Skip to primary content
Skip to secondary content

Boulder Community Media – BCM

Creating the New Creative Economy One Story at a Time

Boulder Community Media – BCM

Main menu

  • Home
  • Services and Work Samples
    • Teaching
    • Fiscal Agency
  • About – Boulder Community Media
  • Best Chance Media
    • Meet Besty Bot
  • Get Books & Films
    • Retail
  • About – Alan O’Hashi
  • Donate to BCM
  • Meet Alan Bot
  • First Website
  • Contact BCM Now!
  • Privacy
  • Newsletter Archive
    • Newsletter 2025

Category Archives: BCM Newsletter

Post navigation

← Older posts
Newer posts →

My Cheyenne Frontier Days 5 life phases – ‘Bedpan! Bedpan!’

Posted on July 22, 2025 by Alan O’Hashi, Whole Brain Thinker
Reply

There’s something special about friends you’ve known since kindergarten, those bonds forged before life got complicated. For me, those friendships were built not just in classrooms, but on hay wagons and behind parade floats during Cheyenne Frontier Days. Going on 70 years later, we’re still connected through memories, tradition, and Cheyenne Day reunions.

I’d ridden in the parade before as an elementary school-aged kid. My mom was a member of the X-JWC (Ex-Junior Women’s Club), which sponsored a singing group called the Dearies, consisting of her fellow club members.

The X-JWC entered a float in the Cheyenne Frontier Days (CFD) Parade. All the Dearies had kids – Murrays, St. Clairs, Nichols, Lummises – and we all hung together during the summer, including during the construction of the annual float. My dad, who worked for Coca-Cola, provided a flatbed trailer that he hauled over to the Lummis’s barn.

I don’t recall any of the dads helping out much, except to attach the chicken wire skirt around the trailer. The kids weren’t very tall, and we were the best at stuffing white napkins through the wire.

This was before electric pianos, so the Dearies had to belt out a cappella, their old time classics like Five Foot Two, Eyes of Blue, and Jadda, Jadda, Jadda Jadda Jing Jing Jing.

The moms brought us kids to the parade. Most of us rode the entry-level hay wagons. Back then, nobody minded gender identifying stereotypes. That was an initiation for kids to get involved with CFD.

The boys dressed up in their cowboy duds – hats, jeans, boots, maybe a bolo tie and western belt.

The girls wore long dresses, ribbons in their hair, and bonnets. The boys were instructed to be boisterous and yell “Hee Haw!” while the girls carried hankies and politely waved them at the crowd.

I grew out of selling pop at the parade and honed my social chops working at the Hitching Post. My next CFD phase was riding a wagon in the parades.

My CFD friends and I have kept in touch after all these years. That’s one of the good things about living in a relatively small town. We attended the same neighborhood schools and progressed through the grades together.

Our elementary schools fed into the same junior high school, which in turn fed into the high school. We are still in touch during Cheyenne Day, which is on Wednesday during Frontier Week.

3. High School Parade Rides:  One of my East High School classmates, named Janice Benton, had the pull to get me and my friends into the parade.

Her mom was a volunteer on the CFD Parade Committee, and for three summers through high school, we rode in the horse-drawn field ambulance wagon.

Janice dressed up as a Civil War nurse, and two guys moaned in pain with bandaged limbs hanging out of the windows. My crew over the three parade days comprised Jan, Eddie Frye (pictured in full regalia), and Tad Leeper.

We had messy jugs of red-colored water and let it run out of the corners of our mouths – pretty graphic for a family-friendly CFD, but the crowd loved it.

We also had this “bedpan” schtick, but I don’t need to go into any of the details about that!

We didn’t know it then, but all those summers of float-building, hayrides, and CFD antics created more than just parade entries. They created lifelong connections. Every Cheyenne Day, we pick up where we left off, as if no time has passed at all. That’s the magic of small towns, old friends, and staying rooted in your past.

If you have questions or comments, message the ALAN-BCM BOT. We learn more and more every day!

Go back

Your message has been sent

Warning
Warning
Warning
Warning

Warning.

Share this:

  • Share
  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
  • Click to email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
  • Click to print (Opens in new window) Print
  • Click to share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit
  • Click to share on Tumblr (Opens in new window) Tumblr

Like this:

Like Loading...
Posted in BCM News, BCM Newsletter | Tagged cfd, cheyenne, days, frontier, parade, reunion, wyoming | Leave a reply

My Cheyenne Frontier Days 5 life phases – Learning about jerks at an early age

Posted on July 20, 2025 by Alan O’Hashi, Whole Brain Thinker
Reply

Cheyenne Frontier Days was more than just a celebration of cowboy culture—it was where I began to learn how the world really worked.

By junior high, I had graduated from selling pop on the streets to bussing tables at the Hitching Post Inn, Cheyenne’s busiest spot during CFD. Ironically, after the HP was condemned, it was torched by its owners.

It was there, under the glare of neon signs and cigarette smoke, that I got my first hard lesson in human nature—and racism. I didn’t have the vocabulary for it back then, but I knew what it felt like.

All businesses either make or break their year based on their CFD trade. The hotels jack up their prices, which is understandable. Cheyenne becomes a destination for rodeo fans or those who have CFD on their list of things to do before they die. CFD is akin to what the 10-day-long Sundance Film Festival will mean for Boulder.

