aruba
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In Memorium: Grexer Valerie Mates
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Jan 10 22:15 UTC 2004 |
This is a eulogy for Valerie Mates the Grexer. Valerie the person is
very much still alive, of course, but Valerie the Grexer has passed.
I have a lot of grief (and anger) over her passing, so I decided to
write this eulogy.
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I first heard about Grex in April, 1992. My roommate Paul brought
home a newsletter from The People's Food Coop in Ann Arbor which had a
little article about Grex in it. (I learned later that Valerie had
written the article.) I had a computer and a 1200 baud modem, so I
tried Grex out. I chose the login "mark".
I was only on a few times as "mark" - for whatever reason, it didn't
really stick. I don't remember much except noticing that there were
women on Grex, which was encouraging to me. And one woman in
particular.
In March of 1994 I was starting a new life, having quit grad school
the year before, bummed around for a while, and then started a new job
as a programmer. I had no social group, and I have never been very
comfortable meeting people. So I remembered Grex, where you could
take your time over your responses, and where people seemed friendly.
When I ran newuser again and it asked me for a login name, I sat and
thought for a long while. I decided I wanted something happy
sounding, because I remembered a woman who had the login "popcorn"
when I logged in before. To me, popcorn sounds bouncy, happy -
lively. I had a map of the U.S. on the wall above my computer, and
the Caribbean was just above my field of vision as I looked at the
monitor. I remembered a happy time I'd had at a party called "Aruba
Night" when I was in college. Hundreds of people have called me aruba
ever since.
I first met Valerie in person on April 30th, 1994, which happened to
be her 28th birthday. That was the first time I walked with the
Grexwalkers. She looked just about the way I had pictured her, I
think; though it's hard to say now what I pictured. But there was
this five-foot-tall person with a big smile who seemed to be the
center of attention. She had black hair with a few strands of gray.
I remember her seeing something interesting (I don't remember what it
was now) and sprinting 50 feet to get to it, she was so excited. I
think maybe I fell in love with her right then.
For most of the next few years, Valerie represented, to me, the
essence of what Grex was. Friendly, above all. Not in need of strict
rules. Welcoming of differences. And excited about life. These were
all things that were lacking in my life up to that point, and I was
thoroughly taken with them.
There are a number of qualities necessary to make any human endeavor
work. Good planning. Discipline. Attention to detail. Caring.
Thoughtfulness. Determination. Different people can provide
different parts of the puzzle.
Valerie, it seemed to me, provided excitement for Grex. The joie de
vivre. A couple of years after I met her I wrote a piece about being
"alive" that might be the thing of which I am most proud. (You can
find it in the archives conference, item 13.) I'm sure I couldn't
have written that if I had never known Valerie.
Valerie is able to make things happen. Since being a founder of Grex
she has gone on to spearhead a number of other groups and initiatives.
She has a gift for starting new things. I guess the flip side is that
she's not as good at leaving the old ones.
No one should forget, though, that Valerie also gave extreme
dedication to Grex. Throughout Grex's existence, Valerie has done an
immense (and I mean immense) amount of work for the system, most of it
unheralded. She used to sign emails as "Grex janitor", which was
extremely appropriate, since she mostly cleaned up after people, and
got little attention or respect for it.
I remember going out to dinner after a board meeting once - or maybe
it was after we moved Grex to the Dungeon. There were about six of
us, and Valerie was the only woman. She sat in the middle of the
table, and it seemed to me that she was in the center of everything
else, too. I guess that was my bias. But it seemed that we all loved
her.
Of course, there were always conflicts. Valerie doesn't like a lot of
rules, and this occasionally meant she ran afoul of people who need a
lot of them to live. She's an extremely nonjudgemental person, which
means she had trouble dealing with people who *are* judgemental. As
Grex acquired more and more of those people, she found it more
frustrating and less rewarding.
But the real change came when Arlo was born. No one in the world
would fault a mother for putting her children first in her life - none
of us ever have. But, of course, that meant that Grex was the loser.
Valerie continued to put in lots of time doing staff work right up
until last week, but she stopped participating much in the conferences
after 1998, and that was a huge blow to Grex. I've always thought
that the only thing which has kept Grex from devolving into a steady
stream of insults is a small group of reasonable people who work hard
to challenge the assumption that such a state is inevitable. Valerie
always topped my list of those people.
