2013.06.03 13:00 - Singing the Field

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    The Guardian for this meeting was Eliza Madrigal. The comments are by Eliza Madrigal.


    (This session is alternatively titled "Each Melody has Roots" or "Umquotbothi") :)

    tea ceremony session_001.png
     

    Eliza Madrigal: Hello Rosatta :)
    Rosatta Resident: cobblestones - how lovely : )
    Eliza Madrigal smiles... see you have found a butterfly
    Eliza Madrigal: did you fish for it?

    Rosatta Resident: Sunshine gave it to me. She is so sweet
    Eliza Madrigal: aw, she is
    Eliza Madrigal: I'm not sure if you play with light settings, but i've set mine to narcon's dawn, and it is a great effect
    Eliza Madrigal: soft and a little foggy
    Rosatta Resident: I will try it : )
    Rosatta Resident: I don't have narcon's dawn, but I have sunrise
    Eliza Madrigal: hm, might be nice too, though a bit darker
    Rosatta Resident: Well, this is beautiful in all settings : )
    Eliza Madrigal smiles
    Eliza Madrigal: :) I wonder if for the pauses today it might be fun to do a little dash writing about day dreaming

    Eliza Madrigal: Hello Sunshine :) that dress so suits you
    szavanna Resident: :)
    szavanna Resident: tyty °͜°
    szavanna Resident: Rosie has the most amazing wings :)
    Eliza Madrigal: fluttering just so
    Rosatta Resident: Ty, Sunshine : )
    szavanna Resident: :)
    Rosatta Resident: T hey are made by Pryda.
    szavanna Resident: can you send me the LM :)

    Eliza Madrigal: Sunshine, have you done dash writing before?
    szavanna Resident: no
    szavanna Resident: what is it
    szavanna Resident: dash writing hmm
    Eliza Madrigal: I was thinking that instead of taking the 5 minute pauses around each bell, to take a bit longer around the :30 bell
    Eliza Madrigal: and in that time, "free write" about daydreaming
    Eliza Madrigal: whatever springs up
    Eliza Madrigal: we don't have to share, but we could share if we liked, a sentence or two

    szavanna Resident: oh ok so 15 min quiet?
    szavanna Resident: and during that time we write?
    Rosatta Resident: I'm happy to work with whatever you wish to schedule. Now having the smarts to follow it . . .
    Eliza Madrigal: dash writing is actually a method... where people usually attend a presentation then write about it then share with just a few others
    Eliza Madrigal: :)

    Eliza Madrigal: yes... 15 minutes may be to long though
    szavanna Resident: ah ok
    Eliza Madrigal: but the idea would be to sort of dive into it in a meditative way
    Eliza Madrigal: after chatting a little
    szavanna Resident: :)
    szavanna Resident: we can do that :)
    Eliza Madrigal: so we could pause at :30 and I'd ring a bell to end at :40pm
    Eliza Madrigal: but only if it sounds fun ^ ^
    szavanna Resident: yes ok we do it at 30
    szavanna Resident: never did it before
    Eliza Madrigal: yes, we just don't come back after the 90 seconds... we linger a bit longer
    szavanna Resident: kk :)

    Eliza Madrigal: One place I did this was in these consumer education classes in SL
    Eliza Madrigal: as part of Occupy events that were going on
    szavanna Resident: ah
    szavanna Resident: consumer education
    Eliza Madrigal: was fun just to go wild on the page
    szavanna Resident: :)

    --BELL--

    Eliza Madrigal: daydreaming thoughts to get us started?
    szavanna Resident: hmm actually I just woke up :)
    Eliza Madrigal smiles
    szavanna Resident: so still dreaming
    szavanna Resident: :)
    Eliza Madrigal: mmm
    szavanna Resident: now that I am busy with my club ....
    szavanna Resident: I think a lot about africa again
    szavanna Resident: we talked yesterday with Ramlaa and Mira and Zenji
    szavanna Resident: about the ceremony of tea drinking
    szavanna Resident: and for some reason I often think of having tea with people
    Eliza Madrigal: is there is a like ritual in Africa?
    szavanna Resident: you know all sorts of people
    szavanna Resident: in africa
    szavanna Resident: yes

    tea ceremony session_003.png

    szavanna Resident: yesterday we talked about the ritual of attaya making
    Eliza Madrigal: attaya?
    szavanna Resident: attaya is a strong sweet tea
    szavanna Resident: and it is drunk in small cups
    szavanna Resident: often poured from the pot into the cup
    Eliza Madrigal: naturally sweet, or made that way?
    szavanna Resident: then back again ...
    szavanna Resident: to make a frith
    szavanna Resident: froth
    Eliza Madrigal: mmm

