Potluck – Happy New Year

January 4th, 2010 by Erin Hannah

It is the season of resolutions and I am the first to get caught up in grand improvement schemes. Indeed, some have interpreted this project as just such a scheme.  While I can acknowledge that I am writing about these dinners in hopes of inspiring both myself and others, the holidays certainly reminded me to appreciate what I have and to try to accept who I am. Some of you may be able to relate.

I spent less of the holidays writing than I had hoped, much to my own consternation.  And I spent less time than I should have trying to book dinners. I am still learning about asking for what I need and hope that those of you who have been encouraging interesting people to contact me will continue to do so. Like me, this project is a work in progress.

I love writing this blog and am encouraged by the commitment so many of you have made to reading it. I know that the courage of those who have told their stories makes a difference. There are close to 50 000 hits to the site each month coming from over 450 different IP addresses. Even more exciting is the fact that the average visit is over 10 minutes. That means that you are taking the time to read. Thank you!

I certainly dream of more dinner invitations and more readers. I think that the stories I have been told deserve as large an audience as possible. My original premise remains intact. We have so much to share and to celebrate. And in doing so I am sure we all move a little closer to the people we want to be.

The holidays certainly reminded me that I am still learning, struggling sometimes to share who I am and to celebrate what I am trying to accomplish. I say this because some of you have been there too; we can doubt ourselves even when we are doing good work. In fact, there are times when the earnestness of the effort creates all the more uncertainty.

Over the holidays, I wanted to write more lessons than I did. And I wanted to book more dinners. I also wanted to take a harder look at how to market the project. Instead, I came face to face with the fact that I was exhausted, just as many of you had predicted.

So I spent time with friends, did my best with family and said some goodbyes to Christmases past.  It was a much needed rest from the pace of the last few months, but it has left me with more questions than answers.

I already feel like I have more than enough information for a book, though I still have so much more to learn. I am excited about spending more time improving the writing so that you are reading people’s stories in a form that is a closer approximation to just how compelling the stories are when told over dinner. I am less excited about pacing myself, but will have to do so nonetheless.

Sustaining myself this year means seeing this project through. It also means taking a hard look at my own story and taking good care of myself so that I can move into the next stage of my life, certain of the contribution I have to make. I know that in your own ways, many of you are doing the same thing.

We live in a world of constant change. Last year’s holidays probably did not look like this year’s. And who knows what next year’s will bring. At its most powerful, the New Year is all about reconciling who we have been with who we are becoming. The wisest among us take the time to savour that process, knowing that change is occurring in every moment, not just in grand statements and resolutions, but more significantly in the small gestures we make and keep making.

What I Have Learned So Far – Intention

December 31st, 2009 by Erin Hannah

Over the holidays, I will be having dinners with the family and friends that impact me. Every day for ten days I will be writing about something I have learned in the first two months of this project.This is lesson 5.
When I began this project, I had a plan of sorts. I was certain that [...]

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What I’ve Learned So Far – Perseverance

December 29th, 2009 by Erin Hannah

Over the holidays, I will be having dinners with the family and friends that impact me. Every day for ten days I will be writing about something I have learned in the first two months of this project.This is lesson 4.
Exceptional people do not seem to suffer any more or less than the rest of [...]

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What I’ve Learned So Far – Giving

December 27th, 2009 by Erin Hannah

Over the holidays, I will be having dinners with the family and friends that impact me. Every day for ten days I will be writing about something I have learned in the first two months of this project.This is lesson 3.
When I began this project, I was certain that we lived in a world where [...]

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What I’ve Learned So Far – Light

December 21st, 2009 by Erin Hannah

Over the holidays, I will be having dinners with the family and friends that impact me. Every day for ten days I will be writing about something I have learned in the first two months of this project.This is lesson 2.

Today is the darkest day of the year.  In Canada, many are struggling with the [...]

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What I’ve Learned So Far – Family

December 19th, 2009 by Erin Hannah

Over the holidays, I will be having dinners with the family and friends that impact me. Every day for ten days I will be writing about something I have learned in the first two months of this project. This is lesson 1.
Although I knew enough to start this project with family, an interview with [...]

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Potluck – Coming Home

December 13th, 2009 by Erin Hannah

The trip home has been a bumpy one to say the least.  My time in Northern Ontario, a place that has always been a home away from home, was so filling I am still reeling. The North and its people are achingly beautiful, and that realization is all the starker as an adult returning on [...]

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Potluck – Bearing Witness

November 29th, 2009 by Erin Hannah

To be in the north is to glimpse a complexity that defies simple conclusions, especially from an outsider.  People do their best to come together to decide how to grapple with the decisions that affect their communities. Race relations and the legacy of residential school abuses cannot be ignored in any meaningful dialogue.
The history of [...]

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Potluck – Part of the Journey

November 23rd, 2009 by Erin Hannah

When we travel we acknowledge that we are moving. Even if we anticipate a return trip along the same route, we are aware that we might not pass this way again. Our perception of risk is heightened and we keep our wits about us.
Our everyday lives are often organized to create the opposite illusion. We dull [...]

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Potluck – Why Dinner?

November 16th, 2009 by Erin Hannah

It is a good thing that I waited this long to address the question of “why dinner?” There are many reasons and some of them I am only beginning to appreciate fully.
Growing up, my family did eat dinner together.  While there were many things we did not talk about, the children discussed ideas with the [...]

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