Friday, November 28, 2025

Five Minute Friday :: Turkey

Psalm 65:8
Your wonders awe those who live
at earth's farthest bounds; you
make the gateways of the morning
and the evening shout for joy!
Psalm 65:8

Five Minute Friday :: Turkey Linkup at Andrew's Place

thanksgiving dinner plate
Writing on Friday

Andrew's hosting FMF auspiciously has led to an epicurean – or is that an edible? – trio of coffee, chocolate, and now turkey. Turkey because the prompt went live on Thanksgiving evening, or for another reason? I'll take the reason that I love to write about food; I love gifts of food; I love to enjoy food. Food is my love language.

Like my late uncle, I'm [almost] everyone's BFF. I don't think it's genetic, but I believe some people are wired that way. That introduces my saying yesterday I again ventured out to the Santa Monica Church where I had Thanksgiving dinner last year and in 2021. For 2025 I went with a couple of housemates from the hostel where I'm staying and managing; a third joined us at the venue. Although it's an annual community dinner, it's on the small side. Best guess is we had 50 guests, which borders on intimacy for this kind of gathering.

Isn't sharing a meal or a snack a leveling experience? I leveled with the people I've been living with, those Santa Monica church peeps I already was acquainted with, neighborhood people who were first timers at that church and first timers with me. We had food for the table. We made room at the table. When there's room at the table we can call each other friends. All those people I leveled with now are [at least my] BFF.

When food and friends come together, that's a love feast. Food is my love language. And yesterday included turkey.

Do you have a turkey commentary or any comments about turkey?

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apple pie
peace on earth
turkey
Sylvia and ice cream

Wednesday, November 26, 2025

Grand Hope Park

The larger grander Grand Park was my original Tuesday destination, but with shorter days and therefore limited time I found myself at the much smaller and previously not known to me Grand Hope Park. Given that the urban oasis blooms between Grand and Flower on Hope Street, what semi-accidental redirection could be more perfect as the season of Advent – that time of renewed hope – begins again?
trash containers dog and newspaper
My picture show begins with a funky presentation of trash containers outside the park; I noticed several of these same designs along my route.
grand hope park sign
In this Utopian Garden
Splendid in Art
Shall the Spirit of
South Park Replenish
The Heart of the City

Dedicated June 12, 1993
Mayor Tom Bradley, City of Los Angeles
trees
trees
trees
trees
trees
Trees in autumnal beauty
mosaic 01
mosaic 02
All four sides of a pair of mosaics; next time I'll research their origins.
grand hope park sign
Welcome to Grand Hope Park includes hours and guidelines for visitors.

Thursday, November 20, 2025

Five Minute Friday :: Penguins

penguins group
Penguin Group Small with legal reuse rights
by Antarctica Bound on Flickr


Five Minute Friday :: Penguins Linkup at Andrew's Place

It's no surprise I immediately thought of last spring's Penguin Tariffs and the intelligence those penguins and seals displayed navigating such a clueless injustice.

Here's part of an AI overview:
"Penguin tariffs" refers to tariffs imposed on the Australian territory of Heard and McDonald Islands, an uninhabited island chain populated by penguins and seals. This occurred as part of a broad tariff policy announced by the Trump administration in April 2025, which was criticized as illogical and based on inaccurate data, as the islands have no human population, commercial activity, or trade of their own. The issue gained public attention due to the nonsensical nature of taxing a territory of wildlife, prompting confusion and a viral social media reaction. The hashtag #PenguinsAgainstTrump gained traction on social media. Australia's government called the tariffs "unwarranted" and "not the act of a friend."

Five about Penguins

Although Andrew had predicted he wouldn't be writing sonnets on his weekly host posts, he wrote one this week, and what fun! He observed how South Pole and North Pole are many miles apart, so at first glance, that means penguins don't participate in Christmas festivities featuring Santa, Reindeer, and Polar Bears. Or Elves. "At first glance," because penguins are a major theme on Nativity tide paper products (wrapping paper, greeting cards, retail store displays, home decor) and apparel for all ages. Penguin Tariffs may have been paradoxical, but despite their South Pole geography, most people don't consider penguins incompatible with Christmas.

