Thursday, July 31, 2008

A Good Read



Who, being loved, is poor?
-Oscar Wilde



I read a beautiful short story by Annie Proulx in the June 9 edition of the New Yorker yesterday called "Tits-up in a Ditch". It tells the story of a young mother from a small town in Wyoming who enlists in the Army and goes to Iraq. As are many of Proulx's tales, it is heart-wrenchingly sad, realistic, and subtle. The main character is tragically unloved, and therefore dreadfully poor by Wilde's estimation. I highly recommend revisiting anything by Oscar Wilde and this new piece by one of my favorite authors.

Wednesday, July 30, 2008

There's a sad story in Planet Jackson Hole today about the declining ranks of abortion providers in the West. This lack of access has driven some women to do some very scary things in order to terminate their pregnancies on their own.

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Tuesday, July 29, 2008

Plan B in Wyoming

Planned Parenthood of Wyoming, NARAL Pro-Choice Wyoming Education Project, and the Wyoming Health Council have just published a brochure listing all the pharmacy locations in the state where you can get Plan B emergency contraceptive. Here are the local resources:

KMART PHARMACY 739-1164
SAV-ON PHARMACY 733-9223
SMITH'S PHARMACY 733-8746
STONE DRUG 733-6222
WESTERN WYOMING FAMILY PLANNING 732-1694

If you're not familiar with Plan B, here's the scoop:
Plan B is an emergency contraceptive that can help prevent pregnancy after contraceptive failure, unprotected sex, or sexual assault. When taken within 120 hours, it can substantially reduce the risk of pregnancy. Plan B will not work if you are already pregnant. For more informaiton visit www.go2planB.com.

Copies of the brochure are available upon request. Call 1-800-584-9192.
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Friday, July 25, 2008

A Sad Day in South Dakota

Scary stuff happening in our eastern neighbor state:

South Dakota Abortion Law Takes Effect

South Dakota abortion providers are now required to recite a script telling patients that the procedure will "terminate the life of a whole, separate, unique living human being." They must then warn the woman of a supposed increased risk of suicide.

The law additionally requires that doctors tell a woman seeking an abortion that there is "an existing relationship" with the fetus that "enjoys protection under the United States Constitution" and that, by having an abortion, "her existing constitutional rights with regards to that relationship will be terminated," reports to the Washington Post.

The law came into effect last Friday, after a 2005 court order that prevented the enforcement of the law expired. It will affect the Sioux Falls Planned Parenthood, the only recognized abortion provider in the state.

(from Feminist Daily News Wire)

A history of tough, independent women


The NY Times had a fascinating article yesterday on the history of northern Wyoming. In the early 1900s, there was a movement to lop off the top half of the state and join forces with a part of Montana and South Dakota to form a separate state: Absaroka. While not specifically a women's history, the story does feature a few tough ladies:
“It was 90 miles of dirt road to the county seat,” said Helen Graham, who was a teenager in 1930s South Dakota, a daughter of struggling homesteaders.
And a modern-day ranch woman:

Jill Havert stirred 40 eggs for the guests and crew in a cast-iron pot as the gas burners hissed under the canvas and the creek rippled outside. Ms. Havert, a 21-year-old nursing student at the University of Wyoming in Laramie, is being “initiated,” as she put it, into the Kerns family. Her boyfriend, Tyler Kerns, 20, is one of Ken Kerns’s grandchildren and a junior in architectural engineering at the university. He has been making cattle drives since childhood; she was on her first, and dark-before-dawn breakfast duty was part of the drill.

“This is a sink-or-swim family,” Ms. Havert said. “But I’m holding my own.”

Tuesday, July 22, 2008

I *Heart* My Vagina




Our house painter - and new best friend - is the kind of guy we wish we could clone. Instead of buying himself a monster truck and tailgating us to show off his macho prowess, he hangs a demure little sign from the rear view mirror of his Toyota: "I *heart* my penis."

Is it just me, or would the world be a better place if more men had this kind of sense of humor and sense of confidence about their masculinity?

Our friend tells us most women who see this sign want one of their own - specific to their own genitalia, of course. I told him, send them to The V-Store. There, you can get all the gear you need to become a Vagina Warrior. If you don't yet know about Eve Ensler and The Vagina Monologues, you need to check this site out and get on board in this global effort to end violence against women. "V-Men" welcome too!

Wednesday, July 16, 2008

Massachusetts leading the way

I'd like to take the opportunity to give a shout-out to my home state of Massachusetts. Was proud to hear that the State legislature repealed a century old law that prohibited non-residents from getting married in the State. This opens the door for lesbian and gay couples from other states to be married in the Bay State, where same-sex marriage is no longer illegal. The Catholic Church, naturally, opposed the measure. Like anyone should be looking to the Massachusetts Diocese for guidance on morality.

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Tuesday, July 15, 2008

Action Alert: Bush attacks contraception as a form of abortion

This from NARAL Pro-Choice America:

We found out some truly disturbing news.

Just hours ago The New York Times reported that the Bush administration is proposing a new regulation that could discourage doctors and health-care clinics from providing birth control to women who need it.

Pro-birth-control members of Congress are calling on the Bush administration to reconsider this terrible idea. Please let your members of Congress know that you strongly oppose this attack on birth control!

