mermaidcamp

mermaidcamp

Keeping current in wellness, in and out of the water

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Soul of the Nation

August 12, 2013 1 Comment

James Hillman, well known Jungian scholar, talks about soul and psychology:

His observations are pertinent today as we live with serious division in the nation’s psyche.  The congress is a symbolic and highly visible example of our troubled national soul.  When I was young  I felt patriotic and secure that America was the greatest nation in the world.   The Viet Nam War and civil rights struggles in the states changed my mind about that.  I had the chance to live outside the US for a year when I was 13-14, in Venezuela.  I learned Spanish.  I had listened to Fidel Castro on the radio.  My psyche had already been subverted before Viet Nam.

I have never missed an opportunity to vote in any election since I turned 21.  I pay all my taxes and obey the law.  I am a tiny part of the deeply troubled economy that is driving the young and the old into poverty.  My personal comfort and economic security are good, but neighbors all around me are not as lucky.  I am healthy, but the nation is statistically very ill, mentally and physically.  I am concerned about the bifurcation that tears the country into two unhealthy sides of some eternal controversy.  I am concerned about the soul of America.

Oil and Vinegar

August 9, 2013 10 Comments

The classic oil and vinegar combination, used for salad and other dishes, has taken on new epic proportions in Tucson.  Alfonso Gourmet Oil and Balsamics offers a wide variety of super high quality olive oils and balsamic vinegars.  I have used them for over a year and have virtually stopped buying any dressing in a bottle.  I have found additional ways to use both the oils and vinegars,seasoning roasted veggies and even love the vinegars on ice cream and in cocktails.  My list of favorites expands every time I go back to the store.

Tom Alfonso, the gracious owner, recently completed a course followed by a certification exam to become a professional olive oil taster.  He said it was intense, with three days of learning and savoring.  He just found out that he did pass the exam and is now a certified olive oil professional.  I am very pleased he and his wife decided to carry these extraordinary products right next to my bank drive through window, very near my home. It is a fun extravagance that improves our meals every day.  The bottles last for a very long time since  a very small amount produces big flavor results.

The recycle punch card bonus system reminds you to bring the bottle back..then you try a few new items, check out the sales, leaving with a whole new culinary profile with which to play.  Today my new item is a grassy, very green, high note olive oil from Australia.  It is both delicious and unlike any other oil I have tasted.  It is not flavored, but I have recently received a lovely gift of special Australian herbs in a combo box from a friend down under.  This will be an exciting paring with greens, tomatoes and avocado. Freshness spikes the flavor in the olive oil that reduces the need for other seasonings.  I will sauté with it as well as dressing salads.

The ginger blackberry balsamic I refilled today is an ingredient in a cocktail I love to make and drink, the Gas Streak.  The example calls for ginger rice wine vinegar, which I am sure is nice, but the blackberry adds punch and the balsamic is fabulous with the burned sugar taste.  Enjoy!

IPO on Empire Avenue

August 9, 2013 6 Comments

reflection of value

reflection of value

My recent discovery of Empire Avenue has exposed me to a new universe of contacts with tons of enthusiasm and knowledge.  When your shareholders speak, you need to listen, just like real markets.  They bought shares in your IPO as gamble, now they want you to be a media star so that they can profit by owning shares in you.  Since real time must be invested I am working this new activity into my social media schedule at the expense of becoming the instant queen of instagram 15 second video production (another recent undertaking).  I really appreciate all the expert guidance the community offers.  It is more hospitable than any other network because that hospitality and expertise is a factor in driving stock prices.  The more you accept and learn from the community, the more valuable you become.  Real life should be so simple.

I have met a few friends on the Avenue I know from other social media sites, but most of my gentle shareholders are strangers, just studying my stats.  When using real money you would be insane to try to time the market, but I am sure with experience one can easily do it in this imaginary one.  This week I can safely say that my fake 4 million Empire bucks and my own stock price give me only great satisfaction. Today, however, is the first day my own stock price has dipped a tiny bit……..I do not love that as much as I love the soaring price of my IPO.  Still, what goes up must come down, so I can deal with that.  My hefty portfolio of pretend shares looks like this today:

Portfolio (226)
Shareholders (531)
4,151,453.72e Net Wealth

Share Price
163.48e ( 0.56e )

Avg. Dividends/Share
0.87e

Last week Paula Deen brought an IPO with Butterqueen as her ticker.  I think it will be a really fascinating stock to watch.  She is doing very well out of the gate.  Since the stock price reflects interest, I think  she will move quickly.  I believe stock price can be driven by news just like it is on Wall Street.  The avenue is a moderately risk free place to stage a come back and gather fans ( stockholders).  Are you on the avenue, and if so, have your purchased any Butterqueen?

