Hero & Zero

Hero

Coco Davis, a 16-year-old Kelpie mix, was taking a lovely walk last Wednesday morning on the Pipeline Fire Road when she became separated from her people. Two Marin County Open Space District rangers joined the search for the senior dog and located her 30 hours after she went missing.
The rangers found Coco far off the trail in dense brush on very steep terrain. Unfortunately, the poor pup was no longer able to move and the rangers couldn’t get her to safety by themselves. They called on the services of the all-volunteer Marin County Sheriff’s Search and Rescue Unit (SAR).
Within 20 minutes, SAR members arrived on the scene and prepared a technical rope rescue. They set up a dual-tension rope system and wended their way down the side of the hill to Coco. One of the crew members, specially trained in emergency K-9 first aid, deployed with a new K-9 first aid kit. She assessed the hurting pup and prepared her for transport.
Once Coco reached the top of the hill, she was reunited with her people and then whisked off by Marin Humane to a nearby veterinary hospital. The last time we checked in, the pooch was recovering from her ordeal.
A big howl-out to the 28 SAR volunteers, the Marin County Open Space rangers and the Marin Humane personnel for rescuing sweet Coco.

Zero

Congregation Rodef Sholom in San Rafael is one of many synagogues across the country being hit with a not-so-clever email phishing scam. Congregants receive an email, supposedly from one of the congregation’s rabbis, requesting gift cards that will be sent to charity or to someone with cancer.
Urging people to be wary of emails from strange addresses that may contain the rabbi’s name, Congregation Rodef Sholom suggests that recipients don’t reply and either ignore them or report them as phishing to their email server. It’s a scam. Don’t fall for it.

email: ni***************@***oo.com

Hero & Zero

Hero

Coco Davis, a 16-year-old Kelpie mix, was taking a lovely walk last Wednesday morning on the Pipeline Fire Road when she became separated from her people. Two Marin County Open Space District rangers joined the search for the senior dog and located her 30 hours after she went missing.

The rangers found Coco far off the trail in dense brush on very steep terrain. Unfortunately, the poor pup was no longer able to move and the rangers couldn’t get her to safety by themselves. They called on the services of the all-volunteer Marin County Sheriff’s Search and Rescue Unit (SAR).

Within 20 minutes, SAR members arrived on the scene and prepared a technical rope rescue. They set up a dual-tension rope system and wended their way down the side of the hill to Coco. One of the crew members, specially trained in emergency K-9 first aid, deployed with a new K-9 first aid kit. She assessed the hurting pup and prepared her for transport.

Once Coco reached the top of the hill, she was reunited with her people and then whisked off by Marin Humane to a nearby veterinary hospital. The last time we checked in, the pooch was recovering from her ordeal.

A big howl-out to the 28 SAR volunteers, the Marin County Open Space rangers and the Marin Humane personnel for rescuing sweet Coco.

Zero

Congregation Rodef Sholom in San Rafael is one of many synagogues across the country being hit with a not-so-clever email phishing scam. Congregants receive an email, supposedly from one of the congregation’s rabbis, requesting gift cards that will be sent to charity or to someone with cancer.

Urging people to be wary of emails from strange addresses that may contain the rabbi’s name, Congregation Rodef Sholom suggests that recipients don’t reply and either ignore them or report them as phishing to their email server. It’s a scam. Don’t fall for it.

email: ni***************@***oo.com

How I Became an Art Thief

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Ever want to post a nude online but fear future repercussions? Conceptual artist Andy Sewell has you covered—literally. At a recent exhibit of the artist’s work and collaborations at Petaluma’s Sonoma Coast Surf Shop, Sewell showcased his knitted, wearable digital pixelation garments for “When you want to fake that nude but not regret it later … cover your bits with BITS.” Sewell’s tableaux also included a piece of “found art” originally created by fellow artist Johnny Hirschmugl (otherwise branded as Art by Johnny), which Hirschmugl himself offhandedly said Sewell hoped would be stolen at the event. I obliged. I offer my confession here, publicly, to attest to having aided in closing (what I hope was) the conceptual loop as well as heading off any legal pursuits in the matter since stealing the painting was technically performance art. The piece is now on my bookshelf. If either artist wants it back, you know where to find me (on eBay).

• • •

Meanwhile: I have a vague memory of attending the Wine County Distillery Festival. I believe there were distilled spirits and a cocktail contest for which I and other media types served as judges. It stands to reason that somebody won—my congratulations to them. If anyone finds the brain cells I lost, please send them to me c/o of the Bohemian.

