10.29.2021
the run-up
10.27.2021
the ed report
10.26.2021
school pix/cool pix
I have always been a fan of school pictures. They are typically so dorky, and yet when you look at a decade's worth, you get a real sense of growth. In a way, the photographers who don't know or care about their subjects produce a more interesting record. I haven't thought this through, but there's something there. Exhibit A, Camilla and Isaac from a couple years ago and today.
What we learn from these (first shot from my refrigerator), is that Camilla has forgotten how to open her eyes, but has not greatly changed her hairstyle.
But wait up, next up is Isaac, whose refrigerator picture was just named by my nephew Mason as a world-class dork pic. Isaac now does know how to open his eyes and shows signs of improvement in posing for pix. Also aging.
I actually like the physical photos the best—those dumb billfold-size you are meant to carry in your purse—but waiting on those.
10.22.2021
how i spent my graduation vacation
I have been asked to write an entry for a Vassar 50th reunion book that is meant to encourage others in my class to attend. Not sure this will do the trick. TMI? No ending. Any other critiques?
How I spent my Graduation Vacation
Let’s see.
I went to Kauai for a year with Vassar alum Laura Broeksmit, lived on the beach, bartended and shucked corn. Then I decided I needed a real job, so I moved to the opposite place: New York City. There my Vassar degree (plus a contact with Time Inc's Chairman of the Board) got me a job as copy girl at a startup called People magazine. I was promoted to copy editor when my boss decided that if I could speak Chinese, I could probably speak English. My Chinese was actually pretty bad, but what did she know.
A couple of friends from Time magazine decided they would launch a weekly newspaper in Illinois. The copy desk was where women’s magazine careers went to die (along with researcher and photo researcher jobs), so I joined them as a reporter. Breaking up with the boss turned out to be another career killer, so in a year I was back in NYC. I wound up back at People as a writer, one of a handful of women at Time Inc. I was the movie editor and reviewer, which was odd, since I’d always loathed movies. The learning curve was steep.
When I had spent enough time in screening rooms (and when a colleague was promoted to senior editor before me, since, the ME explained, “he had a family to support”), I quit. I had just gotten married and bought an unheated house on Block Island. I sublet my apartment to that same ME, and moved to the island, wintering in Jamaica. Without my income, we soon ran out of money. My husband (also ex-Time) took a job in Chicago where our daughter, now 40, was born. Then we ran out of money again, so back we went to NY, where that same ME hired me as a senior writer at Life magazine.
What a gig! Climbing Everest, canoeing down the Amazon basin, going backstage at the Bolshoi in St Petersburg. And mostly writing about ordinary people in extraordinary circumstances. No celebs. OK, maybe a few. I stayed there for 15 years, retiring after the magazine went belly up yet again. Little did I know the whole company, along with most magazines, was about to go south due to something called the web.
After that I teamed up with photographer friends to write intros to their books and do docs for Oxygen TV. I also got divorced and built two houses on our Block Island property, which I now rent out for the summer. Two decades ago, I was reintroduced to the Ozarks (where I lived until the age of eight) when I did a story on far-right white supremacists—we tried to warn you all those years ago. I bought an old gas station there. Now it’s Block Island on the shoulder seasons, Ozarks in the summer, New York in the winter. Full circles.
Oh, and I was spending a month in Kauai, too, until I was turfed out by Covid.
The only Vassar people I’m in touch with are Laura and her husband Bill Downing, who was in the first cohort of male students to graduate. I know Georgia Hall’s family on Block Island, though I have not seen her in years, and Jamie Sunderland, also of Rhode Island. They both lived in Ferry House with Laura. I am also in touch with Danielle Beauchamp, with whom I became friends when her parents were very kind to me on a year abroad in Taiwan.
With Danielle in Taipei, 1971
10.21.2021
higher ground
The information I have received about What To Expect About Your Knee Replacement Recovery (scheduled for November 29) (from Bill Dugan) suggested that I raise my bed, as I wouldn't be able to get out of a low one. So I put together a frame, and dudes in the building helped me put box springs and mattress on top of it. Last night I had altitude sickness.
And speaking of beds, Hannah just put up an AirBnB listing for Sara's awesome apartment in their backyard, and it got a first booking within minutes. Check it out here.
10.19.2021
first night in nyc
After a lovely dinner we headed up to Donna's roof to enjoy the moon on what she calls, for obvious reasons, the Jenga building. And then home, because really, after leaving Block Island the day before and Providence in the morning, I was pretty well activitied out.
10.06.2021
the memory of light
I woke up this morning and kept my eyes shut, hoping to go back to sleep. I lay there in the darkness of my closed eyelids for a while. And then I briefly, very briefly, opened my eyes for a few seconds. When I closed them again, I still saw the light I had seen with them open. I guess the light was in my brain, rather than my eyes. I'm not sure how long the memory of light lasted, because before long, I slid back into sleep.
Blogging here in Block Island is so arduous, on account of the piss-poor internet, that I can't bear it. I will resume on a regular basis when I am back in New York in ten days or so. Meanwhile, hold onto the memory.
10.03.2021
sara's legacy
Sara Burke Laughlin, 69, passed away peacefully at home in Providence, RI, on October 1st, 2021, surrounded by family. Sara was the daughter of sculptor Ruth F. Laughlin and noted anthropologist William S. Laughlin. Born in Spokane, WA, Sara was raised in Madison, WI, spending much of her time in exotic locales from an isolated camp in Idaho to islands in Alaska and even Copenhagen, Denmark. She eventually settled on Quaddick Lake in Thompson, CT, where she worked tirelessly to support her community. To each role in her life — from biology teacher, to WIC employee, to archeologist, to gestalt life coach—Sara brought kindness, commitment and compassion. A lover of string figures, cooking shows and endless notetaking, Sara deeply valued her friends and her family and always made time for them. Throughout her 15 years with amyloidosis, Sara was unwavering in her positivity—inspiring all around her to be more present. Predeceased by her parents and sister, Leslie Laughlin, Sara is survived by her eldest son and his wife, Jonathan and Stephanie Garrison of Portland, OR, and her younger son and his wife, Christopher and Hannah Garrison of Providence, RI. Her legacy lives on through grandchildren Ian Garrison, 15, son of Jonathan and his former wife Heather Garrison, and the children of Christopher and Hannah, Camilla, 11, and Isaac, 8, who will miss RaRa dearly.
Obit by Hannah, pix by me