Shari Della Penna
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"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

Red Rover, Red Rover

2/23/2021

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…I’m starting to wonder--
could anything possibly live here?
It’s dark. It’s cold.
I’ve brought this gift of chocolate cupcakes.
I don’t think I’ll find anybody to eat them.
                                                      from Life on Mars
                                     written and illustrated by Jon Agee
                                    Dial Books for Young Readers, 2017
    I’m not that much of a science fiction fan, but a short story by Ray Bradbury, “Dark They Were and Golden Eyed,” has stuck with me all these years. I remember it being about the necessity of accepting change and the inevitability of assimilation. I mention it now because it takes place on Mars. 
    I grew up when Ray Walston played a wacky Martian neighbor in the sitcom “My Favorite Martian.” The song “Telstar” rocketed to #1 on the music chart in 1962. The Space Race pushed reality toward the boundaries of Science Fiction. And it seemed like the whole human race was obsessed with outer space, space flight, and space travel. Reaching the moon was certainly do-able. Could a trip to Mars be far behind?
    Even after the Challenger disaster in 1986, NASA continued to do its work, astronauts continued to make discoveries, but it seemed like our heart wasn’t in it. In February 2003, when the space shuttle Columbia broke up as it returned to Earth, killing all seven astronauts on board, NASA suspended space shuttle flights for more than two years while it conducted an investigation. Another successful shuttle flight was completed in 2006, but when the International Space Station was complete in 2011, the shuttle missions ended and funding became harder to get.
    But just three months later, November 2011, the Curiosity rover launched its 293 million mile journey to Mars. It landed safely about seven months later.
    In 2016, Elon Musk headed his SpaceX rocket to the International Space Station to resupply the astronauts. The world noticed. 
    Then on Saturday afternoon, May 31, 2020, NASA astronauts launched a commercially built American ship operated by an American crew from American soil. It was the first all-American mission in nine years.
    Meanwhile, Curiosity has quietly been exploring the surface of Mars all this time. As of February 21, 2021, Curiosity has been on Mars for 3038 sols, or Martian days (3121 Earth days). Here’s Curiosity’s home page. https://mars.nasa.gov/msl/home/ where you can see what it’s been up to.
    The goal for Perseverance, to land in the Jazero Crater, was tricky. It needed to avoid the rocks at the bottom that would surely damage the craft.
    Perseverance’s safe and careful perfect landing on Mars last Thursday (February 18, 2021) at 3:55 pm EST, got the ground crew at NASA’s jet propulsion lab cheering.
    Scientists think the crater is the site of a lake bed that dried up 3.5 billion years ago. There's a chance that before it dried up, it was home to some form of Martian microbial life. There's also a chance the rover instruments will be able to see a signature of that life in the rocks in the crater, like a fossil. 
    While NASA’s Insight rover is already probing deep into the surface of Mars, Perseverance will look for those signs of life. It will also collect and bring back rocks and soil with the intention of returning it on another mission. Scientists can study the Martian material with equipment too large and too heavy for easy transport. Perseverance's mission will last about one Martian year, about 687 earth days. 
    Here’s Perseverance on Mars! https://www.enterpriseai.news/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/Perseverance-Mars-rover-NASA_600x.jpg
    According to National Geographic and mars.NASA.gov Several spacecraft are already transmitting data from orbit: NASA’s MAVEN orbiter, Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, and Mars Odyssey. The European Space Agency (ESA) operates Mars Express and Trace Gas Orbiter. India’s Mars Orbiter Mission is also still orbiting and transmitting information. 
    The United Arab Emirates launched its probe called Hope on July 20, 2020, from the Tanegashima Space Center in Japan. Their goal is to provide scientists with a complete picture of the Martian atmosphere. They promise to share the data. As of last week, Hope is on a two-earth-year orbit around Mars.  
    China’s spacecraft also arrived in Martian orbit last week. It's preparing to send a lander and robotic rover to the surface later this year. 
    Everyone is working to help us Earthlings learn about the Martian atmosphere, its landscape, seismic activity, how the planet has changed over time and if life has ever existed there. 
    Maybe we’ll even learn a little more about ourselves along the way.
    Here are the first pictures sent back by Perseverance. https://mars.nasa.gov/mars2020/multimedia/images/ Hover over the image to get a description. Click and see a larger image and the narrative explanation written by NASA.
                                               --stay curious! (and look up)
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Strong as an Ox

2/16/2021

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    Dear Gazelle,
        … You make me want to be the best ox I can be, so I thank you again. You are the unflattering light of my life.
            XO,
            Ox
                                            from XO, Ox: A Love Story
                                                    written by Adam Rex
                                           illustrated by Scott Campbell
                                             Roaring Brook Press, 2017

