Rearranging furniture in the “front porch room” and livingroom

Yesterday all of a sudden got the idea of moving the bookcase from the living room into the front porch room, and some assorted other changes.

Living room:

With the bookshelves moved out to the little “front porch” room, the living room now serves more of its original intended function of overflow guest lounging/sleeping space. The hanging rack that has the blue triangle pattern quilt on it is where the bookcase used to be.

(Yes, we have our fridge in the living room, not in the kitchen. It’s kind of weird, but neighbors had a huge fridge they were getting rid of, and this was as far into the house as we could get the fridge. If we had wanted to get it into the kitchen it would’ve had to go around multiple corners and skinny hallway. Modern American fridges can be gigantic, and this house was obviously built in the era before gigantic fridges.)

Front porch room:

Moved the bookshelves from the livingroom to the front porch roomette – love the update so the books & games are more front & center. #communallivingprototype #ornateminimalist

Detail notes:

Lampshade – If you’ve been following me for a while, and have an eye for certain details, you may have noticed this lampshade over the years. I made it from one of those moisture-proof, vacuum-sealed bags that coffee comes in. I was glad to find this reuse, but even happier to later find a local coffee roaster who sells us coffee in mason jars. (And bonus, gives a significant discount for us returning the jar each time.)

Mug sitting on the bookshelf – This is my favorite coffee mug. I use it daily. It’s decorated with an illustration and quote from my cousin Jim Kay, an artist-activist born and raised in Fall River, Massachusetts. He loved his hometown and did so much good there in his 87 years. His daughter, my sweet cousin Alix, designed & commissioned commemorative mugs for us.

You can see pics here on my deep green Facebook page. Living room; and porch room.

A 2014 Facebook memory, and my Mom

Lately Facebook has been serving me up a bunch of memories from 10 years ago. As it happens, this time of year 10 years ago was a very challenging phase of my life.

Spring 2014. My mother had had a heart attack and had triple bypass surgery, with other medical complications such as diabetes as well, and I had gone up to Virginia to stay with her in her house while she recovered. If I recall correctly it ended up being about three months.

My siblings live an hour or so away from the rural place where Mom & Dad had retired to, and they had always been steadily helping Mom with all sorts of things after Dad passed, so I felt like the least thing I could do would be to go up there for a spell and try to contribute some hands-on support such as helping with driving to appointments, cooking, complying with meds etc. And trying to provide some joy and pleasure.

I actually feel like I did nowhere near enough for my siblings and our Mom, but in my mind at the time it was the best I could do. If I could invent a time machine there is a lot that I would do more & different. Most of it has to do with communication; that would’ve solved a lot.

(My siblings, whose names and other information I withhold out of love and respect, because they are very private people as was our Mom.)

Financially this period back in 2014 was a very hard time keeping up with my apartment and other bills, as I had started to depend on income from location-dependent work (pedicabbing, general labor, retail side-job etc) in my home city of Daytona Beach.

Emotionally it was a very very hard time. Having to navigate between the doctors’ advice, hospital discharge instructions etc., and what our Mom was willing to comply with. Being afraid that my mom might die if I happened to be the only one of us with her and was not able to say the right thing to convince her to comply. It was big because I always felt like I was my mother’s most difficult and troublesome child. From the very beginning of our childhood, the other siblings were always so much better behaved and gave her so much less grief than I did. So there was definitely some history there. Sometimes a parent and child can just have personality differences and it’s nobody’s fault.

Nonetheless, Mom and I did genuinely love each other no less than the other family members. In a different way perhaps but I would say no less. And, we managed to have some genuinely good times even during that rough phase.

One of our pastimes together was watching all sorts of things on TV, such as Criminal Minds and CSI, and Call the Midwife, and The Bletchley Code, and documentaries on the history channel.

For the first time ever, I became dependent on online sales of my artwork to pay my rent and other bills. There were some close calls, but I managed, thanks to many friends and strangers who purchased my artworks. I even went to the farmers market of the little town and managed to sell one of my artworks to the mayor of that town! (Or maybe she was the deputy mayor, I don’t remember.)

