Sunday, February 28, 2021

An Abundant Life - Love Multiplied

The Love & Plenty project was developed during this past year, starting last March when the restaurants were first shut down. As I wrote last spring in my first post about the project, because of my background teaching nutrition and health workshops in Manhattan and working in low income and food insecure neighborhoods for years, when the restaurants were shut down I knew that we were facing an immediate and long term disaster in the food supply chain and the economy. At the time I couldn't believe that I was the only one who was seeing this, but then I began to realize that unless you've worked as a frontline worker specifically in the areas that I have, there was no way that you could know that on a good day in Manhattan and the boroughs there is not enough healthy food available for people in need. I've worked in soup kitchens and food pantries, shelters, recovery programs, senior citizen centers, schools, after schools and harm reduction centers. I've stood in parking lots in the Bronx during health fairs and in Harlem on 125th Street outside of social services centers handing out information about food stamps and WIC and where to go to find meals and clothing and housing support all while doing hands on education about eating more fruits and vegetables and lowering your sugar and sodium intake. The one constant in every place where I've worked and shared information is that people need healthy food and though there is plenty to go around, somehow it doesn't get distributed equally and the lower the income of the community and the more in need, the less healthy food there is readily available. So when the restaurants shut down, I knew immediately that not only would so many people be suddenly put out of work, but that those people, their families, and the people who the restaurants donated food to would not have a food source they had been relying on. And I also knew that the restaurants not only employed their staff, but they provided business revenue in a direct line to the farmers, purveyors and restaurant suppliers that would abruptly stop and leave food available with no market for it. Because of what I knew and had experienced over the years, I started to think about what I could possibly do to help mitigate the looming disaster, and I began to develop what was soon called Love & Plenty.

You can read about the project's early stages in my post of May 24, 2020, and now that it has been nearly a year I thought it was time to give an update because so much that's so good has happened. In the early months I was focusing on sharing resources with restaurants and meal programs to help connect them with food sources and funding, grants, and other programs that could help their businesses stay afloat and put food on people's tables. I reached out to contacts I've had for years in community and faith based organizations that worked in the inner city and in the areas of food and nutrition, and sent information to government organizations and grass roots newletters to raise awareness and ask for guidance. The basic premise of Love & Plenty was to help restaurants get funding to provide meals for people in need, and because I have also worked with Artists for many years, I connected them into the process with the idea that with any work sold, instead of a percentage or fee going to me, it would go to the project to help the restaurants. In the early stages I though that Love & Plenty would need to become a not for profit organization and I contacted people about possible fiscal sponsorship in the process and spoke with business advisors and consultants who I was connected to in the not for profit and business management fields. Then, in a memorable conversation last June, an Artist friend who is also a lawyer with many years of experience in the business world suggested that the business could remain for profit. With that idea, I realized that Love & Plenty could just be a consultancy of my own that I did pro-bono and that I could help a for profit restaurant build a sustainable charitable arm through their regular revenue and create a business model that could be replicated with some variations in any location. At that point I understood that Love & Plenty was simply the crisis mode of a long term project I have been planning since July of 2008 and had started to move forward on in 2018, to purchase a house in Little Compton, Rhode Island that would become a farm to table Chef's table restaurant that would be a training center for youth and adults from challenging backgrounds to learn about the hospitality industry, food and nutrition, farming, agriculture, ecology and sustainability, and that would also be a retreat and residency program for Artists. The restaurant would fund the charitable work, so that there could be free programs and a sliding scale for trainings and residencies.

Last September, when Antique Bar & Bakery reopened, we began to plan monthly wine pairings under the umbrella of Love & Plenty to help the restaurant with added revenue and marketing. Over time, Sommelier and Artist Joel Liscio who selects wine for the pairings has been bringing in ideas that could help the restaurant increase income from wine sales and a targeted wine program. The first of those ideas that was implemented at the beginning of this year was for the sale of Rife wine which has Joel's art on the label. I chose that restaurant because from the beginning of my vision for Love & Plenty, the food available there has been the inspiration. It is my core belief that everyone deserves to have food of that quality and creativity and flavor because it is lifechanging. If we can feed people with the best food, we can begin to help empower them to change their lives for the better.

In recent months Artists have begun to donate work for the pairings and to bring their artwork to be sold with a portion of the proceeds being donated back to the restaurant for the Love & Plenty project. The pairings themselves are exquisite and special afternoons, with special lunch menus that are paired perfectly with the wines selected by Joel Liscio. The tables are seated with food and wine and art lovers, entrepreneurs, Artists, and philanthropists, and there's a spirit of fun and celebration as well as an understanding that we are coming together as a community to help the community. Love and Plenty started as an idea and it has grown organically. When the name came to me, I thought of four additional subtitles, "Love Created, Love Delivered, Love Shared, Love Multiplied", a chain to fill the gap that had been broken when the restaurants were abruptly shut down, and over this past year I've seen the truth of those words come to life.


