Saturday, July 30, 2016

Trying to Pay Attention

7-29-16

Birds:                     Pleasant Park - 8:00PM

Herring Gulls (or Ring-billed) >100
American Robins
Chimney Swifts

Insects:
Hornets nest near energy(?) meter in park, stung dog and mother

7-28-16

Birds:

Rock Pigeons

7-27-16

Birds:

House Sparrows
American Goldfinches

7-26-16

Birds:

Downy Woodpecker                Morning
White-breasted Nuthatch
Northern Cardinal
House Sparrow
Mourning Dove
Chimney Swifts
American Robin

Blue Jay                                 Afternoon - 4:15 PM
Northern Cardinal
House Sparrow
Black capped Chickadee
American Robin
American Crow

7-25-16

Birds:

House Sparrows
White-breasted Nuthatch

7-23-16

Birds:

Chimney Swifts

7-21-16

Birds:

House Sparrows
House Finch

Insects: 

Wasps and butterflies in the Russian Sage
Caterpillar nests in the trees
Hornets nest in "Speed Hump" sign, stung boy

Saturday, July 23, 2016

Asset Based Community Development


'You have to be a real human being. You can apply technique, but you need to engage.' -- note from conversation with Susan Weaver Van Lopik, Participatory Learning and Action practitioner with World Renew

"If you have come here to help us, you are wasting you time, but if you have come here because your liberation is bound up with mine, then let us work together." -- Aboriginal Activists Group, Queensland, 1970s

Asset Based Community Development or ABCD was formally developed by John Kretzmann and John Mcknight at Northwestern University. You can learn more about it through the very earnest talk given by their co-worker, Cormac Russell linked here and above. Below are some personal thoughts and responses to ABCD, as we engage in this work here in South Hills.

ABCD and other forms of participatory development are attempts within the community development world to reckon with the mystery of free will.  In our efforts to make the world a better place, we cannot make anyone choose a quality life. We are very capable of hurting one another, but we cannot through any force available make people in a place support the kind of place we want it to be.

In a world which has deconstructed authority and which emphasizes rights and de-emphasizes responsibilities, we must choose for ourselves to change, to love life, and to want something better. People--creative beings made in the image of God--are the ones who must choose to participate in any effort to create a better, more beautiful world. Each individual person is incredibly important as we have the power to act or not. Any organizer, manager, or leader knows that it is the willing contribution of those following them which makes their efforts effective. Any effort to force change in someone, even if we believe it is clearly for the other's benefit, will be met with frustration, anger, unwillingness to engage, and all kinds of resistance.

Jesus took the dignity of personhood into account during his ministry and continues to protect it as he loves and teaches us today. We might ask, "If Jesus is God himself and all powerful, why did he only feed a few thousand and heal some of the sick? Why didn't he conquer Rome to create just social systems? We have so many problems. Can't almighty God fix them?" Instead, Jesus arrived in a barn, grew up fleeing between countries, asked questions as a child and as an adult, and conducted his ministry on two feet and a donkey. Rather than fix everything with his divinity, Jesus built and taught a core community of men and women to love God, to love one another, and to proclaim the Kingdom of God. He invited people to change direction towards a life of grand celebration. "Repent, for the Kingdom of God is near!"

And what was the human response in the face of such love? Many were attracted to it and by accepting the invitation to the Kingdom feast, they were opened up to transformation and healing. Others who were attempting to hold the world together by force were offended, and they crucified Jesus for his unwillingness to serve their visions of a better world. Jesus refused to play their game of trying to perfect the world by force so much that he--with access to legions of angels and the power of almighty God--let them do it. He so valued our personhood that he was willing to let us kill him, and in looking lovingly on those who would kill him, he destroyed death. He rose from the dead, affirming the promise that anyone who accepts the invitation to love and to be transformed by his grace will have eternal life. We are invited to change, to turn around, to repent, to metanoia--and the invitation keeps coming.

Asset Based Community Development then could be two things. First, it is merely a technique created to serve life and to continue to offer the invitation to be changed and to change the places we are in to be a touch more like heaven as a sign of what is to come. The invitation is to enter the wedding feast and to recognize what it means that God is king here and we are all brothers and sisters of one Body. Second, even ABCD could be a means of control, a technique to try hold the world to a preconceived vision. ABCD is merely a paradigm with a set of tools, and tools depend on how they are used.

The tools of ABCD are many and varied. A prominent one is the 5 question tool, where the ABCD practitioner asks neighbors:
1. How long have you lived here?
2. What is your favorite part about the neighborhood?
3. If you could change anything about the neighborhood, what would it be?
4. If we found other people who cared about that same thing, would you be willing to participate?
5. What groups or associations are you part of?

Another tool is Head, Hearts, and Hands. A group is gathered and everyone is asked to write down on sticky notes three things they know well enough to teach others, three things they are passionate about, and three things they are good at doing. In this way, a group can begin to see what they are capable of doing together.

Good ABCD is relationship driven and measured in terms of relationship. The technique is only good as it serves relationship. Neighborhood transformation is centered around resident initiative and driven forward by the force of people coming together. Each person must be the center of their own change in taking initiative and paradoxically be displaced so that the community can be at the center.

The community tends to be a vague concept, a sort of myth to discuss but never encounter. ABCD work reminds us that we always meet the community in individuals, and we work out the community story in terms of particular relationships. Relationship can never be forced, leaving those who want to work towards a better world and take part in a story large enough to hold all of us with the question, "What will it take for us to realize that we need one another?"



Wednesday, July 20, 2016

Paying Attention

7-19-16

Birds:
House Sparrow
Chimney Swifts
House Finches
American Robin

7-18-16

Birds:
House Sparrow
American Robin
White Breasted Nuthatch
Northern Cardinal
Rock Pigeon

7-15-16

Birds:
Blue Jay
House Sparrow
American Robin
Finch
Northern Cardinal
Rock Pigeon
Mourning Dove


7-12-16

Birds:
White Breasted Nuthatch
House Sparrows
Northern Cardinals
European Starling
American Robin
Mourning Doves
Sharp-shinned Hawk
Blue Jays
Chimney Swifts
Herring Gull