July 23, 2014

Around Town July 24

Who dunnit?
Who dun nit? The Kennett Square Murder Mystery is Friday, Aug. 1. 

• The Kennett Square Murder Mystery Art Stroll will take place Friday, Aug. 1, starting at 6:30 p.m. The murder “discovery” is at 6:45 p.m. This year the theme is Art in the Garden and it has drawn a variety of colorful characters from the local and regional garden clubs. But underneath the veneer of friendly competition there lurks a darker side to the event. Reginald Foxglove, the head judge and a member of the organizing committee, met a sinister fate and has been found collapsed on the Genesis Walkway, the victim of a fatal blow to the head. Who dunnit? Meet the detective at the scene of the crime, the Genesis Walkway (101 E. State Street) to gather clues, question murder suspects in participating downtown locations, and attempt to identify the murderer and solve the crime. Participants will investigate the murder by determining holes in suspect stories by using the questions, answers, and clues provided by the detective, murder suspects, and suspicious characters.

• The Kennett Area Senior Center sponsors a free Medicare counseling session on Thursday, Aug. 7 and 21 from 9:30 a.m. – 2 p.m. Sign up to meet with a Department of Aging volunteer from APPRISE who can help you with any questions you have about Medicare and your individual coverage. Please contact the KASC at 610-444-4819 to make an appointment.

Every Tuesday in August, the Delaware Museum of Natural History is partnering with Artisans’ Bank to lower admission prices to just $1 per person during Artisans’ Bank Dollar Tuesdays. Visitors are invited to explore the wonders of the natural world at the Museum for just $1 on Aug. 5, 12, 19, and 26, courtesy of Artisans’ Bank. Admission includes entry to the museum’s special exhibit, BUGS: Outside the Box, where visitors can get up close with a dragonfly’s delicate wing, the huge mandible of a stag beetle, or even a section of a butterfly’s scaled wing. They’ll view intricate details not visible to the naked eye and learn fun facts about metamorphosis, adaptability, camouflage, and important roles insects play in our natural world.

• The landscapes of Charles Burchfield (1893-1967), one of America’s leading artists of the 20th century, are featured in a major exhibition of more than 50 paintings on view at the Brandywine River Museum of Art from August 23 through November 16. Co-organized by the Brandywine River Museum of Art and the Burchfield Penney Art Center, Buffalo, the exhibition features works borrowed from museums and private collections across the United States, including the Burchfield Penney Art Center, the largest repository of the artist’s work. A fully illustrated catalogue will accompany the exhibition, with essays by the co-curators, Audrey Lewis, associate curator at the Brandywine, and Nancy Weekly, head of collections and Charles Cary Rumsey Curator at the Burchfield Penney.

 

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Free Your Space: Oooooh, shiny things

Sale flyers arrived at my house this week advertising Back-to-School savings. As office supplies are integral to my job, sales like this catch my attention. Back-to-school shopping was also one of my daughter’s favorite activities of the year when she was little and, I must admit, it is also nostalgia and habit from those years that attract me to these ads. In staring at the brightly colored folders and markers that adorn the pages, it occurs to me that this common experience draws so many of us away from a possible beach day into air-conditioned department store splendor and, for many, rightly so. Parents of school-aged children can take advantage of these savings, get a break from the heat and simplify the end of summer chaos. Business people can restock supplies at a terrific savings.

However, after working in the organizing profession for many years, I believe I have discovered something else. Something different. An occurrence that is common but, as yet, unspecified. I have put a name to this recurring phenomena and it is Shiny Things (copyright – Annette Reyman) Syndrome. I threw in the copyright so that I could abbreviate the whole thing to S.T.A.R.S. Here is how you can know if you suffer from Shiny Things Syndrome a.k.a. if you’re seeing STARS.