    I’m not unfamiliar with the lunar year. Jewish holidays are based on the lunar calendar and each Israeli month begins with a new moon. Each month in the twelve-month year is 29 or 30 days long. To compensate for the shorter year, a leap month is added seven times during a 19-year cycle. This adjustment ensures the holidays fall during the correct season, making them seem to come “early” or “late” in the Gregorian calendar we are all used to.
    The traditional Islamic calendar is also tied to the lunar cycle. Like the Hebrew calendar, the sum of their twelve lunar months is eleven days shorter than the solar year. Without the use of corrective mechanisms like leap days and leap months to synchronize the lunar calendar with the solar one, Muslim holidays occur earlier and earlier in each solar year. But that is not important. Time is time. A month is as long as a month is. Holidays occur in their appropriate month, no matter what the season. 
    Chinese years are based on the lunar calendar, too. The New Year begins on the first new moon after the Winter Solstice. Like the Hebrew and Islamic calendars, the traditional Chinese calendar uses a twelve-month cycle of 29- or 30- day months and compensates by adding a whole month when needed to keep the months in their proper seasons. 
    We recently (February 12, 2021) entered the Year of the Ox. Knowing the name of the year is only a small fraction of the complexity of the Chinese Zodiac and the astrology determined by it, though. Stars are aligned or not with each other. Particular signs can be auspicious or not, depending on many factors. The Feng Shui Institute offers an overview of how to read the Chinese Zodiac. https://www.feng-shui-institute.org/Chinese_Astrology/interpretation.html 
    It would be interesting, but more complex than I’m willing to consider right now, to compare a reading using the Greek Zodiac we are familiar with along side the traditional Chinese Zodiac. Just sayin’.
    According to https://www.chineasy.com/the-characteristics-of-each-chinese-zodiac/, in Chinese culture, oxen are symbols of wealth, prosperity, diligence, and perseverance. They are quiet, steadfast, and methodical.
    The five elements, metal, water, wood, fire, and earth, contribute to our understanding, too, and help determine how we will all fair during this Year of the Ox. This being a metal year, we celebrate the Metal Ox. Attributes of metal include firmness, rigidity, persistence, strength, and determination, self-reliance, and sophistication.
    Combine the qualities of an ox with the qualities of metal, and people who are metal oxen are said to be hardworking, active, always busy, and popular among friends. Barak Obama is a metal ox. 
    Looking ahead to our Metal Ox year, we might expect an emphasis on metallurgy (Jewelry? Cars? Hammers, nails and I-beams?) and a focus on diligence, wealth, and a quiet, methodical movement forward. 
    Many traditions help usher in the New Year. Preparations begin early. On the 26th day of the previous month, festive cakes and puddings are served. They symbolize wishes for improvement and growth in the coming year. A thorough cleaning is done on the 28th day of the previous month, and welcome banners are hung on the 29th. Family reunion dinners take place on New Year’s Eve. The menu is important. Foods associated with luck, like fish and puddings as well as food that mimics gold ingots, like dumplings are often served.
    Some families stay awake past midnight to welcome the New Year as soon as it arrives.
    Parents give red money envelopes to their children.
    People parade in the streets.
    Here in the West we say “Chinese New Year,” but the holiday is celebrated in many Asian nations including Viet Nam, South Korea, Thailand, and Malaysia. 
    The New Year celebration culminates on the fifteenth day of the holiday (this year February 26), when the Lantern Festival is celebrated. Many cities around the world still put on massive lantern displays and fairs on the final day of the festival. Some cities shoot up fireworks.
    In this year of COVID-19, most festivities both in cities and families have been cancelled or curtailed.
    On February 26, I won’t wash or cut my hair. I could be washing or cutting away my luck in the New Year. I won’t sweep my house or clean anything. That might destroy the good luck that arrived just after midnight. The Chinese word for "book" (shū) sounds exactly the same as the word for "lose" so giving a book as a gift or even reading a book yourself is an invitation for loss. That will be hard for me. I wonder if reading on my tablet counts?
    I’ll will wear red, a lucky color, and some jewelry to honor the metal in my life. I’ll ponder my many gifts that make me feel grateful.
                                          -—stay curious! (and celebrate)
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Stop to Smell the Roses… and Rice, Legumes, and Beans

2/9/2021

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    But he still pulled up the weeds around it every day and sprinkled the ground with water.
    And then, one day, a carrot came up just as the little boy had known it would.
                                               from The Carrot Seed
                                               written by Ruth Krauss
                                       illustrated by Crocket Johnson
                                                 Harper and Row, 1945

