A joker in every crowd

Thanks to Gordon G.!

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Gun violence – a brief history

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INTRODUCTION to “Facing Death: Finding Dignity, Hope and Healing at the End”

The following in the introduction to my book, released by Clyde Hill Publishing in September 2020. If interested, I have a few copies available at a discount. Otherwise the book can be found on Amazon and at your favorite book store. Jim deMaine

For thirty-eight years I cared for very sick, terminally ill patients. Their stories—their deaths and suffering—have become part of me. I have collected and treasured the many kind notes that patients and families have sent me, at times crediting me with powers I do not deserve. As I ministered to patients, their loved ones and caregivers, I was part doctor, part teacher, and part spiritual advisor. In a care conference in the ICU, I would often tell a story to help a family understand the crisis their loved one was enduring. I tend to think in stories and found that, through them, families could more easily grasp whatever lesson I was trying to impart. They, like most of us, had not talked much about death and were unprepared for it. But when death lands on our doorstep, do we lock the door or welcome it in? Dying is different for each of us as we enter the unknowable on our own unique path.

Sometimes we negotiate. Larry surprised me during a visit to my pulmonary clinic. “Doc, I want to take you out to lunch. There’s something I want to discuss with you.”

I was a little nervous about the invitation. Larry was a favorite patient of mine, coming across as a bit crusty but a straight shooter. I’d grown to know him well and we often chatted about his former career in sales. I was a bit concerned that he might try to sell me something—and in a way, he did.

We arranged to meet at a restaurant near the hospital, and after some pleasantries, Larry let me know that he wanted to talk about dying.

“Look, I’ve lived a long time and what I’m doing now isn’t really living,” he said. “These flare-ups are torture. I feel like a fish out of water and I don’t want to die that way. My biggest fear is suffocating to death. Doc, I want you to help me at the end.”

Larry was suffering from severe COPD, and his condition was getting worse. He had a piercing gaze that twinkled when he cracked one of his frequent jokes, and he always appeared well groomed. But he breathed noisily and had a dusky color, even with the oxygen flowing through his nasal prongs. Larry was not joking now. He’d just been discharged from the hospital after another crisis, with severe wheezing, gasping and coughing due to infection. His waterfront home, where he lived alone at age seventy-seven, had become a prison to him.

“Doc, I can’t handle the stairs, go crabbing, or even lean over to dig clams. This is the pits.”

“How about hiring live-in help or moving to Seattle to be closer to your family and medical care?”

“No way,” Larry said. “I don’t want to move and bother my sons or have some stranger in my home!”

Larry’s COPD was near end stage. He had the classic findings of distended neck veins and a barrel-shaped chest. His lungs were over-expanded, and his diaphragms were moving poorly. There was a trace of swelling in his legs. His blood showed elevated carbon dioxide, and he couldn’t breathe well enough either to maintain oxygen or expel CO2. Chronic respiratory failure due to longstanding tobacco use was his diagnosis. He had finally kicked the habit five years earlier, which helped some, but not enough. Looking at him, I could see the side effects of prescribed steroids — the “moon face,” bruising of the arms, muscle wasting and weakness—all scourges of chronic use of prednisone.

We talked about ventilators to support his breathing and other kinds of ICU care. “No,” he said. Larry was clear; he wanted to be in control. “Look Doc, all I want you to do is promise me that you’ll help me at the end.”

Posted in Books, end of life, Health | Comments Off on INTRODUCTION to “Facing Death: Finding Dignity, Hope and Healing at the End”

Dog lovers or “who needs Jane Fonda”

Thanks to Donna D.

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Hearing Aids for the Masses

by Shira Ovide in the NYT

Today, let’s talk about relatively simple technology and a change in government policy that could unleash more innovation for Americans who have difficulty hearing.

I’ve been speaking with audiologists, consumer advocates and technology companies about what could be a revolution for our ears — hearing aids at a fraction of the cost and hassle of conventional devices.

Here’s how things stand now: Hearing loss is a pervasive and serious health problem, and many people are reluctant or can’t afford to get conventional hearing aids. Nearly 38 million American adults report some degree of hearing loss, but only a minority of people who could benefit from hearing aids have ever used them.

Hearing aids typically cost thousands of dollars, require multiple visits to specialists and often aren’t covered by health insurance. Untreated hearing loss is associated with cognitive decline, dementia and other harms. Overcoming barriers to hearing treatment may significantly improve Americans’ health.