Shiny Things Syndrome or STARS:

Characterized by:
Distractibility
Impulse actions/follow-through
Forgetfulness
DisorganizationCan sound like:
I love this, where can I use it?
It’s so much cheaper if we buy it in bulk.
This is a great price; I know I’ll find someone to give it to.
I have to have this even though it doesn’t fit just right/have nothing that matches it.
It’s so cute!
Do you know how much these used to cost? I can’t believe I found them at such a great price.Can lead to:
An excessively cluttered environment
Feelings of overwhelm
Goal derailment
Anxiety & depression

Not to be confused with:
Healthy, natural curiosity
Imaginative minds
Frugality

As for myself, I wouldn’t say I actually have STARS, but must admit that I have had bouts of it from time to time. Here is one instance: Fabric book covers (referred to as book socks) became popular when my kids were in elementary and junior high schools. Up until then at our house, we simply made book-covers out of paper bags. I couldn’t see paying almost $4 to cover each book and I refused to buy them. Years later, with the kids in high school and college, I found them in a sale bin for .50 each! I was so excited I bought a dozen. I brought them home so proud of my thrifty prowess only to hear that the kids no longer wanted or needed to cover their books. The book socks went into a supply drawer and got donated (unused) years later. STARS. It got me.

Noticing things that are not in our plans or on our lists can merely be a sign of a healthy awareness of the world that surrounds us and can often lead to new ideas, solutions, growth and change. In other words, it can be a good thing.

It is when we allow ourselves to get derailed from our goals and distracted from our priorities that seeing STARS becomes a problem. Do you see STARS? What do yours look or sound like?

* Annette Reyman is a member of the National Association of Professional Organizers (NAPO®) and President of its Greater Philadelphia Chapter. To contact her for organizing work, professional unpacking, productivity support, gift certificates or speaking engagements call 610-213-9559 or email her at annette@allrightorganizing.com. Visit her websites at www.allrightorganizing.com and www.allrightmoves.com. Follow All Right Organizing on Facebook and Pinterest.

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Mind Matters: A psychologist’s projections on Jamie Wyeth’s art

The Boston Museum of Fine Arts opened its retrospective exhibition of Jamie Wyeth’s works on July 16, and, as the fates allowed, I was there.

Objectively speaking, it is doubtful anyone would deny Jamie Wyeth’s extraordinary skill and expertise as an artist. However, my reflections here are simply subjective — pure projections of my own psyche.

First of all, I was delighted to be able to see “Bale of Hay” again. When I first viewed this painting years ago when it briefly hung at the Brandywine River Museum, I was in awe. This bale of hay sitting in a field was filled with light: it was a glimpse of the sacred in the ordinary. I was reminded of Elizabeth Barrett Browning’s words, “Earth’s crammed with heaven, And every common bush afire with God, But only he who sees takes off his shoes; The rest sit round and pluck blackberries.”

So, too, with the painting of a barn with a bag of lime spilling onto the ground. As the light strikes its whiteness, it shimmers. (“Lime Bag”)

One early morning driving down Creek Road, I spotted a man studying a gnarled tree. It was Andrew Wyeth. Now, I had passed that spot many times and didn’t notice the tree that made its own fairy cave with its roots. But Andy did. And Jamie Wyeth would too. I relate this story here, because I think the bag of lime and the hay bale we take for granted is like that tree. If we don’t take time to look, we don’t see the light, the shadow, the mystery in the everyday.

But the other side of the mystery is not so tame. Consider Wyeth’s “Inferno.” This is a large painting of Cat Bates, a shirtless island boy feeding a garbage-burning incinerator. Gulls swoop for scraps before the conflagration. My free association here? Is this an allegory of our lives of consumption? Or is it about earth being swallowed up in global warming? Impure projections … .

What also fascinated me as a psychologist with a Jungian interest in dreams, is how Jamie’s art is informed by his dreams. His recent works of turbulent seas with his father and grandfather standing on the rocky shore with Andy Warhol as observer are his dreamscapes. However, one person’s dreams can speak to the collective unconscious of us all.

* Kayta Curzie Gajdos holds a doctorate in counseling psychology and is in private practice in Chadds Ford, Pennsylvania. She welcomes comments at MindMatters@DrGajdos.com or 610-388-2888. Past columns are posted to www.drgajdos.com.

