Tuesday, February 15, 2022

Panic Pushing the Publish Button--plus

My intended blog post, #Will Evil Ever be Eradicated from the Earth? is below, but first this:

When I was a kid, I rode a school bus—as many of you have. We lived near the top of a long sweeping hill, and I was the first kid on the bus each school day. The driver lived further up the hill, and each night he parked the bus at his house. In the mornings, it was easy, he just picked up the kids on the hill and drove us into town, to school.

 My kids say I have no inkling of time, and I guess I didn’t in those days as well, for often, I was running down our steps as the bus was coming to a screeching halt outside our gate. The driver took to honking for me. The trouble was he laid on the horn for about a block before arriving at our house, and he honked whether I was running or waiting. (We did have an elderly couple living across the street, who were former owners of our property. They were hard of hearing, and never complained.)

 After six kids were onboard the bus, the driver pulled into a neighbor’s drive, parked on his steep driveway, set the emergency brake, and with an “I’ll only be a minute,” jumped out of the bus.

 A moment later, I felt a slight shutter as the bus gave a groan. I knew the brakes were about to fail.

 Well, the driver heard it too. He flew into the bus, and caught the controls before the bus, with six kids on board, began to roll.

 My story set the stage for this children’s book: The Incredible Yellow School Bus. It became a fantasy, of course.

 


 

I wrote the story when my second daughter was in the first grade. The protagonist/narrator was 11 years old. 

The story sat in an old file. Although my daughter kept telling me to publish it. I didn’t think I could.

 Fast-forward 20 years, I wrote the sequel, A Journey Into Inner Earth, set four years later. The protagonist was then 15-years-old.

  

You know the old movie where a fellow waves his hand over the signature line of a check? He just couldn’t get himself to sign it. That was me in pushing the publish button on these books.

And then, miracle of miracles, on my birthday a week ago my internal voice, you know the one who likes to whisper? This time it screamed at me: “PUBLISH THOSE BOOKS, STUPID!”

 My ears are still ringing.

  I’M DOING IT. (But don’t call yourself stupid—yourself is listening.)


Note, I am jewell d

Both books available within a couple of days on Amazon.com


Now for the blog post I intended to use before getting carried away.



Have you heard about #The Paper Clip Project?


I had forgotten about it until a night ago when I heard Dr. Harley Rotbart, a pediatrician, being asked this question:

 

 “Will evil ever be eradicated from the earth?”


He thought for a moment, started to say no, then stopped himself. “It will come from the young people,” he said. Then he proceeded to tell the story of the paper clips.


It happened in 1998 in a little town of 2,000 in Whitewell, Tennessee. The town was very homogeneous, all white. Most were protestants, not even a minority or Catholic. The first class consisted of 16 students and was taught by Sandra Roberts, a language arts teacher. When she informed the students that the Nazis had murdered six million Jews. The students were quiet and then began to ask questions about how many is six million. Finally, one of the students suggested that maybe they should collect six million of “something.” The doctor said that the paper clip idea came from a man who wore one in his lapel to commemorate a Holocaust victim. Therefore, they chose paper clips.


Family and friends contributed. Even with a lot of help, they only had 160,000 paper clips by the end of the year, and the students were discouraged. Unknown to everyone at Whitwell, help was on the way.


Two German White House newspaper correspondents, the Schroeders, learned about the Whitwell student project from the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum website. The couple wrote letters and printed them in German newspapers, asking for paper clips and for letters explaining why people wanted to support the project. Within three weeks, the Whitwell students had received 2,000 letters and 46,000 paper clips.


The students wrote celebrities, and soon their 6 million goal seemed within reach. They asked the Schroeders what they should do if people kept sending paper clips to the school after they reached the 6 million. The Schroeders reminded them that historians believed at least eleven 11 million Jewish and non-Jewish victims were murdered by the Nazis and their collaborators during the Holocaust. So, the new goal for the Whitwell, Tennessee students became 11 million paper clips.


