Wednesday, April 29, 2020

What are our priorities?

I think we all understand that life will change after the pandemic, but what are our priorities? What guiding principles will light our way and inform those changes? In the face of glaring inequities revealed by the crisis, I worry about this.

Perhaps I should explain where I stand. I believe that the proper role of government is to defend and work for its citizens. All of them, not just the rich and powerful. This idealistic view parallels passages in the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution, or, at least it does the way I was taught to read them.

Unfortunately, what we see unfolding in the face of the COVID-19 pandemic all too often reflects different priorities.

Priorities revealed


It's a truism that we don't really know what we're made of till we're tested.

Many thanks to QuoteFancy, for this quote from Warren W. Wiersbe.


For every prediction that smart investors should migrate to renewable energy, there also seems to be a view to the contrary that "We can no longer indulge the impulses of “environmental” activists. Sanitary plastic grocery bags are safer than reusables. Mass transit and densely-packed cities spread infections. Automobiles and suburban/rural living are healthier," as Jerry Shenk put it recently.

Other decision-making whipsaws reflect just as little consensus. Whose priorities should we value? Whose should we reject as unworthy?

Varied views of future outcomes


I've read interesting stories about wildlife venturing into areas where traffic has dropped off. Others about historically clean air in places where traffic has dropped off. And one about ways to make cities more walking friendly and keep car traffic at lower levels after the pandemic (see a trend, there?).

I've seen several articles about ordinary people's decimated savings. Others explore the disastrous effect of recent public policies. And a flood of new ways for creative people to grow their businesses continues as people discover new and old techniques.

Not only that, but there are predictions about ways our minds will change about things such as social distancingwork from homechild care, and universal health care. I've also read more cynical predictions about how some will spin retrospectives to skew perceptions if possible.

Many thanks to Goalcast, for this quote from James Baldwin.


Our decisions reveal our priorities

Most of my fellow countrymen/women are pretty decent folks, as individuals. We've seen gallant examples of selflessness, self-sacrifice, and public spirit as this pandemic rolls out. These warm my heart and give me hope.

Some of my most-accessed blog posts in recent weeks have been those about ways to thank first responders, and how to understand and respond to their stress.

Many Americans--many people all over the world--understand the deep things. The value of honest work, the worth of a thank-you, the joy of praising admirable deeds.

Many thanks to Discover Corps for this quote from Muhammad Ali.

But we've also seen a different spirit. 


It reveals itself in the unseemly scramble of large, publicly-traded companies grabbing up vast sums of money meant to go to small businesses struggling to stay afloat. The rules allowed it, so they grabbed. Some of them gave it back once they were caught.

We've also seen banks garnish stimulus money from overdrawn customers, pre-empting what was meant to be grocery and rent money from ever reaching the desperate would-be recipients.

And we've seen crowds of closely-packed protestors, mostly white folk with guns, demanding that the lockdowns be ended immediately so they can get haircuts, among other things. They claim a constitutional right to liberty, plus economic insecurity, drives them. Although other motives have been noted.

What are our priorities? 


Now is the moment for us to decide. Are things more important than people?

Is our convenience more important than other people's lives? Do we even have the right to make the decision that it is?

Who gets to decide how many deaths are "acceptable losses"--and, acceptable to exactly whom?

Do we live in a country that is of, by, and most especially for the people? All of the people? And, for this question's purposes, corporations are not people, my friend.

Many thanks to AZ Quotes for this quote from Mahatma Gandhi.

I very much worry how history will evaluate our true measure, based on how we order our priorities today.

How do you think we should form--and inform--the priorities that will guide us into the future? What are you doing to join that conversation?

IMAGE CREDITS

Many thanks to QuoteFancy, for the Warren W. Wiersbe quote; to Goalcast, for the quote from James Baldwin; to DiscoverCorps, for the quote from Muhammad Ali; and to AZ Quotes, for the Mahatma Gandhi quote. I appreciate you all!

Wednesday, April 22, 2020

Earth Day, fifty years on

(Image courtesy of Kresge.org)

Earth Day, fifty years on, looks a lot different from the early Earth Days I remember.

Followers of this blog may recall my claim to be "older than dirt" (as a gardener who composts, I can confidently make that claim). I also am older than Earth Day.

