Stories #40 #cong24 #legacy

Synopsis:

Stories are an important way to connect when we’re alive and are equally important as a means of being remembered when we’re dead.

Total Words

470

Reading Time in Minutes

2

Key Takeaways:

  1. The best part of funerals are the Eulogies
  2. The stories that are told about us when we die are the ones that keep our memories alive.
  3. Good stories are memorable and repeatable.

About Donal O'Dea:

Ex-Advertising Creative Director. Co-author of the ‘Feckin’Series’ of books, ‘Stuff Irish People Love’ and various different humorous books on Irish culture. I also write and direct short films.

I play a little bit of Basketball and spend my spare time hauling my ass over the Wicklow hills on a bike.

Contacting Donal O'Dea:

You can contact Donal by email or see his work on O’Dea.ie and Remarkable Films

By Donal O’Dea

I don’t like going to Mass.

Week in and week out, it’s pretty much the same thing and, well, for someone with low attention span, it gets tedious.

But funerals, while sad, are different because you’re celebrating the life of a person.

Every one of them are different.

I was at my mother’s last month. She’d reached the grand old age of 92 and her time had come.

For the congregation who had sat through the mass, now was the time for them to get rewarded with some good stories about the deceased.

My brother had written a well crafted eulogy. Easy for me to say, but I think the task wouldn’t have been hard because she had led an interesting life.

And stories he told. Sometimes they were tear jerkingly sad and sometimes laugh-out-loud funny. Her various achievements wern’t important unless they were wrapped up in a good yarn.

At the end he got a big round of applause.

He did her proud.

My father passed away over 20 years ago. I didn’t get on well with him. He was an alcoholic. He didn’t spend much time with the family but was always getting involved in some mad project that had noting to do with us.

My brother, once again, delivered the eulogy. Cleverly he cast him as a lovable rogue. He told some great stories about his misdemeanours and how although he had died young, he lived life to the full.

People like to be remember favourably. But if they can’t be remembered favourably, they at very least want to be remembered.

I think stories are an important part of how we connect with people when we’re alive. Good stories are entertaining, memorable and repeatable.

Likewise the good stories that are told about us when we die are the ones that keep our memories alive.

The more time we spend creating stories now, the more people will remember us when we’re dead.

Long Thinking in Inishowen #16 #cong24 #legacy

Synopsis:

My blog post takes heavily from the book ‘The Good Ancestor’ from public philosopher Roman Krznaric and to make decisions with seven generations in mind. My connection with the land, sea and rivers of where I live now has come from the love for the area that was passed down to me through stories. Can I use the stories of my ancestors and an imagining of my descendants to guide how I chose to live my life?

Total Words

1,069

Reading Time in Minutes

4

Key Takeaways:

  1. Can I think long? As proposed by leading public philosopher Roman Krznaric in his book The Good Ancestor.
  2. Will a larger view of the responsibilities I have towards the future generations allow me to make better decisions?
  3. I can trace my ancestors back 7 generations to Inishowen where I now live. I feel a connection passed to me through stories and a love for this place.
  4. I want the work I am doing and how I am choosing to live strengthened with the legacy of my ancestors and with the thoughts of my descendants.

About Carlene Lyttle:

Following a number of years away from the North West of Ireland, I have discovered a powerful connection with Inishowen which I am using to inspire me in different projects including river restoration, capturing the hidden histories of the village of Culdaff and bringing together tradition and innovation in Inishowen’s first science festival.

Contacting Carlene Lyttle:

You can follow Carlene on Twitter or connect to her on LinkedIn.

