Across the Pond

By Grace Maselli

Cheerio. “Grab your brolly, it’s drizzling outside.” Okay, so the timebankers from England who recently visited—Annie and Jennie—didn’t actually use this phrase. But it did drizzle on the ride to the Spring Hill monthly meeting they attended this May, where the two of them chip-chipped in their fantastic British accentstheir groovy, regional UK patois.

They joined TBT members at the home of Spring Hill coordinator Andy LePage’s house, where the monthly orientation meeting for new members and review of regular goings-on was held.

At the gathering (that also involved some timebank transportation “gymnastics” to get the travelers from downtown Tampa to Spring Hill), the lovely Brits talked about all the fun stuff and people they’ve met in their homespun Southern England timebank. One of their stories about a coordinated UK timebank event stood out: The gals’ participation in a collective “yarn bombing,” which this humble blogger had never hoid of before. Here’s what the dictionary has to say about yarn bombing, “The action or activity of covering objects or structures in public places with decorative knitted or crocheted material, as a form of street art.” Specifically, Annie and Jennie and their crew yarn bombed an English bus shelter, festooning it with knitted spring flowers, bubble bees, and all-around fiber energy! Totally inspired.

Zigzagging from Here to There

The pond-hopping got its get-up-and-go with 70-year-old Annie who came to Florida to swim with dolphins. Jennie, a world traveler and professional nurse when she’s not visiting places like Kuala Lumpur, joined Annie for the fun. The pair stayed overnight in Andy’s guest bedroom and the next morning, after a yummy porridge breakfast, yet another Spring Hill timebanker got his exchange motor running and drove the Brits to Orlando where they carried on in the tropical sun. Sooo, TBTers, the story line is timebanking and its ethos crosses continents and oceans, connecting the human spirit wired for contact with other caring peeps.

Salon.com Covers Timebanking and “Liquidity” of Daily Tasks

By Grace Maselli

Earlier this month Salon.com peeled back the layers on “increasingly popular cooperative time banks.” For readers who may not know, Salon.coman online newspaper—started nearly a quarter century ago and self describes as an, “American news and opinion website…publish[ing] articles on U.S. politics, culture, and current events [with] a politically progressive, liberal editorial stance.” The April 6 piece zeros-in on a timebank in Detroit and references beaucoup exchanges including housing sitting, window washing, transportation, and multicultural cooking classes. The writer also delves into the flex that characterizes the timebanking model. In particular, “time is traded throughout a local time banking community, or even throughout the country: For example, you find yourself in another city and need a ride to the airport. You could spend your time banked in your hometown on a ride in the city you’re visiting.” Voila.

The piece likewise references digital time collection through hOurworld and other U.S. timebanks, referencing the variety of top exchanges shared depending on the community and who enjoys doing what. New York City and Baltimore top the hOurworld charts in terms of size; and in Baltimore in particular, emphasis is placed on the system’s ability to enable older adults to continue to live independently in their homes. The article links to Baltimore’s “Partners in Care” that gets to the core of timebank founder Edgar S. Cahn’s aim: “Volunteering is a one-way relationship that is charitable, but not necessarily reciprocal. An economist might say that a time bank creates liquidity in a market for day-to-day tasks that might not be commercially available or affordable to [timebank] members.” Let’s hear it for the flow of daily tasks along with the beauty of two-way relationships.

Let’s Tawk “Exchange”

By Grace Maselli

The life blood of any timebank is its exchanges. What a person offers to another member.
What a person receives. An hour for an hour. When the timing and need sync. No matter if you’re pulling weeds or pulling teeth. Could be a household chore. An errand to the dry cleaners. A visit to someone in the hospital. A meal for their family.

It’s the stuff of caring. Often with meaning way beyond money; rather, it’s about the actions and deeds that thread and join the interdependent fabric of community. Youth—teens—can be involved too. According to the chores list on “VeryWellFamily,” here’s a sampling of what youth might also contribute to their local timebank exchanges:

  • Plant watering
  • Pet feeding
  • Pet walking (and litter box cleaning!)
  • A scrubba dub dub of pets, pets’ things, and cars in driveways
  • Babysitting (complete with chocolate chip cookie baking)

Orrr…

  • Lawn mowing
  • Hoisting and heaving plant cuttings into bags, then tossing bags into appropriate receptacles
  • Light housekeeping for older people
  • Reading/companionship to housebound folks

    So consider getting your teens into the swing of timebank things. Because you never know when the effort can really make a positive difference in someone else’s life. And yoursOpen our TBT timebanking flyer  for more info.

Timebanking Esprit de Corps

By Grace Maselli

 

In an informal TBT poll-taking (spontaneous question-asking on the campus of  a nearby college), it quickly became clear that what people like is hanging out. Together. Some good old-fashioned connection and conversation is the ticket!

