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No More Reading Lists

July 23, 2008 | 6:59 pm

At least not this week! I’m finally finding the time to plan a new geocache, and I’m very excited about it. As usual (for me), it will be a multi-stage cache, taking cachers on a tour of some of Provincetown and Truro (Massachusetts) history.

The centerpiece is the story that the local history museum tells — with a straight face, if that can be believed. When the Mayflower arrived, its first stop was here in Provincetown, before the colonists moved on to Plymouth. They had a tough first winter, and were close to starving when they came upon a cache — no pun intended — of corn that the local native tribe, the Wampanoag, had put aside for their own sustenance. The pilgrims were ecstatic to “find” this corn, consumed it, and lived to see another season. We have no records of how many Wampanoag didn’t make it because of the settlers’ theft.

It’s a bit of local lore that gets brushed aside when tourists flock to Provincetown, as they are now, and that deserves to be known. And anyone doing my new geocache will learn about it … and more!

Like much of “American” history, we need to know both what is wonderful and what is less wonderful about our heritage. Opening our hearts means more than just looking for happiness; it’s finding joy in understanding everything we need to understand in order to learn from the mistakes of the past … and tread lightly on the earth now.

Jeannette Cézanne
Open Your Heart with Geocaching

Posted by: Geocaching, Opening the heart, Being Peace — jcezanne | Comments (0)


It’s How You Play The Game

June 25, 2008 | 12:27 pm

Once a week or so I head over to the forums page of geocaching.com to see what people are talking about, join in a conversation or two, that sort of thing. Last week I responded to a geocacher who was expressing frustration that people weren’t doing his new cache “correctly,” and frankly, I had to laugh.

In fact, that very frustration is one of the themes in my book, Open Your Heart with Geocaching: you cannot control what others do. This particular geocacher has a challenge/response component to his cache — in other words, cachers need to answer a question in order to log the find. Some enterprising souls decided that they don’t want to answer the question, found the cache through alternate means, and logged it. The cache-hider, perplexed, asked others on the forum what he should do. Delete the “illegal” logs?

I feel for him, truly I do. As anyone who has read my book knows, I, too, am a bit of a control freak. I, too, have a challenge/response cache, though I’ve been fortunate in that folks doing it have been a fairly self-selected bunch and don’t seem to mind.

But the reality is that you can never control how others play the game. You can never tell them that this is “the” way to do it. For some people, that’s the challenge: outfox the cache-hider! As my spouse often says, “it will end in tears.”

It’s not a bad life-lesson. We’d probably all feel a lot less frustrated if we ever accepted that the only people whose actions and behaviors we can control are … ourselves. I cannot make other people behave the way I want them to (and, believe me, I’ve tried!), and that will surely end in tears, one way or another. What I can control is myself: how I behave, how I react and respond to others’ behavior.

Playing the game — whether geocaching or life — involves a lot of give-and-take. We can lament when others appear to do nothing but take … but perhaps we can balance that karmically, too, with an overabundance of giving!

Jeannette Cézanne
Open Your Heart with Geocaching

Posted by: Geocaching, geocaching books, Opening the heart — jcezanne | Comments (0)


GeoWoodstock

June 5, 2008 | 8:11 am

Well, yet another year has come and gone and I didn’t go to GeoWoodstock VI, held last month in California. As I said last year, “next year!” Hmm.

Here’s what it’s about:

GeoWoodstock is an annual get-together for geocachers from all over the world. In five short years GeoWoodstock has become the world’s largest geocaching-related event. It is a relaxed, friendly, and free gathering. Typical activities at past GeoWoodstock events have included meeting people, prize giveaways, geocoin sales and trading, travel bug swaps, and of course, caching like crazy. There have been large and small cache runs, and records have been made for the most caches found in a 24-hour period.

It’s not exactly Crosby, Stills, Nash, and Young, but it’s supposed to be a lot of fun, and events such as this one are terrific for bringing together what is often a disparate community practicing a largely solitary activity. If you’re considering geocaching, consider attending an event or two — even GeoWoodstock. Because while it’s wonderful to be alone on the trail, it’s a good idea to balance that with the reasons we become community.

Jeannette Cézanne
Open Your Heart with Geocaching

Posted by: Geocaching, Opening the heart — jcezanne | Comments (0)


Time To Get Back to Geocaching!

May 21, 2008 | 6:54 am

I haven’t written much about geocaching lately, not because it hasn’t been on my mind, but because some reading topics really took over. But a recent radio interview reminded me that it’s spring, it’s time to get out there and start geocaching again!

