I’m kind of overwhelmed by the amount of work needing doing at Pinecone Park! I had to water all the beds before I could get to weed whacking and planting. Plus, I had to walk Her Highness, but I love our morning walks. At this time of year, I can walk early knowing that I’m unlikely to run into anyone.
We walked bright and early, and then I came home to get to work. First, I did some weed whacking and then, while the whacker battery recharged, I got busy with watering the beds. That pattern continued until all the beds were well watered. And then endless raking. It’s pure joy to be outside and working on beautifying P.P. I loved every second of work yesterday.
It’s also joyful to know that rain is coming. It’s shocking to discover, after I think that I have done such a good job of watering all my beds, how shallow the wet soil is. Mere centimetres deep, the soil is bone dry.
Our walk was lovely, and I like working in the yard and garden, but it’ not easy for this old man. When I weed whack, my arms and hands are very shaky for about half an hour afterwards. It’s difficult to do things with my hands. Luckily, watering only requires squeezing a handle. Watering in zen-like compared to weed whacking, but the whacking is vastly improving the look of Pinecone Park!
When I stopped to feed lunch to the brood and to have my own meal, it was 11:30 and I was extremely pleased with my progress. I’d cleared the weeds on just under half of the backyard weed fields and watered all the backyard beds. After lunch, when I went back to it, I began by watering the edible garden and the front bed and the fruit trees, and then the battery was ready for me to go back to whacking.
At 14:30, I took a break. I’d finished all the raking where I’d whacked, so while the battery recharged, I took Her Highness for our afternoon walk. Then I came home to whack one more section of the yard calling it quits for the day. I’ll continue today. I’ll finish the whacking and raking I reckon, and then I’ll be toting all the detritus to the back forty.
After that, all the essential work is done, except for planting the remainder of my new babies into the beds. Then I’ll start fertilizing everything before the rains come on Friday and Saturday. I hope!
I’m amazed by how good the yard looks even though it’s a field of weeds. When it’s all whacked, it looks clean and cared for, and it makes for a green carpet (with gaps), making the gardens stand out much better. I was thrilled by how much work I got done yesterday, and I look forward
And now, it’s going to be easy to maintain. I’m really going to enjoy attending to little details here and there that will beautify the beds even more. Some pruning, cleaning the few remaining beds I haven’t yet cleared of cones and needles, fixing the fence around the Apple tree, and putting pebbles around some of the trees and vines to reduce evaporation.
Pinecone Park is an ideal adult playground (see below).
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Last night, I asked AI if I was considered mentally ill due to my CPTSD and FND diagnoses. I got an interesting response.
“No. … having Complex PTSD (CPTSD) and Functional Neurological Disorder (FND) … means that your central nervous system is experiencing severe dysregulation.
“Medical diagnostic manuals classify these conditions under psychiatric, trauma-related, or somatic categories … modern neuroscience views them as brain-based, physiological disorders of the nervous system…. The functioning and communication lines between your brain and body are altered.
“CPTSD and FND are deeply intertwined. Prolonged inescapable trauma (CPTSD) keeps your brain in a permanent survival mode (fight-or-flight). Over time, this intense, chronic neurological stress ‘spills over’ into physical symptoms, causing the brain to misfire signals to the body (FND).
I’m glad to know that I’m not mentally ill, and I better understand myself after reading this. There was also a section on how both conditions are classified. Here’s all of it, but it’s the last sentence that I loved! It was such an concise and understandable description of what FND is.
“CPTSD is classified as a severe and trauma-related disorder by the World Health Organization’s IDC-11. An overwhelmed nervous system stuck in a persistent state of hyperarousal and survival threat.
“FND is classified under ‘Somatic Symptom’ or ‘Conversion’ disorder in the psychiatric DSM manual. A neuro-circuitry disorder sitting directly at the intersection of neurology and psychiatry.”
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Connie’s niece, my ‘cousin’ Ann, lived in Athens, and while she was there, all my birthday and Christmas presents were things she would get in the museum gift shop. The best gift I ever got was a replica of the head of a young man who was looking down. It was the greatest thing I’d ever owned.
I became obsessed with Greek history—Greek artistic, judicial and cultural history, not about war. So, off I went to visit the country. Top of my list of things to see was the pass of Thermopylae. There is absolutely nothing there. It was on the map, but we were on a road with a railing, and it was barren rock all around us. It was impossible to stop, but I saw a road sign at one point naming the pass.
It was such a disappointment. I took Latin. I’d translated text about Thermopylae often in my studies. It was famous because a small Greek army held off an invading Persian army. It was a moral victory; the Greeks were eventually overtaken. I thought the site would be a big deal in Greece and that there’d be a park with historical markers and all that, but no. There was nothing at all there.