To redirect this narrative, black and white long has been considered a color palette that always works. (Another is permutations of red, yellow, and blue.) Does that mean you need to like them? No, of course not. Does it mean they can't be done badly? Both of those and some others definitely can be done up disastrously! In addition, formal tuxedo and ultra-formal white tie attire comes to mind with black and white. Some make a lot of the contrast between white and black, and even assign positive traits to white, negative ones to black.

What more can I say about penguins? They impress me as smart, fish-loving, and friendly, but probably not cuddly. They're picturesque and appealing. And penguins are an out of the ordinary Five Minute Friday prompt.

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penguin dance
Sylvia with ice cream

Wednesday, November 19, 2025

Getty Center 2017

I previously blogged some of these pictures in my activity summary for September 2017, but they deserve a standalone blog.

If you live in Los Angeles, if you visit Los Angeles, you must go to the Getty Center and the Villa, too.

These vistas come from Thursday 14 September 2017 and Thursday 28 September 2017.

Getty Center 2016

A while ago I blogged some of these pictures in my rundown for Summer 2016. They're from my visits on Tuesday 09 August and Thursday 11 August 2016.

Have you been to the Getty Center and the Villa?

Losing Moses on the Freeway

Here's a shorter version of my original blog about this book.
Moses came and told the people all the words of the Lord and all the ordinances; and all the people answered with one voice, and said, "All the words that the Lord has spoken we will do." —Exodus 24:3

Now behold, one came and said to Jesus, "Good Teacher, what good thing shall I do that I may have eternal life?" So Jesus said to him, "Why do you call me good? No one is good but One, that is, God. But if you want to enter into life, keep the commandments." —Matthew 19:16-17

The way we know we've been transferred from death to life is that we love our brothers and sisters. Anyone who doesn't love is as good as dead. —1 John 3:14

Blessed are those who do his commandments, that they may have the right to the tree of life, and may enter through the gates into the city. Revelation 22:14

from the baptismal liturgy:
"In Christian love you have presented these children for Holy Baptism. You should, therefore, faithfully bring them to the services of God's house, and teach them the Lord's Prayer, the Creed, and the Ten Commandments. As they grow in years, you should place in their hand the Holy Scriptures…"

Serendipitously I happened to buy a book by former New York Times foreign correspondent Chris Hedges; it's Losing Moses on the Freeway: The 10 Commandments in America.

Losing Moses on the Freeway cover

In the author's story I recognize major parts of my own journey. At the beginning, the author explains God gave us the Sinai Covenant, the ten words – decalogue or commandments – to enable and sustain community—:

"They [the commandments] were for the ancients, and are for us, the rules that, when honored, hold us together and when dishonored lead to alienation, discord and violence."

Chris Hedges opens the first chapter, Mystery, with his experience as a young seminarian serving a people and a church in the inner-city Boston neighborhood of Roxbury. Its normative violence and human degradation, crumpling, decaying physical infrastructure, pervasive aura of wastedness and death amounted to a setting he'd not previously known (and probably hadn't imagined).

On page 18 Hedges, son of a pastor, admits in words identical to what I've said and written dozens of times over the past few years, "The church was part of my daily rhythm. I look at the world through the eyes it gave me." Also parallel to my experience he says, "But I also knew the church's dark side, its self-righteous smugness, its crushing piety, the way it used religion to exalt itself and how it often masked human cruelty behind the quest for virtue and piety." [page 19] To that I'll add the petty viciousness, self-centeredness, and destructiveness of both local and judicatorial church politics.

I relate to the author's anger as he chronicles [page 11] smashing a glass bottle against the front door of the church building as "…an ending, a final conclusion to a life spent in the powerful and claustrophobic embrace of the church. It is meant to be a break from God. But you trade one god for another. This is how life works. We all have gods."

For myself, the unanticipated separation from full participation in the church to which I'd devoted years of my life and that had played a central role in shaping my goals, lifestyle, and worldview is like experiencing my own death.

On page 11 Hedges says we circle back to the origins of our lives, "if not to embrace it, then to understand how it shaped us, to examine with less heat and anger our marks and scars."