The Hitching Post Inn was a conference and convention center that was always busy. It was the Wyoming State Legislature headquarters.

Even more so during CFD. When I was in junior high school, my first job was working as a busboy there during the summers of 1966 to 1968. It gave me an early education about human nature. I hadn’t run into as many jerks and a$$holes as I did during those days and nights at the Hitch.

The night show entertainment at the CFD arena has become the big draw these days. CFD numbers are up, not because of the rodeo, but because of the party atmosphere promoted during CFD. The standing room seats are the primo tickets and a party zone for young people who think hamburger comes from the grocery store.

The world needs more cowboys.

Back in the good old days, the popular shows were family acts like Doc and Festus from “Gunsmoke” and the chuck wagon races. They don’t do those anymore either due to liability issues.

Being a Cheyenne native, some people are surprised to learn that my family and I were city people and didn’t get much into the rodeo part of Frontier Days.

2. Learning Human Nature at an Early Age: My first shifts at the Hitching Post were during the day in the coffee shop. Most days it was busy, but during CFD, the place was packed with a waiting line that extended onto the sidewalk outside.

“Hey Hopsing!” I heard from a guy from Texas with a bad mustache, wearing a polyester, brownish herringbone western-cut jacket. At first, I didn’t know what he was talking about until he yelled it again, pointing at me. “Can ya bring me more cowfee!”

This was the first time I had ever been overtly berated based on my race. It took me by surprise because I was Japanese, not Chinese, like the Cartwright’s stereotypical servant from the Bonanza TV show.

Lorne Greene, who played Ben Cartwright, performed his one hit Johnny Ringo at CFD at a night show in 1970.

That moment has stuck with me and influenced my work today, which includes writing books, such as Views from Beyond Metropolis, and creating documentary films, including Beyond Sand Creek and Beyond Heart Mountain, with a focus on cultural competency themes. Additionally, I create safe spaces where diverse communities can read my books, watch my movies, and come together to discuss important issues.

As I became more experienced, my favorite shifts during CFD were 7 pm to 3 am and 11 pm to 7 am. There was always plenty of action for a 14-year-old kid running booze and glasses to the smoke-filled Hitching Post Coach Rooms for the Sons of the Pioneers Show, shooting the breeze with fun-seeking cowboys and their girlfriends at the counter in the coffee shop.

During the day, I delivered room service to the lounge singer named Jody Miller. She was a one-hit wonder. She climbed the charts with Queen of the House,  a remake of Roger Miller’s King of the Road.

I was in Phoenix Books and Music when it was still owned by Don McKee, and noticed a record by Jody Miller. The only other famous person I met was Victor Jory, who sat at the coffee shop counter in a tan safari jacket, smoking cigarettes.

Just before sunrise one morning, another busboy named Mark Samansky – God rest his soul – and I went into the Coach Rooms.

Mark played the drum solo from Iron Butterfly’s “In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida”. I don’t think the boss – Kenny Ahlm – ever figured out who was making all the racket. The drum solo begins at 6:29 of the music video. I kept in touch with Mark until he graduated from high school. He was a few years older than I, and we lost contact.

He, not surprisingly, went into radio broadcasting as a well-known DJ in Florida and Denver. He died a few years ago.

That one moment—being called “Hop Sing” by a customer who saw only my race—never left me. It cracked open a lifelong awareness that eventually shaped my work in film, writing, and community-building.

Today, I create spaces where people can confront those same biases, build cultural bridges, and speak across differences. I didn’t ask to learn that lesson at age 14, but I carry it with me still, from the Coach Rooms of the Hitching Post to every story I tell.

If you have questions or comments, message the ALAN-BCM BOT. We learn more and more every day!

Go back

Your message has been sent

Warning
Warning
Warning
Warning

Warning.

Share this:

  • Share
  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
  • Click to email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
  • Click to print (Opens in new window) Print
  • Click to share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit
  • Click to share on Tumblr (Opens in new window) Tumblr

Like this:

Like Loading...
Posted in BCM Movies, BCM News, BCM Newsletter, Books | Tagged cheyenne, cultural competency, days, diversity, frontier, racism, rodeo, sundance, wyoming | Leave a reply

My Cheyenne Frontier Days 5 life phases – Entrepreneurship at a young age

Posted on July 19, 2025 by Alan O’Hashi, Whole Brain Thinker
Reply

Before I knew what “entrepreneur” meant, I was hauling red wagons of Shurfine soda along the Cheyenne Frontier Days (CFD) parade route. The image features me, my sister, Lori, and our friend Carol Lou posing before heading to a CFD activity.

That side hustle as a sixth grader taught me more about business than any textbook ever could.

Growing up in Cheyenne, CFD wasn’t just a rodeo and huge crowds, it was a rite of passage. For me, that passage started in grade school with a red wagon, a stash of off-brand pop, and hot asphalt in front of the parade-goers along the route.

I didn’t know it then, but that scrappy little side hustle was the beginning of my entrepreneurial spirit. Long before I understood words like “margin” or “market demand,” I understood this: people were thirsty, and I had something to sell.

