Saturday, April 1, 2017

REFLECTIONS ON LIFE March 2017

REFLECTIONS ON LIFE
March 2017


REFLECTIONS ON HOME IN COLUMBIA

Spring is here! … and it played a trick on us this year.

Having excitedly observed the early opening of the crocus blooms and the forsythia beginning to blossom, and then to experience the subsequent frost reminded us again that we are not in control.  Yet if this apparent result of lack of rain and warmer temperatures IS related to global warming and thereby to environmentally detrimental human behavior and public policy on our planet, we are to that significant extent responsible.

On Friday, April 21, @ 7pm at the Howard County Nature Conservancy, I, as one of six story tellers, will participate for the first time in this entertaining tradition.  I have attended several story telling events and have been totally immersed in and enthralled by the experience.  Having given literally hundreds and hundreds of “speeches” in my many years in public office, I thought I would relate very easily.  Well, it is a totally different skill.  It took me a while to get my bearings, and when I did, I fell in love with story telling.  April 21 will be my “coming out” telling of a story from my life. I would love it if you would join me.  The Howard County Nature Conservancy is located at 10520 Old Frederick Rd.  As you may expect, the building and grounds are beautiful.  Let me know if you plan to attend.

The arts are blooming right along with the flowers in our community.
Tonight I will attend the Judy Collins concert in Columbia.  I will be going with Susan Jacobson, a “girlfriend” of many years who was involved in local politics even before I was.  When I first met her, Susan was heading up the McGovern campaign in our county.  I know the theater will be filled with so many women I have known for so many years.  We grew up to the melody of Collins’ “Clouds.”
What a blessing to have so many memories still alive at my age of 74.

Spring training and his beloved Phillies lured Lloyd one again to spend a week in Florida. I flew down for the last weekend and joined him in a beautiful rental apartment on Tampa Bay, amazingly secluded for that busy area.  We loved watching the birds.  Eagles soared overhead and ducks paddled in the water


Just as we love living in our community of Columbia and travelling to distant and not so distant places, reading and discussing what we read is a big part of our lives.  Reading and discussing the Washington Post and Baltimore Sun over coffee each morning is an integral part of our day.  Having completed my explanation of the Sports section to Lloyd, we move on to the editorials, following them with world, national, state, and local news.  More than any other time that either of us can remember in our lives, it would be so easy to allow ourselves to wallow in negativity.  Then one or both of us come back to the moment and realize what beauty fills our lives, right alongside the tragedy and apparent hopelessness of so many of our neighbors on planet earth.

We have cut down on periodicals to one monthly, The Atlantic, and one weekly, The New Yorker.  We find that reading both thoroughly contributes to balance in our lives in these times when we can so easily get off kilter.


The Atlantic  March 2017 edition
There is a great article, “Professor Caveman,” about author/college, professor Bill Schindler,  teaching college students right here in Maryland  at Washington College to live like early humans, obtaining and preparing their own food in nature.


The New Yorker     March 20, 2017 edition
This weekly magazine was first published in 1925. I recall my mom’s reading it when I was an elementary school kid.  I first subscribed to The New Yorker in 1987 shortly after having been elected Howard County Executive and moving from Ellicott City to our present home in Columbia.  I like the cartoons a lot. Lloyd, who had not been a reader of this particular publication prior to our marriage in 1992, loves them. This month the New Yorker announced that its cartoon editor for more than 20 years, Bob Mankoff, is stepping down from that role in the spring.  Having published his first New Yorker cartoon in 1977, Bob said that the aspect of the role which he will miss most is “the unwarranted adulation and respect that comes with the imprimatur of being cartoon editor of the New Yorker.” I have a clear recollection of my mom’s reading this weekly magazine when I was a kid.  I can see and hear her now laughing out loud at the cartoons.   I have subscribed for about 40 years.  Now I hear Lloyd laughing at them just as loudly.





UU World
One of the seasonal publications that we receive by virtue of membership is “UU World,” UU standing for Unitarian Universalist. The recently released Spring edition contains an article by Elaine McArdle , a senior editor and resident of Portland, Oregon, about three composers who died last year.  Categorized as “Inspiration,” it is entitled “Bowie, Prince, and Cohen:  Saints of Freedom.”

