accordingly.

Think About When to Shop

Many stores have decided not to open on Thanksgiving this year. Frankly, I’m glad. I believe it’s good to have a few days a year when employees whose jobs are not critical to public safety can have time off to spend with their loved ones. Some stores offer time and a half for employees who work on holidays (though this is not legally required), and some employees would rather get the extra cash for working on Thanksgiving. But as I recall from my days in retail, most of us were happy to have a holiday off, and things don’t appear to have changed much since then. As you decide whether or not to patronize the stores that open on Thanksgiving (or just after midnight on Friday – an hour which requires many retail employees to decide between family time and sleep), take the people who will be there to serve you into consideration. Make your decision on whether or not to shop based on how you feel your choice will impact their lives.

If you want to be really radical and protest a culture that seems to value consumption and profit over health and happiness, consider celebrating “Buy Nothing Day” on Black Friday, too. REI is encouraging people to spend the day outside instead of shopping.

Think About Where You’ll Shop

Shopping at big box stores isn’t evil; you are helping to pay the wages of retail workers, many of whom badly need the money. But there are advantages to buying from small businesses in your community: more of the money you spend stays local, strengthening the economy in your area; small businesses add a character to your community that you don’t get from cookie-cutter national chains; and small businesses are actually a major source of employment opportunities. When you choose to forego doorbuster sales for personalized shopping at small businesses, your support makes a very real difference.

Categories
Something Wonderful

Something Wonderful: Tea Duelling

Biscuits for tea duelling
If you’re an American, use these biscuits.

 

I first heard about tea duelling in 2012 at Teslacon, a steampunk convention in Wisconsin. [Note: I use the British spelling for “tea duelling.”] Major Tinker (John Naylor’s steampunk persona) is one of two men who created tea duelling. He was present at the con that year, eager to share the relatively new sport with others. I was nervous about signing up for something that I knew nothing about, so I sat in the audience, learning the rules and watching people duel. When I left the room, I vowed never to turn down the opportunity to duel again. Aside from the duels over which I have presided, I’ve kept  that promise. I also became a bit of a tea duelling evangelist, teaching it to my daughter, my friends, and, most recently, the kids in my church’s middle school youth group.

As I recall it, Major Tinker said that he and a friend were at a traveling tea museum in England and noticed a sign that read “Tea Duelling is strictly forbidden.” Of course, this raised the question: “What is tea duelling?” The two men decided the intriguing sign needed to have a real sport behind it. They came up with this:

If you are going to duel properly, you should acquaint yourself with the rules of the sport. When I give a short explanation of duelling to others, I say that the opponents dunk their biscuits in the tea to the count of five, and then each tries to be the last person to achieve a “clean nom.” A clean nom involves getting all of the biscuit into your mouth in one bite without it crumbling and landing in your tea, on the table (or floor), or on your person. Note that there is an important bit of information missing from the official rules: how much of the biscuit should be submersed in the tea. I’ve heard anything from one half of the biscuit to three-quarters of it. When I serve as Pot Mistress, I ask duellists to dunk at least three-quarters of their biscuit in their tea.

The founders came up with a selection of approved biscuits for duellists in the U.K.; in the United States, we have one official choice: Pepperidge Farm Chessmen. The cookies should be displayed face down, so that the duellists don’t pick a biscuit based on the image on it. Although I do not know of any testing that proves this, some images might “work” better than others. If neither duellist can see the images, they have equal chances of picking a “good” or “bad” biscuit.

Someone with gluten intolerance once asked me about gluten-free biscuits, and I ran the question by the founder of the American Tea Dueling Society. She suggested that gluten-free biscuits could be provided, but the duellists must always have the same kind of biscuit so that neither has an advantage over the other.

While a proper duel consists of, at a minimum, the duellists and Pot Master or Mistress, you can always informally duel with a friend. It’s also perfectly acceptable to practice alone for future duels. Rumor has it that the cookie calories don’t count when consumed during a practice session.

This week, challenge a friend to a duel over a couple of cups of tea and some biscuits!

Categories
Make a Difference

Make a Difference: Treat Poor People Like Human Beings

Be kind to poor people

My extended family took a trip to Scotland this summer. While we were in Edinburgh, we stayed in apartments within walking distance of a grocery store. We passed the store on our way to and from different sites in the city, and we stopped there more than once for breakfast items and snacks. When we passed it, I would often see a young man, almost certainly homeless, seated just outside.