Love & Plenty  
Wine Pairing Lunch
At Antique Bar & Bakery





Artisanal Truffles And Chocolates
From Milène Jardine Chocolatier

Artist Stephen Cimini
With Artwork Donated For The Project


The Love & Plenty Logo
Created By 3D Artist Dana Gambale
And The Invitation
Created By Designer Jamison Harvey




Blessings,

Jannie Susan

  

Sunday, February 21, 2021

An Abundant Life - Giving Help Where It's Needed

In 2006, when I first began to work on the lower east side of Manhattan as the Director of an after school program on Avenue D, I was introduced to the Partnership For After School Education or PASE as it is known and referred to by those of us who have been lucky enough to meet the wonderful people who are a part of that organization. At the time I had a heart to do the work, but no formal training and very little experience, and because of the excellence of the services available at PASE I was not only able to bring so many wonderful enrichment programs to the youth and families I was serving, but I was given the opportunity to be a part of several high level and highly regarded trainings and educational workshops and career development college and graduate level courses that changed the trajectory of my own career. It's been something that I've thought of often during this past year of challenges due to the current health and economic crisis that has brought about so many changes to all of our lives and the ways that we have been used to work. Since the time that I took my first training at PASE my own work has moved from the lower east side to all over the five boroughs, changing from being the Director of an after school program to teaching community nutrition and health and then onto starting my own community based organization. But through it all, as my own work and life changed and grew, PASE was a constant that was always a valuable resource, adding to and strengthening the experience I was gaining in the field, and appearing often with new ideas, supportive services and information about best practices that have continued to this day to make it possible for me to do the work that I do with to the best of my ability.

Two years ago I wrote about Landit, a women's executive leadership development program that was offered to me through PASE because of other leadership development programs I had graduated from in the past. I knew at the time when I applied for it that it would be a wonderful opportunity because every program I have been a part of through PASE is always so memorable and useful and full of the types of information and resources that help support career growth and knowledge, and it was life changing. During this past year I have been so grateful that I had that opportunity when I did because I have used the information and skills learned in ways that I never imagined that I would have to before the world as we know it changed. Even if we were still living in the time before this current crisis, the insights and skills and tools that were made available through Landit were powerful and empowering. In this current landscape of uncertainty, they have been integral to so much of the work that I do that I am reminded every day of how important the gift of that opportunity was.

Organizations like PASE are so valuable, because they support those who are doing the work in the communities on so many levels. When we measure impact, we can also look at the exponential quality of what the work has the capacity to do, and with an organization like PASE, the numbers of people whose lives are affected for the better because of their stellar and committed daily work to support the after school providers, services and educators in the community can only be measured in stars.

Partnership For After School Education
120 Broadway
Suite 230
New York, New York







Blessings,

Jannie Susan
       




Sunday, February 14, 2021

An Abundant Life - Writing From The Heart

Daniel Damiano has written an extraordinary novel. "The Woman in the Sun Hat" takes us on a journey from start to finish that not only invites us into the world of the protagonist Peggy Bubone, but helps us to inhabit that world with her in all its sometimes uncomfortable, emotionally challenging, earthy and ultimately invigorating glory. At times so deeply moving in its depiction of Peggy's life that continuing to read felt like a personal excavation, this is a novel that begins far away from where it ends and yet somehow brings together the strands of a woman's life in a way that is both breathtakingly beautiful and heart-wrenchingly painful.

I met Daniel a few years ago when I was invited to a reading of one of his plays that an Actress friend was a part of, and at the time I offered to write a blog about him because his writing is excellent. In the process of getting to know him more, I attended a production of his one man show, "American Tranquility," and enjoyed his tour de force performance so much that I returned when it was brought to the stage again a few months later. Writing about him then I noted that the characters he creates have so many levels and layers that they are not only infinitely fascinating, but they are unique and real even in their sometimes hilarious commentary, dialogue and actions. They are also people that we come to deeply care about, as we discover more of what's underneath the surface of their lives, and we find ourselves rooting for them to find whatever the golden road is that they are looking for.

"The Woman in the Sun Hat" is not like any novel I have ever read before. It is also written in such a personally unique style that it was refreshing to experience it. The first time I read it, I told Daniel that though in the beginning the characters were entertaining, I was unable to understand why it was only later that I began to embrace them. I've realized since then that it is because of the arc of Peggy's transformation. As she moves through the story, she becomes many things that in their complexity reveal the deep roots of her humanity. In my second reading of his newly edited pre-published version, though I knew where the story was going I still enjoyed the pure act of reading in a way that is not always the case. I love to read and have since I was a very young child, but I usually gravitate to certain styles and certain authors. This novel is in a way very different from the writing I would normally say was my style, the lyrical romantically beautiful language of F. Scott Fitzgerald, passages of Proust, or the English classics of the Bronte's, Jane Austen and Charles Dickens, but though it has its own rhythms and traditions there is a very special something that draws the reader in and makes us want to continue on to find out just where we are going and where we will ultimately end up.