By Carlene Lyttle

As I began to look at legacy I found it hard to imagine the seven generation stewardship concept of indigenous populations, to live and work for seven generations into the future. I can’t even tell what job my 9 year old may look for in a decade, never mind what might be the world of my descendants in 300 years. Although, I can trace the line of my family in Inishowen back 288 years to my great-great-great-great-great grandfather Daniel O’Dogherty born in 1736 – a fisherman and a farmer living by the Crana River. My great grandfather – Neal Joseph was born in 1874 married Ellen O’Doherty from Umgal, Malin to whom my grandfather John Doherty (Saddler) was born in 1924. I can imagine Granda Saddler as a child, fishing the rivers, collecting dulse, and picking potatoes. I think of the love of the community as the reason why my direct line, for seven generations, chose not to leave Inishowen for a different life in America or Australia. I discovered a peace in the longer thinking of seven generations stewardship. In a world of 24 hour new cycles, instant messaging and unlimited distraction, I am enjoying long term thinking and looking to escape the tyranny of the present moment.

The oldest known human artifact in Ireland is a flint flake found in County Derry dating back to around 12,000 years ago. In Inishowen evidence of hunter gathers goes back to 8,000 BCE with rock art and rudimentary tools. I’m living in a village, Culdaff in North Donegal, which can trace back 4000 years of inhabitants. From neolithic rock art and bronze age shards of urns, the material traces of my ancestors lend a sense of awe and perspective. The copper bell which was made in honour of St. Buadán in the 8th century is the only early Christian copper hand bell still in the area it was made, thanks to a family who passed it down for 1200 years.
But in Culdaff, I see evidence of temporal myopia, defined by Krznaric, as the inability to see beyond immediate concerns. The holy well from the same cult of St. Buadán was built upon with a septic tank which still covers it today. The neolithic standing stones at Bocan, which had a ritual significance for our druid ancestors in the early bronze age, are used as a scratching post for cows of the farmer whose land they are in, causing cracks in the stones. So many decisions have been made for a short term gain.

How can we know what will be reverenced and respected as a legacy of our lifetimes? We can’t. Kierkegaard said ‘life can only be understood backwards but must be lived forwards’. My dad lives forwards. If he was from neolithic Ireland he wouldn’t have had a burial site, or an urn from the bronze age. To bury him he wants us to put him in a wheelie bin and set it on fire. He would not be of the St. Buadán cult and pass on a copper bell through generations. His legacy will not be a watch, rosary beads or a treasured books of poems. But as my sister reminded me when I was mulling ideas for my Congregation submission, he will leave a legacy in the stories we will share.

Stories have a legacy just as physical artefacts. The links of St. Buadán and the monastic traditions of Iona have been carried through a copper hand bell but also the story of the rock, still in the Culdaff River, that saved him from the Picts in Scotland by transforming to a boat and carrying him across the sea, before returning to stone when he disembarked in Culdaff where it can still be seen in the river unmoved by land use or floods. As a life lived forwards the stories that will make up the legacy of Eugene Lyttle, as Brian Friel said of memories in Philadelphia Here I Come, will be ‘distilled of all coarseness and what is left it going to be precious, precious gold’.

What would I say to Daniel O’Dogherty about the legacy he has left me? Thank you for leaving a legacy of love and respect for the land of Inishowen. The stories of the beauty and wild nature have had a lasting impact. I now think of how to maintain the sand dunes, ensure there are still fish in the rivers, and preserve the bogs. Thanks to the stories that have been passed down I have found a meaning in what I am doing, For my great-great-great-great-great grand descendants, you may one day be asked to think back on me as part of a weekend of unconference – I’m going to work to leave you air to breathe, water to drink, a planet to live on.

I Secretly Read Children’s Books #5 #cong23 #reality

Synopsis:

Children seem to know the difference between reality and real life even though they spend a lot of their lives playing and living in their imagined life.

Total Words

1,068

Reading Time in Minutes

4

Key Takeaways:

  1. Not to forget to learn from the past and how can society benefit from it.
  2. Getting in touch with our inner child can still support us in many ways.
  3. How apt the lyrics for” Video Killed the Video Star” 44 years later.
  4. Not to diminish children early in their life, to help them retain skills they have already learned?

About Geraldine O'Brien:

Interior Architect and grandmother still seeking new ways to use my experience.

