International Youth Day was created in 1999 through a United Nations resolution. The purpose of the day is to bring youth issues to the attention of the powers that be and the public at large. It is celebrated annually on August 12. At the Rail Yards Market activities and workshops will be led by Warehouse 508. Warehouse 508 is ABQ’s biggest youth arts and entertainment center and is located in Downtown Albuquerque.
Youth Centered Activities
“The Live Art Zone will be featuring some of Albuquerque’s finest up and coming young artists! Swing by the Live Art Zone to watch live demos and learn the techniques & rhythms of some of the most talented young local artists. Come say hi, ask a question or just scope out the pop-up gallery showcasing their recent work. Come get involved and show your support for local artists!”
“Come spend some time at the Children’s Art Zone, where Warehouse 508 will be hosting workshops teaching a basic form of artistic expression: having fun! Bring the kids and enjoy watching them create their own masterpieces, mysteries and worlds of creativity. Workshops lead by passionate local artists who love to inspire! Take it with you to commemorate the event and showcase their work at home.”
On our Main Stage we will be featuring nationally recognized poet Zach Kluckman. Internationally known VDJ/DJ Flo Fader and his students will be demonstrating the skills involved in the art of DJing. DJ Flo Fader is an instructor at Warehouse 508 teaching DJ 101 and other courses. For our entire lineup please visit our website and click on the calendar.
“If I only knew then what I know now,” is a common refrain uttered by many of us. Come join our youth in celebration at the Rail Yards Market from 10-2pm.
*Thanks to the folks at Warehouse 508 for their contributions to this article.
*****
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Ulcers. Something I have never endured but I find that the effect will show in my writing as I have one now due to many a thing. Worry and stress, tooth pain, no money, single motherhood and a constant guilt that stems from no absolute place all play a part in the pain. However, I feel it has led me to pondering and action and may be only a smaller hurdle in the face of all that is happening in life.
I am left wondering just how things have gotten so stressful, though I know the process well for I have been working on it for the last fourish years. It began with a simple decision… moving to New Mexico. Some think my decision was a selfish one because being in love was involved. My oldest two children, living with their father after the divorce due to me being poor on my own, lived in Washington as did I before my move. They didnt understand and neither did I if I am to be honest, but we are very much still close and share the deep love only mother and child can understand.
That is how it began. After my lament of leaving and the following excitement, i had no idea what would happen. The ensuing roller coaster ride was still a secret to me when first I rolled into town in my uhaul and my independence. I was happy and found a place I love with such deepness that I know I will never call any other city “home”. This dusty, dry, windy place that is full of weirdos, scholars, freaks, hippies and the occasional businessy human won me over instantly.
Life Changing
Why does any of this matter? It matters because if you have ever been a throw away kid, a person of no kind reputation, an easily forgotten human, you will see that this tiny portion of my life is also the most important. I write to give the depressed hope for it is in every eye I look into. It offers a transparent view of how the mistakes we believe we make and can never recover from can actually change your life forever in a beautiful way.
I was raised in an oppressed environment and shown that I was, in fact, an adopted child. “Adopted” is not accurate even because they never saw fit to go through with that action. I was ignored as were huge and evil events that occurred in my life, brushed off and used. I never knew what it was like to make my own decisions or even to do the normal things rebellious teenagers do because my mom scared me every day of my life.
Then, at 19, I married a man who I loved so mightily and even took on his Christianity until I believed it was my own choice. I didn’t want to believe that he would ever show me anything but a strong Christian man, but by year two I found much of what I believed was false and my love misplaced. But I am stubborn and pig headed and stayed beyond my usefulness and his love.
I divorced him after ten years of marriage and two beautiful children and found myself in a place of happiness. That was, until I finished college and tried to get a job and found out that my seven years as a stay at home mother rendered me almost useless to society despite my intelligence and degree I earned at night. I also found myself at a loss for the children went to live with him.
