Legacy: How the Pain of More Honestly Reassessing Our Ancestor’s Legacy Might Secure a Better Legacy for Us. #70 #cong24 #legacy

Synopsis:

When I reflect on the legacy of my local ancestry, I now feel both pride and discomfort. The field by my grandparents’ house once symbolized joy and safety for me, but the story of a nameless famine victim suggests that our nation’s survival was shaped by harder choices and more moral compromises than we like to admit. As we face an uncertain future again, maybe those harder lessons, those more unpalatable traits, are just what we need to survive and thrive again.

Total Words

1,154

Reading Time in Minutes

5

Key Takeaways:

  1. We are not being fully honest with ourselves about our colonial past.
  2. Our Famine ancestors were taught to turn a blind eye, or worse
  3. We don’t seem to appreciate that we are the descendants of the survivors
  4. We might need those survival skills sooner than we think

About Damian Costello:

Born in Cong. Father of three. One time Industrial Designer, Innovation Consultant, Strategist, Futurist. Philosophy fan. This is my 10th Congregation.

After years on my own and in start ups, I went into a French Digital Technology Multinational called Expleo last year to enlist a bigger team in my mission to save the Multinational Pharma and Medtech Manufacturing Sector In Ireland, and by extension the fabric and prosperity of rural Ireland.

Contacting Damian Costello:

You can connect with Damian by email.

By Damian Costello

The photograph I’ve shared here is of the front gate of my grandparents’ house just outside the village of Cong, Co. Mayo. All the cousins grew up referring to the field to the right of the picture as ‘the road field’, for obvious reasons. Endless games of football were played here over multiple generations, accessed by the stile visible to the right. I remember helping making hay in that field on days full of cousins, bottles of tea, and raucous laughter. This field is part of the legacy I inherited, and part of what makes me so proud to be Irish.

However, since I first heard of this year’s topic “Legacy” I haven’t been able to get another anecdote from family lore out of my head. A story whose significance I had overlooked all my life in a manner that parallels some of the flaws in this country’s relationship with its troubled past. Flaws that maybe we now need to confront and reconcile.

It is said, that during the Famine years, a woman died on the road between this gate and the stile. It is not remembered, at least not by me, who she was, or where she had come from. Nor do I remember when I first heard it, but I do remember feeling safe and lucky to be so far removed from such hardship. Like so many others, we used the story to buy into our parent’s fetishisation of education. And it worked too, all thirteen of the Irish born cousins of my generation were educated and have since made their lives in the West of Ireland. This 100% retention rate stands in stark contrast to the three out of ten born in that house that survived and got to stay.

In Ireland, we tell ourselves stories of victimhood and injustice, of oppression and revolution, of civil war and emigration. To these all three of my brothers and I add stories of college, the Celtic Tiger, and Galway’s Medical Device industry. So, the conventional view of history, and of the rhetoric my generation was fed has served my family well.

Indeed, that field was a pillar of my identity that had gone unquestioned until Eoin Kennedy suggested ‘Legacy’ would prompt another thought provoking, diverse, and unmissable Congregation. It was only then that I linked it to my current worries about the future of a civilisation undermined by polarisation from within and existential threats from outside. Young people disillusioned by social injustice, climate disaster, and wealth inequality are enraged by the blatant hypocrisy of leaders, corporations and celebrities whose words suggest they care, but whose actions prove they don’t. ‘The road field’ represents the foundations of some of my deepest beliefs, but I now see shadows of my own hypocrisy in its luscious greenness. Shadows that reflect even more sinister aspects to that nameless death that my family still remembers. The conventional version of Irish history is one of colonialism. We were innocent victims, and ‘they’ were totally evil. But what if the reality of that past was more complicated? What if it was even worse? Are we mature enough as a nation to revisit our legacy? Are we ready to think about the survivors’ guilt that must have ravaged our forebears, or worse the real guilt that people like my ancestors must have endured.

Our stories suggest that we have forgotten that we are not the descendants of the victims who died. We are the descendants of the victims that survived, and this begs the overlooked question, what did our people have to do to survive? Would facing those truths make us less naive about our uncompromising goodness, and less smug about the uncompromising evil of others. I have started to ask, why did my people not help this woman? What choices were they forced to make to protect their own? Did they know the woman’s name, where she came from. Did they inform her people? Did she have any people left?

How did my people raise their children with a sense of right and wrong, and of generosity and decency when they themselves were forced to turn a blind eye. I remember generous grandparents, with great neighbours in safe, open-door communities. So why were those wonderful people able to ignore clerical sex abuse and excuse the Magdaline Laundries. Why, a generation later, were those of us who were brought up during the Troubles, able to blank out most of what was happening, even though it was on our televisions every night. Why, a generation later again, can we claim to be outraged by the genocide we are witnessing live on TikTok, while allowing our leaders to get away with doing nothing. Is it because deep down while we may have post-colonial empathy for the oppressed, we’ve allowed it to be tarnished by a post-colonial ability to turn a blind eye to oppression?

We might never know the true extent of the sacrifices that were made to get use here, both practical and moral, but we would do well to remember that are not here today by the grace of our oppressors, or the charity of our betters. We are here because we made it happen for ourselves when everyone had us written off. Maybe, as the world faces another period of unprecedented change, we’d be better served remembering that we are survivors, not victims. Maybe we should be more appreciative of a legacy that has made us a nation of cute hoors, rather than helpless feckin’ eejits.

Legacy & Scandal – an Inseparable Pair #69 #cong24 #legacy

Synopsis:

Since the very 1st sex scandal in 1791 it seems we have learnt nothing or are destined to repeat the same mistakes.

Total Words

647

Reading Time in Minutes

3

Key Takeaways:

  1. . Great legacies are often tarnished by great scandals
  2. History has shown that we humans seem to repeat the same mistakes over & over again
  3. The better story will win out

About Vanessa Byrne:

Marketeer by trade. Raised in Kildare, settled in Dublin.

