“We’ll fill our lives with cinnamon now” - The Decemberists
Often  it is said that there is a special “something in the air” during the  holidays.  Sometimes, if you’re lucky, that something is snow.   Sometimes it’s the scent of peppermint or balsam fir or chestnuts  roasting on an open fire.  Occasionally, it’s an unexplained aura of  brotherhood and cheer.  More often, it’s haste, stress, curse words, or  in the case of a California Walmart this Black Friday, pepper spray.   Sometimes it’s cinnamon.
Today,  I had a cup of chai.  There are few pleasures in life greater than a  warm mug of chai.  Before I’ve even taken a single frothy sip, its  delicate aromas - mixing sweet and spicy, foreign and familiar - have  already transported me to a heavenly place...brought me home, so to  speak.  The distinct chai spices carry a bite that awakens me to the  world and stimulates my senses while at the same time its smooth milk  tempers the bite, softens the edges, and envelopes me in a blanket of  peace.  No matter how often I take a sip of chai, it never ceases to be  special.  I love every piece - the cardamom, cinnamon, ginger, and  cloves - but perhaps the most universal and accessible of the many  flavors in my cup is cinnamon.  
Harvested from the inner layer of bark of a handful of trees from the genus Cinnamomum,  cinnamon is literally a prehistoric spice.  It was imported to Egypt as  early as 2000 B.C. but was surely being used in South and East Asia  long before then.  In Sri Lanka, which now produces 90% of the world’s  supply, cinnamon is known as kurundu, and in nearby Indonesia, it is called kayu manis,  meaning “sweet wood”.  I love that name for it because that’s what  cinnamon is: it takes what is normal, plain, functional - and makes it  something more.  It is unassuming, brown, and whether rightly so or not,  fairly ubiquitous.  And ubiquitously loved.
Who  doesn’t like cinnamon?  Unlike ginger or cilantro, cinnamon is not a  spice with a cult following.  I don’t usually ask around to see if the  dinner guests mind my adding it to the butternut squash.  Like anything,  it can be overdone, but that would take a pretty heavy-handed chef.   Cinnamon goes well with both sweet foods - apples, yams, chocolate -  and savory or tart foods - squash, curries, wine, cranberries.  It  evokes a sense of comfort, “making this cold harbor now home,” as The  Decemberists sing.  And for many, cinnamon has seasonal associations.   In the TV show Community’s  satire of stop-motion Christmas specials, the characters describe their  imaginary holiday story land as having an “atmosphere that is seven  percent cinnamon.”  At a time when the world is frosting over, hours of  light are short, and warm-blooded creatures retreat to the indoors and  underground, we turn to cinnamon for heat and a hint of joy and rebirth.
Beyond  its comforting properties, however, cinnamon remains a spice.  It both  symbolizes and yields a certain power.  In the Hebrew Bible, Moses was  instructed by the Lord to add cinnamon to the sacred oil with which he  anointed the ark of the covenant, the Tent of Meeting, and all the  accessories of the holy altar.  God commanded him: “Do not make any  other oil using the same formula. It is sacred, and you are to consider  it sacred” (Exodus 30:32).  This sacred spice has been a symbol of  wealth and power for much of its history.  Its demand alone was enough  to spur the capture and colonization of Sri Lanka by first the  Portuguese and then the Dutch in the sixteenth and seventeenth  centuries.  As with coffee, chocolate, diamonds and mahogany, the  cultivation of cinnamon has cost the poor a great deal of blood and  sweat and its profits have not always been theirs to share.
The  potency of cinnamon has traditionally extended to romance as well.  In  the biblical Song of Songs, the lover says of his beloved, “You are a  garden locked up, my sister, my bride; you are a spring enclosed, a  sealed fountain...with choice fruits...calamus and cinnamon...and all  the finest spices.”  She responds, “Awake, north wind, and come, south  wind! Blow on my garden, that its fragrance may spread abroad.  Let my  lover come into his garden and taste its choice fruits” (Song of Songs  4:14-16).  In Proverbs, too, cinnamon is combined with myrrh and aloes  to perfume the bed of the temptress.  There is something about this  spice that is irresistible - something that awakens what is dormant  within us and, to put it bluntly, turns us on.
This  magical “sweet wood” can also heal.  Not only is cinnamon oil used as a  perfume, an insecticide, and an antibiotic, but a recent study by the  Indian Journal of Medical Research found that it was the most effective  of 69 plants tested as an antiviral against HIV-1 and HIV-2.  As someone  who has spent several years working closely with those affected by HIV,  I find this deeply heartening.  As if that weren’t enough, apparently  cinnamon also helps combat cancer.  It has led to documented  anti-melanoma activity in cell cultures and test mice - progress against  the cancer that killed my aunt - and who knew that cinnamon “activates  the Nrf2-dependent antioxidant response in human epithelial colon  cells,” thereby helping to prevent colon cancer like that which robbed  me of my favorite Granny.  The same favorite Granny was starting to go  batty and had some memory loss...she was never diagnosed, but if her  family members are at risk for Alzheimers, a 2011 study found that  CEppt, an extract of cinnamon bark, is a successful inhibitor of that  disease in mice.