The story is a truly remarkable one, and the writing itself is so skillful, with the kind of language that jumps out at you not because it is trying to prove something but because it is so enjoyable. It's one of those books I found it difficult to put down and also one I wanted to take time over to savor and enjoy and not finish too quickly. To say that Daniel Damiano is a Wordsmith and a Master Craftsman is an understatement. He can do what many cannot, and create a world that is entirely his own that also reaches into our own personal experience and reminds us of those moments which are more powerful than anything, the expressions in a life that come from deep within the heart.


"The Woman in the Sun Hat"
A Novel By Daniel Damiano






Blessings,

Jannie Susan
 






Sunday, February 7, 2021

An Abundant Life - At Home

When I first moved to New York I had been accepted into an internship with the Circle Repertory Company. I lived in an apartment on 122nd and Amsterdam because a friend from childhood who lived in New York who I'd contacted just happened to have a room opening up in her apartment when I needed to find a place to stay. Her father was a Professor at Columbia, and she had gone to Barnard, and he had bought her an apartment in one of the buildings that was newly renovated. It was a fifth floor walkup across the street from a school where hip hop Artists hung out and played music on their boomboxes constantly, but to me even with the noise booming on summer evenings I felt like I was in a very special world. My part of the rent was $350 per month. Eventually it went up to I think $390. I found out later that the friend I was renting from wasn't paying any part of that at all. Her father had bought the apartment at an insider discounted price for cash, and the amount she was charging me for rent was her Co-op maintenance. But even at that price it was a stretch in those days. My internship paid me $60 per week and I had to get a part time job just to scrape by. When the friend decided to move in with her boyfriend in another state she found a roommate for me to in her words cover the other half of the rent. That poor guy was a graduate student whose marriage was on the outs, and he not long after moving in decided he couldn't take New York any more. I don't know why my friend insisted that I get another roommate, but she did, and for a period of time I had several different people who came and went. One young actress who came to live with me was a friend of one of my fellow interns. He had met her in London at the London Academy of Dramatic Arts and when she was moving to New York and was looking for a place to stay he introduced us. He had lived with me for about a month or maybe more himself, before finding another roommate situation with a bunch of guys at NYU downtown. The young actress was very much of a party goer, and she had much more money than I did. She put her mind toward going out everywhere she could see and be seen, and one day she started telling me that she had gone to a restaurant all the way downtown on the outskirts of Soho called the Bell Caffe. She couldn't stop talking about the place because it was such an insider hotspot. Only the coolest of the cool went there, and late nights regularly turned into after hours. I forget which hot young actor she met there and shared a table with, maybe Matthew Broderick if my memory is correct. I'm not sure, but I think there may have been many. She was bound and determined for stardom and she found many connections at the Bell Caffe.

A number of years later, when I moved downtown and was beginning to write and produce plays and evenings of theater, I read in the Circle Rep LAB newsletter that Kurt Williams who owned the Belle Caffe was offering the restaurant as a place to host collaborative projects. I called him up and made an appointment and stopped by one afternoon. How to describe the Belle except that it was funky and fun, a vision he had lovingly created from his own Seattle coffee shop background combined with and LA vibe. He'd taken the abandoned garage and gutted it, working with friends to create a restaurant that was full of art and artwork down to the mosaics on parts of the walls. A skilled Chef he created a healthy and eclectic menu that always had something interesting and delicious that somehow was always exactly what you wanted. After meeting that day we planned some events and some evenings of theater, and over the next few years I almost lived there. I cast Kurt in my own plays and he introduced me to his friends, I had my birthdays there, I grieved my father's death there, and my heartbreaks found a place to heal through laughter, creativity, love and art.

After the Bell closed, Kurt and I remained friends. He worked at different restaurants for a time, inviting me to visit with him at places that have such a history in the city but for me have a personal one. His resume spanned some of the best, but whenever I hear their names I only remember visiting with him there. The food, though excellent, was somehow always secondary to the adventure of being with him. I visited him in East Berlin in the earlier days before it became an enjoyable place to live when he was helping a friend open a restaurant, and we spent days in New York City on rooftops, at Central Park Summerstage and one summer he took me to Brighton Beach, an introduction that started me journeying out there with an enjoyment that has lasted to this day.

How do I describe the Bell? When I first walked into Antique Bar & Bakery I felt like I was somehow thrown back in time, not just because of the vintage decor but because somehow it felt like the Bell. Chef Paul Gerard's sense of design and aesthetic are so perfectly put together with everything in its perfect place, but while the Bell had a feeling of bohemian abandon there is something somehow that it similar between the two. Maybe it's the decor, but maybe it's the heart that is in the two very different Chefs. They love to invite people into the spaces they've created and help them feel right at home.


With Kurt Williams
On My Birthday Years Ago
At The Bell Caffe


  



Blessings,

Jannie Susan