• • •

Cult-brew Pliny the Younger returned to Russian River Brewing Company last Friday, causing its usual annual people-jam to encircle Santa Rosa’s Fourth Street and beyond. Days later, the line for the triple India pale ale (which comes in at a whopping 10.25 percent alcohol by volume) persists. Of course between the brews’ namesake, Rome’s Pliny the Younger, and Pliny the Elder, is Pliny the Millennial—known for highlighting the absurdity of his privilege by humble-bragging about enduring a long beer line. #youthiswastedontheyounger

• • •

Our friend John Augustine Moran has shuffled off this mortal coil. He was an artist in every sense who had many a great turn on local stages, was easy with a tune and was the kind of smoke-breathed co-conspirator to pull you into a corner by the elbow and tell you, “This is how it’s gonna go, lad …” He was my friend, mentor and consigliere. Who could resist his Dickensian accent, his Satanically smooth entreaties, the winking charm he used to get me into more and deeper shit than I care to recall? We’re collecting remembrances of Moran at Facebook.com/NorthBayBohemian, which may be used in a future tribute. If Moran touched your life, please leave a note. In the meantime, permit me to quote Hamlet: “I knew him, Horatio; a fellow of infinite jest, of most excellent fancy; he hath borne me on his back a thousand times …”

From Gun to Gavel

Former Santa Rosa Mayor Chris Coursey, now running for a slot on the county board of supervisors, tells me I ought not be surprised that Tom Schwedhelm, the current mayor and former chief of police, is pro-cannabis.

“Cops knew the war on cannabis was lost a lot sooner than most folks,” Coursey says.

Last December at the Emerald Cup, Schwedhelm suggested that Santa Rosa might become a hub for the whole industry.

In his office—sitting behind a sign that reads, “There’s no place like Santa Rosa”—he tells me, “Cannabis has contributed to our community and economy. It has not created problems, though some citizens think so.”

Born and raised in Oakland, the son of a cop, Schwedhelm knew he wanted to follow in his father’s footsteps by the time he was in high school.

“I saw that policing went way beyond guns and badges,” he says. “I knew it was for me.”

During the last four-and-a-half years of his 30-year career in law enforcement, he served as Santa Rosa’s chief of police, and, while he never worked in narcotics, he occasionally made arrests for cannabis.

“I remember, people went to prison for pot,” he says. “Then Prop 215 passed and medical marijuana became the law. I went to an address where people were trimming marijuana. They had medical-marijuana recommendations and weren’t breaking the law. My whole perspective changed.”

On another occasion, while playing in a golf tournament in Windsor, he arrived at the 10th hole and saw that a CBD-cream company was sponsoring the event.

“That was also an epiphany for me,” he says.

Before last December’s Emerald Cup, Schwedhelm met with founder, Tim Blake, to discuss how to make cannabis more acceptable in Santa Rosa, where many voters rejected Prop 64, the measure that legalized adult use.

“Unfortunately, some people in our community still have the Cheech-and-Chong image of the stoner,” Schwedhelm says. “We need more education.”

He also points out that there are no conflicts between dispensaries, like SPARC, on Dutton Avenue, and neighboring businesses; no rip-offs or violence in the regulated-and-taxed market; and that, thanks to the fledgling cannabis industry, old warehouses have been brought up to code.

“Santa Rosa is a great place to live and work, whether as a cop or as mayor,” Schwedhelm says. “As mayor, I do much of the work myself. It’s a full-time job.”

Jonah Raskin is the author of “Dark Day, Dark Night: A Marijuana Murder Mystery.”

Pop-up theater returns to San Rafael

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A vacant downtown San Rafael storefront is being haunted by the Ghosts of Bogotá. They are characters in playwright Diana Burbano’s darkly comic autobiographical look at a group of siblings dealing with some disturbing family history. It’s AlterTheater Ensemble’s latest “pop-up theater” and it runs through Feb. 23.

Siblings Lola (Livia Gomes Demarchi), Sandy (Carla Pauli) and Bruno (Eduardo Soria) arrive at their late grandfather Saúl’s Bogotá apartment to arrange for his funeral. He is a man who will be mourned by no one, especially by the sisters who he sexually abused, but familial duty requires them to handle his internment.

The apartment is cold, stark and haunted by its previous inhabitants. Soon the sisters are engaging with the spirits. Sandy deals with the ghost of Saúl (Tony Ortega), who is trapped in the apartment because he knows hell awaits him if he leaves. Lola finds herself in conversation with her grandmother Nena (Leticia Duarte), challenging her to explain why she never dealt with her husband’s physical abuse of her and sexual abuse of others. Her explanation is haunting in its own right.

