Day 6 of 366 The Crazy isn’t over yet.

FAA orders temporary grounding of the Boeing 737 Max 9 after a flight from Oregon to California had to make an emergency landing because a chunk of the wall detached midair. I drove school bus 31 years and we had to do circle checks every day on our bus before our departure. Obviously, the precheck on the plane differs but it should have been noticeable before takeoff.

“First, there was a pop. And then a big bang.

Air whooshed out of the side of the airplane, which was flying at 16,000 feet with an emergency exit-size gash. A cellphone, a giant teddy bear and a passenger’s shirt were sucked out the hole in the cabin. Oxygen masks dropped from overhead compartments. Passengers on Alaska Airlines flight 1282—which on Friday afternoon was en route to Ontario, Calif., from Portland International Airport—were fearful for their lives. The flight, however, landed back at the Portland airport less than 30 minutes after takeoff, with 171 passengers and six crew members aboard, all of them alive. “~ MSN

I can’t help wondering how often the outside structure is checked. I wonder if after this, it will be done on a regular basis.

All of Central Florida is under a tornado watch Saturday through 10 p.m.

The National Weather Service issued a tornado watch that stretches from Tampa and the Gulf Coast through Orlando to Daytona Beach and the Treasure Coast on the Atlantic. Florida has seen a lot of severe weather this week.  Hail pummeled West Melbourne and Palm Bay in Brevard County. A weak tornado touched down in Boynton Beach Friday night.

Trump says,” The Civil War could have been negotiated.” Historians are shaking their heads wondering where he comes up with these outlandish thoughts. “The declarations of secession explicitly state that the seceding states were leaving the Union to maintain that system. … This could not be ‘negotiated, says James Grossman (Director of the Historical Association)

There’s a fascinating series on Netflix I recommend watching called “You Are What You Eat, the Twin Experiment. https://www.netflix.com/title/81133260 Identical twins change their diets and lifestyles for eight weeks in a unique scientific experiment designed to explore how certain foods impact the body. It will definitely make you think twice about the American diet and our meat consumption. 

A 90-year old woman was rescued five days after the 7.6 magnitude hit Japan. She was trapped 124 hours under her house. Sadly, more than 200 people are still unaccounted-for, although the number varies.

I’ve discussed my enjoyment with embroidery and the project I’m doing for my doctor who loves airplanes. I’ve completed the Kittyhawk and the Curtiss Jenny. What I learned when I looked up what colors to use when I stitched them. The Kittyhawk built by the Wright’s in 1903. They used spruce for straight members of the airframe (such as wing spars) and ash wood for curved components (wing ribs). The wings were designed with a 1-in-20 camber. The wing fabric used was a 100% cotton muslin called “Pride of the West, commonly used for women’s underwear. It had a warp of 107 threads per inch and a weft of 102 from a total thread count of 209. The muslin fabric was on the lower left wing panel of the Wright Flyer on December 17, 1903, when the airplane made its historic first flights at Kitty Hawk, North Carolina.

Muslin squares are what I’m embroidering the planes to put in the quilt. I love the durability of muslin when used in quilts but there are disadvantages too. Pulls can be expected and occasionally there are slight color and intensity variances. What I love is it is lightweight and breathable because it is a loose plain weave. Muslin dates back to Ancient India.

The Curtiss JN “Jenny” was a series of biplanes built by the Glenn Curtiss Aeroplane Company of Hammondsport, New York, later the Curtiss Aeroplane and Motor Company. The Jenny is made from  a combination of steel and aluminum tubing with some wooden parts and a doped aircraft fabric. Its 27.50 ft (8.4 m) span wing has a wing area of 175.0 sq ft (16.26 m2) and the cockpit width is 24 in (61 cm). Aircraft dope is a plasticized lacquer that is applied to fabric covered aircraft.  It tightens and stiffens fabric stretched over airframes, which renders them airtight and weatherproof, increasing their durability and lifespan. The technique has been commonly applied to both full-size and flying models of aircraft.

What I learned that the Kittyhawk and Curtiss Jenny both benefitted from the doping techniques. These techniques have been employed in aircraft construction since the dawn of heavier-than-air flight. Without the application of dope, the fabric coverings lacked durability and were highly flammable. Both factors rendered them far less viable.

Day 4 of 366

And the crazy continues at Perry Community School in Iowa at 7:37 am. The shooter, 17 yr. old Dylan Butler has died from a self-inflicted gunshot wound. A sixth grader was killed. Five other people were wounded by the shooter. Four victims were students, and the other victim was an administrator. Children should be safe in their schools not seeking places to hide so they don’t die. Unfortunately, this isn’t the first incidence of violence in schools. We’ve talked about changes, and some have been made but apparently not enough because children still have access to guns.

