TILT

Things I Learned Today

fireRecap: Our storyteller has shared her four most crazymaking encounters (Reports from Hell) with bureaucracy in Parts 1 and 2 of this series. In Part 1 she shared how a summer job with the Federal government turned her into a thief, and how in order to survive a stint with the State government she became a liar. In Part 2 of this series, she wrote of the bureaucracies she has encountered later in life, how the Hysterical Commission turned her into a cheat, and how the Fire District has left her cynical.

This is the third and last installment in this series. Her takeaway. MoonLit has shared the backstory as context so that you may draw your own conclusions.

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fire Recap: Last time, our storyteller shared her youthful encounters with bureaucracies. She wrote of the Forest Circus, where she'd been ordered to slaughter thousands of innocent seedlings. The experience compromised her ethically and rendered her an insubordinate thief.

She relapsed ten years later by taking a job with the Motor Vehicles Division. There, she was required to send handicapped drivers to the doctor to be recertified as 'still permanently disabled' in order to renew their wheelchair license plates. She left public service compromised, an insubordinate liar.

We rejoin our story in progress.

Report #3: Hysterical Contagion

paint I thought when I bought the auto parts shop that, since I was working for myself I would be in charge. My signature was all by itself on a breathtakingly huge loan and I thought that purchased me the right to self-determination. Seems like it should have. I told myself I was empowered and didn't have to let bureaucracy compromise my integrity ever again. I was in my early 40s and purchased the business to bail my mom out of it after my dad passed away suddenly and unexpectedly. The shop was housed in an ancient, wheezing building centrally located in a small town on Route 66. I had an enormous mortgage on a piece of history, my dingy old dog-eared auto parts shop was on the register of historical buildings.

burning moneyA few years into my auto parts career, I was changing vendors, and needed to repaint my building exterior from gray and gold NAPA team colors, to team CarQuest colors, which were red, white, and blue. This transition was taking place, coincidentally, not long after the 9/11 tragedy. All of America was painting itself red, white, and blue. The Historical (Hysterical) Commission responsible for overseeing the integrity of the appearance of the Hysterical District, insisted I commission an architect's rendering of the building's new look (at a cost of thousands of dollars and weeks in delay), in order to obtain its permission for my red, white, and blue paint.

The lady who ran the Chamber of Commerce was also the chair of the Hysterical Commission. She was a fine artist, a painter, in her spare time. She was the one who delivered the Hysterical Commission's bad news to me about the architectural rendering. “Are you kidding me!!?” I ranted, “It's a greasy old auto parts shop, Donna! Sheesh, it could hardly get an uglier!”

But in the end I had to surrender, the authority of the Hysterical District overlaid my rights to independence as property owner. I buckled and hired the architect. The Hysterical Commission liked the architect's picture and gave its blessings to my paint job at last.

Unfortunately, the colors the architect proposed, and the only ones the Commission would allow me to use, were proprietary mixes available only at a certain paint store in Phoenix (I suspected collusion). That certain paint store informed me that the paint would have to be special ordered. It was going to take weeks to get, and someone was going to have to drive to Phoenix (150 miles away) to pick up the Blush Ecru, Batik Blue, Domino Black, and Lipstick Red paint.

I blew a gasket and went to the Chamber of Commerce office to bitch about it. Donna wrinkled her little fine art nose at me and said “Well, but, T, you know, some whites are so glaring and cold.”

witch on broomstickI managed not to roll my eyes but thought Oh, this poor, fragile thing. I flew the short distance between the Chamber of Commerce and my shop on my broomstick. In flames.

We were already weeks behind with the changeover project owing to the Hysterical Commission/paint fluster cluck. I was about to snap under the pressure.

I paced and fumed and raged and cussed for a while to try and get my blood pressure back down.

“Okay.” I said, taking David aside for a private conversation. “We are SO done screwing around with this. Like effing paint is the most important thing we've got on our plate right now. I have yet to find the Champion plugs, and our customers are starting to cry about the good old NAPA days. It just won't do.

“Go to the hardware store.” I told him. “You have a half an hour till they close, Get the coldest, most eye-blistering white they have, vampire blood red, and the bluest of royal blues. awardOff the shelf colors, David, I want this job finished by Monday.”

“Yes Ma'am,” he grinned.