    My grandmother saved her seeds from year to year and planted her whole backyard, part of her front yard, and that little grassy strip between the gravel on her driveway with vegetables and flowers. I don’t know what happened to her seeds when she passed away. I’m pretty sure neither of my aunts took them. I know my mom didn’t. So they and their progeny are lost to obscurity.
    On a grand scale, forward thinkers devised a way to protect the world’s food crops from falling into oblivion. In 1996, the first Global Plan of Action for conserving and using crop diversity was adopted by 150 countries. In 2004, the International Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture was put into place to help support this global system in a sustainable way. The Crop Trust was born and its Seed Vault opened in 2008.
    The Svalbard Global Seed Vault houses seeds of over one million crop varieties from over 5,000 species. The seeds arrive from countries the world over and are catalogued and stored deep inside a mountain halfway between Norway and the North Pole in a $9,000,000 structure. The permafrost, thick rock, and low humidity ensure the safety of the seeds, even if the Vault loses power. 
    From their website, “The Crop Trust is the only organization whose sole mission is to ensure humanity conserves and makes available the world’s crop diversity for future food security.” https://www.croptrust.org/about-us/  
    The Crop Trust and the International Rice Research Institute signed a long-term partnership agreement in 2018. In it, the Crop Trust agrees to fully fund the essential operations of the IRRI genebank forever. From their website https://www.irri.org/our-work “IRRI works toward finding solutions for the world’s biggest challenges and contributing to the UN Sustainable Development Goals.” They fight hunger, poverty, and inequality while working toward responsible consumption and production, climate recovery, and good health and well being.
    Besides working with the IRRI and governments around the world to develop crop conservation strategies, the Crop Trust studies how we can sustain ourselves in light of population growth and the changing climate. Their Crop Wild Relatives Project is a global long-term effort to collect, conserve, and use wild relatives of cultivated crops to develop food crops that will thrive during the changes our climate is undergoing.
    Crop diversity ensures food security, helps adapt to our changing climate, reduces environmental degradation, protects nutritional security, reduces poverty, and ensures sustainable agriculture. The Svalbard Global Seed Vault is an insurance policy of sorts, to back up the many seed banks all over the world serving to ensure crop diversity. 
    My daughter sent me one of the most interesting sources for seeds. It’s not a seed bank or a warehouse. It’s a seed lending library. Located in the Concord, MA Library’s Fowler Branch, patrons are encouraged to check out a packet of seeds (5 packet limit) and grow them. They encourage, but don’t insist the growers reserve a couple of their best plants, allow them to “go to seed” and return their harvested seeds back to the library. This will help the seed lending library become self-sustaining. https://concordlibrary.org/resources/concord-seed-lending-library 
    Another website lists seed lending libraries from all over the world. Unfortunately, while over 80 locations are listed, you can’t search by location to easily find one close to you. https://www.seedsoftimemovie.com/find_seed_libraries It’s an interesting browse, though, and while you’re there, you can watch the Seeds of Time documentary. 
    During the Cold War years of the 1950s, my dad thought it would be a good idea to dig a shelter in our backyard, just in case. He didn’t do it. I’ve seen enough apocalypse movies and read enough books to know that if someone dropped a massive bomb, I would not have to worry. I’d be dead along with everyone important to me, probably. 
    But even if the ice melts and sea levels rise, the Global Seed Vault, at 426 feet above sea level, is high enough to be out of the water, even in a worst case scenario. And the permafrost will keep the seeds cold. 
    Seed samples sent to the Vault stay in possession of the country that sent them. The first withdrawal was made in 2015 by Syria who had been storing seeds since 2012. Thirty-eight thousand seeds were removed by researchers and sent to Lebanon and Morocco. The Syrian non-profit organization that contributed the seeds moved to new quarters after rebel forces took over their area of Aleppo. The organization, the International Center for Agricultural Research in the Dry Areas (ICARDA) continues to deposit seeds, coming now from their new locations. They also continue to withdraw seeds, as necessary. https://www.croptrust.org/press-release/vault-continues-prove-value-world/
    The Svalbard Global Seed Vault is "owned and administered by the Ministry of Agriculture and Food on behalf of the Kingdom of Norway and is established as a service to the world community." 
https://www.wur.nl/en/show/CGN-seeds-in-the-Svalbard-Global-Seed-Vault-FAQs.htm  In case of famine due to war or natural disaster, we'll be able to start over.
    Good to know.
 
                             -—stay curious! (and plan your garden)
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Overwhelmed? Here’s the Overview!

2/2/2021

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Bird:  Everything looks spectacular from a space shuttle, I bet.
Judith Resnik:  That’s true.
Bird:  What’s it like, anyway?
Judith Resnik:  It’s like being far away and close at the same time. Floating in a world that belongs only to you, but also belongs to everyone else.
                                            from: We Dream of Space
                          written and illustrated by Erin Entrada Kelly
                                               Greenwillow Books, 2020

    It’s sometimes hard for me to see the big picture. Whether it’s deciding on the structure of a novel I’m working on or changing up my grocery shopping habits from daily trips to a weekly (or longer) plan, sometimes I get lost in the details of the trees, so to speak, instead of taking in the whole experience of the forest. 
    But, some people are naturally big picture thinkers.
    Frank White is one. Mr. White is a Harvard graduate and Rhodes Scholar. He has a Master of Philosophy Degree in politics and, in 1987, coined the term “Overview Effect.” His book of the same name is in its 4th edition. He interviewes many astronauts and cosmonauts and reads their writings to help him describe the life-changing effect of viewing Earth from outer space or the moon. Simply put, the Overview Effect expresses a feeling of awe for our planet and an overwhelming desire to work for its protection. It becomes an almost universal mindset of those lucky enough to have experienced space travel.
    Less than a year before White published the 1st edition of his book, the Challenger space shuttle exploded killing everyone on board, six astronauts and one teacher. People were questioning why we were putting so many resources, time and money as well as human life, into a program that experienced more than its share of tragic setbacks. As he tried to articulate an answer, White discovered Space Philosophy. He asked the fundamental question many were asking but no one was answering, “What is the purpose of space exploration?” His partial answer, “the Human Space Program will engage all of us as ‘Citizens of the Universe.’” That answer is more fully developed in his 2018 book, Cosma Hypothesis: Implications of the Overview Effect.
    Most of us will not have the opportunity to rocket to the moon or Mars, or spend time exploring outer space. The question for me, then, is how to translate this experience for us, the everyday citizens of the universe. How to feel that awe, show empathy to our neighbors near and far, and become motivated to help Earth survive when our feet are firmly planted and gravity and inertia work to hold us here. 
    Even though it’s been around for over 30 years, I’ve noticed a spate of articles on the Overview Effect recently. Others must be on my wave length. 
    In its January/February 2021 publication, the Sierra Club quoted astronaut Ron Garan, “[Earth] looks like a living, breathing organism. But it also, at the same time, looks extremely fragile.” https://www.sierraclub.org/sierra/2021-1-january-february/books/big-picture-benjamin-grant-overview-timelapse 
    On June 3, 2020, Dave Mosher of Business Insider quoted NASA astronaut, Bob Behnken, “You see that it's a single planet with a shared atmosphere. It's our shared place in this universe.”
    In the same article, Mosher tells his readers, “Psychologists say the effect isn't just a matter of idle curiosity, but perhaps an essential part of maintaining mental health on long-duration space missions.” https://www.businessinsider.com/astronauts-describe-overview-effect-seeing-earth-from-space-emotions-feelings-2020-6 
    Could a similar mind-set help us maintain our own mental health right here in our everyday lives? Help us spend a little more time looking outward to the universe and each other and a little less time looking inward to all those everyday problem out of our control?
    And in August, 2020, https://spacecenter.org/photo-gallery-the-overview-effect/ posted a photo gallery on its blog. The images are spectacular, awe-inspiring, and worth the click. 
    You may not be as awed as an astronaut, you may not feel their overwhelming urge to protect our fragile home, or become more empathetic to friends and neighbors, but the change in perspective was enlightening for me! 
    Here’s what I wrote in this space on July 23, 2019 in a post about food waste:
    “From the distance of outer space, it is easy to understand that boundaries between countries are drawn by people. It is easy to imagine oceans and jungles teaming with life. Harder, though, to remember that everything is finite.”
    Everything is finite, though. And change is our only constant.
                              -—stay curious! (and keep looking up)
                         Happy Groundhog Day!!
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Make Your Mark!