Contacting Vanessa Byrne:

You can connect with Vanessa by email.

By Vanessa Byrne

I went to see the broadway musical ‘Hamilton’ recently. Fantastic show, but one scene in particular made me chuckle & got the wheels turning. The scene told the story of how the now well established Alexander Hamilton & soon to be one of the founding fathers of the United States of America, had an affair with a married woman while his wife was out of town. This of course created ripple effects that led to him being blackmailed & ultimately led to his demise & premature death. In 1791 it was one of the first sex scandals in American political history. Sitting there, in middle of the Bord Gais theatre I couldn’t help but wonder, how many men throughout history altered the course of their legacy or sabotaged their potential legacy because of the temptations of a woman? And, how many women have a legacy of bringing down powerful men? And perhaps vice versa.

Imagine, this happened in 1791! A man who had come from nothing & entered the USA as an immigrant, wrote 51 of the 85 federalist papers advocating for the US constitution, had the world at his feet & could have become the 1st president of the United States of America, allowed himself to be compromised by an affair?

What baffles me even more is that, somehow men have not learnt from Alexander’s fate or the fate of others? They seemed destined to repeat this mistake over & over again. Let’s take a look back at some of the most interesting ones…

JFK, a significant legacy & contribution to the Civil Rights Movement but he also left a legacy of numerous affairs, most notably with Marilyn Monroe. Does this affect the way his story is told?

Bill Clinton & Monica Lewinsky…”I did not have sexual relations with that woman”. What would Bill Clinton’s legacy have been had it not been for this sex scandal? Does this tarnish his legacy? Do people remember the scandals 1st & the achievements after?

In 1988, former Colorado Democratic Senator Gary Hart was suposedly the front-runner to become the next President of the United States when rumors of an affair put a halt to those plans. What might his impact on the world have been?

The list goes on…Donald Trump of course, Silvio Berlusconi, Prince Andrew, not least we forget Fergie & Princess Diana. I haven’t forgotten the ladies who are not immune to scandals!

To be a person of influence or power with the potential of leaving a lasting legacy comes with it enormous pressure, stress, the heavy weight of expectations or people counting on you. Some of these people may have ended up going down these paths as a means of escapism or stress relief. Others, because their sense of power or their egos meant they felt entitled to do as they please regardless of the consequences. Others, perhaps because they simply have no morals.

I wonder if they understood what their lasting legacy could be and if they kept this as their ‘Raison d’etre’ would they have behaved differently to protect it? Or do we just accept that legacy & scandals go hand in hand, an inseparable pair? As time passes on, which is more likely to be remembered, the good deed or the bad? Most likely the better story.

The Creation of Legacy with Living in the Moment #68 #cong24 #legacy

Synopsis:

Legacy tends to be focused more after death and the perfect memories. The constant worry of reputation and if you have a good one. When I focus on living in the moment, I find the memories more exciting and less about other’s opinion of me.

Total Words

913

Reading Time in Minutes

4

Key Takeaways:

  1. When people focus more with living in the moment, the memories become more cherish. There is less focus on the perfect memory.
  2. Focusing and living for oneself and less for others .
  3. Personality lies deep within legacy.
  4. Less focus on what we are leaving behind as we are still walking through life.

About Sophie Joyce:

Hi, I’m Sophie. I am a 22 years old currently working in retail. I have a fascination for music and go to many concerts. I have a craving to see the world.

Contacting Sophie Joyce:

You can connect with Sophie by email.

By Sophie Joyce

Legacy is mainly spoken about after death. Whether it is the death of someone globally famous or someone in a person’s personal life. It becomes the talk of the town or of the family who has gained a loss. It becomes a memory shared and the sorrow of no new memory created. From the experience of death, it becomes the hope you have created happy memories among others when the inevitable occurs for yourself. It becomes the focus of one’s everyday life. Have I done enough? How did I contribute to the people I love? Did I help the environment? Does the footprint I leave behind impact the world with something bigger than myself?

Legacy does get wrapped up in what others think of oneself. What reputation have I left behind? It becomes an obsessive habit of mainly focusing on other people’s opinion of oneself. Do they like me? Have I said anything rude? People tend to lose themselves within the idea that they must be perfectly liked by everyone around them. The belief that their legacy left behind is known to be liked by all. The idea of a perfect legacy told by others tends to drown us in pleasing others above ourselves.

People tend to forget that they have all of their memories. Their legacy should focus more on their satisfaction of what they have done for themselves. Their love for themselves. From my personal experience, I wrapped myself in the idea of always being there for my workplace. If they needed an extra worker, I was there. I didn’t call in sick to work for two years just so I didn’t let my boss down. Yes, I may have gained the adjective hard worker but I lost myself. So wrapped in the need of being the perfect worker that I let myself down. I forgot the most important person, myself. The legacy I create should be one where I was happy, the one where I showed up for myself and not constantly others. Once I changed that perspective about focusing more on myself, I became more satisfied. I did call in sick once recently as I really needed to and my friend was proud but most importantly, I am proud. I showed up for myself. People should shift their focus on themselves when it comes to legacy. Maybe I will be remembered for all the times I didn’t call in sick or maybe the one where I did but that’s okay. You will have great things spoken of you but also bad. That is okay so long as you are doing what is right for you.

People tend to get so wrapped up in what they leave behind and miss out on living in the moment. Living in the moment without thinking about what the aftermath we will leave behind. Like many others, I have become more focused on creating such a perfect moment but perfection doesn’t really exist. We tend to go through life like a checklist but rarely soak it in. From personal experience, I find the moments I’ve created in a spur of the moment are the ones I cherish the most. From saying yes to act in an apache advertisement to saying yes to going on a spontaneous trip to Galway. I have left little drops of personal legacy as classmates remember the time I acted in the apache advertisement and with every like and share on the facebook page. The legacy of becoming closer to a friend of mine in Galway. Even the little things on the spur of a moment like the time I spontaneously complimented a stranger on the street. The spontaneity of deciding to go to a concert would be a big memory many people have of me. I choose to live in the moment of music. Many speak of me as the lady who has been to every concert even though I obviously haven’t. It is a great interest of mine and I never think too hard about saying yes even if my bank account is low. I leave that legacy with others even though I’m still alive. It is simply like our personalities lie deep within our legacy. What we love to do and what we don’t like. The ability to be yourself freely creates our legacy throughout our life. Legacy is like the footprints and leaps we leave behind even when we are still walking. Live in the moment as you discover that perfect doesn’t exist.