At one point my mom asked me, how much do you make from selling your art. I took a deep breath, mustered all the put-on dignity and brook-no-discussion determination that I could, and responded, “ENOUGH.”

It must have been enough brook-no-discussion vibe, because she didn’t say anything back. I couldn’t afford for her to have her attention on that, could not afford to let this become a topic. For many reasons. Dignity was seriously at stake. As well as a legitimate wish to protect my Mom from financial anxiety. (Even though she had always had financial anxiety despite being well-off. There was nothing I could do to help her get past it — I had tried many times — but at least I could do my best to avoid adding to it.)

Having been raised on a middle-class path with the expectation of college and always a cushy office job with all the security, I had always felt a bit in the closet ever since I had dropped out of the middle class in the early 2000s. Actually, let’s be honest, I started dropping out of the “professional” middle class almost as soon as I started trying to endure the office thing, it just took a while for me to muster the courage to fully disengage.

The finances, harrowing as they could be, were never the hardest part of it. The hardest part of it was the fear of disappointing my parents. Of becoming — or maybe already being — that embarrassing weird family member no one wants to talk about.

I never did really fully come out of that closet, although they always knew that I wasn’t working any kind of steady job, let alone one of those “professional office jobs.” What would be called a “real job.” I tried it for a few years right out of college but it just didn’t feel like me. To the point where it felt like death. So I had to choose life, and if that sounds melodramatic, so be it.

This photo shows a few of the artworks I made during that Spring 2014 time period. The period of my mother’s heart surgery and recovery. All of my artwork before had had a very strong Texas flavor –and then later on when I moved to Florida, a Florida flavor.

It’s kind of startling to look back and see this little batch of artworks that were influenced by my surroundings in Virginia. The garage one is inspired by my parents’ garage, and was very much filled with the legacy of my Dad’s memory. When I look at that piece of art I can still smell the garage.

Dad passed in 2010, and Mom in 2017, but I can still smell the garage. It smelled like ancestral sawdust and multigenerational carpentry, rust and petroleum, car interior vinyl, road atlases, our family’s whole life together. It smelled of stored dreams and archived hopes. It smelled, too, of course, of everyone else’s impressions which were out of the bandwidth of my sense of smell’s range.

It smelled of memory-traces that I guess follow a person or family over the years from one garage to the next: It smelled of snow and cigars and little organized jars of screws in Grandpa Nazak’s basement in northeastern Pennsylvania; it smelled of tarry pilings in Yokosuka; it smelled of a swimming pool on a military base in Long Beach; it smelled of juniper bushes on a manicured desert suburban street in San Diego, it smelled of cut grass from different lawns of the different houses we had occupied.

During the “Virginia 2014, Mom’s Heart Recovery” phase, there was a point when I was selling my artworks for $13 apiece. It was tough, but it got people buying, and it added up to pay my rent, and there is no feeling like the satisfaction of that! That at an extremely challenging time of my life, I was able to pay my bills entirely with pens and pencils and paints.

If I had not been able to find a way to make money, I would’ve had to give up my apartment and then had to look for a new place when it was time to come home to Daytona Beach. Thank God that did not have to happen.

For many reasons — mainly because of my activism — my mix of work nowadays, and throughout most of my life other than some unusual times like spring 2014, has generally included multiple activities in addition to my art.

However, I remain grateful, and I also remain a strong advocate to fellow artists who are trying to earn their livelihood purely from their art. I’m here to tell you it’s totally doable.

There were a variety of emotional pressures but it still worked. Art IS a way to make a living. The arts ARE a way to make a living. I believe Kurt Vonnegut said that, and I totally stand by that.

Artists are needed in this world. All types of artists and artisans are needed, no less than roadbuilders and architects and lawyers. It really does take all of us, and if any of us aren’t showing up, it’s like if you were a paint brush trying to be a hammer. You might be able to hit a few small nails with that paint brush but really the paint brush needs to be making paintings, and if you have a big nail you need to go get a hammer.