Phase I – Parade Pop Sales: When I was in the sixth and seventh grades, one of my golfing pals, Pat, my sister Lori, and cousin Matthew from Salt Lake City sold ice-cold pop along the parade routes. My family was heavily involved with CFD. My sister and I are pictured getting ready to ride in one of the parades. Sitting in the hay wagon on a straw bale gave me my first look at CFD as a participant. From my perch, I noticed older kids pulling wagons and selling pop.

“I can do that,” I thought. My dad worked for Coca-Cola, and we could purchase products at a discount. Despite the wholesale price, I opted for a higher profit margin. Besides, thirsty parade-goers weren’t interested in brands. Coca-Cola did have bags of ice and cups. None of the other kids had those.

cfd alan lori

Two months ahead of time was spent hoarding all the cheap off-brand sodas, such as Shurfine and Cragmont, to sell at each of the three parades that wound through downtown Cheyenne.

They just wanted something wet and cold. This was well before bottled water. I think it was before flip tops, and we had to open them using a can opener.

In our first year, we ran out of pop and wasted at least half an hour running over to Brannen’s Market on Carey Avenue, which is now a Wyoming state government office.

During subsequent years, three red wagons were dispatched, and cars with additional supplies were strategically parked along the parade route. My cousin saved the bag of loose change from his first take as a reminder of his first entrepreneurial project. I wonder if he still has it.

These days, kids must obtain a permit and be accompanied by an adult. Plus, there is no selling in the street in front of potential customers, only on the sidewalk behind them.

Sheesh – talk about overregulation.

Looking back, selling Shurfine soda from a wagon might seem trivial. The lessons were lasting: prepare ahead, work as a team, and always stay close to your customer. It was my first taste of hustle, and it stuck with me.

As you think back on your own childhood, what lit your fire? What small moment—maybe overlooked at the time—nudged you toward the person you’ve become? Sometimes, it’s not the big milestones, but the hot July mornings with sticky fingers and jingling pockets of change that shape us most.

If the world needs more cowboys, maybe it also needs more kids who get their start selling pop at a parade.

Share this:

  • Share
  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
  • Click to email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
  • Click to print (Opens in new window) Print
  • Click to share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit
  • Click to share on Tumblr (Opens in new window) Tumblr

Like this:

Like Loading...
Posted in BCM News, BCM Newsletter | Tagged cfd, cheyenne, cowboy, days, entrepreneur, frontier, parade, rodeo, wyoming | Leave a reply

Why I’m a Cat Person: Or How the Moon Came to Life in Boulder

Posted on July 17, 2025 by Alan O’Hashi, Whole Brain Thinker
Reply

WordPress suggests writing prompts. Today – Dogs or cats?

I didn’t choose the cat life. The cat life chose me. Specifically, a fluffy Siberian Forest was wandering down Colfax Avenue in Denver like some kind of mystical furball hitchhiker.

Let me back up.

Six months earlier, I’d climbed off my deathbed (yes, the actual kind with the dramatic lighting and everything), and apparently, the universe thought, “What this guy needs now is a four-legged enigma with a regal tail and zero regard for human schedules.”

A friend rescued the cat that was foraging at the restaurant where she worked. They brought her over and she’s been judging my life choices ever since the June 2014 Full Moon from the window sills and atop the fridge and step ladders.

Now don’t get me wrong. I grew up in a dog household. Waggy tails, bigger personalities, endless games of fetch, and smells that defy science. I love dogs. I respect dogs. But as an adult? I like naps, autonomy, and furniture that isn’t chewed beyond recognition.

Cats are basically introverted roommates who pay rent in headbutts and purrs. Dogs, bless their wiggly hearts, are needy toddlers with a bark button.

They want to be in your lap, your car, your soul. Cats? Moon will look at me and say, “You may approach me… but only if you’ve recently opened a can.”

Moon is primarily an indoor cat and doesn’t require daily walks. She doesn’t whine at the door. She doesn’t bark at Amazon deliveries. She simply is. Like a Buddha with whiskers and a mysterious past.

And after coming back from the brink of death, I wasn’t ready for a high-maintenance commitment. I needed soft purring. She’s not a lap cat, bit likes occasional attention. She’s low-drama, high-fluff, and suspicious of everyone but me (most days).

So yes, I’m a cat person. Because Moon wandered in like a cosmic gift on Colfax Avenue, dogs are wonderful, but cats are survival partners with fur.

Share this:

  • Share
  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
  • Click to email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
  • Click to print (Opens in new window) Print
  • Click to share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit
  • Click to share on Tumblr (Opens in new window) Tumblr

Like this:

Like Loading...
Posted in BCM News, BCM Newsletter | Tagged cats, dailyprompt, dailyprompt-2002, dogs | Leave a reply

Superman, Slurpees, and the Art of Showing Up

Posted on July 14, 2025 by Alan O’Hashi, Whole Brain Thinker
Reply

Superman has been my hero since childhood, not just for his strength or ability to fly, but because he stood up for the underdog, the outsider, the marginalized. His story runs through the heart of my memoir, Views from Beyond Metropolis, as both a metaphor and a moral compass.

