Saturday, December 20, 2008

Wow.

O Christmas Tree!
Isn't it BEAUTIFUL?!

Saturday, December 13, 2008

Books! Books! Books!

Of course every book I've picked up and read has been from the library. I LOVE my public library! When I need something specific, or get fixated on a particular topic, I visit their online site and search, search, search. Then I request the books I'm interested in and they bring ALL of them to my favorite branch! At the moment I have books from all over the state! It is so cool.

Friday, December 12, 2008

More Books.

Today I picked up a new batch of books. I'm still working through some of the last batch. I am about a third of the way through Breach of faith : Hurricane Katrina and the near death of a great American city; by Jed Horne. It is heavy, not heavier than I expected, just heavy. There are a lot of details and personal stories each intwined and touching. It is actually quite a bit of work to get through because there are so many details, but so far it seems worth it so on I plod.

1 Dead in Attic after Katrina by Chris Rose. A collection of stories.

Soldiers' Pay. by William Faulkner is an older [1927] work of fiction by a New Orleanian author.

Dinner at Antione's. by Frances Parkinson Keyes also an older [1950] work of fiction, mystery I think, written by a New Orleanian author.

turning to one another : simple conversations to restore hope to the future. by margaret j. wheatley

This afternoon I put aside the Horne book and picked up Wheatley. I'm liking some of her suggestions. She says;
The principles ... to emphasize [before] beginning ...
  • acknowledge one another as equals
  • try to stay curious about each other
  • recognize that we need each other's help to become better listeners
  • slow down so we have time to think and reflect
  • remember that conversation is the natural way [we] think together
  • expect it to be messy at times
I've just started this one so I'll keep updating as I learn more. Aside from this I'm not sure what I'll be able to get through as our fundraising gets underway this weekend. But I'm looking forward to reading and learning more as the days go by! 

Saturday, December 6, 2008

More reading materials.

My aforementioned reading has been adding up. I'm currently browsing 13 books that I've checked out of the library. Most of them have been pretty light, until now. Yesterday I picked up the newest four and they are far from speed reads. 

Last night I polished off The scared child : helping kids overcome traumatic events; by Barbara Brooks and Paula M. Siegel. There was a lot of information in this book and some of the examples were quite overwhelming. But I gained an important piece of information - terminology for my biggest fear going into this trip - trauma by proxy. I also learned four steps to debrief a traumatized individual. This isn't counseling but listening and guiding questions to help children (or teenagers) process overwhelming events like natural disasters or trauma experienced by peers (which can be as traumatizing as experiencing it oneself for some individuals). 

Debriefing Goals
• Assists the individual in “venting”
• Helps the individual develop a more complete understanding of what happened
• Normalizes the individuals responses
• Teaches the individual appropriate coping skills
• Assists the individual in adjusting to posttrauma life

And the steps I mentioned;
Debriefing has four steps:
1. Preparing yourself
2. Having the individual tell the story
3. Sharing the individual’s reactions
4. Survival and recovery

Obviously I still have a lot to learn, I want to be the best listener and helper I can for the New Orleanians but also help to prepare and comfort the teenagers that I am going with. 

Tonight I'm taking a break from the PTSD learning to become more familiar with the victims of Katrina and Rita. I've just begun Breach of faith : Hurricane Katrina and the near death of a great American city; by Jed Horne. So far so good. I'm especially thankful for the detailed maps at the beginning. There is one outlining all of the neighborhoods of New Orleans followed by a more topographical map that depicts the areas that were flooded and how much water they were under following the storm.

The last two books that I've just taken on, and hope to get to this weekend, are 
1. After the storm; by Kendall Johnson
and 

I'm saving the Campolo/Darling book for last as I'm actually dreading it. I don't know why, maybe high school social studies class, but I have this huge chip on my shoulder when it comes to missionaries and missionary trips. I've never actually been on one, nor do I personally know someone that has. But I have this idea that missionaries are pushy folks trying to convert the masses to Christianity. I am most definitely not that type. But this New Orleans trip is considered a missionary type trip, right? I think it is anyway and the Campolo/Darling book was suggested by the group organizers. At the very least I'll leaf through it. 

But for tonight Jed Horne is my man and I'm leaving you with my current thoughts - and the State flag of Louisiana.
It is a parent pelican with three babies. My understanding is that the parent represents the government taking care of it's babies, the citizens of Louisiana. Saying the during times of trouble or need the state's inhabitants will be nurtured. Leading me to my concern, isn't it worse to not get something if you've been taught your entire life to expect exactly that something?

Wednesday, December 3, 2008

Reading Materials

Some of the books I've been reading to get ready.
The one book I've been spending most of my time reading.
But I'm only this far.

Tuesday, December 2, 2008

New Orleans Trip

All I can think about is my upcoming trip to New Orleans. I've been to their website and requested information. The 2009 Fodor's Guide has become my constant companion. I'm gobbling up every word. 

There are so many things I'd like to put together for this trip. I've been picturing a huge map with the Fodor's descriptions (and history) clipped to the corresponding locations. Then I'd know exactly where each thing is - and I'd be ready! Ready to wander the pedestrian friendly areas taking photos, talking with locals and taking it all in, bit-by-bit. 

Of course, Co. will be along for the trip (ha, ha, actually they are letting me tag along, details, details) and 1/Co. is map crazy while the other 1/Co. has been to New Orleans before. Likely I'll just be tucked into a backpack and transported about. But say I weren't, say I got to choose our destinations, I'll need to be ready.

More updates and planning to come. Now, back to my Fodor's!