It is Sunday evening at the cottage; the floodlights just got turned on so I can look at the creek as I write. An other worldly fog hung about the creek this morning as I rose early to prepare for doing coffee hour after the 10:30 service at Christ Church. About every six weeks I do one and it always is comforting to me, a bit like throwing a small party [which everyone who knows me, knows I like to do every now and again].
Friday, Donald J Trump became the 45th President of the United States. As unlikely a thought as it might have been a year ago, it is now our reality. My best friend from high school, Tom Fudali, and still one of the dearest people on earth to me, said tonight when we were chatting: we own him. He IS our President. So, he is.
Mine eyes dazzle…
Like doing coffee hour at church today, I have found myself in doing things that make me feel cozy. Right now, while looking at my creek, Ella Fitzgerald is singing the great American songbook. There is a fire in the Franklin Stove.
It is my intent, going forward to embrace hygge. Now what the hell is that you are asking. It began to surface just a few weeks before the election and there have been a number of articles since the election about hygge.
It’s a Nordic word for living a cozy life. And if ever there was a time when I wanted to be living a cozy life it’s now. Recently, I find I am reading the Food Section of the New York Times before I look at the news. I think that’s hygge. By the way, it’s pronounced “hue-gah.”
It’s become a phenomenon in Britain. After all, they must deal with Brexit. We must deal with Trump. Seems to be a time for a little bit of hygge.
Which is why I am sitting here, a martini next to me, the lights on the creek, Ella Fitzgerald playing. How much more hygge could I be?
And that’s not the whole story, a retreat into comfort while the world is teetering. Away from hygge, is the fact I am becoming, more than I have ever been, an activist.
Yesterday, there were marches by women to protest the President’s questionable record of dealings with women. The women were joined by many men. Some of my friends went to New York and some went to Washington, DC. Me, I marched here in Hudson. It’s been a long time, maybe ever, that I could deal with the kind of crowds that were in New York or Washington or Sydney or…
So, I marched in Hudson. It was expected there would be about 200 or 250 people who would show up and it was more like a 1000 or 1200 and everyone was amazed. And that seems to be the story around the country, more showed up that were expected.
Donald Trump has disputed the numbers who showed up for his inauguration. Sean Spicer has claimed the numbers were amazing but the facts don’t seem to cooperate that. Spicer gave “alternative facts” to the facts.
Do I feel I am living in an alternative reality? Oh, yes.
And in my time when I am not being an activist, I am determined to be very hygge. God knows I will need it. And I was doing hygge before hygge was fashionable.
Go, be hygge! And do not hygge so much you forget about what is going on…




Letter From Claverack 01 15 2017 Bemused but not amused…
January 15, 2017It is early evening in Claverack; the lights have been turned on over the creek and I have asked Alexa to play the “Pop Classical” station so music is filling the cottage. It is an idyllic night after a very nice day.
Waking before the alarm this morning, I cleared my email inboxes, showered and gathered things together for the food pantry at the church. Post church, I went to the Red Dot and then to Ca’Mea to meet Larry and Alicia and it was a pleasant country afternoon.
Against the backdrop of the pleasant country afternoon is a tension about the political scene.
One of my neighbors, who, when he met me was a bit uncomfortable with me and who has become a very good friend, asked me why the LGBTQ community was concerned about Trump. He voted for neither Hillary or The Donald, loathing them equally.
My response was that it wasn’t so much Trump’s views on gays but the views of the people who are around him. Mike Pence, Governor of Indiana until Friday, then Vice President of the United States, worked to enact strident laws that jeopardized the rights of gays in his state. Jeff Sessions, who is by all accounts is a gentleman of the first order in social situations, is homophobic, anti-immigration and anti some other important things.
My friend had no idea. And was concerned when he heard this.
Representative John Lewis of Georgia, a legendary figure in the Civil Rights movement, is not attending Trump’s inauguration because he does not feel Trump in a legitimate President. I find that unfortunate and counterproductive.
And I find unfortunate and counterproductive Donald Trump’s Twitter storm against Representative Lewis, demeaning his part in the Civil Rights movement. The man nearly lost his life on the bridge into Selma. To denigrate him as Trump has is unfortunate and not in keeping with someone who is about to enter the highest office in the land.
Stephen Colbert discussed “truthiness.” Donald Trump exercised a bit of it in his depiction of Representative Lewis’ district as crime ridden. In fact, he represents one of the most affluent areas of Atlanta.
There is a good part of me that is sitting back and watching what is happening unfold with a sense of wonder, a sense of OMG is this real? And it is…
Every time I turn around, I am astounded by our President Elect.
His son-in-law, Jared Kushner, is going to be a Senior Advisor. Is there not something somewhere about nepotism? Ivanka may be the de facto First Lady as Melania seems to be content to remain in Trump Tower.
Who is this person?
Andy Borowitz, comedian and raconteur, described him as the “Kremlin Employee of the Month.”
The awful thing is that he MIGHT be.
The VERY unsubstantiated report about his actions with the Russians are, at one time, very amusing and incredibly disconcerting. It has spawned a cottage industry in defining “golden showers.”
Right now, I am sitting back and watching it unfold. Called me bemused, call me amused, call me frightened, call me whatever you like and I think we need to go back into the early 19th century to find anything similar.
Oh, wow!
And I will continue to watch with a carefully bemused eye that is also carefully turned on to what the new President might do as he needs, more than most Presidents, to be held accountable.
Please help with that. Please.
Tags: Alexa, Alicia Vergara, Andy Borowitz, Atlanta, Claverack, Donald Trump, Golden Showers, Hillary Clinton, Jared Kushner, Jeff Sessions, John Lewis, Kremlin Employee of the Month, Larry Divney, LGBT, LGBTQ, Mike Pence, Selma, Stephen Colbert, The Donald
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