Blessings Darlings!
I assume that everyone reading has heard of the attack earlier this week on the people - black people - at the Emmanuel AME church in South Carolina. I'm going to provide a simple magic aimed at reducing racism.
BUT - before I get to that - I'm going to write about what racism is and what to do in the mundane about it.
First I'm going to point out that the dictionary definition of racism is totally inadequate. The dictionary (written by ... whom? think on that) defines racism as the same as 'prejudice'. As an individual issue. That's not correct, in my never humble view. In my view, racism is a societal power issue - you can be prejudiced against folks you don't have power over, but racism has IMPACT on daily lives of others. Racism requires power over the 'others'. That can only happen when privilege is a basic part of society. BTW - you might want to research why/how the AME church was created.
It can be hard to see privilege if you have it. I guess that's kind of like not seeing air if you're a land animal, or not seeing water if you're a fish. If you're not sure what privilege looks like, you can google things like 'how to recognize white privilege'.
Actually ending racism is going to end white privilege. That's going to be a side effect. If you do the magic right, and it starts working at least in your local area ... if you're white, you may see changes in your life that you might not like. Police and courts might treat you the same way they treat blacks. Because privilege is built into the legal and enforcement systems. And the system is going to fight ending privilege.
In the Mundane - move out of your comfort level.
To work on ending racism in every day life, you're going to have to speak up when you see/hear racism and prejudice. Speak up when folks make 'jokes' putting down other races. The terrorist in Charleston made lots of them. His friends laughed.
Have those discussions about race, prejudice, racism that might be scary for you to have. If you're white, you fear of words is nothing compared to the fear of being attacked for your race by the agents of the state.
And, FFS (BTW, on MY blog, FFS means "For Fern's Sake"), listen to people of color when they describe their experiences. Don't try to rush them to 'forgiveness' when the perps haven't asked for it, and when the attacks are ongoing.
The Magic
This is real simple magic. Go weed your garden. Charge the weeds with being 'racism', and root those weeds up. Let them dry to nothing in the light of the sun.
That's it. Really. Most magic is simple.
Frondly, Fern
Shit that catches the attention of a no-bullshit Crone. You're in touch with your inner child? I'm in touch with my inner Baba Yaga.
Sunday, June 21, 2015
Monday, June 8, 2015
Defrosting The Freezer
Blessings Darlings!
Being the busy little home maker I am, I'm defrosting the freezer as I type this. We have an OLD upright freezer, 14.7 cubic feet, not at all frost-free. We got it in January 1979, so it predates our 1980 marriage and LONG predates our 1987 Spawn.
Every now and then (really, more NOW), it needs to be defrosted. It's one of the easiest household tasks, if you manage things right. And the one thing that is most critical, to me, in 'managing things right' is to use big cardboard boxes - the type to hold hanging files in - in your freezer to hold things as a matter of course.
Our freezer has 4 of those in use. Two for meats, one for bones for broth and prepared broth, and one for fruits. I also use the cardboard 'bases' from cases of catfood in two places.
The boxes do two things. First, they prevent ice buildup on the TOP of the shelves. This the cardboard bases to, too. But on top of that, to empty the freezer before defrosting, and to re-fill after defrosting, all I have to do is move the box out or in. No trying to find things to store that food in. Easy peasy.
Once everything is out of the freezer, I just put big pots of boiling water in, close the door, and wait. Thermodynamics FTW! Of course, I have layers of towels on the floor, but since the freezer is in the garage, mostly I just sweep the puddles out after I'm done.
Once defrosted, the old darling runs like a top.
And while it defrosts, I get to multitask online.
Frondly, Fern
Being the busy little home maker I am, I'm defrosting the freezer as I type this. We have an OLD upright freezer, 14.7 cubic feet, not at all frost-free. We got it in January 1979, so it predates our 1980 marriage and LONG predates our 1987 Spawn.
Every now and then (really, more NOW), it needs to be defrosted. It's one of the easiest household tasks, if you manage things right. And the one thing that is most critical, to me, in 'managing things right' is to use big cardboard boxes - the type to hold hanging files in - in your freezer to hold things as a matter of course.
Our freezer has 4 of those in use. Two for meats, one for bones for broth and prepared broth, and one for fruits. I also use the cardboard 'bases' from cases of catfood in two places.
The boxes do two things. First, they prevent ice buildup on the TOP of the shelves. This the cardboard bases to, too. But on top of that, to empty the freezer before defrosting, and to re-fill after defrosting, all I have to do is move the box out or in. No trying to find things to store that food in. Easy peasy.
Once everything is out of the freezer, I just put big pots of boiling water in, close the door, and wait. Thermodynamics FTW! Of course, I have layers of towels on the floor, but since the freezer is in the garage, mostly I just sweep the puddles out after I'm done.
Once defrosted, the old darling runs like a top.
And while it defrosts, I get to multitask online.
Frondly, Fern