Bruno is the odd man out. Born in the United States after his mother relocated there, he never knew his grandfather and cannot relate to him as anything but a doting, distant relative. This may explain Sandy’s antagonistic attitude towards Bruno and his carefree, pansexual lifestyle. How dare he find joy in something she relates to trauma and pain?

All of this unfolds under the watchful eye of Jesus (Noe Flores) who, when he’s not residing in a jar, is content to observe quietly. When he does speak, it is neither in the Biblical language, nor with the attitude one would expect from the Son of God.

Wickedly humorous at times, gut wrenching at others, this play is clearly Burbano’s attempt to exorcise her own ghosts. Director Alicia Coombes facilitates that exorcism with the help of a very strong cast. Pauli, Gomes Demarchi and Soria feel like siblings and make that unspoken bond palpable. Duarte blends compassion with hard-bitten reality as the grandmother. Ortega may be menacingly one-note as the despicable grandfather, but that is how the sisters see him. Flores makes for a very unique Jesus.

The storefront setting presents challenges, particularly with scene transitions, but the cold and emptiness works in its favor. As passers-by stopped to peer quietly through the windows, it was as if another group of ghosts had arrived. They should have come in.

‘Ghosts of Bogotá’ runs through Feb. 23 at 1200 Fourth Street (at B Street), San Rafael. Wednesday, Feb. 12, 7:30pm; Friday–Saturday, 8:00pm; Sunday, 2pm. $15–$49. 415.454.2787. altertheater.org.

Advice Goddess

Q: I’m a woman who’s fiercely competitive in the business world. I’ve been rewarded for pursuing deals as relentlessly as highly successful men do. Yet, taking this approach in my dating life—energetically pursuing men and confidently asking them out—has been a bust. The men I go after seem to find my openness, excitement and confidence off-putting. I keep hearing that I need to chill out and let men pursue me. This seems crazy. I shouldn’t have to act like a debutante, waiting for a man to ask me out.—Irritated

A: In seduction, more is not more. You’ll be most attractive if you simply let who you are sparkle—a term that has more in common with “twinkle” than “immobilize men with the alien death ray of your personality.”

As a heterosexual woman, pursuing romantic partners as ferociously as you’d pursue a business deal is especially counterproductive. Though we’re living in modern times, we’re stuck with an antique psychological operating system, calibrated to solve ancestral mating and survival problems. This means the psychology driving us is sometimes seriously mismatched with our modern world.

For example, we now have reliable birth control, and even if that fails, children won’t die of starvation because the dude who fathered them “hit it ’n’ quit it.” Yet, we’ve still got our evolutionary legacy running the show. In vetting potential sex partners, women evolved to be more quality-conscious—choosier, more “hard to get”—while men evolved to take a more quantity-driven approach.

These differences in sexual choosiness emerge from what evolutionary biologist Robert Trivers explains as men’s and women’s differing levels of “parental investment.” The members of a species with the greatest possible costs from having sex—like pregnancy and a kid to feed—evolved to be more selective in mate choice.

Women’s emotions are their parental-investment watchdogs, pushing them to make sure a man’s willing and able to stick around and provide resources. Though some women can take an emotionally Teflon approach to casual sex, anthropologist John Marshall Townsend finds that for many, hooking up comes with some emotional reflux—even when a woman knows a one-nighter is all she wants from a guy. She’ll boot some himbo out of bed only to worry that the guy she wants nothing more from doesn’t want anything more from her.

These differences in male and female mating selectivity showed up in a big way in a recent study looking at heterosexual Tinder users. Belgian econ doctoral-candidate Brecht Neyt calculated the percentage of profiles men and women gave “super likes” to—a Tinder function as of 2015.

For those uninitiated in Tinder-ese, swiping right “likes” another user, but they will be none the wiser unless they, too, swipe right on you. Swiping up, however, is a “super like,” which automatically notifies the super-liked person. (Annoyingly, the researchers didn’t mention or take into account that super likes are generally seen as a sign of desperation.)

Neyt and his colleagues found that men super liked 61.9 percent of women’s profiles, while women super liked only 4.5 percent of the men’s. Their finding is a pretty dramatic reflection of men’s evolved quantity-over-quality default.