1/26/2021

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Making the good-bye card was a hard job.
Hallie had to erase
and start again many times.
Even so, the letters were never perfect.
                                      from: Hallie’s Horrible Handwriting
                                                 written by Valerie Tripp
                                                   illustrated by Joy Allen
                                   Pleasant Company Publications, 2003

    The first word I learned to write (as opposed to print) was “it.”  I can still see itititit on line after line after line. We were taught to produce slightly right-slanted letters, to connect the up-strokes and down-strokes, and to evenly space the letters and words. We used horizontally oriented newsprint paper marked off for us with upper and lower guidelines and a dotted line between them. I usually got an A in handwriting. 
    For a while, not too long ago, cursive writing went out of favor in schools. Kids went straight from printing to keyboarding. Seemed like it would be more useful, but research proved that handwriting is more important than people thought and now 21 states require it as part of their curriculum again. Even states that do not mandate teaching cursive, allow it. Here’s a site with state by state requirements: https://mycursive.com/the-14-states-that-require-cursive-writing-state-by-state/#tab-con-11  
    While that controversy raged, I wondered how children would learn to sign their names. And how to read signatures of others. Handwriting is personal. My husband’s handwriting is almost as familiar to me as my own. I can see my mom’s handwriting in my mind’s eye. My dad’s too. I have recipes in my mom’s hand, my grandmother’s, and my mother-in-law’s. They have become precious to me.
    Did you celebrate National Handwriting Day last weekend? I did! January 23 is John Hancock’s birthday and WIMA (Writing Instrument Manufacturing Association http://www.pencilsandpens.org/handwriting.php) sponcers a celebration. A page on their website tells the history of handwriting. Another one explains its importance.
    While writing on a keyboard, like I’m doing right now, uses muscle memory, “[h]andwriting is a complex, cognitive process that involves neuro-sensory experiences and fine motor skills.” https://www.pens.com/blog/the-benefits-of-handwriting-vs-typing/  Several things work together in a writing experience including: feeling the paper against your pen; applying just enough pressure to make the ink flow; and engaging in the thought process to form the words.
    A 2012 study published by the National Institutes of Health shows handwriting is an important factor children need as they learn to read. The ability to recognize individual letters, a crucial skill necessary for reading, is enhanced by writing those letters. Speed and accuracy in recognizing and naming letters is a good predictor for the development of reading skills. And, the study continues, the parts of our brains we use for reading are more active after we practice handwriting. This is not true for typewriting. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4274624/ 
    And each person’s handwriting style is unique.
    Graphology is the scientific study of handwriting. Discovering personality traits is its goal and forensic graphologists work to determine connections between the way a person writes and his or her personality. Taking a huge number of factors into account, graphologists can pinpoint over 5,000 personality traits. How much pressure you use, how big your letters are, how they are spaced, where you cross your ts and dot your is, if you write uphill or down, how you slant your letters, and how legible your writing is are some features taken into consideration. 
    Jung and Freud concluded that handwriting is a window to both the conscious and subconscious mind. Crime labs hire graphologists to help them gage whether a suspect is telling the truth, how much stress a person is feeling, how secretive or open he or she generally is. While crimes are not often solved by a graphologist alone, the analysis can point criminologists in the right direction. According to  Andrea McNichol “…much of the preliminary examination of handwriting is guided by common sense. Look for the abnormalities, and make educated guesses as to what they mean.” https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/articles/199211/the-lowdown-handwriting-analysis 
    Your signature represents the you you show the world even if it is different from the you in your private thoughts.
    Legend has it that when asked why he signed his name so large, John Hancock replied, so the “fat old King could read it without his spectacles.” In those days there was no greater treason than declaring independence from the King. 
    John Hancock lived a gregarious life. He liked being noticed, and his signature is consistent with that. His writing slopes upward, indicating that he liked drama in his life, a handwriting trait also consistent with his personality. 
    Whether or not you put stock in someone’s ability to learn about you through the marks you make on a page, by taking a deeper dive into the subject you might discover something new about yourself. The library has several books on graphology and the Internet is full of articles and quizzes. Choose wisely!
    I wonder if I practice some traits I like and change my handwriting, a personality change would follow. A blogger called GraphologyJunction says I can. 
    On second thought, I think I’m just fine the way I am!
                      -—stay curious! (and write a letter to a friend)     
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Testing Your Mettle*