    Rosatta Resident: This is a north African custom?
    Rosatta Resident: More middle Eastern than sub-Saharan?
    szavanna Resident: you can find it there also
    szavanna Resident: but its not so strong in North Africa
    szavanna Resident: in west africa ....it becomes really dark
    szavanna Resident: it looks like coffee
    Eliza Madrigal: ahhh, like Turkish tea?
    szavanna Resident: and it is boiled for very long
    szavanna Resident: hmm not sure about Turkish tea
    szavanna Resident: its also called gunpowder tea :)
    Eliza Madrigal: okay, yes, that I kind I know
    Eliza Madrigal: :::dots connecting::::
    szavanna Resident: and when I was in Tunis
    szavanna Resident: it often felt like
    Rosatta Resident: I read a book about a Swiss woman falling in love with a masai man and I remember now that they made tea so strong and sweet that it was nearly a meal in and of itself
    szavanna Resident: all we did was making attaya and chatting
    szavanna Resident: °͜°

    szavanna Resident: so when I day dream ...I often end up in a dream that involves attaya
    Rosatta Resident: You sound a little homesick for it : )
    szavanna Resident: hehe
    szavanna Resident: hmm yes I miss that
    Eliza Madrigal: :) homesick for where you are
    szavanna Resident: you know it was really the atmosphere
    szavanna Resident: that was really special
    szavanna Resident: even though I was the only white person
    szavanna Resident: I fitted in seamlessly
    szavanna Resident: I felt really at home
    Eliza Madrigal: :)
    szavanna Resident: like at PaB ;o)

    Eliza Madrigal: beautiful... sometimes I think about how many rituals have fallen away from daily life... like snapping peas ... things that take a really long time
    szavanna Resident: yes :)
    szavanna Resident: you know where people just spend long times together
    szavanna Resident: like in africa
    Eliza Madrigal: maybe one goes through all the motions on special occasions, like I still do, but it isn't just an intrinsic part of sharing meals
    szavanna Resident: people sing and work on something
    Eliza Madrigal: yes :)
    szavanna Resident: yes

    szavanna Resident: one doesn't feel like doing it
    Eliza Madrigal: my Meme was like that... always working but never seemed burdensome because always singing and praying too
    szavanna Resident: and it becomes tedious
    Eliza Madrigal: mmmm
    szavanna Resident: Meme?
    szavanna Resident: grandmom?
    Eliza Madrigal: my great grandmother, raised me when little
    szavanna Resident: oh :)

    Eliza Madrigal: I was thinking the other day that she was the only one who, when I talked to, I didn't feel like it was a bother
    szavanna Resident: yes hmm its a special thing that we don't have in modern societies
    Rosatta Resident: I am so glad you had someone to validate you when you were little
    Eliza Madrigal: an amazing gift

    szavanna Resident: my grandmom was like that
    szavanna Resident: I grew up with my mom and grandmom
    szavanna Resident: my mom was more of a rebel :)
    Eliza Madrigal: :)
    szavanna Resident: my grandmom was also a rebel ...

    --BELL--

    szavanna Resident: but still had that grandmom quality

    Eliza Madrigal: (writing)

    szavanna Resident: :)

    Eliza Madrigal: >>ding<<

    Eliza Madrigal: :)
    szavanna Resident: :)
    Eliza Madrigal: nice way to go into the writing... with the phrase "grandmom quality"
    Eliza Madrigal: how did it feel?
    szavanna Resident: nice °͜°

    szavanna Resident: I was writing about those nights when I was visiting my friends in Tunis - from Mauritania
    Eliza Madrigal: still tangible for you?
    szavanna Resident: very
    szavanna Resident: I can smell tea tea
    Eliza Madrigal: still smell and feel the place? hear them?
    szavanna Resident: cooking
    Eliza Madrigal: mmm :)
    szavanna Resident: yes °͜°
    szavanna Resident: it is still so vivid
    szavanna Resident: a bit like that picture
    szavanna Resident: with the kids and the tea
    szavanna Resident: and also like the other picture showing how "old" things look
    szavanna Resident: but how homey and cosy it was
    Eliza Madrigal: was just thinking that
    szavanna Resident: tiles broken
    szavanna Resident: and window not freshly painted and all that
    Eliza Madrigal: I saw this interview with Lenny Kravitz last night... and he grew up in privelege but at some point he lived in a place where friends had very little
    szavanna Resident: it was filled with a familiar feeling
    Eliza Madrigal: but he said they were very generous (by comparison)
    szavanna Resident: :)
    szavanna Resident: it reminds me of the film Searching for sugarman