We kept going and went to Delphi. I’d seen billions of images of the statuary and pieces of architecture. I felt that I was going to a holy place of history when we arrived to walk in blisteringly hot air.
I had read, in a creditable source, that the oracles spoke gibberish. The Oracles were women serving as high priestesses in the Temple of Apollo. They were elected to the position and were women, usually over fifty years of age.
History says great leaders sought the oracle’s advice before going into battle or when considering a war. History also says that the oracle would go into a fissure in the earth, a grotto, and inhale fumes coming up through a vent, and that sent her into a trance.
She would then leave the grotto and go to the priests to ‘deliver messages from Apollo,’ and then the priests would explain what Appollo said. I read a lot about Greece, and many legends and records include a visit to the oracle. That led to reading a lot about these priestesses.
The historical myth about the oracles is that they were intoxicated by the fumes they inhaled and spoke gibberish to the priests. The priests then interpreted the gibberish to speak for Apollo. Contemporary scholars believe that the historical record proves that the oracles were lucid and respected advisors.
I took a tour in Delphi so that I could hear what they said about the oracle. In her presentation to us about the Temple, the guide mentioned the oracle and all she said about her was that she served in the temple and was the high priestess. So, when we got to our next presentation site, during our walkabout time after her presentation, I asked her what she thought. Was the oracle a stoned, gibberish speaking woman, or a wise advisor?
It was like talking to Barbie. Barbie as a hockey player, deflecting my every question, like a skilled goalie. She was frozen in her professional role and would not go off script. I was crushed. Then Barbi turned to point out some text on the temple wall to our group and redeemed herself in my eyes.
It was two short words up high on the wall, and she spoke the words we were looking at in Greek. Then she told us that in English the words mean, ‘know thyself.’ And I had a moment when she said that.
When I quit the Catholic church, I thought all religion was hooey. But part of me was sad to leave. I’d embraced the church. I sang in the choir (ahem, I was a soloist), acted in church plays, went to Catholic camp, and made friends. There were lots of Catholic things to do, but I when I realized I was gay I knew that I had to leave. Besides, to the church I was a bastard. And my birth mother was a venal sinner for having me. I was team gay bastard, so I left the church.
I was twelve when I invented my new faith: the Church of Science. I have never met another member of this church, so although there may be other members out there living and worshipping, I feel that I invented this church. I took my Catholic hierarchical structure of faith, from pope to parish priest, plus their heavenly hierarchy, and I distributed these titles of faith to the cosmos of great scientists , both historical and contemporary, and added my personal favourites (and there are a lot of them).
And …
I made my own set of commandments. They’ve never been written down; they exist only in my memory. One is: ‘Never be where I’m not wanted.’ Another one, added to my commandment list long before the phrase became part of US politics, is: ‘Ask, don’t tell.’ And another: ‘Never say should.’
I don’t remember how I learned about this saying. It was just there, in my head, when I first began to become wary of people no matter how they presented. Early on, I learned about violence. I experienced it. And I saw it on TV, read about it in literature and history, saw it in movies and play, and in the playground. I saw conflict everywhere, and I knew that it could erupt in those who seemed least likely to be violent. In my long life, I have never been violent. I respect all life and never intentionally kill living things (except mosquitoes).
I decided that in the Church of Science, focus is on the self. In my church, you, me, we—everyone is God of our own world. I came to believe that if you focused on understanding yourself and your moral and societal responsibilities that there would be far less violence. And so, my first commandment became: Know thyself.
I was deeply moved to see those words at Delphi. Thoughts of Ann’s influence on me, the boy’s head sculpture, Delphi’s beauty and significance, the heat, it all got to me. I felt immensely proud that my first commandment was carved in the Temple of Apollo in Delphi.
And then Barbie led a Q & A. And she was great off-script.
BEFORE
| As it was when I arrived. |
| I arrived in October 2017. This is the backyard in 2018. The fence is up and all the mechanical crap and construction detritus are gone from the yard. |
| Both the front and back yard had no soil. It was sheet sandstone with years of needles and cones on top, and covered in weeds and moss. |
| 2018 putting soil down in the front yard. |
| After adding soil to the backyard, I planted grass which lasted two months and then died because I wouldn't water the lawns. |
| The weed feels have been trimmed and it makes all the plants and beds pop out as you take in the view at P.P. |
| Done in the foreground, not in the back. I'll do that section today. |
| Laburnum. |
| This section show you what leaving the weeds to grow looks like. |
| P.P. is a jungle now. Compare this to the shot above when the yard was cleaned of all the crap left by the previous owners, but void of plants. |
| You can't even see the fence anymore. |












































