December 8, 2011

  • "Let us put our minds
    together and see what
    life we can make for
    our children."
    -Sitting Bull, Lakota- 1877

    Christmas Food Basket

    There are places here in the reservation areas of the Southwest, where families
    will not have a Christmas dinner this year.

    We have hundreds of families that live without running water, electricity, and live on
    dirt floors. These are the "poorest of the poor" in this "third world America".
    These are the families we are striving to provide a Food Basket this holiday season.

    We may not be able to save the world, but we might be able to feed and warm a Native
    family in a real tangible way. Follow your heart. We thank you for thinking of us.
    View our Video

    Video

    What is in the Christmas Food Basket?

    Turkey 20 lbs
    Potatoes 20 lbs. sack
    Pinto Beans 4 lbs. sack
    Baking Powder 22 oz.
    Canned Milk 6 - 5 oz. cans
    Sugar 4 lbs. bag
    Vegetable Shortening (low fat) 3 lbs.
    Stuffing 24 oz.
    Coffee 13 oz.
    Table Salt 26 oz.
    Canned Corn 15 oz.
    Canned Peas 15oz.

    Canned Green Beans 14 oz.
    Rice 32 oz.
    Low Salt Crackers 16 oz. box
    Canned Cranberry Sauce 16 oz.
    Canned Yams 29 oz.
    Canned Peaches 15 oz.
    Canned Pears oz.
    Fruit Drink 1 gallon
    Flour 20 lbs. bag
    Raisins 15 oz.
    Oatmeal 18 oz. box

    Visit Us Online: www.southwestindian.com

November 23, 2011

  • A Sad Day for SyFy.....

    Anne McCaffery has moved on to the Great Beyond. Her passing will be a great loss to the SyFy world. She is best known for her books on PERN, and The Dragonriders from there. Though I also liked her Freedom and Petaybee series of books. Her writings held many meanings and could be read on many levels. Those levels being romance, drama, comedy, with social connotations. Her work made you think, besides being entertaining. For more info on her visit this web site: http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/45409015/ns/today-books/#.TsxXEPI2yuI  
    From there you will find links to other site about her. She will be sorely missed! May she fly to the Great Beyond on the wings of a Golden Dragon!Other webs sites of interest are: http://pernhome.com/pern/   http://pernhome.com/aim/   http://pernhome.com/tjm/   http://www.annemccaffrey.org/books/index.html

  • A Reflection for this Season....

    Native American Legends

    Creation Story

    An American Indian Legend - Nation Unknown

    History begins with Creation. There are several versions of the Creation story. This is one of them:

    Our world began with the creation of the Earth, which is seen as the horizontal plane that separates the world above from the world below. In the Sky-World lived a fellow named "The Sky Holder." Next to his lodge was the Great Tree of Light, for which he was the caretaker. The flowers of this tree gave off bright light. His wife, named "Mature Flowers," fell through a hole created when he uprooted that tree at her urging. She fell into the dark world below, a world of endless water. The water animals decided to save her because she had the power to create life. The birds flew up and caught her in their inter-locked wings. They decided to place her on the back of a giant snapping turtle. The muskrat was the only animal that could dive deep enough to retrieve some mud from the bottom of the sea. The mud was placed on the back of the turtle and it began to grow. As she walked about in an ever-expanding circle, the mud grew into an island. Each day she walked counterclockwise and the island expanded. The Iroquois still dance in that direction to honor the Creation. Seeds fell from her clothing and began to sprout in the fresh Earth.

    She then gave birth to a daughter who later had many suitors from the male beings who could transform themselves into human form. She selected the being that wore scalloped leggings and a large robe, said to be a turtle being. He placed two arrows over her body at night, and she became pregnant. She had twins, but died giving birth to the second son, as he was born through her armpit. The Sky Woman buried her daughter and from her body grew the Three Sisters - Corn, Beans and Squash. From her heart grew the tobacco plant, which we still use as a way to carry our thought to the Sky World. The deceased daughter became known as Earth Mother.

    The good-minded twin was named "He Grasps the Sky With Both Hands," and his evil-minded brother was named "Flint - The Mischievous One." The good-minded brother set about to create plants, animals and birds. In the sky he placed our Grandmother the Moon, our Elder Brother the Sun (Day Bringer), the Morning Star, and the Milky Way as the path to the Sky World. He created the cycles of day and night, of the changing seasons.