As with many things in the 1970s, however, I came to Earth Day a bit late. Many schools in the US let out classes or didn't count absences, if students left campus to participate in peaceful demonstrations or "teach-ins" on April 22, 1970 (Seriously! What an awesome civics lesson!). But not my high school in conservative southwest Missouri!



No, we may have glimpsed a story about it on the news. And it may have begun in a bipartisan spirit of cooperation. But it would take a few more years, and my evolution into a "somewhat-hippie" college art major, before I actively participated in any observances of Earth Day.

An expanding movement


The first Earth Day was a mixed success, but the movement persisted, because the problems didn't go away. Decades of laissez-faire non-regulation of toxins in the environment had turned most of the "developed" world into a toxic mess.

I cringe when I hear about recent changes that make the Environmental Protection Agency less able to hold polluters accountable, or when supposedly-reasonable political leaders discount climate change.

The Cuyahoga River caught fire several times near Cleveland, OH, during the mid-20th Century. It got to be kind of a routine event. This is a photo from June 25, 1952, when it still seemed kind of novel. (historic photo courtesy of Wired)

That's because I remember when the Cuyahoga River could be set on fire by sparks from a passing train. And I remember rarely being able to see the mountains from Denver (while the view of Denver from the mountains was a reddish-looking haze of pollution). I also remember being in Kansas City for only a day, before I could wipe a layer of grime off my car from particulates in the air.

Denver smog alert, 1980s-era (photo courtesy of the EPA).

But the USA wasn't alone. Irresponsible governments and companies were freely destroying the whole world. So by the 1990s, Earth Day had grown into a global event. We all have a stake in our planet's health!

Fifty years on, "Earth Day is widely recognized as the largest secular observance in the world."

But 50 years on, there's still a lot to do


Global climate change is still accelerating. Too many powerful people don't want to change, don't want to risk having to pay for cleanups, and don't seem to think they'll suffer too many consequences if they drag their feet.

On this blog, I've sounded the alarm about deforestation, habitat loss, extreme weather, and other aspects of climate change that affect us now--today.

And there's plenty we can do. Let's choose greater energy efficiency in our own lifestyles, advocate for climate-wise policies in our local, state, and national government,  and stay aware and informed.

Volunteer opportunities abound. So do donation opportunities. If we have more time than money, it's pretty easy to find and get involved in local clean-ups, community gardening efforts, educational work, or any of the many other initiatives.

There are as many different paths to a better future as there are people--but time is running out. Fifty years on, Earth Day reminds us that the cost of ignoring the problem is too ghastly to accept.

(Image courtesy of Earth911)

IMAGE CREDITS

Many thanks to Kresge.org for the "Happy Earth Day 50 Years" header, and to YouTube for the 1970-vintage video from CBS. I'm grateful to Wired, for the historic photo of the Cuyahoga River on fire in 1952, and to the EPA for the photo of 1980s-era Denver. And finally, many thanks to Earth911, for the "Happy Earth Day" greeting image.

Tuesday, April 21, 2020

In celebration of Library Week

It's once again time to do something in celebration of Library Week! Last year on Artdog AdventuresI posted a different library-related quote each day. The brilliant Simini Blocker illustrated all of them. Of course, The Weird Blog didn't exist yet, this time last year.

This year, I'm no less grateful and delighted that we have libraries in our lives. I have a lot less time for blogging. But I owe it to libraries and their impact on my life to do something in celebration of Library Week!

Many thanks to Shellie's Quote Emporium on tumblr, for this quote from Mari Barnes.

Libraries are centers of knowledge


Of course, for any book lover, libraries are life and breath. They also have been a feature of civilization for about as long as civilizations have existed. You might consider libraries as one of  the characteristics that marks a given cultural flowering as a "civilization." Unfortunately, in most civilizations, libraries weren't open to the general public

Granted, the general public couldn't read for most of human history. Also, the concept of a public library hadn't occurred to anyone. One thing we citizens of the USA can be proud of is that free public libraries appear to be an American invention.

Libraries function as repositories of information, accumulated wisdom and insight. Sometimes poppycock mixes in there, too. But that's often hard to discern till much later. In every age, they're centers of knowledge. And you know what they say about knowledge.

Many thanks to ebook friendly for this Dr. Who quote.


Years ago, a wise person told me that reading material in the home often tells us who'll be a greater success. A good-sized collection of books (in their field or more general) signals a more agile mind.