Arte/Scienza

August 8, 2013 3 Comments

Leonardo da Vinci said, “Study the science of art and the art of science.” Today his advice to find balance between creative imagination and logical discovery is sage, indeed. We are swayed by evidence and data, which is appropriate. Adding the equal amount of pure artistry is the tricky part for most people. Leonardo lived Arte/Scienza as one of his core values. He worked to become ambidextrous because he thought it added to his whole brain thinking. I am sure it did.

He used mind mapping in his notebooks. One of his mottos was ostinate rigore which was important to his sense of detail.  To be both detail driven and expansive in creativity was his goal. The free association and creative style thinking he used had never been promoted before Leonardo.  He not only taught and believed in an infinity of ideas, his notebooks show us that he recorded a good number of them while he was alive.  Notebooks with records of nightly dreams are a wonderful way to add to your own right brain training and attention.  It is not as important to go into detail as it is to begin a practice of writing them down directly after awakening.  If you follow a daily routine the dream memory will become stronger as you practice.  Your own dreams contain both art and science that you need to create balance.

Manning Brothers Bring It

August 8, 2013 2 Comments


I am neutral about football. I only know about the Manning brothers because of the other commercials they do on TV. I have a whole new level of respect for Peyton and Eli now that I have seen them bling it up in this music video. I know this is an ad for Direct TV, and I am not endorsing that network. I just think this is the highest and best use of the Mannings’ obvious talent.  I hope you enjoy it as much as I did.

Revolution in Openness, @JasonSilva

August 7, 2013 8 Comments

This is my first introduction to @JasonSilva.  I lived in Venezuela in the 1960’s, which was a completely different era.  He was born in 1982, when the country was undergoing rapid change and political upheaval.  Some of my radical tendencies are a reaction to the petroleum princess lifestyle I enjoyed while living in a petroleum camp in eastern Venezuela.  The imperialism of the situation became clear later when I became aware of politics.

His view on evolution is not only revolutionary, but very hopeful.  I am glad I found him; I hope the gentle readers agree he is a gem to follow…brilliant in a brand new way:

John Thomas Lanier, 8th Great-Grandfather

August 6, 2013 5 Comments

Lanier coat of arms

Lanier coat of arms

My eighth  great-grandfather came to Virginia with John Washington, and once owned Richmond:

John Thomas Lanier, son of Nicholas and grandson of Jerome was from

Bordeaux in 1603 to America with John Washington. He brought much of the

family furniture with him. He was given a grant of 10 miles or 1400 acres

of land on the South of James River and it included what is now Richmond,

located in what is now counties of Prince George, Brunswick, etc. He

subsequently moved to North Carolina (North border) and was very

prominent.

John Thomas Lanier (1631 – 1719)
is my 8th great grandfather
Sampson Lanier (1682 – 1743)
son of John Thomas Lanier
Elizabeth Lanier (1719 – 1795)
daughter of Sampson Lanier
Martha Burch (1743 – 1803)
daughter of Elizabeth Lanier
David Darden (1770 – 1820)
son of Martha Burch
Minerva Truly Darden (1806 – 1837)
daughter of David Darden
Sarah E Hughes (1829 – 1911)
daughter of Minerva Truly Darden
Lucinda Jane Armer (1847 – 1939)
daughter of Sarah E Hughes
George Harvey Taylor (1884 – 1941)
son of Lucinda Jane Armer
Ruby Lee Taylor (1922 – 2008)
daughter of George Harvey Taylor
Pamela Morse
I am the daughter of Ruby Lee Taylor

State-Wide, NC – Lanier Family Genealogical Tree

The following bible record is found on the LAGenWeb Archives at the

following  http://files.usgwarchives.org/la/state/bible/lghsbible/

This record is “bible4-4.txt” in the list of records

Bible Records Published by Louisiana Genealogical and Historical Society.

Be it Known And Remembered: Vol. II,  Bible Records 1961: Pages 1 – 60

Submitted to the USGenWeb Archives by LGHS, Jun. 1998

LANIER FAMILY GENEALOGICAL TREE

Taken from the Family Records of Mr. Lee Lanier of Amite, La. Submitted to

the Society by Mrs. Kathryne Watkins, Hammond, La., State Librarian of

Louisiana Daughters of the American Revolution.