The federal government is poised to help. Congress in 2017 passed legislation that would let anyone buy hearing aids approved by the Food and Drug Administration without a prescription from an audiologist. The F.D.A. has missed a deadline to release draft guidelines for this new category of over-the-counter hearing aids.

Experts told me that when the F.D.A. moves ahead, it’s likely to lead to new products and ideas to change hearing aids as we know them.

Imagine Apple, Bose or other consumer electronics companies making hearing aids more stylish and relatively affordable — with people having confidence that the devices had been vetted by the F.D.A. Bose told me that it’s working on over-the-counter hearing aid technology.

Barbara Kelley, executive director of the Hearing Loss Association of America, an advocacy organization, told me that she can’t wait for more affordable and accessible hearing help. “I’m really excited for the market to open up to see what we got and see how people are reacting,” she said.

It is already possible to buy a hearing helper — they can’t legally be called hearing aids — without a prescription. These devices, called personal sound amplification products or PSAPs, vary wildly in quality from excellent to junk. But when shopping for them, people often can’t tell the difference.

(The Wall Street Journal also recently wrote about hearing helper technologies, including earbuds that can amplify quiet sounds. And Consumer Reports has a useful guide to hearing aids and PSAPs.)

Nicholas Reed, director of audiology at the Johns Hopkins Cochlear Center for Hearing and Public Health, told me that the F.D.A. process should provide a path for the best PSAPs to be approved as official over-the-counter hearing aids. He expects new companies to hit the market, too.

You may doubt that a gadget you buy next to the toilet paper at CVS could be a serious medical device. Dr. Reed’s research, however, has found that some hearing helpers for $350 or less were almost as good as prescription hearing aids for people with mild-to-moderate hearing loss.

Dr. Reed described the best lower-cost devices as the Hyundai of hearing help. (This was a compliment.) They aren’t flashy, but they will get many people safely and effectively where they need to go. He also imagines that the F.D.A. rules will create the conditions for many more people to buy hearing aids — both over the counter and by prescription.

Over-the-counter hearing aids won’t be able to help everyone, experts told me. And the traditional hearing aid industry has said that people are best served by customized devices with expert help.

There is also more technology brewing at the luxury end of the spectrum. A Silicon Valley start-up called Whisper has a novel monthly payment option for its hearing aids and says that its software “learns” over time based on an individual’s hearing deficits.

Health care in the United States can often feel as if it’s stuck, and technology is usually not the solution. But with hearing aids, technology and a change in government policy could bring helpful health innovation.

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Some of the best things to stream

Thanks to the NYT

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Go for a ride when you’re bored

Thanks to Gordon G.

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Ever seen a peacock in full flight?

Thanks to Gordon G. Make sure to scroll down for pics.

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Never tailgate a rhino

Thanks to Donna D. Somebody had a bad day!

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Party animals

Thanks to Gordon G. (be sure to scroll down)

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History of April 15th and shift in US Policies by Heather Cox Richardson

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The Last Time a Vaccine Saved America

from the New Yorker by Howard Markel, a professor at the University of Michigan, is a member of the National Academy of Medicine and a Guggenheim Fellow.

Ed Note: Thomas Francis, Jr. is the father of one of our residents–Mary Jane!

On the morning of April 12, 1955, an epidemiologist named Thomas Francis, Jr., took the stage of the Rackham Auditorium, at the University of Michigan, in Ann Arbor. Short and portly, in his mid-fifties, with a long face and a close-clipped mustache, Francis was there to deliver a ninety-minute lecture on the vaccine field trial he had just completed. The trial had evaluated the efficacy of the poliovirus vaccine developed by Jonas Salk, a former postdoc in Francis’s lab.

An influenza researcher, Francis was known among scientists for his deft direction of complex flu-vaccine trials during the Second World War. He had taught Salk the techniques necessary for developing “killed virus” vaccines—shots in which large quantities of a virus are disabled in a formaldehyde solution, then introduced to the human immune system in order to prompt the production of antibodies. Today, no bioethics panel would allow Francis to run a safety trial for a vaccine developed by someone he knew so well. But rules were more relaxed back then—and, in any case, Francis’s reputation was so sterling that, as the Salk biographer Jane S. Smith has written, “even the most dedicated opponent of the new vaccine could never say a trial supervised by Francis was political, biased, or incomplete.”