So, if you’re reasonably attractive and in a man’s age range, there’s a good chance he’ll go out with you simply because you ask—though he may not be interested beyond a hookup. But let’s say he’s somebody who would be interested in you. Because men co-evolved with women, men expect women to be choosy, and they tend to devalue women who just tumble out of the sky into their lap.

The best test for whether a man has real interest in you is seeing whether he’ll lay his ego on the line to ask you out. You aren’t without control in this approach; you can flirt with a guy you’re interested in to signal that you’re open to being pursued by him.

Should things be different? Well, sure, in a more perfect mating universe. But if you want to be successful in this one, you should do what works—which is driven by men’s evolved psychology. Though men will eventually take a selective approach when considering a woman as a long-term partner, many will have sex with anything this side of a pound of liver in the refrigerator (and sometimes that will just have to do).

Love in the time of apps and angst

My husband and I have been married for 27 years, and for most of that time we have lived on a quiet street in a quiet neighborhood. All but one of our four kids flew the SoCo coop to L.A., where they struggle to find their feet, slogging through the existential goo of late capitalism, creative saturation and infrastructure decay to eek out a living among the masses as musicians and artists. Life has become for them, like many millennials and Gen Z-ers, an exhausting grind of self-curation; day by day, the tinsel tarnishes.

Few of their friends are in relationships, either because they haven’t met someone or can’t afford to date. I have little in the way of advice for them. After all, I came of age during the Cold War, an early arrival of Gen X. The year I went to college we still had a rotary-dial phone and rabbit ears on our TV set. Gas was 62 cents a gallon.

To understand the romantic zeitgeist of my teenage years, one need not look further than ABC’s 1982 hallucinatory synth-pop video “Look of Love” in which lead-singer Martin Fry, dressed like Harold Hill in heavy eyeliner, beckons two hand-clapping, lederhosen-clad party boys towards him as he holds a Hasselblad camera in his hands singing, “When the world is full of strange arrangements, and gravity can’t hold you down.”

Alas, I have now reached the age when Valentine’s Day is best celebrated with boxed cheesecake, a fork and Monty Don’s Great British Garden Revival. Nothing says romance like watching a Cambridge-educated gardener sow the runner beans and brew a homemade plant tonic from fermented nettle and comfrey, making the occasional guest appearance at some rural allotment to advise on cabbage white fly and powdery mildew.

All my husband and I ask of each other on Valentine’s Day is that we agree to ignore it. Romance is in the small daily acts of reciprocity—instead of long-stem roses, the gift of blooming Manzanita and quince on a winter walk, our rescue dogs, our chickens, the appreciation of another year on the good green Earth before it becomes Venus.

Admittedly, navigating romance in the 21st century requires a new set of skills, and I still have an iPhone 4. I tell my kids to cultivate their interests, to get outside and off-screen as much as possible and that love, like gardens, is cultivated from understanding, care and by nurturing the soil that sustains it. They tell me that I have no idea what I’m talking about, that gardening metaphors are both ridiculous and irrelevant for a generation of people priced out of both gardens and housing, and they’re #vanlife right.

The rules have all changed—marriage is out, gender fluidity and polyamory is in. Some argue that marriage is and has always been an economic arrangement, one intended to preserve an imbalance of power and autonomy between the sexes based on the historic fact that men would be the economic engine of the marriage and women the caretakers of the domestic sphere.

Welcome to the future.

In her book Against Love: A Polemic, provocateur-essayist Laura Kipnis writes, “We live in sexually interesting times, meaning a culture which manages to be simultaneously hypersexualized and to retain its Puritan underpinnings, in precisely equal proportions.”

The Atlantic and the Washington Post ran articles in recent years citing studies about how Americans are having less sex, a trend mostly driven by younger generations. In the age of SnapChat, fears about exposure during and after intimacy, the illusory online “you,” 24/7 availability through cell phones, and the proliferation of Internet predators, are really real. Yet love finds a way—even in February.

There are those who can and do offer professional relationship advice for singles, couples and throuples for navigating Valentine’s Day—for better or for worse.

For singles seeking connection, Alexis, from Tinder Plus, says to promote the “authentic version of yourself. If you pretend to be someone you’re not, you’ll attract someone who falls in love with the false version of you. Don’t be so afraid of rejection that you fake who you are.”

No news here. But in the age of a digital persona, even the authentic version of oneself is highly edited, enhanced and if we’re honest with ourselves, a little dishonest to others.

“Valentine’s Day doesn’t have to be just about romantic relationships,” says Viktor, a relationship expert for the website SocialPro. “Celebrate other important relationships by doing something enjoyable with those close to you. Surprise and variation are important ingredients in any healthy relationship.”