So when the new Superman movie hit the big screen, I caught a RealD 3D screening. What happened before, during, and after reminded me that even the most iconic heroes sometimes play to a nearly empty house.

By the time the movie finally started, after 30 minutes of trailers and commercials, there were only eight people left in the theater.

The movie? Solid. A high-level noisy story with plenty of comic-book camp and a darker, more grown-up tone. More cursing, more open-mouthed making out, and quite a bit of monster-and-robot smashing. Only one human casualty, though the collateral cyborg damage was massive.

Not really a preteen-friendly flick, but enjoyable for fans of the character or the genre. Superman still carries the weight of hope and idealism, even in a world that looks a lot rougher around the edges.

What stuck with me wasn’t the film, but the contrast between that nearly empty theater and what was happening at my go-to 7-Eleven at Valmont and Folsom, where July 11th, aka 7-Eleven Day, was in full swing. People lined up for the store’s famous giveaway: a free Slurpee.

Not for me this year. When I pulled into the parking lot, a few hand-scrawled signs taped to the doors declared “Slurpees are out,” a small but crushing blow to me after braving the summer heat for a brain freeze on the house.

The juxtaposition felt symbolic.

On the one hand, a nearly empty theater screening a high-budget, high-concept retelling of one of America’s oldest pop culture icons. On the other hand, a jammed convenience store gives away a small cup of frozen sugar water. Priorities, right?

A Brief History of the Slurpee: The Slurpee has a storied past. It originated in the late 1950s when Omar Knedlik, a Kansas Dairy Queen owner, started serving partially frozen sodas after his soda fountain broke.

The icy concoctions became so popular that he commissioned a machine to replicate the effect.  In 1960, Knedlik partnered with an engineer to build the machine commercially, and The Icee Company was born. These machines began appearing in convenience stores across the nation.

In 1965, 7-Eleven struck a licensing deal with The Icee Company to sell the drinks. As part of the agreement, 7-Eleven couldn’t use the “Icee” name.

So, they rebranded it as the Slurpee (named after the slurping sound) and gave it their own flavors, branding, and promotions. That’s why Icee and Slurpee drinks look the same, taste similar, and use basically the same machines.

Since then, the Slurpee has been a summer staple and a cultural icon. It’s colorful, nostalgic, and always predictable, except on 7-Eleven Day.

Superheroes and Slurpees: As a long-time Superman fan, I couldn’t help but notice the parallels. Superman is a symbol of American timeless idealism and resilience, but is taken for granted. The Slurpee, in its own way, is a symbol too: of cheap thrills, childhood summers, and the small joys that still matter.

The takeaway? Maybe it’s this: sometimes the big, bold stories play to nearly empty rooms, while the little rituals—the free Slurpees, and other everyday traditions are what draw the crowd.

Maybe it’s just that you never know what you’re going to get when you walk through a door. Could be Superman. Could be a hand-scrawled “All Out“ sign.

Either way, show up. You might be surprised.

A Cold Ironic Truth: Here’s one last twist to the day. Before heading into Theater 6 for the nearly empty Superman screening, I noticed that the Cinemark concession stand sold high-priced Icees. I skipped in favor of water to wash down my medium overpriced popcorn, anticipating the free Slurpee. 

It’s a dialectic. On one hand, six bucks might be worth it when you consider the air-conditioned theater. On the other hand, you get handed a paper cup with a plastic dome lid and a twisty straw for free, unless the 7-Eleven is out.

That’s some delicious irony.

The day ended up feeling like a case study in American priorities: a big-budget superhero film playing to a nearly empty room, and a convenience store swamped with people looking for a free cup of frozen sugar water, only to walk away empty-handed.

We still show up for the things we care about, even if we leave disappointed. Whether it’s the enduring appeal of Superman or the nostalgic pull of a Slurpee on a hot July day, we chase these experiences because they remind us of who we are, or who we used to be.

When the machine is broken or the crowd is small, the story’s still worth telling.

The things that matter most don’t come with long lines or loud applause. Superman reminded me, once again, that showing up, speaking up, and standing firm still count, even when no one’s watching. Maybe especially then.

If Superman or Slurpees meant something to you growing up, or still do, check out my memoir, Views from Beyond Metropolis.

Click here to get your copy today!

His story is woven into mine, from childhood to the present, as a symbol of hope, justice, and resilience. If you’ve ever felt like an outsider or stood up for someone who was, you might see yourself in these pages.

If you have questions or comments, message the ALAN-BCM BOT. We learn more and more every day!

Go back

Your message has been sent

Warning
Warning
Warning
Warning

Warning.

Share this:

  • Share
  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
  • Click to email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
  • Click to print (Opens in new window) Print
  • Click to share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit
  • Click to share on Tumblr (Opens in new window) Tumblr

Like this:

Like Loading...
Posted in BCM Movies, BCM News, BCM Newsletter | Tagged 3d, 7-eleven, american way, icee, slurpees, superhero, superman | Leave a reply

Riding the River: Reflections from the Big Thompson to Texas

Posted on July 13, 2025 by Alan O’Hashi, Whole Brain Thinker
Reply

Every now and then, I seem to have a brush with death, not because I have a death wish, but maybe to remind myself to stay grateful that I’m still on the right side of the grass. We’re approaching the 49th anniversary of the Big Thompson Flood and the 12th anniversary of the flood that inundated Boulder.