By Monday it was done. We got a lot of compliments from our neighbors on our bright new look, including one from the Chamber of Commerce lady, end of 3Donna, who found it refreshing and clean and said “See, it was worth the extra effort, wasn't it?” The Chamber of Commerce even gave us an award for our new spruced-up exterior. And there I was, a newly-minted insubordinate cheat, my right to self-determination tatters in the wind.


Report #4: The Blind Leading the Sighted

fire truck By my early 60s I had sold the auto parts shop. My feet and back were ruined and I could no longer run fast enough to escape the trouble that pursued me down the street in my own little neighborhood. I was out for a hobble around the block with my walking sticks when a neighbor ran me off the road into the bar ditch with his bright yellow Jeep. Literally. He held me hostage there. He wouldn't help me out of the ditch or move his Jeep until I caved and agreed to take a position on the fire district board. It would only be temporary, he promised. He only needed someone to sign checks, he said. I wouldn't even have to attend meetings, ever, he vowed. Although we didn't have one handy, he is a Christian man, the kind who are always up in your face about it, and I made him swear on a virtual Bible.

gumball hydrantAs soon as I was duly sworn in and my signature was officially on the fire district's checking account, he quit and dumped the whole mess on my head. It was the sleaziest thing that's happened to me since I quit drinking.

I had managed to happily avoid bureaucracies for almost 20 years and now find myself running a tiny little government—just 94 acres of 'nobody else gives a shit.'

The fire district job situates me, who doesn't know squat about managing a fire department, (nominally) in charge of managing a fire department. I'm now supposed to supervise people who have lifetimes of professional experience with it. This is bureaucratic intelligence at its finest.

When I complain about the illogic of this to one or more of the several fire chiefs I work with now, I ask them to recognize that none of us on the board (me least of all) has enough information to supervise any of them. They are polite and deferential as they explain to me that this remove is institutionally intentional. My board and I are theoretically the degree of separation between the county, big meetingwhich collects the taxes, and the fire department, which spends it. It is thought that this degree of separation puts board members like me in a position to be careful with taxpayer money.

Sigh. Yet another room full of policy makers somewhere in the draconian bowels of the fire district world who clearly haven't thought it through. If anything, I'm in greater danger than anyone else of wasting taxpayer's money because I don't have the first, teensy, tiny little clue how the money would be best spent.

I was recently required to write into an employment agreement that the independent contractor my little government was hiring would agree not spend her taxpayer funded wages at any business boycotting Israel.

contract“Who is going to enforce this?” I fumed at my attorney, who is counsel for the County. “I promise you it's not going to be me. Do you have a list of approved businesses? Does my new hundred-dollar-a-month secretary have to submit receipts for approval? The district will be in violation of this contract from the outset, right? I'm extremely reluctant to sign this.”

“Oh,” the County Attorney says, “It's just one of those quirky little things. You know, a feel-good thing. Nobody expects it to be enforced.”

“Well why write it as a law then? If it's just a 'feel good thing' let's send her a greeting card. I'm taking this quirky little unenforceable feel good clause out of the employment contract. It doesn't make me feel good in the least.”

“No, you can't do that. State law demands that clause be in all contracts with all levels of government.”

“I thought you told me the law requires the board to take care of the taxpayer's money! This is a Catch 22. You're requiring us to sign something regarding expenditure of taxpayer money we know to be unenforceable. Is someone at the state level going to vet every business where our secretary might spend her money? What if the only grocery store in town is on the verboten list? Is the state going to pay her extra to drive to another town to go to an approved grocery store? Our tiny little district doesn't have any extra money to pay for travel. This is Big Brother stuff and it's terrifying! How can you be so casual about it?”

“Nothing will come of it,” the County Attorney says, “and I will defend you if anything does.”

Small comfort.

I butted heads with my attorney for a few more rounds, but I'm old and soft-headed now, while she has youth and legal certainty on her side. We soon discovered that she had the harder head.

My purpose here is not to throw stones at any of the excellent people who work in and around fire departments, but rather to point out the fundamental flaw in the basic bureaucratic structure of fire districts. The structure that elevates me, yet again, to a level of incompetency. The structure that places the cart in front of the horse. You can just call me Peter (principal).

end of 4So I try my very best to be a good sheep now with this 'volunteer' position. I go placidly where I'm led and sign where I'm told to sign, a newly-minted insubordinate cynic.

To be conculted


moonlit press logo, crescent moon with a star below

MoonLit offers this second installment of three in a series that takes a gander at bureaucracies and how they function—or dysfunction as the case may be. Be not afraid, this series is only political in a tangential sort of way. The series hopes we can retain our sense of humor as we navigate the minefield that American bureaucracies often represent.

