Shari Della Penna
  • Home
  • About
    • My family
    • My work
    • My favorites
    • FAQ's
  • Contact
  • Blog

"Small acts of kindness can change and humanise our world."
   Rabbi Lord Jonathan Sacks 1948-2020
   ​Chief Rabbi of Great Britain, 1991-2020
                         Author, Advocate, Advisor

I Learned That on YouTube!

5/13/2025

0 Comments

 
    The last time I was about to use the computer, I had searched for tips about how to become a good YouTuber, and one of the top suggestions was to write out what you wanted to film before you got started. There was even a template that showed me how to do it.
                              from: J. D. and the Family Business
                                                written by J. Dillard
                                  illustrated by Akeem S. Roberts
                                                          Kokila, 2021

    About ten years ago, I got my first smartphone. I made the change because, as texting became more popular and convenient, I found the cumbersome method I was forced to use with my flip phone was anything but convenient. It took 14 clicks just to sign my name!
    I like to be organized and found out that I could put the apps on my phone in folders. My phone’s help screens were not helpful. Google’s directions were too complicated. 
    A few days later, I was visiting with my ten-year-old grandson and showed him my new phone. We played around with Garage Band, played a little solitaire, and Angry Birds.
    When he said how cool my phone was, I told him that I learned there was a way to collect the same kinds of apps into folders. I told him I wanted to do that, but was having trouble. Did he know how? 
    “Did you try YouTube?” he asked.
    I handed over my phone, and a few minutes later, I was all set.
    
    YouTube is 20 years old. Here’s a short timeline and a few facts from a YouTube video. 
2005 April:     Jawed Aarim, one of the founders of YouTube, recorded and uploaded the first video, “me at the Zoo” 

2006 April:     YouTube is acquired by Google from founders Chad Hurley, Steve Chen, and Jawed

​2008 January:  YouTube adapted itself to be accessible on mobile devices

2009 April:      YouTuber, Fred, reached 1,000,000 subscribers. He sold t-shirts and Hot Topic began carrying them. Because he was so popular, he was invited to appear on an episode of  iCarly.”

2010 May:        YouTube added a “Like/Dislike” ranking system

2011 July:          Introduced movie feature where users could pay to watch movies
     December:  Added live-stream feature and streamed exclusive live events like the Ultima Fighting Championship (UFC)

2013 March:      YouTube changed its entire layout

2014 February:  Added Spotlight feature to easily find what was trending on the platform 

2017 December:  YouTube changed its logo and added YouTube Red, a paid subscription service. Now it’s called YouTube Premium

2019 March:       Billie Eilish published “Bad Guy”

2021 May:          YouTube created YouTube Shorts, 60-second videos, to compete with TikTok

2021 May:          Time stamps were added allowing users to jump to certain sections or topics

2021 November:   Removed the “dislike” button to protect smaller content creators from bullying

    Worldwide, more than 400 hours of content are uploaded to YouTube each minute and one billion hours of content are watched every day. YouTube is the second most popular website in the world, right behind Google.
    It was designed to provide an easy way for new, inexperienced computer users to upload content and share it over the Internet. In 2005, YouTube’s slogan was “Broadcast yourself. Watch and share your videos worldwide!” quickly shortened to “Broadcast yourself.”
    YouTube is a multi-billion-dollar business. It has captured more viewers than most TV stations and other media markets. It was Time magazine’s “Person of the Year” in 2006, and featured YouTube’s three creators.
    The average person spends almost 50 minutes a day watching YouTube content. And with 348 million views, “Baby Shark” is still the most popular video.
    What has all this watching and data collection about all this watching told us about ourselves? Along with funny cats and cute babies and sharks, YouTube has launched Joe Rogan through his right-wing podcast, Sean Evans, host of Hot Ones, and does anyone besides me NOT know Mr. Beast? 
    Of course, lots of nefarious topics are available for the taking, too. Disinformation about medical issues, crime, and politics comes immediately to mind.
    Last month, on YouTube’s 20th anniversary, Doug Most reported on the opinions of several faculty experts from Boston University regarding YouTube’s impact on society.  
    According to some studies, misinformation spreads up to six times faster than evidence-based content. This is a real problem. “The way our information landscape has evolved reveals a critical truth: sharing accurate information is necessary, but not sufficient…[W]e must also focus on making evidence-based content engaging, accessible, and relevant to a wide variety of audiences.” 
    That’s a tough nut to crack.
    Because it is so easy to access, YouTube has revolutionized how people receive and use online information. Streaming videos is ubiquitous. Searching for content is simple. What is not so simple or ubiquitous is discerning which information is not only useful, but accurate. 
    Anyone can post content and sometimes make it go viral. But the content is not vetted.
    What YouTube’s algorithm chooses for you to watch next is dependent on what you have already watched, leading you into a consistent and unvarying silo.
    On the upside, technical knowledge is accessible to anyone who wants to learn how to do a project or maybe just needs a brush-up. Some YouTubers are better than others, but so many people are experts in so many areas. 
    When I forgot how to turn the corners on the binding I needed to attach to the baby quilts I made about every two years, a particular YouTuber was on my subscription list.
    If I can’t get to the library, or if the book I want is not available nearby, I can usually find my blog quote on a read aloud on YouTube.
    And just yesterday, a friend sent me a link to a recipe site with a YouTube video on cooking for company embedded right in it.
    YouTube is available in 76 languages and most countries. Whether you’re looking for quilting techniques or what to plan for brunch, recipes included, or how to change your car’s battery, you might want to start with YouTube.  

