Contact Victor Williamson with your questions about simulator based experiential education programs for your school.
SpaceCampUtah@gmail.com

Sunday, August 2, 2020

The Summer Camp Season Finished. I'm Heading Home. A Quiet Conversation at the Wonderland Station. Also, An Update with Photos on the New Space Center's Construction. And Another Also, This Week's Imaginarium Theater! Welcome Back Troubadour. We're In the Saddle Again.

Waiting at the Wonderland Station. Our Vacation Starts.

The Troubadour.  Ten Years Ago this Week.  August 1, 2010.  
The last summer camp was done. The staff and volunteers were heading home for their well deserved and short summer vacation before the 2010-2011 school year started.  I wrote this as a thank you and to emphasize how our work at the CMSEC sparked waves of creativity and inspiration in our campers.
 

I stood on the platform and waited for the next train. It was quiet, no sound at all except for the humming of a young lady waiting on the station's one turquoise bench. She was dressed in white. Her yellow handbag and jacket rested beside her.

“It’s not very busy tonight.” I tossed the statement in her direction to test the waters hoping for a bit of conversation to fill the quiet punctuated by the cold concrete.
“Everything is either closed or closing for a few weeks," she said. I was relieved she took my invitation to explore a conversation. Sharing a train platform with one other person is similar to riding an elevator with a total stranger - except the time between trains is longer than a journey between floors.

“You’re the director of the Space Center?” she asked.
“Yes I am.”
“So you’re the reason then.”
“Reason for what?” I wondered out loud.
“The reason I’m off for a few weeks. You’re closing and that puts Wonderland on minimal staffing. Thanks a lot!” she said mildly annoyed. A moment later a faint smile delivered the sarcasm.



“Where do you work?” I questioned.
“The Imaginarium. Its a sub section of the Ministry of Wonder. I’m an office assistant in the Office of Joinings," She replied.

“Oh, I see. And how does the closing of the Space Center affect the Ministry of Wonder?” My question was an honest one. The Ministry of Wonder was enormous in scope and size with the Imaginarium only a small division of the whole.

The Office of Joinings

“My office is responsible for the inspiration that comes from imagining what might be, from what Is.”

I walked closer and asked if it was OK to sit with her. She nodded and extended her hand in welcome. I sat on the opposite side of the bench leaving one square of turquoise between us.

“So, let me see if I understand what you just said. Your office creates images of the future based on what we experience around us in real life?”

“Got it in one,” she smiled and reached into her purse for a stick of chewing gum.

She opened the package and held it out. “Would you like a piece?” ‘

“Yes, thank you,” I replied. I took the gum. The gum had an odd taste, sort of a mixture of hazelnut and raspberry. “Where did you buy this?” I inquired.

“There’s a little shop around the corner from the Ministry. It’s awesome, you walk in, wait for a clerk and then imagine your favorite flavor or flavors. A moment later you're handed the gum you imagined.”

“Is this shop a product of the Imaginarium?”

“Yes, mine actually," She replied with pride. "An imagination came across my desk several weeks ago from a young girl in Nebraska. She had it while waiting to purchase a pack of gum at her local WalMart. The line was long so she had time to daydream. And when you day dream you open the door to my Departement. Her thoughts told me she was tired of her usual brand of gum and was looking for something different. Well, I also knew from reading the print out that she had just come from lunch at a pizza restaurant with a build your own salad bar.”

“Stop, let me take it from here,” I interrupted.

“Go right ahead.”

“You put the two thoughts together to create a vision of What Could Be from What Was. You took her memory of a build your own salad bar and combined it with a desire to build her own gum flavor.”

“You got it. We call that a Joining in the trade. I do Joinings all day long. That is what I do.”

A strong gust of wind moved through the station announcing an approaching train. It was the Express from Inspiration. Express trains never stop at the Wonderland Station. We had to wait for the local train.


The train sped by. The people inside were framed in the windows. They looked tired and ready for home and supper. Their work was grueling, having to managing Inspiration day in and day out. My hat was off to them.

A few moments later the platform was still again.

