Starting Again for the ?? Time

I last wrote on January 19. I went the whole month of February with no posts. I thought any times about posting but then the day would get away from me and no posts.

ROOTSTECH 2024 was Feb 29 to March 2. I listened to Thursday morning  sessions and a couple afternoon sessions as I drove to Idaho and then was at my parents. Didn’t see much on Friday while taking care of Mom. Went in person Saturday morning and attended a class and then got to see and hear Kristen Chenoweth sing and talk.

I bought a Mylio membership at the Expo Hall. It will help me get pictures organized and safely stored.

Tonight I attended the Democratic Caucasus for House District 44. I am now a vice chair of the West Jordan 060 precinct. There was only myself and a gentleman named Wyatt Frampton there from our precinct, so he is the Precinct chair and delegate.

I joined the Democratic party because it is not right that the Republican Party has so much control in the state of Utah. I sincerely disagree with many of the bills passed by the state legislature this session. Especially the bills the dismantled diversity, equity and inclusion offices, that didn’t fund Medicaid for more people or provide services for the disabled, the bills that promoted book banning, etc.

I need to get involved and try to be part of the solution and open my mouth.

I am reading a book called Less is More How Degrowth will save the world by Jason Hinkel. It is a fascinating read and puts into words so many concepts about wealth, inequality, injustice, and misuse of natural resources that have been floating around somewhat nebulously in my head for years.

Jason confronts the paradox of unsustainable growth in world with finite resources.  He calls  capitalism “growthism” because it only ‘works’ if there is ongoing growth. For over 500 years elitists have raped this planet and people to make themselves obscenely wealthy. They will continue to push their agenda of growth because that is what keeps them wealthy and powerful even though it is devastating the ecology of the planet and driving escalating poverty, social injustice and inequality.

Jason talks about how elitists create conditions that exploit the labor force mercilessly. I have never felt like I was being exploited but in just the last 5 days, the case management department continues to cut staffing because, somehow, the data says we are “overstaffed.” I realized that when I get so anxious at work trying to get it all done and when I work late, that is a form of exploitation.  Of course, there are millions of people who are exploited so much more than my discomfort and frustration at my working conditions. But, the degree of exploitation aside..it is still my patients and consumers everywhere who ultimately suffer in some way while the elitists continue to collect record profits.

The book is filled with sobering facts.  “The richest 1% have accumulated wealth worth $158 trillion, which amounts to nearly half of the world’s total  [wealth]. “

“Data from 2010 indicates that around  400,000 people died that year due to crises related to climate  breakdown –mostly hunger and communicable disease. No fewer than 98% of those deaths occurred in the global South. Rich countries will suffer only 1% of climate related deaths within their borders.”

Jason’s degrowth philosophy in a few sentences:

“We must choose to limit growth ourselves. We need to organize the economy so that it operates within planetary boundaries, to maintain the Earth’s life-suporting systems which we depend on for our existence. “

His statement reminds of my question formulated on the bus ride from Banos to Cuenca in December 2022: “What is a sustainable global standard of living?”

I know that I have more than I need of sheltered space, goods, and resources. I want to figure out how to not be wasteful with what I have and to redistribute with love and wisdom my over abundance.  Just as happiness and meaning in life don’t correlate with my personal GDP, global measures of happiness and meaning/purpose are not tied national GDP or wealth accumulation,  growthism.

Rootstech Expo Hall 2024
Sunday dinner with the Burg’s
Cold Walk on North Ash Street
My family

These pictures reflect some of the experiences and people that make my life so blessed.

My Impact

I often wonder if the efforts I make as a novice genealogist make a difference. I rarely seem to be able to find and attach records to the appropriate people. There are so many options sometimes and it seems like I am just guessing sometimes. Even indexing names sometimes seems like my guess as I try to decipher handwritten records from two hundred years ago. It is easy to feel like my inconsistent and novice efforts to do Family History have little impact for good.

I opened Family Search this morning to do some indexing and found this new (to me) addition to Family Search. A whole page about My Impact. The page shows records I have indexed and records I have attached to persons in Family Search. Another section shows what happened to those names that were indexed and attached.

For example,

George StanleyHanisko

Male1897–1964

You indexed George Stanley Hanisko’s name. His name was taken to the Veracruz Mexico Temple on 26 January 2019.

Many of the names I had indexed were distant relatives of mine or Gil’s, like Gil’s 10th cousin twice removed.

Virginia NorfleetJordan

Female1867–1948

You indexed Virginia Norfleet Jordan’s name. Her name was taken to the Oquirrh Mountain Utah Temple on 9 June 2017.

I find this new feature an answer to prayers. I keep trying to do Family History because I know that I have a responsibility to share the Gospel of Jesus Christ with both the living and the dead. I have a firm testimony that making connections between families is what the Gospel of Jesus Christ is all about. Despite having that desire and the testimony, I have struggled to be consistent in working on Family History daily. Seeing these connections now happening because I took 15 minutes to index some names or research some hints, gives me a lot of encouragement and hope that my every effort is meaningful to someone. I do make a difference.

I am also in awe of my mother Serena Watt. She just turned 85 on Saturday, January 13. She has worsening macular degeneration and struggles to see a computer screen. She is an avid indexer of records. I was visiting her this week and found her in front of the computer checking indexed records for accuracy. She has been doing this more often because she can see the typed names better than trying to discern the handwritten names. What an inspiration to me she is! An example of someone whose abilities are declining but she still makes the effort to serve others.

The screenshot shows how much work she has done over the years. I can’t even imagine what her Impact page shows!

Serena Watt’s Indexing Numbers