Wednesday, May 31, 2023
Learning about air frying
Tuesday, May 30, 2023
Just a regular Tuesday...two bits of interest in my inbox this morning
1)
From NPR All Things Considered, this...
Sunday, May 28, 2023
Family birthday
Happy birthday to my first son, Marty!
So he's turning 59.
It's hard for me to believe I have a son beginning his 60th year.
I had an idea to post photos of his father, and his grandfathers, and his great-grandfathers...so we could tell if he looks anything like any of them.
But my photo albums and processes on this laptop are completely phoey. So my good wishes aren't interested in delving into why I can't copy and paste from one file into another, nor download anything. I really like showing visuals! So I'll try again for his 60th next year.
It's what I enjoy on other people's blogs.
Here he is with his dad on left, grandpa Norm, and grandma Mary. Marty might have been around 2.This show a different three generations, with Marty on the right!
Will (now 28), Michael (now 37), Doug (now 83), Marty (now 59).
Will and Michael are Marty's sons. Doug is his father. This photo was taken at least two years ago, but I gave their ages as they are today.
I think there's a likeness between all of them, but I've seen them all at their young ages (like Will and Michael.)
Dear son...I do wish you a most enjoyable day to celebrate your birth (I was there, remember?) and many many happy returns. It's always neat to have had Mothers Day just a few weeks before yours...and some years your birthday is on Memorial Day, but at least there's almost always a long holiday weekend for you to celebrate YOUR DAY!
Today's quote:
When your real, effortless, joyful grateful nature is realized, it will not be inconsistent with the ordinary activities of life. |
RAMANA MAHARSHI |
Saturday, May 27, 2023
Laugh a little
One thing to keep one's sanity when considering all the insanity around one...humor.
I love that some bloggers bring cute sayings along almost weekly. What a relief. Well not that bloggers are ever part of the insanity, but I guess I'm guilty of mentioning it every now and then.
So here's what I can contribute to laughing out loud, and hope that you do too.
"Over a half-century has passed since then. But television comedians remain indebted to the pioneering brothers who sacrificed their careers in support of their belief in questioning authority with laughter and challenging power with humor and satire. " As shared on The Pete Seger group by Bob Wolpert, on FaceBook, May 23, 2023.
The intro to the 20th Reunion of the Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour.
Today's quote:
Before we set our hearts too much on anything, let us examine how happy are those who already possess it.
-Francois, duc de La Rochefoucauld, moralist (1613-1680)
Friday, May 26, 2023
Psychics are sending me a message
I haven't figured it out yet.
But when a NOVA show about the brain leaves me with all this stuff that may be sleight of hand, but it definitely isn't answered...there are questions about who is running the show in my head, basically. These different parts of my dear brain have names, and duties to perform, and I suppose they communication with each other.
But this show left me wondering. How did they get the word the woman chose randomly in the book, and wrote on a post-it-note, and left in the room while the rest of the show was taped, but then that exact word was found printed on white paper inside the sealed envelope that she supposedly hid on her person during the whole show?
So the next thing to knock my door of perceptions was having a haircut. And Joe (who many of my friends also deppend upon for their styles) starts by telling me of a little town (Lilly Vale) near where he lived, and he says when he was younger (I'm imagining teenager) they would drive into a cemetery and start whispering. That was ok, because I'd just mentioned a cemetery that was also near his home town in western NY.
But then I mentioned Edgar Casey. Neither of us ever said the word Cassadaga, which I knew about from the Florida community he (Casey) started. Joe knew about him from Virginia Beach VA. So Joe started to tell me about Carol, who was his regular hair client. And she told him he had the "gift."
So she enrolled him in some sessions, and he was able to do some "readings with people's personal possessions." They seemed satisfied. Then one evening some of the people who had the same training, who were blind, were also in the room, and one came up to Joe and said, "You look good in that red shirt Joe." This was a blind person, who accuratly picked up some kind of vibration and knew that indeed, Joe was wearing a red shirt.
