Friday, May 22, 2015
Sunday, February 22, 2015
Norman F. Chamberlain....
Norman Chamberlain & Wisdom Wright Seattle Wa 2012
Memories like the corners of my mind...misty watered colored memories of my Dearest Norman.
One such Love that will forever be in my Heart. I miss you like crazy but know you're right here!
Norman Chamberlain & Gwyn Baker courtesy Pacific Media 1990
Through the years and the tears you brought me Joy and allowed all things Beautiful. I so Love you.
Norman Chamberlain Columbia City 1991
.....Forever is forever is forever is forever
Memories like the corners of my mind...misty watered colored memories of my Dearest Norman.
One such Love that will forever be in my Heart. I miss you like crazy but know you're right here!
Norman Chamberlain & Gwyn Baker courtesy Pacific Media 1990
Through the years and the tears you brought me Joy and allowed all things Beautiful. I so Love you.
Norman Chamberlain Columbia City 1991
.....Forever is forever is forever is forever
Wednesday, June 11, 2014
FISK UNIVERSITY HEIRS...
Reflections of Tomorrow by Wisdom W. Wright
-->
-->
I
peek through the curtains looking at all the different faces that I will soon
meet. The sun is peeking through the clouds that fill the sky and I’m just
about to go on stage to perform my scene. With this being my first time acting,
my heart is beating fast. While my eyes scan the room once more, I finally see
her. I see the woman whom I’ve just had tea and biscuits with a few days ago. I
see the woman who laughed about her journeys at Fisk University during World
War II. I see the woman who smiled while reminiscing about being an independent
young woman who took the train back and forth between Pennsylvania and
Tennessee. My mind is finally at ease while on stage, because Vivian Freeman’s
confident spirit resides within me and I know she is looking forward to the
young lady who is about to portray her. Raise the curtains… it’s show time!
I
grew up in the small knit community of Huntingdon Valley, Pennsylvania. My
family had just moved from the Pacific Northwest and the thought of moving to
another region in the United States was frightening to me. I would have to
adapt to a new culture, a new community, and the mindset of the people. My
family was fortunate enough to move to a community that would be the perfect
place for me to make everlasting friendships and hold fond memories of
childhood. When I was in second grade I was asked to participate in a community
play for individuals who contributed to Huntingdon Valley. This was how I met
Vivian Freeman; the woman who helped shape who I was back then and who contributes
to my personal development today.
Vivian
Freeman has lived most of her life in Huntingdon Valley. Not only was she one
of two Black-Americans to graduate from Lower Moreland High School, she was
also valedictorian of her class. She would eventually continue her education at
Fisk University earning her Bachelor’s Degree in Teaching. She told me riveting
tales of riding the train as an eighteen-year-old girl alone in a world full of
confusion and fighting as World War II pressed on in her undergraduate years at
Fisk University.
While the world was surrounded by
the uncertainty of the future,Ms. Freeman would start her day by wearing her lovely hat
and gloves and walk onto the platform of tomorrow as if the other day was just
a fleeting moment that pushed her towards her goals. Her courageous spirit has taught
me to believe in myself and go beyond the conventional way of life and look for
a path that is more noteworthy, vibrant, and fresh. Although uncertainty looms
over most of us, Ms. Freeman has encouraged me to live in the moment.
Photographs of Ms. Vivian Freeman Fisk class of 1946, Wisdom Way future Fisk Scholar
Sunday, July 3, 2011
Cultural Divides Part 2
One of the first friends I met, Lady M a Nashville transplant. Our families spend time together often
“Manners and behavior can take you places where money can’t, no matter what color you are"
Mr. Bill “Bojangles” Robinson 1949
Upon further investigation of cultural division it appeared to show its face in areas of fear and superiority/inferiority complexes. Call it what you'd like; sexism, classism, racism, caste system, intellectualism, etc it all comes down to the "golden rule" of treating others the way you would like to be treated. That said, not everyone wants to be treated with respect and their principals may not align with your way of living. I love the quote from Mr. Bill "Bojangles" Robinson. Manners and behavior are of utmost importance in order that we as a community get along and benefit the whole. It is how you " act, interact and react" to people, places and situations that determine your experience.
Every city and community I have moved in I made sure to take the time to listen and learn as many have been there before me. I enjoy hearing tales of how the community was formed, who came and went. There is nothing new under the sun as they say. We are here but for a measure of breaths and it is my intention to breathe healthy beautiful breaths therefore I do not like spending precious moment tearing down but instead I prefer to build and create bridges.
Cultural Divides first take place in the mind and are acted out. When we judge we create separation and can not receive. Remember that judgment creates separation. Practice being open to new situations and people. Every moment is a new beginning and an opportunity to experience something you have never experienced. Let's build healthy strong bridges together and share this beautiful Earth knowing that others will come after us and be grateful we have left a blueprint for successful sustainable living!
"It is not the strongest of the species that survive, nor the most intelligent, but the ones most responsive to change. "Charles Darwin
Labels:
friends,
kindness,
relationships,
Transformations,
Transitions
Friday, July 1, 2011
Cultural Divides?
Ruth Benedict in 1937 Anthropologist, cultural relativist, and folkloristExperiences of Culture
What comes to your mind when you say the word culture? How about cultural influence?
The word "culture" is most commonly used in three basic senses:
- Excellence of taste in the fine arts and humanities, also known as high culture
- An integrated pattern of human knowledge, belief, and behavior that depends upon the capacity for symbolic thought and social learning
- The set of shared attitudes, values, goals, and practices that characterizes an institution, organization or group

As I was born and raised in Seattle, Washington in West Seattle and lived briefly in San Diego California and also in Huntingdon Valley Pennsylvania before moving to Nashville Tennessee I have had a few experience of culture across the country. For the last two and a half years I have had many unpleasant experiences where I currently reside. The workshops, conferences and transformation coaching I have done over the past twenty odd years should have provided me with the skills to handle such situations. Sadly it did not. There was more learning and exploring for me at the ripe age of 49. I took to research and oral/written interviews of the locals to get to the "root" of the challenge.Here I will share what I found. Ruth Benedict did extensive research and I had come to many of her conclusions twenty odd years ago.
Benedict, in Patterns of Culture, expresses her belief in cultural relativism. She desired to show that each culture has its own moral imperatives that can be understood only if one studies that culture as a whole. It was wrong, she felt, to disparage the customs or values of a culture different from one's own. Those customs had a meaning to the people who lived them which should not be dismissed or trivialized. We should not try to evaluate people by our standards alone.
Because my challenges were with brown people in the South I found this interesting.
Environment has more to do with intelligence than birth does, including how much money is spent on schools. "Southern Whites", for example, scored below "Northern Negroes" in the IQ tests administered to the American Expeditionary Force (AEF) in World War I. And the per capita expenditures on schools in the South were only "fractions" of those in northern states in 1917.
Almost 100 years later the scores are still the same. Why?
After many interviews with locals and people who migrated here from the "North" I believe I am on the trail of discovering the "Truth".
Part 2 coming soon!
Thursday, June 30, 2011
Bird Song Breakfast Pleasure
Friday, January 21, 2011
Room For A View
There is a room...full of thoughts, words and delicious tales
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)



.jpg)