The ticket to what?

To human interaction. You’ve heard it before. We homo sapiens love a good party. Or a picnic. A shared cultural event that we can discuss, dissect, elaborate on, be grateful for, together. After the fact. Or an interactive workshop.The kind where we break out into small groups and talk. Brainstorm. Or just eat pie.

In case it’s been a while since you Googled the dictionary meaning of esprit de corps, here it is: “A sense of unity and of common interests and responsibilities, as developed among group of persons closely associated in a task, cause, enterprise, etc.”

We here at TBT are such a”closely associated” group of peeps. We like to go to cultural events together. Eat sandwiches in sync at public parks. (We like to feel our way into real face-to-face experiences.) Sometimes we don’t even talk that much; we just smile knowingly at one another. Other times, yackety-yack. And of course we’re all about timebank exchanges. Check out the flyer for more info. And tell yer friends too!

It’s a “Decorate the Springtime Tree” Potluck!

By Grace Maselli

Put it in your calendar: Sunday, May 19 from 3 to 6 PM. TBT and its friends and guests will be self-expressing and chowing down on potluckery on a Sunday afternoon. Coming together as a community to connect and share. And of course we have a theme! We’ll be festooning the tree pictured here. Guests should plan to bring a personal emblem, ephemera, memento, relic, small photo, object, remembrance, Roadside America gadget, souvenir, or bauble, to hang from a tree branch—anything participants feel is a reflection or symbol of who they are. It can be store-bought, homemade, borrowed, rented, picked up at a yard sale, accepted on temporary or long-term loan. You name it. Could be a mini collage, a symbolic animal that represents what you value in strength, speed, ability to camouflage. It could be something that sparkles to represent engagement with the world around you. It should be about the size of a standard holiday tree ornament, maybe no bigger than your hand. Anything you conceive that is valuable to you and authentically symbolizes what you want to share with guests, is fair game. But it must be able to hang from a tree branch. So get out your glue gun, tape, sealing wax, paste, chewing gum, stickem stuff, and ribbon, string, fishing line, cord, twine, dental floss, or copper wire to make it work. (To make it dangle from a branch!) Plan to bring a yummy, crowd-pleasing dish to share. And prepare to let us know why you chose what you chose, then pick a place on the tree for your object. We’ll hang all pieces from the tree and take a community photo as an area-wide timebanking keepsake! Let’s come together to satisfy our collective hunger for stories and to build friendship! 

 

Date Sunday, May 19, 2019
Time 3-6 PM
Address 2128 Park Crescent Drive
Land O Lakes, FL 34639
Between Collier Pkwy and Livingston Road
Questions? Contact Grace at mgmwrite@gmail.com
or 215.834.4567

 

Timebanking Opens the Door of Perception to Local Poetry

By Grace Maselli

Sometimes gifts drop from the sky. Or in the case of our Tampa timebank, from the mystical vibes and synchronicities that live quietly in the still, local spaces between cypress tree branches. A major vibes “channeler,” butterfly farmer (along with his giddy, effervescent wife, Deb), is TBT member and professor—PhD and MBA—Robert E. McGinnis. Robert, who’s too humble to go by “Dr.” in our TBT circles, or likely any circle, is part Renaissance man, part poet (who’s memorized entire epic masterpieces by Kahlil Gibran and recited them verbatim at our TBT potlucks), also teaches in Saint Leo University’s Department of Computer Science & Info Systems in the School of Business.

Given Robert’s eclectic interests, and quick, ready knowledge of stuff happening at Saint Leo’s, he was generous enough to share. Specifically, he forwarded a few known poetry-writing TBTers and groovy friends submission information about the Pasco Fine Arts Council’s and Saint Leo’s Daniel A. Cannon Memorial Library’s Jacaranda Poetry Contest, in honor of April’s National Poetry Month.

Sooo. I did what all would-be poets do when gifts drop from the sky. When energy concentrates and the writing bumps into opportunity (manifested in the physical world, i.e.: Robert’s run-with-it Jacaranda Poetry Contest submission guidelines), I threw my hat in the ring and submitted three unpublished poems.

Turns out one of ’em won first place. My reaction? In a few inimitable words spoken gruffly in 1933 by Popeye the Sailor Man…flippin’ Blow Me Down!

Here’s the very recent email missive I received about the whole magilleh from Jacalyn E. Bryan, Reference and Instructional Services Librarian and Associate Professor at Saint Leo, who works in the Cannon Memorial Library, and who had a major role to play in organization of the Jacaranda contest:  “Dear Grace, Congratulations!  Your poem, Queen of African Violets, has been selected by our judges to receive first place for the Jacaranda Poetry Contest. We would like to thank you for your contribution to the contest and look forward to your participation in the Jacaranda Poetry Reading and Reception on Wednesday, April 3 at 6:30 pm in the Cannon Memorial Library at Saint Leo University.”

