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County Events

Ulster Events–July 2016

Let Freedom Ring. There will be a patriotic ceremony with dramatic readings and stirring songs. The Third Ulster Militia will be encampe...

01 Jul 2016 | 0 comments | Read more

Dutchess Events–July 2016

Bard Summerscape Dance: “Fantasque.” Magical new family-friendly dance event created by brilliant contemporary artists John Heginbotham an...

01 Jul 2016 | 0 comments | Read more
Feature Articles

Passion for Honeybees

By Anne Pyburn Craig    “My grandfather was a beekeeper,” says Keith Duarte, owner of Damn Good Honey Farm in Kerhonkson w...

28 Jul 2016 | 0 comments| Read more

Yardavore: Sipping a Shrub

By Maria Reidelbach    Thin-skinned, glowing, red strawberries, freckled with a multitude of seeds; deep indigo blueber...

28 Jul 2016 | 0 comments| Read more

Local Wisdom: The Legend of Abe Waruch

By Jodi La Marco   Dance on Friday to the Hillbilly music I’m a likeable chap, the girls all say I’ll tumble your outhouse ov...

28 Jul 2016 | 0 comments| Read more

Daddy Debrief: Separation

By David Dewitt    Lately I’ve been performing again. Singing and acting.   Something I used to do with more regula...

28 Jul 2016 | 1 comments| Read more

Publisher's Editorial

The Yardavore

Yardavore: Sipping a Shrub

By Maria Reidelbach    Thin-skinned, glowing, red strawberries, freckled with a multitude of seeds; deep indigo blueber...

28 Jul 2016 | 0 comments| Read more

Yardavore: Bloody Beautiful

Blood-veined sorrel  by Maria Reidelbach Okay, be honest: does locally grown food sometimes weird you out? Of course, these d...

01 Jul 2016 | 0 comments| Read more

All You Need is Lovage!

by Maria Reidelbach The mere existence of an herb like lovage gives me great hope and joy. Lovage is incredibly delicious, extreme...

01 Jun 2016 | 1 comments| Read more

Yardavore: Don’t Fence Me Out

by Maria Reidelbach  Forsythia wall. A jarring experience that I’m sure many of my Hudson Valley neighbors share is roaming our t...

03 May 2016 | 0 comments| Read more
Transitioning...

Connecting with the Earth's Experience

by Polly Howells Eco-philosopher Joanna Macy, in her seminal work Coming Back to Life, outlines the inner work that each of us must do...

06 Aug 2015 | 1 comments| Read more

People In Your Neighborhood

Food & Restaurant

Stick to Local Farms Adventure Map Debuts at Rosendale Farmers Market

On June 5 the Stick to Local Farms project will debut the third annual map of Rondout Valley farms that offer a free art sticker to each ...

01 Jun 2016 | Read more
Arts & Music

Urth Arts

 “To me the coolest thing about Urth Arts is not just making art, but turning other people on to making art—how fun it is. You don’t ...

02 Dec 2015 | Read more
Horoscopes

Inner Space–May 2015

by Eric Francis Aries (March 20-April 19) Focus on your family and home and everything else will fall into place. If you build your...

02 Jun 2015 | Read more
Local Economy

Trout Abound

by Terence P Ward   If you're itching to tie one on — a lure, that is — and you're casting about for some healthy trout, D...

01 Jun 2016 | Read more
Bread & Roses

Perma-Cultured

by Marie Doyon     In the last century alone, the dizzying evolution of technology has profoundly impacted agriculture a...

02 Jun 2015 | Read more
New Economics

Glimpses of the Next Economy

by David McCarthy    The work of shifting our global economy toward one that honors both people and planet is immensely compl...

02 Nov 2015 | Read more
Re>think Local

Gratitude for the Hudson Valley

by Ajax Greene    It was a tough year for me, 2014—about the worst ever financially, tough emotionally and physically. Normal...

03 Dec 2014 | Read more
Culture Features

Planting With the Cycles of the Moon

by Lee Reich For no apparent reason, seedlings sometimes seem to take longer than usual to poke their first green shoots up throu...

01 Jun 2016 | Read more

Daily Video

Daddy Debrief: Separation


By David Dewitt   


Lately I’ve been performing again. Singing and acting.   Something I used to do with more regularity years ago but had not pursued very much after Finn was born.

Rehearsals have required me to be in the city away from Finn and Erin for a couple of long stretches.  It’s the first time Finn and I have been away from each other for extended periods since he was born.  
Facetime has made it more bearable, but I think the most challenging thing is explaining to him what I’m doing.  I don’t think he fully comprehends the acting thing yet.  He has attended some live performances, but none where Erin or I have played a character.

On one of my days off we spent the day together and he wanted to know more.  

“It’s just pretending,” I said, “like when you and I play pretend, but I’m doing it in front of an audience.  I’m actually pretending to be someone’s Dad.”

“WHAT!!?”  he said, followed by a dramatic pause.  “That’s silly.”

At night we Facetime before bed.  Being able to see each other’s faces when we talk seems to lessen the blow of the physical absence.  At least it does for me. 

But it also makes that link of communication feel more precious.  A few days ago, the morning after performing in a concert on Long Beach Island, Erin and I were enjoying a rare and all too brief time on the beach.  I had just snapped a few pictures with my phone when a sudden wave forced us to grab our blanket and belongings and run farther from the water.

Once we were settled back down, I discovered my phone was missing.  With it being practically brand new, I was frantically digging in the sand. I immediately began thinking how stupid I was for not buying the insurance that the pushy cell phone salesman had urged me to get.

We used the phone finder app from Erin’s phone to see if it was still showing a signal.  It was, but the blue dot it showed on the map covered a large area.  For what seemed like an eternity I combed through the sand with my fingers trying to skim the whole circle. 

Then Erin found a way to turn on a ping through the phone finder app.  The sound was just loud enough to hear above the ocean waves.   Thankfully it was a few feet away buried in the dry sand.  I couldn’t believe how completely covered the phone had gotten in that instant.  

Of course it would have been ok if we hadn’t found it.  It would have been a pain, but I would have survived, gotten a new phone, and bought the insurance.

But it made me think about the importance of connection and the fear of disconnection.

How essential it is for Finn to have these opportunities to learn to deal with separation.   And maybe through the process, his Father will learn to deal with it as well.

David Dewitt is an artist, blogger, and painter who lives with his family in the Rondout Valley. For more, visit daviddewitt.com.

Posted by Chris Hewitt on 11:41 AM. Filed under , . You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0

1 comments for Daddy Debrief: Separation

  1. And next time buy the damn insurance. ;)

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