Show Up With Hope’: Anne Lamott’s Plan for Facing Adversity

You would almost have to be nuts to be filled with hope in a world so rife with hunger, hatred, climate change, pollution, and pestilence, let alone the self-destructive or severely annoying behavior of certain people, both famous and just down the hall, none of whom we will name by name.

Yet I have boundless hope, most of the time. Hope is a sometimes cranky optimism, trust, and confidence that those I love will be OK—that they will come through, whatever life holds in store. Hope is the belief that no matter how dire things look or how long rescue or healing takes, modern science in tandem with people’s goodness and caring will boggle our minds, in the best way.

Hope is (for me) not usually the religious-looking fingers of light slanting through the clouds, or the lurid sunrise. It’s more a sturdy garment, like an old chamois shirt: a reminder that I’ve been here before, in circumstances just as frightening, and I came through, and will again. All I have to do is stay grounded in the truth.

Oh, that’s very nice, you may well respond. And what does that even mean, the truth?

I don’t presume to say what capital-T Truth is. But I do know my truth, and it’s this: Everyone I know, including me, has lived through devastating times at least twice, through seemingly unsurvivable loss. And yet we have come through because of the love of our closest people, the weird healing properties of time, random benevolence, and, of course, our dogs

At regular intervals, life gets a little too real for my taste. The wider world seems full of bombers, polluters, threats of all kinds. My own small world suffers ruptures—a couple of deaths, a couple of breakups, a young adult who had me scared out of my wits for a couple of years—that leave me struggling to stay on my feet.

In these situations I usually have one of two responses: either that I am doomed or that I need to figure out whom to blame (and then correct their behavior). But neither of these is true. The truth is that—through the workings of love, science, community, time, and what I dare to call grace—some elemental shift will occur and we will find we are semi-OK again. And even semi-OK can be a miracle.

“Sometimes I have to believe that heaven is just a new pair of glasses.” That was said by a priest who helped establish Alcoholics Anonymous roughly 80 years ago—and when I remember to put on such glasses, I spy reasons for hope on every street. You can’t walk a block without seeing recycling bins. Nations are pledging serious action on climate change. My young friend Olivia, who has cystic fibrosis, got into a clinical trial two years ago for a newfangled drug—and it’s working, meaning she will live a great deal longer than we ever dared to hope.

I like these days in spite of our collective fears and grief. I love antibiotics. I’m crazy about electricity. I get to fly on jet airplanes! And in the face of increased climate-related catastrophes—after I pass through the conviction that we are doomed, that these are End Times—I remember what Mister Rogers’s mother said: In times of disaster we look to the helpers.

Look to the volunteers and aid organizations clearing away the rubble, giving children vaccines; to planes and trains and ships bringing food to the starving. Look at Desmond Tutu and Malala Yousafzai, Bill Gates and the student activists of Parkland, Florida; anyone committed to public health, teachers, and all those aging-hippie folk singer types who galvanized the early work of decontaminating the Hudson River.

You could say that river cleanup was child’s play compared with the melting of the ice caps—and I would thank you for sharing and get back to doing what is possible. Those who say it can’t be done should get out of the way of those who are doing it.

We take the action—soup kitchens, creek restoration, mentoring—and then the insight follows: that by showing up with hope to help others, I’m guaranteed that hope is present. Then my own hope increases. By creating hope for others, I end up awash in the stuff.

We create goodness in the world, and that gives us hope. We plant bulbs in the cold, stony dirt of winter and our aging arthritic fingers get nicked, but we just do it, and a couple of months later life blooms—as daffodils, paperwhites, tulips.

Hope is sometimes a decision that we won’t bog down in analysis paralysis. We show up in waders or with checkbooks. We send money to India, and the Sierra Club, the Union of Concerned Scientists, and to Uncle Ed’s GoFundMe account for his surgery.

You want hope? In India you see families waking up on hard, dusty streets and the poorest moms combing their kids’ hair for school. School is hope. Closer to home you see a teenager recover from a massive brain bleed and head off to a college for kids with special needs—not only alive but carrying a backpack full of books and supplies, and lunch. (Lunch gives me hope.)

You saw someone, maybe yourself or your child, get and stay sober. You read that the number of mountain gorillas in central Africa has risen consistently over the past few years. One had barely dared to hope, and yet? If this keeps up, we’ll be up to our necks in mountain gorillas.