​One of my book clubs is reading The Institute by Stephen King (Scribner, 2019). It’s a contemporary story about a group of kids sent to the Institute, where their telekinetic and telepathic abilities are exploited. It’s creepy, but not terrifying. It’s also absorbing, engaging, and thought-provoking. Typical Stephen King, if there is such a thing. Recommended.
                            Be curious! (and learn from YouTube)
0 Comments

Look Who’s Laughing

5/6/2025

0 Comments

 
Do you know what
the best sound in the world is?
The best sound in the world is
by far
…the sound of your laughter.
          from If You Laugh, I’m Starting This Book Over
                                      written by Chris Harris
                                   illustrated by Serge Bloch
                           Little, Brown and Company, 2022
                             (accessed on YouTube 5/5/25)

    Euclid Beach was an amusement park in Cleveland when I was growing up. I remember going with our parents in the summer. My favorite part of the park was not the rides, not the cotton candy, or even the beach. I liked all that just fine, but Laffing Sal was the highlight for me. Partly because I thought she was really funny, but more so, I think, because my dad did. 
    She was enormous, way taller than any grown-up I knew. She stood in a glass case in front of the fun house. When I was small, I thought she was real. I think Dad thought that was funnier than Laffing Sal, herself.
    Even though my sister and my mom thought she was creepy, Dad would laugh and laugh and so did I. So did my brother. Laffing Sal bent from her large waist and her arms moved and her head, too. Her laugh was raucous. She stood 6’10” including her 12” pedestal. She was commissioned by the Philadelphia Toboggan Company of Pennsylvania and built in Canton, Ohio by the Old King Cole Papier Mache Company. 
    Many amusement parks hosted Laffing Sals. She was made of seven layers of card stock mounted over steel coils. Her arms and legs were attached with fabric, staples, pins, nuts, and bolts. Her laugh track was hidden in her pedestal on top of a stack of 78 rpm records. After she had laughed through her whole stack, an attendant restacked them, and off she’d go again. 
    And so did we.
    Her laugh was contagious. Sometimes a crowd would gather around, but Dad, my brother, and I would stay there the longest. It was hard to leave her laughing.
    She worked with a push-button. That’s how I finally found out she was not a real person dressed up in her enclosure. I tried to find out about Tanya Garth, the woman who gave her laugh to Sal, but came to a dead end. 
    You can hear her here, though.
    Euclid Beach closed in 1969. In 1997, John Tomaro and John Frato bought Sal at an auction. They took her to events in Northeast Ohio to keep the traditions of Euclid Beach alive. Now she resides in part of the area once occupied by the original Euclid Beach and is run by the Cleveland MetroParks.
    Even though Sal was placed outside the Fun House, she wasn’t spooky. But could she really be good for our health? Is there any truth to the saying laughter is the best medicine?
    Not surprisingly, the simple answer is yes.
    We laugh for different reasons and all of them relate to our need for social connection, says Sophie Scott, one of the world’s leading experts on laughter. “We’re 30 times more likely to laugh if we’re with someone else than if we are alone,” especially if we know and feel comfortable with them. 
    We laugh to mask difficult emotions, too. Think of nervous laughter. Or fear. I used to laugh when Mom yelled at me for not cleaning up my room or not turning in my homework on time. That never went well. For either of us.
    We laugh to feel emotionally connected with a group. The contagious element of laughter is a form of social bonding. We use laughter to demonstrate joy and affection.
    We laugh as a physical response to a joke, as a reaction to our environment, or to being tickled. Even through all the ticklish controversy (which is a subject for a different day).
    Dr. Scott also finds that laughter relieves stress. Levels of cortisol (the stress hormone) go down, and adrenaline and endorphins are released, making us feel happier and more relaxed.
    Some studies say that laughter may relieve pain. Even though the research is in its early stages, finding that endorphins are released when we laugh will probably reinforce the idea.
    Laughter burns calories. A Vanderbilt University study found that laughing for 10 to 15 minutes burns about 40 calories.
    Research from Loma Linda University shows that laughing improves short-term memory in adults in their 60s and 70s. 
    Laughter is probably good for our hearts, too. That 10 - 15 minute calorie-burn increases our heart rates and oxygen levels.
    From the time we are babies, humans distinguish the difference between a polite titter and a genuine guffaw. People are good at telling the difference between voluntary and involuntary laughter. And we get better and better as we age.
    Faking our laughter shows our ability to adjust to social norms. It is an indication of our emotional intelligence as we “read” the people we are with.
    Fake laughter uses our voluntary muscles. The areas in our brains that light up with our emotional activity are quiet.
    Genuine laughter, though, is a whole body affair. It’s spontaneous. The emotional centers in our brains are lit up and dancing. 
    It’s the difference between jumping for joy and performing a choreographed number. 
    Genuine laughter is a heart-thing, literally.
    But what if you don’t laugh very much any more, or even at all? That can really happen. Susanne White of caregiverwarrior.com lists several suggestions to get your laugh back. 
    Watch funny movies or TV shows. 
    Watch those funny cat videos or listen to YouTube laugh tracks.
    Consciously look for the funny side in a situation. Find the cosmic irony. It’s there.
    Watch yourself laugh in a mirror. Fake it till you make it. A real chortle may escape. Keep practicing.
    Seek out people who make you laugh.
    On March 1, 2022, I wrote this and it’s still true. “The world is not a funny place right now, I know. But laughter is healthy. It is good for our souls. So this week’s challenge is: Find something funny and tell someone close to you what you found.” 

I just finished reading Anxious People by Fredrik Backman (Atria Books, 2019). It’s a thought-provoking, truth-seeking, relationship-exploring story of a crime that may never have happened in a place where eight unlikely strangers find understanding. And a father and son do, too. This is one I will read again!
                           Stay curious! (and do something silly)
0 Comments

Enjoy the Early Spring

4/29/2025

0 Comments

 
Good morning,
No post today. Enjoy the early Spring weather.
Next Tuesday, May 6, is Ohio’s Primary. Like me, you may only need to cast your ballot on one issue, but it’s important. 
Here’s a link to more information: Ballotpedia.org 
​See you next week!

0 Comments

Where is True North?

