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Showing posts with the label neighbors

How My Cat Made Me a Better Neighbor

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  My cat has no concept of boundaries — emotional, geographic, or social. Naturally, this has improved my standing on the block. He introduced me to everyone. Not by choice. He simply walked into their yards, porches, garages, and once, their SUV. I had to follow with apologies and small talk. Boom: instant community. He forced me to be observant. If a neighbor’s window is open, he’s in it. If their door is ajar, he’s halfway through. I now notice things like “Your gate latch is loose” or “Your Amazon package has been sitting out since Tuesday.” He taught me diplomacy. Nothing builds negotiation skills like retrieving a cat who has decided he lives with the people across the street now. He made me generous. When your cat eats a neighbor’s plants, you show up with muffins. It’s the law. He softened the block. People who never spoke now wave at me because they know my cat. Some even ask about him by name. I’m basically the cat’s plus-one in my own neighborhood. My cat ...

Precerpt from In with the East Wind: A Mary Poppins Kind of Life - Town Meeting

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  Precerpt (excerpt prior to publication from the forthcoming memoir,  In with the East: A Mary Poppins Kind of Life  by Dr. Betty Lou Leaver Town Meeting              No description of Acton would be complete without a regalement of the annual town meeting. In Acton, governance wasn’t just a matter of policy—it’s a living tradition. While many towns across America have adopted city councils, charters, and professional administrators. Acton has held fast to a form of government that dates back to colonial New England: the Town Meeting–Selectmen model.              This isn’t just a quaint relic. It’s a deliberate choice rooted in scale, history, and civic philosophy.          Acton was incorporated in 1830, carved from the western portion of Shapleigh. From the beginning, it embraced the town meeting format—a syste...