111 Faces of Klamath Falls - Photography Project, Week 13

Hi!

This week, we meet two different Rons and a Dallas! 

Ron - 37

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Ron - 37/111


Q: What’s something that brings you delight?

A: “People and their happiness!”


Q: What’s something great about yourself? (a trait or accomplishment)

A: “Being wise.”


Q: Is there a problem for which you have a solution?

A: For the problem of racism, Ron said, “the solution is not being a vicim of it.  Don’t do to others what they do to us, meaning, I will be better than my adversaries.”


Q: What’s your life’s dream/goal, and how are you working towards it?

A: “My goal has been to be a wildland firefighter.  I’ve already done two years, and looking forward to more.”


Q: How would you like to be remembered? (personal legacy statement)

A: “I want to be remembered as a person that overcame anything that I faced. Period.”  Ron gave the examples of racism and growing up hard in LA as challenges that he’s overcome. 


Thank you, Ron!


Ron - 38

Ron - 38/111

Ron - 38/111

Q: What’s something that brings you delight?

A: “Playing music.”


Q: What’s something great about yourself? (a trait or accomplishment)

A: “I’m patient.”


Q: Is there a problem for which you have a solution?

A: Ron identified a problem that there’s not enough respect for musicians.  The solution, Ron said, “is for people to recognize what we’re doing and realize that not everyone can do it.”

I have eternal gratitude for musicians, and I’m in a constant state of awe for the creation of music. 


Q: What’s your life’s dream/goal, and how are you working towards it?

A: “My thing has always been to play music and I’ve been lucky enough to be able to do it full time for the last 25-30 years.”


Q: How would you like to be remembered? (personal legacy statement)

A: “I just want to be remembered as a good musician…that’s all.”


I got to see Ron perform and I will, indeed, remember him as a good musician!  This was my first time getting to see live music since COVID and it was the best day I’ve had in a year!  Ron and my friend Jen played at Lake of the Woods Resort and it was excellent! Looking forward to going again this summer!  It’s been years since I’d been to Lake of the Woods and it’s definitely going to become a favorite destination. 

Thank you, Ron!

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Dallas - 39

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Q: What’s something that brings you delight?

A: “Snowmobiling.”

If you couldn’t tell, I met Dallas when he was taking a break from snowmobiling.  


Q: What’s something great about yourself? (a trait or accomplishment)

A: “Snowmobiling.”


Q: Is there a problem for which you have a solution?

A: Dallas joked that my questions were way too deep and passed on this one.


Q: What’s your life’s dream/goal, and how are you working towards it?

A: “Snowmobiling full time.”


Q: How would you like to be remembered? (personal legacy statement)

A: “I think I’ll be remembered for being like how my friends describe me -  as being a ‘really nice asshole.’”

“I could see that,” I replied, when Dallas answered the question. OUCH!!!!  I didn’t mean it the way that came out!!! Luckily, Dallas IS a really nice…guy, and totally forgave me. 

Thank you, Dallas!


I’ve not been pleased with the quality of my images since starting this project.  I cut myself some slack because it’s been winter and I often seem to find myself photographing on gray days.  But there’s been a little more too it. I wondered if I was so out of practice that I lost my “eye” entirely, or maybe COVID and this time we’re living in has just been so intense that it’s impacted me more than I had realized.  Yes, it’s true - I’m both out of practice, and I’ve definitely been affected like everyone else.  I’ve reached the conclusion, however, that I’m looking at things “differently” in this project, compared to my previous street portraiture project(s).  I’m using a different lens in order to keep a little more social distance between me and the subject.  

My go-to lens for street photography, and the lens I used to teach myself photography, is a 50mm.  I’ve been shooting this project with a 24-70mm zoom lens because it enables me to stand more than 6 feet away from the subject in order to keep us both safe.  It’s a great lens…an excellent lens! I’ve owned cars that cost less than this 24-70mm lens, so please don’t think I’m saying there’s anything wrong with the glass.  When it comes to street portraiture, I just know how a 50mm lens behaves.  I can intuit how an image will look because I know the lens well.  Of course I still made, and continue to make, unsatisfactory images with a 50mm, but for the most part, I can see an image in my mind and know what I need to do to capture it.  And most importantly, the 50mm is a much more intimate lens.  It’s a prime lens, meaning, it’s always at 50mm.  You must actively work to make or create an image when using a prime lens.  If you want to change the composition of a photo, you have to do so by moving your feet, changing your position, changing your point of view, getting higher or getting lower…you have to “work the scene” (a saying by one of my favorite current street photographers, Eric Kim) in order to capture the image you’re striving for.  So my realization is that using the 24-70mm zoom lens for this project has accidentally made me…lazy!  Photographers always warn you not to get “lazy” when you go from shooting on a prime lens to a zoom lens. I know this!!!  Even though the lens zooms, it only zooms in or out…you still need to “work the scene,” change your point of view, and change your positioning in order to capture the image you desire. 

