Tag Archives: John

150th Anniversary, Odd Fellowship in Mountain View

2024, Katy Debbie Debra Odd Fellows Parade, 11 Nov 2024
2024, Katy Debbie Debra Odd Fellows Parade, 11 Nov 2024

This year, I am serving as the Noble Grand of the Mountain View Odd Fellows Lodge #244 in our 150th year as a lodge. It’s like being the Chair or President of a community group but one that makes a lifetime commitment to support each other and the principles of Friendship, Truth, and Love. My daughter Jessica was Noble Grand of our lodge in 2019 and my son Paul has been a member almost as long. I only joined in 2024.

This week will be our big 150th anniversary celebration and I am super-busy coordinating a multitude of minutia. As a lodge fellowship, we have so-far produced an event logo, banner, 3 window panels honoring Friendship, Truth, and Love, and a selection of merchandise featuring anniversary images. (Special thanks to Sinead Toolis and Tatiana Kuvaldina for their inspired designs, and to Michael Greenzeiger for the merch!) John and I put together a 12-minute video of lodge history from 1876 to 2026 to be shown at the celebration. The video features portraits and candid photos, and pictures of architecture and artifacts from disparate sources – many of which were discovered or suggested by other lodge members.

150th Anniversary logo, Mountain View Odd Fellows Lodge #244
150th Anniversary logo, Mountain View Odd Fellows Lodge #244

Here is what I wrote in our Silicon Valley Odd Fellows newsletter (3 February 2026) about being a first-time Noble Grand for the Mountain View Odd Fellows,

“I am very new to Odd Fellowship, having only applied in 2023, and am honored to have been elected to be incoming Noble Grand of Mountain View, Lodge #244. Both of my adult children have been Odd Fellows for many years and I supported them at their lodge events long before joining. What inspired me to join was the great heartedness of this group and their generous, selfless, long-term dedication not only to each other but to the larger community. Since serving as Vice Grand, Trustee, and head of the Fellowship Committee last year, I have many times needed to ask people to support me with tasks that are not only time consuming but potentially tedious. Many lodge members have made time and given me good advice on how to make things work better in Odd Fellows.”

“In this, Mountain View’s 150th year as a lodge, I think our incoming leaders represent Odd Fellows very well. My Vice Grand, Conductor, and Outside Guardian are even younger to Odd Fellowship than I am. We range in age from late teens to late eighties and cherish a range that includes new members through those who have been Odd Fellows for over 50 years. We welcome folks who are LGBTPIA+ and straight, physically-challenged and currently-wellbodied, neurodiverse and cognitive normals. We are artists, teachers, students, technical professionals, historians, retired folks, and even a jail chaplain (me!). I think our lodge’s superpowers are our diversity and big hearts. This year will be fun, inspiring, and an opportunity to learn about and do more for my community.”

2025, Sally Calpo, Katy Dickinson MV Lodge Holiday party
2025, Sally Calpo, Katy Dickinson MV Lodge Holiday party
150th Anniversary banner, Mountain View Odd Fellows Lodge #244
150th Anniversary banner, Mountain View Odd Fellows Lodge #244

Images Copyright 2026 by Katy Dickinson, If you want to receive Katysblog posted by email, please sign up using the Sign Me Up! field (upper right on Katysbloghome page).

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Family: Graduation, 2 Certificates, and a Funeral

Jessica Dickinson Goodman MSFS Georgetown graduation with family, May 2026
Jessica Dickinson Goodman MSFS Georgetown graduation with family, May 2026

I have not been keeping up on events on KatysBlog so this post will cover some ground. John and Paul and I recently returned from a week in Virginia for Jessica‘s first graduation from Georgetown University, with a Master of Science – Foreign Service (MSFS graduate degree). She finishes her second Master’s in December. Jessica is also newly a Mom our granddaughter Joanne who is thriving with her big brother 3-year-old Alex and Dad, Matthew. We are all very proud of Jessica (and having fun with our beloved grandbabies)!

Jessica John Katy Paul Georgetown MSFS graduation
Jessica, John, Katy, & Paul at Georgetown MSFS graduation

My father, Wade Dickinson, and his brother Wayne were business and innovation partners for fifty years, during which time they were granted more than fifty U.S. patents and taught entrepreneurship for 16 years at U.C. Berkeley Engineering. My father passed in 2011 and my Uncle Wayne passed late last year. Wayne’s memorial service was last weekend in San Rafael, California. It was a touching opportunity to tell stories and reconnect with my brother Mark and cousins Eric and Leslie Dickinson.