Jerome Lanier of Brodeaux, France in 1558 emigrated with his family to

England, in the latter part of the reign of Queen Elizabeth. Jerome was a

Huguenot who  fled from execution or persecution and finding himself

without means in a foreign land availed himself of his accomplishments and

secured a position in Queen Elizabeth’s household as Court musician. He

found great favor at the court and for about one hundred years – 1558 to

1666 – the Laniers flourished in England, distinguished themselves in

music, art and military genius. They were a family of means and culture in

France. Jerome Lanier had three sons:  Nicholas, Clement and Jerome.

Nicholas Lanier was born in 1568, he was the most prominent of Jerome’s

sons. He enjoyed high favor under James the 7th reign and especially so

under Charles the 7th’s reign. English history says of him that he was one

of those artists whose various talents were so noticeable as to suit the

taste of Charles the 7th. He gathered Charles the 7th’s collection of

paintings. He was a skilled musician, artist and courier. Five of his

famous paintings are distributed as follows: one owned by Van Dyke, one in

the collection of Charles the 7th, one now in the music hall of Oxford.

Two owned by the Prince of Wales. He died in 1648 leaving two sons:

Nicholas, Jr. and John Thomas Lanier.

Nicholas Lanier, Jr., brother of John Thomas Lanier who migrated to

America in 1683; was also a noted musician and artist. He was frequently

seen at the court of England. He was made president of the English Society

of Musicians

Page 133

and Artists for life. He enjoyed many favors from the King. Other members

of the Society were Clement, Andreu, and Jerome. These appear to be of

another branch of Laniers.

(Comment of J. B. Lanier Plooard – 1947 – Apparently history closes out

all branches of the family who may have remained in England and the

Laniers in America seem to be descendants of John Thomas Lanier and

Elizabeth Washington, the aunt of George Washington.)

Jerome Lanier lives in a palatial house in Greenwich, was a great and

famous musician. Owned the greatest collection of paintings than in

existence. He had only one son.

Sir John Lanier in 1690 comes again in history of being knighted “Knight

of his valor, in the capture of Castle of Edinboro. He was Major General

of the “Horse & Dragon.” In the Irish war made himself prominent in Battle

of Boyne and fell at Battle of Steinkiek fighting gloriously along with

the brave Douglas. This closes his story as far as we know of Clement and

Jerome Lanier, so the family name was apparently perpetuated by the

descendants of the son Nicholas Lanier. They may have had daughters.

John Thomas Lanier, son of Nicholas and grandson of Jerome was from

Bordeaux in 1603 to America with John Washington. He brought much of the

family furniture with him. He was given a grant of 10 miles or 1400 acres

of land on the South of James River and it included what is now Richmond,

located in what is now counties of Prince George, Brunswick, etc. He

subsequently moved to North Carolina (North border) and was very

prominent. In 1688 he married Elizabeth Washington, daughter of John

Washington, aunt of George Washington. His will is on record in Prince

George County, Virginia. He was prosperous and left sons Sampson, Robert,

Nicholas, John Thomas and Buckner.

Nicholas Lanier, son of John Thomas Lanier, died 1779 and left two

daughters.

Sampson Lanier was the only surviving son of John Thomas Lanier and

Elizabeth Washington Lanier. He died in 1743 also rather young, but lived

a life of great usefulness as a plantation teacher and physician. His will

in Brunswick County, Va. left large estate to Thomas Dannell Lanier;

Sampson Lanier, Jr., James, Richard and Elizabeth.

Thomas Dannell Lanier died in 1745 and left two daughters.

Elizabeth married a Burch and second a Smith.

Richard Lanier had sons Lewis, Burwell, Buckner and daughter Winnifred.

Lewis, son of Richard Lanier, had a son Alexander Lanier that settled in

New York City. Alexander had a son James D. F. Lanier.

Burwell Lanier had one son David. David moved from Brunswick Co. to

Pittsylvania Co., Va. in 1772. The land is in what is now Henry Co., Va.

Va. records show that David Lanier was a Capt of a Co. in the revolution

distinguished himself as a brave military genius. He married Miss Mollie

Hicks.

Page 134

David Lanier, Jr. had son James Monroe Lanier, grandson Charles and

grandson James who named a son James Monroe Lanier, who was a Capt. in War

of 1812. Was of fine personal appearance and was a large land owner in

Virginia. Daughters of James Monroe Lanier, son of David, were Sally and

Judith.