I stood at a precipice. My life was shaken to the core because of my own actions, but I had a sense of bliss that stuck to me no matter how much I sobbed when I couldn’t tuck my children in, or how angry I became when my ex husband referred to me as Gomer from the Bible (if you don’t know the reference, I will be vulgar here and say she was the biggest whore in the good book), or even how disturbed I was when I realized my devotion to Christianity amounted to nothing more than a false sense of hope. I was stripped raw and had no idea what to do next.
Albuquerque, New Mexico
I met a man in the modern way (Facebook) and he taught me so much about the world I had hidden from so diligently. He was sweet and beautiful and no one would ever dare question his talent as a musician. He taught me how to think for myself, how to see beauty in the mundane and how love could feel when given with no filters. So I visited New Mexico, knowing nothing about it but for Bugs Bunny always wishing he had turned left at Albuquerque.
And in Albuquerque I was warmly and most lovingly welcomed. The man I met I fell in love with, I had crazy adventures and wild sex and found that henna is something I am passionate about even if I am only mediocre. It was the best week I had ever experienced- which we know would not be hard to accomplish for me up to then. I came back a second time and in October, I moved here.
I immediately had guilt over leaving my children and even now I still have leavings of that emotion. Within six months I was pregnant and this was the point at which my family chose to finally cut me out of their lives. I almost died before I could have my sweet new baby and no- that is not an exaggeration. I obviously made it through and was left with a premature, tiny MonChiChi of a daughter who I dote on.
Then I had to leave the man who drew me to my true home. I am no picky woman but I could not continue in the face of the reality of the relationship and spent the following year relying on my friends to offer me a place for my child and I to sleep, food for us to eat and money for gas so I could find a job. I am crying as I type this, because to say that life, though not detailed on any real way here, dealt me depressive darkness and resentment as the main theme of my hand of life poker would be understating by many a mile.
Whew. Are you still with me? That was a lot of vague sadness for which I apologize for, but you don’t want to hear about the paedophiles who groomed me, the mother who forgot to stop hitting me, or the detailed ways in which love can lead to hate and my sexual non importance. There is a point to this, I promise.
Persevere
All of the hate, lust, violence, disappointment, self loathing and deep depressive states of mind have actually done me more good than harm. I am scarred, mangled, chewed up and digested. I am a pile of human goo that few care about in any deep way. But I am thankful for such things. In my current state, I am pliable, I flow with less restriction, I am strong minded and self confident. I now live with my wee moon girl, am about to go get my oldest children for a fun time in my favorite town, I have my first teaching job and my own car. I found the independence I have always craved and though it is scary, I find it the most refreshing took in my so-called belt.
I did it. I survived the darkness, my evil and selfish thoughts about the breath I felt I wasted. I survived love and have found it again. I am goo. I gross and slippery and hard to hold in your hand. I am resilient and have been beautifully tortured. I have found that family is truly what you choose for yourself, that to be in love I must love me, that no amount of piled and stinking manure can truly crush me and I somehow have become a warrior goddess in a world where it is not cherished to be one.
Fight
So to all of you throw away children, waifs that society has forgotten, all you who are about to slice the life from your flesh or drink another sorrow down with malice, I only have this to say to you:
I love you, though I do not know you. If you are in that dark place you have already survived and won. You just don’t know it. You and I share a constant struggle- an endless wave of reality that we have not signed up for. Our lives parallel no matter where you live and for this we are connected like mushrooms- deep and wide spread across the entire earth. I am you and you are me. We rock. We are beautiful because of our scars . We made it. Don’t you dare give up on me now…keep going as I did and you, too, will find your wounds and heal them.
*****
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Acey May is an Educator and Henna artist. She was born in Yakima, Washington and lives in Albuquerque, NM. Acey is the illustrator on the forthcoming multimedia book, Bella the Caterpillar. Acey is also contributing illustrator on Fiona the Funkadelic Freckle Fairy multimedia children’s book. Read more about Acey here.