Follow Terryl's work and give her feedback on:

Mastodon https://mastodon.sdf.org/@wordsbyterryl
email mailto:moonlitpress@proton.me


Gratitude list:

Graphic design by AJ Brown https://mastodon.sdf.org/@mral
Photography by AJ Brown https://mastodon.sdf.org/@mral

Some images are through Creative Commons License and we would thank all of those creators if we could find their names.

To the Life in Pieces writing circle for reading an early draft of this.

Terryl is extremely grateful to Chief Trotter and everyone at High Country Fire and Rescue, for their valuable assistance in navigating the administration of a small fire district. Thank you for your many kindnesses great and small, and your clear-eyed understanding of the work you do. You're worth your weight in gold, each and every one.

Terryl and Al are both deeply thankful for the people who read our work. You are what make it worthwhile. We love hearing back from you, and are ever so grateful to you for sharing our efforts with your friends and family.


Terryl Warnock is an eccentric with a happy heart who lives on the outskirts of town with her cat. She is known as an essayist, proof reader, editor, maker of soap, and proud pagan. A lifetime student, she has pursued science, religion, and sustainable communities. This, plus life experience from the local community service to ski instructor, from forest service worker to DMV supervisor, from hospitality to business owner gives her a broad view on the world.

Terryl is the author of:
The Miracle du jour, ISBN-10: 0989469859, ISBN-13 ‏: ‎ 978-0-9894698-5-2

AJ Brown, in a past life, was an embedded systems engineer (digital design engineer). He worked on new product designs from hard disk controllers, communication protocols, and link encryptors to battery monitors for electric cars.

A few years ago he surrendered his spot on the freeway to someone else. Now he is more interested in sailing, building out his live-in bus for travel, and supporting the idea of full-circle food: the propagation, growth, harvest, storage, preparation, and preservation of healthy sustenance. He is a strong supporter of Free/Libre Open Source Software[F/LOSS] and is willing to help most anyone in their quest to use it.

Together, we are MoonLit Press.

article goes here then colophon


moonlit press logo, crescent moon with a star belowWe have learned from our Hopi neighbors that the mind and spirit are most open to growth when there is a smile upon the face. In keeping with that wisdom MoonLit offers this as the first of three installments in a series that take a gander at bureaucracies and how they function—or dysfunction—as the case may be.

Follow Terryl's work and give her feedback on:

Mastodon https://mastodon.sdf.org/@wordsbyterryl
email mailto:moonlitpress@proton.me


Gratitudes:

Graphic design by AJ Brown https://mastodon.sdf.org/@mral
Photography by AJ Brown https://mastodon.sdf.org/@mral

Some images are through Creative Commons License and we would thank all of those creators if we could find their names.

To the Life in Pieces writing circle for reading an early draft of this.

Writing is not easy for our staff writer at MoonLit. She writes with people in the Life in Pieces writing circle from whom beautiful, lyrical, evocative, emotionally potent writing flows like water from a tap. These powerful writers can turn it on and off at will. Terryl admires these writers (and, okay, if she's honest, is a little jealous) and enjoys their work immensely. But for her own part, writing is dreadfully heavy lifting. Terryl is grateful to Al for his computer expertise and his willingness to share it. Without his brilliance and generosity of spirit there would be little point in doing the hard work of writing because nobody would ever read it.

Terryl and Al are both deeply thankful for the people who read our work. You are what make it worthwhile. We love hearing back from you, and are ever so grateful to you for sharing our efforts with your friends and family.


Terryl Warnock is an eccentric with a happy heart who lives on the outskirts of town with her cat. She is known as an essayist, proof reader, editor, maker of soap, and proud pagan. A lifetime student, she has pursued science, religion, and sustainable communities. This, plus life experience from the local community service to ski instructor, from forest service worker to DMV supervisor, from hospitality to business owner gives her a broad view on the world.

Terryl is the author of:
The Miracle du jour, ISBN-10: 0989469859, ISBN-13 ‏: ‎ 978-0-9894698-5-2

AJ Brown, in a past life, was an embedded systems engineer (digital design engineer). He worked on new product designs from hard disk controllers, communication protocols, and link encryptors to battery monitors for electric cars.