I’ve recently experienced some things in life that I had been unable to work through.   At one point, during an internal dialogue I was having in attempt to sort out a problem, I actually said out loud to myself, “work the scene.”  I was viewing my problems through a zoom lens, instead of actively engaging and “working the scene” like with a prime lens. Yes, I was trying my best to work through those things, to examine the issues by zooming in and zooming out, but I had gotten a bit lazy, thinking that “zooming out” by just allowing the passage of time to put distance between the problem and myself would change my perspective and right the situation.   Yes, zooming out and just allowing time to pass, does often lessen the sting in a lot of situations, but sometimes being lazy, zooming out and letting time take care of things, doesn’t result in the best possible outcome.  Sometimes, just “zooming out” actually makes the problem worse! To capture the image or the outcomes we desire, we have to work the scene.  If we continue to look at a problem or situation from the same point of view, with the same mindset, we’ll be unable to see the true nature of the problem or issue.  We’re able to see the true origin of the problem, we can’t see the solutions, and we’re unable to alter our mental or emotional response to the problem. The outcome will be undesirable or less than ideal. In photography, we put the subject in good lighting.  In life, we put the problem in good lighting. In photography and life, we have to view the subject or the problem from all possible angles, and all points of view, and all positions, until we can see it for what it truly is.  In photography - the result is going to be a beautiful image.  In life - the result is often going to be a beautiful lesson.  (And even painful lessons can be beautiful ones, depending on your point of view…)


Thank you for following along so far.

And thank you to everyone who’s allowed me to photograph them for this project.

Hope you have a fabulous week!


111 Faces of Klamath Falls - Photography Project, Week 11

Happy Spring! Thanks for checking in!

Our next three subjects are Ireland, Dave, Tasha, and a bonus person…Layla! 

Ireland is a recent acquaintance.  Dave, Tasha, and Layla are strangers I met at the park, and they saved this week’s post from being just a one-subject week!  I’m not being overly dramatic when I say that I was *this close* to giving up and only sharing Ireland’s photo for the week.   It’s a challenge to find strangers who are up for letting another stranger photograph & “interview” them.  I now know that I can’t let myself get in the position where I don’t have at least a subject or two lined up for the week. 


Ireland - 31

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Ireland - 31/111


Q: What’s something that brings you delight?

A: “Sunbathing!”

I share Ireland’s delight in sunbathing, especially in Klamath.  Have you noticed the sun shines differently, more intensely here?  There’s something pretty special the way the sun shines in Klamath Falls…when the sun shines down on your face and hits your cheeks, it can warm you to your center unlike anywhere else you’ve ever been.  It’s an instantaneous mood-boosting, spirit-lifting, life-affirming warmth. 


Q: What’s something great about yourself? (a trait or accomplishment)

A: “I’m resilient.” 

Ireland has had to deal with some life-altering health issues, and it was only fairly recently that she finally received a diagnosis.  She’s become resilient because she had to for her own well-being.  She remains optimistic, and she knows her own personal life experiences will help her to help others in the future, but it’s been difficult at times.  She’s young, ambitious, and she aspires to help others, but she acknowledged that at times, she’s felt discouraged by having to cope with so many health challenges at such a young age. 

I’m hoping for the day to come when Ireland is well, and doesn’t have to be so strong & resilient.  


Q: Is there a problem for which you have a solution?

A: Ireland envisions a new way of allocating how our federal tax dollars are used. She would like to see a system where we get to choose how to solve our societal problems, specific to the community where we live.   “We vote with our tax dollars,” Ireland said, “taxes would be used democratically.” She imagines a system where federal tax dollars are directed back to the communities from which they came, and we, the taxpayer, get to specify how we want that revenue to be distributed.  We would decide where we want our income tax to be allocated, whether it be toward environmental health, the military, border security, or anything we choose.  Ireland wants us to be able to see our tax dollars at work in the communities where we live. It’s Ireland’s vision that a completely different system of tax revenue distribution would enable us to build the local communities that we desire, by being able to fund the programs that are important to us each individually, and locally. 