Back in 2014 when I first posted these, some rando on my feed commented that they were crap and even his kindergarten daughter could do better. Well I totally believe that, because kids are great artists and I’m a decent artist but I’m really not all that.

But the fact remains that my art paid my bills and kept me from having to give up my apartment, and nothing can take that away. From me or any other working artist. Fellow artists navigating life, I salute you!

By the way, my mother was an artist too. She never had to depend on it for her livelihood, but she was no less an artist. She made outstanding sculptures of dogs and horses and other subjects. She drew and painted as well, and made jewelry. I always think I got my artistic side from her, and from our cousin Jim Kay.

If you want to see my drawings that popped up in my Facebook feed today, you can go here to the post on my art and design page.

OJ, antiracism, and empathy

In the following post that I made on my Facebook page 3 days ago, I said some things that in retrospect I would have said differently, or refrained from saying. (The links and excerpts stand. Those are good articles for anyone who wants to understand the wider societal context of the OJ Simpson case.)

I’m leaving the post in its original form (for accountability & learning) but am also posting a revised version below it. Maybe my rewrite based on reflection will be helpful to some other people who, like me, are trying to learn how to be more understanding and empathetic to their intended listeners, while still speaking up.

The main differences: 1) I took out the mention of our local comedy scene, which only ended up fanning the flames of a recent conflict in the community, plus obscuring the point I was trying to make. And 2), I corrected the tone and wording to be what I hope is more appropriately empathetic and humble.

The original post:

In regard to OJ Simpson’s passing, I have seen a lot of covertly racist comments — and some overtly racist comments as well — on the pages of fellow white people, in regard to OJ Simpson’s passing. Racist jokes and racist comments are never OK.

And a special note to my fellow comics:

One of the things I love most about The Last Laugh Open Mic Comedy at Tir na nOg Irish Pub, is the absolute, non-negotiable prohibition we have against racist jokes. It’s actually the only restriction we have on content at the Nog.

(I say fellow comics, even though I have only tried stand-up a handful of times, at open mics, and am really mainly an audience member — but I do use humor extensively in my writing and hold myself to this rule).

And I thank all the beautiful Daytona comics who have so consistently enforced this essential rule at the Nog.

I actually think it’s not OK to even make mean-spirited comments about someone’s death, never mind actual racist comments, but maybe that’s just me.

As a white person who is learning how to be anti-racist, I found these two articles to be very helpful. I have shared the link to each, with a couple brief quotes.

1) from Washington Post Apr 11: https://www.washingtonpost.com/nation/2024/04/11/oj-simpson-racial-divisions-murder-trial/

“While the reaction to the verdict was largely portrayed in the media along racial lines at the time, it was always more complicated than that, said James Lance Taylor, a politics professor at the University of San Francisco. “The truth is many millions of Black people thought O.J. Simpson was probably guilty,” said Taylor. “There was just so much wrapped up in the O.J. case that was connected to the Black experience in America.””

BUT, AND, ALSO: “Coming just a few years after the acquittal of four officers who beat Black motorist Rodney King in 1992 and the 1991 killing of Black teenager Latasha Harlins by a store clerk in Los Angeles, Simpson’s treatment by the police and media was viewed by many in the Black community as proof that even wealthy celebrities couldn’t escape racism in America…”

2) from Antiracism Daily’s weekend edition today:
“Nearly 30 years after O.J. Simpson’s acquittal, his death shows America’s persistent racial divide. Simpson, who died Wednesday, remains a symbol of racial divisions in American society because he is a reminder of how deeply the inequities are felt, even as newer figures have come to symbolize the struggles around racism, policing and justice.”

The newsletter goes on to link an article from PBS on this topic:

https://www.pbs.org/newshour/nation/nearly-30-years-after-o-j-simpsons-acquittal-his-death-shows-americas-persistent-racial-divide

“Some people recall watching their Black co-workers and classmates erupting in jubilation at perceived retribution over institutional racism. Others remember their white counterparts shocked over what many felt was overwhelming evidence of guilt. Both reactions reflected different experiences with a criminal justice system that continues to disproportionately punish Black Americans.”