Regarding Prince, McArdle tells how Bruce Springsteen spoke of him as having “demolished barriers not just of sexuality, but race.”  “ In ‘Controversy,’ Prince inquired ‘Am I black or white, am I straight or gay?’  His answer – loud and proud – was “Yes.”

Of the other two composers, McArdle wrote:
“Aware their time on earth was ending, Bowie and Cohen did not go gentle into that good night but raged with creativity to the end.  Two days before he died, Bowie released the terrific album ‘Blackstar’ with an astonishing video exploring his imminent death.  Cohen’s final album, ‘You Want It Darker,’
‘came out two weeks before he passed.  Yet, wise men both, at their end they knew dark was right.  And so, their final gift of freedom to us:  the extraordinary courage to stare into the maw of the infinite unknown – and not to recoil, but to jump.”

NOTE:  As usual, I had planned to send out this “Reflections” on the last day of March, yesterday.  That didn’t work technically this time, so we put it off until today, April 1.  Last night, as planned, Lloyd and I attended a Candlelight Concert at Howard Community College.  A young string trio performed magnificently one of their pieces:  Leonard Cohen’s “Hallelujia.”  Had I not experienced that technical difficulty, this reference to Cohen’s masterpiece would not be included here.




Author and filmmaker, Amy Rosenthal, learned a couple of years ago that she  was terminally ill with ovarian cancer.  She spent her remaining time on this earth composing an unconventional “textbook”  - “Not Exactly a Memoir” in her “Mid-term Essay” reflecting on her passion for life and middle age.  “Invariably, I will have to move on before I have had enough.  My first word was ‘more.’  It may very well be my last.” In a column she wrote for the New York Times, Rosenthal gave tribute to her long-time husband, Jason, in the form of a dating profile titled “You May Want to Marry My Husband.”  I imagine that I was probably not alone in thinking “What?  How inappropriate!”  Then I saw this writing more clearly – what a beautiful parting gift to a loving spouse .


REFLECTIONS ON ZACH

Reading the Washington Post this weekend and seeing an advertisement for a new production of “Aladdin,” I experienced a flashback of about 20 years.  My sister Martha had just moved in with Lloyd and me, having just learned that she likely had about three more months on this earth due to leukemia.  Zach was then three years old and staying with us for the weekend.  We four – Martha, Zach, Lloyd and I – sat down to lunch.  Zach, having pulled himself up quite straight in his booster seat, looked directly across the table to my sister and, in a somewhat formal voice, enquired “Do you know Abu?”  The question was posed with a quite apparent and clear intention of starting a meal conversation.  We three adults, fortunately having been able to resist the urge to laugh, learned that Zach had very recently seen the popular film, “Aladdin” which was then playing in nearby theaters.  A delightful four-way conversation, clearly led by Zach, ensued. Since then whenever I see or hear a reference to “Aladdin” or hear its music, Zach shows up, poised and sitting straight up in his booster seat.

In the Sunday Sun a few weeks ago that was a page dedicated to the Annual Zaching Against Cancer fourth annual fundraiser/dinner/dance at Raven’s stadium. There were about a dozen small photos of various family members and friends and a half page sized one of Julia, Zach’s younger sister.  She is wearing a beautiful black lace dress and beaming with a dazzling genuine smile

In the accompanying interview, a reporter asked Julia about the “living the dream” philosophy of her brother.  I have heard, and read, many quotes about Zach given by many people who knew him.  Not one surpasses or even comes close to the beauty and simplicity of Julia’s:  “He always said to live every day to the fullest.  I like to keep that in mind whether I do little things or big things.  As I pursue my dreams, I know he would be standing next to me telling me to do whatever it takes.”




REFLECTIONS ON BALTIMORE, MY HOMETOWN

Baltimore City Councilmember, Mary Pat Clark, who has unflaggingly continued to pursue for years the adoption of a $15 an hour “living wage” in Baltimore finally succeeded in attaining passage.  I have deep respect and admiration for her work on this basic economic justice issue.  She met strong and persistent opposition from some segments of the business community.  I am deeply disappointed that Mayor Pugh vetoed the bill.  Hopefully a sufficient number of the City Councilmembers will have the wisdom and courage to vote to overturn the veto.  This is about as bedrock an economic justice issue as possible.