1/19/2021

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[That] day they decided that Sneetches are Sneetches
And no kind of Sneetch is the best on the beaches.
That day, all the Sneetches forgot about stars
And whether or not they had one upon thars.
                              from: The Sneetches and Other Stories
                                    written and illustrated by Dr. Seuss
                                                       Random House, 1961
                                            accessed on YouTube 1/17/21
    I won first place for some lyrics I wrote back in college. A few years ago you might remember, I won third place for the challah I entered in our county fair, but that’s it. I won a ribbon at the Fair, not a metal medal. I was happy to accept it and the $3.00 prize that went along with it. (I don’t think prize money covered the cost of the ingredients, but I’d have to get back to you on that.) I guess part of the reason I don’t win much is I’m not too big on entering contests.
    Lots of medals and awards are presented for many reasons. The Olympics and other sporting events like the Super Bowl and World Series, music awards including the Grammys, entertainment accolades like Oscars, Emmys, and Tonys, and Military honors like the Silver Star and the Purple Heart, and the Nobel Prizes, as well as the Newbery, Caldecott, and Pulitzer are just some off the top of my head.
    The Presidential Medal of Freedom is our country’s highest civilian award.
    In 1963, President Kennedy revamped the Medal of Freedom, first issued by President Truman to honor “...any person ...who, on or after December 7, 1941, has performed a meritorious act or service which has aided the United States in the prosecution of a war against an enemy or enemies...(or) has similarly aided any nation engaged with the United States in the prosecution of a war against a common enemy or enemies.” (Executive Order 9586) https://ecommons.udayton.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1081&context=pol_fac_pub 
    Kennedy broadened the scope to include a person’s “…especially meritorious contribution to the security or national interests of the United States, world peace, cultural or other significant public or private endeavors.” (Executive Order 11085. See above citation.) The award is given at the president’s discretion.
    Awarding the Presidential Medal of Freedom is a presidential duty. No one else bestows that award. Here’s a list of President Obama’s recipients. https://obamawhitehouse.archives.gov/campaign/medal-of-freedom Other presidents awarded the prize, too. The list is very long (well over 630) and includes in no particular order Steven Spielberg, Mother Teresa, Neil Armstrong, Jonas Salk, Martin Luther King, Stephen Hawking, Toni Morrison, Marian Anderson, E. B. White, and Marjory Stoneman Douglas. 
    During last year’s State of the Union address, Rush Limbaugh, yep, the right wing radio personality who coined the term “feminazi,” accepted this highest civilian honor from, starting tomorrow (January 20, 2021) at noon, the former president.
    Last week, Bill Belichick declined the Presidential Medal of Freedom. 
    While I won’t dispute whether or not he deserved it (I really know beans about football, but I just found out he won six Super Bowls in the last ten years, so that’s something), fact is, he declined the honor and the medal that went with it. 
    The “tragic events of last week,” when pro-Trump rioters stormed the Capitol Building, led Belichick to his decision. He went on to say, “I was flattered … out of respect for what the honor represents… Above all, I am an American citizen with great reverence for our nation's values, freedom and democracy.” https://www.cnn.com/2021/01/11/politics/bill-belichick-presidential-medal-of-freedom-spt-trnd/index.html  
    His refusal puts him in company with very few people. My search found three. 
    Dodgers catcher, Moe Berg, was fluent in many languages including German, Italian, and Japanese. During WWII he was a spy for the United States trying to find out if the Nazis were building an atom bomb. He declined the medal claiming his “‘humble contribution’” to WWII could not be divulged.”
    Jacqueline Kennedy declined when President Johnson offered it to her in conjunction with President Kennedy since she worked with him to establish the design of the medal and its new parameters. She wanted to make her husband, recently deceased, the “focal point of the honor.” https://www.nytimes.com/2021/01/12/us/politics/medal-of-freedom-declined.html and
    https://www.oregonlive.com/trending/2021/01/who-has-turned-down-presidential-medal-of-freedom-question-brings-surprising-answers-including-jackie-kennedy.html 
    Bill Belichick, well, we already know about that. 
    That’s it. Three. 
    While not wanting to appear judgmental, I disagree with this previous (I know, as of tomorrow) administration’s selection of honorees. I try to avoid quoting from Wikipedia, but this list of medal winners from the Kennedy administration forward looks pretty good. Scroll all the way to the bottom to find Trump’s list. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Presidential_Medal_of_Freedom_recipients 
    Winning is important. Being recognized for outstanding achievement is also important. Having the mettle to decline a medal, metal or otherwise, is possibly most important of all.
*mettle: the courage to carry on especially when the going gets tough https://www.vocabulary.com/dictionary/mettle
             
         --stay curious! (and get vaccinated as soon as you can)
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Living in the Moment