Francis’s lecture was awaited breathlessly by the American public. Few diseases have inspired more fear than polio. During the first half of the twentieth century, summertime polio epidemics left wakes of paralysis and death behind them, forcing summer camps, movie theatres, and public pools to close. Newspapers regularly featured horrific images of children struggling to walk or breathe. Adults also suffered: after contracting the virus in 1921, when he was thirty-nine, Franklin D. Roosevelt was forced to use a wheelchair or leg braces for the rest of his life.

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Aphorisms for the year

Thanks to Gordon G. (Keep scrolling, there’s 4 pages!)

Posted in Humor | Comments Off on Aphorisms for the year

When Patients Choose to End Their Lives

By Jane E. Brody in the NYT

At a time when so many are dying against their will, it may seem out of sync to discuss the option of having a doctor help people end their lives when they face intolerable suffering that no treatment can relieve.

It’s less a question of uncontrollable physical pain, which prompts only a minority of requests for medical aid in dying, than it is a loss of autonomy, a loss of dignity, a loss of quality of life and an inability to engage in what makes people’s lives meaningful.

Intractable suffering is defined by patients, not doctors. Patients who choose medical aid in dying want to control when they die and die peacefully, remaining conscious almost to the very end, surrounded by loved ones and able to say goodbye.

Currently, nine states and the District of Columbia allow doctors to help patients who meet well-defined criteria and are on the threshold of dying choose when and how to end their lives. The laws are modeled after the first Death with Dignity Act, passed in Oregon in 1997.

A similar law has been introduced repeatedly, and again this January, in New York. Last year, Maryland came within one vote of joining states that permit medical aid in dying. Diane Rehm, the retired National Public Radio talk show host, says in a new film on the subject, “Each of us is just one bad death away from supporting these laws.”

Most people who seek medical aid in dying would prefer to live but have an illness that has in effect stripped their lives of meaning. Though often — and, proponents say, unfortunately — described as “assisted suicide,” the laws hardly give carte blanche for doctors to give people medication that would end their lives quickly and painlessly. The patient has to be terminally ill (usually with a life expectancy of less than six months), professionally certified as of sound mind, and able to self-administer the lethal medication without assistance. That can leave out people with advanced dementia or, in some cases, people with severe physical disabilities like those with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (A.L.S., or Lou Gehrig’s disease).

A desire to broaden access to medical aid in dying prompted Joe Fab, a director and writer, to create the film “When My Time Comes,” to air on public television starting April 8. (A free livestream of the film preview and discussion will be available on April 8, at 12:45 p.m. Eastern, at weta.org/WhenMyTimeComesFilm.) The film follows the 2020 publication of Ms. Rehm’s companion book of the same title, subtitled “Conversations About Whether Those Who Are Dying Should Have the Right to Determine When Life Should End.” Both the book and film were inspired by the protracted death in 2014 from Parkinson’s disease of John Rehm, her first husband, to whom she was married for 54 years.

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Tom Lehrer Turned 93 Yesterday: On Aging

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Possible sister community to Parkshore in Kirkland

Ed note: The memo below from Parkshore’s ED was forwarded to me by a friend. Now a public document, it received considerable discussion at Skyline’s meeting yesterday which left many unanswered questions. I think the hope is that our parent company can be fully transparent and seek input from Skyline’s Resident’s Association as this proposed project develops.

“Memorandum: Date: April 1, 2021
RE: Exciting Masterplanning News

Good Afternoon,

This communication is to make you aware of a very exciting project that Parkshore and Transforming Age are currently working on! As some of you are aware, Transforming Age affiliated with The Gardens at Juanita Bay in December 2018 with a commitment to masterplan the property and plan for the future.

In partnership with design architects, as well as the City of Kirkland, we have identified a project of which I believe Parkshore residents and team members will be particularly proud. The plan is for a Parkshore satellite campus to include a luxury lakeside apartment community with 12-apartments that overlook Juanita Bay including a dock and over 100 feet of waterfront, as well as, a tree-lined parkside 40-apartment residence at Juanita Village, three blocks apart.

This added satellite campus would give current Parkshore residents seamless access to Kirkland via Parkshore’s private luxury vessel and Parkshore Juanita residents access to Madison Park amenities.

