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Posts Tagged ‘Minnesota

Square Lake: An Abundance of Divers

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A Bounty of Lakes to Explore–Even in October

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Square Lake is a diving destination because of the clear water. That water is also very cold.

More on “bountiful” here.

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Written by kirkistan

October 4, 2014 at 9:53 am

How to Make Your Message Permanent

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A tip from a prehistoric consultant

First: Forget about it. Nothing is permanent—at least not in the way advertising mavens augur.

Second: OK—if you insist—make your message about someone else. Make your message give back more than it takes in. “GE” branded on a rock would never last. Even the Apple logo will be chiseled away by Microsoft rebels. But a man with jointed wings, well, who can resist that story?

Who can resist the story about the “Thunder Being”?]

Who can resist the story about the “Thunder Being”?

Prehistoric peoples stopped by these ancient rocks to tell their version of the human condition. So they carved/picked/incised/abraded their messages into the exposed Sioux quartzite outside Comfrey, Minnesota long before there was a Comfrey or a Minnesota or a U.S. of A. Maybe before the pyramids and Stonehenge. Ancients left messages here to direct and entertain passers-by.

Why make your message permanent? We understand marketing communications for companies—it’s about keeping the wheels of commerce turning. But you personally—what messages do you have to communicate? And why would you make them permanent? I argue that your take on the human condition comes out in the way you do your work, the way you interact with family, friends, colleagues, and even the way you see/refuse to see the homeless guy at the end of the exit ramp. And all these daily interactions amount to a carving and incising that is far more permanent than any of us imagine.

The Jeffers Petroglyphs tell a story that became a destination.

The Jeffers Petroglyphs tell a story that became a destination.

Our conversations have an enormous (cumulative) effect on the people around us. An effect that may move through generations.

What exactly is your message, anyway?

 

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Image credit: Kirk Livingston

Our State Fair Was A Great State Fair

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Written by kirkistan

September 21, 2014 at 8:24 am

Pipestone National Monument

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September 20, 2014 at 8:07 am

Minnesota Death Watch: Not Heart Disease, But Cancer. Then Stroke. If All Goes Well: Alzheimer’s.

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Written by kirkistan

June 4, 2014 at 8:10 am

St. Paul: Still Cold

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February 10, 2014 at 10:04 am

10,000 Parking Lots

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Written by kirkistan

January 6, 2014 at 9:05 am

Concrete Ledge with a View

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Ailsa’s focus on birds (Where’s my backpack?/Travel theme: Birds) got me thinking about these pigeons I saw in Saint Paul, Minnesota.

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When a woman below started sprinkling handfuls of seed on the sidewalk, the pigeons dropped like curtains of rain. I was not practiced enough with shutter speed to catch the action. But I did catch them looking smug and satisfied.

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Image Credit: Kirk Livingston

Written by kirkistan

December 29, 2013 at 5:00 am

Weekly Photo Challenge: Layers—From Civilization to Anarchy

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Written by kirkistan

November 21, 2013 at 10:16 am

Theology of Place: Minnesota

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WWFD: What Would Fred Do?

Ever since I read of Fred Sanders’ work developing a theology of place in California, I cannot stop thinking what such a set of thoughts and conversations would look like for Minnesota. Mr. Sanders developed the notion after teaching a summer undergraduate class at Biola University focused on California authors and essayists.

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Here’s Sanders describing his project from the EPS blog:

I wanted to apply that great books approach to California literature, about which I knew very little. I just had an instinct that the perennialist approach, in which we read the proven classics, “the best which has been thought or said” in the history of the western world, would benefit from a little dose of localism, where we investigate a regional heritage and get to know our own surroundings.

A Minnesota-based project would have a lot of moving parts.

There are the obvious Lutheran influences, of course. From Germany and Sweden. Catholic influences are also strong and vocal and from everywhere. The two cities where the majority of Minnesota’s population lives, Minneapolis and St. Paul (plus surrounding suburbs), are themselves launching grounds for waves of immigrant communities. Irish folks, Northern Europeans of every stripe. More lately Hmong and Somali folks have entered the area. There are communities of people from India and Ghana and Thailand. The Native American community should be an anchoring presence. Just walking the neighborhoods reveals much about what is important to the different groups.

Then there are the literature pieces: from F. Scott’s newly rejuvenated Great Gatsby to the benign(ish) Lake Wobegon characterization of Minnesota to Augsburg Fortress publishing insightful theological tomes to the nationally recognized Milkweed Editions. I’m missing lots and this is just for starters.

There’s all the science and medicine and vast amounts of research taking place at various colleges and universities. Medical devices and industry headquarters. The advertising and design and communication communities are clever and vocal. How would one start to get a handle on a theology of place: what are the priorities of the people of these communities? How does faith mix into the public and private lives of the people who live here? And what have the results been and what can we say about what is likely to develop in this vast mix?

Maybe the beginning point is to follow the lead of Minnesotan Andy Sturdevant who’s MinnPost column The Stroll is a weekly chronicle of pedestrian interestingness in the Twin Cities. Stuff we typically we don’t see because we rarely leave our cars.

Maybe we need our theologians and philosophers and artists to take group hikes through the cities, followed by a beverage and a discussion about what they saw and understood and what it all meant.

I’d sign up for that walk.

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Image credit: Alli Livingston