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Category Archives: a sense of place

from the neighborhood: 4-H VPs

07 Monday Mar 2011

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in a sense of place

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boston, domesticity, family, from the neighborhood, hanna

This passed Saturday, Hanna volunteered as a judge for one of the local 4-H clubs’ Visual Presentations competitions. Hanna used to do 4-H as a child in Maine, and a colleague at Countway roped her into getting involved in the day’s activities. I tagged along as the driver (and last-minute door monitor).

Audience members listen to a young Junior class (ages 8-13) presenter
Hanna (in blue sweater) takes notes on a presentation

There’s already been talk of Hanna joining the advisory committee … so there may be more 4-H in our near future. I promise if I come across any bunnies I will photograph them and provide pictures here on the blog!

from the neighborhood: shark attack!

18 Tuesday Jan 2011

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boston, from the neighborhood, photos

Following the recent snow day here in Boston, Hanna and I noticed this snowman along our usual walk to work (outside an apartment building near Audubon Circle for those who know the area). Thought y’all would enjoy the creativity at work here!

Why is the snowman worried?
Snowsharks!

saturday smut: missing Aberdeen (and winter snow)

04 Saturday Dec 2010

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in a sense of place

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british isles, family, outdoors, photos

As I’m writing this it’s Friday night of a really long, long week … the penultimate week of my semester in which all my projects were wrapping up and life just generally felt like one damn thing after another.

And then I found these lovely photographs made available online at The Scotsman (Edinburgh), snapshots taken by Scots from around the country documenting the wild winter weather they’ve been having in Britain this week. Since it’s December 3rd here in Boston and we’ve yet to see a single flake of snow (though the forecasters promise some Monday), I’m going to indulge in a little winter weather photo porn.

Enjoy!

Kildrummy, Aberdeenshire (by Darren)
Balerno (by Alan Macmillan)
Christmas Fair, Princes Street Gardens, Edinburgh (by Sarah McPhee)
Newtongrange (by S. Robert)
Sheep in the Borders (John Peters)

Click through to see all the rest in four parts at The Scotsman’s website.

midweek calm (in pictures)

27 Wednesday Oct 2010

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in a sense of place

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boston, photos

Sunday Morning at Chestnut Hill Reservoir
Photograph by Anna J. Cook, 2010-10-24
 

Thanks to Hanna for letting me borrow the camera to snap this photograph. Hope y’all have a good Wednesday and have things to look forward to in the second half of the week.

from the neighborhood: colors from maine

15 Wednesday Sep 2010

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family, maine, photos


Fresh tomatoes from Kevin and Linda’s garden.


Balls of carded fiber, dyed with home-grown indigo by Linda.


After hurricane Earl blew through, we had a gorgeous weekend.

Monty the cat on Linda's lap
Monty is suspicious of visitors, but braved our presence to spend a few minutes on Linda’s lap Sunday evening while we were watching movies.

Hope y’all are having a good week; happy 15th of September … in six more days it will officially be fall. Maybe next time we head north, there will be some red and orange color in the trees.

work+school+life: launching year four

09 Thursday Sep 2010

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domesticity, education, family, history, librarians, simmons

The Leonard P. Zakim Bunker Hill Memorial Bridge (Boston, MA), by garreyf.
Made available at Flickr.com.

It’s the week after Labor Day and thus that time of year again … to look back and look forward and wonder when that third year (that seemed so speedy-fast and incredibly filled with eventfulness at the same time) slid by and to wonder what the year ahead is going to bring.

Hard to believe this is the third anniversary, already, of my move to Boston. (See my post from the end of year one and from year two here). With the hectic nature of the last two weeks (punctuated by several severe migraine-grade headaches), I can’t say that I’ve had a lot of time to reflect meaningfully on the question of whether I feel more authentically “Bostonian” now than I did at this point last year, when I was still very much on the fence. But here I still am, and here Hanna and I are likely to stay for at least the medium term (job opportunities willing!). I admit, in my heart of hearts, to longing for the Pacific Northwest now and again, since it has always felt like something of my second home — and both of us have close friends and family ties there. But the possibility of such a cross-country move is in the distant world of future possibilities, alongside Hanna’s equally important lifelong desire to live, for at least a time, in England. For now, our life is here.

And a jam-packed-full life it is at the minute!