4/22/2025

0 Comments

 
…but the South Pole wasn't his home. He was a polar bear, and polar bears live in the North Pole.
Which is why he said goodbye and traveled 12,430 miles all the way back to the North Pole, where he belonged.
                                           written by Jean Willis
                                     illustrated by Peter Jarvis
                                  Nosy Crow/Candlewick, 2015
                                 accessed on YouTube 4/21/25

    Mom and Dad took us on day trips to interesting nearby places instead of long family vacations. Dad was an expert map reader. Mom was, too. My brother picked up the skill easily, but my sister got carsick so was excused. And I, well, left and right, directions like NSEW were (are) confusing. 
    Dad kidded me saying I could get lost backing out of the driveway. He was right, then. I always thought spatial relations was not my best thing. I’m lots better now, so maybe I just lived down to his expectations.
    Now, take the North Pole. Everyone knows the magnetic North Pole is different from the geographic North Pole. But I just learned that even though the geographic North Pole is stationary (even as Earth orbits and rotates), the magnetic North Pole strays.
    Magnetic poles (North and South) are located at the precise spot where the geomagnetic field is exactly perpendicular to the surface of the Earth. An imaginary line to the center of Earth’s core is called a dip pole.
    The imaginary line connecting the magnetic North and South Poles is not necessarily parallel to the imaginary one connecting the geographic Poles. Currently, the axis of the dip pole is inclined 9.32° compared to the rotational axis. This differential (that changes over time) only matters if a reversal occurs. That is unlikely and perhaps the topic for another day. 
    But where the Magnetic North Pole IS does matter. Back to that in a few minutes.
    In 1831, James Clark Ross (1800 - 1862), a British Naval Officer, located the Magnetic North Pole in the Canadian Arctic. It has been drifting slowly across the Arctic Plain and is now nearing Russia.
    You might wonder, as I did, Why does it move? Well, it’s complicated. Earth’s magnetic field is caused by Earth’s outer core. Unlike the solid inner core, the outer core is liquid. It is the movement of iron, nickel, sulfur, and oxygen sloshing around the huge solid core made of iron and nickel that creates the magnetic field. Think of opposite ends of a magnet. Opposites attract while like repels like.
    Since the magnetic field is constantly changing, so are the magnetic Poles. From 1831, when Ross first located it, to the 1990s, magnetic North drifted about 9 miles (15 km) per year. However, since the 1990s, it has been moving faster, lots faster.
    Using satellite measurements, scientists think they have figured out why. Information from the journal Nature Geoscience says “tussling magnetic blobs” in Earth’s outer core cause the ruckus. One blob is under Canada, and one is under Siberia. As they attract and repel each other, the magnetic field shifts. Here's an illustration from EarthSky.org. 
    Within the last 20 years, Magnetic North has been clocked between 30 and 50 miles per year, galloping South, toward Siberia.
    But about five years ago, movement slowed to between 30 and 22 miles (50 to 35 km) per year. EarthSky.org says, [it’s the] “biggest deceleration in speed we've ever seen.”
    GPS (Global Positioning System) Navigation depends on the accuracy of Earth’s magnetic field. Think of a magnet and a compass. Because Magnetic North is always moving, navigation is tricky.
    Experts from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) meet with their British counterparts every five years to develop a more accurate World Magnetic Model (WMM). While emergency updates are done as necessary, those five years may be too long to wait.
    While we still watch objects in the sky to tell where we are in space and how to get somewhere else, satellites (for the most part) have replaced “navigation by the stars.” NOAA's website tells us we depend on “[o]ver 30 GPS navigation satellites [that] are whizzing around the world, orbiting at an altitude of 12,000 miles, to help us find our way.  
    The new WMM has been available since January 2025, and mapping companies, shipping agencies, logistics firms, and governments are busy making updates.
    Our smartphones depend on GPS, too, but those updates happen automatically.
    Climate scientists have been studying the effects of the increasing levels of CO2 on climate change since at least 2012. According to an article in physics.org, “[w]hile CO2 causes heat to be trapped in the lower atmosphere, it actually cools the upper atmosphere.” Using computer simulations, the scientists found that changes in Earth’s magnetic field (in the upper atmosphere) cause changes in global temperatures, with the “strongest warming … located over Antarctica” and all those icebergs.
    Today is Earth Day. Celebrate by planting a tree or two, our best allies to capture the carbon we are so wantonly inclined to spew into the air.

I just finished reading God of the Woods by Liz Moore. When 13-year-old Barbara Van Laar disappears from her family’s exclusive overnight camp, it feels like a replay of the disappearance of her older brother. Camp counselors, a complicated past, and family intrigue work against a female detective, trying to establish her credibility, to unravel the “twin” mysteries, only to discover they are not as similar as they first appear. It’s long, but worth your time!
                                 Be curious! (and breathe deep)
0 Comments