Free Association on Legacy #67 #cong24 #legacy

Synopsis:

Legacy is a manifold thing. So this submission is also a manifold thing.

Total Words

536

Reading Time in Minutes

2

Key Takeaways:

  1. The idea of legacy gives rise to more questions than answers
  2. Legacy to an academic refers to an intellectual legacy, in part
  3. We have little control over our legacy

About Bobby Apel:

I am a Professor of Criminology at Rutgers University in New Jersey, USA.

Contacting Bobby Apel:

You can connect with Bobby on Twitter: @RobertApel (I spend no time here anymore), Instagram and Bluesky

By Bobby Apel

Please indulge me while I engage in some free association. The paragraphs below are not really linked together in any coherent way. They are just different reflections on the theme of legacy.

There are lots of questions that come to mind when I consider legacy, some that strike me as more profound than others. Is legacy something that can be planned and nurtured in advance, or something that only exists after the fact? Can one have a legacy in one’s lifetime? Who is entitled to a legacy, and are some groups of people regarded, by virtue of their social position, as more worthy of legacy than others? Who, if not the person in question, defines someone’s legacy? What possibilities exist for reevaluation of a person’s legacy, and by what criteria? Can legacy be claimed by people, places, and things (or events) in equal measure?

As an academic, I often meet colleagues who profess to care about legacy, and I suppose I do too. But what is legacy to an academic? One way to think about my own legacy is to reflect on my body of published research. For example, many academics wonder whether they have had “impact,” by some particular definition of the term. This strikes me as relating to legacy in the realm of ideas, specifically, one’s scholarly contributions. If other scholars cite my research and continue to do so, that suggests some form of intellectual legacy. In a digital information age, moreover, there is an opportunity to grow one’s legacy well beyond what would have been possible in a pre-internet age.

When I think about legacy, I am reminded of a book I read by historian Laura Thatcher Ulrich, entitled Well-Behaved Women Seldom Make History. The title comes from something she published in a journal article in the 1970s, but a subtle variation of the phrase became something of a feminist anthem that has withstood the test of time: “well-behaved women rarely make history.” The most interesting thing about what Ulrich wrote is that the feminist expression is the complete opposite of what she intended when she wrote it. The feminist expression is assertive and has an “I am woman, hear me roar” vibe. But the original intent of the phrase was to honor women who labor in the background of history and who essentially remain invisible because of it. In an unexpected twist on the feminist expression, then, honor stems from ordinariness rather than assertiveness. Both “flavors” of the expression are worthy of their own legacy, in truth, but this strikes me as a fascinating example of how we have little control over our legacy.

Legacy, What is it? Are these My Eyes? #66 #cong24 #legacy

Synopsis:

This piece is a reflection on what legacy means to me, both personally and professionally. I don’t typically think about legacy when starting a job; my focus is on doing my best, even if it leads to stress and self-doubt. Through my work in I.T. and educational technology, as well as moments shared with my son, I’ve come to wonder whether a legacy can be more multifaceted than just one defining achievement. I’ve realized that it’s okay to be remembered for a mix of contributions and experiences. In the end, stepping outside my comfort zone—like writing this for Congregation—reminds me that embracing imperfections is part of my legacy, too.

Total Words

1,168

Reading Time in Minutes

5

Key Takeaways:

The irony of writing about takeaways is there ARE no TAKEAWAYS in Cong

  1. Legacy is Diverse: A legacy isn’t limited to one grand accomplishment; a person can leave behind multiple legacies through various roles, achievements, and moments in their life.
  2. The Importance of Effort: What matters most is consistently giving your best effort in whatever you do, even if the outcome isn’t always perfect or universally praised.
  3. Embracing Imperfection: Being remembered isn’t necessarily about flawless success; it’s about showing dedication and sincerity in your endeavors, despite challenges or self-doubt.
  4. Reflective Growth: Taking time to reflect on your experiences, even if it’s difficult (as with writing in this case), is a way to understand and shape your legacy over time.

About Hassan Dabbagh:

I Am Hassan: A Passionate I.T. Trainer and Creative Technologist

I’m Hassan, an experienced I.T. trainer based in Balla, County Mayo, with a mission to empower community groups across Ireland through technology. My love for photography, computers, and all things tech has naturally blended into both my professional and personal life.

Over the years, I’ve built a reputation as an engaging educator and innovator, dedicating my career to working in the tech and education sectors. My workshops are designed for learners of all ages, helping them build confidence and develop valuable skills in an ever-changing digital landscape. Co-founding a company with my best friends has been one of my proudest achievements, along with contributing to a national organization that helps communities preserve their heritage through digital archiving—proof that history can be preserved in modern ways.

But it’s not just about the work for me. I cherish the light-hearted moments, like sharing jokes with my 6-year-old son and nurturing a sense of humor that teeters on the ridiculous. Writing is a challenge I’ve always faced due to my dyslexia, but I push myself to step outside my comfort zone. My reflective posts and talks at events like Congregation are examples of how I’m willing to share my journey, even when it scares me. I’ve learned that embracing imperfection is an essential part of growth.

Through my work, I hope to inspire more than just tech proficiency—I aim to spark a real passion for learning. My goal is to leave behind a multifaceted legacy that connects with both the minds and hearts of the people I meet.

