Blog Summary
Thoughts and Musings
2021 - Present
How do we cope when our bodies and minds aren’t what they were? How do we find purpose in life? Is adventure still on the horizon? Can we cope much less thrive in today’s chaotic environement? How might adventure change as we sprout wrinkles?
-
Adventuring
- Jun 20, 2023 Must an Adventure be Extreme?
- Apr 15, 2022 Adventure finds you when least expected
- Nov 2, 2021 Marooned in Memphis
- Oct 10, 2021 Why Girl Scouts?
- Dec 29, 2020 When will it end?
-
Commentary
- Jul 18, 2023 AI is not the Monster, is it?
- Jul 1, 2023 Zooming with Ukrainians
- Jun 20, 2023 Must an Adventure be Extreme?
- May 15, 2022 Missed Rebellion
- Feb 23, 2022 Alone and Inbetween
- Jan 17, 2022 Troubling Times
- Dec 23, 2021 Holiday Cards
- Dec 16, 2021 It’s not about me at Christmas
- Nov 27, 2021 Opera is not dead
- Nov 2, 2021 Marooned in Memphis
- Oct 19, 2021 Art Fights Gun Violence
- Jul 3, 2021 Humbled and Renewed
- Jun 26, 2021 Buckshot not Bullets
- May 28, 2021 Dog Sitting
- Apr 28, 2021 Assumptions are Stupid
- Apr 22, 2021 First Kiss
- Mar 19, 2021 Messing with Meditation
- Feb 25, 2021 What’s in a Nickname?
- Feb 18, 2021 Confinement Messes with the Mind
- Feb 12, 2021 Breadth or depth?
-
Medical Adventure
- Jun 11, 2023 Spine Surgery Epilogue
- Jun 4, 2023 Pushing too hard almost defeated me…
- May 30, 2023 A Step in the Wrong Direction
- May 21, 2023 No Bending, Lifting, Twisting
- May 16, 2023 Creeping Disabling Pain Got Me
- May 21, 2021 Pretzel Pain
-
On Ageing
- Jun 7, 2022 Wise or Just Old?
- Nov 17, 2021 Memory on My Mind
- May 21, 2021 Pretzel Pain
- Apr 12, 2021 Pandemic Isolation Thwarted
-
On Writing
- May 8, 2023 Pandemic Stress
- May 16, 2022 They liked it!
- Feb 23, 2022 Alone and Inbetween
- Feb 10, 2022 Rabbit Hole
- Oct 24, 2021 Fiction vs. Memoir
- Jun 26, 2021 Buckshot not Bullets
- Jun 19, 2021 Claustrophobia
- Apr 5, 2021 Ode to Southern Writers
- Mar 25, 2021 Criticism - Gift or Fault Finding?
- Mar 19, 2021 Messing with Meditation
- Mar 5, 2021 When writing ‘what you know’ is not enough
- Apr 22, 2020 The Writing Life
-
Pandemic
- May 8, 2023 Pandemic Stress
- Jun 19, 2021 Claustrophobia
- Apr 12, 2021 Pandemic Isolation Thwarted
- Feb 18, 2021 Confinement Messes with the Mind
- Dec 29, 2020 When will it end?
Art Fights Gun Violence
Breathless. They overwhelmed my mind as we carried dozens of bags each holding 250 boxes, each box representing a person killed in the U.S. by gun violence. I stood before the panels representing 200,000 people killed in the last three years.
Washington, DC. Breathless. They overwhelmed my mind as we carried dozens of bags each holding 250 boxes, each box representing a person killed in the U.S. by gun violence. I stood before the panels representing 200,000 people killed in the last three years. Silenced by the photos, the circumstances, ages, dates, and places inscribed on boxes, I walked the panels slowly, unable to turn away. Over 50% were suicides. The rest from shooting violence, defense, and accidents. The toll of suffering continues. Over sixty-thousand deaths so far this year.
Forty-five years ago, a schoolmate’s father killed himself. More recently, a young relative smashed into tree to die. I read and listen to gun violence death reports, absorbing anecdotal stories, graphs, and statistics, understanding the problem intellectually, from the safety of my home. Yesterday was something different. I stared spellbound, overwhelmed at the massiveness of it all. The panels transformed words and numbers into physical symbols of loss.
The thousands of boxes in front of me were visceral and inescapable, causing both sides of my brain, the logical and the emotional, into an alignment of comprehension. I now understand why those who experience tragedy first hand change their lives to take action. It is why former addicts lead recovery programs; why families who lost loved ones to incurable diseases commit to funding research for cures; and why gun violence survivors become passionate advocates, raising awareness of the impact of gun violence on families and communities.
I thank the founders and volunteers in the Soul Box Project for raising my awareness.
To see more photos and learn about the Soul Box Project on the Mall in DC, read this Washington Post article in the October 16, 2021 edition. To learn more about the Soul Box Project, go to Soulboxproject.org