Be creative. Care about something bigger. Romance isn’t just for those with disposable incomes, and it costs nothing to spread the love.

“Saying and doing small, simple expressions of gratitude every day yields big rewards,” Alexis writes. “When people feel recognized as special and appreciated, they’re happier in that relationship and more motivated to make the relationship better and stronger.”

“The number one thing that I teach couples who want a sustaining, nourishing relationship is to regularly set time aside to do a ‘commitment ceremony,’” writes Marie from Marie Anna Winter Coaching. “Every deep relationship that we have deserves and needs attention and care, and a celebration of our commitment to the relationship.”

“Remember, practice always makes perfect,” Alexis says, about multiple-partner relationships. “The latter means that for you to be successful in this fetish, you will not only need to research but also have to ensure that you are willing to practice.”

Boundaries, she says, define the limits and potential of a threesome.

“In my experience, the biggest challenge of people in throuples and less-normative relationships is an underlying fear of not being accepted by those around them,” she says. “This is true for most people who decide to live outside the societal norm—especially during times like Valentine’s Day. It’s important to understand that we create our happiness not by adhering to expectations but by living our lives just like we want to.”

Rilke wrote that, “the highest task of a bond between two people: [is] that each should stand guard over the solitude of the other. For, if it lies in the nature of indifference and of the crowd to recognize no solitude, then love and friendship are there for the purpose of continually providing the opportunity for solitude. And only those are the true sharings which rhythmically interrupt periods of deep isolation.”

Maybe Valentine’s Day, despite its largely forgotten historic origins and the tacky modern commercial hype, is a reminder that a warm, life-giving force stirs beneath the surface during the month of suicides. Perhaps it is a reminder to expand the human heart at the very moment when the bleakness seems eternal.

By Lisa Summers

Laughing Matters

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Comedian Gina Stahl-Haven gets heckled a lot, but not so much at comedy clubs as in her college classroom. It turns out, working as a professor prepared her for stand-up more than she expected.

“My students are hecklers and I have to respond to them,” she says. “I’m literally standing in front of 30 people in the classroom doing a bit. It’s got my lecture in there but there are jokes and I’m responding to the group and that’s my job, so in a way, I have been professionally performing for the past 15 years.”

The rising star gives motherhood and relationships her signature treatment with her straight-talking humor—sarcastic but not self-deprecating, celebrating the experience of being a woman while acknowledging the laugh-so-you-don’t-cry moments.

Stahl-Haven, a Novato native and instructor at Santa Rosa Junior College, won the exclusive San Francisco Comedy Competition last year when no one had heard of her, but was later told there was an error, and she’d actually won second place.

“I still have a lot of questions about what happened,” says Stahl-Haven.

The disappointment reinforced her feelings about women in comedy.

“I think women are funny, and we should open the space for more diverse types of comedy,” she says. “There’s a lot of misogyny in comedy, even though there’s a lot of people who are trying to change that in the scene.”

Stahl-Haven began performing improv in college at San Francisco State University, where she took her first comedy class. She continued improv but kept stand-up comedy on the back burner. Meanwhile, she became a professor of rhetoric at the University of San Francisco, also teaching at College of Marin and Santa Rosa Junior College, while living in Novato with her husband and two kids.

“Then all of a sudden I’m 37 years old and I’m like, ‘Being afraid to do comedy is not a good reason to not do comedy,’ and I opened my mind to the possibility of doing it without a direct path,” she says.

She looked for opportunities—even though it was still scary—and soon had gigs throughout the Bay Area. After about a year, she entered the San Francisco Comedy Competition as a long shot. But she did get in, and winning/not winning was life-changing.

“That experience built a lot of opportunity, and helped me build some confidence and see my place in the scene,” she says.

With a young family and an existing career, it’s not always easy. The upside is that there is a lot of comedic material when you’re a mom. Her authentic humor resonates—especially with women.

“I hear people say, ‘I’m not against women in comedy, I just don’t find it funny,’” she says, “and that’s a much bigger discussion about social issues, which is, ‘Why is the experience of women so foreign that you don’t relate to it?’ Because comedy is about relating to things, right?”

It’s a question a rhetoric professor might ask, and a question a mother would feel is important, but the comic in Stahl-Haven would say it’s her direct experience. People come up after the show and actually express surprise that they liked her.

“They’ll say, ‘You were so hilarious, and my husband does not like women comics, but he liked you,’” she says. “Like women, in general, aren’t funny.”