We might hope that this or that will happen, and be disappointed—but when we instead have hope in the resilience and power of the human spirit, in innovation, laughter, and nature, we won’t be.

I wish I had a magic wand and could make people in power believe in climate science, but I don’t. I do, however, have good shoes in which to march for science and sanity. (Sanity: Is that so much to hope for? Never!) I see people rising up to their highest, most generous potential in every direction in which I remember to look, when I remember to look up and around and not at my aching feet.

My friend Olivia hates having cystic fibrosis, and every moment of life is a little harder than it is for people without the disease. But most of the time she’s the happiest person I’m going to see on any given day. She is either in gratitude or in the recording studio, where she is recording her second album of songs she wrote and plays on guitar. The engineer hits the mute button when she needs to cough, which is fairly frequently. She got a terrifying diagnosis 23 years ago, but with her community’s support, she and her parents kept hoping that she would somehow be OK or at least OK-ish—and then voilà, the successful clinical trial of a miracle drug.

Children pour out of school labs equipped with the science and passion to help restore estuaries and watersheds. Church groups pitch in to build water wells to nourish developing-world villages. As John Lennon said, “Everything will be OK in the end. If it’s not OK, it’s not the end.” This has always been true before; we can decide to hope that it will be again.

Sometimes hope is a radical act, sometimes a quietly merciful response, sometimes a second wind, or just an increased awareness of goodness and beauty. Maybe you didn’t get what you prayed for, but what you got instead was waking to the momentousness of life, the power of loving hearts. You hope to wake up in time to see the dawn, the first light, a Technicolor sunrise, but the early morning instead is cloudy with mist. Still, as you linger, the ridge stands majestically black against a milky sky. And if you pay attention, you’ll see the setting of the moon that illumined us all as we slept. And you see a new day dawn.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Cavendish Update 4/15/20: Gov's Conf/News/Bread

Normally the vet trimmed Edna’s claws; in quarantine, it was Mano a Mano. Jane Hart

CHECK THE CAVENDISH VT FACEBOOK PAGE DAILY FOR THE LATEST NEWS You don’t have to be a Facebook subscriber to see this page.

4/15/20

1.    What’s Been Happening

2.    Sanity Break: No-knead bread

3.    Events

We’re staying home today for the Shaw’s staff in Ludlow, who are working to keep shelves stocked and attitudes friendly. Please observe senior hours Tuesday and Thursday from 7-9 am.

In the scope of things, the amount of news coming out that is impacting our daily lives has slowed down quite a bit, so starting next week, we’ll drop back to Monday & Friday updates.

From Monday’s Governor’s press briefings, it appears Vermont is plateauing and depending on how fast the numbers come down, the Gov. Scott continues to hint that the “spigot” could open sooner than May 15, the most recent date given for lifting the “Stay at Home” order.

"The number of new cases every day is getting smaller and it's leveling off," Mark Levine, Vermont’s Health Commissioner  said at Monday’s, April 13, press conference. "We seem to be approaching a plateau. We will see if that is a sustained phenomenon, or a just a trend for several days. We are, in the general population of Vermont, not recording major outbreaks or spikes in our data." Most new cases of the virus have been occurring in closed settings, like nursing homes, elder living facilities and prisons.

Vermonters are doing an incredible job. Yesterday, there were only four new cases, which is the lowest we’ve seen in a month.

Does the President get to decide when to reopen the country? No he doesn’t, and as if to prove a point, coalitions of state governors are working to bring their respective states out of quarantine together based on science and the public good. Right now VT is not part of one of the coalitions, but today’s press conference may change that.

On Monday, Scott stated, "We will open up the economic spigot a quarter turn at a time. Many just want to get this over with right now. And others are worried we will move too quickly. I will continue to act based on... data and science." However, as Scott starts to reopen businesses, social distancing measuring and wearing masks sound like they will be the “new normal.”

Thank you to all who have responded to the Internet survey for the Knapp Pond area. We have supplied that information to the state and are working on a two phased approach-addressing immediate need and long term solutions. Hopefully we will have more information for you by Friday and it appears we may be able to work something out with ECFiber for the long term solution.

Masks and social distancing will be with us for a while. If you need masks, please e-mail cavendishconnects@gmail.com We will be having masks for children, with distribution being coordinated with the school.

For those of you who have asked me for my bread recipe, I’ve included  my version below of no-knead bread. Enjoy!

If you need help with shopping, a transfer station run, TP or something else, please call the Cavendish Town Office, M-F from 9-5 226-7291 or 7292.