Contacting Hassan Dabbagh:

You can connect with Hassan via email, Instagram, Twitter : (It will AWAYS BE twitter) or Telepathy : “Can you hear me now? “

By Hassan Dabbagh

What will I leave behind? What’s my legacy? I’ve been fascinated by the idea of writing your own obituary—seriously, why not? Think about it: who better to capture the essence of your journey than you?

Now, I’ve never started a job pondering what legacy it would leave. My approach has always been straightforward: do the best I can, with whatever resources I have. If I walk away from a disaster (and yes, it has happened), I can rest easy knowing I gave it my all. That said, my standards are sky-high, and I’m never fully satisfied with the results. Cue the sleepless nights, stress eating, and those wonderfully destructive habits that come with it. But wait, there’s more—what if they don’t like the project? And who are they, anyway? Why do I care what they think? If I don’t care what they think, do I still care about my legacy? So many questions. I guess that’s the point of these posts—to dig deep.

For someone with dyslexia, writing is a fear-inducing task. I hate that it takes me hours to put down a few paragraphs. I hate that when I read back what I’ve written, I instantly question: What was I trying to say? It feels like someone else wrote it. But back to the important part: Why? Why do I fear writing? Is it because I’m not good at it, or am I worried about what others will think when my ramblings go public? Let’s park that mini-counseling session and talk some more about legacy.

Legacy, in its simplest form, is what’s handed down. And as someone who works in I.T., legacy is part of my daily grind. Old code, outdated software—it’s all “legacy” that should have been retired years ago but somehow lingers, like the 32-bit folder in Windows (if you know, you know).

As I’m mulling over this, my 6-year-old son bursts in with a joke. I won’t repeat it, but let’s just say it involved a piano, a woman, a stool, and a hairy banana. It was un-PC, borderline rude, and absolutely hilarious to him. Is this my legacy to him? A sense of humor teetering on the absurd? I’d like to think he’ll get more than just that.

When I reflect on my work, legacy is a tricky word. I’ve been fortunate to work in two jobs I love: one with a company I started alongside my best friends, and another with a national group that supports people and communities in preserving their heritage through digital archives. Yes, my best friend is involved in that one too—because why not? Naturally, the “Heritage Gig” came to mind when I started writing this. Isn’t heritage just another form of legacy? Maybe they’re close cousins. The groups I work with create archives to preserve their heritage, but ironically, it’s the website showcasing the archive that becomes their legacy. Am I overthinking this?

So, how will I be remembered? I’ve spent years as an educational technologist, working with learners of all ages and achieving varying degrees of success. Would I like to be remembered for doing something well? Sure. But I realized that if I tackle each job with the mindset of “I’ll give this my best,” then I’ll be remembered for many different things. And I’m okay with that.

As I look back, I notice all my submissions to Congregation have a reflective tone. Maybe that’s because writing isn’t my strongest suit, so sticking to what I know—me—is the only way forward. Coming here and writing this post still scares the hell out of me. I’m so far out of my comfort zone. So, what will they say about me? What’s my legacy? Maybe it’ll be: “Nice lad, but can’t write for sh******.”

Dynamic Legacy: Creating the Future Through Tradition and Innovation #65 #cong24 #legacy

Synopsis:

This piece explores the delicate balance between tradition, legacy and modernity, using examples from Māori culture, Irish heritage, and innovation. It reflects on how traditions and legacy shape identity, offering both constraints and opportunities for renewal and creation. Drawing on tradition, Joan Mulvihill’s thoughts on digital colonialism, and evolving practices, I look at how embracing both heritage and aspirations can foster a meaningful, adaptive legacy. The essay highlights the power of legacy as a conversation between past and present, one that can enrich societies and drive co-creation, viewing tradition not as a constraint but as a foundational dialogue between the past and present to build a meaningful legacy.

Total Words

1,306

Reading Time in Minutes

5

Key Takeaways:

  1. 1. Tradition as Living Identity: Traditions are not static relics but living aspects of culture that can inform and inspire contemporary action, as demonstrated by the Māori Haka in a political context.
  2. Colonialism’s Lasting Impact on Traditions: The erasure or marginalization of indigenous traditions, as seen in Ireland, underscores the profound effects colonialism has on cultural identities and legacies.
  3. Technology’s Dual Role in Cultural Identity: While technology can disrupt traditional senses of identity (digital colonialism), it also holds the potential for co-creation and innovation that respects and integrates diverse cultural legacies.
  4. Preserving and Evolving Legacy: Legacy isn’t just inherited; it is actively shaped through choices about what to carry forward and what to adapt for the future. Tradition and innovation can coexist, providing a foundation for new ideas and practices while preserving cultural richness and diversity.

About Dermot Casey:

Dermot has now written more on the topic he was least prepared for than any other post for Cong. When not running IRDG, and trying to shake a few billion more out of the government for innovation he can be found in a book, drinking tea or taking occasional dips in the sea.

Contacting Dermot Casey:

You can connect with Dermot onBluesky, LinkedIn or send him an email

By Dermot Casey

I watched transfixed as a 22-year-old Māori politician tore up a document and strode into the centre of the New Zealand parliamentary chamber and did the Haka. She did it in protest at an attempt by a small right-wing party to rewrite the founding treaty between the British and the Māori. It is the Haka that has resounded around the world. Over the last few weeks I’ve also been watching ‘The Gone’ on TV. Its an Irish New Zealand co-production set in New Zealand with a mix of Irish and New Zealand cast. Māori and Māori rituals feature strongly.

The role of tradition, culture and legacy intrigued me. Ireland was the petri dish within which the English field tested colonialisation before deploying it globally. A key legacy of 800 years of colonisation was the erasing of much Irish tradition. Ireland was so thoroughly colonised by the legacy of imperial rule that generations later we still haven’t fully recovered. Israel managed to revive Hebrew in a generation, 100 years after independence the Irish language continues a marginal existence. Legacy and tradition are deeply intertwined. Tradition preserves and propagates legacy. Legacy, personal or collective gives tradition its depth and significance.