The Bible is full of disasters. Not just as warnings from on high, but as turning points when people had to set aside their differences and face something bigger than themselves.

When the flood came for Noah, survival meant togetherness: family, animals, the whole ark of creation. In Acts, Paul survives a shipwreck and an earthquake by the cooperation of sailors, soldiers, prisoners, and even a Roman jailer, all of whom were caught in the same storm.

Disaster doesn’t discriminate. That’s what it takes to bring people together who might never otherwise speak, help, or even acknowledge one another.

The Big Thompson Flood in 1976 was an experience that still haunts me. I’m lucky I wasn’t one of the 144 casualties. In light of the catastrophic, so-called “1,000-year flood” in Texas this year, I’ve been thinking a lot about what’s changed and what hasn’t.

The pundits and politicos are making the rounds, wagging fingers at budget cuts to the National Weather Service and FEMA. No doubt, gutting public infrastructure doesn’t help anyone. When a wall of water barrels down a canyon in the dead of night, no government agency or politician can move fast enough to outrun it.

Back in 1976, I spent the summer working with the National Park Service at Rocky Mountain National Park. I’d lucked into the job, thanks in part to a few letters of recommendation from former Colorado Congressman Wayne Aspinall, a gruff but fair-minded man I’d met during grad school in Wyoming.

I’d gone down to Cheyenne for Frontier Days, unable to resist the last weekend of “The Daddy of ’Em All.” Saturday night, July 31st, instead of crashing with my friends, I made the fateful decision to drive back through the Big Thompson Canyon so I’d be on time for my Sunday shift.

That drive nearly killed me.

A black layer of clouds over an orange band extended across the western horizon. By the time I reached the Narrows on U.S. Highway 34, I was the only vehicle heading west.

Everyone else was fleeing east.

A state trooper flagged me down, told me to turn around. He said something about “bad water” up ahead. I didn’t make it far before slamming into six inches of runoff that turned into a wall of water.

In seconds, I was surrounded. My Pinto was no match for the surreal surge of mud, uprooted trees, and natural gas tanks that floated.

It was like what Dorothy saw when carried away by the tornado in the Wizard of Oz. I’m pretty sure I saw Miss Gulch ride by on her bicycle with Toto, too.

A family in a car across from me floated over the edge and vanished downstream into the black.

Then fate intervened: a porta-potty got jammed against my bumper, nudging me toward the canyon wall instead of into the torrent.

I scrambled out the window, waded to higher ground, and was eventually picked up by a Highway Department truck. That night, I huddled with strangers at Rainbow Bend. I don’t even remember falling asleep.

By morning, the road was gone. The canyon was a war zone. The hillside was littered with dead fish, trailers, cars, and splintered timber. We heard the dam at Estes Park might break. Eventually, a Chinook helicopter airlifted us out.

I took a dry pair of socks and a cup of day-old coffee in a styrofoam cup from the Red Cross station in Loveland before I was driven to a friend’s house in Cheyenne.

The phone lines were down, and my parents had no way of knowing where I was. They drove from Laramie to Loveland, and I imagine the Red Cross had noted that I was driven to Cheyenne.

After the Big Thompson Flood, Colorado invested in better flood warning systems, maps, and plans.

We like to think we’re in control. That if we just budget better, fund better, and predict better, we’ll be safer. Natural disasters remind us that even the best planning is still a matter of guesswork. We can’t control the storm. But we can choose how we respond to it—and to each other.

Because floods don’t just wash away roads and houses. They strip away illusions. They collapse social walls. They reveal who we are when everything else is gone.

The Big Thompson Flood tore through a remote canyon in 1976, claiming lives in an area where few people lived year-round. Its violence was no less devastating, but its reach was constrained by the sparse population in a flood-prone landscape. In contrast, the recent Texas floods swept through densely populated neighborhoods never meant to withstand such relentless force.

The human cost was far greater.

After 1976, Colorado made significant strides in flood management, including the development of warning systems, drainage plans, and revised maps.

Yet, when floods returned to Northern Colorado in 2013, the water carved new paths that no one had anticipated. The humbling truth about disaster planning rests on the illusion of predictability.

I made a documentary about the 2013 post-flood cleanup efforts by Workforce Boulder County.

We draw new lines on maps, build dams, and write updated protocols, but nature has no obligation to follow them. Ultimately, preparedness is less about control and more about humility and an ongoing acknowledgment that we live at the mercy of forces far older and more powerful than ourselves.

The same thing happened in Kerr County in Texas, where so-called “1,000-year floods” engulfed more densely populated areas built on the assumption that nature would follow existing plans and models. There are 120 dead and 170 unaccounted. The Guadalupe River had previously overflowed its banks in 1987, killing 10 kids.

We’re still asking the same question: Why weren’t people warned?

It’s the wrong question.

Nature doesn’t care about weather models. It doesn’t wait for press conferences. We can throw all the money in the world at weather models, but there will always be events that happen too fast, too fierce, and too far outside the lines of prediction.

So here’s my takeaway:

We’ve got to stop pretending we can engineer our way out of disaster.

