I’ve been away from the blog for a while, but I’m back,
at least for today. I was doing other things and not quite in the blogging
mood. Some of the things:
1)
Democratic precinct work building up to the
April 4 election.
2)
Assistant directing the play Photograph 51 at Heartland Theatre.
3)
Library work + freelance writing & editing
work.
4)
Writing a poem a day in April for National
Poetry Month.
Well, the election has happened, the play is up and
running, I’m still working, and it’s still April, so I’m still writing a poem a
day, but the blogging mood seems to have bloomed with the tulips, violets,
dandelions, and bleeding heart. So here I am.
Our local politics have gone viral. Yesterday, my husband
was reading his Daily Kos and said, “Isn’t that the lady who was in our front yard?”
Yes, indeed, that was Chemberly Cummings, who had brought a campaign sign for
our yard and was elected on April 4. She is the first African American to be
elected to the Town of Normal town council. This is the new Normal!
Daily Kos and others had picked up the story from the
Huffington Post, which had also done an earlier story on Cheri Bustos holding a workshop for motivated people like Jodie Slothower, to help them learn how to run for public
office. I’m so proud of all our locals who stepped up to serve the public! The mayoral race was too close to call. Official results
will come out today, and there may still be a recount. A reminder that every
vote really does count.
While I was not blogging, I was also not sending out very
much poetry, but that engine is beginning to rev up, too. I participated in a
wonderful poetry reading for the museum of Americana at the McLean County Museum of History with fellow poets Justin Hamm and Tim Hunt. On April 20, we
have the next open mic reading at the Normal Public Library, with an Earth
Day/Arbor Day set of themes: earth, trees, weather. It’s from 7:30 to
8:30 p.m. in the library café. Local poets and poetry
lovers, come on over!
1 comment:
Good to see you blogging again, whether for one day or many. I saw the news on Chemberly Cummings elsewhere, but fun to know that for you she is a local. Maybe this IS the new normal, or the new Normal, or the new new Normal. We can hope.
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