All this was being told while Joe expertly cut my hair off exactly how I wanted it but hadn't asked for it...different than the last time.
Anyway, then Carol apparently was on Johnny Carson's show one night, and told him about the blind guy who said to an unknown man, that "he looked good in a red shirt." And of course the audience were impressed that a blind man had that ability to pick up whatever red gives off...and comment about it.
Joe got a kick out of being inadvertently mentioned in a story on Johnny Carson. Of course.
But the main thing was...to me at least...that this psychic stuff needs to be considered.
I didn't ask Joe for a reading, because he had another client waiting. But he did share that the way he gives people the haircuts they want is by putting his hands on their shoulders and kind of reading them. He had done it with me before the first cut.
I came in and said I basically hated all the things about my hair. He asked if anything was good. I said I guess I'm grateful to have any hair.
I do like my very short summer trim! (But it will grow out, sigh!)
Today's quote:
Life unfolds as it will, and the universe will wait patiently as we make our way into the unknown.
Thursday, May 25, 2023
Plastic Free Day
Today is International Plastic Free Day.
To be astonished is one of the surest ways of not growing old too quickly. |
SIDONIE-GABRIELLE COLETTE |
Wednesday, May 24, 2023
Uvalde Anniversary Poll
Poll: Most Americans say curbing gun violence is more important than gun rights
The highest percentage of Americans in a decade say they think it's more important to curb gun violence than protect gun rights, according to a new NPR/PBS NewsHour/Marist poll.
The finding comes a year after the mass shooting at an elementary school in Uvalde, Texas, the second-deadliest in American history. Multiple other mass shootings that have taken place in the time since that one.
But the survey of almost 1,300 adults also shows Americans' views on guns are mixed, with little consensus on what to do about gun violence.
Fewer Americans say they feel their community's schools are safe from gun violence. And while a significant majority feels the answer to mass shootings is stricter gun laws, the percentage believing the solution is more people needing to carry guns has jumped 10 points in the last four years.
6 in 10 say controlling gun violence is more important than protecting gun rights
That's the highest in 10 years and includes 4 in 10 gun owners.
In 2013, people were split on this. But Democrats and many independents have shifted since.
The survey of 1,286 adults was conducted from May 15-18 with live interviewers using mixed modalities – by phone, cell phone and landlines, text and online. The poll has a margin of error of +/- 3.4 percentage points, meaning results could be about 3 points higher or lower than reported.
SOURCE: Uvalde Anniversary Poll.
There are many more graphs and data details in the original article.
As I post this (4:45 pm, May 24, 2023) President Biden is speaking of the anniversary, and promoting better gun control.
Tuesday, May 23, 2023
How much plastic do you use?
Now there's a use of plastic inner-tubes to carry humans along in some water or another...at least not single use plastic, and lots of fun I'm sure!
My personal dismay is that so many of my medical needs are met with plastic devices, often engineered to be used only a few times. I manage to wash my nebulizer inhalers, as well as my CPAP headgear and hoses...in warm soapy water or vinegar water. But I do admit I hate taking the time to do so. But if I don't, I know creepy mold will find a nice damp warm place to live in them. That results in more lung problems...and I go up and down with them. So I fight against mold as well as single-use plastics!
Next job is to take the rest of the houseplants outside (thus removing another source of mold) and repot them. First have to deal with our heavy pollen which has my eyes all swollen and tearless. Dry eyes are no fun! I'm already wearing protective sunglasses that wrap around my face. Going to eye doc again today because of this. I've been using the drops she recommended, without relief. That happens.
So I hope you have a great day, Tuesday, May 23, 2023.
Today's quote:
Monday, May 22, 2023
Another woman who made a difference
This post on FB was under Covenant of Unitarian Universalist Pagans.