The loss of her then surprised me, I must say. I never imagined Grex
without Valerie.
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jep
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response 8 of 93:
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Jan 11 03:34 UTC 2004 |
I met Valerie at a JCC Colossal Computer Sale meeting, shortly after
Grex was started. I was with Arbornet; I'd known Valerie as "popcorn"
on-line on M-Net but never met her in person. I used to get
invitations to the December 31, 1999 New Year's Eve party each year,
but that was several years before 1999.
Things were a bit on the tense side between some M-Netters and some
Grexers in those days. Grex was this little startup with about 50
users, and M-Net was the big dog. Almost all of the Grexers were ex-M-
Netters, including all of their founders. Grex was a reaction to the
Dave Parks ownership period of M-Net; an attempt to run a conferencing
system in a community governed sort of way.
At the JCC sale, we kind of avoided one another for the first part of
the day, as I recall it. STeve Andre was with the Grex side, and Jim
Knight and I were on the M-Net side. Mike Bernson had wandered
through, and said hello to both sides; he never cared about politics.
A few others from on-line had come through as well, and probably fled
from both of our tables to avoid getting tangled up.
M-Net had an enormous pile of HP terminals that had been donated to us
from Medstat, and Grex had some anonymous expansion cards and the
like. We were both making money, and we both needed it desperately.
At some point, someone decided it was time to break the ice between M-
Net and Grex, but I don't recall who. We talked stiffly for a little
while, we would have all gone our separate ways shortly, but then
something else happened. What I recall most sharply is this young
woman came in just *bouncing* all over the place. She couldn't stand
still, it seemed. Or stop talking. She just *blasted* exuberance all
over the place. I don't know if we were introduced, but it was clear
who she was. I described her on one system or the other, in an item
about introducing someone else, as being very popcorn-like. There was
just no imaginable way she could have been anyone else.
I remember her for her attempt to implement a unit of not-quite-
currency on Grex which was called "mathom". (M-Net has gribblies,
which are distinctly currency, though they've never been used to buy
anything.) I never understood "mathom". It wasn't "mathoms". It
wasn't in units.
If you've ever used figlet... Valerie brought it here. It's a way to
use ASCII art to create larger characters. It's still here; there are
different fonts, but the only one I've seen used in years is from
aruba.
There was this huge collaborative funding effort between Arbornet,
Grex and the Huron Valley Community Network; it was called WINS, and
it was intended to bring a big old computer networking grant to Ann
Arbor. HVCN hadn't been incorporated yet; Grex wasn't a 501(c)(3)
yet. It was Valerie who brought it together. I spent a fair amount
of time working with her on it. I also brought the news to a WINS
meeting that Arbornet pulled out of it. It ruined the project... as
far as I can tell, Valerie is one of the few people involved who never
blamed me for doing this. (Then she and mdw, and HVCN tried to put
together another proposal at a late date. It failed, but they tried.)
My password expired at two separate points; I hadn't logged in for a
half year or so. Each time it happened, I mailed "staff@grex.org" a
request to reset it, and each time, Valerie was the one who
responded. Not just to set my password, saying "of course we know
it's you", but making it exceedingly clear I was welcomed back.
I, too, am going to greatly miss Valerie. I'm reeling with the loss
to Grex. I've already e-mailed her, twice saying that she can always
come back. I surely do hope she does. Maybe after a little time
passes, she will.
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richard
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response 11 of 93:
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Jan 11 04:22 UTC 2004 |
And one thing I remember from years back was Valerie starting a chain
reaction where a bunch of people changed their logins from whatever
they were to their real names. It was just a thing to do at the time,
like maybe it made your posts more real or something if you used your
real name as your login. One day "Popcorn" started posting as "Valerie"
and suddenly other users followed in suit and started using their real
names. Grex's "reality" phase. That was when I changed from "Kerouac"
to "Richard" I figured if people want to be their actual names for
their logins, well that isn't a bad thing, and if Valerie is
being "Valerie" now, well it must be a real trend.
It got confusing actually, because at that time there were three active
Valeries on grex-- Val (Valerie Szopko), BlondVal (Brighn's wife, I
don't remember her last name but she was the blonde Valerie), and
Valerie. Now all the Valeries are gone. There are no more Valeries on
Grex. :(
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