So once again, with humility and deepest appreciation, I reap the meaningful, nourishing fruits of the beautiful timebank. Complete with its connection to people, the arts, and the humanity and soulfulness to care about more than just money. If poetry’s your thing, please join us on April 3 at 6:30 PM at the Daniel A. Cannon Memorial Library at Saint Leo University and earn TBT hours. Let ’em know if you plan to show at Jacalyn.Bryan@saintleo.edu. Library address is 33701 FL-52, St Leo, FL 33574; I’ll be posting the 19-line poem here on the blog after the reading. You can also check out the gorgeous 2019 National Poetry Month poster here.

 

Healing Arts and Community Connection

By Grace Maselli

Membership in our Florida Network of local timebank groups is definitely growing! In addition to Tampa, motivated members from Spring Hill and New Port Richey, among other local environs, are getting the word out through faith-based organizations, Meetup groups, at libraries, and in their own homes. The energy is strong. And every day we’re building more momentum. The gratitude is equally palpable. For a quick download of information to share with friends, neighbors, and co-workers, check out our TBT flyer. And stay tuned!

 

Reminder: Monthly TBT Meeting in March

 

Reminder: Join us soon on Tuesday, March 19our Third Tuesday of Every Month rendezvous, otherwise known as TBT’s member-and-guest meeting and orientation. We meet at Tampa’s Life Enrichment Center (LEC).  This Tuesday we’re psyched about a program presentation by new member, Janie Ambrose, a woman who’s skilled in the healing arts and metaphysics, just to name a few of her impressive competencies. Find out more about “Amazing Healings by Janie” for an introductory preview. From all of us at TBT, see you on Tuesday!


Hard to believe it’s already March, eh? Join us soon on Tuesday, March 19our Third Tuesday of Every Month rendezvous otherwise known as TBT’s member-and-guest meeting and orientation.  We meet at Tampa’s Life Enrichment Center (LEC). Our Third Tuesdays are part of TBT’s revitalization initiative to dispatch our efforts further into the community. This month, as always, we’re dedicated to education around our mission: exchanges, as explained here in our flyer! But we’re also gearing up for a local celebration of International Timebank Day and founder Dr. Edgar Cahn’s birthday on Saturday, March 23, 2019. Come join us at LEC for some community togetherness, event planning, and timebanking conversation!

Date Tuesday, March 19, 2019
Time 6:30-8:30 PM
Address 9704 North Boulevard, Tampa, FL 33612; phone: 813.932.0241
Questions? Contact coordinator@tampabaytime.org or call 608.335.2382

 

Woman, Daughter, Wife, Aunt, Fräulein, Chica

By Grace Maselli

It’s Women’s History Month! In honor of our “mothren,” let’s give praise to the artists, inventors, engineers, change-makers, community advocates, caregivers, and dynamos right in our own backyard. Reach out to TBT women for a March exchange to recognize our collective advancements. Read some cool stories too on the Smithsonian website. Remarkable tales of bravery and rule-breakery to advance vital causes in civil rights, healthcare, government policy, and so much more. In timebanking tradition, let’s celebrate the fearlessness and fortitude among us!

Reminder: Join Us this Sunday for a Valentine’s Soirée Potluck

By Grace Maselli

Tampa Bay Timebank members and friends are cordially invited to a Valentine’s Soirée potluck where each guest can safely wear his or her heart on their well-worn (or otherwise) sleeve! Come share an enchanting dish and be prepared to extol love, celebrate joy, and bemoan loss as may be applicable. (Uh, er, when isn’t it applicable?) Tell us your tales of love liberation or what your heart aches for. Come single, coupled, ambivalent, or whatever.

Festive Valentine’s Accessories Required for Entry!

Whether it’s a red glitter heart headbopper—or a suitable tinsel tiara and socks festooned with the ancient Roman god of love—come dressed for Valentine’s attention. Regale us with accounts of crushes from yesteryear or the last 10 minutes, or anything else cupid would wink at or shed a tear over. We’ll empathize over pink confections and 1950s Jell-O molds. (Does anyone know how to make a Jell-O mold?) Come join the TBT Valentine’s Soirée where we’ll pass the “talking heart” from participant to participant, sharing friendship and real life. 

Date Sunday, February 10, 2018
Time 3:00 to Our Heart’s Content
Address 2128 Park Crescent Drive
Land O Lakes, FL  34639
Questions? Contact coordinator@tampabaytime.org or call (215) 834-4567 and reference our Valentine’s  Soirée potluck.