    His evil-minded brother, in trying to imitate his brother's work, created thistles, thorns, bats, monsters, and serpents, as well as rapids in the rivers, winter in the seasons, and other things that would make life on the new Earth difficult for the people that were about to be created. The evil-minded brother fought his good-minded brother for dominance in the newly created world. They played lacrosse to a draw. This is why lacrosse is still played today, as it is a way to manifest the classic struggle of good over evil. They held a wrestling match but were of equal strength. However, the evil-minded one was finally defeated by being struck by a deer antler and banished from the Earth. The Universe was divided into two spheres of power. The evil-minded one was sent underground, where he would rule over the serpents and powers of the deep. He would also have dominion over the night. The good-minded brother would be responsible for life on Earth and have dominion over the day. Forever, the two brothers would be opposing powers of our universe and the idea of duality is introduced.

    The grandmother had favored Flint and tried to have him return to the Earth, but she lost her authority to the good-minded twin after losing a dice game. That game is still played in the ceremonies today, again as a way to relive the events from the time of creation and teach us to take both success and failure in stride.

    The good-minded one then went about creating many things in the new world. First he took yellowish bark from a tree and created the Asian people. He then took the foam from the great salt sea and created the Caucasian people. He created African people from the rich, black soil. The good-minded one created a man that he named "Sapling" and a woman he named "Growing Flower," from the reddish clay. He breathed life into them. But all the races began to fight over a shinny object and had to be sent to four different quarters of the world, each in their own land. The basic element of four is introduced into our world view.

    The good-minded brother taught the people the use of the plants and animals, ceremonies of thanksgiving and to live in harmony and peace. We have come to refer to him as Sonkwaiatison, "The Creator." Before departing from the Earth, he struck a deal with the people. We are to protect his gifts of Creation and be respectful of all living things, and were to simply be thankful for all that he has provided, as he has given us all that we need to live a happy life. In return for showing thanks, he would strive to keep the cycles of life continuing for the benefit of the people.

November 17, 2011

  • Must see on PBS!

    http://www.pbs.org/independentlens/we-still-live-here/

    "There is nothing I know of that's anything like the Wampanoag case."

    — Noam Chomsky

    We Still Live Here - Âs Nutayuneân is the story of the revitalization of the Wampanoag language, the first time a language with no native speakers has been revived in this country. The Wampanoag’s ancestors ensured the survival of the Pilgrims in New England, and lived to regret it. Nevertheless, through resilience and courage they kept their identity alive and remained on their ancestral lands. Now a cultural revival is taking place.

    The story begins in 1994 when Jessie Little Doe, an intrepid, 30-something Wampanoag social worker, began having recurring dreams: familiar-looking people from another time addressing her in an incomprehensible language. Jessie was perplexed and a little annoyed — why couldn’t they speak English? Later, she realized they were speaking Wampanoag, a language no one had used for more than a century.

    These events sent her and members of the Aquinnah and Mashpee Wampanoag communities on an odyssey that would uncover hundreds of documents written in their ancestral language, lead Jessie to a earn herself a masters degree in linguistics at MIT, and result in something that had never been done before – bringing a language alive again in an American Indian community after many generations with no native speakers. With commitment, study groups, classes, and communitywide effort, many are approaching fluency. Jessie’s young daughter Mae is the first native speaker in more than a hundred years.

  • My Curse!

    My curse hit me again! I made plans and every time I make plans I end up having to change them. I had to give up the vacation time I wanted to take. I set this up in October when we had other people working that could cover the in charges days off. I was going to start vacation on Nov 20th to end on Dec 1st. The thing is, the time I wanted we are not suppose to get because of the holiday, but it was approved for me back in Oct. Now that I am back to covering the in charges days off, again, I will not be able to take that time off. They are having a hard time finding somebody who will and can do the second in charges job. Once they find a person and are training him or her on night shift, I will be able to take some time off. I just don’t know when that is going to happen!