For much of my life I’ve kicked back against a lot of Irish traditions. Hell is growing up in 80’s rural Ireland with zero interest in football, hurling, religion or alcohol. Not entirely hell but you get the gist. A friend once commented that tradition is peer pressure from dead people. Running away from those traditions I ran towards the future. Science and technology. Into Computer Science and industry, eyes firmly fixed forward.

Over time I’ve wondered about my relationship with tradition and legacy. Witnessing the Māori people’s embrace of their heritage made wonder about my own cultural legacy. The Māori have managed to keep their language and customs alive despite the pressures of globalisation and historical oppression. Their traditions aren’t relics; they’re living, breathing parts of their identity. Many Irish traditions have travelled through a glass darkly. St. Patrick’s Day, once a religious feast day, is a global festival of green beer and leprechauns. The Irish language, despite revival efforts, struggles to find a place in Ireland. It’s taught in schools but seldom heard on the streets, a ghost of what it could be. And at the same time remnants of older traditions persist.

So how do we look forward, reforging our identity while respecting legacy. Some of the answer comes from an amazing farsighted piece on digital colonialism that Joan Mulvihill wrote 11 years ago. Two points from it include the impacts of colonialism and of technology.

“Colonialism was motivated by a need for control of trade routes and economic gain. The colonising powers arrived bearing gifts of modernity and development for the poor natives and when the natives didn’t buy into it, they took what they wanted anyway and left the indigenous populations disenfranchised and isolated, living in cordoned off reservations without a voice much less a vote.”

“Technology has the ability to disrupt the very essence of how we define ourselves as people, our identity and sense of ‘place’ in the world”

These points seem even more important now than they were a decade ago. The legacy and promise of technology has gotten wrapped up in and warped by Digital colonialism. And we need to ask what legacy are we leaving behind? In our rush towards forward, have we discarded parts of ourselves that are worth preserving? Tradition doesn’t have to be a chain that binds us to the past; it can be a foundation upon which we build the future.

Perhaps legacy is about balance. It’s about honoring where we come from while not being chained by it. It’s about taking the strengths of our traditions and adapting them to the present day and building new traditions and rituals. The Māori politician in New Zealand wasn’t just performing the Haka; she was invoking the spirit of her ancestors to address a contemporary issue. She connected the past and the present in a way that was both profound and effective.

In an key note of optimism in Joan’s piece she wrote “I would like to find a way that works for everyone – that delivers the immeasurable benefits without fear of the costs so that we can continue to innovate for the good – because I do believe that it is for good.” And

“A determination for co-creation based on trust between all stakeholders will allow us to innovate in such a way that great ideas will actually become great innovations.”

I think these are truly vital ideas now more than ever. Legacy isn’t just what we inherit; it’s what we choose to carry forward. It’s the stories we tell, the languages we speak, and the customs we practice. And it also needs to include a reckoning with the past. Theres a lot of post-colonial legacy to deal with. And now more than ever we need to innovations to create and to establish new traditions. For new things to emerge we have to let go of some things from the past and give space for creation. By acknowledging and embracing our legacy, we can enrich our lives and contribute to a more diverse and vibrant society.

This is part of why I come back to Cong. Everyone who comes here brings some part of themselves and leaves enriched by those they meet here. Eoin Kennedy has built an important special Legacy in the traditional trip to CongRegation in November.

In the end, perhaps tradition isn’t just peer pressure from dead people. Maybe it’s a conversation—a dialogue between the past and the present, informing our journey into the future. And maybe, just maybe, by embracing both our heritage and our aspirations, we can create a legacy worth leaving behind.

Legacy – Should You Worry About Your Own Legacy? #64 #cong24 #legacy

Synopsis:

Your legacy isn’t really your concern because you may not be aware of the impact you have on others.

Total Words

970

Reading Time in Minutes

4

Key Takeaways:

  1. Don’t concern yourself with your legacy
  2. Focus on how you are with people and let them decide on your legacy
  3. Don’t regret the things you don’t do …
  4. Book the holiday!

About Pamela O'Brien:

Pam is a lecturer in the Technological University of the Shannon. She is also a mother, wife, daughter, sister and friend. She is not really concerned about what her legacy will be …

Contacting Pamela O'Brien:

You can connect with Pam on BlueSky or LinkedIn

By Pam O’Brien

Legacy …now there’s a loaded word! As has happened in the past with the themes for Congregation I have ruminated for many weeks over what this this means to me. This time around I keep coming back to the same thing and that is that your legacy is none of your business in much the same way that what people think of you is none of your business. So, this might be a very short blog post!

There are many definitions for legacy and the one I am choosing to place at the heart of this post is that which refers to the practices that have been handed down from the past. So, when I think of legacy, I think of the people who are no longer here and what impact they have had on me and others who knew them. So, what I really mean when I say that your legacy is none of your business, is that you may be completely unaware of the impact you have on others so focusing on your own legacy may be a little pointless. It is more important to consider how you treat people as opposed to how you will be remembered.

My dad died 30 years ago. To say that it was a traumatic event doesn’t even begin to acknowledge the huge impact that it had on my life and that of my family. He battled for almost a year before he died and watching cancer reduce him to a shadow of his former self was heartbreaking. My dad was a strong, independent, hardworking man who spent the last few weeks of his life unable to really move himself in the bed or even feed himself. He was 50. I can’t imagine being in his situation and yet he accepted it for what it was and allowed us, his family, to see the best of him in his last months and weeks. So the legacy from my dad is to live your life and do the things you want to do. It is often said, that you will regret the things you don’t do more than the things you do, so I have made it my mission to do the things I want to do while I can …

But that isn’t his only legacy. Dad was hardworking, family focused and a good friend to so many people and all of these things have been mentioned many times in the years since he died. I would like to think that these are the qualities that I and my brothers and sisters have continued on from both my parents.