So  why this obsession with the so-called sacred spice? Why “fill our lives  with cinnamon now”?  Because there is a draft under the door.  It’s the  first Sunday of Advent, and I’ve begun to deck the halls.  All but the  most stubborn leaves have fallen, my bike is put away, and I’m about to  flip to the calendar’s last page.  In the face of winter’s chill, we  seek warmth.  We gather close, rub our hands, bake with abandon, make  soup.  An atmosphere of cinnamon is a balm for a broken, frozen,  half-dead world.  It is the comfort we need today all tied up with the  hope we hold out for tomorrow.  It is both passion and patience.  In  almost all of us, it triggers something, no matter what that something  is.  So throw a little in your cocoa and meet me by the fireside for a  song: ‘tis the season of cinnamon.
For now we see through a glass, darkly; but then face to face. Now I know in part; but then shall I know even as also I am known. (1 Corinthians 13:12)
Monday, November 28, 2011
Sunday, November 27, 2011
It's Complicated
Devon P likes Dance.
Devon P is in a relationship with Dance.
July 5 at 9:45pm
Devon P added 15 new photos to the album Once Upon a Time...
July 5 at 10:15pm
Devon P was tagged in 13 of her own photos.
September 3 at 10:11pm
Devon P Donned ballet slippers for the first time in far too long and lived to tell the tale. I'm gonna feel it tomorrow.
September 4 at 11:20am
Devon P Can't walk, sit, bend over, turn my head, or laugh. Haven't felt this good in ages!
October 18 at 5:32pm
Devon P Off to see Hubbard Street Dance with Katherine and Erik! So psyched.
December 13 at 9:54pm
Devon P > Cari M Come take class with me! I swear that at this studio every mirror is a skinny mirror!
January 1 at 11:12pm
Devon P New year, new city, new job.
January 8 at 4:04pm
Devon P Never thought I'd say this, but I think I have a new love: yoga!
January 8 at 4:17pm
Devon P is now friends with Back Bay Yoga Studio.
February 2 at 7:49pm
Devon P > Hartley P My PT is awesome! She works full time and dances in a company on the side...She also gave me a list of studios to try in Boston and Cambridge.
March 10 at 8:57pm
Devon P First time in a long time anyone has asked me to do 32 fouettes...
April 29 at 10:33pm
Devon P > Hartley P I <3 Cosmin! He's the Romanian Serg-a-Lerg!
May 17 at 7:40pm
Devon P > Hartley P Haha just chatted with the pianist at ballet about Tatiana Legat! Apparently they are BFF and she used to be a ballet mistress at Boston Ballet. Left for Mother Russia though and he's super bummed.
June 1 at 9:02pm
Devon P likes Claudia T's album La Vie, Les Amis, La Danse.
June 13 at 10:05pm
Devon P Seriously??! The sub for dance class just asked if I danced professionally. I don't know whether to laugh or cry.
August 28 at 9:14pm
Devon P Ugh. How is it possible that someone who danced professionally for so many years cannot count to 8??!
August 31 at 11:07pm
Devon P added 21 new photos to the album Boston Ballet at the Hatch Shell.
September 12 at 8:25pm
Devon P > Hartley P Cosmin is gone. New teacher is tall, skinny and gorgeous. Felt the need to demonstrate her 180+ degree penchee multiple times. Gag me.
September 12 at 9:22pm
Devon P Still feeling the effects of my three month foray into running a year and a half ago. So no, I'll take a pass on that 8 mile race with 2000 feet of elevation change in a ridiculously humid tropical climate.
September 15 at 6:27pm
Devon P went from being “in a relationship” to “it’s complicated.”
October 18 at 3:04pm
Devon P Why am I paying $15 an hour to pretend to be a dancer again? I believe there are other, cheaper forms of self-torture.
October 22 at 12:01am
Devon P likes Hartley P's link Senior Capstone Performance - www.youtube.com.
October 22 at 12:09am
Devon P likes Hartley P's link Hartley P Dance Reel - www.youtube.com.
October 22 at 12:14am
Devon P commented on Hartley P's link Hartley P Dance Reel - www.youtube.com: “Love you sis! Take NYC by storm!”
October 30 12:32pm
Devon P “So to all the secret writers, late-night painters, would-be singers, lapsed and scared artists of every stripe, dig out your paintbrush, or your flute, or your dancing shoes. Pull out your camera or your computer or your pottery wheel. Today, tonight, after the kids are in bed or when your homework is done, or instead of one more video game or magazine, create something, anything. Pick up a needle and thread and stitch together something particular and honest and beautiful, because we need it. I need it. Thank you, and keep going.” - Shauna Niequist, Cold Tangerines
November 12 at 2:55pm
Devon P Can't wait to hit up Boston Ballet's Romeo and Juliet with Cara L!
November 12 at 11:11pm
Devon P “We do not judge great art. It judges us.” - Dr. Caroline Gordon
December 8 at 3:56pm
Devon P Modern class in the citay with Hartley P!
December 30 at 12:18pm
Devon P Conspiring with Hartley P to start a world-changing dance company...while stuffing our faces with cheesecake and chocolate!