There are less than 2 weeks until the grand opening (May 4) of the Rail Yards Market and everyone involved is ramping up their efforts, doing their part, to make it the overwhelming success it is going to be.
But Why? What drives our desire to belong to a community?
Humanist psychologist Abraham Maslow developed the concept of a “hierarchy of needs” in his 1943 book, Motivation and Personality. This hierarchy suggests that people are motivated to fulfill basic needs before moving on to other, more advanced needs. One of those needs is the need to belong which gives us a sense that we belong, we matter, we contribute.
Are there measurable benefits?
In 1986, social psychologists McMillan & Chavis formed the theory that has become the most widely accepted understanding of how communities work and why. They called this theory, “A Sense of Community.” A community of people thrives because it is based upon care. Community members care about each others well being because they know that each individual is essential for the survival of the whole.
Greater participation in civic responsibilities thereby enhancing our democracy
An increase in shopping local which benefits the local economy
Giving a louder voice to group concerns brings important issues the attention they warrant
How do we build a community?
Artist Ana Romero Sanchez and Musician Keith Sanchez
One person at a time. At the Rail Yards Market committee meetings, we are encouraged to bring people with us. Whoever might be interested in participating, whether they are established artists/musicians or someone that only has time to give, all are welcome: every contribution is appreciated.
Update
Thanks to your help the 2014 season was a rousing success! We welcomed over 120,000 people, and vendors generated over $450,000 in business all with the help of over 16,000 volunteer hours! Our amazing story continues in 2015 and we welcome your help with open arms! If you are interested in volunteering, donating, partnering, sponsoring, educating, or participating in any way please visit our website for more info: http://railyardsmarket.org
Anything you can contribute is greatly appreciated and goes a long way toward revitalizing our community!
*Cover Illustration by John Barney. All rights reserved. *****
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Free Art Friday is upon us and art is in the air! As a participating artist in Free Art Friday Albuquerque I often try to imagine what it is like to find a piece of art on Free Art Friday. In the busy life of rushing that most people live finding a piece of art is something that makes one pause and contemplate creativity and in the shifting of attention from our normal routine we start noticing other new things in our path that we had been missing.
So in a way the art of Free Art Friday helps to cultivate our attention it the details in life that we did not seem to notice before. That shift of focus from the norm could be the very spark of inspiration that is needed to start a flow of creativity that expands our personal world and helps pave creative pathways that could lead us to places we would have never found otherwise. Imagine being on your way to work or having a bad day when all of a sudden seemingly out of nowhere you see a piece of art that chose you to be its owner, that can make you feel special and change the tone of your whole day.
The artists and art of Free Art Friday create that kind of magic for people allowing us to be part of something bigger then ourselves by engaging in positivity! So please consider participating in Free Art Friday Albuquerque! You are all artists and your art makes a positive difference in your community and beyond!
*****
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Stephanie Galloway
Stephanie Galloway is from Santa Fe, New Mexico. She has been writing poetry since she was a child and still loves to explore the magic in words and their power to touch others deeply. She taught art to children as the Children Zone Leader of the Rail Yards Market and is the founder of Free Art Friday Albuquerque.
***** Community Publishing brings local artists of all mediums together in creative collaborations for distribution as multimedia eBooks while promoting literacy in our communities. We are proud to be a community partner and digital marketer at the Rail Yards Market. Community Publishing: From the Community For the Community
Random acts of art that reach the heart! When we share things in life with others it makes them more meaningful. Art is no exception to that. Sharing art is a way of connecting with others that can break through feelings of loneliness and isolation by communicating with another person on a creative level.
Each time leave out some art for Free Art Friday Albuquerque I feel that I am fulfilling
my human need to be social. Another important aspect of Free Art Friday is that your art can speak to someone without even needing to meet them, so a person that is shy and normally feels uncomfortable starting up a conversation with someone can now be more comfortable expressing themselves in an anonymous way.
