Wednesday, January 30, 2013

TOURING A NEIGHBOR'S FARM

Hi out there,"

Sander Houk and Don Brian visited a farm with a beautiful new barn and an anaerobic digester near the SALT (Senior Activists Living Together) farm in Linseville, PA. Join us. Surely you can muster up enought get-up-and-go to to check us out with yous thoughts, inspirations, and talents. We need  people who are willing to do good, productive, and resourceful things to advance our society in small ways and large. Help us build a Field of Deams. If you come we will build it.  Don't be timid. Come with your talents! Help us! Come for a visit! Come to stay! Just don't delay! Here are some pictures of our farm tour today:




 
Sander Houk (right) gets a good explanation from Don Bortnick about how milk is cooled. 
 
Sander Houk and Don Bortnick in front of the building that houses the engine fueled by the anaerobic digesters at the Bortnick Dairy Farm in Conneautville, PA near the SALT (Senior Activists Living Together) farm a few miles away in Linesville, PA
 
 
Don Brian (left) with Don Bortnick with the anaerobic digester in the background
 
 
 
 Excess gas produced by the anaerobic digesters being burned as seen by the flames in the background
 
 
 
One of the anaerobic digestors on the Bortnick dairy farm near the Linesville, PA SALT (Senior Activists Living Together) farm.
 
 

Friday, January 25, 2013

January 25

We sit here this evening as Don plunges into his first volume, (presently titled) Autism and the Deference Syndrome: When the System Becomes Sinister. Don has been playing with a downloaded program, BookSmart, to self-publish his life's work. His excitement boils over and he's going on 30 pages just within the last few days, and about 20 other ideas for the next volumes. But we need to actually get writing. Lynnell and her workers (Don and Sander) need to find grants to apply for to make SALT energy efficient, make the program legal, and find people to work over the summer beyond the few we have volunteered already. We need more people. We need more funds. We need to get things moving. These last three weeks made us sure that this program is more than possible, marketable, and that people love the idea, but we need more than that. We need your help. We cannot have a revolution alone.

Friday, January 18, 2013

January 18


In life we are constantly moving into a new phase. Knowing how, where, and when to do this as gracefully as possible is not usually accomplished without experiencing anxiety and growing pains.

One way or another we all depend upon one another even though it is not all that easy to always get along. We all have a need to be happy, independent, and contented, while realizing that aloneness constitutes loneliness. Joyfulness in concert with the company of others leads to a longer, healthier life. People are social interactive and interdependent beings who collectively thrive by being united, engaged, and supportively observant of one another.

We here at SALT believe that there are countless individuals who have worked in environments that made them uncomfortable because of the unfair and unjust practices observed. We know right from wrong and we are not content to look the other way. We are also not content to leave a broken system, which also breaks hearts and people, unfixed for the next generation. Just to observe problems and injustices and not take action to be part of the solution is a wasted life. We are going to leave this life whether we wasted it or used it.

We have observed countless fraudulent and unethical business and service practices. Because of our observations we have something to constructively offer. We can serve one another in many ways just by being around, caring, contributing good will and merriment, and orchestrating interesting things to do and see. We can delay or cancel the necessity of assuming life in an assisted living facility or a nursing home. We can be a benefit to each other and those in every generation if we make the effort to keep ourselves healthy, active, and alert.

We have skills that will serve us well as we simply collectively strive for the truth. We deserve to live in an environment where our well-being will be respected and protected. If we can be objective and open-minded we will provide a model for others to emulate.

There is an overwhelming need for us to be investigative reporters who maintain newsletters and other publications that mandate that the system be more accountable, more effective, and just, relative to cost and unbiased performance. We need ethnic, social, cultural, talent, and skill diversity. We need ethical caring people who represent a wide range of occupations, professions, hobbies, and interests. We need to be flexible. We will have plenty of time to get rigid after we die.

Since we have an ongoing bed and breakfast, potentially interested individuals can visit us and interact with us on as many occasions as they desire before deciding whether they would like to come for a short term trial experience, a longer stay, or a permanent residence. The website address for the B&B is http://wynkenblynkennod.com .

Peace and solidarity,


Don

Wednesday, January 16, 2013

January 16


Sander Houk prepared a Chinese dinner for us at the Linesville farm tonight. We watched a documentary titled Guns, Germs, and Steel. Don charged up the Massey Ferguson tractor and the Thomas Skid Steer, took many pictures inside and outside of the pole barn, including carpentry and electrical work recently done there. Don also removed a load of wood and steel (door, trim, scrap wood, bed frame, etc.) from the Suburban and stored it in the pole barn. Don, Lynnell, and Sander have mainly been working on SALT projects and ideas for developing and marketing SALT overall. Lynnell finally got around to taking down the Christmas tree today. Sander was making some pleasant sounds on his mandolin this evening.

