Tuesday, February 18, 2025

stay unruly

In a recent post StephLove mentioned how when she visited her kid at Oberlin, she was "charmed by paper snowflakes in the windows surrounding a “Free Palestine” sign" because it made her "think about what it’s like to be in college, close enough to your childhood to make paper snowflakes, but old enough to be politically engaged."

I've thought about that image often since reading it, and it always makes me smile. It is particularly endearing. And it describes young people and their hopefulness and creativity perfectly... 

And in some way it also describes everyone I know. 

All of us making time outside of mandated work to create something or reach out to someone or share thoughts or start a conversation or make a difference are pushing back against a system that's built to keep people in narrowly-defined and isolated channels. 

I love the unruly nature of this. The system cannot rule us.

Yesterday, I looked up from typing just in time to see Nu (probably taking a break from homework) pick up an old party-favor-bubble-bottle that has been sitting on the table forever and blow out a stream of bubbles. I'm glad I caught that. That bubbling moment of playfulness in my child and the unexpected bubbles in my day.

Pic: Outside the window, are the icicles I think of as "the fangs of winter." Inside, my jasmine is budding profusely. Last May, a single bloom was so fragrant I nearly went mad with happiness. Fingers crossed for these buds.

Monday, February 17, 2025

fallout shelter breakout

there must be someplace where life takes place
outside the snarl and rattle of tyranny 
and everything else just waits

life could just be... beautiful even if useless 
longing could maybe be merely distance 
growing wordless, not mindless 

but my teen just doesn't yet know what happens  
to the Emmett Till Monument... doesn't even
know what they've done to Stonewall 

it feels like we've hardly caught up with history 
while events range--like mountain peaks
just absurd in scale and spilling over

so here we go again searching for surest shelter 
after gasping out how we'll never return 
just... going back and forth like that  
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Pic: Serendipitously, a shelter I spied at Sleepy Hollow Park yesterday. 

Sunday, February 16, 2025

a stranger sonnet

I let the ecologue in my head be interrupted
for it is also right there and alright
ready to wait for these letters 
that make all these words
that then go on to make
so many meanings
and things

watch how
it is wayward
and a bit word weary 
and yet bright as a ribbon
tossed up, a road trip through 
options: what is / what we wanted /
how we find our way as we brake for beauty
_________________________________
Pic: A hike in Sleepy Hollow State Park with work friends (none of whom I'd ever hiked with before). Also four new-to-me doggos. Would repeat. In the proverbial heartbeat.

Saturday, February 15, 2025

"avoiding time travel"

My people showed up! The potluck went great! 

Everyone picked five songs for the playlist so everyone had something they liked to groove to and it turned out to be a neat icebreaker with people bonding over artists as disparate as David Gray and Rupaul. And also, there is a song called “Cowboys are Frequently Secretly Fond of Each Other” (with Willie Nelson), and isn't that a great title?

Funniest thing: SD is no longer a work friend, but continues to crack me up. He submitted ten songs (instead of five)  on behalf of himself and AH and quipped, "Married filing separately, bitches!" This makes me giggle every time I remember it. 

Smartest thing: "Avoid time travel," DG told us--"don't dwell in the past, don't obsess about the future; just live in the present." Sounds like something well worth trying. 

Sweetest thing: DV's chocolate-raspberry torte was wildly popular and was polished off before too long. But after clean up, I kicked back with a bowlful of her whipped cream, dipping hothouse strawberries into it.

Pic: The zucchini and carrot rosette tart I made based on the picture I fell in love with on this recipe website. (At some point, I got tired of rolling carrot peels into rosettes and instead layered circles of mini peppers to look like the core calyx and sepals.)

Friday, February 14, 2025

the drumming in the wilderness

by the time this day ends 
I've  run  out  of  prayers
but  I've  made  an  altar

there is also indifference
its easy caress like a hook
escaping edicts, their edits
dim redactions--it's official
it's artificial--how we are all 
desperate as gossips--telling 
and listening at the same time
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Pic: Store-bought chocolate cheesecake bites, store-bought valentine's day picks; assemblage 100% me. Max still doesn't know chocolate Valentine's Day treats are not for him--it's a good thing there are other treats he can have. Several long meetings today, but I somehow managed to power shop for our Post-Valentine's potluck tomorrow. We've already had some cancelations from long-distance friends due to the winter storm though... I think local friends will still be able to make it. Let's see. 