I've Looked at Clouds From Both Sides, Now

4/15/2025

0 Comments

 
Little Cloud drifted toward the clouds.
Then all the clouds changed into one big cloud and 
rained!
                                                    from Little Cloud
                               written and illustrated by Eric Carle
                                                          Philomel, 1996
    Part of my grandson’s fascination with clouds comes from his keen interest in weather phenomena, especially severe weather: hurricanes; tornadoes; cyclones. He got himself a small notebook that fit in his pocket and started studying clouds. He drew pictures of them and collected all his notes in one place. 
    He learned about different cloud formations and what kinds of weather they would bring. Needless to say, I was more than a little impressed with the quality of illustrated information and at least as impressed by the idea of the notebook itself.
    So when I heard an article on “Living on Earth,” last Saturday, I knew I had my topic. First thing I learned is how complex clouds are. Very. While they are all composed of either water droplets or ice crystals, cloud formation, height, size, and color are all important.
    In 1803, meteorologist Luke Howard classified clouds into four core types. 
  • Cirro-form  high, whitish, and wispy clouds made of ice crystals.
  • Cumulo-form  puffy with sharp outlines and usually a flat bottom. These are the ones that look like bunnies and butterflies.
  • Strato-form broad and flat, like a blanket with scattered edges.    
  • Nimbo-form  a combination of all three. Gray, heavy, and portend rain.
    But clouds usually form with some combination of features. 
    High-level clouds are white and delicate. Ice crystals gather to form cirrocumulus and cirrostratus. They glow in splendid sunsets.
    Mid-level clouds are usually made of water droplets. Altocumulus are the most common. Many different layers can appear at the same time and cover much of the sky. Altostratus are gray and layered. Sometimes, you can see streaks of rain (virga) in the distance, hanging diagonally from the cloud and even reaching the ground. Nimbostratus are thick enough to blot out the sun. They are ragged and full of rain or snow. They fall lower to the ground as the rain or snow continues.
    Low-level clouds are also made of water droplets. Cumulous clouds puff up like cauliflower on otherwise clear days, but cumulonimbus are thunderstorm clouds. They can also produce hail and tornadoes. Stratocumulus clouds are gray and honeycombed. They might look like rain is on the way, but most likely, it is not. Stratus clouds can produce drizzle, ice prisms (sleet), or snow grains (small hail).
    Our current climate crisis is an energy imbalance. It is defined as a physics problem where more energy is entering our planet than leaving it. 
    Jennifer Francis is an atmospheric scientist conducting her research at the Woodwell Climate Research Center. (woodwellclimate.org) 
    In her interview on "Living on Earth," Dr. Francis explained that shrinking ice coverage exposes darker ground and absorbs more heat, adding to global warming. Here’s a paradox, though. Cleaner air reduces the toxic haze of tiny airborne particles that reflect light. So cleaner air allows more sunshine to reach the ground, too. 
    The white sands of deserts reflect energy back to the atmosphere. So do the massive ice sheets. City sidewalks, light-colored rooftops, and buildings do too, to a lesser degree. 
    In an ideal world, the energy being absorbed by dark, rich farm soil, trees, crops, and plants using the sun’s energy for photosynthesis, and even asphalt would balance out the amount reflected.
    But, Earth is out of balance.
    Low, thick clouds, the cumulo-forms, reflect light. High, thin clouds transmit incoming solar radiation, and, at the same time, trap some of the infrared radiation, warming Earth’s surface even more.
    The balance between clouds’ effective heating and cooling depends on how high a cloud is, how big, and what it’s made of, ice or water. And what is under them.
    NASA scientists discovered the gap in our energy-in-energy-out equation is partially explained by clouds. 
    If it was only that easy.
    The scientists used satellites to measure wavelengths of energy coming from different cloud formations floating over different surfaces and marked the change over time.
    They discovered that clouds made of water droplets have a much stronger influence on the energy that is trapped or absorbed than those made of ice crystals. Those that blanket the sky are good at reflecting sunlight back to outer space. 
    But their study also suggests that cloud cover is becoming less, especially around the equator, due to air currents and temperature changes, so more light is getting through our atmosphere and adding to the warming.
    Dr. Francis confirms that “the last couple years were the warmest on record for the earth, probably going back 120,000 years…” 
    She adds that the cuts to NOAA and NASA, agencies heavily involved in interpreting data from their satellites, are concerning. Their scientists help us learn how much worse our climate crisis will get, where the most severe storms are occurring, and how we humans can intervene. 
    By cutting funding to these agencies, we are less able to predict weather patterns and less able to give people time to prepare or move out of a storm’s path. 
    Keeping all this in the back of my mind, I choose to concentrate on the next generation and the one after that. Those kids who draw pictures of clouds and fill notebooks with scientific information. The ones who put into practice what they’ve learned and show the rest of us how to follow their lead.

I’m reading The Storyteller by Jodi Picoult (Emily Bestler Books/Atria, 2013). The granddaughter of a Holocaust survivor learns that her neighbor was a Nazi war criminal. My takeaway is a clearer understanding of the power of Story, that we are all storytellers, and everyone’s story is an important piece of a cohesive society. WARNING: Graphic violence is depicted throughout, but especially in the grandmother’s memories of her time in Auschwitz Concentration Camp. Recommended.
                                Be curious! (and keep looking up)
0 Comments

Libraries: The First Step of a Thousand Journeys (with thanks to Orsen Scott Card)

4/8/2025

0 Comments

 
    I feel the need to correct myself: The little library is not “mine.” Libraries are meant to grow, and to be shared.
                                             from The Lost Library
                      written by Rebecca Stead and Wendy Mass
                                              Feiwel & Friends, 2023
                                                       (read on Libby)
    
    When I was growing up, my library was about four miles from my house, too far away for six-year-old me to walk by myself, and I wasn’t big enough to ride my bike yet, so Mom took me. Sometimes my sister came, too. Sometimes my brother did. But library time was my time with Mom. She loved to read and so did I. (I still do.)
    The library was in the converted mansion of William E. Telling. The Cuyahoga Library System bought the building and the property in the 1950s. It was my library until I grew up and moved away. I took my kids there, too, when they were babies.
    The Cleveland Heights library was closer, and when I got a little older and better at bike riding, I rode there. The whole basement floor was a kid’s room.
    We had a library in our elementary school where we learned about the Dewey Decimal System. It makes so much sense in a non-mathematical way. 
    In 1883 Melville Dewey became the librarian of Columbia College (now Columbia University) in New York City. He founded the world's first library school there in 1887.
    But libraries have existed in the world since ancient times. Probably, the most famous is the Library of Alexandria in Egypt. Opened during the reign of Ptolemy II Philadelphus, between 286 and 285 BCE (Before the Common Era) it survived a prolonged period of decline, finally closing in the third century CE (Common Era).
    Greece, Turkey, and Morocco served their people with libraries. So did China with its Cave of the Thousand Buddhas, where, according to HistoryHit.com, a “system of 500 temples stood at the crossroads of the Silk Road.” In the early 20th Century, over 50,000 documents were discovered there, written in a “large variety of languages.” 
    According to the American Library Association, “Public libraries—and indeed, all libraries--are changing and dynamic places where librarians help people find the best source of information whether it's a book, a website, or database entry.”
    Besides public libraries, other libraries serve their clients’ needs every day. School libraries, academic libraries, and special libraries including medical libraries, law libraries, and research libraries are some examples.
    In January 2025, the Institute of Museum and Library Services, IMLS, launched its first-ever National Museum Survey. From its website, “The [IMLS] is the primary source of federal support for the nation’s libraries and museums.” The survey was designed to find the greatest need, the most used resources, the most important programs, and other places where libraries and librarians as well as museums and curators serve the public and common good. 
    On April 1, 2025, NPR reported that the entire IMLS staff was put on paid administrative leave. They were notified by email. Employees turned in government property and their email accounts were disabled.
    How can a society retain its culture without its libraries and museums? 
    Keith E. Sonderling, the deputy secretary of labor, is now the president’s pick for the new acting director of IMLS as well. He was confirmed on March 20, 2025. Sonderling is quoted in his acceptance speech on the IMLS website. “…We will revitalize IMLS and restore focus on patriotism, ensuring we preserve our country’s core values, promote American exceptionalism and cultivate love of country in future generations.”
    I can only imagine what libraries will look like after this “revitalization” and “preservation” takes place.
    How can a society retain its culture without its libraries and museums? Will Mr. Sonderling get to decide what is important to keep available for public use?
    Some states and communities also support their libraries, but many libraries will be unfunded if the IMLS is gutted.  
    National Librarian Day is April 16, 2025. While the day was first sponsored by the American Library Association (ALA) in 1958, it wasn’t until the ALA called attention to it in a 2004 campaign to “raise awareness and appreciation for library staff.” It’s been celebrated on April 16 ever since.
    Some ways you can thank your library staff include attending a library program. Libraries offer everything from Baby Storytime to Chair Yoga. Craft programs, music programs, how to file your taxes, how to design a garden, how to use a computer (from beginning learners to experienced). All are offered for free. 
    Materials to support all these activities are available to borrow. 
    Spring is a great time to de-clutter. Take all those books you promised yourself you’d read again but never did to the library’s book sale. The Friends of the Library use the money they raise to support their library in countless ways. 
    Consider volunteering or donating to their group.
    In Ohio, the House Of Representatives is working on its next two-year budget. Their current proposal will eliminate the Public Library Fund (PLF) and replace it with a line-item appropriation which will cut funding by $100 million compared to the governor’s proposal.
    Libraries in Ohio are funded at the same level as 2000, with no adjustment for inflation. Through its line item, the House’s budget would eliminate the requirement that a portion of the state’s General Fund be dedicated to libraries. Their proposed new distribution formula would cut funding to 39 counties of our 88. 
    That’s besides what’s going on with the IMLF in Washington DC.
    How can a society retain its culture without its libraries and museums?
    What can you do? 
    Ohio Library Council (OLC) suggests that you contact your State Representative and Matt Huffman Speaker of the House, TODAY. 
    Scroll to the bottom of the Public Library of Youngstown and Mahoning County’s blog to find a script you can use or adapt. Or check your library’s website for alternate scripts, but please act today. 
    The survival of our culture depends on all of us working together.
    -—stay curious! (and find answers, entertainment, and information at  your library)
0 Comments