I'm still examining the mosaic in order to find my place, just as I try to discern ways I've helped create it as it has created and recreated me.

On page 175 the author wisely reminds us "They [the commandments] do not call us to practice total self-abnegation, empowering others, as I did at first in Roxbury, to abuse us. They call us rather toward mutual respect and mutual self-sacrifice." In words from a pastor with whom I worked alongside, "God calls us to serve, but not to be walked all over."

To illustrate his advice of setting (physical, in this case) boundaries so you won't be broken and violated, Hedges gives the example of Martin Luther King, Jr. walking from Montgomery to Memphis with a detachment from the National Guard. [pages 29-30]

From the Holy Communion liturgy in the Book of Common Prayer:
God spake these words, and said:

I am the Lord thy God who brought thee out of the land of Egypt, out of the house of bondage. Thou shalt have none other gods but me.

Lord have mercy upon us, and incline our hearts to keep this law.

Examine your lives and conduct by the rule of God's commandments, that you may perceive wherein you have offended in what you have done or left undone, whether in thought, word, or deed. …

Like Israel formed in the searing heat and God's minimal yet faithful supply of the exodus desert, we are a people, a nation. In Lord's Day worship we retell, re-enact in baptism and the Eucharist the meta-narrative of our deliverance from death into life, of Jesus' death and resurrection. Although sometimes I think I loved the Church more than I loved Jesus, after beginning really to hear my story, someone asked me why on earth I'd remained in the church at all and I replied, "This is where I find the sacraments!"

In the Love chapter: "But by giving up parts of ourselves for others, by accepting that we must be willing to lose life to create and preserve life, we honor the core of the commandments. The commandments hold out to us the possibility of love." [page 173] Chris Hedges [page 174]: "The covenant offered by the commandments, the covenant of life, is the covenant of love. It is a covenant that recognizes that all life is sacred and love is the force that makes life together possible. … But it is never too late to turn back. Atonement permits a new way of being. It calls us to life." [pages 173-175]

We people of Maundy Thursday have received Jesus' New Commandment, the mandate of love faithful unto death; by faith and in the Spirit we have infinite access to Jesus Christ's atonement for the buying back, the redemption, for the life of all creation.

Then Moses took the book of the covenant, and read it in the hearing of the people; and they said, "All that the Lord has spoken we will do, and we will be obedient." —Exodus 24:7

Here we will take the wine and the water;
here we will take the bread of new birth,
here you shall call your sons and your daughters,
call us anew to be salt for the earth.

Give us to drink the wine of compassion;
give us to eat the bread that is you;
nourish us well, and teach us to fashion
lives that are holy and hearts that are true.

Marty Haugen, Here in This Place/Gather Us In, © 1982 GIA Publications, Inc.

my Amazon review: law that binds; commands that free

Thursday, November 13, 2025

Five Minute Friday :: Chocolate

chocolate chip cookies
Five Minute Friday :: Chocolate Linkup on Andrew's blog

Andrew told us he'd be finding fun quotes to accompany his FMF posts; today he only quoted and didn't write anything himself. Check them out!

My relationship with chocolate is unusual.

1. I don't like candy of any kind at all. My mother used to complain she'd throw away my Halloween candy at Easter and she'd throw away my Easter candy at Halloween.

2. People who haven't known me a long time or who don't know me well frequently assume I don't like sweets, but that's not true. I love high end, rich, decadent sweets, though chocolate isn't often my first choice.

3. Partly because certain chocolates in certain forms at certain times of day are migraine triggers for me.


4. But what do I like? Chocolate chip cookies. Especially home baked chocolate chip cookies. I'm partial to the Nestlé Toll House recipe, but others can be fabulous. I fondly recall one of my design school classmates baking dozens from the Splenda recipe. They were lighter and not as rich as some, but they also were in the "can't eat just one" category.

Another favorite was a neighbor who made the Toll House recipe with half lard and half butter. A real wow!

And I love some hot fudge sundaes. You likely know just as chocolate chips differ and people have different preferences, fudge sauces variy in sweetness, bitterness, richness, and other attributes.

What's your chocolate pleasure?

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chocolate chip cookies
chocolate fudge sundae
life stuff
chocolate
Sylvia