I really wish I had used a recorder or voice recording app.  I’m just barely scratching the surface of Ireland’s vision for a new tax system.  We could have talked at length about her idea, and I hope I’m conveying it in such a way to do it proper justice.  

 

Q: What’s your life’s dream/goal, and how are you working towards it?

A: Ireland’s goal is to become a Naturopathic Doctor.  She’s currently a pre-med student and will attend naturopath school after she graduates in a couple months! “I’ll continue to broaden my understanding of health and continue to learn and grow,” Ireland said.  “My dream is to have a successful career and to be well known for what I do, and help as many people as I can in life, with their health,” Ireland added.  

 

Q: How would you like to be remembered? (personal legacy statement)

A: “I want to be remembered as someone really intelligent.  I want to discover something groundbreaking…and if that doesn’t happen, that’s fine too.” 


Ireland will soon be graduating and leaving Klamath Falls. It was important for me to include some OIT students in this project because Oregon Tech is such a critical & valuable part of our community.  Wishing Ireland all the best of luck and success, and I can’t wait to read about your groundbreaking and life-improving, possibly life-saving, discovery someday.  


Tasha (left) and her daughter Layla (right) - 32 

Tasha (left) and Layla (right) - 32/111

Tasha (left) and Layla (right) - 32/111


I got a little teary-eyed after meeting this little gem of a human, Layla.  I just wish you could see the way Layla passionately and whole-heartily wants for a better planet for us all.  She gives me hope. 

Tasha’s answers are immediately below, and then Layla’s answers will follow beneath.  

Tasha’s answers:

Q: What’s something that brings you delight?

A: “Jesus.”


Q: What’s something great about yourself? (a trait or accomplishment)

A: “I’m about to get my GED!”

Congratulations, Tasha!

Q: Is there a problem for which you have a solution?

A: Tasha wants to be able to help kids, youth, and teens early so that they can make good choices. 

Tasha is clean and sober today, and her life experience has inspired her to want to be able to reach our youth early in life, before they have problems or troubles, so that we can help to shape their paths to a bright and successful future. 


Q: What’s your life’s dream/goal, and how are you working towards it?

A: “My goal is to help get people to heaven by spreading the news of God.”


Q: How would you like to be remembered? (personal legacy statement)

A: “I want to be remembered as a great evangelist.” 


Layla’s answers:

Q: What’s something that brings you delight?

A: “Helping nature.” 

Layla couldn’t contain her excitement as she went on to explain to me just how much she loves nature and animals!  

Q: What’s something great about yourself? (a trait or accomplishment)

A: “I’m doing well in science.  I’m a good science student.  I’m in the 4th grade, and I love science.”


Q: Is there a problem for which you have a solution?

A: For the problem of littering, which impacts fish, wildlife, water and the environment, Layla said, “the solution to help parks is a law requiring you to throw your garbage away when you go to the beach or park.”  Layla added, “I just want to make the world better.  Nature is beautiful.”  

(We wouldn’t need litter laws if we could just be a little more like Layla. )


Q: What’s your life’s dream/goal, and how are you working towards it?

A: “My goal is to become a forest ranger or something that helps nature.  Nature was given to us and we need to take care of it.”

 

Q: How would you like to be remembered? (personal legacy statement)

A: “I want to be remembered as a person who helped everyone and helped nature,” Layla answered, “and I want to bring peace.”  Layla also added, “I don’t want things to be bad. I miss how the world used to be when it was kind and sweet.”  

Same, Layla.  Same. 

Wow!  This young lady is out to do big things for us all.  Good things.  

Tasha and Layla, thank you.  Best wishes for your bright futures.   (and ours.)


Dave - 33

Dave - 33/111

Dave - 33/111


Q: What’s something that brings you delight?

A: “I’m a Christian…I love nature and everything the Lord made.”  

Dave added that he’s a farmer and a gardener and he loves to work the ground and work with plants.”


Q: What’s something great about yourself? (a trait or accomplishment)

A: “I love good things, I like righteousness, peace, rest, and truth.”


Q: Is there a problem for which you have a solution?