 

2. WHAT’S BEEN HAPPENING

Gov. Phil Scott has appointed a new task force charged with opening businesses and getting people back to work. The governor says the state will determine its own timeline for reopening, despite what President Donald Trump says.

Special enrollment period for uninsured Vermonters extended to May 15

Lieutenant governor calls for new guidance to reopen farmers markets

Thousands of Vermonters still waiting on unemployment checks

• The VT Folklife Center Listening in Place Project focuses on three responses to the COVID-19 emergency: the creation of a crowd-sourced Sound Archive to document our daily experiences during the pandemic, a series of online Virtual Story Circles, where Vermonters can gather remotely to listen and share during these challenging times, and Show Us Your Masks! a project to document homemade face masks created by Vermonters. Learn more

• While the Green Mountain National Forest is open, visitors are being asked to protect themselves, others, and avoid environmental impacts by not using soft trails and following the guidelines below:

  • Avoid visiting the forest if you are sick.

  • Follow the CDC guidance for cloth masks and social distancing of six feet apart.

  • Dogs need to be on a leash and close to you.

  • Be cautious and choose low-risk activities to avoid injury.

  • Stay out of closed areas and check www.fs.usda.gov/main/gmfl/home to see if your destination is open before you visit.

  • What ever you bring in take out.

  • Use the restroom before or after your visit to the forest. Unmanaged waste creates a health hazard for our employees and for other visitors.

  • If an area is crowded, look for a less occupied location or return at a later time. Consider avoiding the forest during high-use periods.

2. SANITY BREAK: No Knead Bread: This is my version, which differs in that I don’t do a second rise. Yields one 1 1/2 pound loaf

3 cups all-purpose or bread flour, more for dusting

1⁄4 teaspoon instant yeast

11⁄4 teaspoons salt

Cornmeal .

1. In a large bowl combine flour, yeast and salt. Add 1 5/8 cups cold water, (a little over a cup and a half) and stir until blended; dough will be shaggy and sticky. Cover bowl with plastic wrap. Let dough rest at least 12 hours, preferably about 18, at warm room temperature, about 70 degrees. Can leave as long as 24 hours as the longer it rises the better the flavor.

2. Dough is ready when its surface is dotted with bubbles.  

3. At least a half-hour before dough is ready, heat oven to 450 degrees. Put a 6- to 8-quart heavy covered pot in oven as it heats.

4. Remove pot from oven and sprinkle bottom of pot with cornmeal. Then add the dough from the bowl to the pot, scraping down the sides. Shake pan once or twice if dough is unevenly distributed; it will straighten out as it bakes.

5. Cover with lid and bake 30 minutes, then remove lid and bake another 15 to 30 minutes, until loaf is beautifully browned.

Cool on a rack.  

3.. UPCOMING EVENTS: Go to dgBody Works  for classes that are being posted via Facebook live. Take a new one, do an old one. Stay fit and healthy.

April 16 (Thursday): GMUSD board meeting, 6 pm via Zoom. See the agenda for zoom instructions.

April 17 (Friday): Proctorsville Volunteer Fire Department is hosting a community solidarity event at 8 pm. Come together to show your support for Cavendish Citizens working the frontlines at area hospitals, nursing homes and rescue squads. We are asking for the community to join us with your vehicle (do not get out) by parking along Main Street, at CTES or around Svec Park in Proctorsville on Friday April 17th at 8pm. At that time we will have our apparatus outside with emergency lights activated, and will do a one minute blast on the building siren. We ask that at that time you join in with your car horn and lots of cheering from your vehicle. If you live on Main Street or close by please participate from your yard. If you walk to Main Street, please remain with your household members 6ft or more away from others and don’t forget your mask. Let’s come together and let our local healthcare professionals know that we are proud of them and appreciate everything they do for us.

Staying home for Patty, Bob Kirkbride, Singletons, Dave Norton, Deb Hryckiewicz, Ludlow Ambulance Service and the Cavendish Water/Waste Water Treatment Team, Rocky and the Cavendish Transfer Station Crew, Cavendish Town Crew, Mt. Ascutney Hospital, Cavendish/Proctorsville firefighters & first responders, Mack Molding employees, and Shaw’s Ludlow employees.

Have a Heart -stay home or 6 feet apart wearing a cloth mask or scarf.  

                        Stay healthy to protect yourself and Cavendish.