My sister and I stopped by the store one evening to pick up a couple of things. Before we entered it, she approached the young man. “Are you hungry?” she asked. “Can I get you anything?”

He said he didn’t need any food, but he did ask for a soft drink. She bought him one along with her groceries and gave it to him on her way out. I mentally resolved to do as she had done in the future.

When I talked with her about this later, my sister said that she likes to honor people’s preferences. She pointed out that many of us are able to make all sorts of choices throughout the day; when you’re poor, your options are severely limited. You may hate bananas, but if your only option is to eat the banana or go hungry, you’ll gag down what’s available. If, instead, we offer poor people choices, we recognize that they are human beings who have likes and dislikes.

Streamlining options is important to efficiently run a program that helps the poor, but I feel like some organizations don’t always do this with the humanity of the people they serve in mind. Some people in my office used to help at a soup kitchen on a monthly basis. On the night my coworkers were there, they would always offer tater tot hotdish (a very Minnesotan casserole), sides, beverages, and small chocolate chip cookies for dessert. The organization that ran the soup kitchen decided to stop offering dessert; this was done in the name of providing a healthier menu, but they kept the tater tot hotdish, not exactly a healthy dinner. To me, the move was patronizing, not recognizing guests’ ability to use willpower to take or leave a cookie as they saw fit (or to parent their children accordingly). I also felt like the change punished people who were careful with what money they had; they would no longer have the option to have a small treat when they went to the soup kitchen.

On the flip side, a person with a disability told me about a local grocery delivery program that went from allowing people to order anything they needed from a certain store to offering a menu of items chosen most often by its patrons. Unfortunately, most patrons chose items that were less healthy than what this person preferred — and needed. My friend had to discontinue using the service.

In addition to honoring people’s preferences, my sister also likes to offer them luxuries when she can. Recently she encountered a woman in need at a time when she had a small tube of toothpaste and a sample bottle of perfume in her purse. She gave the woman some money and offered her the toothpaste and perfume, both of which the woman gladly accepted.

Not everyone is comfortable just giving cash to someone who asks for it. I understand the concern. There are people who take the money given to them and use it on alcohol or drugs. When you give to charitable organizations or offer homeless people food or hygiene kits, you know you are providing help, and you don’t have to worry that people will use the money you’ve given them in ways that will harm themselves or anyone else. A friend of mine has sometimes purchased food for homeless people, including recently taking a man to Subway for a meal. The man still wanted money after he’d eaten, but the meal itself was a chance for my friend to honor this man as a real person who was hungry, giving him the opportunity to choose food for himself.

While I don’t remember when I last gave cash to a homeless person, I don’t condemn those who make that choice. I believe that, while there is a kind of love that looks out for the good of the other person — the love we give our children, for instance, or the love we show when we talk to a troubled friend about getting treatment for something they cannot handle themselves — there is also a love that says, “I’m going to treat you like a responsible adult.” People who give money are choosing that kind of love. It’s not wrong to decide to give to the poor through a charitable organization or by offering someone food. It’s your money, and you need to decide the best way to share it with others. But there’s something wonderful about taking the risk that the person to whom you give your money will use it unwisely, because you are showing that person trust and respect that they probably rarely see.

The important thing is that, however we choose to give, we treat the people we encounter like human beings. It’s tempting to rush by a homeless person without looking. I’ve done it many times. If I don’t make eye contact, we think, the person won’t bother me. Or, we may thrust money at the person as we hurry to our destination. We’ve assuaged our guilt and given a gift, but we’ve also communicated to the person that they are a nuisance.

Instead, take the trouble to interact with the next homeless person or panhandler you encounter. If you offer food and are in a position to give the person a choice, let them decide for themselves what they will have. If you give money, see what you can do to make the interaction personal. Perhaps, like my sister, you can offer a luxury as well as money. “I have a tube of lotion in my purse. Would you like it?” If you prefer to give directly through charitable organizations, see if you can direct homeless people to local services that can provide help. However you give, if you treat the poor people you encounter as people who are worthy of your attention, you’ll give them a rare but valuable gift.

Categories
Something Wonderful

Something Wonderful: Thomas Sanders’ Vines

Thomas Sanders' Vines are family-friendly

My teenager, who loves to show me her favorite Vines, was the first one to let me know that Twitter is shutting Vine down.