“So, you Joined the images and created a thought. Then what?” I continued the conversation with my bench mate.

“The girl imagined such a place where you could mix and match your gum flavors and when she did, it became real here in Wonderland.”

“Will it stay?” I asked.

“Only as long as she revisits the thought. The shop becomes an anchor point in her imagination. A place for her to mentally visit whenever she chooses. What’s cool is how the shop changes its shape and design every time she imagines something different. Today it looked like that wand shop in Diagon Alley. Tomorrow it may look like something else.”

“And when she gives up the idea?” I asked.

“Then the shop disappears?” she replied.

"Never to come back?"

"Not unless someone else Imagines it." We sat quietly, each staring a some point in the concrete.

I thought back to the starting point of our conversation.
“OK, so getting back to the original question. How does closing the Space Center for a few weeks so we can recharge our own imaginations, affect the Imaginarium - A Sub Section of the Ministry of Wonder?”

“You have no idea how busy we are when the Center is running at full steam," She answered. "The imaginations you help create in those kid's minds pour into our Department filling our In Baskets to the point of burying us. You fill their minds with Wonder at what could be based on what they’re experiencing in the real world. Our job is to join the two images and inspire them to go out and make what they experienced real. Now, suddenly you close and the cascade of ideas and thoughts goes from the raging Niagara to the dribble of a leaky faucet.”

“And the department lays off its staff.” I said.

“The Department has a budget. With this economy every penny counts.”

“Well, we open for the school year on August 20th. You’ll be back to work then," I assured her.

She smiled and reached for her bag. A strong wind from the dark tunnel blew across the platform. Our train was approaching. We stood and walked towards the platform’s edge. The train’s powerful headlamps appeared first, piercing the darkness with 3 yellow lights. The lights grew brighter and brighter until the body of the train emerged. It slowed to a stop, a moment later the automatic doors slid open to welcome us aboard.

“After you,” I said, reaching out to hold the automatic doors open until we were both safely inside.

“Thank you,” she replied.

The train jolted to life. I reached for the nearest hand strap  attached to a metal bar running the length of the coach. The Wonderland Platform, with its blue and red sign, disappeared into the dark.

My vacation had started.

Thank you staff and volunteers for a wonderful, imaginative, creative and inspirational 2010 summer camp season.  See you all back in the saddle again soon for a busy school year and a new season of weekend overnight camps!

Mr. Williamson

Christa McAuliffe Space Center Update
James Porter, Director

June Update
 T - 00:06 Engineering Panel Upgrades
     In June we held the final round of our Engineering Panel Competition. Three amazing panels had been created in just a few short months even with all of the turmoil going on in the world. Each team presented to our judges new panel concepts that not only add enhanced educational connections, but responsive integrations with our Thorium software. Two of the panels give access to systems never built into physical controls with life support and fire suppression entries.

The Ford Family Team

     A huge congratulations to all three teams that participated and achieved a huge leap forward in starship operations. Ultimately the top prize went to the Ford family team and their Subsystems panel. They were awarded their $500 cash prize made available through an Adobe grant. 


     Now we turn to converting the prototype models into versions built to withstand stressed crew members and the rigors of space travel.


     This is another of the amazing new features we are so excited to be developing for our new facility. Though our launch has encountered a bit of a “weather delay” we are still progressing forward with an amazing program that we look forward to sharing with everyone this fall. So find your lost isolinear chips, zip up your jumpsuit, and refresh those circuitry skills because there are many challenges awaiting you thanks to the talents of these amazing panel engineers.

Photo Update on the Construction of the new Christa McAuliffe Space Center.  

Photos from the CMSC's Facebook Page.  Be sure to Like the CMSC's Facebook Page for Regular Updates.

     It looks like an end of September opening for the new Christa McAuliffe Space Center. The construction is coming along nicely.














Imaginarium Theater
The best videos from around the world edited for a gentler audience


Sunday, July 12, 2020

My Sanctuary in a Land Time has Nearly Forgotten. Reality's Edge at Canyon Grove Academy is Busy Busy During this Covid Season. Imaginarium Theater.