Kindness Matters

4/1/2025

0 Comments

 
It was a day that could’ve been really bad
if not for the kindness of a few cool beans.
                                                from The Cool Bean
                                               written by Jory John
                                          illustrated by Pete Oswald
                              Harper/HarperCollinsPublishers, 2019
                                   (accessed on YouTube 3/30/25)


    When I looked up the definition of “kindness,” I was more than a little disappointed. Merriam-Webster online defines kindness as “the act of being kind.” Hmm, I kept looking.
    On their blog, InspireKindness defines kindness as “the quality of being friendly, generous, and considerate. And also acknowledges that “kindness” means much more than that. It’s seen and felt. It is intentional. It is thoughtful.
    Meaning that kindness begins with a thought. It’s not the idea of what can be done, though, it’s the actual doing.
    My mom used to tell me “the road to hell is paved with good intentions.” It’s what she said when I failed to follow through on a helpful or generous or loving idea. It might have been a phone call to check on my grandma if she wasn’t feeling well. Or sending a birthday card to my cousin who lived in a different state. Or playing with my little brother even when I didn’t feel like it.
    It goes without saying that not everyone is kind. But sociologists, psychologists, anthropologists, and other healthcare scientists know this: kind people are happier than those who are unkind.
    In a recent article in Healthbeat, a publication of the Harvard Medical School, Tyler VanderWeele, the co-director of the Initiative on Health, Spirituality, and Religion at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, says, "There's compelling evidence that kindness is linked with a number of aspects of health and well-being.”
    He goes on to say that genuinely kind people are kind intentionally. They always look for ways to make life better for someone and find ways to contribute something positive to another person. 
    Humans are naturally social beings, but kindness comes more easily to some of us than others. Dr. VanderWeele suggests we purposefully do kind acts, five different acts in one day for six weeks. He says that will help form a habit, and kindness (and happiness) will grow from the “outside in” rather than the inside out.
    Here are some of VanderWeele’s suggestions to try:
  • compliment the first three people you see
  • run errands for a friend or neighbor 
  • leave a bigger-than-usual tip for a service worker 
  • listen, really listen, to a friend or colleague who is having a bad day
  • do an unpleasant household chore when it’s “not your turn”
  • donate to a worthwhile charity
  • let someone check out ahead of you in the grocery store 
  • volunteer 
    The General Assembly of the United Nations has set March 20 each year as the International Day of Happiness. It’s when they present their World Happiness Report, a list of countries rated on the achievement of 17 Sustainable Development Goals. The goals are the epitome of kindness. The high correlation of happiness with striving to reach these goals is not surprising.
    And it turns out that being kind is not only good for the recipient of your kindness, you, the kind person, also benefit. These benefits include not only a feeling of well-being but actual health benefits that can be measured, too.
    In her TEDxDeerfield talk presented on May 16, 2018, Reagan Hill introduced a study done by Emory University. It illustrated that the brains of participants doing kind acts lit up as if they were the ones receiving the kindness. 
    Doing acts of kindness releases serotonin into the bloodstream. Serotonin is known for its ability to heal wounds, calm the nervous system, and elicit happiness. Oxytocin is also released, counteracting cortisol and relieving excess stress. Oxytocin is protective of the heart by decreasing blood pressure. And it strengthens our immune system. Studies have shown that due to its stress reduction benefits, kindness slows aging.
    Ms. Hill listed three parts of being kind: harmlessness; humility; and honesty. Click the link above for her enlightening 12-minute discussion.    
    We live in a scary, grief-filled, and angry world. In not so many words, Mom used to tell me that I’d get what I expected. It felt appropriate to have those words come to mind when I again feel overwhelmed by factors beyond, way beyond my control.
    That’s not to say that our world is rosy. It is not. But in recognizing our reality, we can choose, over and over, to be kind, to do kind and meaningful and helpful acts for the people of our world, in our communities, and in our families.
    We can, like Anne Frank, choose to believe that “[d]espite everything, … people are really good at heart.”
    Being kind is good for the world and good for each of us.