Initial research suggests this will be a very attractive masterplan and I am personally thrilled at the added benefit this would extend to current Parkshore residents. Our next step is to share this exciting news with our current waitlist members and request an Expression of Interest in the form of a $1,000 fully refundable deposit. Following the notification and invitation to our waitlist members, information will also be shared with residents of Kirkland. If you have friends or family who may be interested in this project, please encourage them to contact our Sales Team for additional information. After the expression of interest campaign, we will verify market demand for the project before moving forward.

If interested, you are welcome to join an informational Zoom webinar on Wednesday, April 14 at 3pm to learn more about this project. As always, thank you for being a special part of the Parkshore community, it truly is a community like no other.”

Posted in Advocacy, CCRC Info, Finance, In the Neighborhood, Law, WACCRA | Comments Off on Possible sister community to Parkshore in Kirkland

Madison St. changes are coming

Thanks to Barb W. for the update

  We’re proud to share we’ve reached a major funding milestone! The Federal Transit Administration (FTA) has now allocated $59.9 million in funding from the Small Starts Program to the Madison BRT – RapidRide G Line project for construction. This funding allocation builds on years of work with the FTA to meet the rigorous readiness requirements for the Small Starts Grant.

Now that funding has been allocated, the next step is for the FTA to execute the grant agreement with SDOT. After the grant is executed and a contractor is on board, we’ll be able to start construction. If all goes as planned, we expect construction to start this fall and you can hop on a RapidRide G Line bus in 2024!

Read more in our April 5, 2021 blog post.     (L) Boarding a RapidRide bus. (R) As part of this project, we’ll build a community-requested pedestrian signal at this location (Madison and 10th) near Seattle University. Photo Credit: SDOT Flickr.   PREPARING FOR CONSTRUCTION
We are collecting additional information from neighbors on access needs and who to contact during construction. Feel free to contact us with questions or to virtually meet with our project team. Check out our webpage for details on what crews will be working on during construction.   PLANNED CONSTRUCTION TIMELINE Fall 2020: Completed final design Spring 2021: Finalize funding After the Small Starts Grant Agreement is executed with the FTA, we’ll move forward with hiring a construction contractor Early 2021: Advertise for construction bids to build the project   After a contractor is selected, we will know more about the planned construction sequencing, timeline, and intersection closures Fall 2021: Anticipated construction start  2024: Complete construction and open the RapidRide G Line     SEE WHAT THE PROJECT WILL LOOK LIKE ON YOUR BLOCK!
See the final design sheets showing what the project will look like on your block: seattle.gov/Transportation/MadisonBRT.htm.     PROJECT MAP WITH KEY FEATURES
Click to enlarge.     Above are renderings of the Madison BRT – RapidRide G Line at different locations along the route. Click to enlarge

Clockwise starting from top left: 
Central Library: Rendering at Central Library shows a station shelter, real time arrival info, station platform at the same level as the bus, and bus lane. 
Madison & Terry: Rendering at Madison and Terry shows a center running station, pedestrian refuge (protected space in the middle of the street), center running bus lanes, new curb ramps, landscaping, station shelters, and real time arrival info. 
Madison and 12th: Rendering at Madison and 12th Ave shows a center running station, new curb ramps, pedestrian refuge (protected space to wait in the middle of the street), bus lanes, landscaping, and new curb ramps. 
Madison & John: Rendering at Madison and E John St shows a station platform level with the bus, bus only lane, new curb ramp, yellow tactile strip for people with vision impairments, station shelter, and real time arrival info.      CITY RESOURCES
We know these are especially challenging times for businesses. Here are some resources the City is offering.

The Office of Economic Development is offering free technical assistance to businesses applying for COVID-19 recovery loans. They’ll help you navigate the application and documentation process, and they have staff who speak multiple languages. Contact the Office of Economic Development to get connected to the right resources depending on your situation: OED@seattle.gov, 206-684-8090.
  Seattle Department of Transportation is offering streamlined, free temporary permits for outdoor cafes, retail merchandise displays, food trucks, and vending carts that are valid for up to 6 months! We are also offering temporary street closures to support restaurants and retail. Visit this website for more information.     시애틀시는 연방 정부 보조금을 확정하는 단계에 있으며, 이르면 2021년 봄부터 공사가 시작될 것으로 예상됩니다.

경제개발국은 COVID-19 회생 대출을 신청하는 기업에 무료 기술 지원을 제공하고 있습니다. 신청과 서류 절차에 대한 안내와 여러 언어를 사용하는 직원들의 도움도 받을 수 있습니다. 여러분이 처한 상황에 알맞은 정보를 안내 받으려면 경제개발국으로 문의하십시오:
OED@seattle.gov, 206-684-8090.