January 2 at 9:58am
Devon P Packing the pointe shoes. You never know when you'll need some pink satin-covered pain-induced nostalgia, right?
January 25 at 9:31pm
Devon P Finally found an effective incentive with which to bribe myself to do my PT exercises: withholding other forms of exercise!
February 29 at 12:47am
Devon P Leaping my way into Leap Day barefoot on the beach under Caribbean stars...
March 1 at 3:23pm
Devon P “The only way we can brush against the hem of the Lord, or hope to be part of the creative process, is to have the courage, the faith, to abandon control.” - Madeleine L'Engle
[...]
Devon P went from “it’s complicated” to being “engaged”.
[...]
Devon P is married to Dance.
[...]
It’s still complicated.
Friday, October 21, 2011
The Little Things
Earlier this week, I bought a bag of candy corn at the drug store and put it in a desk drawer at work.
Every  morning, I forget that it is there.  Then, at some point a few hours  into the day, I open the drawer looking for a highlighter or some  white-out or stamps, and voila!  Someone has sent me a secret surprise!   Delighted, I grab a handful and shut the drawer.
A  minute later, this time with no pretense of needing the white-out, I  open the drawer and grab another handful of artificially colored, sugary  goodness (which, by the way, claims to be “made with real honey!”).   Perhaps 45 seconds later, it happens again, this time unconsciously.   Open, shut, chew.  Open, shut, chew.  I am compelled - I can’t stop -  MUST HAVE CANDY CORN!
Ten  or fifteen minutes into this routine, I choke on a piece of candy corn  that, in my manic haste to pump corn syrup and yellow #5 into my blood  stream, goes down the wrong way.  I pause, take a few long sips of  water, and breathe.  My body has saved itself from near-death by tiny  triangular confection bullet.
In  that instant, self control is restored.  The mind is back on top; all  animal appetites are at least tentatively subdued.  I go on with my day.   The drawer stays closed, and all traces of yellow-orange-and-white  striped thought vanish from my brain.
Tuesday, July 26, 2011
Shedding Light on America's Dark Side
 Sundown Towns: A Hidden Dimension of American Racism by James W. Loewen
Sundown Towns: A Hidden Dimension of American Racism by James W. LoewenMy rating: 5 of 5 stars
I have been meaning to read this book since Chris Lahr brought it to my attention four years ago. I finally managed to get it on inter-library loan, and I was instantly wary because it was about 500 pages long and 10 lbs - not exactly ideal for the crowded subway, where I do most of my reading. But in a way, the book's physical size is a reflection of the ideas its pages contain: this is a heavy subject. I don't blame Loewen for refusing to skimp on the details, though - these truths have been suppressed long enough. So I persevered, and made it to the end, and I entreat everyone in America to do the same.
The premise is this: many of our basic assumptions about race in America are false. For one, race relations have not followed a linear trajectory of improvement since the end of slavery. After the Civil War, things got drastically better for blacks in this country: they were given opportunities for good jobs, owning land, playing major league sports, and holding political office. Then, due to a complex combination of factors, things turned sour, and between 1890 and 1940, most of the ground gained by Lincoln, the 13th-15th amendments, and Reconstruction was lost. America plunged deeply into racism once again, and this time the tactics were a lot more subtle.
The second major assumption that Loewen cuts down is that racism in this country is rooted in the South. Almost all of the book's 500 pages are about places north of the Mason-Dixon line - places that, in the collective (white) memory have been friendly to blacks all along. Though they may not have kept slaves, these cities and towns still viewed African Americans as inferior beings, and they resolved to keep them as far away as possible. Sundown towns are towns that had policies, written or unwritten, that said blacks could not let the sun go down on them there...or else. I'll let you read the book to see the many forms that "or else" has taken as well as the varied renderings of the sundown rule, most involving the word "nigger".
And what will blow your mind is the sheer volume of these towns. Just as racism is not limited to the South, it is not confined to rural "hick" towns, either. Just for starters, Loewen suspects that Illinois, where I grew up, has 472 sundown towns. And they extend to the suburbs, too. These are towns that are, or were for a significant part of their history, all white on purpose. These are towns that all of us have lived in, or visited, or know someone from. People in these towns decided that blacks were "the problem," and they resolved to steer clear of "the problem" at all costs, and this is the reason our country looks the way it does today. If you have heard of redlining in urban neighborhoods, this is redlining on a macro scale. African Americans congregated in cities not because they wanted to be around folks with a similar taste in music and cooking, but because there is strength in numbers. The more of you there are, the harder it is to burn all your homes and drive you out of town.
I cannot begin to touch on the gravity of the truths that Loewen uncovers in his meticulous research. The statistics were too numerous to highlight, the disturbing anecdotes were crammed two or three to a page. Yes, in many ways the book was too long - only in the sense that its intimidating size will keep all but the most determined from picking it up. But I'm so glad I finally did. I will never look at society the same way again, and I will do everything in my power to reverse the century or more of damage that sundown towns and suburbs have done to American race relations. Thank you, Mr. Loewen, for lifting yet another veil from my eyes.
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