A few years ago he surrendered his spot on the freeway to someone else. Now he is more interested in sailing, building out his live-in bus for travel, and supporting the idea of full-circle food: the propagation, growth, harvest, storage, preparation, and preservation of healthy sustenance. He is a strong supporter of Free/Libre Open Source Software[F/LOSS] and is willing to help most anyone in their quest to use it.

Together, we are MoonLit Press.

missing Lughnasadh (loo-na-sa) is one of three pagan harvest festivals that stretch from late summer to the end of the vegetal cycle at Samhain (sow-en, Halloween). Lughnasadh celebrates the first harvest early in August; Imbolc, at the autumnal equinox is the second; and the last is at Samhain, on November Eve, after which the world dies back for the winter.

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missing

Wild bird populations in North America are a fraction of what they were in the middle of the 20th century. Many species face extinction. A significant factor in the demise of wild birds are domestic cats. Please, please, please keep your cats inside.

bird caught by catDomestic cats kill an

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missing

Lughnasadh poem by Terryl Warnock


Flying Lessons

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Details. The all-important details. Some say the devil hides there, in minutiae easily dismissed as inconsequential and beneath notice. Aspects of the whole so small as to escape importance.

I didn't think much about insects. Unless

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box label text I was righteously pleased with my clever box labeling, and my label that got a lot of laughs from a lot of people for a lot of years. I was a young adult packing to move out of my college dorm room, and was beginning to accumulate things. My things. The things that would express my adult self and

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The Exhausting Calculus of Harming None

crushed paper cup with shadowI recently killed the first two paper coffee cups I've killed in over a decade. My community service commitment obliged me to attend several days of training in a seedy desert casino a couple of hours north and west of here. I found myself trapped there with thousands of excessive consumers.

When I travel, which is rarely, I bring herbal tea along. The first evening I took my clean stainless steel travel cup to the restaurant closest to the elevators to get some hot water so I could go back to my room and make a relaxing cup of tea. I asked the server to fill my cup with hot water. Oblivious to the point, he brought a paper cup of hot water, poured it into my stainless, crumpled the paper cup, and tossed it in a trash can as he walked away.

I was gobsmacked. As gobsmacked as the woman who'd checked me in earlier had been when I turned down two 'complimentary' plastic bottles of water.

“Oh, no, thank you,” I said, “I haven't killed a plastic water bottle in a very long time.”

“But, they're free,” she stammered, “you can put them in the refrigerator in your room.”

I flourished my battered old water bottle, never far from my hand, and said “This one goes in the refrigerator filled with tap, just as well.”

She looked at me like I'd just stepped off a space ship. “But, they're free . . .”

The second paper cup I killed as inadvertently as the first. I took my stainless to the coffee kiosk the next morning and handed it to the barista to get a cuppa. I have done this without drama so many times in so many coffee shops it didn't occur to me that the barista couldn't, or wouldn't know what to do with it. I could barely hear her over the cacophony of the casino, and was paying attention to securing my wallet in my bag as she told me “I can't fill that, it's against health department regulations.” Smacked again, I couldn't react quickly enough.

“Uhhhhh . . .” She had my money and my name on a paper cup before I could recover my wits enough to cancel my order.

It wasn't until the evening of my third day in casino hell that I found a food outlet which would bring a carafe of coffee to the table at dinner I could fill my stainless from. I brought the coffee back to my room and drank it tepid the next morning.

It was a painfully tedious, three-step process to strip the bulbs from the Christmas lights on my old homemade outdoor decoration. The old strings of inefficient lights had lasted for almost twenty years so I didn't have any real complaints. There were five, 150-bulb strings wrapped around the two-foot-tall, flame-shaped frame the guys in the locomotive shop fabricated for me. I bolt it to the top of the Maypole to make it into a Yule candle in the dark of the year.

The first step was to untangle the lights from the frame. Clearly it never occurred to me that I might have to do this for they were impressively, impossibly tangled. It took wire cutters and a jigsaw puzzle mentality to get them off. The second step was to pry up a tiny plastic clip that held each bulb securely in its socket. I remember thinking these little clips were a great feature when I bought the lights. Now I know better. Now I know they're evil. I jabbed my hands repeatedly with the tiny screwdriver required for this task. Ultimately I surrendered to reality and put on work gloves, which saved on bloodshed but impeded the detailed work. The third step was to work along the length of the string and pull the bulbs from their sockets with a pair of pliers. Working my way up and down the first string took over three hours and left me with terrible back and neck pain.