A: My note-taking was slower than Dave spoke, but I hope I’ve adequately summed up his answer. Dave sees many problems in the world such as abuse of powers, inhumane treatment of people, and millions living in poverty.  He sees the solution as being when the Lord returns to end it.  


Q: What’s your life’s dream/goal, and how are you working towards it?

A: Dave answered that he has no earthly dreams, and added, “my dream is to go to heaven.” 

 

Q: How would you like to be remembered? (personal legacy statement)

A: “I don’t have a plan on being remembered, I don’t plan on coming to an end.”


Thank you Ireland, Tasha, Layla, and Dave!  


And thank you for following along for another week!  


111 Faces of Klamath Falls - Photography Project, Week 7

Hi!

The next three subjects of “111 Faces of Klamath Falls” are Emma, Sarah, and Ashanti.

Meet Emma. There’s nothing I can tell you about Emma that she can’t say 5000 times better in her own words, writings, and works. I’m not slacking here…this is the truth!  I’ll share some links - please check them out!  This is an incredible woman who does incredible things, and I just really want you to get to know Emma and her environmental and social justice work. She has a TED TALK ! See what I mean - it’s much more direct and effective just to check Emma’s work for yourself.) Check out her TED video and you’ll begin to look for, and see that, nature is everywhere. Solutions are all around us.

Emma - 19

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Emma - 19/111

I first learned of Emma a few years ago when I listened to a random podcast on which she was the guest.  I was happy to hear someone from Klamath Falls and began to follow her on twitter.  I didn’t know at that time that our paths would intersect.  Emma is a member of the Equity Task Force, and I’m honored for the opportunity to work with her.  Emma is an indefatigable social justice warrior and ally.  (Emma, thank you.  Sincerely.) I intended to share that first podcast interview with you, but when searching to see if I could locate that episode, I discovered that she’s been interviewed on several podcasts. Search for Emma Marris on whatever podcast app you use and be prepared to be enlightened about nature and our planet, and our responsibility to it, and for it. Emma’s ability to communicate complex ideas is admirable and impressive. Emma is able to organize thoughts, ideas, and information, and present it to even the most unwilling of recipients with just enough softness for the message to be heard, but also with logic and data so that the message is irrefutable. She’s convincing. She’s persuasive. She’s powerful.

Q: What’s something that brings you delight?

A: “Music really brings me delight.” 

Emma grew up in Seattle in the 90’s. She joked that her Seattle upbringing tends to make her a bit of a music snob, but she’s been finding delight in her kids’ top 40/pop music since coronavirus.  (Is this a thing?  Since COVID, I’ve been finding myself, uncharacteristically, listening to top 40/pop too!.)

Q: What’s something great about yourself? (a trait or accomplishment.)

A: “Great is a high bar,” Emma prefaced, “I guess I would say that I don’t settle for stuff. I want things to get better in my life and in the world.” 

Again, these aren’t just words.  Emma lives it in every way imaginable.

Q: Is there a problem for which you have a solution?

A: For the problem of climate change, Emma’s solution is for us “to demand change!” “It’s not too late. We get organized and demand big changes,” Emma instructed.  She cautioned that we can’t allow ourselves to feel so guilty about our own personal footprint that it paralyzes us and prevents us from making the real changes needed, which are so much bigger than our own personal footprint. 

Emma also offered a solution for a smaller problem, “Everybody in America needs to learn how to cook fried rice and stop throwing out their take-out white rice.”


Q: What is your life’s dream/goal, and how are you working towards it?

A: “I just want people to say, ‘She did her best…she tried.’”  Emma added that she’s working on not letting herself get too overwhelmed because her desire to always want to improve things extends to her entire life. “I’m going to keep trying to make things better,” Emma said.  

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Q: How would you like to be remembered? (Personal Legacy Statement.)

A: Emma wants to be remembered for her work.  “I’ve written one book, and a new book is coming out this summer.  Writers want their work to live on forever.”

Congratulations on your second book, Emma! Click here to pre-order Emma’s second book, “Wild Souls”

Learn more about Emma here on her website!


Sarah - 20

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Sarah - 20/111

Q: What’s something that brings you delight?

A: “Mt. Shasta!”  

Sarah grew up near the ocean for most of her life. She liked being so close to something as vast as the Pacific because it forces some perspective. “The ocean keeps us in scale,” Sarah explained. The view of Mt. Shasta provides her with that reminder now that she lives here.  


