Category: General

February 23rd, 2021

The Calls of Lent

I fell in love with Barry Lopez’s Arctic Dreams when it first came out in 1986. At that point, preferring fiction, I had not read much “nature writing”, but I found myself enthralled by the majesty of the Arctic scenery which he managed to describe both vividly and lyrically, and by his descriptions of living…
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February 16th, 2021

Grass Roots

From the book Braiding Sweetgrass:  “Sweetgrass is best planted not by seed, but by putting roots directly in the ground. Thus the plant is passed from hand to earth to hand across years and generations. Its favored habitat is sunny, well-watered meadows. It thrives along disturbed edges.” I had been thinking of Lent, of ashes,…
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February 9th, 2021

Written in Invisible Ink

“I will commit an act of willful erasure, whittling each document and letter until only the lives of women remain…I’ll devote myself to luring female lives back from male texts. Such an experiment in reversal will reveal, I hope, the concealed lives of women, present, always, but coded in invisible ink.” The “I” above is…
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February 6th, 2021

The Accidental Advertisement

“‘I think often about a group of bishops who, after Vatican I, left … to continue the “true doctrine” that wasn’t that of Vatican I,’ said the pontiff. ‘Today, they ordain women,’ the pope continued, adding: ‘The severest attitude, to guard the faith without the magisterium of the church, brings you to ruin.’”  Ruin? Thank you,…
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February 2nd, 2021

Piercing the Darkness

Ride the elevator to the top of the Empire State building at night; have your binoculars with you, and while others are doing the traditional looking down and out at all the human-made wonders and artificially lighted world, look up instead. Set your binocular focus to infinity if you want the best view, but even…
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January 26th, 2021

“The Past We Step Into”

I am sure she will be quoted often these days, Amanda Gorman, our twenty-two year old Youth Poet Laureate. I am overjoyed that she is so young and undaunted and inspired and inspiring. I shudder to think about a world in which gifts like hers might have been missed—or missing.  I believe we needed to…
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January 19th, 2021

In This Week of New Beginnings

I wasn’t even looking for a poem.  In this week of new beginnings and promises, of cautious hope and restrained joy, I just wanted to memorialize a turning.  In this new year, during this week of new beginnings, we will have two new world leaders, one, blessedly, a mixed race woman, beginning to take on…
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January 16th, 2021

A Big Deal

So many people responded “what’s the big deal” to Pope Francis’ change to Canon Law allowing all laypeople to be acolytes and lectors that I am going to say it IS a big deal.  I’ve edited what I wrote to my grandson: “This is so important to me right now because it’s a chink in…
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January 12th, 2021

Just Nine Miles

Actually, it may be fewer than that today, more like six miles. I’m speaking of the distance to Bethlehem from Jerusalem. Even I could walk that distance if need be. And I think the time has come. In fact, it came a long time ago and has now become urgent.  When I visited pre-pandemic Bethlehem…
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January 7th, 2021

Insurrection or Politics?

Whenever I would go to meetings in DC, including the WOC Board, I would get a thrill seeing the Capitol dome, as I see it tonight. I remember being inside with a class I took to Washington near the end of my teaching career. We took photos and listened for echoes in statuary hall.  We…
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