I spend a fair amount of time on the beginner’s forums over at geocaching.com, because a lot of the most expert cachers are busy discussing more advanced topics, and I think it’s important to help folks just starting out — that’s the point of my book, Open Your Heart with Geocaching, after all! And what’s been interesting to me, lately, is seeing how much people are in a hurry.

What do I mean? One new cacher wants to place his first cache and wants to know what to put in it … though he would have known that if he’d found any number of caches; the guidelines tell you to find a lot before you place any. Another poster also wanted to place a cache, but didn’t know where she should do it. Placing a cache should be a thoughtful activity, one that’s inspired by a certain place or idea … not by responses on a forum.

But what all this really says to me is how much we’re, all of us, in a hurry most of the time. We want to grow up quickly, buy that cool new item now, have a promotion before we really understand our current work. We live in a disposable society where everything from batteries to spouses are seen as replaceable, and where instant gratification is the norm. But … does it make us happy? Divorce rates, bankruptcy rates, runaway rates, crime rates all paint a different picture.

What if we stopped seeing life as a race? What if we decided to do some of the things I talk about in my book –slow down. Look up. Find your joy. What if we lived those things, instead of being in such a hurry?

I have a sense of what my life would look like if I took my own words to heart. What would yours?

–Jeannette Cézanne
Open Your Heart with Geocaching
www.JeannetteCezanne.com

Posted by: Geocaching, Opening the heart, Happiness, Peace, growth — jcezanne | Comments (0)


Opening The Heart — Even When You Don’t Want To

January 17, 2008 | 12:24 pm

The post-primary season here in New Hampshire has a little of the post-holiday feel to it … a little exhausted, a little deflated, a little anti-climactic. It’s the first time I’ve actually worked a primary for a candidate, and perhaps the fact that my candidate didn’t do well has something to do with my own feeling of letdown. I’ve been discouraged, it’s safe to say, for over a week now.

And then something extraordinary happened.

Two climbers were lost in blizzard conditions on Mount Hood a day or so ago. They created a snow-cave and survived the night, and were in cell phone contact with would-be rescuers; but they could not give their location, as they’d gotten lost the night before. But, amazingly, they came across a geocache … And every geocache includes a note with its GPS coordinates.

At a time when geocaching started to seem trivial to me (next to what I was seeing as a life-and-death political struggle), I read this account of it saving lives, and felt my heart opening all over again. There is good to be found everywhere, and those of us who pursue the hobby should be proud to be part of it.

In a couple of weeks I’ll be giving a talk for beginning geocachers at the Manchester City Library, and I know that the enthusiasm I’ve felt waning lately will be right there again.

And in the meantime, a very nice review of Open Your Heart with Geocaching has been picked up on the wires and is also, it has to be said, making me smile.

Maybe when you don’t want to open your heart, you should pause for a moment … because that may be the best time of all to do it!

– Jeannette Cézanne
http://www.JeannetteCezanne.com

Posted by: Geocaching, geocaching books, Opening the heart, Difficulty, Overcoming difficulty — jcezanne | Comments (0)


Lost But Not Forgotten

December 19, 2007 | 1:43 pm

I haven’t been geocaching much recently — a terrible admission from someone who wrote the book on it! — mostly because of either bad timing or bad weather; but it’s never far from my mind.

In fact, I’m planning the placement of my next cache as we speak!

I’m teaming up with a fellow cacher (and history enthusiast), “MuchAdo,” to put together a cache that will take participants on a tour of Manchester, New Hampshire. But wait, those of you who have read my book are saying, isn’t that already one of your caches? Indeed it is: Dark Satanic does take cachers on a tour of Manchester’s mill history. This is a different sort of tour.

It’s a tour of places that are no longer there.

Manchester has a plethora of them: the old zoo, washed away in a flood; the grand hotel with tram access, gone with the passing of the era of grand hotels; the city jail, of which only the doorway remains; and many, many more places. And as MuchAdo and I work with the concept – mostly done over microbrews at Millie’s – I keep wondering about all the other ruins, all the other lost places in all of our communities, the places that once were important to people who used to live where we live now.

What is the point in keeping up with them? Why should these places mean anything to us now?

It’s a little like families, I think. We may not be our pasts, but our pasts are part of who we are. Just as we inherited our families’ DNA, we inherit the stories of the places where we live. Remembering them will keep them alive; and maybe we owe that to our communities, to our history.

What are the lost places in your community?

– Jeannette Cézanne
http://www.JeannetteCezanne.com

Posted by: Geocaching, Opening the heart, Learning something new, Joy — jcezanne | Comments (0)

 
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