I just finished reading Half-Moon Summer by Elaine Vickers (Holiday House, 2023). It is a middle-grade fiction title about two kids choosing to run a half-marathon, both for different reasons, and both with strong connections to their respective families. The story shows the power of friendship as they hope the race will help them find meaning in the challenges their families face. Recommended. 
                                              Be curious! (and kind)
0 Comments

Fun With Flags* (a nod to The Big Bang Theory)

3/25/2025

0 Comments

 
She stands for all our heroes--
Courageous, strong, and brave.
She reminds us of the freedoms
They’ve fought to win and save.
                                  from Meet Our Flag, Old Glory
                                    written by April Jones Prince
                                          illustrated by Joan Paley
                                               Little, Brown, 2004

    I grew up in Cleveland, Ohio, and only just became aware that Cleveland has its own flag. It’s had one since 1896.
    General Moses Cleavland chose the location for his city at the spot where the mouth of the Cuyahoga River empties into the southern shore of Lake Erie. It was to be the site for the new capital city of the Connecticut Western Reserve, a land company made of speculators from Connecticut. After making his decision, Cleaveland returned to Connecticut and never came back. 
    Local lore says that The Cleveland Advertiser dropped the first A in his name to make the name fit on its masthead. True? We will probably never know.
    In its early days, Cleveland served as a major trading hub for the Great Lakes. 
    In the War of 1812, the 100 or so inhabitants of the general’s village had no idea of their importance to the War declared on Great Britain on June 18th. Because of its location, though, it served as a base for supplies, a meeting place for military units, and the establishment of Fort Huntington and a military hospital, neither of which are still standing.
    By the time of the signing of the Treaty of Ghent on December 24, 1814, which ended the war, the residents, because of their proximity to the river and the lake, could congratulate themselves on their strategic contributions to the nation’s war effort and their use of natural resources in their defense against an invasion that could have, but did not actually, materialize.
    After the Ohio and Erie Canal was finished in 1832, the village became a key link from the Ohio River to the Great Lakes and from there to the Atlantic Ocean. 
    The population continued to grow.
    Soon, Cleveland became home to immigrants from Europe and the Middle East as well as African American migrants moving North on their quest for better working conditions.
    Before and during the Civil War, Cleveland was a major stop on the Underground Railroad. The city was full of a vocal group of abolitionists, strongly influenced by their roots in New England. 
    During the Civil War, Cleveland became an industrial giant, manufacturing everything from railroad iron to warships.
    More people came.
    The Rockefellers grew their refining centers in Cleveland, founding Standard Oil, which became Sohio before partnering with BP in the 1960s. The company used the name Sohio until 1991.
    More business meant more opportunity. More opportunity, more people.
    At the beginning of the 1900s, Cleveland was the country’s sixth largest city. Car manufacturing rivaled Detroit. 
    In the first Gilded Age, generous philanthropists helped grow Cleveland into a cultural center. The Cleveland Museum of Art advertised free admission. The Cleveland Orchestra, founded in 1918, is known as one of the five major orchestras in the US. Playhouse Square, a hub for live theater was built in the 1920s. North-moving musicians brought the jazz scene with them.
    The 1920s also saw the growth of major retailers.
    And Cleveland was a sports town. The Cleveland Guardians (playing as the Cleveland Indians) won their first World Series championship in 1920. 
    But the Great Depression brought unemployment to about half of the city’s industrial workers. 
    Recovery took time, but by the end of WWII, Cleveland was back. Population boomed to almost 1,000,000 people. Cleveland baseball, hockey, and football teams dominated their leagues. 
    And along came Alan Freed and his “rock and roll.” 
    But Cleveland grew in fits and starts.
    When I was growing up, Cleveland was nicknamed “The best location in the nation.” By the time I was in high school, it was “the mistake on the lake.” Pollution in the Cuyahoga River was in no small part to blame for the name. Racial tension, tight budgets, and lost population due to “de-industrialization” played their part. A river burning and a spoiled lake competed with the “Emerald Necklace.” 
    How do you put all that on a flag? 
    It started in 1895 when a New York journalist, Julian Ralph, visited Cleveland. He was impressed with Cleveland’s civic spirit and pride and told William Stokely, a Plain Dealer reporter, that he was surprised Cleveland did not have a flag. Ralph, Stokely, and city leaders held a contest. 
    In 1895, Cleveland City Council unanimously adopted 18-year-old Susan Hepburn's design. It was unveiled on October 21, 1895, in time for the 100th anniversary of Cleveland's birth. Ms. Hepburn, an art school graduate, incorporated a shield with the name Cleveland on it, an anvil, a hammer, and a wheel to show the city’s growing industry. An anchor and windlass represented the importance of the lake and river. All on a red, white, and blue background. The current mayor, Robert McKisson, added the words “Progress and Prosperity” the next month.
    Click here to see the original 1896 version:
    A lot can happen in 100 + years, and last year a group of volunteer Clevelanders decided it was time to update the flag. 
    They wanted the flag to be “instantly recognizable” and “intimately connected with the identity of our city.” It was to be modern and inclusive. A new contest was put in place.
    The new flag was unfurled last week. It’s designed by Shan Rodich and incorporates symbols both subtle and evocative.
    See the flag and read up on the symbolism here: 
    You can see most of the submissions here: 
    Ted Kaye is a vexillologist, someone who studies flags. In his book Good Flag, Bad Flag, along with his five elements of good flag design, he includes a tip. Draw it small. Use a one-inch by one-and-a-half-inch rectangle to design your flag. That’s what a 3x5 foot flag looks like atop a flagpole from 100 feet away.
    I wonder what a flag of Youngstown would look like?
                      Be curious! (and hold tight, especially when
                                                     the wind blows)

I’m reading The Queen’s Secret by Karen Harper (HarperCollins, 2020). At first, I was put off by the introductory pages’ long list of monarchs and their relations. I thought the story would be mired in the complexity of characters. I’m happy to report I was wrong. I’m learning about the Queen Mother, Elizabeth, who was QEII’s mother and the wife of King George VI. The book is historical fiction, and though extremely well-researched, the author admits to taking some liberties. Recommended.​
0 Comments

