When Frogs Sing, We Listen

When Frogs Sing, We Listen
Watercolor by Anne McClard
Why do frogs sing?

I am sure some people wonder why I bother spending time writing books and songs. I sometimes worry that friends and acquaintances think my writing activities are egoistic. It’s possible that some think I am a pretentious poser, or that I am a bad writer, a bad singer, or a poor musician, and don’t understand why I bother. One has to start someplace, and typically, one doesn’t start at the top. And, besides, frogs sing because they have to.

I write because I like telling stories, and love the process of piecing things together. My two favorite idioms are opposites—song and novel—short and long form. Each of these forms comes with its challenges. The challenge with the long form is how to keep readers engaged, maintaining continuity, and keeping track of all of the characters and events. The challenge of the short form is to tell a complete and satisfying story in few words that lasts between three and four minutes, and also pleases the ear (most of the time). The joy lies in the process. That doesn’t mean that I don’t want an appreciative audience. That brings its own satisfaction, but it isn’t my goal. I love exploring words, thoughts and ideas at my leisure without too much regard for what other people might think about them.

Songwriting as Truth-Telling

I participate in Matt Meighan’s songwriting workshops, something I began at the onset of the pandemic, and have continued to do.  He calls his class “Songwriting as Truth-Telling.” I don’t know how many of his classes I have participated in to this point, but quite a few. To date, I have written more than seventy songs, most of them as part of Matt’s workshop. The only daylight most of my songs ever see is in that context. Some songs are better than others, but they are all worthwhile, and that is the truth.

During the pandemic, and while taking care of my mother who was dying, songwriting, music and fiction writing were my refuge. Many of the songs I wrote were about my mother, some inspired by things she said in delirium, some inspired by her lived life, and then later, her death. Those were not happy times, but Matt’s workshop gave me an outlet for dealing with the difficulties in my life.

In today’s post, I want to tell you more about how Matt’s classes work, because being a part of them has brought so much joy to my life, and I feel like there are lessons in it to be gleaned by anybody who has ever been on the giving or receiving end of criticism.

Each workshop lasts four to six weeks, virtual or in-person depending on the season, and also on the songwriters geographic locations.  Every week eight to ten songwriters—a mix of first timers and highly experienced—get together to share something they have written, a song, a poem, an idea for a song, whatever they are able to bring on that day. Matt suggests prompts every week, but no one is required to adhere to the prompt. Many people never use it. I am embarrassed to say that I usually do, as I love the surprises that emerge, and frankly I don’t always have a song waiting in the wings.

You can’t teach a frog to sing if you step on it

Matt doesn’t offer direct instruction or song critique, in fact, critique is prohibited. Each person sings or reads in turn. We don’t spend a lot of time discussing form or the specifics of “how to” write a song. That isn’t the goal. The goal is to listen to other people’s songs closely—to hear the words, story, word choices, voices, melody, and the chord progression .  There are rules. Listen. Hear. Be generous. Kind. At first, I was disappointed that Matt or my fellow workshop participants were  not offering up suggestions about how to make my songs better, but in time my perspective changed.

Initially, I wanted to learn more about structure, and different song forms, so I signed up for a Berkeley class. I got what I needed out of it—it had great course material, not such good human interaction. People were not kind. I didn’t want to put my songs “out there” so that some snotty twenty-something year-old could take a dump on me. And, after several times of attending “Songwriting as Truth-Telling,” I began to understand that the positive responses to specific aspects of my,  and other people’s songs, were the lessons. Turns out a one-word, one-chord song can be a good song, even when a frog is singing it—especially then.

An old frog sings

In case any of you are interested in hearing an old frog perform a few thus-far unperformed songs, I will be singing several at the open mic at Threshold Brewing and Blending, located at SE 79th and Stark on the 27th of July. It starts at 6 and ends at 9. We are looking for a few more songwriters to perform. Reach out to me if you are interested, and I will get you on the list. The slots are 10 to 15 minutes each—so 2-3 songs.

Stay tuned for my next post that will focus on the long-form writing I do! In the meantime, if you haven’t read my first novel, Butterfly Dreamsor ordered my second novel, Margaux and the Vicious Circle, now is an excellent opportunity to do so. While you are at it, check out some of the other great books in the Aristata Press Bookstore!

I am looking for early reviews of Margaux and the Vicious Circle. Reach out to me personally if you would like a free copy of the ePub to read. I will send you a download link.

Think you are registered to vote? Think again! Check.

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It’s not a game; vote like your life depends on it. It does.

My mother moved to Oregon from Colorado back in June. One of the first things we did was have her fill out a voter registration card. With the mid-term elections fast approaching, and so much on the line, I began to wonder whether she was actually registered. She had never received any confirmation. I had recently heard on the news that one could check voter registration status online, so I went online and entered my mother’s details. I learned that she was not registered.