But maybe it’s that women comics just aren’t in the scene. A study done by producer and comedian Meredith Kachel revealed that venues book male comics more frequently than female comics, and it’s even more true of less-frequent performers (a 70 percent male to 29 percent female ratio).

“I would just say to people: what you think is comedy, might not be the only comedy,” Stahl-Haven says. “When somebody has this kind of response, and they don’t question ‘Why do I feel uncomfortable?’ then they continue having that implicit bias.”

No woman has ever won the San Francisco comedy competition. But Stahl-Haven is in good company anyway. The last woman to win second place? Ellen Degeneres, 34 years ago.

Gina Stahl-Haven is headlining in the Best of the San Francisco Stand-Up Comedy Competition: St. Valentine’s Day Mascara, on Friday, Feb. 14, at the Marin Civic Center, 10 Avenue of the Flags, San Rafael. 8pm. $30. 415.473.6800.

Horoscope

ARIES (March 21-April 19): You now have the power to make connections that have not previously been possible. You can tap into an enhanced capacity to forge new alliances and strengthen your support system. I urge you to be on the lookout for a dynamic group effort you could join or a higher purpose you might align yourself with. If you’re sufficiently alert, you may even find an opportunity to weave your fortunes together with a dynamic group effort that’s in service to a higher purpose.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): “Victory won’t come to me unless I go to it,” wrote the poet Marianne Moore. In other words, you must track down each victory you’re interested in. You must study its unique nature. And then you must adjust yourself to its specifications. You can’t remain just the way you are, but must transform yourself so as to be in alignment with the responsibilities it demands of you. Can you pass these tests, Taurus? I believe you can. It’s time to prove it.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): While at the peak of his powers as an author, Gemini-born Nobel Prize–winner Jean Paul Sartre consumed an array of mood-shifters every day. He quaffed at least a quart of alcohol, smoked two packs of cigarettes and drank copious amounts of coffee and tea. His intake of pills included 200 milligrams of amphetamines, 15 grams of aspirin and a handful of barbiturates. I propose that we make Sartre your anti-role model during the next four weeks, dear Gemini. According to my analysis of your astrological indicators, your ability to discover, attract and benefit from wonders and marvels will thrive to the degree that you forswear drugs and alcohol and artificial enhancements. And I’m pleased to inform you that there could be a flood of wonders and marvels.