IF YOU READ THIS PLEASE HELP SUPPORT CAVENDISH CONNECTS

Cavendish Update 4/13/20: Internet/Stay Home Extended

Cathy missed her sons and her hairdresser. Jane Hart

 

CHECK THE CAVENDISH VT FACEBOOK PAGE DAILY FOR THE LATEST NEWS You don’t have to be a Facebook subscriber to see this page.

4/13/20

1.    Internet Survey (Knapp Pond/Lower Tarbell Hill area)

2.    What’s Been Happening

3.    Sanity Break

4.    Events

We’re staying home today for Mack Molding employees, who are working to supply much needed medical equipment to combat Covid-19.

So now that the Governor has extended the state of emergency to May 15, which includes the “Stay at Home” order, we gotta talk about Covid-15. No, this isn’t a new type of virus, it’s the 15 pounds that you’ll gain if you spend hours at the computer, watching TV and eating a lot of food you don’t need. Take lots of breaks and move.

 Also, the supply chain is just fine so no need to buy up all the paper products “just in case.” Given that a number of people already have a “case,” please be respectful that others also need to wipe. For those who do find they are running short, let us know and we can drop off what you need.

According to the state’s Covid-19 Team, we are on good footing as we head into what they anticipate will be the peak period, late April-early May. That noted, if people do not continue to be vigilant about staying at home, standing 6 feet apart and wearing cloth coverings, we could easily see that flip and be in terrible straights very quickly. As it is, the estimates are that between 1,000-5,000 Vermonters will become infected and less then 100 will die by the end of May. Yesterday saw the fewest new cases (16), since March 8, which is a good sign. The quicker we get to no new cases, the sooner the state will “turn on the spigot,” letting various groups return to work.

As we’ve seen with the prison outbreak, many become infected and don’t know it. While a lot of people will do okay with it, particularly children, it can be easily transmitted, resulting in devastating effects on those with pre-existing conditions (some of whom may not know they have one), those over 60 and even babies and toddlers. 

If you need help with shopping, a transfer station run, TP or something else, please call the Cavendish Town Office, M-F from 9-5 226-7291 or 7292.

 

1. INTERNET SURVEY (KNAPP POND/LOWER TARBELL AREA): We are working with the state to improve Internet speeds for those living in the Knapp Pond, lower Tarbell Hill area. They do have stop gap measures that can be used such as a COW (cell on wheels). In order to understand where to place equipment, we need to hear from people who live in that area. Please send an e-mail to cavendishconnects@gmail.com and include your street address, what you are using for Internet and issues you may be experiencing. We want to get that information to the state ASAP.

 

2. WHAT’S BEEN HAPPENING

The Panic Mechanic: UVM researchers have developed an app to help get a handle on panic attacks using biofeedback. It’s available for $19.99 for iTunes now and will be available for other phones the end of May.

School budgets vulnerable as state revenues plummet

Unemployment Insurance: File Your Claim Based on Your Last Name; The Dept. of Labor has started an alphabetized system for receiving calls and taking claims. Anyone can call on Sunday and Friday. Monday is A-E, Tuesday F-L; Wednesday M-R and Thursday S-Z. The phone number is 800-983-2300. Click here for more:

Vermont DMV Launches Online License Renewals

• Effective immediately: Motor vehicle inspections due in April 2020 have been extended for 60 days.

Copley Hospital offers test for Covid-19 immunity: Copley Hospital has rolled out a new test that can identify people who have developed Covid-19 antibodies. 

No, You Don't Need To Disinfect Your Groceries. But Here's How To Shop Safely

Vt. officials warn to keep an eye out for ticks

  

3. SANITY BREAK: Keep in mind that humans were designed to handle adversity. This is nothing new. Take 18 minutes and watch Lucy Hone's TED Talk. In a nut shell, through her own story of incredible loss, even armed with an extensive background in resiliency-she trained under the father of positive psychology, Martin Seligman-Hone found that while intentions were good, people were basically trying to turn her into a victim.  Instead, Hone took a different approach, one largely discussed by the ancient Stoic philosophers, embraced today by Cognitive Behavioral Therapy and being proven by the ever expanding field of neuroscience.

 

4.. UPCOMING EVENTS: Go to dgBody Works  for classes that are being posted via Facebook live. Take a new one, do an old one. Stay fit and healthy.

April 13 (Monday): Cavendish Select Board Meeting, 6:30 pm via Zoom (conference call available). For agenda and directions click here.