It’s a Fluke

3/18/2025

0 Comments

 
…pretty soon he was hundreds of miles from home and was singing loudly about everything he loved, and many other fish and mammals were listening to him…
                                      from Soren’s Seventh Song
                                           written by Dave Eggers
                                    illustrated by Mark Hoffmann
                                      Cameron Kids/Abrams, 2024

    Humpback whales are making a comeback. Well, four of the 14 identified family units are still protected as endangered and one is threatened, but the other ten are indeed, repopulating themselves. 
    Putting Captain Ahab’s ocean treks in his pursuit of Moby Dick and other adventurous types aside, owners, captains, and crew of whaling ships in the late 1800s and early 1900s were interested in only one thing, the money to be made by hunting, capturing, and processing whales. 
    Then, whales were hunted relentlessly, almost to extinction. Before their populations were decimated, they provided oil for lamps and machines. Spermaceti, a highly prized oil found in the head of a sperm whale, was a great prize. New Bedford, Massachusetts, was such a busy port dealing mostly in lamp oil, that it was nicknamed “The City That Lit the World.” 
    Other whales provided vast amounts of blubber, which, when separated from its skin and cut into chunks, was rendered into its own lesser grade of whale oil. The oil was processed into soap, paint, varnish, rope, and textiles.
    The bony plates in the upper jaw of some whales (including Humpbacks) strain food from the gallons of seawater whales suck in during feeding. Before plastic was invented, baleen harvested from hunted whales was made into stays in women’s corsets and hoops for their skirts. It was also made into umbrella ribs, riding crops, buggy whips, and hat brims.
    As you might imagine, whaling was a dangerous occupation. Before all the rendering of blubber into oil and baleen into corsets took place, a whale must be caught. A harpoon (a long shaft with a barb at the end) was the primary weapon, but whales are heavy. Their weight and the fury with which they fought made them hard to catch and quick to escape.
    That is, until Lewis Temple (c1800-1854), an African American abolitionist from New Bedford, Massachusetts, invented a pivoting iron head and attached that to the tip of a harpoon. Now, when the harpoon sunk into the flesh of the whale, the hinge at the tip pivoted, embedding the hook and ensuring the whale did not get away. 
    This simple invention revolutionized the whaling industry. Remaining in use until the 1950s, Temple’s toggle was so efficient that according to Dr. Wally Franklin of the Oceania Project, “between 1900 and 1978, over two million whales were killed.”
    Humpbacks became a protected species in the early 1960s, and in 1986, the International Whaling Commission placed a moratorium on commercial whaling, ending the practice (except in Japan.) Citing the possible need for use as a food source, Japan withdrew from the IWC in 1986. Since then, limits have been placed on the amount of whales Japanese whalers can take. 
    Whaling is also limited to “subsistence whaling” for the Inupiat and Siberian Yupik people living on (and off) the coast of Northwestern Alaska and monitored since 1979. Most of the whales harvested for food are not Humpbacks, though.
    Humpbacks live in every ocean in the world, but those 14 family groups cluster at the east and west coasts of South America, southern Africa, and Australia. 
    The water surrounding Australia is a dedicated whale sanctuary that has protected humpbacks, especially, since 1989. The water temperature is mild, the way they like it, and food is plentiful. According to Wally Franklin of the Oceania Project, 40,000 humpbacks live in Australian waters. 
    Dr. Franklin acknowledges that the severe depletion of sperm whales and near extinction of blue whales has provided little competition for humpbacks searching for food and mates. Which brings us to whalesong.
    According to the IFLAscience newsletter, all whales vocalize, but only a few species actually sing, and the best and most famous singers are humpbacks. Males and females use calls. They include clicks, whistles, and pulses. They are used for navigation, coordinating hunting strategies, and maintaining social bonds within a pod.
    But only males sing. Their songs are long, sometimes up to 20 minutes and include repeating phrases, rhythms, and structured patterns. Researchers think the primary reason for the song is to attract a mate. Maybe something like Elvis’s “Love Me Tender”? 
    So all the feeding, singing, and mating seems to be working, for now.
    I’ve never seen a live whale. They are so huge that even if I saw one in an aquarium, even if I was very young, I think I would remember. So I’ve only seen them on a screen, from a physical and electronic distance. Not the best way, I agree, but that’s all I have. 
    Because of the recent (1/22/25) executive order to disallow the Endangered Species Act to be an obstacle to energy development (read “drill, baby, drill”), I may never will.

I’m reading The Secret Letters by Margaret Peterson Haddix (Quill Tree, 2022). Recommended by my youngest grandson, it’s a combination of historical fiction and mystery with a friendship story that works to show readers the difference between junk and clutter. When two friends unravel two separate mysteries, they discover that true friendships can stand the test of time.

                                      Be curious! (and keep singing)
0 Comments

What’s Your Type?

3/11/2025

0 Comments

 
At first, [Farmer Brown] couldn’t believe his ears. 
Cows that type?
Impossible!
Click, clack MOO!
Click, clack, MOO!
Clickety, clack MOO!
                        from Click, Clack, Moo: Cows That Type
                                          written by Doreen Cronin
                                          illustrated by Betsy Lewin
                                               Simon Spotlight, 2000