시애틀 교통부는 야외 카페, 소매 상품 전시, 푸드 트럭 및 자동판매 카트에 대해 6개월간 유효한 간소화된 무료 임시 허가를 제공합니다! 또한 식당과 소매점을 지원하기 위해 임시 거리 폐쇄를 제공하고 있습니다. 다음 웹사이트를 방문하여 자세한 내용을 확인하십시오: www.seattle.gov/office-of-economic-development/covid-19/outdoor-permit.   西雅圖市目前正在最終確定聯邦撥款,我們預計該工程最早將於2021年春季開始。

經濟發展辦公室為申請COVID-19復甦貸款的企業提供免費技術援助。他們會幫助您對申請和文檔的各個流程進行指引,並且他們的員工會說多種語言。請與經濟發展辦公室聯繫,以根據您的具體情況獲得合適的資源:OED@seattle.gov,206-684-8090

西雅圖交通運輸部為有效期長達6個月的戶外咖啡館,零售商品展示,食品卡車和自動販賣車提供簡化的免費臨時許可證!我們還提供臨時封閉的街道,以支持餐館和零售。訪問此網頁以獲取更多信息:
 www.seattle.gov/office-of-economic-development/covid-19/outdoor-permit。   Thành phố Seattle đang trong quá trình hoàn tất các khoản trợ cấp liên bang và chúng tôi dự kiến việc xây dựng sẽ bắt đầu sớm nhất vào mùa xuân năm 2021.

Văn phòng Phát triển Kinh tế (Office of Economic Development) đang cung cấp hỗ trợ kỹ thuật miễn phí cho các doanh nghiệp xin các khoản vay phục hồi COVID-19. Họ sẽ giúp bạn đi qua quá trình đăng ký và cung cấp tài liệu và họ có đội ngũ nói nhiều ngôn ngữ. Liên hệ với Văn phòng Phát triển Kinh tế để được kết nối với các nguồn lực phù hợp tùy thuộc vào tình huống của bạn:
OED@seattle.gov, 206-684-8090.

Sở Giao thông Vận tải Seattle (Seattle Department of Transportation) đang cung cấp được đơn giản hoá, miễn phí giấy phép tạm thời cho các quán cà phê ngoài trời, trưng bày hàng bán lẻ, xe bán đồ ăn và xe bán hàng tự động có giá trị trong tối đa 6 tháng! Chúng tôi cũng sẽ tạm thời đóng cửa đường phố để hỗ trợ các nhà hàng và cửa hàng bán lẻ. Truy cập trang web này để biết thêm thông tin: www.seattle.gov/office-of-economic-development/covid-19/outdoor-permit.     WANT TO STAY INFORMED?
Call our info line at 206-484-2780, Monday to Friday, 8 AM to 5 PM, to speak with a project team member.

You can also email us at MadisonBRT@seattle.gov or text “Madison” to 33222 to sign up for project alerts via text. Standard texting rates apply.

Thank you, 

Sara Colling
Outreach Lead
Madison BRT – RapidRide G Line project team  
For more information on the project, please visit our website.

If you have specific questions, or would like to schedule a meeting or briefing, please email us at MadisonBRT@seattle.gov or call us at 206-484-2780. 

Hadaaad mashruucan suaalo ka qabtit email noo soo dir:
MadisonBRT@seattle.gov ama nasoo wac: 206-484-2780.
Nếu bạn co cau hỏi về dự an, vui long gửi email cho chung toi theo địa chỉ
MadisonBRT@seattle.gov hoặc gọi cho chung toi theo số 206-484-2780.
如果您對本工程有任何疑問,請電郵 MadisonBRT@seattle.gov 或致電
206-484-2780.
यदिआपके पास प्रोजेक्ट के बारे में प्रश्न हैं, तोकृपया हमें MadisonBRT@seattle.
govपर ईमेल करें या हमें 206-484-2780 पर कॉल करें
이 프로젝트에 대한 질문이 있으시면, 이메일 MadisonBRT@seattle.gov
또는 206-484-2780로 전화 주십시요.
Si tiene preguntas sobre el proyecto, por favor envienos un mensaje a MadisonBRT@seattle.gov o llamenos al 206-484-2780   Connect with us online or share using #madisonbrt           Copyright © 2021 Seattle Department of Transportation, All rights reserved.
You are receiving this email because you have subscribed to receive email updates related to the Madison BRT project. The E Union St PBL project is a separate but adjacent project to Madison BRT that will provide bike connections to Capitol Hill and the Central District. We thought you might be interested to learn about this project as someone who lives, works or plays in the area. If you’d like to receive future emails about the Union St PBL project, you can subscribe by visiting https://el2.envirolytical.com/registration/form/48432.