Only 600 bulbs to go. My technique eventually improved, but I could only do half a string at a sitting, and that made the project stretch to the horizon. I swallowed the lump in my throat thinking of this painful tedium, but I stayed the course because I am acutely aware of what I throw away and what becomes of it. I had called the Hazardous Waste Department at the county landfill about my Christmas lights and they had given me hope that, sans bulbs, they would accept the old lights because the wire in them could be recycled.

It wasn't until the third string I finally grasped that I needed to pull the socket away from the bulb rather than pull the bulb away from the socket. It is a subtle difference in technique, but one that made all the difference. When I pulled at the bulb, the pliers slipped on about one bulb in five, and the pliers broke the glass. The earthworms living under the front porch will suffer because of the microshards of glass I let get away from me in this way.

Pulling the socket from the bulb, though, required leverage from my arthritic thumb that turned the project into torture on a whole new level. I remained committed to it though, because I can walk away from this project until my pain abates in a way Mother Nature cannot. If I throw the Christmas lights away, She's stuck with them for geologic time.

I am green. I was born this way.

I bullied my boss into letting me flex my work time to help put together a community event for the twentieth anniversary of Earth Day in 1990. He wasn't happy about it but I was too valuable to fire and he got over it. I volunteered hundreds of hours coordinating the recycling arm of the big event. It was a spectacular success. We recycled tons. Tons more than had been anticipated. We had to call for more rolloffs before noon. Although I couldn't browbeat my boss into the flex time to help with it in subsequent years, my beloved recycling fair became a fixed feature of the Earth Day celebrations in Flagstaff and the city eventually went on to establish a recycling program.

The most radical thing you can do is stay home. Gary Snyder

Home is enough for me.

Home is sacred space, a sanctuary. In my adult life I have always been willing to take the financial hit living in paradise demands. Poverty with a view is not a joke. Most people have to leave home to experience the natural world I am blessed to live in every day. The disadvantage, at the risk of stating the obvious, is the poverty. But I am rich in so many ways. Ways that cannot be reduced to monetary valuation by any manner of calculus. I have dark, stars, dirt, fresh air, quiet, and an extended close-knit family of trees, animals, birds, people, and native plants. I am happy and fulfilled at home, so my carbon footprint is next to nil for vacation travel. This is how I justify the carbon cost of driving 120 miles round trip to take my labor-intensive Christmas lights to the county transfer station.

I proudly present my paper sack to the young man working in the hazardous waste area. He glances in the bag and says “Oh, we don't take those.” My heart sinks to my shoes. “We could throw them away for you, though.” he offers, helpfully.

“Um, is Eric here? I called and spoke with him . . .”

“Yeah. ERIC!!'

Eric, from a loft somewhere in the back of the cavernous building hollers back. “Yeah?”

“Lady says she talked to you about Christmas lights.”

“Yeah, I told her we would take 'em if the bulbs were stripped.”

“Oh,” He checks for bulbs and says with a smile, “If Eric says it's okay, it's okay.”

I am so relieved when he takes them I don't even ask for the paper bag back although it still has some good life left in it.

“Thank you, and thank Eric for me.”

I get a Right, lady, whatever, look and start for home, sixty miles away.

The addict in me tastes the desperation in the blinking, clanging cacophony of the seedy desert casino. Underlying the shallow valuation of everything in terms of money is the fraught quest of the addict to change the way I feel. Alcoholics drink to escape the dreary ordinariness and petty anguishes of their lives. Others go to a casino and hope to hit it big for the same reason.

My lifetime of frugality with waste wouldn't offset a single day's operation here. People go to places like the casino to be excessive: excessively wasteful, excessively hedonistic, excessively skanky. They are looking for instant gratification. My long view is alien here.

One person wasting two paper coffee cups a decade is not the end of the world. Las Vegas has 150,000 motel rooms. Figure two people per room per night and that's 600,000 paper cups a day, over two hundred million of them a year. A tragedy beyond reckoning.

Consider the triangular recycling symbol. The three arrows pointing to each other are for reduce, reuse, and recycle. It also illustrates the ecological circularity of the biosphere. We get back from the world what we put out into it. We are the only ones (!) who can save ourselves from drowning in our own waste.