While some businesses used Vine in an attempt to reach their audiences, it was really a place for people to share six-second stories and short, funny skits. Like other social media channels, Vine made some of its best contributors famous — among them, Thomas Sanders. (You’ll notice that Sanders prominently displays the address of his YouTube channel next to his profile picture on Vine.)

There are plenty of talented, funny Viners, but one of the things that I particularly appreciate about Sanders is the mostly family-friendly nature of his Vines; I’ve seen many of them now, and they don’t seem to get any dirtier than the brief flash of the middle finger in this Vine. While I don’t cringe at the occasional profanity or sexual reference (otherwise, I wouldn’t listen to Bruce Cockburn), many Vines are things that I wouldn’t share with children or even with some of my friends. Sanders’ work is refreshing.

Many Viners do variations on a theme, such as Jus Reign’s “Gotta Be More Careful” series (including this Vine and this one), but Sanders specializes in them. Among his themes are “Narrating People’s Lives,” “Misleading Compliments,” and pranks on his friends inspired by either Disney or Pokemon. Some of the pranks are a little more than I could take if I were one of his friends, but I love his Peter Pan-inspired prank. He often plays a dad, a teacher, or a prince.

Occasionally, Sanders uses humor as social commentary. He’s covered platonic friendships between men and women, stress in schools, and strict dress codes for girls. But most of his Vines are just silly fun as he plays Ant-Man, an introvert at a party, a man who rescues a dog, a drama geek in a history class, and a cat… and those are only some of the Vines I wanted to link to in this post!

This week, take a break and indulge in some of Thomas Sanders’ Vines. Vine may be going away, but I have a feeling Sanders will do just fine without it.

 

Categories
Make a Difference

Make a Difference: Choose Love

 

 

Choose love

This isn’t the “make a difference” post I’d originally planned for this week, but as I drove to work on Wednesday morning, I began thinking about the upcoming presidential election, and I decided to table the post I’d been working on and post about love instead.

On Tuesday, we will vote for our next president… at least, I hope readers are planning to vote. This has been the most emotionally charged campaign I have ever seen. Many of us are so distressed that there is a very real temptation not to vote. Please, don’t give up. Our right to vote is a precious thing that many people have been denied. Vote for the lesser of two evils or a third party candidate, or write in a vote… but whatever you do, please vote because you are fortunate enough to have a voice in who will run our country. And remember, while choosing not to vote may seem like a way of saying you are fed up with the choices offered to you, it can also be read as “I don’t care.”

Please care enough to vote.

Care because we have one of the two largest economies in the world. Care because our military spending far outpaces that of any other country. Care because our country is one of the top greenhouse gas emitters in the world. Care because the U.S. is one of the most charitable nations on earth. Our choice of president influences not just our own country but the entire world.

And when you vote, please don’t vote out of anger or hatred or fear. Anger is a valid emotion. It can motivate us to do good things, but I don’t believe it should be our primary source of motivation. I believe that we are our best selves and make our wisest decisions when we are motivated by love.

Don’t vote for candidate X because you are afraid of what this country is becoming or for candidate Y because you are afraid of what that person will do in power. Vote for the candidate who best models a wise and loving spirit, even if you believe that no candidate is particularly good at modeling that.

On Wednesday, when the dust has settled, we will know who our next president will be (barring a repeat of the 2000 election). Choose love in the aftermath.

Your candidate may not win. It may feel like the end of the world. You may be angry with the people who supported the winning candidate. Were they blind? Are they evil? You might be afraid for what our next president may do. Of course they will have a lot of power, and with such power, they could indeed do horrible things.

Choose to love anyway.

Or your candidate may win. You may be relieved that the nation did not swing over to the dark side. You may want to crow a bit about how evil did not triumph, how there were not, in fact, enough idiots in this country to put That Person in office.

If your candidate wins, choose to love the “idiots” whose candidate lost.

I’m not saying that it’s wrong to feel strongly about this election. I have very strong opinions about who should win. I’m not saying it’s wrong to express those opinions, although I’m choosing not to openly endorse a candidate in this post. I think it’s normal to feel some fear and anger, given what we’ve seen during this campaign season. But I believe that, no matter how powerful our president may be, our nation will ultimately stand or fall based on whether we choose to be people who act out of love.

You’ve almost certainly seen this commercial before, but it’s worth watching again. It may be fiction, but I believe that if we are as loving as this character, we will change the world for the better.