April 16 (Thursday): GMUSD board meeting, 6 pm via Zoom. See the agenda for zoom instructions.

April 17 (Friday): Proctorsville Volunteer Fire Department is hosting a community solidarity event at 8 pm. Come together to show your support for Cavendish Citizens working the frontlines at area hospitals, nursing homes and rescue squads. We are asking for the community to join us with your vehicle (do not get out) by parking along Main Street, at CTES or around Svec Park in Proctorsville on Friday April 17th at 8pm. At that time we will have our apparatus outside with emergency lights activated, and will do a one minute blast on the building siren. We ask that at that time you join in with your car horn and lots of cheering from your vehicle. If you live on Main Street or close by please participate from your yard. If you walk to Main Street, please remain with your household members 6ft or more away from others and don’t forget your mask. Let’s come together and let our local healthcare professionals know that we are proud of them and appreciate everything they do for us.

Staying home for Patty, Bob Kirkbride, Singletons, Dave Norton, Deb Hryckiewicz, Ludlow Ambulance Service and the Cavendish Water/Waste Water Treatment Team, Rocky and the Cavendish Transfer Station Crew, Cavendish Town Crew, Mt. Ascutney Hospital, Cavendish/Proctorsville firefighters & first responders and Mack Molding employees.

Have a Heart -stay home or 6 feet apart wearing a cloth mask or scarf.  

                        Stay healthy to protect yourself and Cavendish.

IF YOU READ THIS PLEASE HELP SUPPORT CAVENDISH CONNECTS

Cavendish Update 4/10/20: Covid Update/ Events/

Zack’s old carrier pigeon was no real threat to pay-on-line. Jane Hart

CHECK THE CAVENDISH VT FACEBOOK PAGE DAILY FOR THE LATEST NEWS You don’t have to be a Facebook subscriber to see this page.

4/10/20

1.    What’s Been Happening

2.    Sanity Break

3.    Events

 

We’re staying at home this week for the first responders/fire fighters of Cavendish and Proctorsville.

On Wednesday, the Governor announced he would be extending the “Stay at Home” order. While he was cautiously optimistic about how well Vermonters were doing with social distancing, and helping to “bend the curve,” at what point we’d be free to move about in our “new normal,” remains to be seen. Today, he will be providing an extension date, along with clearer ideas about what lies ahead as far as re opening the state.

While the number of new cases has dropped off significantly since last weekend, there has been a breakout at the St. Albans prison and last evening  28 more inmates and five additional staff tested positive for Covid-19. Many of those testing positive had no symptoms, which is an indicator of why this virus can spread so rapidly and why a cloth mask when in public is strongly encouraged.

According to. State Epidemiologist Dr. Patsy Kelso, who spoke at last night’s VT Lawmakers (Leahy, Sanders & Welch) Town Meeting, Vermont is in a position to test everyone in the state and data is showing that the spread of the disease is slowing. You will still need a referral from your doctor before receiving a test.

Gov. Scott is doing an incredible job and is making tough decisions to ensure the safety, health and well-being of the people of Vermont. Even the White House recently gave a shout out to the excellent job Vermont is doing to keep the virus in check.

No matter how you slice it though, everybody, literally the entire world, is heavily impacted by Covid-19. This is not a contest. No one is being “singled out.” Everybody has their own brand of hell they’re dealing with, but we each have things we can be grateful for as well.

Over the weeks, I can’t help but notice how incredible the people of Cavendish are by practicing social distancing yet stepping to the plate and helping one  another. Yesterday, to celebrate one of our second grader’s birthday, on a very wet afternoon, a parade was held for him. Lead by VSP Trooper and Cavendish resident, Kevin Hughes, it was followed by fire trucks from both Cavendish and Proctorsville, Ludlow Ambulance, and friends and neighbors in their respective cars.

This brings to mind Sir Winston Churchill. Talk about a non sequitur, well there is a point.

The prime minister of England, Churchill motivated his country, as well as the allies during WWII, starting each day and ended all of his phone conversations with the expression “Keep Buggering On” (Keep Plodding On if in the presence of a lady).

So we’re taking it from the Churchill play book and we’re just going to “keep buggering on.” Not just until the Stay at Home order is lifted, but right through to when we’re on good economic footing. 

