To those of you who have never been homeless, you should be very grateful. It is a horrible thing each hour of the day. Not having a place to clean yourself, cook food or even go to the bathroom. In my experience, you become a time bomb to yourself. What will you do to feel […]
Forecaster opinion
Here’s Something: Remember the Maine ties to Sept. 11
They say as people get older, they get wiser. I don’t think so. There are many wise young people and too many old fools. I also don’t see politicians getting wiser as they age. They callous over. They spin lies. They believe their own fairy-tale views of the world. Proof of that is last month’s […]
Life Unwound: What are your hungers?
Grocery shopping, I spotted a box labeled, “Entertaining Crackers.” I chuckled. “I’ve never found crackers to be entertaining.” The sign leading to another aisle read, “Functional water.” I laughed. “Isn’t all water functional?” I wondered about how we market food, advertisers desperate for sales, to entice, as if a buyer might say, “These crackers will […]
Mainewhile: MOFGA marks milestone
Yours truly has just celebrated a birthday. This one was a milestone year and I was eyeing it a little dubiously when I discovered to my great joy that I share this particular milestone with one of my most favorite organizations, the Maine Organic Farmers and Growers Association – MOFGA to its friends. MOFGA was […]
Forum: Anti-vaxxers are nothing new
Having spent nearly two years in hospitals with polio as a child, I am incredibly grateful that by the time my own children came along, pediatricians automatically provided the polio vaccine. I can still remember the fear infantile paralysis brought to American parents each summer. Everyone avoided crowds and public places for swimming and movie theaters were forbidden. […]
Mainewhile: Play is serious business
Remember when getting ready for a new school year meant a new backpack and a fresh pack of pencils? Man, I miss that. Last year we were figuring out how to manage returning mid-pandemic. We navigated cohorts, figured out Zoom and became experts on different types of sanitizer. This year, we are figuring out how […]
Through My Lens: Music and culture should be integrated
It is about time immigrant leaders in the state of Maine start embracing music and cultural integration. It is common these days for people to group themselves in faith or culture and stay together tightly for safety reasons, particularly in the past few years under Trump’s leadership. While I think that is not a bad […]
Superintendent’s Notebook: Homeostasis – destination or roadblock?
I don’t think any of us thought we’d be heading into the new school year like this … more uncertainty, continued adjustments and ever-changing policies. It’s a bit disheartening, especially after a hopeful spring and summer. A common refrain: “Can’t we just go back to the way things were?” A friend of mine once observed, […]
Life Unwound: What questions are you asking?
Do you ever wake up empty? I mean, do you first think versions of hollow questions like “What’s for breakfast?” or “Do I look fat in that shirt?” You know, questions that trigger “ugh, another day, blah.” Me, too. “Ugh” questions don’t nudge us out of bed like poet Mary Oliver’s, “What is it you […]
Mainewhile: Sorrow both here and abroad
This week I packed up the youngest, along with most of his belongings, and the two of us took a road trip to settle him in at college. I’ll be the first to acknowledge that the “empty nest” phenomenon is real. Never did I think it was possible to simultaneously feel so much joy and […]