    Not to blow my own horn, again, but right now I am the only person they have that can do the second in charge job. One of the major factors that they are looking for in a person is how available that person is. How often does this person call off from work? A day here and there is not a problem through out the year. But when you show a pattern of calling off often you will not be considered right for the job. This is the problem with promoting the people that are on night shift right now. Too many call offs! The other problem is finding a person that can exert himself or herself as a manager. That is getting or being able to have the workers do their job. You Can Not be their friend! I know that when I am acting as in charge I can't be their friend. They have a job to do and all I ask is that they do it. I have told every one of them, “That if I can do the job at my age and with my health problems, I expect them to do it also!” I worked through chemo; I have a bad back, and a hernia. Suck it up and do the job! Move you ass, and do what you are told to do! I have tried to show my coworkers short cuts on getting the job done faster, but if they don’t do it, I can’t make them. Mostly, they just don’t see how much faster some of my short cuts are. The only thing I do different that I don’t expect them to do is work during their breaks. I don’t really take my lunch break, but I do take my 15-min breaks (just to rest). I go outside for my lunch break to have a smoke, so while I am out there I collect shopping carts. Something that needs to get done before 3:00 am. Their breaks are their time and what they do is up to them. As an in charge you don’t always get your breaks the way you would like. The life of management! Something my coworkers don’t understand! You get extra work that only you can do, besides doing the same job they have to do. If I can do the extra and their job and do it faster then them, they should be able to get their job done just as fast, if not faster then me, but mostly they don’t.

    On a good note, once we get a second in charge, I will be going to second shift! I am hoping that it will be easier on my health, it should be. The only problem is I will be working will people under 18, who have poor work ethics, that is something I am going to have to show them how to do better.

November 14, 2011

  • Help from Tech Support. This is good !

     

    This ought to make you feel better  about  your computer  skills!
               
    Tech  support:   What kind of computer do you  have?
    Customer:   A  white  one...
    Tech  support:    Click  on the 'my  computer' icon on to the left of the  screen.
    Customer:    Your left or my  left?
    ****************************
     
     
    Customer:   Hi, good afternoon, this  is Martha, I can't print. Every time I try, it  says 'Can't find  printer'.  I've even  lifted the printer and placed it in front of the  monitor, but the computer still says he can't  find it..
    ****************************
     
     
    Tech  support:   What's on your monitor  now, ma'am?
    Customer:   A teddy bear my  boyfriend bought for me at the 7-11.
    ****************************
    Customer: My keyboard  is not  working anymore.
    Tech  support: Are you sure it's plugged into  the computer?
    Customer: No. I can't  get behind  the computer.
    Tech  support:   Pick up your keyboard  and walk 10 paces back.
    Customer: !   OK
    Tech support: Did the  keyboard come  with you?
    Customer:  Yes
    Tech support: That means the keyboard   is not plugged in.
    ****************************
    Customer: I can't get on the  Internet.
    Tech support: 
      Are you sure you used  the right password?
    Customer: Yes, I'm sure. I saw my  colleague do it.
    Tech  support:   Can you tell me what the  password was?
    Customer: Five dots.
    ****************************
    Tech  support:   What  anti-virus  program do you use?
    Customer: Netscape.
    Tech support: That's not an anti-virus  program.
    Customer: Oh, sorry... Internet  Explorer..
    ****************************
    Customer:    I have a huge  problem. A friend has placed a screen saver on  my computer, but every time I move the mouse, it  disappears.
    ****************************
    Tech support:   How may I help  you?
    Customer: I'm writing my first  email.
    Tech support:   OK, and what seems to be  the problem?
    Customer: Well, I have the letter 'a' in  the address, but how do I get the little circle  around it?
    **************************** 
    This one and the next are our personal  favorites!
    A woman customer called the Canon  help desk with a problem with her  printer.
    Tech support: Are you running it under  windows?
    Customer: 'No, my desk is next to the  door, but that is a good point. The man sitting  in the cubicle next to me is under a window, and  his printer is working fine.'
    ****************************
    And last but not least!
    Tech  support: 'Okay Bob, let's  press the  control and escape keys at the same time. That  brings up a task list in the middle of the  screen. Now type the letter 'P' to bring up the  Program  Manager.'
    Customer: I  don't have a P.
    Tech  support: On your keyboard,  Bob.
    Customer: What do you mean?
    Tech support: 'P'.....on  your  keyboard, Bob.
    Customer: I'M NOT GOING TO DO  THAT!