OJ Simpson; USA racial divide

The revised version which I posted on my Facebook just now:

Revised version:

In recent days, I started noticing a lot of comments on social media, regarding O.J. Simpson’s death. They seemed triumphant, like oh good the guy is going to hell etc. And something about it to me didn’t sit right, even beyond my personal aversion to commenting triumphantly about someone’s death.

So I did some reflecting and some web searching, and also, in a timely manner, things popped into my inbox that helped me understand the bigger picture behind what I was feeling.

As a white person who is learning how to be anti-racist (and I expect this to be a lifelong journey), I found these two articles to be very helpful. I have shared the link to each, with a couple of brief quotes.

1) from Washington Post Apr 11: https://www.washingtonpost.com/nation/2024/04/11/oj-simpson-racial-divisions-murder-trial/

“While the reaction to the verdict was largely portrayed in the media along racial lines at the time, it was always more complicated than that, said James Lance Taylor, a politics professor at the University of San Francisco. “The truth is many millions of Black people thought O.J. Simpson was probably guilty,” said Taylor. “There was just so much wrapped up in the O.J. case that was connected to the Black experience in America.””

BUT, AND, ALSO:

“Coming just a few years after the acquittal of four officers who beat Black motorist Rodney King in 1992 and the 1991 killing of Black teenager Latasha Harlins by a store clerk in Los Angeles, Simpson’s treatment by the police and media was viewed by many in the Black community as proof that even wealthy celebrities couldn’t escape racism in America…”

2) from Antiracism Daily’s weekend edition today:
“Nearly 30 years after O.J. Simpson’s acquittal, his death shows America’s persistent racial divide. Simpson, who died Wednesday, remains a symbol of racial divisions in American society because he is a reminder of how deeply the inequities are felt, even as newer figures have come to symbolize the struggles around racism, policing and justice.”

The newsletter goes on to link an article from PBS on this topic:

https://www.pbs.org/newshour/nation/nearly-30-years-after-o-j-simpsons-acquittal-his-death-shows-americas-persistent-racial-divide

“Some people recall watching their Black co-workers and classmates erupting in jubilation at perceived retribution over institutional racism. Others remember their white counterparts shocked over what many felt was overwhelming evidence of guilt. Both reactions reflected different experiences with a criminal justice system that continues to disproportionately punish Black Americans.”

OJ Simpson; USA racial divide

Weaving loom, and a beach-toy library

I have been adding more features to the “porous property” edge of my yard.

One of my projects the other day was to set up a makeshift loom on the south sidewalk-edge of my front yard. By attaching two skinny lengths of bamboo to two of the fence posts.

And I started weaving a little rug using various scraps of fabric (accreted over time from my waste-stream diversion efforts) in bright pink/orange hues.

The first two photos show the start of the project, which I was able to do under the excessive street lights. The third photo shows today, this morning, weaving in the right-angled strands.

The beach toys you see in the third photo, I found on the beach, someone had left them by the trash for someone else to pick up and use, but sometimes they end up getting thrown away when that happens, so I am going to start a beach-toy toybox at the edge of my yard. People walking by on their way to the ocean can grab beach toys, and either bring them back or keep them.

It’s important because so many beach toys just get discarded after one use.

A few years back, someone tried to start a beach-toy toybox on the beach, and it was allowed to be there for a while but then it was removed, unfortunately.

Update:

  • I ended up using the bamboo poles as a hanging rod for my beach-toy lending library. The hooks (made of yellow-coated wire, from a massive roll — one of the many things left in my garage by the previous owners of this house) are easy to remove any time I want to use the bamboo poles as a loom again! 
  • The little rug is now on the floor of my back office, serving as cute bright decor and as a sand-stopper from when I walk into my office through the back door from outside.
  • All of the stuff mentioned in this piece was rescued from the waste stream.
  • Projects like this are what I see as low-stakes experiments aimed at helping to restore a more healthy level of trust in our society. Help repair the social fabric. Maybe even “build back better,” since some of this stuff is pretty fun and unusual and out-there.

You can see photos here, in this post on my Facebook page art & design by jenny nazak.