Which brings me to the topic I wanted to discuss. Lidia Yuknavitch challenges writers to be the fire in our society. We can’t continue with our American exceptionalism mentality. The more we tell stories, the more awareness we raise for the voices not heard like children that have died from senseless violence. In power displacements where children are ripped from their families and transported into situations where they are later objects for barter. Women and men are involved in sex trafficking of minors. There’s still uneasiness among the LGBTQ communities because people have homophobic fears. Women and children are still abused by their loved ones.

Poets and Writers January/February 2024 Pw.org pages 34-35 if you want to read more of the article.

Storytelling may not save lives but it will keep the fire burning for those faced with contradictions between the brutality of our society and the fissures of hope that occasionally surface. As a storyteller we bear witness to it all and hopefully find ways to ease suffering.

In Lake Luzerne, New York (one hour north of Albany) a library was adding a one-time event to their monthly line-up Drag Queen Story hour. Amanda Hoffman knew it was a controversial topic but had no idea what the repercussions would be. A bomb threat, board meeting that erupted into a fist fight, people calling each other fascists, predators and queers all took place which unfortunately forced the closing of the only library in town after 53 years of operation. This community became a battle ground for issues of inclusion, free speech and what exactly is the role of a tax-funded institution. The minister in this community took the situation further by pushing to keep perverted books away from children. Banning books have become a social norm.

Ursula K LeGuin says “You cannot buy the revolution. You cannot make the revolution. But you can be the revolution.” Yuknavitch and LeGuin aren’t suggesting we become perfect humans. We’re flawed because we will say the wrong thing or do the wrong time. It’s in our nature. But there’s nothing stopping us from trying again the next day to be a better human, a better co-existent because we’re not the only creatures on this planet. We’ve been the ethos of death and destruction too long.

In the conclusion of her article written in Poets and Writers she offers a writing exercise that I found thought provoking. “Draw courage From the Fire. Name one kind of fire within us, one that keeps us from despair and moves us toward courage in the world. Where did it come from, this internal fire? What experiences brought us to this fire? What shapes does the fire take? Where does this fire live in our body? What story is held there?” ~ Lidia Yuknavitch

My fire is domestic violence. Did I choose this fire? No, my first husband chose it for me with his physical and verbal assaults. What moved me forward was my children initially. Their safety was my primary concern until I could make the changes for us. There is truth in the saying always know where the devil is because the unknown will be your undoing.

I’ve written poetry for contests and published a book to raise awareness. But the fire didn’t just begin with my marital situation, unfortunately it was very much a part of childhood as well. I married not knowing this wasn’t a social norm. Sadly, there wasn’t the media coverage or the resources we have now. But unfortunately, even with the resources, the problem still exists for many women. Yes, it’s crazy that domestic violence exists in this country like it does in third world countries where women have less rights than here.

Harmonium by Lyn Crain

Tasting of bloodied blue interlude, she trembled
Caught in an eternal plot of frenzied cadence arouse.
Her treasured hot peace lyre symbol necklace
Baroque ripped, his alleged rights of the spouse.
His frozen touch, firm on her hymn alabaster neck
Gregorian chants the parody of marital vows.
Her classical breath screamed to simply die, ending it,
But his ballad rage wasn’t done, he only let her drowse.

I chose a musical twist for one of his assaults to encourage thought.

I wish I could say it’s a thing of my past but it’s not because it still impacts my thinking, my reactions to certain comments even a sudden movement. My brain and body are always aware of my surroundings. Sadly, that tool that helps me in other social situations. We live in a violent society, awareness is crucial. We’re never too old to change our thinking.

Like this morning, there were many police sirens near us. The pitches were different, so I knew it was more than one police car. I immediately locked the front door my daughter had recently exited, checked the other doors and then called her to make sure she was safe on the road going to work. I wouldn’t have called her a month ago but after a friend killed in a carjacking incident just over a mile away, I feel less secure than I did. I had become lax in my awareness of my surroundings. I won’t be less guarded again because the crime rate in this country is escalating as poverty and ignorance rises.

On a closing note, for today’s reminder of the craziness we live in. Where ever or whenever culture wars exist, there’s voices that want to fight it out to the death or destroy anything that might possibly offend someone. Unfortunately, once the fighting begins, we all lose.