Some say recycling is an exercise in futility, that we have passed the tipping point where it will make any difference. But it makes a difference to Mother Earth, and it certainly makes a difference to the tree that doesn't have to die to make the paper coffee cup. I'm an old woman now and, like most egotistical humans, I hope to be remembered after I'm gone. I'd like to be remembered for the quality of my compassion, perhaps, or something compelling and beautiful I have written. I'd like my legacy to be my happy heart, not the mountain of trash I left behind me. I didn't have the time to spend all those painful hours stripping the cursed Christmas lights, but I made time for it because, for me and my house, we will serve the Goddess.

Please recycle.
Please reuse.
Please reduce.
It's not too late.


Harm None is the only religious commandment contemporary pagans are required to keep. The Exhausting Calculus of Harming None is a series of essays exploring the ambivalences encountered living this commandment.

Follow Terryl's work and give her feedback on:

Mastodonhttps://mastodon.sdf.org/@wordsbyterryl
email moonlitpress@proton.me



Gratitude list:
Graphic design by AJ Brown, https://mastodon.sdf.org/@mral
Photography by Terryl Warnock, https://mastodon.sdf.org/@wordsbyterryl
Photography by AJ Brown, https://mastodon.sdf.org/@mral
Editing by Lynn Hartman, https://www.lynnHartmanbooks.com/favorites
The Life in Pieces writing circle, for their excellent critiques of an early draft,
and to functioning recycling programs wherever they may be found.

Terryl Warnock is an eccentric with a happy heart who lives on the outskirts of town with her cat. She is known as an essayist, proof reader, editor, maker of soap, and proud pagan. A lifetime student, she has pursued science, religion, and sustainable communities. This, plus life experience from the local community service to ski instructor, from forest service worker to DMV supervisor, from hospitality to business owner gives her a broad view on the world.

Terryl is the author of:
The Miracle du jour, ISBN-10: 0989469859, ISBN-13 ‏: ‎ 978-0-9894698-5-2

AJ Brown, in a past life, was an embedded systems engineer (digital design engineer). He worked on new product designs from hard disk controllers, communication protocols, and link encryptors to battery monitors for electric cars.

A few years ago he surrendered his spot on the freeway to someone else. Now he is more interested in sailing, building out his live-in bus for travel, and supporting the idea of full-circle food: the propagation, growth, harvest, storage, preparation, and preservation of healthy sustenance. He is a strong supporter of Free/Libre Open Source Software[F/LOSS] and is willing to help most anyone in their quest to use it.

Together, we are MoonLit Press.

Blog articles are published roughly monthly on the new moon. Adjustments are made to align with major holidays like Beltane or to comment on current events.

See wordsbyterryl for the latest and a complete list in chronological order.

For realtime notices follow wordsbyterryl on Mastodon or ask her to add you to her curated email list.

Serious Essays

Reality-based essays, Letters to the editors, Comments of social condition, etc.

Fun Stuff

Easy reading stories about present day topics or past events.

Seasonal Thoughts

Essays and poetry about real-time celebrations.

Guest Authors

From time to time real or imaginary authors may drop in to express a non-sequitur thought or some political satire:–)

  • Dwart and Ethyl Gothenbobbles – The thermodynamic characteristics of intergalactic gas clouds
  • Donald J. Pharce – visiting professor from C.R.A.P. Institute
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Respected articles and blogs on other sites.

  • Lynn – editor and author

    Unlisted stuff

The rest of the stuff is unlisted, you will have to search the main list in the Fediverse:–) There might be gold.


Terryl Warnock is an eccentric with a happy heart who lives on the outskirts of town with her cat. She is known as an essayist, proof reader, editor, maker of soap, and proud pagan. A lifetime student, she has pursued science, religion, and sustainable communities. This, plus life experience from the local community service to ski instructor, from forest service worker to DMV supervisor, from hospitality to business owner gives her a broad view on the world.

Terryl is the author of:
The Miracle du jour, ISBN-10: 0989469859, ISBN-13 ‏: ‎ 978-0-9894698-5-2

AJ Brown, in a past life, was an embedded systems engineer (digital design engineer). He worked on new product designs from hard disk controllers, communication protocols, and link encryptors to battery monitors for electric cars.

A few years ago he surrendered his spot on the freeway to someone else. Now he is more interested in sailing, building out his live-in bus for travel, and supporting the idea of full-circle food: the propagation, growth, harvest, storage, preparation, and preservation of healthy sustenance. He is a strong supporter of Free/Libre Open Source Software[F/LOSS] and is willing to help most anyone in their quest to use it.

Together, we are MoonLit Press.