If I have what used to be a fairly close friend who I suspect is unwell and self-sabotaging, and he rejects repeated attempts to reach out, dinner invites etc, with lamest of excuses, despite living 10 mins away, should I keep trying?
I want to continue, and not take previous rejects close to heart, but if any of my followers were in a similar situation and have any advice, I would love to hear it.

penamerican:

In this week’s Illustrated PEN, Guest Editor MariNaomi presents an excerpt from Thi Bui’s illustrated memoir, The Best We Could Do.

MariNaomi writes: Thi Bui’s book about her family’s escape from a war-torn Vietnam couldn’t be more timely in today’s political climate. It’s a deeply personal tale, but universal in so many ways, filled with familiar struggles and joys that so many of us will relate to. You need to read this book.

climateadaptation:

rjzimmerman:

I spent the day at Anza Borrego Desert today, photographing the wildflower explosion. These are predominantly desert sunflowers, which are massed along Hendersonville Canyon Road north of the small town of Borrego Springs.

As I was wandering through the acres of flowers, I was reminding myself of the line from the movie, Wizard of Oz: “Poppies… Poppies. Poppies will put them to sleep. Sleeeeep. Now they’ll sleeeeep!” These aren’t poppies, but still….

Photo by rjzimmerman March 15, 2017.

Beautiful.

Maybe I should just move to west coast

Is intersectionality a religion ?

“Reason and empirical debate are essential to the functioning of a liberal democracy. We need a common discourse to deliberate. We need facts independent of anyone’s ideology or political side, if we are to survive as a free and democratic society. … And if a university cannot allow these facts and arguments to be freely engaged, then nowhere is safe. Universities are the sanctuary cities of reason. If reason must be subordinate to ideology even there, our experiment in self-government is over.”

As a geeky engineering student (who was too busy working, and commuting, unable to afford to live on campus), I managed to avoid this entire discourse, my liberal worldview firmly rooted only in the things I’ve read and experienced, but it terrifies me that little L probably won’t be as lucky.
I hope to be able to teach him critical thinking, empathy and reasoning enough to make his own conclusions, and able to change them when facts point in that direction, and hope that they will align with mine. I also hope that liberal democracy still endures despite threat from Trumpism, intersectionality, and religious fundamentalism.

Is intersectionality a religion ?

The Time Thief

brycedotvc:

my Krouse Rosenthal died yesterday.

I don’t know her, but I cried when I read the dating profile she wrote for her soon to be widowed husband.

Like, big ugly cried.

I can count the number of times I’ve cried as an adult on one hand. Well maybe I’d need to borrow a few fingers, but the point is I rarely ever cry.

Maybe its because my wife is out of town and I miss the mornings with her after the kids have gone to school and the nights where we don’t even have to be talking but just being near each other is enough to put us both at ease.

Maybe it was because my son had posted a picture with his arm around his little girlfriend wishing her a happy birthday. And he still looked like a little boy. Like my little boy. And I know that won’t last much longer because within months his voice will start to change. And he will change. And he won’t be that sweet little boy with his arm awkwardly draped around an awkwardly adorable little girl with braces. He will still be my son, but that little boy will be a memory as I welcome the man he’ll be.

I don’t know if any of those reasons are the reasons I was ugly crying reading news that a woman I’d never met have died.

Women I’ve never met die everyday and I don’t cry.

Let alone ugly cry.

But something about this woman, and this woman’s words as she met her end stirred something in me. They say that hearts are the ears of the soul. And mine needed to hear what Ms. Rosenthal had to say.

“I want more time with Jason. I want more time with my children. I want more time sipping martinis at the Green Mill Jazz Club on Thursday nights. “More” was my first spoken word (true). And now it may very well be my last”

Notably she wasn’t asking for more time with her phone. Or with the brands that she’d built a relationship with.

They say that there is a war being waged for our time and attention. That companies of all kinds are competing for little spaces in our days and in our brains and in our shopping baskets. As with every war, there are winners and there are losers. If the brands, and social networks and media outlets win, who loses?

Maybe the reason for my ugly cry was that I know who loses.

And who is losing.

Last night, I found my two older kids on the couch watching the Bachelor. I mean, ugh! But, instead of retreating to my office for more working, or surfing or scrolling I sat. Instantly I was flanked on each side with two cuddly kiddos. A moment of more.

In a war that feels like a constantly losing battle, this felt like a small win.

Thank you, Ms. Rosenthal. I hope you were able to savor what little more you were able to while you could.

I didn’t know about her. And I do now.

And this makes me want to cry, too. And to close the laptop, bring L home from the day care, snow and freezing rain be damned, and spend the rest of the day with him in this tiny apartment, learning the new words and sounds together, finding this world endlessly fascinating, only in the way an 18 months-and-x-days old person can. Because tomorrow he will be 18 months-and-x+1 days old, and it will again be different.

Subway is not running in my neighborhood – they only serve the wealthier areas in this weather. But the day care is mercifully open – caretakers live upstairs from it. The next bus that will take me home is in 20 mins. Coffee shop was closing, but she let me have the last hot chocolate. On the way to the day care, as I was waiting at the bus stop with L strapped to me, a Chinese man asked me, in broken English, if we wanted a ride in his hatchback. I am hopelessly late to start working. Will the South Africans understand how a city shuts off in the snow?