Update April 21: I made a three-part series on my YouTube channel about my “porous property” adventures. Part 1, Part 2, Part 3. Each video lasts about a minute.

Update April 28: This morning I heard someone talking in glowing terms about my yard. She was speaking into a phone. It turned out she was Instagramming my yard! How cool is that. Especially since my Instagram account is not active, if I even have one.

We introduced ourselves to each other and had a nice conversation, exchanged numbers. She is a relatively recent arrival and just bought a condo right nearby. I was thrilled to meet such a nice neighbor and in such a cool context.

Neutrality: the downside

Neutrality can be very lucrative. Look at Switzerland during World War II. There are some situations where one definitely should not be neutral.

By the way, the point of this post is not to pick on a particular country; it’s to reflect on how neutrality is sometimes very very beneficial to the neutral party in ways that we don’t see. Can be money, can be something else.

And the party taking a neutral stance doesn’t have to be a country. Neutrality is a thing all around us. Like, in interpersonal relationships, neutrality gives a person access to double-dip approval and other goodies from both sides, instead of having to take a fall and endure ostracism or worse.

Same as Switzerland offered neutral ground for the Nazis/Axis powers to meet with the Allied powers for discussions aimed at seeking a peaceful resolution, a person taking a neutral stance can serve a valuable role as a mediator or mediation space. We just have to be alert to the potential dangers of adopting a neutral position.

An interpersonal situation I witnessed (actually multiple situations) prompted me to explore this topic by googling “Switzerland World War II”.

• “The sinister face of ‘neutrality’” (from Frontline/pbs.org ): Switzerland’s reputation as a neutral safe-haven during World War 11 has been badly tarnished by recent revelations about its wartime transactions with Germany. What began as an examination of the dormant bank accounts of Holocaust victims has gained momentum to include the whole gamut of Swiss financial dealings with the Nazis. In recent months a vast amount of incriminating documentation has been unearthed that reveals the sinister side of Swiss “neutrality”. … Most of the Jews who availed themselves of the opportunity to transfer their assets failed to escape the flames of the Holocaust. While happy to accept Jewish capital, the Swiss were less happy to accept Jewish refugees (often their own depositors).”

• “Swiss supplied arms to Nazi war machine” (from swissch.org): “New studies probing Switzerland’s wartime past have found that the country supplied munitions to the Nazis at the expense of the Allies. Seven studies released on Friday by the Independent Commission of Experts (ICE) show that the lion’s share of Swiss munitions exports went to the Axis powers.”

TNOC 2024 – The Nature of Cities Festival

This year’s theme is “The distance between dreams and reality is action.” Or, for short, “Action.”

The following are just a tiny slice representing my top take-aways from this rich feast.

Day 1, Monday April 15

Happy Monday everyone!
Today is the first day of TNOC 2024. The Nature of Cities Festival. Opened this morning with the first plenary session, which started at 3 AM my time!

Later, in an interactive session, with a small group, we used a nature-based framework and some AI tools to generate a visual of what a nature-oriented city might look like. Lots of interesting insights and cross-pollination of ideas and models. Got to work with people from Singapore, Indonesia, and other countries.

I have attended this conference in several previous years, and always bring so many good ideas and connections to share with our city and home region.

Day 2, Tues April 16

TNOC Day 2 in progress!!! current speaker in plenary #2 – talking about goal of drinkable rivers, connecting the world’s watersheds

Li An Phoa did a 1000km walk from France to the North Sea in 60 days – dialogues w ppl along the way – incl meeting numerous Mayors – together formed “Mayors for a Drinkable Meuse” https://drinkablerivers.org/what-we-do/action-communities/

#drinkablerivers

In the small-group panel session I attended next, “Nature as a catalyst for livable communities and local economies,” I was happy to hear mention of behavioral economics. And I was able to bring up drinkable rivers as a possible overarching framework for a vibrant local economy. And brought up the idea that Degrowth is very compatible with a vibrant local economy.

This session, as it happened, most of the panelists were from Ireland, and there was a lot of great work being done, for example, bringing trees and nature to an under-resourced area of Dublin.

