Proposals
Scavenger Hunt!
You'll get the list at the start and then we'll all meet up at the end and see what we found!
- Log in to post comments
Tastes of Skill Swaps Past
As requested, I will attempt to teach folks how to make the sesame rice salad with tofu and greens that has appeared on at least one past Skill Swap menu. Have I ever made it for <90 people? No! Has a recipe ever existed in written form for this dish? Also no! Do I know how everyone on the NYT cooking/Bon Appetit/King Arthur instagrams are making their cooking demos look so good, and/or do I have their videography capabilities? Definitely not! Like Annie, I'm not sure if I can really do this, but I'm willing to try.
- Log in to post comments
Basic Retirement Planning Literacy
I am not a financial expert and have no qualifications of any kind, except for doing a million-tabs-open-at-once-self-directed crash course in retirement saving. I'd be happy to share my knowledge and at least get you oriented to some of the language (what's an IRA? 401k? Roth account?), some of the basic theory (how much do I need to save to retire?), and some ideas on where to start (what should I read next?) With the caveat that you should do your own research and talk to someone with real expertise before doing anything with your money.
- Log in to post comments
Learn to meditate!
Learn the basics of meditation! A time-tested tool for strengthening our minds to make them more flexible and useful to us so we can stop fixating on things that aren't helpful, and more fully enjoy the moments of peace and happiness in our lives, among other things. We'll work with a simple Tibetan Buddhist method, and if there's time and interest we can get into some Buddhist thought, or talk about how to incorporate regular practice into your life!If people are interested in one-on-one sessions to talk more in-depth about meditation, Buddhism, their personal practice, or whatever, I'm open to that as well!
- Log in to post comments
Make Your Kitchen Tools Work Better
Your kitchen has things with sharp edges. If you aren't maintaining them actively, they're probably dull. Dull tools require more effort for the same cuts and are often unsafe. Want to fix 'em? It's easy. You probably already have the tools you need.You'll need a tool with a dull edge (usually knives or scissors), a factory-made ceramic mug with a smooth unglazed base (or ring around the base), a Sharpie, and some paper. Bonus points if you have a protractor and some cardboard, a leather belt, a "sharpening" steel, etc. I've taught basic sharpening a bunch of times at ESS, and several people have recently reached out asking me to teach it again. Seems like a lot of folks are spending more time in their kitchens than they used to, thanks to COVID-19, and it might be a good time to make sure your tools are sharp, safe, and ready to go. There are some ways in which this might actually be easier to teach at ESS_remote than at ESS_Wilmot, since people will be at home with their knives, etc., and can also point the camera directly at what they're doing.This workshop is based on the premise that, although sharpening tools really well relies on precision surfaces and abrasives, often uses custom-built jigs and fixtures, and demands rigid adherence to grit-staging, "good enough" sharpening is often a HUGE improvement over the default state of edged tools, and that good-enough sharpening rests on a foundation of use-whatcha-got and can-do mindset and aims for "better" rather than "perfect". This is a great approach if you're wanting to sharpen your chef's knife; less good if you're wanting to sharpen your scalpel, straight razor, or bagpipe reedmaking gouge.
- Log in to post comments
Have a Not-Primarily-Technical Music-Making Practice
Kurt Vonnegut advised attendees of a class to go home and write a poem and fold it up and carry it in their pockets for a week and never show anyone. He said, "just do it to make your soul grow."Music has no upper limit on the technical competence it can require. One composer, confronted by his violinist who admitted, with embarrassment, that they were unable to play what he had written, said, "I know. It is impossible that anyone could play what I have written. What that section of the score is intended to elicit is the sound of someone attempting, sincerely, to play it." This is not a class that requires or aims, primarily, to cultivate technical competence. As your facilitator, I'll simply ensure that you have what's necessary to get out the front door and begin your adventure, and I'll stick by you long enough to ensure that adventure finds you and you get home safely that night, and that have what you need to go out again.
- Log in to post comments
Cooking A Indian Vegetarian Dish
In this workshop, we will learn how to cook a healthy vegetarian dish called 'Chana Masala' i.e., Spiced Chickpeas. All you need are a few locally available ingredients (list will be provided beforehand). This dish is often a party favorite.
- Log in to post comments
Transformative Activism - What is it?
Ever feel like protests just don't work for you? Don't understand the use of rallies and marches? OR have you ever attended these events and left wondering how you could possibly ever make a difference in a world so large and so complex? This workshop will spend a some time on social change theory to ground in some shared langauge and then create an opportunity to open up into facilitated discussion and other ways of expressing oneself (think body movements, song, and journaling). If conditions feel right, there will be room for our own tenderness, reflection, and deep questions.
- Log in to post comments
Dance the Shim Sham
The closest thing swing dancers have to a line dance, the shim sham is often done in the middle of a swing dance while the band is on break. As a solo jazz routine that is usually done communally, it's a great way to feel the shared-ness of dance without having to be physically close together. Come get moving and learn it! If you want a sneak peek, here's the dance: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g2FyvoAi2ew (Please note, though it originated as a tap routine, I will be teaching the variation I learned from swing dancing. No tap shoes required!)
- Log in to post comments
Fixing the Food System
The COVID pandemic is making the cracks in our modern food system painfully aparent. In the US, the cheap and unhealthy foods we consume make us sick, while the system that produces them exploits workers and degrades our environmental. Up to 40% of food produced and shipped in this county goes to waste, while globally an estimated 10% of people suffer from chronic undernourishment. We can do better. I've spent years dreaming of a just and sustainable food system, and I'm sure many of you have as well. Come to this workshop to engage in a structured conversation about the food system we have now, the one we would like to build, and how to get from here to there.
- Log in to post comments