About Kayta Gajdos

Dr. Kathleen Curzie Gajdos ("Kayta") is a licensed psychologist (Pennsylvania and Delaware) who has worked with individuals, couples, and families with a spectrum of problems. She has experience and training in the fields of alcohol and drug addictions, hypnosis, family therapy, Jungian theory, Gestalt therapy, EMDR, and bereavement. Dr. Gajdos developed a private practice in the Pittsburgh area, and was affiliated with the Family Therapy Institute of Western Psychiatric Institute and Clinic, having written numerous articles for the Family Therapy Newsletter there. She has published in the American Psychological Association Bulletin, the Family Psychologist, and in the Swedenborgian publications, Chrysalis and The Messenger. Dr. Gajdos has taught at the college level, most recently for West Chester University and Wilmington College, and has served as field faculty for Vermont College of Norwich University the Union Institute's Center for Distance Learning, Cincinnati, Ohio. She has also served as consulting psychologist to the Irene Stacy Community MH/MR Center in Western Pennsylvania where she supervised psychologists in training. Currently active in disaster relief, Dr. Gajdos serves with the American Red Cross and participated in Hurricane Katrina relief efforts as a member of teams from the Department of Health and Human Services' Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration.Now living in Chadds Ford, in the Brandywine Valley of eastern Pennsylvania, Dr. Gajdos combines her private practice working with individuals, couples and families, with leading workshops on such topics as grief and healing, the impact of multigenerational grief and trauma shame, the shadow and self, Women Who Run with the Wolves, motherless daughters, and mediation and relaxation. Each year at Temenos Retreat Center in West Chester, PA she leads a griefs of birthing ritual for those who have suffered losses of procreation (abortions, miscarriages, infertility, etc.); she also holds yearly A Day of Re-Collection at Temenos.Dr. Gajdos holds Master's degrees in both philosophy and clinical psychology and received her Ph.D. in counseling at the University of Pittsburgh. Among her professional affiliations, she includes having been a founding member and board member of the C.G. Jung Educational Center of Pittsburgh, as well as being listed in Who's Who of American Women. Currently, she is a member of the American Psychological Association, The Pennsylvania Psychological Association, the Delaware Psychological Association, the American Family Therapy Academy, The Association for Death Education and Counseling, and the Delaware County Mental Health and Mental Retardation Board. Woven into her professional career are Dr. Gajdos' pursuits of dancing, singing, and writing poetry.

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West Nile Virus identified in mosquito pools in Chester County

The Chester County Health Department is informing residents that mosquito samples have tested positive for West Nile Virus in West Goshen Township. The positive mosquito samples were both collected on July 10, 2014.

Mosquito traps are placed in various locations in the County as part of routine surveillance by Health Department officials. The Health Department will continue to monitor these areas as well as surrounding areas and will consider control activities when appropriate.

The chance of contracting WNV from an infected mosquito is small and chances of becoming seriously ill are even smaller, however, the Health Department recommends that individuals take personal precautions to minimize the possibility of being bitten by infected mosquitoes. This includes staying indoors at dawn or dusk when mosquitoes are most active, wearing long sleeve shirts and long pants when outside and using insect repellents when mosquitoes are active. The heightened concern will probably remain until the first frost which usually occurs in mid-October.

Residents are encouraged to take the following precautions to reduce mosquito breeding on their property:

  • Dispose of open containers that may collect water, such as tin cans, plastic containers, ceramic pots, etc.
  • Drill holes in the bottom of outdoor recycling containers so that water will not collect.
  • Keep your property clear of old tires.
  • Clean roof gutters, particularly if leaves from surrounding trees have a tendency to plug drains.
  • Turn over plastic wading pools when not in use.
  • Turn over wheelbarrows and don’t let water stagnate in birdbaths.
  • Aerate ornamental pools or stock them with fish.
  • Clean and chlorinate swimming pools when not in use. A swimming pool left untended by a family on vacation for a month can produce enough mosquitoes to result in neighborhood-wide complaints. Mosquitoes may even breed in the water that collects on pool covers.
  • For stagnant pools of water that cannot be removed or drained, homeowners can buy Bti products such as mosquito dunks at lawn/garden, outdoor supply, home improvement and other stores. This naturally occurring bacterial product kills mosquito larvae but is safe for people, pets, aquatic life and plants.