If you need a reminder that we’re capable of it, Cavendish was one of the worst hit towns in the state after Irene. However, everybody pitched in, brought their A game to the table and within five months, we had everyone back in their homes. Few towns could boast that. And yes, it’s going to take more than five months to right the economic situation. And if we’re really honest, the Depot Street, damaged by Irene, isn’t quite open, yet we’ve been getting around town just fine for the last nine year.  The important thing is we have the attitude and people to go the distance, which is ultimately a key factor in full recovery.

So see ya Monday, or on Facebook over the weekend, have a joyful Passover and Easter and “keep buggering on!”

If you need help with shopping, a transfer station run, TP or something else, please call the Cavendish Town Office, M-F from 9-5 226-7291 or 7292.

 

1. WHAT’S BEEN HAPPENING

• GMUSD students move from maintenance to new learning; spring break happening: Summary of Monday night’s GMUSD board meeting from the VT Journal.

• White House Announces New Guidance For How Critical Employees Can Return To Work: The federal government has released new guidelines regarding when people in critical infrastructure roles can return to work after being exposed to a confirmed or suspected case of the coronavirus.

• 70,000 Vermonters have filed unemployment claims since crisis began: Unemployment in Vermont is above 20% and with self-employed workers now eligible for benefit. Labor Commissioner Michael Harrington said the unemployment rate could hit 30%. That’s causing a backlog for the DOL’s 30-year-old mainframe computer system. 

• Hospitals Face Financial Woes: Even before the COVID-19 pandemic, some of Vermont's hospitals were having real financial struggles. Now that hospitals are on the frontlines of the public health crisis, their financial picture is growing increasingly grim.  Springfield Hospital recently got an emergency $1.3 million lifeline from the state, and other hospitals are even laying off workers and applying for lines of credit to keep their doors open. VPR

• Broadway will remain dark until June and New York’s Lincoln Center has cancelled all of its programming through the end of August.

• More Vermonters are Signing Up for Help in Stopping Smoking: 802Quits-- the program that helps Vermonters trying to quit smoking and vaping-- is seeing a surge in people reaching out for help.

Self-employed Vermonters will have to wait for unemployment benefits

2. SANITY BREAK: Build a bliss station. This comes from Joseph Campbell, author of  “The Power of the Myth.” You must have a room, or a certain hour or so a day, where you don’t know what was in the newspapers that morning, you don’t know who your friends are, you don’t know what you owe anybody, you don’t know what anybody owes to you. This is a place where you can simply experience and bring forth what you are and what you might be. This is the place of creative incubation. At first you may find that nothing happens there. But if you have a sacred place and use it, something eventually will happen. My bliss station is a daily walk. For others it’s the first cup of coffee, sitting in your special chair by a window. Watch a Pink Cast.

 

3. UPCOMING EVENTS: Go to dgBody Works  for classes that are being posted via Facebook live. Take a new one, do an old one. Stay fit and healthy.

April 11 (Saturday): The Cavendish Easter Egg Hunt for Essential Workers: Display an egg of any design by 10 on Saturday so our essential workers can do their own egg hunt on their way to and from work.

April 12 (Sunday): Happy Easter

April 13 (Monday): Cavendish Select Board Meeting, 6:30 pm via Zoom (conference call available). For agenda and directions click here.

April 17 (Friday): Proctorsville Volunteer Fire Department is hosting a community solidarity event at 8 pm. Come together to show your support for Cavendish Citizens working the front lines at area hospitals, nursing homes and rescue squads. We are asking for the community to join us with your vehicle (do not get out) by parking along Main Street, at CTES or around Svec Park in Proctorsville on Friday April 17th at 8pm. At that time we will have our apparatus outside with emergency lights activated, and will do a one minute blast on the building siren. We ask that at that time you join in with your car horn and lots of cheering from your vehicle. If you live on Main Street or close by please participate from your yard. If you walk to Main Street, please remain with your household members 6ft or more away from others and don’t forget your mask. Let’s come together and let our local healthcare professionals know that we are proud of them and appreciate everything they do for us.

Staying home for Patty, Bob Kirkbride, Singletons, Dave Norton, Deb Hryckiewicz, Ludlow Ambulance Service and the Cavendish Water/Waste Water Treatment Team, Rocky and the Cavendish Transfer Station Crew, Cavendish Town Crew, Mt. Ascutney Hospital and Cavendish/Proctorsville firefighters & first responders.

Have a Heart -stay home or 6 feet apart wearing a cloth mask or scarf.  

                        Stay healthy to protect yourself and Cavendish.

IF YOU READ THIS PLEASE HELP SUPPORT CAVENDISH CONNECTS