CANCER (June 21-July 22): I don’t think I’m boring. How could I be? I have an abundant curiosity and I love to learn new things. I’ve worked at many different jobs, have read widely and enjoy interacting with a broad range of humans. Yet now and then I’ve had temporary relationships with people who regarded me as uninteresting. They didn’t see much of value in me. I tend to believe it was mostly their fault—they couldn’t see me for who I really am—but it may have also been the case that I lived down to their expectations. Their inclination to see me as unimportant influenced me to be dull. I bring this up, my fellow Cancerian, because now is an excellent time to remove yourself from situations where you have trouble being and feeling your true self.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Soprano Helen Traubel and tenor Lauritz Melchior performed together in many productions of Wagnerian operas, often at the Metropolitan in New York City. Friends and colleagues but not lovers, they had a playful relationship with each other. A favorite pastime was figuring out tricks they could try that would cause the other to break into inappropriate laughter while performing. According to my quirky reading of the astrological omens, Leo, the coming weeks will be a propitious time for you to engage in similar hijinx with your allies. You have a poetic license and a spiritual mandate to enjoy amusing collaborative experiments, playful intimate escapades and adventures in buoyant togetherness.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Eighteenth-century author Samuel Johnson singlehandedly compiled the influential A Dictionary of the English Language, which remained the definitive British dictionary for 170 years. We shouldn’t be surprised that it was a Virgo who accomplished such an intricate and exhaustive feat. As a high-minded Virgo, Johnson also had a talent for exposing hypocrisy. In commenting on the Americans’ War of Independence against his country, he noted that some of the “loudest yelps for liberty” came from slave-owners. I propose that we make him one of your role models in 2020. May he inspire you to produce rigorous work that’s useful to many. May he also empower you to be a candid purveyor of freedom.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Is there a project or situation you’d love to create but have lacked the confidence to try? Now is a time when you can finally summon the necessary courage. Is there a long-running dilemma that has always seemed too confusing and overwhelming to even understand, let alone solve? Now is a favorable time to ask your higher self for the clear vision that will instigate an unforeseen healing. Is there a labor of love that seems to have stalled or a dream that got sidetracked? Now is a time when you could revive its luminosity and get it back in a sweet groove.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Was there a more influential 20th-century artist than Scorpio-born Pablo Picasso? He was a revolutionary innovator who got rich from his creations. Once, while visiting a gallery-showing of art made by children, he said, “When I was their age I could draw like Raphael [the great Renaissance artist]. But it took me a lifetime to learn to draw like they do.” In accordance with your current astrological omens, Scorpio, I suggest you seek inspiration from Picasso’s aspiration. Set an intention to develop expertise in seeing your world and your work through a child’s eyes.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): I know a Sagittarius man who has seen the film Avengers: Endgame 17 times. Another Sagittarian acquaintance estimates she has listened to Billie Eilish’s album When We All Fall Asleep, Where Do We Go? 135 times. And then there’s my scholarly Sagittarian friend who has read the ancient Greek epic poem the Iliad 37 times. I have no problem with this behavior. I admire your tribe’s ability to keep finding new inspiration in sources you already know well. But in my astrological opinion, you shouldn’t do much of this kind of thing in the coming weeks. It’s high time for you to experiment with experiences you know little about. Be fresh, innocent and curious.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Athens was one of the great cities of the ancient world. Its vigorous art, theater, philosophy, architecture and experiments in democracy are today regarded as foundational to Western culture. And yet at its height, Athens’ population was a mere 275,000—equal to modern Fort Wayne, Indiana or Windsor, Ontario. How could such a relatively small source breed such intensity and potency? That’s a long story. In any case, I foresee you having the potential to be like Athens yourself in the coming weeks and months, Capricorn: a highly concentrated fount of value. For best results, focus on doing what you do best.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): According to my analysis, the year 2020 will be a time when you can have dramatic success as you re-evaluate and re-vision and revamp your understandings of your life purpose. Why were you born? What’s the nature of your unique genius? What are the best gifts you have to offer the world? Of the many wonderful feats you could accomplish, which are the most important? The next few weeks will be a potent time to get this fun and energizing investigation fully underway.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Physicist Niels Bohr won a Nobel Prize for his insights about quantum mechanics. But he was humble about the complexity of the subject. “If you think you understand it, that only shows you don’t know the first thing about it,” he mused. I’m tempted to make a similar statement about the mysteries and riddles that are making your life so interesting. If you think you understand those mysteries and riddles, you probably don’t. But if you’re willing to acknowledge how perplexing they are, and you can accept the fact that your comprehension of them is partial and fuzzy, then you might enjoy a glimmer of the truth that’s worth building on.

Flashback

50 Years Ago

The latest petitions making the rounds are the work of INVOLVE, Independent Volunteers for Vote Extension, and their aim is to qualify for the November ballot an initiative to lower the voting age to 18.

Just about the only force opposing such a change is apathy–the famous silent majority again–and the petition drive may just be the vehicle to overcome that hangup.

⁠—Uncredited, 2/4/70

San Geronimo Valley has been waiting for years to join the television age. There are those who say that all the trouble valleyites get themselves into over hairs, school taxes and art centers would disappear if people out there could just get Channel 9. Or even channel 4, 5 and 7.

⁠—Uncredited, 2/4/70

40 Years Ago

The match flares up beneath the tin foil and the tannish golden powder begins to bubble. As it melts, running down a crease in the foil, its fumes are inhaled through a silver straw. The ritual is called “chasing the dragon.”

But for many who take part in this chase – young, middle-class upwardly mobile Americans – the dragon turns into a monkey on their backs. The powder is Persian dust, some of the purest heroin to hit this country in years. As its name implies, the drug is coming in from the Mideast – mainly Iran, Afghanistan and Pakistan. For now, it is primarily a California phenomenon.

Smoking the Presian represents a shift not only in the way heroin is used, but also in who is using it. Its consumers are showing up in heroin detoxification centers from Oakland to Los Angeles, and they are breaking the stereotype of the addict.

⁠—Mary Clare Blakeman, 2/1/80

30 Years Ago

Fighting in El Salvador took a particularly savage turn on November 16 with the murders of six Jesuit priests, their cook and her daughter on the campus of the National University. They are among the nearly 700 church workers allegedly killed by the military in El Salvador since the war broke out ten years ago. Several members of the Salvadoran army, including a colonel, have been charged in the incident.

