Anchoring this post in time:
Day thirteen of local social distancing directives and schools closing, followed by other days of even stricter guidelines. I would never suggest that anything about all this is "a new normal", but it does feel as if I and others in my life are gradually establishing patterns that stabilize daily life a bit. Within those patterns I've been reflecting on gratitude.
Image from https://www.wilddhearts.com |
Less often mentioned are those one-tier removed, those at the desks, phones, warehouses, and laboratories who provide the scaffolding that allows direct intervention and service to continue. Fewer still are songs of praise for the nearly invisible essential workers who are the foundation of that complex scaffolding system on which society depends: delivery drivers, housekeeping staff in all essential service centers, those reporting, writing, and distributing news in print and digitally, and our ever-on-duty police and firefighters.
In these two weeks of home-based life, my trash collection service has remained consistent and as seemingly "automatic" as ever. I'm so grateful for the men and women who deliver those services.
The following content appeared on a friend's FaceBook post recently, which she read and copied from her community's social media site:
"Hey community named here -- You may have been laid off or had your hours cut at work. You may have trouble paying your bills or feeding your family, but, rest assured, your city streets will be kept clean, by hook or by crook!! Yes, not only are the street sweepers out, they are even cleaning the ALLEYS!! ... Don't bother complaining to the Mayor. He will NEVER admit he's wrong. He will NEVER walk back a bad idea. He will CERTAINLY NEVER criticize a city department or suggest cuts. Keep paying your taxes!"
This was my friend's reply:
"I am grateful for the streetsweepers and all city employees that perform services that keep our city functioning to the extent possible. I am grateful that the streets are being kept clean of debris and litter, which apparently some people are unable to put in trashcans themselves. Even if fewer people can drive on them, I'm glad the streets are being kept clean. I'm also glad that those people who do that work still have jobs. I'm glad they can continue to have income even though others don't right now. That is one way to keep the economy and society from collapsing completely."
(Shared with her permission.)
When it released, I wrote in praise of an outstanding picture book, MARVELOUS CORNELIUS: Hurricane Katrina and the Spirit of New Orleans, written by Phil Bildner and illustrated by John Parra.
Since writing that post and the reveiw (below) on Goodreads, I've read this one again several times, always enjoying it even more and on more levels:
On my second read, (because I was still wowed by the quality after the first read), I wondered if it was or wasn't fiction. I knew it was "based on" a real man. The third time through I finally read the back matter.
I'm a huge fan of back matter, but try not too read too early so that the "author's insight" won't shape my initial reactions.
What I learned is that this is NOT biographical, any more that John Henry (which is based on an actual character) is biographical/nonfiction. Cornelius clearly incorporates things that are exaggerated, uses the language and patterns of tall tales, and absolutely captures the larger-than-life quality of a legendary hero.
It represents that amazing ability to appeal to older readers/adults and yet the youngest love it for the delight of the action and language as well as the kid-friendly folk-art illustration style.
This book bounces, sings, and captures a city and culture as if it is character itself. Scenes shifts throughout, from the earliest pages where the grittiness is transformed by the touch (and hard work) of Cornelius to sparkling and appealing. Eventually, the overwhelming destruction of nature's force is countered by the binding and building of a community, inspired by the spirit of Cornelius.
Beyond that, it offers all those connections to curriculum- geography, careers, infrastructures, the role of government, weather, community action, goal-setting, and more.
Before the first word there is the full page spread quotation by MLK, Jr. about the dignity of work. It's as if he had lived to know Cornelius, and his quote comes from his dealings with the garbage collection workers strike, an episode in his life that realtes directly to his assassination.
"All the hosts of heaven and earth will pause to say,
Here lived a great street sweeper who swept his job well."
I'd never try to out-write MLK, Jr, and it seems I can't say it any better than a Janet Jackson post: "You are seen and forever appreciated!"
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