Planning the Skinner House Book for the Voices series at Pantheacon. Seated with Selena Fox, Shirley Ranck, Margot Adler, Jerrie Hildebrand, and Starhawk. (quite a few years ago)
Shirley and Jerrie Hildebrand leading Sunday Service at CUUPS Convocation in Salem, MA
Shirley Ranck and Jerrie Hildebrand at the UUA General Assembly 2017 in New Orleans at their book launch with Skinner House Press.
It is with deep sadness I share that Rev. Shirley Ranck passed through the veil this morning. She was with her family at the time listening to music. Shirley wrote the groundbreaking curriculum “Cakes for the Queen of Heaven” and coedited and authored with me “Pagan and Earth-Centered Voice in Unitarian Universalism”. Working with Shirley over those two years were some of the most empowering ones I ever experienced and her wisdoms I hold on to daily. Her trailblazing spirit enlivened many over the years. Hail to the traveler. She is now every where and in everything.
(All the above photos and comments by Jerrie Hildebrand)
Shirley Ranck ObituaryRev. Shirley Ann Ranck of Niles Michigan, passed away peacefully Sunday, May 14, 2023. She was born in Jersey City, NJ on October 22, 1930 to Gilbert Holmes and Ann West Bush. She grew up in a number of New Jersey suburbs of New York City.
In 1950 she married Philip Powers Page, Jr. There were two children from this marriage, sons Scott and James. The marriage ended in divorce. In 1962 she married James Gilmour Ranck. There were two children from this marriage, daughters, Christina and Laura. This marriage also ended in divorce. Shirley received her BA degree from Montclair State University in 1953 followed by a Masters of Religious Education from Drew University in 1958, an MA in Clinical Psychology from City University of New York in 1964, a PhD in Urban School Psychology from Fordham University in 1976, and a Master of Divinity from the Thomas Starr King School for the Ministry in 1978. Shirley worked for many years as a school psychologist in the Livingston, NJ public schools. After receiving her PhD, she decided on a career change and became a Unitarian Universalist minister. Most of her career was spent as an interim
minister for various Unitarian Universalist congregations around the United States and Canada.
Shirley is the author of the Cakes for the Queen of Heaven: A Ten Session Course in Feminist Thealogy, published by the Unitarian Universalist Association. She is also author of the books Cakes for the Queen of Heaven and The Grandmother Galaxy, and a number of articles for various publications. Her last published work was as co-editor of Pagan and Earth-Centered Voices in Unitarian Universalism, to which
she contributed three chapters.
Shirley is survived by her sons, Scott Page (Joy Chase) and James Page (Carole Briggs), both of Madison, WI and her daughters, Christina Ranck (Edward) Bell of Sonoma, California and Laura (Donald) Van Lue of Niles, Michigan; grandchildren, Kevin Helliwell of Niles, MI, Jackie (Matthew) Yelland of Stoughton, WI, Michael Cervantez (Megan Heuer) of San Francisco, Sarah Bell (Pio Valenzuela) of Sonoma, CA, and Camilla (Brian) Carlyon of Madison, WI; and many great grandchildren and a large extended family.
Her ashes will be interred with her parents in Brielle, New Jersey.
NOTE By Barbara R: Most of my friends and family know the Cakes for the Queen of Heaven course provided through the UU church brought me to understanding goddess cultures, and a very high respect for the Divine Feminine. Much gratitude to Shirley for authoring that curriculum!