Because you do not need to add words to your interaction when participating in Free Art Friday there is nothing to get in the way of the true meaning of the art piece being able to speak for itself. Art is a language all its own so please participate in Free Art Friday Albuquerque to send a message of creativity that touches someone in a special way!
They have been on display since Sept 2014. On a trip to Explora my daughter one day, I found himself inside the Arts and Crafts rooms and found all the items needed to make some wicking containers.
All you do is add soil and seeds to so they can be self watered. After creating them I asked the crew there if they had some soil and seeds (which they did) and water was added to the lower part of the bottle. Seeds were actually sown right there in Explora by the Glassman! Go check it out, 2 of the 3 original bottles remain. We are planning a day when “The Glassman” will host a workshop there for kids and their families!
Funding for our Earth
At this time I am currently working on acquiring some land in the South valley of Albuquerque, New Mexicoto start growing on and doing more larger scale experimental garden methods as you see in BackToNature on Community Publishing. Please help us grow Luna Star Farm by sharing our GoFundMe campaign page and contributing as much or as little as you can! Even $1 helps! WWW.GoFundMe.com/LunaStarFarm. Check out the latest episode of the Community Spotlight Vlog (Video Blog) below featuring yours truly!
Click link for the Back to Nature articles (archive).
*****
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Community Publishing brings local artists of all mediums together in creative collaborations for distribution as multimedia eBooks while promoting literacy in our communities.
The Rail Yards Market is back and better than ever. Opening Day 2015 is Sunday May, 3rd (fb event page)! Still free to attend and enjoy the wonderful sights, sounds and aromas emanating from the Blacksmiths Shop in Barelas NM (777 1st Street). This season they are focused on diversifying their offerings and increasing their outreach to the community. They will be welcoming back some old friends and giving the All Aboard to many new ones!
The Children’s Zone promises to rock the socks off of the small feet of your little ones! Leading our Cinco de Mayo celebration is Copper Enamel Artists David Snow, who will be leading the kids in Maraca making. Bring your kiddo-artists to craft an amazing instrument from recycled materials!
In the Art Zone, Jane Malone will be demoing her Dia de los Muertos inspired art to one and all. Jane is native to Albuquerque, New Mexico, and as such she has been steeped in the art and culture of the Southwest. She earned my degree at The Art Center Design College (back when it was still AC/DC), specializing in graphic design and illustration.
“My illustrations are done in inks and resin on canvas. They’re all handmade and one-of-a-kind originals. I will use any media, but I have a special love for inks. I use Sharpie, Bic, Marks-A-Lot, Speed ball and India, as well as mixing a lot of my own pigments. The resin is an aqueous resin with a UV protectant, as I’m always trying to keep the original ‘wet’ ink sheen. To set the resin I use a blow torch, so all of the pieces are tested-by-fire before they’re cured. It’s a beautiful way to bring the bubbles out of resin, and I get to use a blow torch.”
Entertainment
Continuing with their theme, entertainers include singers, dancers and musicians:
With the goal of increasing diversity and reaching out into the community/neighborhood(s) they have brought on board a Community Outreach Coordinator to communicate more closely with the surrounding neighborhoods residents and the city at-large. If you are interested in volunteering please contact them at RYMvolunteers@gmail.com
The RYM will be accepting WIC/SNAP and participating in the Double-Up Food bucks program. If you are interested in participating as a vendor/partner/sponsor at the RYM please click here.
The Rail Yards Market is more than just a market. Their responsibility is to you all, residents of Albuquerque and beyond. The community helped us get started and keep it going. Together a more vibrant place to work and play in. See you Sunday. All Aboard!
*****
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Bring adventure to your art! There is a feeling of excitement that is experienced when participating in Free Art Friday! The chance for the artist to have fun mapping out where they would like to leave their piece and letting spontaneity happen.