My grandparents lived in the same village as I did for all my childhood years. I saw these grandparents almost every day of my young life and I am so grateful for that. Their legacy for me was a really strong focus on family. This was very evident a few years back when I attended my cousins wedding. Many of my cousins were also at the wedding and we all had a fantastic weekend catching up and having the craic just like we did over the years in my grandparents’ house. This focus on family prompted me to move closer to my family from Dublin when my son was 2 to ensure that he would get a chance to spend time with his family making memories and creating relationships that will sustain him, and subsequently my daughter, throughout their lives.

My mam is still alive and in writing this blog post I have been thinking about what her legacy might be, and I think it will be the focus on education that she has. She didn’t get a chance to attend secondary school like so many people born in the forties in Ireland. But she made sure that all of her children got the chances she never did. Graduation days from college for me were all about her and my dad because without them, and particularly my mam, I simply would not have been there. I am hoping that when my Doctoral graduation eventually comes around she will be there to share the celebrations with me … I just need to get a wriggle on and make the graduation happen now!

And finally, a blog post on legacy would be incomplete without mentioning Bianca Ni Ghroghain. Bianca was a teacher in the edtech community in Ireland that I had the good luck to call a friend. Those who knew her know the void she left behind when she died and yet her legacy lives on. Bianca was selfless in sharing ideas and thoughts on teaching and technology and her impact was brought back to me recently when I visited a school. The principal mentioned attending the ICT in Education conference in 2015, a conference I run for teachers, and meeting Bianca. He sent himself an email of ideas she shared which he told me he regularly returns to. I wonder how many others similarly return to ideas shared by Bianca over the more than 9 years since she died. There is a legacy!

The Annals of Ireland are Back #63 #cong24 #legacy

Synopsis:

Ireland used be great at keeping her diary. She did so diligently for twelve centuries in what were called Annals. It stopped during the 9 Years War. We have brought the good habit back so she can have amusement in her dotage.

Total Words

1,198

Reading Time in Minutes

5

Key Takeaways:

  1. Each congregant please submit an item for 2024 Annals.
  2. Each congregant please submit an item for the Annals missing years i.e. 1591 to 2019.
  3. We are ideally looking across 2025 to popularise what we are doing with Old People via Day Care Centres and youngsters via Primary Schools, so both ends of the age spectrum. Suggest links please.
  4. Separate to the Scriptorium in Sligo we are developing a base in Dublin to bring our “NEWS” to a broader public. Seeking collaborators ( sounds ominous ).

About Colum Stapleton:

Colum Stapleton made creative documentaries for two decades for TG4, RTE + other channels across the world, the most watched of which was HOLY HIJACKER – SEEKING THE 3RD SECRET OF FATIMA. He has won prized prizes at Documentary Festivals. In 2003 he built the 30 bed, 100 foot diametre wooden round hill topped retreat centre in south Sligo, initially called The Gyreum – and since becoming a NotForProfit and base for the Annals project and in honour of its locality, its new name is Bru Moytura.

Contacting Colum Stapleton:

You can connect with Colum via email or the Bru Moytura website

By Colum Stapleton

The most recent censuses on our Island (north + south) count a few folk short of 7,000,000 boys and girls, that is a lot of goings-on to tally, a lot of activity of both celebrity and regular Jo-citizen. Imagine shrinking all that human activity & opinionizing, isolating the most pertinent facts & parts that represent a slice of present us to pass on to our descendants, centuries into the future. That is our mission in our revitalising the Irish Annals writing tradition at our mighty round Scriptorium in rural Sligo in XXL sized sheets of parchment in sumptuous ink that slowly become a fattening book.

How lasting are floppy disks, cds, memory sticks, chatgpt, data centres ? Clouds evaporate. As our ancestors relied on ink for centuries to chart their annual joys & sorrows we do again, a tried & trusted means of time-capsuling for the amusement or horror of those who come after us on this island. The Annals of Inishfallen for example have survived since 1070AD.

Across our 32 counties of Ireland from the first quarter of the 5th century to the last decade of the 16th century there was a tradition that saw the prime facts of a year inked on vellum. There are some tiny gaps: Viking raid here, pestilence there but the continuity is extraordinary, the words that illustrate proven links to real moments of time across those twelve centuries are obstinately accurate, if betimes slanted. No other country in Europe has such a fantastic wealth of fact and the odd yarn in such an extensive yet compact work. The old Annals logged clann brawls, deaths of minor kings, passings of abbotts mostly; our latter day Annal has the nickname De RÉir (Irish for ‘according to’) BOOK Whoever is quoted gets their due, their citation, their “according to.” Our tome is a here-comes-everybody of events with a seasoning of fact-checked hearsay.

We commenced the renewal of the Annals across the isolation of 2020 taking much inspiration from the defining book on the subject THE IRISH ANNALS by Dr. Dan McCarthy. It takes us almost a full year to complete an Annal; currently we are scribing what will likely be forty plus facts for 2023. Naturally it is a big exercise to shrink the oodles & googles of information. The old Annals were terse e.g. “plague for half a year” we must learn from that discipline, our 8 parchments for 2020, a busy year with its 64 facts, 2021 had but 52, jumping again in 2022 to 60.

How odd that many of our surviving past Annals which mostly dwell on mens’ actions should kick off with the arrival of 49 women, the supposed first humans to arrive on our shores. Four of the existing Annals of Ireland commence with the same obscure event, the arrival of Noah’s grand daughter with her “ark” of women. There had been one fellow, Fintan, but no sooner had he spied land but he jumped ship in the shape of a salmon. The time heaviest part of our mission is filling the 430 missing years between the close of the extant Annals and the reviving in 2020AD. We are hoping women and the non-posh can better populate same. Tended to be felons who got at least noted in those missing centuries, Jo-well-behaveds are gone with the wind.