Our mailing address is: Seattle Department of Transportation PO Box 34996 700 Fifth Ave, Suite 3800 Seattle, WA 98124-4996
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Posted in environment, Transportation | Comments Off on Madison St. changes are coming

Music, Covid-19 and the Zoo

Thanks to Sandy J.

Posted in Animals, Music | Comments Off on Music, Covid-19 and the Zoo

I never thought of it this way

Thanks to Dorothy W.

1. In the beginning, God created the Heavens and the Earth and populated the Earth with broccoli, cauliflower and spinach, green and yellow and red vegetables of all kinds, so Man and Woman would livelong and healthy lives.

2. Then using God’s great gifts, Satan created Ben and Jerry’s Ice Cream and Krispy Creme Donuts. And Satan said, “You wantchocolate with that?” And Man said, “Yes!” and Woman said, “and as long as you’re at it, add some sprinkles.” And they gained 10 pounds. And Satan smiled.

3. And God created the healthful yogurt that Woman might keep the figure that Man found so fair. And Satan brought forth white flour from the wheat, and sugar from the cane and combined them. AndWoman went from size 6 to size 14.

4. So God said, “Try my fresh green salad.” And Satan presented Thousand-Island Dressing, buttery croutons and garlic toast on theside . And Man and Woman unfastened their belts following therepast.

5. God then said, “I have sent you heart healthy vegetables and olive oil in which to cook them.” And Satan brought forth deep fried fish and chicken-fried steak so big it needed its own platter. And Man gained more weight and his cholesterol went through the roof.

God then created a light, fluffy white cake, named it “Angel Food Cake” and said, “It is good.” Satan then created chocolate cake and named it “Devil’s Food.”

6. God then brought forth running shoes so that his children might lose those extra pounds. 

And Satan gave cable TV with a remote control so Man would not have to toil changing the channels.

And Man and Woman laughed and cried before the flickering blue light and gained pounds.

7. Then God brought forth the potato, naturally low in fat and brimming with nutrition.

And Satan peeled off the healthful skin and sliced the starchy center into chips and deep-fried them. And Man gained pounds .

8. God then gave lean beef so that Man might consume fewer calories and still satisfy his appetite.

And Satan created McDonald’s and its 99-cent double cheeseburger.

Then said, “You want fries with that?” And Man replied, “Yes! And super-size them!” And Satan said, “It is good.”

And Man went into cardiac arrest.

9. God sighed and created quadruple bypass surgery.

10. Then Satan created the Health Care System…Amen.

Posted in Health, Humor | Comments Off on I never thought of it this way

Republican Party veering off historical course of Lincoln’s leadership

by Heather Cox Richardson – April 7th

Posted in Government, Politics | Comments Off on Republican Party veering off historical course of Lincoln’s leadership

Back to work?

The Most Popular New Yorker Cartoons of 2018 on Instagram | The New Yorker
Posted in Humor | Comments Off on Back to work?

Thank God for poets

By Margaret Renkl in the NYT

NASHVILLE — When the poet Amanda Gorman stepped to the lectern at President Biden’s inauguration, she faced a much-diminished crowd of masked people on the National Mall, but she was speaking directly to the heart of a bruised nation:

Let the globe, if nothing else, say this is true:
That even as we grieved, we grew,
That even as we hurt, we hoped,
That even as we tired, we tried.

Ms. Gorman’s poem — addressed to “Americans, and the World” — was timeless in that way of the most necessary poems, but it was more than just timeless. After a year of losses both literal and figurative, she offered a salve that soothed, however briefly, our broken hearts and our broken age.

Poets have always given voice to our losses at times of national calamity. Walt Whitman’s “When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom’d” is an elegy for Abraham Lincoln. Langston Hughes’s “Mississippi — 1955” came in direct response to the murder of Emmett Till. Denise Levertov wrote one poem after another after another to protest the war in Vietnam. In 2002, Billy Collins delivered a memorial poem for the victims of the Sept. 11 attacks before a special joint meeting of Congress.