    =

November 10, 2011

  • Too good not to share….get some Kleenex…….

     MOM'S EMPTY CHAIR


    A woman's daughter had asked the local minister to come and pray with her
    mother.
    When the minister arrived, he found the woman lying in bed with her head
    propped up on two pillows.
    An empty chair sat beside her bed.
    The minister assumed that the woman had been informed of his visit...
    'I guess you were expecting me, he said.
    'No, who are you?' said the mother.
    The minister told her his name and then remarked, 'I saw the empty chair and
    I figured you knew I was going to show up..'
    'Oh yeah, the chair,' said the bedridden woman 'Would you mind closing the
    door?'
    Puzzled, the minister shut the door.
    'I have never told anyone this, not even my daughter,' said the woman.
    'But all of my life I have never known how to pray.
    At church I used to hear the pastor talk about prayer,
    but it went right over my head...'
    I abandoned any attempt at prayer,' the old woman continued, 'until one day
    four years ago, my best friend said to me, ' Prayer is just a simple matter
    of having a conversation with Jesus.
    Here is what I suggest..
    'Sit down in a chair; place an empty chair in front of you, and in faith see
    Jesus on the chair.
    It's not spooky because he promised, 'I will be with you always'.
    'Then just speak to him in the same way you're doing with me right now...'
    'So, I tried it and I've liked it so much that I do it a couple of hours
    every day.
    I'm careful though. If my daughter saw me talking to an empty chair, she'd
    either have a nervous breakdown or send me off to the funny farm.'
    The minister was deeply moved by the story and encouraged the old woman to
    continue on the journey.
    Then he prayed with her, anointed her with oil, and returned to the church.
    Two nights later the daughter called to tell the minister that her mama had
    died that afternoon.
    Did she die in peace?' he asked.
    Yes, when I left the house about two o'clock, she called me over to her
    bedside, told me she loved me and kissed me on the cheek.
    When I got back from the store an hour later, I found her...
    But there was something strange about her death.
    Apparently, just before Mom died, she leaned over and rested her head on the
    chair beside the bed. What do you make of that?'
    The minister wiped a tear from his eye and said, 'I wish we could all go
    like that.'

    Prayer is one of the best free gifts we receive.
    I asked God for water, He gave me an ocean.*
    I asked God for a flower, He gave me a garden.*
    I asked God for a friend, He gave me all of YOU...
    If God brings you to it, He will bring you through it.
    Happy moments, praise God.
    Difficult moments, seek God.
    Quiet moments, worship God.
    Painful moments, trust God.
    Every moment, thank God.
     
     

October 31, 2011

  • Survived....

    We survived the first winter storm! All around us there has been major power outages. A friend of my stepdaughter has an all electric home and lost their power, so we loaned them our generator and portable heaters. I had to work that night (Saturday / Sunday) and was worried that we would lose power during that night. Some of the people that work the morning shift came in late because they lost power during the night, while they were sleeping.

    Other news! The store manager is still thinking about moving me to second shift. The only problem is he has to hire and train two new people to replace me. So, in his opinion I do the work of two people. And I am only a part time employee, who works only the truck nights, mostly. I really think that is funny! But, then I have always work hard all my life. I do what I am told to do, even if I think it is stupid. I also can come up with ideas that can improve on getting the job done faster. But, not everybody I work with can see or do it, the way I can. I find short cuts to get the stocking done faster, and I use both hands. Can’t seem to get most of the other workers to understand, that God gave you two hands, and if you can use both of them, do so. The other thing is, I tend to move faster (walking), and I also know the store layout better. It is like I have a map of the store in my head (brain). So, I can spot the aisles and break down the load faster. I know this sounds like I am tooting my own horn, but I have tried to get my coworkers to see the store the way I see it. Easier to explain, if you were working with me, at this store. Each aisle holds a different kind of merchandise and is grouped accordingly. Not rocket science here! In the long run, speed is a key factor in getting the job done. Which is another funny thing about me! I have a bad back, and also worked through chemo, and still I move faster then my coworkers. It is all in how you put your frame of mind into while working. You do what you got to do because you have to get it done! As I keep telling people, I will sleep (rest) when I am dead! So Life Goes On!