Saturday, May 20, 2023
Clarification of eco terms and a book review to help scientists communicate
A great amount of information...I'll just give a link in case you are interested TREEHUGGER
Eco Terms A-Z
A
- Acid Mine Drainage
- Aeroponics
- Afforestation
- Agent Orange
- Agrivoltaics
- Air Pollution
- Alternative Energy
- Alternative Fuels
- Aluminium
- Ambassador Animal
- Animal Abuse
- Animal Cruelty
- Animal Extinction
- Animal Rights
- Anthropocentrism
- Aquaponics
- Arctic Amplification
- Arctic Fires
- Atmospheric River
Book Review - Science Communication in a Crisis: An Insider's Guide - Routledge (Taylor & Francis Group)
Christopher Reddy has been in the public eye through several significant environmental crises and has learned from painful experience that inadequate or inefficient communication, and the denial of truth and vicious personal attacks, can exact a very heavy toll on a scientist. In this book he has offered ten themes that should be considered as part of an effective response to an environmental crisis, bearing in mind that the message needs to be tailored to the audience - not diluted or diminished, mind you, but appropriate to the people receiving it. A presentation to a homeowners' association, for example, should not be heavy on scientific jargon, accompanied by graphs and statistics. It is important for scientists to recognize that all people do not have the same levels of higher education, or education in the same field, yet they are no less part of the community with an equal stake in the outcome. No one should ever be talked down to. A scientist is also a citizen, no more, no less than a philosopher, a school teacher or a plumber. Successful outcomes benefit all equally.
Friday, May 19, 2023
And then there are plastic bags
The following are exerpts from Treehugger Newsletter, May 12, 2023, "Can Plastic Bags be Recycled?"
Plastic grocery and retail bags are made from polyethylene, synthetic polymers made from hundreds of monomers linked together by strong chemical bonds. They are made from nonrenewable petrochemicals derived from fossil oil, natural gas, and coal.1 As a result, their manufacture releases greenhouse gases.
Widespread recycling programs are making it easier to recycle your plastic bags, but the recycling process does have its challenges. Because plastic grocery and retail bags are generally thin and lightweight, they can clog regular recycling equipment (hence the specialty plastic bag recyclers)
The EPA reports that in 2018, about 4,200,000 tons of plastic bags, sacks, and wraps were generated in the United States. Only 10% of those were recycled.3 Commit to increasing this recycling rate by recycling your own plastic bags and reducing your environmental impact.
Plastic Bag Recycling Codes
One way community recycling programs specify what they do or do not accept for recycling is by using Resin Identification Codes (RICs), sometimes called “recycling codes.” Those are the numbers you see inside the small recycling symbol stamped on materials.
Plastic bags generally fall under the #2 and #4 RICs. If your bag is marked with either of these numbers, you can assume its welcome in plastic bag recycling bins.
Examples of #2 plastics include more heavy duty bags, like those you get from grocery stores and fashion retailers. Thinner bags, like plastic produce bags, are likely made from #4 plastics.
But be careful—rigid plastics like bottles and jugs are also marked with #2 and #4 RICs. Plastic bottles and jugs are often accepted in curbside recycling programs. While they technically have the same RIC as plastic bags, you shouldn’t toss your bags in with your other recyclables unless your program specifies that it accepts them.
Most major national grocery retailers accept plastic bags for recycling, often partnering with large plastic recyclers. Find these recycling bins near the store entrance marked as “plastic bag recycling” or something similar.
Experts say the best way to be sustainable is to reduce, reuse, and recycle—in that order. Saying no to plastic by bringing your own reusable bags to the store is a great way to reduce your carbon footprint because you won’t be supporting the burning of fossil fuels for plastic bag production
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And locally there are efforts to reduce having plastic bags in retail shopping. Buncombe County, nearby small town of Weaverville, Asheville, and now Black Mountain are moving in this direction through grassroots petitions and information sharing.
Thursday, May 18, 2023
Vertical windmills, ancient and a new protest practice that's extremely dumb
Ancient Windmills in Iran...
I love how he ends the video, providing life giving air.
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From another blogger, I read yesterday of this strange protest event in Germany, which crippled traffic for a while, was on the news, and doesn't need to be spread into the US!! Hope not any way! Thanks Iris Flavia who posted it on Tom's blog!
Today's quote:
Do not think of knocking out another person's brains because he differs in opinion from you. It would be as rational to knock yourself on the head because you differ from yourself ten years ago.
-Horace Mann, educational reformer ( 1796-1859)