Instead, we need to build resilient communities and networks of neighbors who check on each other, establish evacuation routes that don’t rely on cell service, and cultivate a culture that takes preparedness seriously, not as an afterthought.

The next flood, tornado, or fire won’t care if it’s 3 a.m., or if you’ve stocked up on groceries, or if your kids are asleep upstairs.

It’s coming anyway.

I’m a gambling man who likes to hedge my bets, but when it comes to survival, it’s not about always hitting Soft 17, it’s about how well you plan, how fast you move, and who’s got your back.

If there’s one strange gift disasters leave in their wake, they bring people together who might otherwise never share a meal, a conversation, or even a glance.

Floodwaters don’t care about your politics, your skin color, or your tax bracket. When the sirens wail and the power’s out, neighbors knock on each other’s doors.

Strangers become lifelines.

It’s a divine paradox as old as time. The Bible is full of disasters that forced people to act collectively, to lean into faith and one another.

Noah’s flood gave rise to a new covenant. The Tower of Babel collapsed, scattering humanity and seeding diverse cultures and languages.

In those moments of crisis, the ordinary divisions collapse, and something more human emerges. Maybe that’s the hidden lesson behind the chaos: survival isn’t a solo act.

The New Testament, too, reminds us that disaster can strip away our walls and reveal what binds us. When Paul’s ship wrecked in Acts 27, it wasn’t rank or religion that saved the day, it was shared survival.

The prisoners, guards, and sailors all reached the shore together. When the prison shook in Acts 16, it was mercy, not muscle, that turned a Roman jailer into a follower of Christ. Crisis doesn’t just collapse buildings, it collapses barriers.

If you live in a flood-prone area, a tornado alley, or a place at risk for wildfires, even if you think you don’t, plan the best you can and know your neighbors and bridge the divides before the water does it for you.

Whether it’s a canyon in Colorado, a prison in Philippi, or a neighborhood in Texas, survival is never a solo act. If you wait for the sirens to blare before you decide to get organized, there may not be time to turn around.

My memoir, Views from Beyond Metropolis, tells that story and many others like it—moments when crisis revealed unexpected connections and the quiet power of human resilience. It’s also a guide for how we can start bridging the social, economic, and cultural divides before disaster forces us to.

Want a head start? Grab the book. Start the conversation. Build the bridge.

If you have questions or comments, message the ALAN-BCM BOT. We learn more and more every day!

Make a comment and join us!

Go back

Your message has been sent

Warning
Warning
Warning
Warning

Warning.

Share this:

  • Share
  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
  • Click to email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
  • Click to print (Opens in new window) Print
  • Click to share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit
  • Click to share on Tumblr (Opens in new window) Tumblr

Like this:

Like Loading...
Posted in BCM News, BCM Newsletter, Books | Tagged big thompson, boulder, bridge, cheyenne, colorado, community, cultural, diversity, divides, doge, economic, fema, flood, frontier days, maga, national weather service, noah, social, texas | Leave a reply

X-Ray Vision and Other Myths: Why Superman Was My Mentor, Even Though I Can Barely See the Big E on the Eye Chart!

Posted on July 8, 2025 by Alan O’Hashi, Whole Brain Thinker
Reply

We all grow up with myths that guide us. Some wear capes. Some live next door. Others disappear from the map. When we look closely, even without superpowers, we can still uncover truth, memory, and meaning.

When I was a kid growing up in the middle of nowhere, Wyoming, I thought I might be Superman, or at least adopted from Krypton. I didn’t have X-ray vision unless you count squinting hard enough to read the cereal box, but I did have a strong sense that I was supposed to live by some kind of heroic code.

In my memoir, Views from Beyond Metropolis, I reimagine what Superman’s “American Way” might look like today—not truth, justice, and unquestioning conformity, but truth, justice, and cultural competence.

Spoiler alert: you don’t need superpowers for that.

The 500 Block Was My Fortress of Solitude: Superman had his Fortress of Solitude. I had West 17th Street. Specifically, the 400 and 500 blocks in downtown Cheyenne were once home to a thriving Japanese American neighborhood. My grandfather owned a pool hall at 512 West 17th Street, adjacent to the City Cafe, where my grandmother prepared Japanese and American cuisine.

That was the setting for much of my early life and the historical backdrop of Views from Beyond Metropolis. Today, most of it’s paved over.

If city planners had X-ray vision, maybe they could see the noodle houses, produce stands, and bustling community spirit still lingering beneath the concrete.

Why does Superman still matter? Superman always straddled two identities: the alien outsider and the all-American hero. For me, growing up Japanese American after World War II, that tension felt familiar. We weren’t sent to War Relocation Camps like many West Coast families, but we still felt the overt stings of racism, like slurs and stares. Some of it is more subtle, like being complimented on how well we speak English.

In the book, I discuss how those experiences shaped my sense of cultural competence, which involves recognizing bias, responding with civility, and adapting to a diverse world. It turns out that you can learn a great deal about inclusion by observing how Superman handles villainy. (Pro tip: laser eyes are not required.)

The Real Superpower? Seeing What’s Missing: One of Superman’s powers was the ability to see through walls. Mine has been the ability to see through stories, especially the ones that erase people who look like me.

