Categories
Stories In Focus

Activity of the Week: Skiing

Cross-Country and Downhill Skiing, Snowboarding, and Snowshoeing.

“Warm is bad, cold is good. Sun is bad, snow is good.” This chant echoed across the snow as Professor of Recreation and Physical Education Thomas Kettlecamp’s cross-country skiing class began their first day of swishing through the snow on slick runners.

During a winter in which temperatures plummeted and remained at the bone-chilling -30 degrees, the opportunity to catch a little fresh air without freezing your lungs seems like a distant memory. Though this winter has been record-breakingly cold with frigid temperatures that froze boogers in between classes and paralyzed productivity, activity on the trails and at the ski hill has been bustling. For skiers, snowboarders, and snowshoers alike this winter has been ideal. The cross-country and downhill skiing classes did not get canceled once, a new record according to Kettlecamp.

JonEckendorf Skiing - Killington,VTParticipating in outdoor activities such as skiing, snowshoeing, or snowboarding provides an opportunity to stretch out the legs and unflatten the behind. Skiing is one of the most beneficial activities to participate in, since it targets muscles all over the body much like swimming. It is also a physical activity that can continue into older age as other exercises become more difficult or too damaging to the body. While snowboarding or snowshoeing may not provide as complete of a workout or may take a larger toll on the body, they are nevertheless popular sports that provide a refreshing break from what can become the dreary days of winter.

As we lift our heads to the wind to sniff long anticipated signs of spring, do not forget to catch the last few days on the slopes before the snow melts! Send out winter with a wave and the mantra that all Kettlecamp’s classes do: “Cold is bad, warm is good. Snow is bad, sun is good.”

Categories
Opinions

For the Beauty of the Earth

I grew up in trees. I loved to climb to the highest branches during a storm to be part of their dance with the wind, or to wrap my legs around the lowest branch and swing down to see the world from a new perspective. My love for trees was so faithful that the day the Old Maple in my yard was cut down, I did not talk to my parents for the rest of the day. But, I also grew up pulling the legs off of spiders with my older siblings and making a pile of their bodies. These juxtaposing images of my childhood pastimes illustrate the conflict between my appreciation and relationship with the earth, and a learned posture of entitlement over the created world.

KTQuoteMy posture of entitlement assumed a hierarchy of value: myself and all of humanity at the top, and Nature at the bottom. I only knew, despite my life-long love for trees, nature’s purpose to be a resource for human use and exploitation. I did not know the intrinsic value of the earth.

Nature is not part of a hierarchy with humanity, it is meant to be in relationship with us — a relationship we have the responsibility to reconcile. Dorothy Sayers, a nineteenth century Oxford intellect and writer, postulates, in her book ‘The Mind of the Maker’, that we are made in the image of God, Imago Dei, and God is the Creator of all, so we therefore are “mini-creators”. Sayers goes further to state that we, as “mini-creators”, have the ability to create “good” and “evil”, and the responsibility to create “good”. We can find clear examples of this truth all around us: in our relationships, our school work, our treatment of our bodies, etc. But more evasive are the examples of “creating” that do not appear directly linked to the relational or physical formation of “making” something. For example, when we buy a product we do not think of it as creating, but the action of purchasing a product helps create a demand for that product. Whether extrinsically or intrinsically, we are always creating.

If we believe we create with every thought, word, and action, what then should our relationship be toward the created world around us? Traditionally, our posture toward the earth in the Western hemisphere has been one of ownership and dominance. We have interacted with nature on the prideful basis of control over its resources and have exploited them according to our “needs”. Instead of varying crops or resting fields to replenish the soil, we plant acres upon acres of corn, ignoring the depletion of nutrients, to feed the demand for cheap, conservable goods. We have damaged our relationship with the earth, as Hopkins illustrates in his poem ‘God’s Grandeur’: “Generations have trod, have trod have trod;/And all is seared with trade; bleared, smeared with toil;/And wears man’s smudge and shares man’s smell: the soil/Is bare now, nor can foot feel, being shod.” We have put on our shoes and deceived ourselves into believing that what we create (demand, waste, carbon dioxide, etc.) has no lasting degenerative impact.