    Searching_for_Sugar_Man_filmstill1_Rodriguez_byHalWilson-1-1024x841.jpg
    --BELL--

    szavanna Resident: have you seen it?
    Eliza Madrigal: yes I have
    szavanna Resident: :)
    Eliza Madrigal: you, Rosatta?
    Eliza Madrigal: it is an excellent film and story
    szavanna Resident: I am thinking of making a little event out of it
    Eliza Madrigal: how so?

    szavanna Resident: I think - not many people know about things from an afrikaans perspective
    szavanna Resident: how the afrikaans people experienced apartheid
    Eliza Madrigal: true
    szavanna Resident: so this is really a unique story
    szavanna Resident: that helps people from other places see things more clearly
    szavanna Resident: about the afrikaans community and how they experienced those times

    Rosatta Resident: I worked with an Afrikaans woman who left South AFrica because of apartheid
    szavanna Resident: really
    szavanna Resident: what did she say
    szavanna Resident: or she didn't explain much?
    Eliza Madrigal listens
    Rosatta Resident: She hated the way blacks were treated and she was bitter about it but other than that she didnt' say much
    Rosatta Resident: Mostly "that's why we left"
    Rosatta Resident: She had the most goreous accent
    szavanna Resident: kk

    szavanna Resident: it is a very unique situation that was really trying for all involved
    szavanna Resident: the fact of me having to try and understand it
    szavanna Resident: teaches me a lot
    Rosatta Resident: I met a young woman in the Netherlands who was from South African, also. I thought she was English because of her accent. We never talked about apartheid or anything

    Eliza Madrigal: there is a lot to learn from people, though hard for them to convey
    szavanna Resident: hmm the story of Rodriguez was really like a miracle
    Eliza Madrigal: to capture those stories and memories
    szavanna Resident: yes that is why - often you learn from the silence
    szavanna Resident: just the presence

    szavanna Resident: So Rodriguez was this musician
    szavanna Resident: from Detroit
    szavanna Resident: very poor
    Eliza Madrigal: comparing with holocaust survivors and ancestors... feel the preservation of things is important... so easy to forget
    Eliza Madrigal listens
    szavanna Resident: yes Liz

    szavanna Resident: a lot of traumatic things - people went through here
    szavanna Resident: and this guy Rodriguez - was like the innercity poet
    szavanna Resident: he lived on the streets .... documenting all he saw
    szavanna Resident: and his friends said - he had a special quality about him
    szavanna Resident: he had so little .... but still was sooo rich in the way he lived his life
    szavanna Resident: his daughter talked about him in the film

    szavanna Resident: that a lot of people think - poor people can't live a rich life
    Rosatta Resident: Well, they aren't Catholic, then lol
    szavanna Resident: they have dreams and aspirations like everyone
    szavanna Resident: hm?
    bernadette-th.jpgRosatta Resident: And they can contribute in unbelievable waysszavanna Resident: catholic?

    Rosatta Resident: Catholic history is full of poor people - and people who chose to be poor - who had amazing lives and left amazing legacies
    Rosatta Resident: St Francis
    szavanna Resident: :)
    Rosatta Resident: Bernadette of Lourdes are two well known ones
    szavanna Resident: I don't know much about them
    szavanna Resident: you know - in africa most people are poor ...
    Rosatta Resident: Joan of Arc was a peasant girl
    szavanna Resident: when you look at things with european eyes
    Rosatta Resident: Poverty stinks.
    szavanna Resident: depends how you look at it
    Rosatta Resident: But those who make a difference inspite of it are often more earth-moving than those who have lived lives of priveledge 
    Rosatta Resident: Not always, though
    szavanna Resident: hmm yes depends on the person
    Rosatta Resident: And Ghandi was Hindu and chose poverty and fit these descriptions

    St_FrancisPreachingtotheBirds_Giotto.jpg
    (Giotto)