Day 3, Wed April 17

Mark Hostetler (from Florida! has been a speaker at Outside Collab) speaking on migratory birds in urban/suburban yards

AfricaTown Connections Blueway, Mobile AL USA. Access to historic roots via water.

Day 4, Thurs April 18

Grey City, Green Hope: Mumbai’s Maharashtra Nature Park. Beautiful nature park in the heart of the dense city, has rainwater collection ponds and riverside and other attractions

Day 5, Friday April 19

Plenary: fusing nature w buildings – inspired by living bridges ancient technology in Bangladesh. Arbor Kitchen project Berlin. Art + science + practice; creating spaces that people want to hang out in. The Gardens by the Bay in Singapore. The need in time of climate change / biodiversity loss to cultivate tree care expertise; livelihoods. “Sponge Planet”!!

Smaller session: Nature-based solutions in informal settlements in Nairobi. They have been able to address a lot of what were very serious flooding issues. It’s the middle of the rainy season, and the nature-based solutions are holding up well. We learned about this organization https://www.r-u-nbs.info “The future of global urban development is closely linked to the future of informal settlements. Climate change is expected to have severe impacts on informal settlements in sub-Saharan Africa. Nature-based solutions (NbS) are considered key in adapting to a changing climate while realising significant social and ecological benefits.”

Day 7, Tuesday April 22

Plenary:
integrating living systems w built systems;
the power of comics to tell persuasive stories motivating change.
NBS comics (=Nature Based Solutions) has been around for 10 months, during which time has been read by 1 million ppl!!
“Draw your fantasy, make it real”
Possible NBS “comic con” in the future?
Inherent complexity & ephemerality of urban environment means we can experiment. Imagine our futures, trigger a change in thinking not bound by science. Art can be transformative & disruptive.

Unleash some new ways of looking at the future; engage w novel ecologies; not get stuck in fear

Smaller session: remaking wetlands in Latin American cities

Day 8, Wednesday April 23

Seed session: A public “living room” in Louisville KY. Tour and background of old Louisville neighborhood; intro to concept of “fourth places” (meaning-making). Old decommissioned catholic church, now being used as a public living room type space.

Seed session: Chicago tree-planting initiative – Urban Oasis Unleashed: Empowering your city with lush street canopies through advocacy

Day 9, Thursday April 25

Getting businesses more involved with preserving urban tree canopy; widening the base of stake holders; challenges for human wellbeing under heat and drought conditions

Day 10 – final day, Friday April 26

Plenary: Favelas – creative resilience & social richness of informal settlements. How to find “sweet spot” where govt is helping ppl without quashing flexibility & inventiveness. An overly managed city is a dead city.

Seed session “Buried brook” – daylighting a creek in the Bronx. Nature music app – interactive. Different sounds depending on which way you are walking.

Further Exploration:

The Nature of Cities Festival website has the various titles of the talks, and names of people & organizations etc. There may even be recordings made available on the website if they are not already. As activists it behooves us to use every possible means of connection, we need to be connected with the people around the world who are working on the same things we are. There are so so many of us!

The next-best time

When it comes to things we regret not starting sooner … The best time was always five or 10 or 20 or 40 or however many years ago.

But the next-best time is now.

The saying “Don’t cry over spilt milk” exists for a reason.

I’m not going to tell you don’t cry. I myself cry all the time over various flavors of spilt milk, both in my personal life and as an activist. (Not that I can ever entirely separate those two, but.) There are some really very sad regrets for missed chances and lost time. And a good cry can be a necessary part of moving forward.

But then, we have to get busy right now. Planting trees, learning skills, owning a transgression, making amends to the planet and to fellow human beings, learning a better way, picking up dropped threads of old conversations. Speaking up about something we needed to speak up about a long time ago.

Until someone invents a time-machine where we can go back and have a do-over — which I’m really not sure we want, because wouldn’t different people then be having different do-overs of different stuff, and wouldn’t that take a lot of additional time, and result in many tangled threads in the space-time continuum? — our best option is right now.