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Showing posts from May, 2025

Plate of the Plague: A Microbial Tango with the Microscopic World

      As I lay here in the night, with the devilish blue light twinging against my aching eyes, I feel a great heat emanating from my forever partner. I hear a deep sigh rattle out of him, and I feel the movement of his body as he reaches for tissue, one after another. He is incapacitated. Stuck and melodramatic in my eyes.   I cannot understand it. He calls it the "Man Flu."      What makes it any more different if a man has it versus a woman? I have gone through various lengths, stretching my head as if it were malleable putty, just so I may be able to wrap my mind around it. Alas, I am just as incapacitated as he. Stuck. I do not understand this illness.      All around my feet, it circles—and then it sits. Like an obedient dog, it begs the question from me: Do men feel illness worse than women?      It came as soon as it went. Guilt. I cannot imagine such theatrics from something as mild as a head cold or a sniff...

Plate of Reverence: Witnessing my First Powwow and the Culture it Honors

       It’s an odd feeling. On the brink of excitement and nervousness. Teetering back and forth like a pendulum. Ignoring the laws of Newton as I force myself to stay in the middle. Unwavering. In between, yet imbalanced.      So many questions rush through my head as I am about to attend my first Powwow. After a night of searching for proper etiquette and wondering whether I have the right clothes, I can’t find answers within myself. Do I bring cash or card, or both? How much do I buy to show respect? What if they know I’m an outsider? What if… What if… What if.      As much as I am excited, this is my first real experience with embracing a culture that I do not embody. I can’t help but ruminate over the thought that I might do it ‘wrong’. How do you observe a culture wrong? What if I call her Auntie but she’s actually Cousin? What if I don’t call her anything? Am I even allowed to call her that?      A flurry of t...

Plate of Unearthing: Dig a Little Deeper and Maybe You Too Will Understand

As I’m reading Fahrenheit 451, I’m finding it difficult to get into the book. I’m constantly surrounded by sound and technology. There isn’t a moment in my day where the world is quiet and when I do happen to find it for a brief second, I fall asleep and restart the day chasing that moment again. I suppose there is a lesson to be learned here. It’s ironic if you think about it. This story isn’t a speed read. It’s shorter than other books I’ve read. It’s comprised of an archaic world that no longer follows their inherent rules. The prose is theatrical and amusing. And even I find that difficult to digest. I think it’s written this way for a reason. You have to sift through the uninvited amusement, like putting sand through a sieve, hoping that if you look hard enough maybe you will understand Mr. Bradbury’s words are a little deeper. The world around him. The match that lights the books back.  This reminds me of anthropology in a way. More specifically archaeology. You are constantl...

Why This Matters

  As cultures shift, disappear, and evolve, I believe it’s vital to preserve the pieces — especially those that might otherwise go overlooked. We are always preserving something — language, recipes, relics, rituals. In a world obsessed with speed, I want to slow down and ask: Why do we hold onto this? Where did it come from? Who were we before we forgot? Anthropology gives us the tools to ask those questions. Psychology tells us why we ask them. This blog gives me the space to feel them. The Preservation Plate is my way of honoring them and bringing them to life again. In a therapeutic way to deal with what we can't control.

What You'll Find Here

  Short essays of reflection from everyday life in relation to anthropological history Personal reflections on memory, preservation, and culture Spotlights on emerging psychology and their stories Thought pieces connecting archival practice to holistic healing If you’re curious about how everyday — a plate, a pot, a pie — can tell the story of a person, you’re in the right place.

About Me

  I’m currently earning a BS in Anthropology with a minor in Psychology and certification in Evolutionary Medicine from Arizona State University. From there, I’ll be pursuing my journey to nursing school to become a helping hand for the people. To heal and to understand through shared experiences and tangible care. I’m especially interested in: Cooking/Baking Holistic Healing Lego Building Healthy habits Lifelong Learning Reading Songwriting and Singing Many people find themselves a specialist in certain fields. Many prefer to blindly go through the motions. — I'm not here just to conduct research, but to build a bridge between people and their curiosity. I am the thread and I am the weaver. I serve as a guide and a trusted friend. So let's pass the plate, because I'm hungry for more information!

About the Preservation Plate

  Welcome to The Preservation Plate — a blog where anthropology, memory, and material culture meet. Here, I explore the ways people preserve meaning, identity, and knowledge across generations — through short stories about the daily human experience. This blog unearths the moments, objects, and cultural habits — both ancient and modern — that nourish our sense of self and belonging. It also contains an insightful introspective nature. Here, preservation isn’t just about food. It’s about: The habits we can't seem to let go The memories that we ruminate The itch in the corner of our minds The stories and objects we pass down and barely question Through reflections on books, holidays, food, and everyday experiences, I explore the threads that tie us to the past — and the meaning we make in the present. Whether it’s a dandelion fossil in a Neanderthal’s tooth or a fading Christmas star in the corner of a living room, The Preservation Plate is about honoring the beaut...