Thinking they needed a home for all those paper clips, the Schroeders figured they would find an old rail car such as was used in WWII—the sort that had transported the Holocaust victims. They contacted many people in Germany, but no one knew of a World War II vintage railcar that was available.


A few months later, the Schroeders flew to Germany and drove over 2000 miles through the countryside, looking in old rail yards. Finally, a friend told them to talk to the Director of the Railroad Museum in Ganzlin, Germany. So they did.


The museum had one rail car, built in 1917, Number 011-993, just like hundreds of railroad car pictures from the Nazi Era. The museum director, reluctant to part with the car, finally agreed to sell it to the American school children. 


The German Ministry of Defense shipped the authentic rare railroad car to Tennessee, and the railroad absorbed the expense.


The railroad car houses 11 million paper clips.

 

 



Tuesday, February 8, 2022

Once You're Over 21

 Remember, growing old is a privilege denied many.

 

 

Nobody needs to know your age once you’re over 21.

 

I had an impulse a few days ago to start an Instagram account with a #picture a day with pithy sayings about aging. If a photo a day is too much pressure, I will post regularly in whatever time frame I choose.  I thought I would begin it on my #birthday that would come in a couple of days.

 

But it’s #February, I thought. Many places look dreary. But not all places. I decided to drive a short distance from my house to a #field of sheep. It's lambing season, so I figured I would see #lambs frolicking on a green field. Upon arriving, it tickled me to see a lamb with her nose close to the ground following a little bird who didn’t fly away but just kept hopping, with her nose in tune with his hops. That’s the reason I wanted a picture a day, to look for the simple joys that make our/my #heart sing.

 

I caught these two guys practicing being grown up Rams.

 


 

 

A bumper year for lambs, Many came in two's this year, and many black ones. What does that mean?

And I always wondered how the lambs found their mothers out of a sea of sheep. And how a newborn baby survived when it was born in January, and fell on cold wet ground.

 

 

I am following my mother-in-law’s practice to never tell her age. Instead, she would have un-birthdays, and I think it demoralized her when she had an eightieth birthday party, for then people knew the truth. Truth? Phooey. Go for #fun. Nobody needs to know your age.

 

I have an Instagram account already. (joycedavis747) However, I thought a new one would focus on aging, which everybody does, and everybody doesn’t know how to do it—it’s something that happens to us, yet, I wonder, how much is under conscious control?

 

Instead of taking photos and beginning a new Instagram account, I took myself on vacation to a hotel in Portland, where my niece joined me, and we had a ball. I didn’t use my computer, a daily event at home. However, here I am now. I had to stop myself from spending the day cleaning up emails, for I had a pile, but not good ones—like from you.

 

Before checking out of the hotel the morning after my niece left, I thought of the photos I said I would take. I suggested to the universe (fill in your own name for that force) that she provide something pretty for me to photograph on my way home. My eyes immediately fell on the flowers my niece and her kids gave me. So, I snapped this picture.

 


 Keep your paws warm:

https://twitter.com/i/status/1487832074270613505

 

P.S. about sheep:

 

I'll be darned. I didn't think sheep were high on the intelligence scale. I was wrong. :Look at this:

  • Sheep have very good memories. They can remember at least 50 individual sheep and humans for years. They do this by using a similar neural process and part of the brain that humans use to remember.
  • Sheep have been shown to display emotions, some of which can be studied by observing the position of their ears.
  • Contrary to popular misconception, sheep are extremely intelligent animals capable of problem solving. They are considered to have a similar IQ level to cattle and are nearly as clever as pigs.
  • Like various other species including humans, sheep make different vocalizations to communicate different emotions. They also display and recognize emotion by facial expressions.
  • Sheep are known to self-medicate when they have some illnesses. They will eat specific plants when ill that can cure them.
  • Sheep are precocial (highly independent from birth) and gregarious (like to be in a group).
  • Female sheep (ewes) are very caring mothers and form deep bonds with their lambs that can recognize them by their call (bleat) when they wander too far away