Delegate Cheryl Glenn from Baltimore, Chairperson of the Black Caucus in the Maryland House of Delegates, is also demonstrating deep political courage.  She led that caucus to support a tightening of the law re bail to the end that it would no longer be available only to those of significant financial means - another bedrock justice issue that had been strongly opposed by the moneyed bail bondsmen.

Thank you, Mary Pat and Cheryl.  I rarely use the term “hero.”  It definitely applies to both of you on these economic and social justice issues



REFLECTIONS ON PUBLIC POLICY IN OUR COUNTY, STATE AND
NATION

HOWARD COUNTY

Spring is budget season for county government.  It will be interesting and very important to keep an eye on whether the impact of any federal government changes will have an impact on local and state government funding.

In these changing economic times it is also important for us to remember the $90 million gift that our local government, with the support of PATH (People Acting Together in Howard) gave to Howard Hughes Corporation, the developer of Downtown Columbia, one of the largest and most profitable development companies in the U.S.  In that instance, our county government certainly did not “save for a rainy day” that may very well be imminent.  By the way, I have received questions from some of you about this gift of a TIF (tax increment financing) as to whether it is paid for by all county taxpayers, or just those of us living in Columbia.  The answer is all county taxpayers.

Columbia, in contrast to Jim Rouse’s priority of economic justice, is becoming – by design – an elite community where support staff at our schools and our community college and elsewhere cannot afford to live here.






STATE OF MARYLAND

With only one week remaining in this year’s legislative session in Annapolis, it looks as if we may see several big improvements in social, economic, and environmental justice in out state.

In the immediate prior section of this newsletter I covered the bail bond issue as one that would create more economic justice in our state
The gross economic injustice of bail bonds being available only to the rich.  Bail bonding is a very lucrative business that will resist regulation at all costs.

Pay Day Lending is a gouging economic practice offered to people who cannot afford to do business with a legitimate bank or credit union, mostly because there are none in their communities.  In my early years in the legislature, I served on the financial institutions subcommittee and focused for years on making reliable services available to low income Marylanders.  We met with quite a bit success and were for several years in the 90’s cited as a model state in this area of public policy.  Times have changed and this year there is a big push to revive this gouging practice.  It looks quite hopeful that the legislature may demonstrate the stamina to resist this very economically unjust legislation.

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I know it’s important for us to focus on the future, AND sometimes the lessons from the past are so strong that we must repeatedly look back so we won’t make similar mistakes.

The article below was so predictable.  It was my biggest frustration in 20 years in the Maryland legislature that I was not even successful in getting my own constituents to see the handwriting on the wall.

“Abandoned children a big cost of gambling
As industry expands, more kids being left along in cars”
Baltimore Sun March 19, 2017


UNITED STATES

I will not even attempt to address all or even any of the major public policy changes being considered by our president.  It is more than difficult to keep track.

I hear more than a few friends say that they have stopped following the news altogether because it is too troubling.   Democracies fail when their members – us – stop paying attention.  Now I completely agree that to watch TV or listen to the radio non stop is an equally bad and unhealthy idea. For Lloyd and me, reading the Washington Post daily and thoroughly suffices, although we do add some TV news.  Then it is important to read poetry, a good novel, more poetry, a good biography, more poetry, write a poem of your own.  Watch a good movie.  Attend a good concert. Go for a walk in the woods.  Stand outside at night and watch the stars, moon, and planets.  Go to an art museum.  Make a big pot of vegetable soup.

I also believe it is very important for each of to ask ourselves this question. “What did we – each and every one of us – do to contribute to the result of this election?”  Social, economic, and environmental injustice is all around us, and that would not be the case if we were not participating in it in at least to a small extent. None of us is free of at least some responsibility for this state of affairs.  Then it is important for us to shift to the question “What can we do to improve it?”

Those of us having the good fortune of living in Columbia – Jim Rouse’s “Garden for Growing People” – are observing our beloved community becoming – by intentional design – an elite community where support staff at our excellent  community college, our hospital, our public schools and elsewhere cannot afford to live.  We can still improve this situation, though not unless we are willing to take the personal risk of being criticized.