We were all saddened today by the news of the suicide death of Aaron Swartz. This represents a miscarriage of justice and a reprehensible move on the part of MIT and the U.S. Attorney Generals Office. This 26-year-old man was not a felon. He was not a criminal. He was terrorized and abused by his own government. He was actually providing a commendable service to ordinary Americans. The big ruthless and bullying agents of the system (the partnership of government and corporate evil) have struck again and slaughtered an innocent lamb. Do you really wonder why this nation has so little credibility when it comes to human decency? When are we going to join hands and demand an end to citizen abuse by the system?

Tuesday, January 15, 2013

A canned letter

We here at SALT know that many of you are very busy making this world more informed and more just. We know that you have many important options to consider, in terms of participation or promotion.  but I hope SALT might interest you and that you will take the time and make the effort to investigate us further.

My name is Aleksander "Sander" Houk and I am a Bennington College student working with a couple (named Don and Lynnell Brian) to start a commune in Pennsylvania. Here at SALT we want to start an alternative living/shared housing arrangement for diverse senior activists. It will be used to support the Occupy movement and act as its own strain of direct action activists who want to uncover the ills of our politico-economic system. It will be an environmentally sustainable community where all members will be encouraged to pursue their own interests, continue their work outside, build something here, and come and go as desired. There will be a gym, a dining hall, a library, a publishing house, a yoga barn, a green house, an organic garden, and other facilities. Decisions will be made collectively through direct consensus and any conflicts that may arise between members will be resolved through mediation. This last week we have been working to collaborate with #Occupy organizers, and activist artists. Also, I will be meeting shortly with Noam Chomsky. If you would like to hear more, or join us, please do not hesitate to contact us. It would be greatly appreciated, especially given the profound work all of you have done and continue to do every day of the week.

Monday, January 7, 2013

About Lynnell


"Growing up an only child in a small extended family in Meadville, PA  I learned to entertain myself and work alone.  However, much of my time was focused on lessons of one kind or another.  I took several different instrumental lessons, a variety of dance lessons, and classes at the YWCA  while at the same time  attending to the academics of public school.  Thus most of my interaction with peers was in a controlled setting.   In high school I was active in choral groups, thespian performances, sports, and church youth groups.

I graduated from Allegheny College, a small liberal arts school, with a BS in psychology and continued an extra year after graduating to earn my Pennsylvania elementary teaching certificate.  I then taught school for two years before marrying my husband.  We recently celebrated our 45th wedding anniversary.  We both entered graduate school at IUP during our first year of marriage.  I was in a master's level program studying to become a guidance counselor, and he was in doctoral level program in psychology and school curriculum and administration.

During this time we became the proud parents of our only son. He will soon be 40 and lives in NYC.  Over the next 5 years we made several moves living in Baltimore, MD, Meadville, State College, Huntingdon, and Pittsburgh,PA; Ashtabula and Rock Creek, OH; and back to Meadville.  During this same short five-year period my husband and I started a state-licensed private school and training center for autistic children and adults.  Here I worked as a therapist and teacher.  I continued my graduate studies at Edinboro with an emphasis in Special Education.  With my new study concentration and  experience I returned to the public school classroom as a tutor and full-time special education teacher in Ohio.  After 26+ years in this position I retired from teaching.  It had been a challenging but very rewarding assignment.  Watching those frustrated young students experience the joy of learning and success, despite all of the obstacles that they faced in a system that not only did not meet their needs but failed to make accommodations, made my efforts worthwhile.

Even before I made my decision to retire from a career in teaching I had launched myself into a new enterprise.  I opened a bed and breakfast.  This new endeavor requires that I wear many hats at once to keep Wynken, Blynken, and Nod up and running.  With only Don (my husband) and I on staff we must try to be bookkeeper, banker, baker, landscaper, launderer, housekeeper, consierge, and more.  The B&B has allowed us to meet hundreds of wonderful people who have come as guests and left as friends over the past dozen or so years.

Now the next chapter in my life is a vision on the horizon.  I want to create a "family" of unrelated seniors who can share their talents and tasks while living in shared housing. Members will hopefully encourage each other to live a healthy lifestyle as well as adhere to a healthy diet.  Together we may be able to enrich our own daily experiences while contributing to a more just and promising world.  I believe that as we age we still have much to give to others and to society as a whole.  However,  so much that we cannot accomplish single-handedly can be managed with ease with just a couple extra hands or insights.  I hope we can see this vision become a reality."

-Lynnell Brian January, 8th 2013