This proposed regulation deliberately confuses the definitions of contraception and abortion and could seriously jeopardize state laws and policies that protect women’s access to birth control. For example, state laws that require hospitals to provide sexual-assault survivors with access to emergency contraception could be jeopardized.

This issue makes it all the more clear why we must elect pro-choice Sen. Barack Obama as our next president. Sen. John McCain has repeatedly voted against allowing women to obtain birth control and there’s no doubt he will carry on Bush’s anti-choice legacy. Sen. Obama has a consistent record in strong support of women’s access to contraception and is the chief sponsor of legislation to make birth control more affordable.

Monday, July 14, 2008

Come hear some of the best women in the music biz!

Targhee Fest is this weekend! This is my favorite event of the summer and this year promises to be as great as previous years if not better. The fantastic lineup includes several female musicians of note: Emmylou Harris, Susan Tedeschi, Grace Potter and the Nocturnals, and Carrie Rodriguez.
Emmylou Harris needs no introduction. Susan Tedeschi is a blues-oriented guitarist and singer and her last cd, Hope and Desire, proved that she's got a voice to match her 6-string skills. Grace Potter played at the Moose over the winter and the show rocked. Her sister is a local artist. Carrie Rodriguez is a fiddle player who originally joined forces with Chip Taylor, a veteran singer-songwriter, and is now touring on her own. Her lovely drawl and gorgeous playing always brings my thoughts to Texas, the home state for both of us. She captured my attention on her first cd with Chip and continues to keep me coming back for more.
Of course, there are some fantastic men in the lineup as well including Lyle Lovett, Derek Trucks, Taj Mahal, Martin Sexton (another great live performer), and Tony Furtado. All in all it should be a great weekend.
I'll be the one down front showing my appreciation to these performers by dancing my ass off. See y'all there!

Wednesday, July 9, 2008

Friendship and Inspiration


The brave man is not he who feels no fear,
For that were stupid and irrational;
But he, whose noble soul its fears subdues,
And bravely dares the danger nature shrinks from.
- Joanna Baillie

Joanna Baillie (1762-1851) was a Scottish poet and dramatist who was well know during her lifetime for both her literary talent and for her sweet disposition. She never married, gave 1/2 of her literary earnings to charity, was intelligent and observant.

I had the good fortune of having spent the morning with a similar woman and her partner.

Tuesday, July 8, 2008

Concerns with Gardasil

Gardasil, the relatively new vaccine for HPV, is under fire after complaints that several young girls that were administered the vaccine suffered paralysis. This is a disturbing development, if true, that requires further study and review. The makers of Gardasil have been campaigning for the FDA to approve the vaccine for boys - since men are often carriers of HPV.

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She's all that


As us Cowgrrls know, there is at least ONE female deejay in town, who Planet JH failed to mention. I'll give a shameless plug for my sweetheart, Zanne deJanvier, who will spin on Tuesday, July 29 at the Natl. Museum of Wildlife Art, 6-8 PM. Don't let the desolate windswept image on the Museum's email promotion fool you. Zanne will be serving up samba, bollywood, afrobeat, and all manner of sizzlin' tunes. I promise you won't hear her collection of danceable world tunes anywhere else in town.

If you know other female spinners in town, let us know!
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Wednesday, July 2, 2008

Wonen Rocked the Writers Conference!



It was a powerhouse year for women at the Jackson Hole Writers Conference, June 26-29. I was beside myself with anticipation of my favorite mystery writer, Elizabeth George, one of the keynote speakers. (She's second only to P.D. James in my mind.) George gave a humble and inspiring talk about her journey from high school English teacher to self-taught mystery crime writer to international bestseller. I've started reading her latest book, Careless in Red, which finds our hero Thomas Lynley walking the English coast and grieving a terrible loss that took place in George's With No One As Witness. I'm already captivated!

My favorite talk was by Jane Hamilton. I totally adored her perspective on sorry market for literary fiction in America. She described meeting a woman on a plane who, when she learned that Jane writes fiction, asked if Jane writes "thrillers." Since Jane considers reading great fiction to be "thrilling," she answered yes. The woman got really excited and asked if Jane wrote "smutty thrillers." Jane said that since her mother considers the sex scenes in Jane's books to be rather racy, she thought it wasn't too much of a stretch to say yes again. "Really, really smutty thrillers?" the woman next to Jane replied, nearly apoplectic. Jane "decided to go the distance" and said yes. It was hilarious and we were all laughing.

The biggest crowd-pleaser was local writer Alexandra (Bo) Fuller, who had us laughing and crying with her presentation about her latest book, The Legend of Colton H Bryant. All reports say its a run-don't-walk must-read.

I was really moved and inspired by another local talent, Laurie Gunst of Dubois. Gunst spoke about "the stories that tell us," and described her experience writing nonfiction journalism and a memoir of being raised white and Jewish in the South by an African-American nanny.

Gail Tsukiyama also gave a great talk about becoming a fiction writer and her experience being Asian-American - and often wishing she could just tell American stories, and not be pigeon-holed into "ethnic" literature.

Several of the male presenters were great too, and I appreciated Tim Cahill's nod to the original female staff of Outside magazine and their talent and vision.
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