    Eliza Madrigal: one thing I've learned in disability communities is "disability paradox" - that, from the outside people expect people with a disability to have a diminished sense of well-being and happiness but this is not so. 
    Rosatta Resident: Mother Theresa didn't give up privilege, but she did give up comfort
    szavanna Resident: ah yes also ...
    Eliza Madrigal: that it is easy to see someone as "poor" from the outside and miss most of their life
    szavanna Resident: yes we suppose all sorts of things
    Rosatta Resident: And so many measure a person's worth by materialistic standards

    --BELL--

    Eliza Madrigal: as a teen I had friends who would lend me nice clothes on the way to school, and years later I ran into a girl and we were talking and she said "you know all the time I didn't realize you were poor just like us." lol
    szavanna Resident: what do you mean Liz
    Eliza Madrigal: Hi Wol :)
    szavanna Resident: hi Woly :)
    Wol Euler: evening all, sorry I missed the session :(((((
    Eliza Madrigal: my line hasn't shown up for me yet
    Eliza Madrigal: no worries :) as long as well
    szavanna Resident: :)
    Wol Euler: well but tired, thanks
    szavanna Resident checks Woly's temp
    Eliza Madrigal: I mean that I lived a few blocks over from a friend in school, but she had projected a story about me since I wore fancy clothes
    Rosatta Resident: Hi, Wol! Nice to see you : )
    Wol Euler smiles.
    Eliza Madrigal: and had come from private school
    szavanna Resident: :)
    szavanna Resident: ah ok

    szavanna Resident: in hungary we were sort of the same
    szavanna Resident: during socialist times
    szavanna Resident: ops Rosie is gone
    Eliza Madrigal: she walked into you and poofed
    szavanna Resident: during socialism we had one type of everything
    Eliza Madrigal: :) but that may be my viewer
    szavanna Resident: yes lol
    szavanna Resident: hope she is ok
    Wol Euler: I saw it too, it was an odd way to leave
    szavanna Resident: yes she walked into me
    Wol Euler: anyway

    szavanna Resident: yes hmm
    szavanna Resident: so when I was small we had one type of school
    szavanna Resident: so people were sort of equal
    szavanna Resident: no private schools
    Eliza Madrigal: aspiration of equality
    szavanna Resident: but everything was working well
    Wol Euler nods.
    Eliza Madrigal: I was out of place in private schools then out of place in public schools
    Eliza Madrigal: :)
    Eliza Madrigal: equally
    szavanna Resident: aww little Liz
    Eliza Madrigal: heheh
    szavanna Resident: ;o)
    Wol Euler: awwwwww

    szavanna Resident: I went to a musical highschool
    szavanna Resident: that was fun
    Eliza Madrigal: imagine it would be :)
    szavanna Resident: we played music all morning
    Wol Euler smiles.
    szavanna Resident: from 8am till noon
    szavanna Resident: piano, violin, viola, chamber music
    szavanna Resident: composition
    szavanna Resident: hungarian folk music
    szavanna Resident: then lunch
    szavanna Resident: then normal highschool in the afternoon
    szavanna Resident: and orchestra in the evening
    szavanna Resident: :)

    szavanna Resident: hehe what happened Rosie °͜°
    Wol Euler: wb rosatta
    szavanna Resident: wb :)
    Eliza Madrigal: wb :)
    Rosatta Resident: Ty I stood up and my avatar just took off running
    Eliza Madrigal: that's what we saw too ^^
    szavanna Resident: hehe yes
    Rosatta Resident: I don't think I did anything to cause that : ( ???
    Eliza Madrigal: just a happening I guess
    szavanna Resident: its no probs at all
    szavanna Resident: :P
    Rosatta Resident: Ty. It as embarassing to run right over the top of someone
    szavanna Resident: hmm isn't SL funny that we feel like ... its not right
    Eliza Madrigal: not when unintentional
    Eliza Madrigal: :)

    Eliza Madrigal: I meant to share my dash writing from before... want to see?
    szavanna Resident: just pixels :)
    szavanna Resident: yes Liz :)))
    Rosatta Resident: Yes, please : )
    Eliza Madrigal: well there is stuff before and after but I'm choosing these lines to share...
    Wol Euler: please

    Eliza Madrigal:

    Strong and frothy

    She conveys a
    Rhythmic story

    Passed from mother to
    Mother to mother to
    Mothers

     