Views from Beyond Metropolis explores not only my family’s legacy, like my grandfather’s incarceration at the Tulare in 1942 and my uncle’s detour through the Puyallup assembly centers, but also the larger patterns of legalized oppression in America from slavery to Japanese internment to suburban redlining.

I attended the 2025 Camp Amache Pilgrimage in southeastern Colorado, where the Ireichō book of names lists the 127,000 Japanese incarcerated during World War II. The book verified the whereabouts of my grandfather and uncle.

Sounds heavy, I know, but that’s why I keep it grounded with humor and lived experience. Being mistaken for someone’s Kung Fu teacher in the middle of a grocery store checkout line teaches you to laugh and educate.

Why Read Views from Beyond Metropolis?

In Views from Beyond Metropolis, I suggest that it’s time we evolve it:

  • From rugged individualism to interdependence.
  • From assimilation to belonging.
  • From monoculture to shared culture.

Maybe you don’t need X-ray vision to be a hero. Perhaps you simply need the ability to see others clearly, especially those that history tries to forget.

  • You don’t have to be Japanese American.
  • You don’t have to be from Wyoming.
  • You don’t have to like Superman (though it helps).

If you’ve ever …

  • Felt like an outsider looking in,
  • Been teased for how you look, speak, or live,
  • Witnessed bias and didn’t know how to respond, or
  • Realized, maybe uncomfortably, that you’ve been the one who didn’t see clearly

… this book is for you.

In Views from Beyond Metropolis, I use my lived experience, growing up Japanese American in post-war Wyoming, assimilating and still having to navigate subtle racism, and learning from everyday heroes, to help readers:

  • Understand how bias works (and how to undo it)
  • See through the myths of Superman’s American Way that exclude more than they include
  • Find humor and hope in hard truths
  • Learn practical techniques for building cultural competency and community

It’s not just a memoir. It’s a lens. And it might help you see yourself—and others—more clearly.

👉 Buy the book.
👉 Start the conversation.
👉 Be the hero in your own story.

If you have questions or comments, message the ALAN-BCM BOT. We learn more and more every day!

 

Go back

Your message has been sent

Warning
Warning
Warning
Warning

Warning.

Share this:

  • Share
  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
  • Click to email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
  • Click to print (Opens in new window) Print
  • Click to share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit
  • Click to share on Tumblr (Opens in new window) Tumblr

Like this:

Like Loading...
Posted in BCM News, BCM Newsletter, Books | Tagged cultural competency, culture, diversity, metropolis, racism, social change, social justice, superman | Leave a reply

The Ghost of Kerouac in Longmont, Colorado: Sal Paradise on Neon Forest Street

Posted on July 5, 2025 by Alan O’Hashi, Whole Brain Thinker
Reply

When Jack Kerouac set out from New York in 1947 on his now-famous cross-country road trip, he chased freedom over pavement.

That adventure became the heart of On the Road, published a decade later in 1957, and immortalized his alter ego, Sal Paradise.

What many people don’t know is that one of the key stops along that existential highway was a gas station in Longmont, Colorado, at the time, a dusty outpost on U.S. Highway 287. The old gas station was transformed into a cafe and music venue at 1111 Neon Forest Street in Prospect Village.

It’s a little-known landmark that holds the soul of a restless America, the kind we might just need to revisit.

In the summer of 1947, Kerouac’s odyssey carried him from Nebraska into Wyoming, where he landed in Cheyenne during Wild West Days (an homage to Cheyenne Frontier Days), an irony not lost on the aspiring writer.

Then came Colorado. He caught a ride south, eventually getting dropped off at the gas station in Longmont. He spent the night on his way to Denver, where he met Dean Moriarty (Neal Cassady’s alter ego.

That unremarkable station at the time became a fleeting but pivotal waypoint in his pilgrimage westward.

Today, that station is gone from the highway, but not from memory. Moved and restored in the artsy, planned Prospect Village neighborhood, Johnson’s Gas Station now hums with espresso machines and live music.

The neon sign glows not just with light, but with ghosts of jazz, of youth, of daring hitchhikers and broken-in boots. You can almost hear the beat of bongo drums and the soft shuffle of typewriter keys if you listen long enough.

What if places could remember us? What if that gas station still remembers the kid who would become the voice of a generation? That kind of reckless optimism pulls you across the country with no plan but a thumb and a dream. Is that what we’ve lost in our rush for certainty?

Check out “On the Trail: Jack Kerouac in Cheyenne,” a short movie that imagines where Sal Paradise stopped before he headed down the road to Longmont.

Click on Neal and Jack to watch “On the Trail: Kerouac in Cheyenne.”

In an age of navigation apps–not paper maps, tight schedules–not leisurely drives, and curated digital lives, maybe we need places like Johnson’s again, not just to fill our tanks, but to empty our minds.

Maybe we need roads with no clear destination. Maybe the ghosts of the road still have something to teach us.

Next time you’re in Longmont, take a detour to Neon Forest Street. Have a coffee at the old Johnson’s station. Listen to the music. Let the past whisper to you. The road is still there, and maybe it’s time to take it.

If you have questions or comments, message the BCM-ALAN-BOT. We learn more and more every day!