It is a similar to the feeling one gets when they are preparing to give a birthday or holiday gift to someone. The gift remains hidden until that magic moment when it meets the receiver! When someone knows that there was someone out there that put care, time and planning into making and putting out the art it makes them feel even more special when they find it. Being able to give your art a chance to reach people in such a way takes it on an adventure with purpose.
Some Fridays I choose a spot that is part of my daily route and other Fridays I intentionally take myself to an area that I don’t regularly visit which keeps thing fresh and new for me.
This city has many wonderful places and in my search for a location to drop my art I have found places I would have never discovered otherwise! Happy Free Art Friday Albuquerque ! Hope the day finds you with more art in your life.
*****
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Stephanie Galloway
Stephanie Galloway is from Santa Fe, New Mexico. She has been writing poetry since she was a child and still loves to explore the magic in words and their power to touch others deeply. She taught art to children as the Children Zone Leader of the Rail Yards Market and is the founder of Free Art Friday Albuquerque.
***** Community Publishing brings local artists of all mediums together in creative collaborations for distribution as multimedia eBooks while promoting literacy in our communities. We are proud to be a community partner and digital marketer at the Rail Yards Market. Community Publishing: From the Community For the Community!
Authors Note: My involvement with the Rail Yards Market began early last year when my publishing company, Community Publishing, was called upon to program the Kids Zone at the RYM. Along with co-founder Yvette Sandoval, artist Vanessa Martinez and artist/educator Stephanie Galloway, we were able to provide educational programming for the first months of the 2014 season.
The RYM is more than just a farmers market, arts/artisan market or a venue for entertainers or educators. The RYM has the potential to serve as a sanctuary where folks from the community can come enjoy and/or participate in a paradigm shift. A shift that includes the belief that we as a community of people are empowered to change our city, our society a just, equitable place that puts the interests of the people ahead of profit. If we bond together in mutual support we can take the power out of the few and give it back to the many for the benefit of all of us.
*****
The Rail Yards Market (RYM) is excited to announce that we are back and better than ever! The 2015 market opens on May 3rd and will run most Sundays from 9AM-1PM through October. We aim to continue and improve upon this community-powered movement to stimulate local economic growth in Albuquerque and expose the community to local artists and educators.
Highlights of the 2014 Season
The Albuquerque community really made our inaugural season a rousing success. Due to your support we:
Welcomed over 120,000 folks through our doors in 2014
Generated over $500,000 in local business revenues
Additionally we featured dancers, poets, fortune tellers, bike valet, a FUSION Theatre production of Princess Marisol & the Moon Thieves, high-wire acts, and information from various community health care organizations.
Diversity
National Institute of Flamenco
Diversity is of paramount importance to us at the RYM. Therefore this season we will be welcoming more vendors on the day of the market and more vendors in total. Artisans and Artist will be rotating to allow for us to give more opportunities to our talented community members. In addition, our Educational Zones will include more community organizations and will be focused toward a specific theme.
While we will be bringing back some favorites from last season like morning exercises, poets, and flamenco dancers, we will also be diversifying our entertainment options. Musically we plan on mixing up the lineups we have to include traditional New Mexican music, Latino and African American music artists, Native American acts as well as music offerings from all around our local community and our international community.
With an eye toward expanding our culinary offerings, we are reaching out to our Asian American restaurateurs. Continuing with the theme of reaching deeper into our community, the RYM is hiring a Community Outreach Coordinator who will be tasked with forging connections and creating alliances with neighborhood groups around the vicinity of the RYM and beyond. Their duties will also include fundraising and the disbursement of our RYM tokens throughout Albuquerque.
3 Things to Look Forward to in 2015
1. More Vendors: we have increased our vendor numbers to roughly 100 every Sunday. 2. WIC & SNAP: we will start accepting WIC (Women, Infants, and Children Supplemental Food Program) as well as SNAP (Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program) funding. Participants can use their SNAP “double up food bucks” at the RYM to buy double the produce for half the price. 3. Monthly Newsletter: we will publishing a monthly newsletter that will contain information and discounts. Be on the lookout for signups shortly!