Contacting Geraldine O'Brien:

You can contact Geraldine by email

By Geraldine O’Brien

Children seem to know the difference between reality and real life even though they spend a lot of their lives playing and living in their imagined life.

This thought surprised me !

My inner child encouraging me to followed this tread, to see where it lead.

It reminded me of a younger self and how. I had finally learnt to read. She could transport her self away from the reality of life and into a magical world which some days was better than the realty of my situation at that time.

Many years ago I came across Mac Barnett, a children’s writer based in San Francisco.

His wonderful TedTalk “Why A Good Book Is Like A Secret Door”. It still has the ability to make me laugh out loud many years later.

I love his mischievous style and have bought many of his books as gifts for children, and secretly I read them myself.

I got to meet him in Dublin when he was here on a book tour I was delighted to find he was just as disarming in real life as he was in his TedTalk.
While visiting San Francisco some years ago. I visited some of the magical places places he recommended in his TedTalk, dragging my family along with me. They were exactly as he said zany and very imaginative.

As we can be influenced by many things around us, I don’t want to take accidental credit from Mac Barnett should I inadvertently have used his words and or ideas for framing this blog.

I knew exactly what he was talking about when he mentions “Wonder and crossing over into Narnia” and how we can relearn as adults how to visit this magical spaces in childish our minds.

If you like to watch this talk.

I have two beautiful granddaughters. Their mother and father are doing a great job parenting them, especially as the oldest was born during Covid lockdown and they all lived with us until very recently. I feel very privileged to have shared their lives from birth.

I am now able to converse with the oldest, she can now tell you what she needs or wants as she is very proudly “three”. She loves books as well as her grandmother She has twigged that books are a great source of stories and knowledge and I am her willing co conspirator.

Recently on visit she presented me with a book to read for her.

Four books later, I was getting weary and was looking for a gentle way to distract her without breaking the wonder of this time together so I asked her to tell me a story. Her eyes filled with  excitement and she asked “What story“ ?

“You decide” was all she needed to begin to tell “Her story”.

I decided I wanted to record her so I has a digital memory of her at this charming age of her life.

As she is a child of the 21 C she is already desensitised to her parents LifeCacheing or LifeStreaming her young life, in videos and photos mainly.

She happily obliged me. Starting again but this time she began illustrate her story using her voice, face and body to explain and illustrate her emotions. Which in turn greatly enhanced my experience of her story.

I should explain, her favourite music and film is ABBA and Mamma Mia. She has learned from ABBA and Mamma Mia how she can hold peers and adults attention in a very engaged way. Using these methods.

Driving home later I remembered the song by the Bumbles, Video Killed the Radio Star, thinking to myself  that she is already a video star.
Looking up the lyrics later, I realised how relevant the song still is.

I was surprised to see it still is very current despite being released in 1979. It was the first video played on the MTV music station.

The story behind  ‘Video Killed the Radio Star’ Is about nostalgia referring to technological change in the 1960’s and the desire to remember the past and the disappointment that children will never be able to experience that time.

We are currently experiencing unprecedented growth in AI which may allow children of the 21C, experience the past in ways that have been unimagined before. Sometimes the reality of our lives is too much to handle and why it’s good to remember to see things through the eyes of a child.

My reality is to try to live as much as I can in the present.

As a designer whose job is to problem solve for my clients on daily basis.

I find that the ability I use everyday is my imagination.

Creatively escaping  from the reality of daily life so I can indulge in and play in my minds eye, to find a creative solutions for my problems.

It’s important not to diminish children early in life, from using these already honed and valuable skills of curity, imagination and play. These are skills that they have already learned during early childhood before they negotiate the education system of the 21C.

I can see how ChatGPT and other AI companies has helped us to explore how these skills can be used and applied for good and bad. I think it’s early days yet. I am concerned about what will be lost in the the rush to monetise this technology.

To borrow a phrase from Mac Barnett’s TED Talk “Its all about the” Art” in the Venn Diagram” Or to say it another way, to be careful not to throw the baby out with the bath water.