Mark, Katy, Leslie, Eric Dickinson, Wayne Dickinson Memorial Service, 23 May 2026
Mark, Katy, Leslie, Eric Dickinson, Wayne Dickinson Memorial Service, 23 May 2026
Wayne Dickinson Memorial Service, 1935-2025
Wayne Dickinson Memorial Service, 1935-2025

I posted recently about finishing the Graduate Theological Union‘s Certificate in Islamic Studies. I also just completed the Clinton Global Initiative’s Empowering Faith Leaders Program, hosted at the GTU. It was an interesting class in how substance addiction works in individual lives and the community. I now have a TechWomen certificate signed by Secretary Hillary Clinton and this new certificate signed by President Bill Clinton. It will be strange not to be taking grad school classes for a while!

Clinton Global Initiative, Faith Leaders certificate, 5 May 2026
Clinton Global Initiative, Faith Leaders certificate, 5 May 2026
Clinton Global Initiative, Faith Leaders cohort, 5 May 2026
Clinton Global Initiative, Faith Leaders cohort, 5 May 2026
Islamic Studies Books, May 2026
Islamic Studies Books, May 2026

Images Copyright 2026 by Katy Dickinson, If you want to receive Katysblog posted by email, please sign up using the Sign Me Up! field (upper right on Katysbloghome page).


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Funny and Sad Observations in Eastern Europe

I loved our recent trip to Czech RepublicGermanyAustriaSlovakia, and Hungary (mostly traveling along the Danube River in Eastern Europe). I have worked and traveled in the area before but this was my most in-depth experience. Some of my observations included some sights that were funny or quirky but others were sad. Following up on my long-term interest in civic ironwork, I include photos of street iron that present a city’s symbolic view, starting with the vanishing hole pattern from Prague. The Dancing House and Franz Kafka head (by David Cerny 2014) also seem representative of Prague’s charming sense of humor. Here is a video of the Kafka head in motion.

We started our journey in Prague but found other cities that shared their sense of fun, including Passau which has a medieval stone head they call “the Fool of Passau” as its civic mascot. John and I enjoyed a class in which we tried to sculpt the fool’s head in marzipan.

Vienna (“Wien”) was full of very serious palaces and monuments but I did spot the local Bitzinger Würstelstand, a popular street sausage and champaign stand with a green rabbit and wine bottle on the roof hinting that the city had a funny side. The green rabbit refers to the “Young Hare” painting by Albrecht Dürer in a nearby museum and is apparently only one of several colorful giant rabbits in Vienna. Unfortunately, Vienna’s street iron in was too serious to display civic symbols and all I found were company names.

The city that seemed most enthusiastic in embracing public silliness was Bratislava with its collection of funny statues effectively designed for tourist engagement. Bratislava’s prominent bridge includes a UFO Restaurant on its tower – an unidentified flying object that seems to have settled in place.

Our final destination for this trip was the delightful city of Budapest in which I saw two funny instances of public art: a giant inflated moon and a bronze statue of a man holding chicken and an egg in the Great Market Hall. Budapest is also where I began to consider the sadder aspects of the cities through which we had traveled.

The saddest sights in several cities were beggars. America has nothing to be proud of in its abundance of poor and homeless people, often found begging on the street. However, I had never before seen anyone in full prostration, almost obeisance, posture while begging. I saw this abject begging posture in most cities during our European trip: men stretched at full length on the sidewalk with their hands cupped, or holding a hat, begging for a donation. I started to watch and unfortunately found it common. When I asked a local, they said the beggers were just looking for attention. Having worked for ten years with incarcerated persons who are frequently poor, homeless, and/or begging before or after their jail time, I found the self-abasing posture disturbing. I found articles about begging in the cities I visited which included pictures and more information.

The second saddest sight for me was beautiful but deteriorating buildings. When out of the well-cared-for central city areas, we sometimes saw notable examples of elegant architectural design and execution in advanced disrepair. Many of these old buildings would be cherished gems if they were in America but seem to have fallen to the combined attacks of war, neglect, poverty, and lack of maintenance funds. Below are four magnificent Art Nouveau images of women representing the seasons, on the crumbling facade of an apartment building. I was glad to find a Hungarian article indicating that this trend of architectural deterioration in not locally acceptable.

Street iron is not limited by geography as a form of civic expression of pride and identity. I saw this manhole cover here in the San Francisco Bay Area yesterday.

Images (c) Copyright 2025 by Katy Dickinson. If you want to receive Katysblog posted by email, please sign up using the Sign Me Up! field (upper right on Katysblog home page).

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Tasting History Cruise

John and I just returned from a Danube River cruise on the AmaMagna ship of AmaWaterways. We were with a group of about sixty put together by Max Miller of Tasting History (working with Travel Advisor Ruth Walker) celebrating both our 25th wedding anniversary and my finishing my doctorate. We flew into Prague and spent a few days there before joining the ship in Vilshofen in Germany.

We enjoyed eating our way across the Czech Republic, Germany, Austria, Slovakia, and Hungary. Meal venues included the Black Madonna cubist style restaurant in Prague and a historic sausage kitchen in Regensburg (built in 1135 CE). We ate Linzertorte in Linz and Sachertorte in Vienna. Our best meals were lunch at the Deco style Authentic Cafe in Český Krumlov, and a final dinner at the Monk’s Bistrot in Budapest.