Hanna, who graduated with her MA (History) and MS (Library Science) last December, is working as a processing archivist at the Countway Medical Library at Harvard and as an archives assistant at Northeastern (a position I now share with her). She’s working on studying for her GRE, with plans to pursue her PhD in Irish History, and in her spare time can be found blogging both at …fly over me, evil angel… and her recently-created companion tumblr feed, evil angel. I suggest to any of you reading this that you check out both if what you’re looking for are all the most entertaining links on current events in Britain/Ireland, in the world of books, libraries and archives, and genre fiction/film. As she regularly points out, Hanna’s RSS feeds are way more diverse than mine, and I always end up learning the most random and interesting things!

I’m in my final semester of work for my Library Science degree, and taking two classes: one on archives management and the other on the curation of digital materials. While both classes promise to be useful for my future work as a librarian, I’m definitely ready to be finished with formal schooling. Being a student makes me claustrophobic, prone to migraines, and depressed; it also tends to sap the pleasure out of the pursuit of learning, which I adore, and on the whole seems to be an unhealthy sort of thing for me to engage in. A bad match, personality-wise, I’ve discovered. Ironically even more so when the learning is intended to be of professional use rather than something I do because I find it intrinsically valuable (as with my history research).

To celebrate the completion of my degree, I am making plans to get my first tattoo. While I have yet to settle on a design, we discovered a kick-ass artist at Chameleon when Hanna got own inaugural tattoo (a Dr. Who question mark) over the summer, a joint birthday present from me and our friend Diana. I have two or three conceptual ideas in the pipeline right now, although I think for numero uno it might be one of the boats from Swallows and Amazons. My friend Ashley counsels that tattoos should be symbolic enough to be re-interpreted over time, wise words that make me hesitate to use something so pictoral. But I’m sitting with the image for the next few months to see how it feels, and then we’ll go from there! (If it all goes well, I’ll have to start thinking about what to get when I turn in the final draft of my thesis!)

Speaking of my thesis, the draft is away in the hands of my readers and will likely not be completed until next spring, although final deadlines are still in high-level negotiations. There are some arguments for finishing it this fall, but for quality-of-life reasons, and for quality-of-thesis reasons the handwriting is on my own personal wall that this isn’t going to happen. I don’t want to be miserable and over-extended for four months, which in turn will make my girlfriend feel miserable and over-extended as she tries to mop up my tears, soothe my migraines, and manage all of the things I simply won’t have time for. So we’re shooting for May, 2011 presently. Which is actually the term I originally projected I’d graduate (I’m making progress: it took my seven years for the B.A., so four years for the double Masters’ degrees ain’t shabby!)

Meanwhile, I’m working at my beloved Massachusetts Historical Society (from whence I am writing this) and also at Northeastern, as previously mentioned, where I tag-team a position as archives assistant with Hanna. My latest project is 20.65 cubic feet of records from Northeastern University’s cooperative education program, dating from the mid-1970s to the present. Lots of folders of interdepartmental memos and committee meeting minutes, not to mention all the internal dramas to which any organization is prone. I should also (fingers crossed!) finally be wrapping up, this October, the Marjorie Bouve scrapbook digitization project. We still don’t have a firm idea for how to display the images and information for users, but as soon as we have anything up and running I’ll be sure to link it here.

That’s all going to keep me more than busy enough, although I’m definitely looking forward to an October visit from my parents, over the Columbus Day weekend, and to some new blogging projects (i.e. the continuation of reading the (lesbian) classics with Danika the Lesbrarian; my copy of Beth Goobie’s Hello Groin arrived in the post just this morning!). Meanwhile, I’m looking forward to staying in touch with y’all via the usual modes, posting here when I can, and tumblr when I can’t.

And maybe, some time later in the fall or early next spring, you’ll see that we’ve finally taken the plunge and adopted a cat like we keep talking about doing. If we do, you’ll be some of the first people to know (’cause who can resist cute cat photos; I know I can’t!)

Best wishes for a lovely early autumn to you all, wherever you may be, and you’ll be hearing from me soon enough.

Peace,
Anna

it’s 100 degrees in Boston today

06 Tuesday Jul 2010

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in a sense of place

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boston, domesticity, family

Visual via @MartinClinton for @BostonTweet on YFrog

Hanna and I have been debating all summer about whether or not to get an air conditioner for our bedroom. When the temps get above ninety and the humidity is high, the city holds the heat like nobody’s business and it’s so, so hard to sleep.