1/12/2021

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    “Okay, listen. To stay in synch with the Earth’s rotation, sometimes they have to fiddle with how we keep time. So this August, we get a free extra second of future. Think about it. It’s a colossal gift. Nell, we can’t waste it. We need to catch that special second and make it officially ours.”
                                             from: Every Single Second
                                                    by Tricia Springstubb
                                            illustrations by Diana Sudyka
                                     Balzer + Bray/HarperCollins, 2016
    Since Stonehenge and the Egyptian pyramids, and probably earlier than that, people have been measuring time. From grains of sand falling through an hourglass to the precision of a Swiss watch, we mark the momentous occasions and trivial pursuits of our lives by noting seconds, minutes, and hours. 
    Being more and more precise about time measurement has been a goal for many scientists. The first atomic clock was invented in 1949 by Isidor Rabi, a physics professor at Columbia University. He showed that measuring the vibrations of an ammonia molecule would produce an accurate measurement of time. His discovery has been improved on through the years, and since 1999, the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), uses an atomic clock that measures the frequency of the element cesium. The clock is accurate to about one second in 100 million years. https://www.timeanddate.com/time/how-do-atomic-clocks-work.html 
    But as the saying goes, time is relative. When I asked about that, my mom described her understanding of Einstein’s theory of relativity. If you touch a lit match, a second seems like it will never end. But, when you watch a sunset, minutes pass without giving time a thought. I’m sure there’s lots more to it, but that definition worked for me. Actually, it still does.
    And ten years into the future always seems longer than ten years ago. When I wonder where I’ll be in ten years (assuming I’m still alive!) it kinda seems like forever from now, but looking back at the last ten feels like a blink. So in my mind, time is fluid.     
    Turns out, time really is kinda fluid. While it takes our Earth 24 hours to rotate on its axis as we orbit the sun causing day and night, that varies from day to day. OK, only by a fraction of a second, but scientists around the world have noticed that Earth instead of trending slower, has been spinning faster lately, faster, in fact, that ever before. 
    Up until now, one complete rotation has taken a little longer than 24 hours (about 86,400.002 instead of 24 hours x 3,600 = 86,400). Twenty-seven seconds have been added to our clocks since 1972, about 1 second every year and a half.    
    Called a leap second, it is added periodically, either on December 31, or June 30, to keep our clocks synchronized with the time it takes for Earth to complete one rotation on its axis. The last one was added on December 31, 2016. Here’s a chart: https://www.timeanddate.com/time/leapseconds.html     
    Earth’s 28 fastest days since 1960, all occurred in 2020. https://www.pennlive.com/nation-world/2021/01/earth-is-spinning-its-fastest-in-decades-heres-how-scientists-are-addressing-the-issue.html Scientists have discovered many reasons for the fluctuation, including the pull of the moon, snowfall levels, and mountain erosion. As the snow caps and high-altitude snow continues to melt, some planetary scientists wonder how much of an impact global warming will have on Earth’s spin. 
    The Antarctic ice sheet is the largest single mass of ice on Earth. It is made of 30 million cubic kilometers of ice: about 30 quadrillion tons of material. It’s located between 8000 and 9000 feet (2400-2700 meters) above sea level. Every time some of that ice melts or calves into the ocean, it not only causes sea levels to rise, it redistributes Earth’s mass so that it’s closer to the central rotational axis. And just as a figure skater can control her rate of spin by raising and lowering her arms, fluctuations in Earth’s rate of spin change according to how much mass is located closer to Earth’s center of gravity. So the changes in ice and water storage on Earth may be responsible for both the current speed-up in Earth’s day, as well as newly observed wobbles in Earth’s rotation. https://www.forbes.com/sites/startswithabang/2021/01/07/why-does-the-spinning-earth-speed-up-if-the-tides-are-slowing-us-down/?sh=7c851f0b343e 
    A leap second was scheduled for December 2020, but was not added. If the speed-up continues, some scientists predict we may need a negative leap second.
    So while 2020 seemed like the longest year ever, it was anticipation that made it feel that way. Waiting for an end to the pandemic, the end to a political crisis, the end to this non-normal lifestyle, I didn’t notice Earth moving a little quicker than usual, skipping almost a whole second. 
    I guess time really is relative.
    Mom taught me to live in the moment. We can’t change the past. We can only plan and hope for the future. It is here, right now, this moment that is always becoming the past, that is meaningful. We are allowed a finite number of seconds to live on Earth. We don’t know how many. We may even get an extra one now and then. 
    Do, contemplate, relax. Most important, though? Pay attention to as much as you can.
                                             -—stay curious! (and aware)
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Order! Order!

1/5/2021

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“Help!” cried Toad.
“My list is blowing away.
What will I do without my list?”
            …
“I cannot remember any of the things
that were on my list of things to do.
I will just have to sit here 
and do nothing,” said Toad.
                             from “A List” in Frog and Toad Together
                                written and illustrated by Arnold Lobel
                                         Harper & Row Publishers, 1972
                                                    Newbery Honor, 1973
                                                accessed YouTube 1/3/21

    Orderliness is my 2021 word of the year. I’m feeling optimistic, but I’ve felt that way before. Lists are helpful. My grocery list, on paper or in my head, is organized either by grocery aisles or alphabetically, depending on how many items I need to remember. My to-do list is usually better off in alphabetical order. When I organize it in the chronological way I’d like to accomplish the activities, very often it doesn’t work out well. I tend to write my errand lists from farthest point to the place closest to home. List making is a chore, but one that I enjoy.
    My mom and my dad were not really opposites in the organizing realm, although they looked like it. Mom was a minimalist. A place for everything, and everything in its place was her mantra. Dad, well, he liked his stuff. He had collections: stamps, newspaper articles (mostly about stamps), old envelopes (waiting for their stamps to be soaked off). But he was methodical. His stacks of stuff, while plentiful and difficult to dust around, had plan and purpose. He could put his finger on anything you asked him for at a moment’s notice. 
    A few years ago, the Huffington Post ran an article called “14 Habits From Organized People That We ALL Should Borrow” https://www.huffpost.com/entry/habits-of-organized-peopl_n_4921454 While not really habits, these qualities are still relevant and important. Here’s my take on them. (I divided “list makers” and “sorters” to end up with 15.)
    Goal oriented. They know what they want. They plan how to get it.
    Optimistic. They believe the world is mostly working the way it should.
    Conscientious. They have a “can-do-ness” about themselves and prefer plans to spontaneity.
    Decision-makers. They’re good at prioritizing and keeping the big-picture in mind.
    Not perfectionists. Good enough is really good enough.
    List makers. Whether written on a calendar, other dedicated space, or kept in their heads, organized people seldom forget an important task.            
    List checkers. They really do the things on their prioritized lists and check them off.
    Sorters. Like with like is the way organized people keep everything in its place. Knowing where to find things is a real time-saver.
    Do-it-now attitude. If a task takes fewer than five minutes, an organized person will get it out of the way. Procrastination, when it happens, is sometimes inevitable.
    Planners. They like to leave a time cushion big enough so that if something else comes up, it will work into their schedule. (see above)
    Not afraid to ask for help. They think about time as a resource with value, and effectively allocate tasks among others so everyone can work efficiently.  
    Uni-taskers. Multi-tasking is a myth. Really. We think we’re doing more than one thing at a time, but that’s a trick our brains play. Actually we flip nano-second by nano-second from one task to another, taking our attention away from both. (see post from 1/1/2019)
    Tuned-in to their biorhythms. Knowing the optimal time for getting a particular task done increases productivity.
    Habit formers. Habits are important. Doing something without having to think about it is a real time-saver, even though it can be a creativity stifler. 
    Know how to de-stress. Practicing yoga, meditation, visiting a counselor, or escaping into a good book, organized people know when and how to “get away from it all.” 
    