For more information on West Nile Virus, visit our website at www.chesco.org/wnv or call 610-344-6752.

 

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Markand Thakar

Kennett Symphony Under the Stars at Longwood Gardens

Markand Thakar

The Kennett Symphony of Chester County (KSCC) presents Symphony Under the Stars on Saturday, August 9, 2014, 7:00 pm (Rain date August 10) in the Open Air Theatre of Longwood Gardens under the direction of Guest Conductor, Markand Thakar, of the Baltimore Chamber Orchestra, and featuring Soprano, Stephanie Scogna, winner of the 2013 KSCC Vocal Competition.

It’s a summertime tradition: The Kennett Symphony performing symphonic favorites at beautiful Longwood Gardens.  Symphony Under the Stars features a spirited overture filled with woodwind solos, a romping good time of a suite featuring the strings, three stunning vocal gems performed by a rising star, and a beloved Beethoven symphonic masterpiece.  Symphony Under the Stars is sure to delight!

 

Ticket price includes the concert, all-day admission to Longwood Gardens, illuminated fountain show after the concert, and free parking.  Ticket price is $35 in advance, $40 at the door.

 

PROGRAM:

Rossini:       Italian in Algiers Overture                      Mozart:  Exsultate jubilate

Holst:          Saint Paul Suite                                       Puccini:  O mio babbino caro

Beethoven:  Symphony No. 2                                     Herbert:  Art is Calling for Me

 

 

For tickets or information, visit www.kennettsymphony.org or call 610-444-6363. Student and Group discounts are also available by calling the Symphony office.

 

Sponsored in part by DuPont, PricewaterhouseCoopers, and Otto’s BMW.


Celebrating its 73rd season, the Kennett Symphony of Chester County is based in Kennett Square, Pennsylvania, and serves residents of Southeastern Pennsylvania, Delaware, Maryland and New Jersey, along with the thousands of tourists who attend the Kennett Symphony’s popular summer concerts in Longwood Garden’s Open Air Theatre. In addition to presenting varied and entertaining orchestral concerts, the Kennett Symphony encourages young musicians through annual Instrumental and Voice Competitions and its affiliation with the Kennett Symphony Children’s Chorus.

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Mr. Charles F. Patton of Unionville

Charles F. Patton
Charles F. Patton

Mr. Charles F. Patton, of Unionville, died Saturday morning, July 19. He was 85 years old. Born in West Chester, on Sept. 25, 1928. He was the son of the late John W. Patton and the late Edith Moore Patton.

He was the beloved husband of Joanne Hood Patton for 59 years.  Father of Charles (Rick) Patton, Jr. and his wife Cindy, Nancy Patton, Amy Patton, Rebecca (Becky) Schultz and her husband Brian and John Patton; grandfather of Sean and Devon Patton, Christine and Carolyn Sirles, Jaime, Aiden and Owen Patton-Martin, Ben, William and Declan Schultz; brother of the late John Patton and the late Edith Anne Patton.

A memorial service will be celebrated at 1noon on Saturday, August 23, at the Charles F. Patton Middle School, 760 Unionville Road, Unionville, Pennsylvania 19348. Visitation with the family will be at the school from 10 a.m. until noon.  A reception of light refreshments will follow the memorial service at the school.

In lieu of flowers, the Charles F. Patton Memorial Scholarship has been established in order to assist an aspiring student whose career will be education.  Mail contributions to: UHS Activities, Attn: Charles F. Patton Memorial Scholorship, c/o Unionville High School, 750 Unionville Road, Kennett Square, PA  19348.

 

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