Hello Troops,
     The Troubadour's office staff worldwide took a few weeks off to enjoy this unforgettable summer filled with Covid twists and turns.  I retreated to my cottage in Deadwood, South Dakota, a place almost untouched by the virus.  Masks were seen in the tourist haunts and the Spearfish Walmart but other than that one would hardly know there was a worldwide pandemic.  
     South Dakota is a wonderland that travels within the quantum sphere - neither here nor there.  We know an outside world exists, and while we demonstrate the finest western down home hospitality, we sure do appreciate the fact that people find their way out after spending all their dollars in our beautiful Black Hills. 
     
The Williamson Deadwood Cottage (Left).  The view of downtown Deadwood from the Cottage's Deck (right)

A typical quiet late summer afternoon from the Cottage.

     
   My family has spiced the Black Hills with character and culture for well over one century.   That tradition continues to this day.  Take my Uncle Marvin and Aunt Dolores for example.  They live on Playhouse Road outside of Keystone just off the Iron Mountain Road which winds through the granite spikes of the Black Hills to Mr. Rushmore.  Marvin was a rodeo circuit rider back in his youth , then worked construction before retiring.  Dolores was a nuclear medicine technician at the Rapid City hospital.  Today Marvin tends a large garden, raises horses, plays gin rummy with the local cowboys, and passes the ponderosa pine scented afternoons making arrowheads from his front porch. 
     Aunt Dolores has a workshop a stone's throw from their cabin.  She weaves her own wool on a loom, makes doll clothes which sell worldwide, needle works traditional samplers, and hand makes beautiful bowls made entirely of pine needles (seen in the photo). 




     Responsibilities brought me back to Utah but I'll be returning to close on a new property I purchased in Deadwood.  The Cottage is joined by a new home I call "Creekside" a half block from Deadwood's rodeo grounds and American Legion Baseball field.  Creekside will be a blessing for the aging Williamson's, it has very few steps and walk in showers.  Whitewood Creek flows directly across Crescent Avenue in front of the house making for pleasant evenings.  

Creekside

     Creekside is less than 200 steps from the front doors of Cadillac Jacks, Deadwood's finest hotel / casino.  They have unlimited soda and hot chocolate machines for those cross creek adventures.  One of Deadwood's two gas stations / connivence stores is next to Cadillac Jacks for my Diet Dews etc.  I'll enjoy Creekside very much.  
     Both Creekside and the Cottage are open to you fellow faithful Troubadours if you find yourself needing sanctuary in a land time has nearly forgotten.  There aren't many perks in the space centering business, but there are a few.  

Victor 

Reality's Edge at Canyon Grove is Busy Busy Busy

     Bradyn Lystrup came by The Fortress of Solitude (my home in Pleasant Grove) this week to see how the remodel is going. We sat down for good catch up.  He reports all is going well at Reality's Edge.  The three simulators are busy busy busy with private missions.  Several staff and volunteers from the Christa McAuliffe Space Center work at Reality's Edge this summer while construction continues at the CMSC and Central School.  
     Bradyn is doing a fantastic job as director of Reality's Edge. He knows the business inside and out from his time growing up at the CMSEC as both a volunteer, supervisor, and Voyager Flight Director.  I'm happy at least one of the Space EdVenture Centers is open during this strange summer.  The CMSC is under construction. Renaissance Space Academy is closed for the summer as Renaissance Academy is being remodeled.  Telos Discovery Space Center is running missions for the school's students only and The Lion's Gate Center is closed for the summer due to Covid.  
     I was pleased as punch to learn that my old old Voyager Mission "The Grand PooPah" was resurrected again for a telling at Reality's Edge a week or so back.  Bradyn sent a few photos of himself decked out as the Grand PooPah himself.  Self Respect is something a Space EdVentures director can't afford as you can see in these photos :)




      Good Job Bradyn and team at Reality's Edge for keeping the Space EdVentures program alive and well during the infamous summer of 2020.  
   
   
Imaginarium Theater
The Best Videos from Around the World Edited for a Gentler Audience