The poems inspired by Black Lives Matter are almost too numerous to count, and their ranks continue to grow, in spite of the personal cost of “chasing words / like arrows inside the knotted meat between my / shoulder blades,” as Tiana Clark writes in “Nashville.”

Many Americans, probably a vast majority of Americans, feel they can get along just fine without poetry. But tragedy — a breakup, a cancer diagnosis, a sudden death — can change their minds about that, if only because the struggle to find words for something so huge and so devastating can be overwhelming. “Again and again, this constant forsaking,” Natasha Trethewey calls it in her poem “Myth.”

To name the forsaking wouldn’t seem to help, but it does. It always helps.

I was 18 when I learned that lesson in the hardest way such lessons can be learned: by burying someone I loved. For three years she was my beloved teacher, the kind of teacher who opens worlds but who could also somehow hear me saying much that I couldn’t yet say.

“Margaret, are you grieving / Over Goldengrove unleaving?” she would say, smiling, in autumn, quoting Hopkins when she found me among the dogwoods after school. If she knew I lingered there in hopes of continuing our classroom conversation far from my classmates’ ears, she never let on. Though she must have been in a hurry to get home to her husband and her little boys, she just listened.

When she died so young, the summer after my graduation, I could not believe how the world went on. People were still honking their horns in traffic. People were still balancing their checkbooks, still mowing their lawns, still hurrying to put supper on the table. Why hadn’t it all screeched into silence? How could there be anything left to do in this world but grieve?

Then I remembered Auden’s “Musée des Beaux Arts,” a poem she taught us late in her last year, when her voice was already growing fainter, quavering until she swallowed again:

About suffering they were never wrong,
The Old Masters: how well they understood
Its human position: how it takes place
While someone else is eating or opening a window or just walking dully along

About suffering Auden was also not wrong, and through many seasons of grief in all the years since I was 18, I have remembered that poem.

Nevertheless, as the poets remind us, too, suffering is not our only birthright. Life is also our birthright. Life and love and beauty. “When despair for the world” is all we can feel, as Wendell Berry puts it in “The Peace of Wild Things,” the world itself — with its wood drakes and its blue herons “who do not tax their lives with forethought / of grief” — may be our greatest solace.

The poets are forever telling us to look for this kind of peace, to stuff ourselves with sweetness, to fill ourselves up with loveliness. They remind us that “there are, on this planet alone, something like two million naturally occurring sweet things, / some with names so generous as to kick / the steel from my knees,” as Ross Gay notes in “Sorrow Is Not My Name.”

We are a species in love with beauty. In springtime you can drive down any rural road in this part of country — probably in any part of the country — and you will find a row of daffodils blooming next to the shabbiest homesteads and the rustiest trailers. Often they are blooming next to no structure at all, ghostly circles around long-vanished mailboxes, a bright line denoting a fence row where no fence now stands. The daffodils tell us that though we might be poor, we are never too poor for beauty, to find a way to name it while we are still alive to call the gorgeous world by its many generous names.

For isn’t our own impermanence the undisputed truth that lurks beneath all our fears and all our sorrows and even all our pleasures? “Life is short, though I keep this from my children,” writes Maggie Smith in “Good Bones.” “Life is short, and I’ve shortened mine / in a thousand delicious, ill-advised ways.”

Carpe diem is the song the poets have ever sung, and it is our song, too. “I think this is / the prettiest world — so long as you don’t mind / a little dying,” Mary Oliver writes in “The Kingfisher.”

This April is the 25th anniversary of National Poetry Month, and it arrives in the midst of a hard year. Last April brought lockdowns and rising infections, but we didn’t know last April just how much harder the year was about to become. We know now. And despite the helpful treatments that have emerged, despite the rising vaccination rates, despite the new political stability and the desperately needed help for a struggling economy, it is hard to trust that the terrors are truly receding.

We know now how vulnerable we are. We understand now that new terrors — and old terrors wearing new guises — will always rise up and come for us.

Thank God for our poets, here in the mildness of April and in the winter storms alike, who help us find the words our own tongues feel too swollen to speak. Thank God for the poets who teach our blinkered eyes to see these gifts the world has given us, and what we owe it in return.

Margaret Renkl is a contributing opinion writer who covers flora, fauna, politics and culture in the American South. She is the author of the books “Late Migrations: A Natural History of Love and Loss” and the forthcoming “Graceland, At Last: And Other Essays From The New York Times.”

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