October 20, 2011

  • More about the Can of Worms......

    A quick blog, have to work tonight.

    The second in-charged got fired! He left the store to go home and security caught him. He was the only manager on duty that night, and as a manager you can not leave the store unattended. He was warned about doing this!

    This past week I worked extra days to cover for the in-charge’s days off. I am hoping that it will not become a permanent situation. The last time I did this I ended up missing a month of work because of my health, and had to be rehired.

    Things are getting tough at work. We have to face the store a different way and is more time consuming. Night shift is not happy about this change, but as our boss says, it says Redner’s on the sign, not your name. This is the price you pay for working for somebody else. We do it the way they want and when they find out it doesn’t work things will change again. What really gets to us on night shift, is we are the only ones that have to face the store. First and second shifts don’t have to do the extra work. Third-shift gets the extra work all the time.

    Oh well, life goes on! The only truth in life is that you are going to die!

    I will try and leave comments when I get a chance.

October 11, 2011

  • Must see TV!!!!

    Meet the dreamers and survivors of the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation this Friday at 10 p.m. ET on a 20/20 special titled “Hidden America: Children of the Plains”.

    Here is a synopsis for part of the show:

    Reservation Child’s Wish: Fresh Water, Bubble Gum and a Backpack

    By ELISSA STOHLER

    When ABC News first met little Tashina Iron Horse, she was 5 years old, a chatty and vivacious kindergartener. Now she’s 6, in the first grade, and she tells us she wants Justin Bieber to be her boyfriend. If she could, she’d ask President Obama for “Fresh water…and bubble gum…and a backpack.” She wants to grow up to be a police officer, a career choice inspired by her mother Bobbie, who works long hours as a security guard.

    Tashina lives on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation, where most of the 30,000 to 40,000 residents identify as Oglala Lakota Sioux and boast of a rich cultural history and deep-seeded spirituality. Located in the southwest corner of South Dakota, Pine Ridge is one of the 565 federally recognized Indian Nations in the United States. It is also one of the poorest.

     

    ht Tashina at pow wow 2020 jt 111010 wblog Reservation Childs Wish: Fresh Water, Bubble Gum and a Backpack

    Young Tashina Iron Horse is a competitive pow wow dancer. (credit: Elissa Stohler/ABC News)

     

    Pine Ridge residents live amid poverty that rivals that of the third world. Forty-seven percent of the Pine Ridge population lives below the federal poverty level, 65 percent to 80 percent of the adults are unemployed, and rampant alcoholism and an obesity epidemic combine with underfunded schools to make it a rough place to grow up. Tashina lives in government housing in Manderson, 30 minutes north of downtown Pine Ridge. She lives with her grandmother, parents, siblings and uncles – sometimes up to 19 people live in the three-bedroom house, which has seen better days.

    In the decades following President John F. Kennedy’s pledge to fund public housing projects on American Indian reservations, a construction boom began in Pine Ridge. Today, most of these units built in the 1970s and 1980s are in varying degrees of disrepair – a result, critics say, of steep cuts to the Housing and Urban Development budget made by President Ronald Reagan in the 1980s. Public housing dollars today are largely spent battling black mold in reservation housing rather than constructing new homes.

    Amid the despair, there are youth across the reservation — like Tashina — who are breaking through the hopelessness with huge dreams and powerful stories.

    So that she can be a competitive dancer at the pow wows, Tashina sports beautifully hand-crafted outfits made by her Uncle Matthew. Matthew is a senior in high school who lovingly hand-sews and beads Tashina’s pow wow regalia: shawls, moccasins, hair pieces, and dresses. At the pow wows, Matthew is constantly at Tashina’s side: practicing with her and helping her get into costume.

    Learn more about Tashina and the challenges she and other Pine Ridge children face Friday at 10 p.m. ET on “Hidden America: Children of the Plains,” a 20/20 special. Check out a sneak peek — Tashina teaches Diane Sawyer some of her moves — below.
    http://abcnews.go.com/blogs/headlines/2011/10/tashina-the-kindergarten-dancer-breaking-through-hopelessness-on-native-american-reservation/