We’d just turned down the offer of a free a/c unit from my colleague and friend, Heather, in favor of fans and cold cloths — but this past weekend has done us in. And we’re going to borrow Heather’s window unit after work tonight, in hopes of actually being able to get a good night’s sleep.

Long-term, though, we have pretty serious concerns about the environmental effect of conventional air conditioning. I’ve been hunting around the web today, looking for some eco-friendly ways to get our bedroom down to sleep-friendly temps and humidity. I found a good essay on Green Living Tips that talks about some of the better options, but sadly a lot of the best include structural changes to buildings that, living in an rented apartment, we don’t have control over. I was also disappointed to see that Evaporative Air Conditioners are, apparently, super-effective in arid desert environments but counter-productive in humid places like Boston (built on marshland!)

Bah.

So maybe the long-term solution is to move to Central Oregon after all, where we could enjoy the benefits of that High Desert air!

Any of you had experience looking for more eco-friendly air cooling options?

from the neighborhood: PSA graffiti

19 Wednesday May 2010

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in a sense of place

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boston, from the neighborhood, photos, random kindness

When Hanna and I arrived at the train station in Lowell a couple of weekends ago, en route to Lunenberg, we happened to spot this helpful message on the side of a traincar.

“Very soon the dead will rise out of their graves.”

I’m not sure if this is meant to be a eschatalogical prediction or a warning about zombie invasion. Either way, I feel the person who painted it with a certain public spiritedness about them.

Possibly, they could have benefitted from the company of whomever offered this bit of advice outside one of the Berklee School of Music buildings near the Massachusetts Historical Society.

“Keep your chin up, old sport.”

"our tea party has cookies!"

16 Friday Apr 2010

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in a sense of place

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boston, humor, photos, politics

Right-wing celebrity of the moment (a girl can hope, yeah?) Sara Palin appeared in Boston this past Wednesday, April 14th, for a whinge session with the Tea Party movement folks (there are even some here in Boston, who knew?) who are pissed about possibly getting better health care and all. So a group of gentle souls decided to hold a polite counter-protest in the form of an actual tea party. The kind where you dress up and have biscuits.

These tea partiers dressed to the nines (or at least the four-and-a-halves) and carried pretty signs with such slogans as

“Tea Drinkers for Civilized Discourse”

“Impoliteness does not bring peace.”

“Our tea party has cookies!”

and

“There is no trouble so great or grave that it cannot be much diminished by a nice cup of tea” (courtesy of philosopher Bernerd-Paul Heroux).

Hanna and I were unfortunately both working and unable to make the occasion (not to mention our lack of proper attire!) but a couple of folks who did make it have posted pictures on Flickr, the photo-sharing site, which are a joy to behold.

Have a lovely weekend, one and all.

*image credit: Parasol! made available by pensive.wombat @ Flickr.com.

thank you thursday: jet-lagged edition

25 Thursday Mar 2010

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in a sense of place

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boston, random kindness

The first summer I lived in Boston, a friend of mine (in town doing research at the Historical Society) took me out for lunch and left her wallet on the table when we left. Ten minutes later, when she realized it was gone and went back for it, someone had already taken it and disappeared. What followed were endless phone calls to put holds on credit cards, debit cards, renew IDs and replace other vital forms of information (library card anyone??). Not as catastrophic as it could have been in the identity theft department, but certainly a headache all around.

Color photograph of Boston T (electric train), Cleveland Circle line, crossing the Coolidge Corner intersection in Brookline, Mass. Photograph by Anna Cook, 2009.So this morning, when — tired and distracted by the back-from-research-trip “to do” list — I left my wallet at the Coolidge Corner post office on my way to work, and didn’t realize I had abandon it until about fifteen minutes (and a mile’s walk) later, I was prepared for the worst. I was already starting to make a mental list of the places I was going to have to phone as soon as possible to make sure our bank accounts weren’t drained through the ATM machine.

Which is why I would like to extend my fervent thanks to the anonymous, civic-minded soul who picked up my wallet from the post office counter and turned it in — every piece of money-generating plastic inside — and handed it in to the post office staff. So that when I turned up, sweaty and anxious from my one-mile trek back up the road, they could hand it back to me.

I don’t expect generosity from strangers, but it’s sure as hell a wonderful feeling to know there are people out there in the world who choose to be generous in their daily lives. Generous to someone they’ve never met, but whose life they’ve just made a hell of a lot less stressful than it could have been today. So whomever you are: Thanks.

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"the past is a wild party; check your preconceptions at the door." ~ Emma Donoghue

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