John Hicks Lanier, Lucy and Nancy and Eliza were other children of David

Lanier.

John Hicks Lanier married a Miss Carter. She was the mother of his

children and when he married a second time the children could not get

along with the new wife and they moved to Missouri. Daughter Mary married

and moved to Lincoln Co., Mo. She married John Lovell__ Children: John,

Jr., Wilie and Allie. Son David had a daughter Mary. Mary first married

James Jones and then a Ferguson. John Hicks, Jr. married Sallie Robinson

and had children: David, Demarous, Mollie. Edward, son of John Hicks

Lanier, Sr. married Jane and had two sons. Robert, son of John H. Lanier,

Sr. married twice. His descendants live around St. Louis.

Sampson Lanier, Jr. – Sampson died 1757, Brunswick Co., Va. and it named

children:

Buckner Lanier, son of Sampson, Jr. was famous for ability to settle

disputes. Well educated – physician and planter. Had one son Sterling

Robert Lanier, son of Sterling, married Mary Anderson of Macon, Georgia.

Sterling Lanier had sons Sidney, the poet, who died of TB contracted

during the Civil War and son Clifford Lanier who went to Montgomery,

Alabama and settled. Sidney Lanier was born 1841.

These are old family records and are not documented; however, they are a

good finding list. There has recently been published a book regarding this

family that will bear out this information. Hillery and his brother

Benjamin were in the Florida Parishes section of Louisiana as early as

1873 but the court records do not show estate papers.

Look at This Instapam11

August 5, 2013 7 Comments

I recently joined instagram when I learned the 15 second videos became truly instant.  I enjoy the challenge of making a real statement in that period of time.  I haven’t done it yet, but have seen others who do.  It will be challenging to story board and shoot some funny, informative, or entertaining 15 second shows. I have just entered the zone, but can see the potential.  I do do see some feet and selfies, but there are also cool things and places I want to see.  However, after hearing this song, I feel pressure to stop posting grams of my food and be purposeful and creative with the new toy.  We shall see how that goes.  It seems like the wave of the future. Careful preproduction has never meant so much.

Taus, an Ancient Instrument

August 5, 2013 4 Comments

My friend Nirvair Kaur Khalsa has had a long career as director of the Montessori schools she founded in Tucson. I met her yesterday at Khalsa Montessori ,where the Sikh community meets for gurdwara.  Nirvair plays and sings the ancient ragas for the congregation on an instrument that has been revived by her teacher, the taus.  This beautiful stringed instrument was played by the guru’s traveling teaching band during a time when peace flourished between Sufis, Sikhs, HIndus and Moslems.   She explains some history of her religion here:

Her interest in religion made her curious about the origins of the teachings she follows. She has studied with Bhai Baldeep Singh, who is bringing back the instrument his ancestors made and played.  These religious poems were sung by the Sikh gurus who used them for worship and teaching.  The musical tradition was passed from person to person, so today Nirvair is one of a few people practicing and preserving the lovely peacock shaped stringed taus.  She gave me a sample in her office:

I plan to return when she is singing during the ceremony. The instrument is a work of art in itself; it produces the sound of ancient India.  Her vocation to learn and play these poems of traditional significance in the original way is impressive.  I believe the gentle readers would like to see this peacock cello in full glory.

Synesthesthetes Unite

August 4, 2013 5 Comments

Science and art collide in the syesthesthetes. Color and odor are so closely related, as are color and taste.  Sensory criss crossing is the particular talent of the synesthetes.  To know what color or flavor an hour of the dawn is one must identify across the senses.  This identification is natural to some, and can be enhanced through practice.  Blind tasting is, in a way, a chance to create your own vision by tasting and smelling.  Leonardo de Vinci called synesthesia one of his core values.  Indian musicians compose ragas to be played at specific times of day and seasons of the year, like liturgy.  When you enter a church with an ornate decorative style to hear chanting and smell incense you are being trained to cross your senses. Here is  quiz to test your own synesthesia.

This device is used in art and literature to create a sensual background.  If I write about cool colors or ice-cold professionalism, I ask you to feel the adjective.  If I tell you the characters were swept away emotionally by the full moon and the soft ocean breeze, I want you to feel the set.  Music videos evoke a feeling that is produced to add dimension to the songs.  Here is one that is straight up color, geometry and sound.  Enjoy!