More than books alone


From the very beginning, libraries have always been more than just collections of books. Books are useless unless someone reads, thinks about and discusses them. For this reason, the ancient Library of Pergamum had four rooms: three for storing books (scrolls at that time), and one for meetings, conferences, and banquets.

In Colonial North America, Benjamin Franklin and a community of friends created the first "social library." They each chipped in 40 shillings to buy a collection of books that all could use. Groups of scholars or a church might share other libraries of the time. 

Three different sites claim bragging rights as the "first" public library. But whichever was first, what we'd recognize as proto-modern, free public libraries arose in the early 1840s, in the eastern United States, in tandem with public schools. Both schools and libraries support the idea that only an educated citizenry can govern a democracy well. 

Many thanks to MEME for the Henry Ward Beecher quote.

In Celebration of Library Week

There's so much to love about libraries! They actually may make us better people

A 2014 Pew Research poll discovered that 2/3 of Americans say they have "high or medium engagement" with their local public libraries. Better still, library patrons are more involved in their communities. They're also more likely to be engaged with friends and neighbors, and generally be more capable tech users.

Contemporary libraries provide a resource center for all kinds of information, materials, and computer/Internet access. They offer a haven of resources for lower-income information-seekers and those in need of services only available online. And they often serve as a port in the storm for some of our our homeless population.

In celebration of Library Week, I could have gone in many directions with this blog post. But I hope you've enjoyed this glimpse of public library history. What would we do without our libraries? If you're so inclined, please share your favorite aspects or experiences with libraries in the comments below.

Many thanks to ebook friendly for this quote from J. K. Rowling.

IMAGE CREDITS

Many thanks to Shellie's Quote Emporium on tumblr, for the quote from Mari Barnes; to  ebook friendly for the Dr. Who quote.  Many thanks to MEME for the Henry Ward Beecher quote, and again to ebook friendly for this quote from J. K. Rowling.

Wednesday, April 15, 2020

Creative amusements

Will you invent creative amusements, or run screaming berserk? I'm sure that's a real question for many people confined to quarters until further notice. Pandemic lockdown is a challenge, no matter who you are.


Essential workers don their masks each day like armor, then venture into a dangerous landscape where one thoughtless cough, like a ticking time bomb, could kill them this or next week.

Desperate times, they say, call for desperate measures. Or, sometimes, for creative amusements.

Above: Brooklyn's 7 Train and traffic below in pre-pandemic times. (uncredited photo from Medium)
Below: Almost the same scene, but with empty streets during the lockdown (Juan Arredondo for the New York Times).

A recipe for . . . ?

Creativity happens when divergent thinking runs up against a problem to solve. And oh my, do problems ever abound right now. I'm blessed to be one of the back-bench folks on this lockdown. I cheer from the cheap seats, but stay well out of the way while the real heroes do epic battle on the front lines. 

And I have plenty of creative work to do--I'm deep in final revisions on A Bone to Pick, the second book in the XK9 "Bones" Trilogy. And when I want to take a break there's always paper sculpture. But what about people confined to their homes or apartments, whose creative work is based somewhere else?

Our first three books are just the beginning. I'm working on A Bone to Pick now. (Weird Sisters Publishing).

I recently discovered two examples of just such people, and two very creative amusements. In each case they "made lemonade" from their less-than-ideal situations. I thought you might enjoy what they came up with.

A wedding photographer with no weddings to shoot


Chris Wallace of Carpe Diem Photography needed a wedding to photograph, but he had none. So he made up his own. Out of LEGOs. 

The resulting photo shoot not only gave a grown man an excellent excuse to play with plastic bricks and miniature figures, but when he posted the photos on his website he garnered memorable media and social media attention.

From his account of Florence and Fred's "magical day," and the assortment of wedding guests (who include, among many other notables, Chewbacca and Eleanor Twitty, the Library Ghost from Ghostbusters), it's clear Wallace had as much fun creating the event as we have viewing his photos.





See all these LEGO Wedding photos and many more by Chris Wallace, from My Modern Met and Carpe Diem Photography.

An artist, a museum curator, and two very cosmopolitan gerbils


It started as a Sunday project to mark a London-based couple's 14th day of quarantine. Before they were finished, artist Marianna Benetti and independent curator Filippo Lorenzin had turned it into an elaborate little gerbil-sized museum gallery.

