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An important part of The Great Human Adventure is a life event that involves a struggle for fairness. When a worker is a member of a union, and the union decides that working conditions will not sufficiently improve via negotiation with management, sometimes the member is called upon to strike, to refuse to work until a better set of conditions is offered.

This morning at 5 AM I joined my co-worker Cynthia and many of our colleagues by the entrance of the SSP America commissary, where we work as prep cooks. We were taken by shuttle to Terminal 3 of Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport, where a picket line–or a picket loop, since the picketers marched in endless laps of a restricted area–had formed.

Strikers congregated near street entrance door 1 of the terminal, visible to air travelers and outside traffic. As we marched we chanted similarly to Marines urged on by a drill sergeant during a long slog. “Whaddowewant?” “CONTRACT!” “Whendowewannit?” “NOW!” Or “What’s DISGUSTING?” “UNION BUSTING!” “What’s OUTRAGEOUS?” “POVERTY WAGES!!” Or “SSP! You’re no good! Treat your workers like you should!” Some chanting was in Spanish, and my Spanish is nearly nonexistent, but I did know that “Si se puede!” meant “Yes we can!”

Union representative Kellen gave us an update, including encounters with management who seemed to be in violation of rules regarding harassment, enticement or intimidation of potentially striking employees. And state representative Cesar Aguilar gave us a good pep talk, saying he had our back and that his father and grandfather had always told him that if he was going to pursue a political career he should always be a staunch advocate for workers.

While we are on strike, in order to receive financial support from the union fund, we are required to clock in and out at the picketing site just as if we are working. And I did work today, marching and representing and chanting and solidaritying, a full five hours. The upside is my Fitbit step count went through the roof.

I’ll close this post with a chant I found delicious. “Everywhere we go–oh! People want to know–oh. Who we ah–are! So we tell them. We are the workers! The mighty, mighty workers! Fighting for justice! And respe–ect!!”

One of the subtle yet profound joys of working with clay on a potter’s wheel is that you will inevitably make shapes that found their way more in spite of you than because of you, because the clay sent you urgent “I’m-Not-Right-Yet” messages, forcing you to wrestle. You finally reach a compromise and relax to the inevitable, and you find that the shape you have made looks familiar; then you realize that shapes nearly identical to yours were first introduced to the civilized world thousands of years ago. You are extending an ancient tradition, and interacting with your ancestors. You may even be connected with the Infinite.

I totally love Effervescence, so when the prompt Sparkle came up I thought of sparkling water. My two favorites are Mineragua and San Pellegrino, though I’ve been known to nip at a Perrier now and then.

But “sparkle” also reminds me of my favorite lyric in The Guess Who’s “American Woman,” so I was happy to spend a little space and time on quoting that lyric on my page.

#inktober2023 #inktober

I’ve begun trying to enhance my ceramic vessels with metal leaf. The early effort on the left was done before I watched a video on applying leaf. The vessel on the right will be my next try. I hope to make the incised ring below the lip cleanly leafified. I think it will give the vessel more character.

Warning: controversial; vulgar; may offend.

INKtober, day 6. Prompt: “Golden.”


https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.krqe.com/news/ny-museum-offered-used-solid-gold-toilet-to-trumps/amp/

Fun fact: about  six years ago, when the Trumps were in the White House, they asked the Guggenheim Museum if they could borrow one of their Van Goghs for a party. A curator told them No, the Van Gogh was unavailable, but they would like to offer instead an 18-carat gold toilet by an Italian sculptor, titled “America.” Here’s a link:

And here’s the poem on my image:

****
golden

golden moment goldeneye
golden arches my o my
golden globes and golden…
toilet???
o m g that sure does
s[p]oil it!!!

he has had his golden hours,
golden swindles, golden showers,
but his golden-years bathroom business,
i feel,
will be conducted in a cell
in stainless steel.
****

Here’s hoping!

Wow, INKtober has arrived, and I didn’t realize till a couple hours ago. The prompt is Dream. I did this without forethought and with no photo sourcing, just mind’s-eye stuff.

Speaking of eyes, I have new lens implants in mine following cataract surgery. My eyes are still healing, but my astigmatism is gone, and with the help of reading glasses I am getting a much clearer view. I am grateful for the medical advances that gave my vision new life.

Here are the words to the quickie double acrostic:

Drama Dream

Damn the slumbrous night–so hard
Ravaged memory of char
Ashen Carnage is the theme
Must we one again do harm? Da
Age and Wisdom lend no charm