Q: What’s something great about yourself? (a trait or accomplishment.)

A: “I’m optimistic!”  (“Or maybe hopeful,” Sarah added.)


Q: Is there a problem for which you have a solution?

A: “I don’t have a solution, no. I’m just a cog in the gears.”  A problem that was on Sarah’s mind the morning we met is how we assign categories or labels to people, and how much better we could be if we just identified “people” as “people” instead labeling or categorizing. 


Q: What is your life’s dream/goal, and how are you working towards it?

A: “To be part of something that makes others’ lives easier.”

Again, these aren’t just fluffy words. Sarah lives it! I’ve observed Sarah’s kindness firsthand, when she assisted a group of elderly travelers who were displaced by the 242 Fire this past fall.  I won’t get into the complicated story, but Sarah didn’t hesitate in providing assistance and she continues to help our community and community members.  

Sarah’s parents raised her with a sense of responsibility to be part of the solution.  “I was born with a silver spoon that tarnished, but I haven’t had to have any more than my share of struggles. I like lifting others up”  


Q: How would you like to be remembered? (Personal Legacy Statement.)

A: “I wan’t to be remembered as being kind and cheerful.”  Sarah added that she also wants to be remembered for being funny! 

20b.Sarah.jpg


Sarah is one of the most kind, cheerful, inviting people I’ve ever met!  She’s also a woman who is as equally fierce in activism as she is sweet and kind!  Thank you for being you, Sarah!  (I’m grateful to have met you!)

Sarah and I left our mini-photoshoot dreaming of the day when it’s safe enough to be able to have a cup of coffee together on a sunny patio, finish the rest of this conversation and begin some new ones. I’m looking forward to it!



Ashanti - 21

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Ashanti - 21/111

Ashanti is a brand new friend I hadn’t met yet!   


Q: What’s something that brings you delight?

A: “Music always brings me delight!” 


Q: What’s something great about yourself? (a trait or accomplishment.)

A: “I think I make really good fish tacos!”  


Q: Is there a problem for which you have a solution?

A: Ashanti explained that he’s been finding himself thinking about how selfish man can be at times, with our own self-serving behaviors, our own agenda and our own desires.   “The solution is to be considerate and treat others how you want to be treated,” Ashanti said, “and not just treating people that way, but the planet too.” 


Q: What is your life’s dream/goal, and how are you working towards it?

A: “My biggest commitment to myself is to become content with my life.”  Ashanti explained that to get to that point, he’s always pushing himself toward a better tomorrow and regularly asks himself, “what’s next?”

Best wishes to you, Ashanti, may all of your hard work take you to your destination.


Q: How would you like to be remembered? (Personal Legacy Statement.)

A: Ashanti wants to be remembered as someone who lived without self-imposed boundaries or limitations, and encouraged others to do the same. “If you want something, go get it,” Ashanti said. 


Thank you, Emma, Sarah & Ashanti!

The idea of “curating community” and “cultivating community” has been a reoccurring thought. As I was reviewing photos of previous subjects and working on the photos for this week, I was struck and impressed by the incredible group of people who’ve participated in the project so far.  ‘This is a great community we’re curating,’ I thought.  I’ve used the hashtag #creatingklamath on Instagram.  I’m inspired and motivated by the people in this project who are sincerely and actively working towards creating a community of which we can all be proud.  Some people are working quietly, and some people are working boldly! I’m optimistic that in spite of everything we’ve lived through recently, or maybe it’s because of all that we’ve lived through, we have the ability to unite and curate the community we desire.  All of these amazing, vibrant people in our community, create a vibrant community!  We have the ability to curate, cultivate, and create a community that’s safe, welcoming, happy, equitable, sustainable, and prosperous for us all. These people are making it happen!

Thanks again for reading along and special thanks to everyone who’s allowed me to photograph them. Spring is coming and soon we’ll have more beautiful blue skies and impressive sunsets. I’m looking forward to pushing myself to look for, see, and capture better lighting. I know the quality of the images will improve as I learn how to see and capture the light.

111 Faces of Klamath Falls - Photography Project, Week 2

Hi!

Thanks for coming back! This is the second group of three subjects for the 111 Faces of Klamath Falls project.

I’m feeling like we can get a little deeper with some of the interview questions. Can you think of anything interesting to ask? Please let me know if you have any suggestions. I loved the questions in the first project. They didn’t appear too personal, intimate, or invasive on the surface, but somehow, the questions revealed so much about each subject. There were times in the first project when the subject (usually complete strangers) and I would end up laughing, crying, or hugging. I would love to find questions that will evoke the same genuine emotions.