    At a fountain
    Where we are snapping
    Virtual peas

    Where we are drinking
    Virtual tea

    Virtually at home


    Eliza Madrigal: :)
    szavanna Resident: aww
    szavanna Resident melts
    Wol Euler smiles.
    Eliza Madrigal: then I've been adding while you've been talking... putting a little sugar (man) in there
    Eliza Madrigal: :)
    szavanna Resident: sigh :)
    Eliza Madrigal: lol
    szavanna Resident: sugarman hehe
    szavanna Resident: I can show you also
    Eliza Madrigal: (wol instead of pausing we took ten minutes for free writing)
    szavanna Resident: incoming :)
    Eliza Madrigal: we paused... but just the usual bits

    szavanna Resident: I arrived at the door and the air was full of aroma. I heard people moving aroud, doing things, talking and singing. I knocked and someone opened. "Hi Anna, come in - the tea is almost done. I walked in feeling a home sort of feeling that I never felt back home. Many people welcoming me, shaking hands, smiling, and walking up and down from the kitchen to the room. I walked into the room and put down the guitar...thinking to myself ....
    szavanna Resident: ( can you believe it, you are here - with all these people from Mauritania ....is it really real ...looking around smiling to myself and smiling at the people around me )
    szavanna Resident: There were grassmats on the concrete floor - and the whole room was very simple .... almost no decorations on the walls - a bit like as if the house was not finished. Yet it felt complete and cosy just as it was - everything was just right. I take off my shoes and settle on the ground on one of the mats.
    Wol Euler: ah, fun
    szavanna Resident: last bit
    szavanna Resident: I was sitting on the mat - just drinking in the atmosphere - the rich aroma of herbs and spices that came from the kitchen. Others settle around me and we chat about absolutely anything ..... it almost doesn't even matter what the topic was. Everyone took part in the conversation ..a story formed as the words whet from person to person ...... I forget where the words were - or who said them .... and when I woke up .... it was almost morning ....

    Eliza Madrigal: smiling smiling :::yay:::::beautiful, can really feel that
    Wol Euler smiles.
    Wol Euler: lovely
    szavanna Resident: ;))
    szavanna Resident: hmm gonna steal your poem Liz
    Eliza Madrigal: highly unfinished poem
    szavanna Resident: snapping peas
    Eliza Madrigal: :)
    szavanna Resident: I didnt know you say that
    szavanna Resident: "snapping"
    Eliza Madrigal: snapping beans is more often said I guess
    szavanna Resident: hmm kk

    --BELL--

    Eliza Madrigal: because as you bend off the ends it makes a loud SNAP sound
    szavanna Resident: ah ok yes
    Eliza Madrigal: (ends of the pods)
    szavanna Resident: hmm life was different in old times
    szavanna Resident: the snap pea days :)
    Eliza Madrigal: :) just one of those chores that takes a long time
    Eliza Madrigal: I wonder if without those chores there would exist any writers at all

    szavanna Resident: hmm in africa each chore has a beat
    szavanna Resident: and songs
    Eliza Madrigal: :))
    szavanna Resident: that one "uses" to make things
    Wol Euler: fascinating
    szavanna Resident: sometimes even a scale
    Wol Euler: is the song like the instructions?

    szavanna Resident: you know like ...when people plough the field
    szavanna Resident: they sing it
    szavanna Resident: and encourage each other to do it right
    Eliza Madrigal: :))

    Wol Euler: is the song the instructions for doing [whatever]? "This is how you plough a field....."
    szavanna Resident: hmm I would have to do some research
    szavanna Resident: to see exactly what the words mean

    szavanna Resident: but imagine walking into a bank
    szavanna Resident: and the people that work there
    szavanna Resident: sing ..."and now we pay the bills ...pay the bills ...pay the bills ..."
    szavanna Resident: lol
    szavanna Resident: or something
    szavanna Resident: everyone is quiet

    Wol Euler: ah :) so more a celebration than a how-to
    szavanna Resident: not even celebration
    szavanna Resident: it just happens
    Wol Euler: O.O

    szavanna Resident: often when I see cleaning ladies
    szavanna Resident: they are wiping the floors in a building
    Eliza Madrigal: "whistle while you work... mmhmhmmm"
    szavanna Resident: and they sing their hearts out
    Wol Euler smiles.
    Wol Euler: wow
    szavanna Resident: almost like opera singers