Where does that leave us? Beyond holding the ideal to create “good”, what are we to do? What we do will look different according to each person, community, environment, etc. Instead, we should ask: how can we be in a reconciled relationship with Nature? Just as we hold the responsibility to be in right relationship with each other and live in community together, so we hold the responsibility to be in a reconciled relationship, and live in community, with the earth. If we know how to be in right relationship, then our actions will, albeit imperfectly, reflect Whose image we are made in. To learn how to do that, well, I recommend listening to the geese: “….the wild geese, high in the clean blue air,/are heading home again./Whoever you are, no matter how lonely,/the world offers itself to your imagination,/calls to you like the wild geese, harsh and exciting/over and over announcing your place/in the family of things.” (Mary Oliver, ‘Wild Geese’)

Categories
Arts

Homecoming Spot 2013 Review

SPOT hosts Hannah Lily and Will Strowe made their way on stage in sweatshirts and sweatbands, in a tribute to Sylvester Stallone’s “Rocky”, to kick start the 2013 Homecoming SPOT this past Saturday. A new spin on the structure of SPOT featured student acts of talent along with the usual videos, skits, dances, and songs that elicited laughter – for the most part. This year’s addition of crowd questionnaires filled in the awkward gaps between acts and kept the crowd engaged, while the surprise stage visits of Houghton graduate celebrities “Beardo” and “Dreads” kept the audience on their toes. From ‘What Does the Fox Say?” to raps to German accents, SPOT displayed a broad array of talents and wit from faculty and students alike.

SPOTCAB was two for two in their video contributions; their “Valentine’s Day” movie trailer depicted the almost inexhaustible joke of awkward Houghton couples and revealed the identity of stars within our midst. Their “Valentine’s Day” video was followed up by a rendition of “The Hunger Games” in which Sodexo kept a careful eye on the fruit to student ratio. First year students were comforted in their fight against the freshmen 15 by Hanz and Franz’s “Buddy Workout” video. The final contender in the video section, a remake of the recently viral YouTube music video “What Does the Fox Say?,” did not disappoint in its ridiculous hilarity and continuously perplexing question: what does the fox say?

While the SPOT videos were largely accepted as solid contributions to the expected humor of the night, the skits faired a harsher fate. Alumni Derrick Tennant, ‘93, received a mixed reaction to his lengthy stand-up comedy act; half the time the audience was unsure whether to laugh or “aww” at the jokes that more often than not poked fun at his own partial paralysis. Other skits, while possibly written with good intentions of entertainment, made light of serious issues and events that crossed the line into rudeness and insensitivity.

The new inclusion of purely talent acts was most evidently displayed in the dance performances. The audience was impressed by the skills stepped, jigged, lept, and tapped across the stage, such as when a student trio performed a tap from the Broadway musical “Newsies.” And while there was no stepping, jigging, leaping, or tapping done by the goat brought in for Taylor Swift’s song “Trouble”, he was an automatic crowd pleaser.

An historical crowd favorite, Danny Kim came back to his former glory as a “big deal” with a rap performance that, despite slip-ups, was carried off with style by him and Cory Martin. “Matilda Jane” however displayed less style and more confusion – who is Matilda Jane again? And no doubt was left in anyone’s mind what dessert the Hardy twins ask for their birthday. Modified songs from Hercules, Veggie Tales, Pitch Perfect, and Late Night with Jimmy Fallon vocalized the musical talents and creativity of various students; and Dean Jordan apparently originated from Mt. Olympus not Philadelphia, as previously understood.

While some acts fell flat of their intended comedic effect, resulting in boredom or downright offense, homecoming spirits created an atmosphere of camaraderie and geniality that encompassed both the audience and performers.