Source: Boulder Weekly
Monday Morning Wake-Up Call
November 2, 2020 by 26 Comments
“One way or another, we’re all white-knuckling our way toward Tuesday. I’ve probably made too many impulse donations to candidates I believe in, but I regret none of them. My husband, son, and I have written letters and held signs. In our small town, we’ll don our masks and vote in person. Beyond that, my approach during these last days has been to stay outdoors as much as possible. I can’t control the outcome of anything that matters, but I can keep the birdfeeders full. I can sweep out the shed, rake up the leaves, and pull out the petunias. I can stay grounded in the simple, necessary tasks of my own life. And I can look at the sky, at the now bare maple tree, at the snow that covers the ground this morning in a frosting of white, and trust in the forces at work in the world that are far beyond my own limited seeing and my own narrow understanding. One day last week, I rounded the corner of the house pushing the wheelbarrow and was stopped in my tracks by the sight of fifty or sixty robins hopping about in the front yard, a gathering as uplifting to me as the determined crowd of citizens who have showed up downtown every Saturday all through the fall to stand in silent solidarity with Black Lives Matter, voting rights, and democracy. When we looked up from breakfast a few days ago to see a herd of deer just outside the window, they seemed almost like silent messengers sent to remind us that we share this time, this place, with others and that we’re all connected, for better and for worse.”
— Katrina Kenison, from “Our Time” (October 31, 2020)
Notes: Image from Mennyfox
Sunday Morning
September 27, 2020 by 24 Comments
No weather so perfectly conjures a sense of foreboding, of anticipation and waiting, as the eerie stillness that often occurs before the first fat drops of rain, when storm light makes luminous all roofs and fields and strands black silhouettes of trees on the horizon. This is the storm as expectation. As solution about to be offered. Or all hell about to break loose. And as the weeks of this summer draw on, I can’t help but think that this is the weather we are all now made of. All of us waiting. Waiting for news. Waiting for Brexit to hit us. Waiting for the next revelation about the Trump administration. Waiting for hope, stranded in that strange light that stills our hearts before the storm of history.
— Helen Macdonald, Vesper Flights (Grove Press, August 25, 2020)
Photo: DK, 6:15 am, September 27, 2020. The Cove. Stamford, CT
The Voting Polls Are Open
December 26, 2012 by 35 Comments
2013 is rapidly approaching. A new year. New beginnings. I’ve been thinking about changing the title of my blog. When I started this blogging venture, I expected to take a certain path. And then I took a fork in the road.
The Kanigan household is divided on the decision. (Note that I didn’t say sharply divided as this topic doesn’t fall on the short list of their top 10 priorities.)
I’d appreciate your feedback on what you feel my blog represents to you. Please select one of the options below or write in your preferred recommendation. Hit the VOTE button.*
I will share the election decision on New Year’s Day. If you prefer to drop me an email with your thoughts, please send it to davidkanigan@yahoo.com. Thank you!
* This is my first attempt at using a blog poll. Let’s hope this works.