    This is a long list. While some of those qualities are already habits, I found a couple points to keep in mind as 2021 marches on. I hope you did, too.
    But, lest you think all I do is make lists, please know, I also keep my spices alphabetically arranged. (I keep a running list of those little jars that have mysteriously multiplied, too, so I don’t replace dried basil or marjoram two weeks in a row.)  I have my socks separated into winter weight and summer shorties, seasonally rotated because my drawer is pretty small. My bookcases are arranged by subject, then by author, just like at the library. 
    And, while I’m prone to procrastination and diving into rabbit holes, I like to think of myself as organized when I need to be, mostly because I don’t like to waste time looking for stuff.    
    Science has shown that people who live in messy, cluttered spaces are less able to concentrate and focus. When distractions abound, our minds tend to wander. While this may be a good way to get the creative juices flowing, it really can hamper our ability to be productive.
    Is habit really the opposite of creativity? I don’t think so. My habits allow my brain the space it needs to be creative. Now, where did I put my pencil? 
                              -—stay curious! (and sort a junk drawer!)
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I’ve Got Rhythm! (the circadian kind)

12/29/2020

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There once was a man who danced in the streets.
    Rap-a-tap-tap—think of that!
He didn’t just dance, he made art with his feet.
    Rap-a-tap-tap—think of that!
                                .    .    .
He danced many rhythms that were seldom the same.
    Rap-a-tap-tap—think of that!
Dance was his passion and it brought him fame.
    Rap-a-tap-tap—think of that!            
                  from Rap a Tap tap Here’s Bojangles, Think of That! 
                           written and illustrated by Leo and Diane Dillon
                                         Blue Sky Press/Scholastic, 2002
                                        accessed on YouTube 12/27/2020

    My new cat Wilson has not adjusted to Standard Time. It’s been almost 2 months. I think he’s on his own time. He doesn’t care about clocks or when the sun rises. He wakes me up between 2:00 and 3:00 every morning for a cuddle. I tell him it’s still night time, but he doesn’t care. After a little while, he goes away, I guess to sleep some more. He calls me to fix his breakfast a couple of hours later. 
    Frances, my old cat is much more laid back. She sleeps all night, lots of times at the end of our bed, and wakes up when Wilson tells her breakfast is ready. 
    Just like us, they have their own sleep/wake patterns, times when they would rather play and times when they would rather not. Eating times, cuddle times, relaxing times. Ahh, to be a cat!
    Since the Winter Solstice has come and gone, I’m noticing longer days and shorter nights which got me thinking about schedules, patterns, and plans. And circadian rhythms.
    Circadian, from the Latin circa + diem, to circle + day, refers to our earthly spin as we orbit the sun each day. Animals and plants, too, have a built-in system to regulate physical and mental activity levels, eating patterns, and sleep/wake cycles. I’m sure plants rest. They nourish themselves. They probably think, too, but that’s a topic for another day. 
    Our body's temperature and hormone levels are tuned to a cycle. When our bodies are working as they are supposed to, even without a clock, even in a dark space, those functions occur regularly on an approximate 24-hour, internally regulated cycle. Most humans are on a diurnal cycle, awake in the daytime and asleep at night. This is our circadian rhythm.
    Our body’s clock (and the clocks in other mammals) is located in the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) located in the hypothalamus. Melatonin, the hormone that regulates the sleep/wake cycle of our circadian rhythm, is directed by the pineal gland found in the middle of our brains. At the end of the day, our pineal gland releases the hormone driver of our sleep/wake cycle, melatonin. Sleepiness is encouraged in humans by the increase in melatonin. It circulates in the blood all night but gradually decreases until morning. When light enters our eyes, the pineal gland directs the stoppage of melatonin, and we wake up.
    If the SCN is damaged or compromised, the result is the absence or disruption of a regular sleep/wake rhythm.
    And although the sleep/wake cycle in our circadian rhythm is the most commonly known,  circadian rhythms regulate our how aware we are, our reaction times, blood pressure, and body temperature. We are also tuned to other less-known but no less important rhythms. 
    Ultradian rhythms cycle more than once in a day. Hunger is an example. 
    Infradian rhythms take more than 24 hours to cycle. Menstrual cycles, hibernation, and migration are examples.
    Recurring patterns, plans, and schedules are all important. Lots of that seems to be either missing or hard to find in our pandemic days of seclusion and social distancing. The other day I heard the word Blursday to describe the days of the week, all kinda the same. Sounds about right to me. 
    So how do we get from Blursday to the regular seven? That’s a problem I’ve been wrestling with for several years. My natural propensity to procrastinate coupled with the lure of an interesting rabbit hole or two, get me to the end of many days asking myself, What did I even do all day?
    While lots of my plans and schedules find the nearest window and escape into the ether or biosphere or just disintegrate, I think lists will help me keep a little control.
    Being in love with words, I really do love the sound of Blursday, I just don’t like the feel of it!
                               -—stay curious! (and make a list or two)
Notes:    
https://kids.kiddle.co/Circadian_rhythm 
https://www.endocrineweb.com/endocrinology/overview-pineal-gland 
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Roll Over, Beethoven!