We celebrated Halloween with a costume party on the ship and watched a new Tasting History episode with Max Miller himself in the ship’s theater. We very much enjoyed sailing through the Wachau Valley full of castles, including the Dürnstein Castle, where King Richard I of England was held captive (1192-1193 CE). We even spent an afternoon at the Széchenyi thermal baths in Budapest. It was a trip full of delights!

Images (c) Copyright 2025 by Katy Dickinson. If you want to receive Katysblog posted by email, please sign up using the Sign Me Up! field (upper right on Katysblog home page).

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25th Wedding Anniversary

My husband John Plocher and I celebrated our 25th wedding anniversary on 4 July 2025 with an Amtrak train ride from San Jose to Sacramento, California, to visit the California Railway Museum and have dinner on the Delta King paddlewheel riverboat. We will be taking another trip later this month, a Danube River Cruise with AmaWaterways, to celebrate our anniversary and my doctorate. We are looking forward to the big trip!

Images (c) Copyright 2025 by Katy Dickinson. If you want to receive Katysblog posted by email, please sign up using the Sign Me Up! field (upper right on Katysblog home page).

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It’s Doctor

I was graduated with my Doctor of Ministry degree from the Graduate Theological Union‘s Berkeley School of Theology on 17 May 2025 – Hooray! I was surprised and honored at the graduation to be awarded BST’s Keith A. Russell Award for Prophetic Leadership in Community Ministry. My husband John, brothers Mark and Peter my Sister-in-Law Julie, daughter Jessica, Son-in-Law Matthew, grandson Alex, Son Paul, and friends Laura and Barbara were able to join the celebrations. It was a delight to have a cheering team. We graduates enjoyed taking pictures with our advisors and each other (especially the BST Student Council for which I have been the Vice Moderator for the last two years). I am continuing to take classes with GTU’s Center for Islamic Studies.

Images (c) Copyright 2025 by Katy Dickinson. If you want to receive Katysblog posted by email, please sign up using the Sign Me Up! field (upper right on Katysblog home page).

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Here am I; send me!

For most of my life, I have served as a lector in church. That is, I am one of those who regularly reads the holy scriptures assigned for the day during our weekly worship services. On 9 February 2025 at Saint Andrew’s Episcopal Church, I read the Old Testament passage, Isaiah 6:1-8, which includes a memorable description of angels (“each had six wings: with two they covered their faces, and with two they covered their feet, and with two they flew”) and concludes with, “Then I heard the voice of the Lord saying, “Whom shall I send, and who will go for us?” And I said, “Here am I; send me!” I love this passage because it is both a fascinating vision and a statement of vocation.

Variants of the phrase “Here am I; send me!” is in many places in the Bible, including, Genesis 22 (3 times), Genesis 27, Genesis 31, Genesis 37, Genesis 46, 1 Samuel 3 (5 times), 1 Samuel 12, 1 Samuel 14, 1 Samuel 22, 2 Samuel 15, Psalm 40, Isaiah 58, Isaiah 65 (twice), Jeremiah 26, Luke 1, Acts 9, 2 Corinthians 12, Tobit 2, Tobit 6, 1 Maccabees 6, and 2 Esdras 14. It is also the refrain of one of my favorite hymns, “Here I Am, Lord,” by Dan Schutte and St. Louis Jesuits (1981),

I, the Lord of sea and sky,
I have heard my people cry.
All who dwell in dark and sin
My hand will save.
I, who made the stars of night,
I will make their darkness bright.
Who will bear my light to them?
Whom shall I send?

Here I am, Lord.
Is it I, Lord?
I have heard you calling in the night.
I will go, Lord,
if you lead me.
I will hold your people in my heart.

I think of Isaiah 6:1-8 whenever I am lucky enough to visit the magnificent Hagia Sophia in Istanbul. Under the dome are four large paintings of six winged angels soaring over the immense and ancient worship space. When I was there last in 2024, I bought a scarf featuring an abstract painting of the dome and angels.

Last night in Elmwood jail, John Plocher and I were discussing the concept of vocation with our weekly class – and of course we discussed Isaiah 6:1-8. Some of the inmates felt a vocation for art or music or sports but many of them are still considering what God is calling them to do in their lives. John and I have just finished a four month term using the “Transforming Literature of the Bible” course on the Christian Testament. Next week is movie night and the guys voted to watch “War Horse.” In two weeks, we will start the next Hebrew Bible term and I will be asking them to notice every time someone says, “Here am I; send me!”

Images (c) 2024-2025 by Katy Dickinson. If you want to receive Katysblog posts by email, please sign up using the Sign Me Up! button (upper right on Katysblog home).

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