The eight killings came less than a week after guerrillas launched the most intense offensive of the war so far and four days after President Alfredo Cristiani had declared a state of siege. San Rafael resident Larry Ross, 50, was in the Salvadoran capital November 16 as part of a Marin Interfaith Task Force program to help members of the Human Rights Commission of El Salvador. Armed with a camera, notebook and Pacific Sun press credential, Ross witnessed a reign of terror that many attribute to the Salvadoran military – which has been receiving U.S. aid since the war started. He reported on numerous human rights violations, including the massacre of dozens of students at the university campus. Ross returned home December 8 with 540 pounds of documents smuggled out of the country for the human rights commission of El Salvador.

⁠—Lawrence Ross (sidebar), 2/2/90

20 Years Ago

While most of us were sleeping a new mountain of industry arose in Sonoma County. Higher than the existing rolling hills and unlike Sonoma’s other industries such as ranching and wine-making, this mountain has no real relationship to the countryside. The new mountain is the telecommunications industry and it has the potential to transform Sonoma into a northern Silicon Valley. That’s good news if you value skyrocketing salaries and a glitzy lifestyle. It’s bad news for those who hate traffic jams and value Sonoma’s warm, rural lifestyle with relatively sane housing prices.

⁠—Shepherd Bliss, 2/2/00

Compiled by Alex T. Randolph

Hero & Zero

Hero Coco Davis, a 16-year-old Kelpie mix, was taking a lovely walk last Wednesday morning on the Pipeline Fire Road when she became separated from her people. Two Marin County Open Space District rangers joined the search for the senior dog and located her 30 hours after she went missing. The rangers found Coco far off the trail in dense brush...

Hero & Zero

Hero Coco Davis, a 16-year-old Kelpie mix, was taking a lovely walk last Wednesday morning on the Pipeline Fire Road when she became separated from her people. Two Marin County Open Space District rangers joined the search for the senior dog and located her 30 hours after she went missing. The rangers found Coco far off the trail in dense brush...

How I Became an Art Thief

Ever want to post a nude online but fear future repercussions? Conceptual artist Andy Sewell has you covered—literally. At a recent exhibit of the artist’s work and collaborations at Petaluma’s Sonoma Coast Surf Shop, Sewell showcased his knitted, wearable digital pixelation garments for “When you want to fake that nude but not regret it later … cover your bits...

From Gun to Gavel

Former Santa Rosa Mayor Chris Coursey, now running for a slot on the county board of supervisors, tells me I ought not be surprised that Tom Schwedhelm, the current mayor and former chief of police, is pro-cannabis. “Cops knew the war on cannabis was lost a lot sooner than most folks,” Coursey says. Last December at the Emerald Cup, Schwedhelm suggested...

Pop-up theater returns to San Rafael

A vacant downtown San Rafael storefront is being haunted by the Ghosts of Bogotá. They are characters in playwright Diana Burbano’s darkly comic autobiographical look at a group of siblings dealing with some disturbing family history. It’s AlterTheater Ensemble’s latest “pop-up theater” and it runs through Feb. 23. Siblings Lola (Livia Gomes Demarchi), Sandy (Carla Pauli) and Bruno (Eduardo Soria)...

Advice Goddess

Q: I’m a woman who’s fiercely competitive in the business world. I’ve been rewarded for pursuing deals as relentlessly as highly successful men do. Yet, taking this approach in my dating life—energetically pursuing men and confidently asking them out—has been a bust. The men I go after seem to find my openness, excitement and confidence off-putting. I keep hearing...

Love in the time of apps and angst

My husband and I have been married for 27 years, and for most of that time we have lived on a quiet street in a quiet neighborhood. All but one of our four kids flew the SoCo coop to L.A., where they struggle to find their feet, slogging through the existential goo of late capitalism, creative saturation and infrastructure...

Laughing Matters

Comedian Gina Stahl-Haven gets heckled a lot, but not so much at comedy clubs as in her college classroom. It turns out, working as a professor prepared her for stand-up more than she expected. “My students are hecklers and I have to respond to them,” she says. “I’m literally standing in front of 30 people in the classroom doing a...

Horoscope

ARIES (March 21-April 19): You now have the power to make connections that have not previously been possible. You can tap into an enhanced capacity to forge new alliances and strengthen your support system. I urge you to be on the lookout for a dynamic group effort you could join or a higher purpose you might align yourself with....

Flashback

50 Years Ago The latest petitions making the rounds are the work of INVOLVE, Independent Volunteers for Vote Extension, and their aim is to qualify for the November ballot an initiative to lower the voting age to 18. Just about the only force opposing such a change is apathy–the famous silent majority again–and the petition drive may just be the vehicle...
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