Go back

Your message has been sent

Warning
Warning
Warning
Warning

Warning.

Share this:

  • Share
  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
  • Click to email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
  • Click to print (Opens in new window) Print
  • Click to share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit
  • Click to share on Tumblr (Opens in new window) Tumblr

Like this:

Like Loading...
Posted in BCM Movies, BCM News, BCM Newsletter | Tagged cheyenne, colorado, dean moriarty, denver, jack, kerouac, longmont, neal cassady, on the road, sal paradise, wyoming | Leave a reply

You say tomato, I say scrumptious

Posted on June 27, 2025 by Alan O’Hashi, Whole Brain Thinker
Reply

What’s the most delicious thing you’ve ever eaten?

The most delicious thing I’ve ever eaten came as a startling surprise. When I was a kid, tomatoes were as hard as rocks. I didn’t like them at all.

I have paintings of tomatoes!

Between my junior and senior year in high school, I went on a long road trip to Prince Rupert, British Columbia, to catch a ferry boat to Sitka, Alaska.

The first leg of the journey, my parents drove me to the town of Fort Laramie, which was the rendezvous point for kids from Casper and Lingle.

Fort Laramie is the site of a military installation where several Great Plains tribes signed a treaty with the U.S. government in 1851.

The local Presbyterian church served us lunch. It was a sandwich bar. 

I learned that it was impolite to turn down food, and added a juicy slice to my sandwich. I had never seen a huge, red tomato like that before and didn’t know what to expect.

Was I surprised at the texture and taste of my first beefeater tomato? I became a connoisseur from that day forward.

Share this:

  • Share
  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
  • Click to email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
  • Click to print (Opens in new window) Print
  • Click to share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit
  • Click to share on Tumblr (Opens in new window) Tumblr

Like this:

Like Loading...
Posted in BCM News, BCM Newsletter | Tagged dailyprompt, dailyprompt-1981 | Leave a reply

Georgia O’Keeffe’s Time Above Ward: Where Detours Become Discovery

Posted on June 26, 2025 by Alan O’Hashi, Whole Brain Thinker
Reply

Discover how Georgia O’Keeffe’s 1917 detour to Ward, Colorado, led to iconic art and personal revelations, reminding us that life’s unplanned paths often bring the richest outcomes.


In the summer of 1917, Georgia O’Keeffe and her sister, Claudia, boarded a train near Amarillo, Texas, bound for the mountain town of Ward, Colorado. Their destination wasn’t just a change in altitude, it was a shift in perspective.

They came to stay in a rustic cabin above Ward owned by Hazel Schmoll, a botanist and pioneering conservationist. The O’Keeffe sisters tramped the alpine trails, painted the sweeping ridgelines, and immersed themselves in the raw, wild landscape.

One of Georgia’s best-known paintings from that summer captures the quiet strength of the church in Ward, still recognizable today to anyone who’s visited the tiny mountain town perched above Boulder. The image is courtesy of the Georgia O’Keeffe Museum in Santa Fe.

What many people don’t know is that the tracks on their original route washed out, forcing the sisters to reroute through Santa Fe. That unplanned stop sparked something in Georgia.

In a thank-you note archived at the Boulder Carnegie Library, she wrote that she couldn’t decide whether she liked Ward or Santa Fe best. I own an autographed caricature of Georgia that has something to do with her Whitney Museum retrospective. I’m on a quest to figure out who made the drawing.

That note struck me deeply when I uncovered it during research for a short documentary about her stay. It wasn’t just a quaint reflection. It revealed something universal: that we don’t always choose the path that shapes us.

When the tracks wash out, we are delivered somewhere unexpected. Santa Fe, as we now know, would become central to O’Keeffe’s life and legend. Ward came first. Maybe it opened her up to the possibility of the Southwest.

Maybe it gave her a glimpse of what it meant to exist inside a landscape, not just observe it. Check out a short film. “Cordially, Georgia O’Keeffe,” which imagines what her stay was like in Ward.

Paige Berry as Georgia O’Keeffe on location in Ward, Colorado. Click on the image to watch the short movie.

That’s what lingers with me from the research: the reminder that the places we find ourselves, whether planned or accidental, are often exactly where we’re supposed to be.

Whether you’re a painter with a canvas or a visitor with a backpack, the mountains above Ward invite you to see not just what’s around you, but what’s inside you.

Isn’t that the truest kind of art?

If you have questions or comments, message the Alan-BCM Bot. We learn more and more every day!

Share this:

  • Share
  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
  • Click to email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
  • Click to print (Opens in new window) Print
  • Click to share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit
  • Click to share on Tumblr (Opens in new window) Tumblr

Like this:

Like Loading...
Posted in BCM News, BCM Newsletter | Tagged artist, boulder, canyon, colorado, georgia, hazel, long lake, o'keeffe, santa fe, schmoll, stapp lake, texas, ward | Leave a reply

Post navigation

← Older posts
Newer posts →

Boulder Community Media (BCM)

Boulder Community Media (BCM)
Powered by WordPress.com.
Boulder Community Media – BCM
Privacy Policy / Proudly powered by WordPress Theme: Twenty Eleven.
 

Loading Comments...
 

    %d