REFLECTIONS ON OUR PLANET BEYOND THE UNITED STATES

International Women’s Day
TV news and the printed media gave considerable coverage to the statue of a young girl being unveiled on Wall Street facing the brass bull which has stood there since the stock market crash in the 80’s.  It would be difficult to find a stronger supporter than I of equal pay for equal work. Yes, we want equality for women in the workforce, including the financial industry. We also must look at the complete picture of injustice in our world.  We want to encourage young girls to seek equality in the financial sector, and yet we must be very careful not to encourage them to participate in spreading economic injustice, as is often done on Wall Street. All forms of injustice are running rampant in our nation and the world – social, economic, and environmental.  We must work to eradicate all three.


GERMANY

Chancellor visits the U.S.

I was in a local coffee shop having a skim milk latte and catching up on my e-mails when Andrea Merkel and our president came on the TV screen above me.  President Trump was in the midst of a talk on international relations during which, with his trademark great fanfare, he castigated the Germans for allegedly poor behavior on the international stage including owing millions in back dues to NATO.  I was struck by the poise and grace with which the chancellor listened, eyes sometimes on the perpetrator of untruths and sometimes looking straight ahead, calm, dignified and serious.  An image came to mind of the respective leaders of these two nations in the year I was born, 1943. 


NETHERLANDS

Washington Post
Editorial - March 16, 2017
Dutch prime minister claims victory
Anti-Muslim firebrand’s defeat may blunt populist momentum in Europe

After so much negative publicity in our world for so long, I found some solace in this “major blow to anti-immigrant populism.”


SYRIA

Washington Post Editorial    March 16, 2017
The worst year for Syria’s children
A U.N. report documents staggering atrocities in 2016.  Will 2017 be a repeat?

In the face of absolutely unbearable suffering in this nation of Syria – old and young – men and women, I cannot find words.  So I turn to a magnificent poet.

“On Joy and Sorrow” - Kahil Gibran (from Lebanon which is virtually encompassed, by Syria)

“Your joy is your sorrow unmasked
And the selfsame well from which your laughter rises
Was oftentimes filled with your tears.
And how else can it be?
The deeper that sorrow carves into your being, the more
Joy you can contain
Some of you say, ‘Joy is greater than sorrow,’ and others
say, ‘Nay, sorrow is the greater.’
But I say unto you, they are inseparable
Together they come, and when one sits, alone with you
At your board, remember that the other is asleep upon
Your bed….”


CUBA

OK, I know that Tampa Bay isn’t Cuba, although there are certainly many delicious Cuban restaurants nearby.  Lloyd rented an apartment on a secluded part of that bay’s coast after flying to Florida to watch his precious Phillies in spring training.  I flew down for the weekend.  For reason unknown I had grabbed a copy of Hemingway’s “The Old Man and the Sea” on the way out the door to go to the airport.  Our Florida apartment was on ground level and had virtually all glass walls.  So whether I was in the apartment or outside by the bay’s coast, I had a full spectrum view of the bay along with the spectrum of birds soaring above it.

I have written of some of my mom’s favorite authors.  Ernest Hemingway was not among them, although his “Old Man and the Sea” was among her favorite books. It was published in 1952.  I was nine years old and at peak influence from my mom’s reading and what she shared with me about it.

When the old man was preparing his skiff to go out to sea to fish with a young boy, that boy was able to provide some provisions which the old man could not afford.  “’Thank you,” the old man said.  He was too simple to wonder when he had attained humility.  But he knew he had attained it and he knew it was not disgraceful and it carried no loss of true pride.”  Attaining humility.  Now there’s a life achievement to be valued.

Sitting alone by Tampa Bay, I realized that my mom attained humility in her lifetime, and I was aware of coming closer to it myself as time passes.  Blessings.



REFLECTIONS ON OUR UNIVERSE

The night skies during the month of March called to mind one of my favorite Rumi poems, “The Planets are Throwing a Party Tonight.”  During this month we inhabitants of planet earth were treated to some exceptionally brilliant performances by Venus and Jupiter.  Several nights I did overtime looking out of the window by my side of our bed. On March 20, the Vernal Equinox, from our human-centric perspective on the earth, the sun appeared to cross the equator into the northern hemisphere.  Truth be told, earth moved.  The sun remained in place.  I find meditating on that fact alone helps to keep my mind from flying off in all directions when observing the state of public policy and the relationships among us humans in our nation and on planet earth.

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 “Pools of sorrow, waves of joy
Are drifting through my open mind
Possessing and caressing me
Across the Universe
~Lennon and McCartney

Be well and love life.
~ Liz

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