Odd too that just when the world turned once again from being flat to round The Annals of Ulster for 1497A.D. relate that the Borgia Pope, Alexander VI blocked up the only entry to Purgatory in that changing world; where, at Lough Derg in Donegal ? Only proof that this took place is in our very own Annals. Let’s not allow those demarcating lines to go unnoticed thus we note burials giving way to cremations, that straight men wear shorts year round, that AI’s arrival is mostly celebrated, that every second garden has a Buddha and living rooms are short on Sacred Hearts, JFKs and Pope John the XXiiis, that News has little grey areas anymore in the clickbaits of its echo chambres.

PLEASE SUGGEST ITEMS FOR US: We seek your inputs for both the ongoing Annal and gap Annal. Choose items that you or your family or class or society or your locality resonate with. Check out our recent years pages to get a sense of what we seek and how short of longwinded to be. We love short but punchy; twittery lengths – but that ain’t easy.

Fow now items can be English, Irish or Latin or a mix of all three. Please can you footnote background details to your chosen facts to help us understand the context of your chosen event or observation to be logged but ideally the item should be related in a crisp way that allows easy comprehension, some lyricism is not unwelcome. It is hard to be neutral. De Reir means “according to” so please if you are citing somebody else be it The Pat Kenny on NewsTalk or the overheard conversation at the ALDI queue or your great granny’s memory of the 1947 snow that reached in snowdrifts to the chimney top. Please flesh out sources as much as you can.

Despite our being based in the North West, we want the purview of the Annals to be all-Island plus a few items per year from Scotland ( and all her 32 counties ) to honour that the Irish Annals were written up on Iona for almost two centuries. We also seek organisations and ask them to choose a Year/ a Fact/ a Subject Matter/ a particular Community/ a Family name to highlight and forward it to us hello@brumoytura.org

A Fairytale Legacy For Your Family – Write A Storybook Featuring Your Children #62 #cong24 #legacy

Synopsis:

Classic children’s fiction has been providing a magical escape for young minds and expanding little imaginations for generations amidst changing technologies. So why not leave your children and their children a special legacy by writing a magical story just for them? Better still, put them in it.

Total Words

761

Reading Time in Minutes

3

Key Takeaways:

  1. Fiction is especially magical to children – so why not put them in the story and in the picture?
  2. Anyone can write and everyone has a story in them – The Hobbit started as a bedtime story for Tolkien’s children.
  3. Modern technology (AI) gives you illustration for free, layout blanks and affordable vanity publishing. It can even write the outline (!) but that would be cheating.
  4. If they like it, your children might read it to their children. Perhaps a legacy from you to young future generations of your own family.

About About Mark Keenan:

I am a dad of three based in Dublin. I have written professionally for six national media platforms and published a book on growing food for beginners. I like to fish, grow stuff and walk along rivers.

Contacting Mark Keenan:

You can connect with Mark via email.

By Mark Keenan

LEGACY : There and Back Again on the River Dodder: A family fashioned fairy tale.

As a life long writer for media, I reflected on what legacy I could leave my children other than memories and inheritance.

I thought about my own childhood and the stories I loved, from Blyton, to Tolkien. So many authors who enabled us kids to disappear up magical winding roads, to have adventures alongside fabulously imagined characters.

And it turns out many great children’s books like The Hobbit, Winnie the Pooh, Thomas the Tank Engine and The Wind in The Willows all started out as ‘private’ bed time stories written only for the author’s children.

So I decided to write and illustrate a fairy tale for my own children that could be read to their children. I’d make each of my kids the subject of the story. A personal family legacy that I hope could be magical. But what story would I write for them?

I live near an entry to the River Dodder Linear Park. My children have loved the river walk since they were small. It’s teeming with wildlife, including the bird bullet that is the marvellous kingfisher.

Along its banks I have been able to show my kids forage they can eat – the tender dandelion and nettle leaves, the roots, the blackberries and the mushrooms. How to catch minnows with a brandy bottle or a plastic mineral bottle. I have taken photos of them proudly holding up their first caught fish(which all went back).

This river walk has magical landmarks. The giant gates of the Loftus estate, a 19th Century lime kiln and even a life sized bronze statue of a rhinoceros stranded in the river.

It was a natural setting for my family fairy tale which I have started.

The story features younger versions of my children searching for the family dog along the river after it is stolen by the ‘little people’.

Sequenced geographically, it is also being designed as real life accompaniment for children for that walk.

The tubular brick laundry chimney at Milltown becomes a transporter “cannon” that fires passengers held safely in giant capsules; to be captured safely in a great net set up on its trajectory further along the route.

The lime kiln is a ‘troll farm’, housing dozens trolls of fairy tale fame (they normally live under bridges) who create bedlam online. Even the bronze rhino gets a look in.

I hope it can become a bedtime story they can read for their own children which will also keep our own happy river memories alive after I am gone. If I’m lucky I might even get to read it to their children, and take that magic river walk with them too!

Anyone can be a fiction writer, if even for just one short book for your own children or grandchildren.

These days it’s easier than ever to produce a quality book you can hold in your hand. There are firms online who specialise in professionally bound photo albums with words. Free Ai can provide the illustrations and software to help with layouts. You could put it up on on Kindle!

If your family fairy tale can go there (and back again), it might even prove a success for a larger audience. Just like The Hobbit.

Twitters Legacy: Community, Dead Parrots and Starting Over #61 #cong24 #legacy

Synopsis:

The article reflects on the profound impact Twitter had on the author’s life over nearly two decades, connecting them to communities, opportunities, and collaborations. Despite its initial promise and transformative potential, the platform’s decline under Elon Musk’s ownership—marked by toxicity, poor moderation, and a shift away from its core values—led the author to leave the platform. The piece concludes with a call to rebuild communities on new platforms like Bluesky, emphasizing that community lies in people, not platforms.