    Wol Euler: I wonder when and why we lost that, and actually whether we actually ever *had* it
    szavanna Resident: and there I stand mesmerised
    Eliza Madrigal: I did too actually, when I cleaned houses when starting college
    szavanna Resident: you see °͜°
    Wol Euler: ah :)
    Eliza Madrigal: sang and prayed just like my great grandmother had
    Wol Euler: aaaaah
    szavanna Resident: see it was something very natural that she did right Liz?
    Eliza Madrigal: she seemed to love all she was doing
    Wol Euler nods.
    Eliza Madrigal: yes
    Eliza Madrigal: she was just "musical" and "worshipy"
    szavanna Resident: like ...hanging out the clothes to dry ...
    szavanna Resident: and singing
    Eliza Madrigal: yes, we hung clothes too
    szavanna Resident: °͜°

    Wol Euler: that might be significant, actually. I was thinking about people here doing typical urban modern jobs singing
    Wol Euler: would a garbageman sing? or the guy on the factory assembly line?
    Eliza Madrigal: would think for sure
    szavanna Resident: may be you can check this one
    szavanna Resident: making african beer
    szavanna Resident: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z07zZeeRZ-o
    szavanna Resident: °͜°

    Wol Euler: I know that building workers sometimes do, somebody starts and everyone joins in, and at the end there is laughter
    Eliza Madrigal: (will have to see video later - connection too tenuous)
    szavanna Resident: ahh you must :)
    szavanna Resident: I used to make african beer too hehe
    Eliza Madrigal: I will :) while I am posting the log
    szavanna Resident: kk °͜°

    Eliza Madrigal: are there many kinds of African beer? what did you make?
    szavanna Resident: its called sorghum beer

    Rosatta Resident: phone call followed by visitors
    Eliza Madrigal: ah :) popular Rosatta
    szavanna Resident: ;))
    Rosatta Resident: Ty,e veryone for a nice session
    Wol Euler is bopping and hopping in her seat :)
    Eliza Madrigal: take care :)
    Eliza Madrigal: hopping and a bopping and asinging her song...
    Eliza Madrigal: (sans 'g's)
    Wol Euler grins.
    szavanna Resident: thats what I love about making this SL world music club

    szavanna Resident: each melody has roots

    --BELL--

    szavanna Resident: feels very down to earth
    Wol Euler: that was great fun, sun, ty
    szavanna Resident: I suppose it has different recipes
    szavanna Resident: hehe yes oooold video
    Eliza Madrigal likes dark frothy ale
    Eliza Madrigal: frothy is the word of the day ^.^
    szavanna Resident: hehehe yes
    Wol Euler smiles.

    Eliza Madrigal: I should go... sleepy actually - am glad SL connection worked today but have been on a lot and my eyes are @@
    szavanna Resident: we ma dlaminiii
    szavanna Resident: lalaaa
    szavanna Resident: yay yes
    szavanna Resident: °͜° hope it recovers totally
    Eliza Madrigal: me too :) I can't live at starbucks
    szavanna Resident: hmm sounds fun

    Eliza Madrigal: and people look at you funny if on SL
    szavanna Resident: aroma of coffee in the air hehe
    szavanna Resident: loll
    Wol Euler: mmhmm
    szavanna Resident: ok hmm
    Eliza Madrigal: :) first because it takes resources and second cause you smile and giggle and cry a lot
    Wol Euler: right :)
    Eliza Madrigal: :)
    szavanna Resident: ;o)
    szavanna Resident: sl is quite the experience
    Eliza Madrigal: Pema never seemed to mind... think we had visitors who met him by looking over his shoulder at the computer
    Wol Euler nods.
    Eliza Madrigal: anyway, so enjoy being with you... must clean up
    szavanna Resident: take care all °͜° sleep well :)

    Eliza Madrigal: Wol you are so elegant todaytea ceremony session_004.png
    Wol Euler: take care, my dears, sing and be happy
    szavanna Resident: love the poem Liz ;))
    Eliza Madrigal: <3
    Wol Euler: oh, thanks, glad you can see me. I still see only a red cloud :(
    Wol Euler: ♥
    Eliza Madrigal: thanks for the stories Sunshine
    Eliza Madrigal: oh no :(
    szavanna Resident: I see you perfectly
    Eliza Madrigal: no you are very sleek today

    Wol Euler shrugs. Lag happens :)
    Wol Euler: good :)
    Eliza Madrigal: :)
    szavanna Resident: :)
    Wol Euler: goodnight, take care
    szavanna Resident: I see you rebaked
    Eliza Madrigal waves
    szavanna Resident: byebyeeeee niteniteee
    szavanna Resident: °͜°

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