Next, I filled out the online registration form for her, and discovered that because she does not have a Oregon driver’s license or ID card that she needed to submit the paper version of the registration. I filled out the required fields online and discovered that the “Print” function was broken. Then, I found a couple of PDF versions of the voter registration card. They were ostensibly interactive forms, but the form fill feature was broken. The form itself was in a microscopic font that was too small for my aging eyes, let alone my mother’s 91 year-old eyes, so I took a screenshot of the form, blew it up so that my mother could see it, and had her sign it.

After that, we drove to the Washington County Election Division. At the Election Division, we were surprised to find that the handicapped parking was at the opposite end of the building from the entrance. It was a very long walk for my mom, but she was determined that she would get registered. Just another hurdle. The woman who greeted us was very nice and helpful. She went over to her computer, and looked my mom up. “Oh yes, we did receive something from you,” she said looking up at us,” but it is ‘pending’ because we could not verify the address.” She went on to say, “The unit numbers on record for that apartment building only go from 00 to 34.”  We confirmed that she lived in 36, and that the numbers went well above that.

She agreed to extend the numbering schema to my mother’s apartment, but needed confirmation of the other numbers in the building. I volunteered to get these for her, which I did, as soon as we returned to the retirement community.

My mother is now registered, but I am still feeling unhappy with the system that put her into “pending” status with no notification that there was anything wrong with her voter registration application. It is unclear to me who is at fault in this situation. Is it the developer? The landlord? The post office? Who provides legitimate addresses to the Election Division? This must pose an enormous problem for the many people who are moving into new construction addresses, especially in Washington County, which is busting at the seams with new multi-family buildings. How many people think they are registered to vote because they submitted their voter registration cards only to find themselves without a ballot after it is too late to do anything about it?

Today, I once again went online to check to see if my mother was registered only to find that the My Vote feature of the state website is not working. Not to sound paranoid or anything, but the Elections Division of Oregon is under the leadership of Dennis Richardson, a Republican. It occurs to me, that during this cycle, he and his cohort may not be interested in signing up too many new apartment dwellers; they tend to be young, less affluent, or old–not all of these demographics are favorable to the GOP. Just saying that the hurdles for registering to vote in a state that prides itself on its progressive Motor-Voter program, and an all-mail-in ballot are more than they should be. If you moved recently, and have not received confirmation of your registration, you need to check to make sure that you are actually registered. If the state website is broken, call the Election Division for your county, or better yet, go in person!

Elections Division
Public Service Building Suite 501
255 Capitol St. NE
Salem OR 97310
503-986-1518
Toll free 1-866-673-VOTE (1-866-673-8683)
Fax 503-373-7414
TTY 800-735-2900



el***********@or****.gov











Search Engine Bias, or does it know I am White?

I am working on a little side project for a friend of mine who has asked me to collaborate in developing a persona or two for designing a solution to a serious problem. I am not going to go into what that problem is. My friend and I have both have done a lot of research in the domain, and feel confident that we can come up with a persona that will be representative and serve the end goals.

I had finished an initial draft of a persona profile, and started the endless search for photos to go with the persona to bring her to life—her mood board, and day in the life stuff. I wanted to show her family, and wanted her family to be interracial, not because it matters all that much with respect to the problem, but because “we white people” often default to white people pictures in our work, because that is what we have, it is what we know, and it is what is easy. It is precisely because it doesn’t apparently matter that it does!

I wanted a picture of a mom, a dad, and two teen-aged kids. First I searched for families. Lots of great pictures of different kinds of families popped up:

screen shot of family images search
Initially, I was please that so many different types of families were represented, but then I realized that none of these families showed teens.

I quickly became frustrated by the fact that I couldn’t find any pictures of families with teen-aged children, even after I modified my search to include them. I think this speaks to how much our culture dislikes adolescents. We are biased against teenagers, favoring images of families with young, cute little children. How sad. No wonder adolescents feel so disenfranchised; they are! I gave up on that and thought I would go look for individual family members. I began looking for a mother.

I typically used Duck Duck Go as my default search engine. I entered, “stock photo middle aged woman,” very generic, thinking that I would get a mix of images of white people and people of color. This is what I got:

Duck Duck Go search MA women
Not a single “person of color,” in fact this is a very pale set. Even searching “below the fold” did not yield more diverse results!

A lot of white women, even “below the fold.” I went to Google. Same result:

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I went to Bing:

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Holy smokes! I had no idea that there were so few women of color in their middle years. I searched on “middle aged men,” and ended up with the same white result.

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What should we conclude from this? I guess white people are the only people who get to middle age?

I searched on “good-looking men.” All white. Then, “good-looking women.” All white. Who knew?

I told my husband about my discovery, and he suggested that I add “Gen Z” in my search for pictures of interracial families and teens. Darn it, if that didn’t do the trick! I found my family, finally.

I am not sure what to make of all this. I believe this is big data at its worst. Our algorithms are biasing us; they reinforce our bad beliefs, and encourage us to live inside our bubbles. Whatever is going on, it is NOT good. What do you think?