Dane - 4

Dane - 4/1111

Dane - 4/1111

Q: What’s something that brings you delight?

A: “Spending time with my parents, and a cup of coffee in the morning.”


Q: What’s something great about yourself? (a trait or accomplishment)

A: “I’m kind to others.”

Q: Do you have a life dream or goal, and how are you working towards it?

A: “To live healthy: physically & mentally.”

Q: Is there a problem for which you have a solution?

A: “There will always be problems or speed bumps in life. You just have to deal with them as best you can.”


Q: How would you like to be remembered? (Do you have a personal legacy statement?)

A: “That I was a great parent.”

Matt - 5

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Matt - 5/111

Q: What’s something that brings you delight?

A: “Being outside.”


Q: What’s something great about yourself? (a trait or accomplishment)

A: Matt shared an incredibly great accomplishment! Matt lost 70 pounds! He’s maintaining his successful weight loss with continued daily workouts. Matt runs/walks/hikes every day after work for at least an hour or more! He’s also extremely proud of his kids - their accomplishments are his accomplishments too.

Q: Do you have a life dream or goal, and how are you working towards it?

A: “To stay fit and live longer.” Matt accomplished his 70 pound weight loss goal over two years and continues to maintain it. I’m so impressed with his dedication to fitness and being healthy for his family. The hiking trail was covered in snow the day we met, but not even snow and close-to-freezing temperatures deter him from his workouts. Congratulations, Matt! I’ll be seeing you around as I’m working on my own fitness goals too!


Q: Is there a problem for which you have a solution?

A: Matt explained that he normally runs/hikes with a little bag and collects any litter that he sees on the trails. He didn’t have his litter bag that day since any litter would have been covered by the snow. Imagine the difference we could make, everywhere, if we all did our small part like Matt! I loved his answer! Such a huge impact, with so little effort required.

Q: How would you like to be remembered? (Do you have a personal legacy statement?)

A: “I would like to be remembered as a good father.”

Matt is the first stranger (friend I hadn’t yet met) in this project. This is a major difference between this project and the first one. It is difficult to explain, but the vibe in our small rural town is different than it is in Portland. People just wouldn’t be as receptive to having a stranger take their photo and interview them. It’s just not a “normal” occurrence here. I’ll slowly work up the confidence to approach strangers, but I just don’t want to make anyone uncomfortable. (And i’m a little uncomfortable as well.) Thank you, Matt, for letting me take your photo!

Alexa - 6

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Alexa - 6/111

Q: What’s something that brings you delight?

A: “My Kid.”


Q: What’s something great about yourself? (a trait or accomplishment)

A: “I can cook!”


Q: Do you have a life dream or goal, and how are you working towards it?

A: “I’ve always wanted to be a teacher. I’m working towards certification.” Go get it, Alexa!

Q: Is there a problem for which you have a solution?

A: Alexa took a sip of coffee as I asked her this question, and then proceeded to spill it. We laughed, and she answered, “normalize adult sippy cups!” Alexa would like to bring more culture to schools in the effort to prevent racism. Alexa is on our city’s equity task force, and is doing antiracism work in order to create a more diverse and equitable community for all.


Q: How would you like to be remembered? (Do you have a personal legacy statement?)

A: “I would like to be remembered as “Sunshine.” Alexa explained that her nickname is “Sunshine.” She wants to be remembered as being bright, and that her presence brings up the mood.” I would absolutely describe Alexa as a little ray of sunshine.


Dane, Matt, and Alexa, thank you for letting me take your photos!

The question, "what brings you delight?" was inspired by an interview with Ross Gay that I heard on the radio the other day. Ross Gay is the author of, "The Book of Delights." I have't yet read the book, but I was just so intrigued by the radio interview and have every day since, been identifying little things in life that bring me "delight." I love the exercise...it's a little like practicing gratitude, but different. And don't you think the word "delight," actually brings "delight"? Like, why don't we use this word more often? A nice warm bath brings me delight. Coffee brings me delight. Having a cup of coffee while visiting with a friend is just as delightful as delight can be.

Thank you for reading this week. Do let me know if you think of any questions you think we should ask the subjects moving forward.

Wishing you a week filled with delight!