They even created gerbil-centric masterpieces for the display (Oddly reminiscent of Vermeer's Girl with a Pearl Earring, Munch's The Scream, Klimt's The Kiss, and Da Vinci's Mona Lisa), and posted a highly futile "Please Don't Chew" sign.

Their two gerbils, Pandoro and Tiramisù, found plenty of interesting things to inspect, as documented in both still photography and a cute short video

Rude gallery patrons that they were, however, they not only chewed up a chair, but briefly gnawed on the "Don't Chew" sign itself. After all, gerbils just gotta chew.




These four "gerbils in the gallery" photos are from Marianna Benetti and Filippo Lorenzin, featuring their gerbils Pandoro and Tiramisù, via My Modern Met.

What creative amusements have you invented?



We should have lots more time to get cabin fever, go stir crazy . . . and maybe think up some creative amusements, too. How about you?

IMAGE CREDITS: 

Many thanks to Medium for the view of Brooklyn's 7 Train and traffic below, pre-pandemic; almost the same scene after the lockdown photo is from the New York Times/Juan Arredondo.

The three Weird Sisters Publishing book covers (with artist credits) are from Weird Sisters Publishing's Our Books page.

The four photos of "Florence and Fred's" LEGO wedding are by Chris Wallace of Carpe Diem Photography, via My Modern Met. Many thanks!

The four "gerbils in the gallery" photos are from Marianna Benetti and Filippo Lorenzin, featuring their gerbils Pandoro and Tiramisù, via My Modern Met. Deepest gratitude!

Wednesday, April 8, 2020

Time to re-pack the load

Sometimes the pack-saddle shifts, the camel stumbles, and it's time to re-pack the load. In my case it was myself as a metaphorical camel (no animals harmed. No crazy ladies, either). But the load was increasingly real.

Not overloaded, we hope--just resting. This camel photo is courtesy of ABC News (no photographer credited).

Confident predictions doomed


This week on The Weird Blog I was supposed to tell you about the availability of Deep Ellum Pawn in print. Sadly, I can't. Because it isn't (yet). I can still promise that it will be, but I've endured enough technical glitches in the past week to restrain any confident predictions of exactly when.

This week on my Artdog Adventures blogI was planning to plunge into the world of video production. Not unlike my friend Lynette Burrows (scroll down on her post), that didn't exactly go as planned, either. It probably still will happen, but I've also endured enough technical glitches in this realm to back cautiously away from smiling assertions.

I've encountered a lot of detours this week.

Many thanks to Wise Famous Quotes for this gem from Mary Kay Ash.

An accumulation of odd jobs


Have you ever been on a hike with a child (or a crazy lady who should know better), who's a packrat at heart? Walk along the trail, and periodically she'll find a pretty leaf or an interesting rock or some other little bit of spontaneous wonderfulness that she just has to bring home.

Pretty soon her pockets are bulging (or yours are), and the accumulated load begins to weigh something. The realization gradually dawns: "Oh, just one more! It won't take much space. And isn't that just the coolest thing?" is a trap.

It's the same with interesting new projects, or shiny new responsibilities. "Sure, that won't take too much extra time," or, "I'd love to help with that," or, "I bet I could improve on how that's done," can turn into excellent opportunities you'll always be glad you accepted. They also can start to weigh you down.

Many thanks to More Famous Quotes for this observation from Gail Sheehy.

Time to re-pack the load


Sooner or later, the camel stumbles. The pocket's seam pops. Or a deadline just can't be met. Our metaphorical camel has balked at that daunting, final straw.

Eventually, it's time to re-pack the load.

This week, that's what happened to me. But re-packing all of exactly the same old baggage puts us right back in exactly the same old pickle we had before. Each "coolest thing" and each shiny new project carries "weight" in the form of a time commitment, as well as possible financial cost. It's time to rethink priorities.

Which one is the sparkliest rock? The most important job? Which will you most regret leaving behind on the trail, and which will carry you more fruitfully in the direction you really want to go? Gotta leave a few "cool things" behind, sometimes, if you're gonna make it home with your pockets intact and a place for each thing when you get there.

Many thanks to "Inspire 99" for this unattributed quote.

IMAGE CREDITS: The photo of the resting camel is from ABC news (no photographer credited). Many thanks to Wise Famous Quotes for the gem from Mary Kay Ash, to More Famous Quotes for the observation from Gail Sheehy, and to "Inspire 99" for the unattributed quote about knowing where to make the effort.