Total Words

1,285

Reading Time in Minutes

5

Key Takeaways:

  1. Twitter’s Legacy: It was a platform that fostered community, connection, and collaboration but struggled with moderation and toxic elements.
  2. Decline Under Elon Musk: Musk’s ownership saw an explosion in toxicity, a collapse of trust and safety, and the platform’s shift towards a harmful ideology. Evil is as Elon does.
  3. The Power of Community: The value of platforms lies in the people using them, not the technology itself. Communities can move and rebuild elsewhere.
  4. Rebuilding Elsewhere: Platforms like Bluesky offer hope for recreating the positive aspects of early Twitter, free from the current issues of toxicity and poor moderation.

About Dermot Casey:

Fan of Strategic Mischief.
A Catalyst, synthesist, and ever curious.
Into Innovation, books, tea, and occasional dips in the sea.
CEO at IRDG. Former lifeguard. Featured on Irish Starter Pack 2 on Bluesky. Godless, 80s child still into SF&F and a better society.

Contacting Dermot Casey:

You can connect with Dermot onBluesky, LinkedIn or send him an email

By Dermot Casey

A number of weeks ago I said goodbye on Twitter. My last thread covered a multitude. Twitter has been the most important technology in my life over the last 20 years. It opened up community, connection, collaboration and Crowdflash. A tweet from Joe Garde led to my first visit to #dalkeyopen in 2010. It may be the world’s longest running tweetup. Its still going. And has outlasted Twitter. First Thursday every month in the Club in Dalkey if you’re around and want to pop in. I’ve recreated the group on LinkedIn (not something I thought I’d be saying even a few years ago) to share the reminders so join there too.

Twitter brought me in contact with Mark Little and led to me joining Crowdflash, the legal name for the company that became Storyful. We built a business on Twitter and brought me into the orbit of so many other people I wouldn’t have met otherwise. The post Storyful career of many of those colleagues has been fascinating. Gavin Sheridan founded and building Vizleagal, Markham Nolan more recently founding Noan, Malachy Browne pioneering visual investigations at the NYT. For good measure Mark went on to found Kinzen with other Storyful Alum Aine Kerr and Paul Watson selling it to Spotify. Alumni work everywhere from Tech roles to media to the International Criminal Court. A talent magnet built via Twitter.

And Twitter was people all the way down. Its probably FOMO after the first CongRegation in 2013 that led me to CongRegation in 2014. My first huddle had Maryrose Lyons, Bernie Goldbach, Sean McGrath and Tom Murphy in the Quite Cailin.

Twitter continued to be important across work and play through consultancy and NDRC. I used it heavily at the start of the first lockdown in 2020 to pull an online version of #DalkeyOpen together. I also used it to keep in touch with my dealer. That’d be Louisa owner of Ravenbooks. Regular ordering of books generally via Twitter DM is the best form of ecommerce.

In many ways Twitter while a superb source of news, craic, and conversation missed its full potential. Back in 2011 in conversations with the Twitter development teams we struggled to explain the value and power of Twitter lists to the people building the product. Twitter also struggled with the rise of the alt-right and the need for moderation. The free-speech absolutists (in reality people who wanted a consequence free way to impose their views on others) regularly took aim at Twitter, and the far right took aim at any form of moderation or limitation of hate speech.

Then in 2022 Elon Musk bought Twitter. For $44billion dollars. Possibly the cheapest purchase of all time. You can view it two ways, purchasing a platform and burning off 75% of its value at a loss of $33billion. Or purchasing a platform and with a 4 year rental of the US Presidency thrown in, eliminating the chance of prosecution and increasing the value of his shares in Tesla by $75billion (not counting SpaceX or any of his other holdings).

Musk is a malign individual and has been a malign influence on Twitter. He is a transphobic parent who rejected his own daughter while he gave free rein to some of the most awful individuals online. Firing trust and safety, he shifted Twitter into another version of Truth Social. Toxicity exploded.

Over the summer 2024 I stayed off Twitter. Over the past 18 months you could see the decline. Active twitter lists I’d used for years faded. And yes I didn’t leave the platform. I’d opened Bsky and Mastodon accounts a while back. A social media liferaft of sorts.

After posting my goodbyes I kept the account open. And then on the 8th of November I deleted my account.

And honestly it felt like a relief. I’ve seen lots of people sharing that they want to stay on Twitter and not give it up to the far right. Honestly that ship sailed when Musk bought the platform. Twitter died. We may have tried to convince ourselves otherwise but to quote the dead parrot sketch

Mr. Praline: ‘E’s not pinin’! ‘E’s passed on! This parrot is no more! He has ceased to be! ‘E’s expired and gone to meet ‘is maker! ‘E’s a stiff! Bereft of life, ‘e rests in peace! If you hadn’t nailed ‘im to the perch ‘e’d be pushing up the daisies! ‘Is metabolic processes are now ‘istory! ‘E’s off the twig! ‘E’s kicked the bucket, ‘e’s shuffled off ‘is mortal coil, run down the curtain and joined the bleedin’ choir invisibile! THIS IS AN EX-PARROT!”

Twitter is an ex-platform, (an x-platform) bereft of decency and devoid of community. We forget that its not land. Its a virtual space. And multiple communities. And the connections between them. Twitter was always us and never the technology.

There is no there there on Twitter, there never was there was ever only us. If everyone moved from there to elsewhere there would be no there there. There would only be here.

On LinkedIn I shared a post on leaving Twitter and encouraging others to do the same. I posted it on a Sunday. It had nearly 7000 views, 110 likes and 50 comments. I think my views have crystalised more since. Now is the time to leave. And to rebuild elsewhere. Right now that seems to be Bluesky. Right now its algorithm free, has the vibes of early Twitter, and a better set of engagement and blocking tools that give it a better chance of survival.

It won’t be the same. We are not the same.

And I guess that’s the legacy of Twitter. The lessons of community and change learned again. After the early rush of connectivity, and the influx and the building of community the need to make money and the misunderstanding and the mishandling Twitter was killed by its owner as he pressed into the service of the worst forms of hate. And into the service of the worst of people.

And we don’t have to hang around and continue to support it.

And lets be honest. Staying is supporting. Time to start over.