Thursday, February 13, 2025

killing medicine

Big A posted this publicly, and I'm sharing a part of what he wrote here. The whole thing is basically a valediction for the medical progress he's seen over the course of his career and the reverses that are already beginning to happen. 

This is just one of the many, many, many stories from people like him who have devoted their lives to making a difference and are now seeing everything they've worked for being dismantled in a matter of days.

"As a premed at the NIH in the mid-90s, I volunteered at D.C.'s largest HIV clinic during the ongoing AIDS epidemic, and got a tour of Tony Fauci's lab from one of my co-volunteers who also worked in Bethesda. One of the most astonishing changes in the 30 years since is that we rarely see complications of advanced HIV infection in the ER.
As med students in Cleveland, we were regularly awestruck running into Fred Robbins, who received a Nobel prize for their contributions to the development of the polio vaccine, in the hallways,. I have never seen an acute case of poliomyelitis, but it's suddenly plausible I may. (Until 2024 I had never even diagnosed whooping cough; I've already been exposed twice in the past two months during a recent pertussis outbreak triggered in no small part by the number of unvaccinated children.)
I'm eternally grateful for having trained at Bellevue Hospital during the era of Lewis Goldfrank, who always put the needs of the marginalized and afflicted above those of corporate medicine and the capitalist healthcare system. And I'm lucky to have had support from the NIH as a postdoc, which has allowed me to devote some of my hours outside the ER to helping prevent fatal opioid overdose among my fellow Michiganders.
But the grants that pay for free naloxone come from the HHS, now led by an infamous anti-vaxxer and conspiracist (while, simultaneously, an unelected far right-wing industrialist is rapidly dismantling pieces of the global public health safety net)."

And so it goes. Sad and scary times. And it's happening all over, in the National Park Services, the Kennedy Center, and all across the federal workforce.
_________________
Pic: Huck and Max aren't ready for me to take this picture. Max is like: Mom! Do you mind? I just want to pee! We had a massive snowstorm--Huck is wading in snow.

Wednesday, February 12, 2025

steps to space

I am five and a "flower girl."
In the nativity play. 
(It must be one of the roles they give out when the real parts are gone quipped someone recently.
It's probably true.)
I have a new dress with flowers on it. I have flowers in my hair. I am so excited. 
My mother wants to know if she can help me rehearse "my steps." She means my choreography/step-by-step moves on stage. 
I have no idea what she means. 
(I have nothing to do in the play. I merely stand in a line with the other bit players and throw a flower or two out of my basket.)
It becomes a small "thing." 
Do you know your steps? she keeps asking. 
I have no idea how to respond.
I have a brainwave and tell her that I can't say them but I can draw it for her. 
She's confused. But ok. 
We find some paper and crayons.
I proudly draw her a series of descending interconnected "Ls" to make a picture of stairs...  they begin and end in emptiness.
*
At is nearly five. This child is my life.
It is summer, my favorite time of the year. 
At is an easy, happy child. We've spent hours cuddled up,  painting, reading, exploring in the community garden...
In this moment, At's health status terrifies me. "Failure to Thrive" a medical resident said with a smile once. (I know they were smiling because they'd solved the mystery diagnosis and not because my child might not live, still...) "Failure to Thrive" makes mealtimes and food intake strenuous and stressful. 
It is summer, my favorite time of the year. 
It is summer and At has no school.
I am in grad school. I am newly widowed. I have spent the day parenting alone. 
I owe my advisor a dissertation chapter, I owe a colleague a book review, I owe the IRS what seems a lot of money.
It's finally 7 pm and I put At to bed. After reading and singing and talking (At has always LOVED to talk), it's 8 pm and I'm getting ready to slip out of At's tiny bed. 
"Stay!" At says. Hopeful eyes, cheeky smile.
And I (will forever regret that I) said the tired thing in my head. "I have to go, Kanna... I need to make some space for me." 
"Wait-wait!" the lonely child says--tiny, triumphant hands eagerly sweeping up books and stuffies to make room, "I'll make more space for you!"  
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Pic: Rainbow-tunnel-carwash. Stuck there, it seemed both grim and hopeful at the same time. 

1/2 happy news, sadness 1/2 suicide, genocide (C.W.)

Huck's bloodwork came back within the normal range! I was so nervous to pick up the call from the vet, but it was ok in the end.  (Scout...