Participate
The Rail Yards Market is focused on building a resilient, sustainable local economy that we all love to work and play in. Through food, art, and music, we hope to bring our community together in an atmosphere of fun, learning, and creativity.
We are a community-run, volunteer-powered organization and we always welcome your participation. We are holding Community Forums open to the public where we welcome your input. To volunteer, partner, sponsor or for more info please visit http://railyardsmarket.org today!
This article originally ran in the City of Albuquerque’s AVCB’s website ABQ365.
*****
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Raise your right hand, and repeat after me…
I do solemnly declare
upon my honour and conscience,
that I will act, at all times,
to the best of my ability and knowledge
in a manner befitting a police officer.
I do,
take this community to be my lawfully
wedded life.
To have and hold,
in sickness and in health
‘til death do us in.
I do solemnly swear,
with my hand on this bible
instead of this rifle,
in this court of public opinion,
that I am not judge
nor jury
nor Jesus.
I am just
a servant,
sworn to protect
this community.
I do thee serve.
I will preserve
the dignity
and will respect the rights
of all individuals.
I will reserve
the right to respect the dignity
of all individuals.
I will serve,
to the best of my dignity,
the respect of all.
I will discharge my duties
with integrity
and will promote understanding
and conciliation.
I will discharge
only when it is my duty,
only when we’re beyond understanding,
only when we are beyond conciliation.
I will only discharge integrity.
I will not Not even when my life is threatened. Only when your life is in danger,
because I signed up to be a hero
not a coward.
Because the only thing I am allowed to be afraid of
is losing my community’s trust
Because anyone can get a gun
and call themselves a cowboy,
but not every gun can get a conscience
and call himself a cop.
I will exercise my authority
as a police officer
in the manner intended by the law.
I will exercise my compassion
as a police officer
because I am not above the law,
because it is not beneath me,
because I am not “the law.”
Just another one of the people
the law protects.
I will faithfully obey
the orders of my superiors,
and will be ready
to confront danger
in the line of duty.
It is my duty
To faithfully obey
my moral compass,
and will be ready
to confront my superiors
when they are out of line.
And that’s an order!
I will act with honesty,
courtesy and regard
for the welfare of others,
and will endeavor to develop
the esprit de corps.
I will not act.
I will be honest, personified.
I will be courtesy of personhood
Even to those without homes
Or on welfare.
I will endeavor to say
“Hello” from time to time.
Develop morale in the community
because it’s bigger than some code,
because it’s bluer than some code,
and desperately in need of sunlight.
Because the root word of morale
is moral.
And because it’s just as easy
to always be looking for
what someone has done right,
as it is to always be looking for
what someone is doing wrong.
I solemnly swear
to be as obsessed with building community
as I am with broken laws. I will act justly and impartially
and with propriety
towards my fellow officers.
So long as they are just,
impartial
and proper
towards my fellow citizens.
I do solemnly declare
upon my honour and conscience,
that I will act,
like and officer of the peace
at all times,
to the best of my ability and knowledge. I will constantly strive to honour this oath in my service
as a police officer,
so help me God.
*****
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Hakim Bellamy
Hakim Bellamy is Albuquerque’s Inaugural Poet Laureate, and counts, educator, musician and community organizer among his many ventures. Hakim’s multimedia Children’s book, Samuel’s Story is scheduled for release by Community Publishing in the Spring, 2015. Image courtesy of Joy Godfrey
Community Publishing brings local artists of all mediums together in creative collaborations for distribution as multimedia eBooks while promoting literacy in our communities.
Curated by Mary Ann Gilbreth, Ed.D., Department of Teacher Education, Educational Leadership and Policy, at the University of New Mexico. This collections includes the work of her students from several of her Reading Methods Classes, promoting cultural diversity in the classroom.