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Women Who Climb Mountains

To celebrate Women’s History Month, my 7-year-old daughter Laurel and I are reading and discussing one outstanding woman each week. These are women who are, literally or figuratively, pioneers, who made an impact on history by their actions, words, and lives. So many phenomenal women to study!

The first choice was obvious: Laura Ingalls Wilder. As a young girl myself I read her “Little House” series repeatedly, until I knew nearly every story by heart. My daughter is reading the books now, and together with her little brother Rob loves to act out the scenes on our own family farm.

Next we moved on to Rachel Carson, discussing how someone can be an effective scientist and communicator at the same time. We talked about the courage it took for Carson to enter a field with very few women, and beyond that, to speak up for what she knew to be true, even if it caused national debate and personal ridicule.

We compared Carson to my daughter’s more modern-day heroes, Sally Ride and our friend Lt. Col. Jackie Parker (first female F-16 pilot, USAF). How they had to break new ground to do what they love – flying higher, farther, faster, than any women had ever gone before. And yet they did it, putting in long hours of hard work and study, and just taking one small step …for human kind … at a time.

We haven’t chosen a woman to learn about this week. Perhaps it will be a poet like Maya Angelou, a dancer like Martha Graham, or an athlete like Manon Rheaume (who? first woman to play on a men’s pro hockey team).

Perhaps I will tell her more of the phenomenal women have inspired me throughout my life. Women like Kathleen Namphy, my freshman literature professor at Stanford. It is for Professor Namphy that I wear the yellow LIVESTRONG bracelet on my left wrist, and have since her untimely death about four years ago.

No, she did not die of cancer. She beat it – twice. She died, at age 69, of injuries sustained in a fall during a trek up Iran’s Mount Damavand, an 18,600-foot peak. An experienced trekker, she was in Iran awaiting clearance to return to Iraq, where she had been overseeing humanitarian programs for some months. Her intention was to open a school for girls displaced by the current conflicts in Baghdad.

Kathy Namphy epitomizes the Phenomenal Woman: scholar, champion athlete, human rights advocate, mentor, educator, mother, friend. I hope I am climbing mountains at age 69. I hope, as long as I wear this bracelet in her memory, to LIVE STRONG, to live with passion, courage, conviction. I hope to always stand up and speak up for myself, and for those who cannot do so for themselves. I hope to surround myself with beauty in pictures, actions, and words, and to teach my children to do the same.

That is the legacy of women who climb mountains.

Phenomenal Woman and Teacher, Kathy Namphy told me, "Surround yourself with beauty."

Oil and Water

It’s raining here in the San Francisco Bay Area. Whoo-hoo! This winter’s unusually warm, dry weather has worried me. Now I feel like rejoicing, standing out all day in the steady drizzle, watching the earth soaking up the moisture and the earth worms wriggling in the puddles.

Yet local meteorologists are offering grim warnings of another year of drought, and mandatory water rationing across the metro Bay Area, as seasonal rainfall and snowpack levels reach only 60 percent of normal. In the unlikely event that storm activity returns to normal, it will take several weeks of steady precipitation to avert a shortage in domestic, industrial, and agricultural water supplies.

It might be easy to ask people to stop watering their lawns, wash only full loads of laundry, and even (gasp!) shower only every other day. But the crisis goes much deeper than that. Many of our state’s farmers, their water supplies already restricted by environmental regulations, are faced with having little or no water to irrigate this year’s crops.

So I wonder, with all the attention we are giving to eliminating our dependence on foreign oil and reducing greenhouse gas emissions, are we overlooking a more immediate crisis?

Without water, farming is unsustainable. Without food, life is unsustainable.

We can find alternatives to running our cars on petroleum, but can we find alternatives to growing food without water?

It’s a difficult question – how to allocate the dwindling water resources we have. Who gets highest priority: the endangered species, the metro water districts, manufacturing areas, or farmers? There are no easy answers.

But personally, I’ll give up my long showers if it means I still get food with my meals.

The Year of the Ox

I won’t presume to pretend I know anything about the Chinese calendar, or the meanings attributed to its zodiac symbols. (For that we have Wikipedia. ) But I can’t help feeling how auspicious it is that 2009 begins the Year of the Ox.

Oxen are perhaps the most under-valued of work animals, doing the hardest, heaviest labor with little glory or thanks. The year ahead, as we rebuild our economy and our communities, will certainly require some heavy lifting. Every person will need to take on some additional burdens, impossibly heavy, and find some extra measure of strength and determination to move forward.

Oxen move slowly, ploddingly. They take small, measured steps but they always put down one foot after the other. Not much moves an ox off-course.  Again, a good lesson for us to take into the new year.

We can’t attempt to solve all our problems — dwindling resources, a failing educational system, high unemployment, and all — at once. We can’t even tackle one of these problems in one fell swoop.  We must break each down into tiny, tiny steps, and take each step with determination and courage. For more on this, I suggest reading Dr. Robert Maurer’s excellent work, One Small Step Can Change Your Life: The Kaizen Way.

Finally, oxen work best when yoked together. The power of two or more is exponentially greater than one alone. They instinctively pull together to lessen the burden for everyone. They have their eyes fixed on a common goal, and moving together, step by slow, methodical step, they get their precious cargo moving forward. Once momentum is established, the load moves easier, and the work accomplished.

We could all take lessons from the Ox.

 

Wishing you great prosperity and joy.

Welcome!

Welcome to Footprints, IRMwrites’ blog about whatever makes an impression on me, and the impressions we make on the earth.

Think about footprints … on the beach, in the mud, in the desert sand,  they are transient, soft impressions that fade with time or are gently erased by other forces of nature.

I saw dinosaur footprints once, somewhere in southern Utah, impressions left from some long long ago geological event. But no animal except humans seeks to make their footprints permanent.

So I wonder, question, muse upon… footprints, the carbon and non-carbon kind. Who or what leaves a good impression, a lasting impression, on me, my community, our world.

I come from a working-collar, Catholic, Hispanic family. I broke the mold and left my hometown to attend Stanford University, studied political science and history with passion but chose to get my degree in English literature. Looking for “real world” experience before committing to law school, I ventured into the completely unknown territory of high-tech, joining Sun Microsystems in their Graphics Products Division and learned bizarre new languages like UNIX, troff, and XGL.

Fast-forward 20 years to now … as a wife, mother of two, still passionate about politics and history but now approaching life with a wider perspective.  Living in a idyllic coastal village, on a 10-acre farm complete with chickens, gaining every day a deeper respect for those who grow our food and fiber, and give us this day our daily bread.

Making my own footprints on the world… learning to walk my own path while following those who have blazed trails before me , seeing how many cliches I can get into a single sentence, being the change I want to see in the world.

Welcome to my blog. Hope I’ve made a good impression.

Wishing you great prosperity and joy.