    According to typing.com's free typing test, I can type 61 words per minute with 99% accuracy. (I knew I mistyped a lowercase M when it should have been uppercase and didn’t go back to fix it.) I’m satisfied with that. I type a little (or a lot) slower, though, when I have to think before I type or remember how to spell a word instead of copying an already formulated text. I would probably type slower, too, if the words were nonsense words.
    But go ahead and click the link. Check yours, too, if you are curious.
    I learned to type on a manual machine, but my parents bought me an electric typewriter when I went to college. I don’t remember the brand, but it had an extra ribbon that magically erased my mistakes. I still had to listen for the ding at the end of each line and pay attention to the mark I made to show the bottom of the page, though. Lots of paper still ended up in the “scratch bin” for grocery lists, to-do lists, and checkbook balancing.
    Even though typewriters and typewriting are experiencing a small resurgence, NPR reported on a story last January that the last typewriter repair shop in Boston is closing. The owner, who is ready to retire, can’t find a buyer.
    Tom Furrier, who has been fixing typewriters for 45 years in Boston, will close his store at the end of this month (March, 2025). When he started working, “you could find 40 busy typewriter shops across Metro Boston,” Tom told an NPR interviewer last January. 
    After working there for many years, he bought the shop in 1990. Personal computers were gaining popularity, but a decade later, vintage was in, and Tom’s shop had people waiting in line for him to open. 
    In recent years, some big cities have become home to more shops, including Milwaukee, which claims to be the birth of the typewriter. 
    Henry Mill (1683?-1771), an English engineer, is credited with the invention of the first European typewriter in 1714. Queen Anne said of his machine, “[it] made counterfeiting more difficult and reading and writing easier.” 
    So, how easy is it to use a typewriter? Why are the keys arranged in a seemingly random order? Who came up with it? And is it really the best order?
    The long progression from Johannes Gutenberg to Bill Gates was an evolution in technology, mass production, and the spread of the written word.
    Today’s typewriter is based on the first commercial typewriter, designed by Christopher Latham Sholes and Carlos Glidden in 1866. Two years later, they contracted with the E. Remington Company to manufacture it.
    The letters were originally arranged in alphabetical order in two rows. Like later machines, each letter on the keyboard was attached to a rod that jumped to strike a paper when the key was struck, then snapped back into position. 
    Sholes, it’s said, discovered that the faster someone typed, the less time the rods had to snap back. They often collided and jammed. He decided to move the commonest letters to the most difficult places on the keyboard to slow down the typing and give the rods a little longer to fall back into place. He had designed the QWERTY keyboard.
    A different QWERTY story credits Densmore, a partner of Sholes. His layout considered common two-letter combinations. He placed each letter on the opposite side of the keyboard to provide efficiency in a two-handed movement while preventing collisions, clashes, and jams.
    QWERTY has been analyzed, studied, and experimented with since the first keyboard to use it. Well? Is QWERTY best? Only maybe. It’s surprisingly controversial. Loads of papers, studies, and experiments have been done. For now, at least, the keyboard isn’t changing. It’s the way it’s (almost) always been done. At least in English. 
    All Latin Alphabets use upper and lower case. It took five more years and the Industrial Revolution for Remington to add the “shift” key, allowing the typist to toggle between them.
    In Gutenberg’s time, letters used to set type were stored in cases. The capital letters or larger ones (the majuscule) were kept in the upper case, and the minuscule (smaller) ones went in the lower case. The names stuck. A discussion of majuscule and minuscule scripts would require a blog post of its own, so let’s leave it there for now.
    Very literal.
    The Cyrillic, Chinese, Thai, and Hebrew alphabets are some examples that mostly do not distinguish between upper and lower case. You can find more here. You can see layouts of their keyboards and type in any language you’d like here. It’s very cumbersome, though.    
    Centuries before modern, ok, vintage, typewriters became widely available, Johannes Gutenberg (c1395 - c1468 invented movable type. He was already familiar with printing and had created an alloy that could be quickly melted, cooled, and reformed. The small, metal pieces, each a single letter, could be arranged in infinite ways. He had also perfected an oil-based, fast-drying ink that was thick enough to coat the letters and still adhere to paper. The screw press, designed for rapid operation, also was in use before Gutenberg adapted it to its use in printing.
    But the essential element was Gutenberg’s adjustable mold. By using a frame, whole lines of text, upper case and lower, could be printed at once. 
    Paper had already been invented by the ancient Egyptians and Chinese, and movable type had already been invented in China. Inks and alloys were already in use, too, throughout the world. Perfecting the pieces and synthesizing them to create something so useful was Gutenberg’s genius.     
    The importance of his printing press can’t be overstated. Like the wheel, antibiotics, and electricity, it has changed our world forever.    

I just started reading When Women Were Dragons by Kelly Barnhill (Knopf Doubleday/Vintage, 2022). It’s gotten mixed reviews, but I loved her Girl Who Drank the Moon (Algonquin Books for Young Readers, 2016. Newbery winner), so I decided to give this one a try. I’ll let you know next time.
                       Be curious! (and literal, when necessary)   
0 Comments
<<Previous

         I'm a children's writer and poet intent on observing the world and nurturing those I find in my small space .

    Archives

    April 2025
    March 2025
    February 2025
    January 2025
    December 2024
    November 2024
    October 2024
    September 2024
    August 2024
    July 2024
    June 2024
    May 2024
    April 2024
    March 2024
    February 2024
    January 2024
    December 2023
    November 2023
    October 2023
    September 2023
    August 2023
    July 2023
    June 2023
    May 2023
    April 2023
    March 2023
    February 2023
    January 2023
    December 2022
    November 2022
    October 2022
    September 2022
    August 2022
    July 2022
    June 2022
    May 2022
    April 2022
    March 2022
    February 2022
    January 2022
    December 2021
    November 2021
    October 2021
    September 2021
    August 2021
    July 2021
    June 2021
    May 2021
    April 2021
    March 2021
    February 2021
    January 2021
    December 2020
    November 2020
    October 2020
    September 2020
    August 2020
    July 2020
    June 2020
    May 2020
    April 2020
    March 2020
    February 2020
    January 2020
    December 2019
    November 2019
    October 2019
    September 2019
    August 2019
    July 2019
    June 2019
    May 2019
    April 2019
    March 2019
    February 2019
    January 2019
    December 2018
    November 2018
    October 2018
    September 2018
    August 2018
    July 2018
    June 2018
    May 2018
    April 2018
    March 2018
    February 2018
    January 2018
    December 2017
    November 2017
    October 2017
    September 2017
    August 2017
    July 2017
    June 2017
    May 2017
    April 2017
    March 2017
    February 2017
    January 2017
    December 2016
    November 2016
    October 2016
    September 2016
    August 2016
    July 2016
    June 2016
    May 2016
    April 2016
    March 2016
    February 2016
    January 2016
    December 2015
    November 2015
    October 2015
    September 2015
    August 2015
    July 2015
    June 2015

    RSS Feed

Proudly powered by Weebly