12/22/2020

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    The music floats and rises. It sings and dances from violas, violins, cellos, double basses, flutes, a piccolo, bassoons, clarinets, oboes, French horns, trumpets, trombones, a tuba, a harp, drums, cymbals, chimes, and one thin silver triangle.
    It is 8:30 on Friday night, and the one hundred and five men and women, dressed completely in black and white, have gone to work turning the black notes on white pages into a symphony.
    They are the members of the Philharmonic Orchestra and their work is to play beautifully.
                              from: The Philharmonic Gets Dressed
                                               written by Karla Kuskin
                                           illustrated by Marc Simont
                                                   Harper & Row, 1982
                                   accessed on YoutTube 12/21/2020

    My grandson texted me the other day to let me know his pre-recorded band concert will be shown on his school’s YouTube channel this evening. It won’t even come close to a “being there experience,” but we’ll save a bunch of travel time and well, I can’t think of another up-side to being apart. I miss him and his brothers and their parents like crazy. My granddaughters and their parents, too.
    Lots of performers have moved on-line. On-line platforms beefed themselves up and lots of us users learned a little more about how to navigate our high-tech, virus-filled world. 
    But that’s not what this is about.
    I was a piano student when I was young. Although I sometimes enjoyed practicing, and I practiced a lot, I did not improve much, even after many years. 
    One of my early piano books was called The Three Bs: Bach, Beethoven, and Brahms. In it were simplified versions of important piano works by those very famous composers. Playing something I could hear on the radio or find in a record shop inspired me and gave me undeserved confidence.
    But that’s not what this is about, either. It’s about the music, and in particular one musician and composer.
    I tuned my Pandora app to "Beethoven’s Favorites" for some inspiration. 
    Born in Bonn, Germany in December, 1770, Ludwig van Beethoven began performing at the age of 8. By age 11, he had to quit school, and by 18 he had become his family’s sole support due to his father’s alcoholism.
    Beethoven spent most of his adult life in Vienna, Austria.
    In Vienna, he fell in love with a young countess, Giulietta Guicciardi, but he was not allowed to marry her. Beethoven, for all his talent, was still considered a commoner. He dedicated his well-known Piano Sonata No. 14, “Moonlight,” to her.
    Beethoven never even published a song that has become even more famous. Ludwig Nohl, a German musicologist, found a piece of music in the back of a dresser drawer, so the story goes. “Für Elise” was scrawled across the top in Beethoven’s distinctive handwriting. Nohl found the music and published it in 1867, 40 years after Beethoven's death. Some theories claim to identify Elise, but no one really knows who she was.
    Ludwig van Beethoven, claimed by many to be the greatest composer who ever lived, may have studied for a short time with Mozart and was tutored by Haydn. He composed throughout the French Revolution and wrote some of his best and most famous peices right after, between 1803 and 1811.
     More than possibly any other composer before or since, Beethoven used his music to express emotions. He stretched the limit of contemporary musical norms and became a bridge between Classical music whose form and structure were well-established (Bach, Handel, Scarlatti) and Romantic music’s more dramatic, emotional, and individualistic flair (Chopin, Debussy, Tchaikovsky). 
    Including his nine symphonies, Beethoven’s body of work is comprised of 722 individual works. He composed his first piece when he was only twelve years old and completed his last the year before he died. He composed in every genre: symphonies; concerti; sonatas; overtures; quartets for various instruments including piano, woodwinds, and strings; chamber music; solo piano music; fugues; rondos; bagatelles; vocal music; choral works with orchestra; and dozens of songs, folksongs, and dances. 
    He composed when he could hear. He composed while his hearing was slipping away. He composed when he was deaf. His “mind’s ear” was still finely tuned. 
    On May 4, 1824, Beethoven debuted his Ninth Symphony at the Theater am Kärntnertor in Vienna. Completely deaf, Beethoven could not know the audience’s reaction. They were cheering. One of the singers turned him around to see their applause. “[T]hey hailed him with five standing ovations, raising their hats and handkerchiefs in the air.” https://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/beethoven-ninth-symphony-debuts-vienna  Beethoven shed tears of joy. He never conducted again. 
    A chorus sings the words of Friedrich Schiller's poem "Ode to Joy” in the choral finale of the Ninth Symphony. It is said to be the most famous piece of music in history. 
    Beethoven’s actual birth date is controversial. He was baptized on December 17, so the middle of December gets me close enough. About where we are now.
    So just now, as we celebrate Beethoven’s 250th birthday, we put the Winter Solstice in our rearview mirrors and look forward to more hours (okay minutes) of daylight. We eagerly wait our turn for the Corona virus vaccine. We look forward to a new political climate. My own Ode to Joy. 
                         -—stay curious! (and keep a song in your heart)   
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         I'm a children's writer and poet intent on observing the world and nurturing those I find in my small space .



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