Welcome to Saturday ...

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“The world is indeed full of peril, and in it there are many dark places; but still there is much that is fair, and though in all lands love is now mingled with grief, it grows perhaps the greater”
~ J.R. Tolkien

Fishing in the Spring ~ Vincent van Gogh, 1887

The Dawn of a New World
What's that you say,
the world is different today?
The people are hunkering down
of their own accord
to stay safe
from the stealth
that will steal their health
or that of a love.

What's that you say,
a shift has occurred today?
The shift has been coming
but you were too busy to see.
The shift will change our world
and how we are to be.

What's that you say,
an unrecognizable world today?
Feet planted firmly on the ground
with no one uttering a sound
I look around
and see that you've found,
the world is different today
and it is time to adjust
to the new order
of our fellow human
as one.

What's that you say,
the world is different today?
Take my hand and walk with me
as we move through this life becoming
aware of the humanity we have forsaken
for the consumption we have taken
to the grotesque extreme we see.

What's that you say,
you want to make a difference today?

The Dawn Of a New World ~ Raggedy Ann

~~~

Spring Plowing ~ Edvard Munch, 1916

Aureus (Coin) Portraying Emperor Nero: December AD 57/December AD 58, issued by Nero

~~~

“Still round the corner there may wait
A new road or a secret gate
And though I oft have passed them by
A day will come at last when I
Shall take the hidden paths that run
West of the Moon, East of the Sun.”

~ Tolkien

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smiley7's picture

May this Spring day greet you in good stead with pantry filled and family around, safe and sound.

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magiamma's picture

Thank you for yet another wonderful beginning to Saturday. Raining here again after a few days of sun. Love looking through the leaves when they sparkle with prisms.

The sun will come out again.

Be well, be safe and be of good cheer.

(watched Bernie’s chat yesterday - still holding out for a sea change)

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smiley7's picture

@magiamma

Rain here as well, intermittent in pea soup fog; normal for our mud season. The leaves comes in a few weeks and yes to the prisms especially when hiking up Story Teller Rock Trail in the special light of green.

All's well here; had an hour conversation with lead UNC doc yesterday; advised to stay away from others and avoid healthcare settings unless having an emergency. She intimated that she expects all non-essential consults and appointments to be pushed back until August. Delaying the beginning of new drug to avoid potential complications that may need hospital care. Okay with me. Her new baby at six weeks and eating solid food. Wonderful caregiver, she is. So lucky to have her.

Maybe a fried chicken day, as a fresh one needs eating or freezing; lots of work, but a treat when done.

Talking more on the phone than usual and scheming with a few friends for us to choose a fishing sport we can drive to separately, park with easy access and fish together at a comfortable distance. Waiting for a warm, sun-shining Spring day.

Take care in California and enjoy the calm.

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magiamma's picture

@smiley7
And meant to get back to this much earlier. Good to hear the choices your unc doc is making and always a pleasure to here about her. More than a good doc to you. Had nice chaw with one of the other Bernie officers from 10 feet apart on her front lawn this morning as I had to pick up a check for one of our campus organizers. Tying up the last threads. Nice to catch up but we mostly talked about how to deal. Good exchange of info. Seems like this is the new normal. Anyway I do hope you sort a fishing jaunt out. We do need social contact. This morning certainly made that clear to me. Take good care.

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Stop Climate Change Silence - Start the Conversation

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travelerxxx's picture

Chilly morning here in the old railroad town of Spring, Texas. Listening as I hear a UP freight slowly rumbling past a few blocks away and glad to hear it. There's been a dearth of them the last few days.

Preparing to transport an old coworker buddy of mine to the Houston Medical Center for – hopefully – the last time this morning. He had emergency surgery for a detached retina a few days ago. Didn't go as well as hoped and it was done over. Today is just a check to be certain the last effort did.

Two amazing things: microsurgery and the speed at which the eye can heal. I guess it's also amazing to check an online map of the Houston freeways and see no one on them and clear sailing.

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smiley7's picture

@travelerxxx
visit along with others. Wonder, did the bank carry the railroad's payroll? From the wiki history, fun to see how the train grew the farming community.

Good fortune and quick recovery to your friend.

You mentioned the lack of trains the other day, the quiet; no noise on main here either, everything's closed except out in the valley where the miracle-mile of fast food reins.

Good to see you; be safe.

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travelerxxx's picture

@smiley7

Not so sure any bank is safe right now...

There's a story that Bonnie and Clyde did rob a bank here in Spring, but I'm not really sure it's correct. I think they got blamed for a lot they didn't actually do. Evidently, they were in the area for a while, so who knows. The UP has had a main office here for a long, long time, so it's possible the payroll went through a Spring bank back in those days.

Friend's second eye procedure was not quite what the doctors had hoped for, so we may be doing a repeat next week sometime. They will check him in a few days to know for certain. Never a good time for something like that to happen to a person, but especially not good now.

I did hear a UP come through early this morning. No aircraft, but sometimes that depends on the prevailing winds. They change the approach/takeoff paths in and out of Bush due to that. Could be that they aren't over us today anyhow. Heard a few yesterday; still not many.

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@travelerxxx
just blew a corpuscle in my left eye yesterday
doesn't look too good
red all over, stress related
can't get treatment as the
emergent care facilities are shut down

could be worse I suppose

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travelerxxx's picture

@QMS

Not surprised about the shuttering of facilities. Here, the eye places are open, but running very tight security. So far, the emergency care places seem to be open (and there are a lot of them these days $$$). I have seen some who have personnel sitting outdoors at makeshift desks, checking people before they're allowed to enter. From what I can gather, a lot of this isn't so much about stopping community spread as it is trying to keep the (limited everywhere) medical staff from getting exposed. Does make sense...

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@travelerxxx A friend used Avery Eye Clinic, and it was not a good result.
What facility?
I was in a civil litigation with a Dr. in Houston with a huge clinic. We did a background check on him, and he had been sued, almost lost his license on numerous occasions. He had faced about 13 complaints I think his last name begins with an "O". Hope you are not using him!

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"We'll know our disinformation program is complete when everything the American public believes is false." ---- William Casey, CIA Director, 1981

travelerxxx's picture

@on the cusp

This is being done via Mann. (A little more via msg.)

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Lookout's picture

...a new world indeed. The changes are odd, but will become a new normal. No music session last night. No trade day this morning. Been doing all those housekeeping tasks that are always put off...like window washing, reorganizing cabinets, and so on. The garden grows and the seasonal wheel continues to turn with lovely blooms reminding us of the true beauty of the natural world. Couldn't ask for a better gardening season with rains almost daily and mild temps.

Spring festivals have been canceled. A gig-less spring is something new. Jimmy Dore's tag has changed, explaining he has no live gigs.

This is a time to breathe and reflect on what is important...be at peace friends.

The Peace of Wild Things

When despair grows in me
and I wake in the night at the least sound
in fear of what my life and my children's lives may be,
I go and lie down where the wood drake
rests in his beauty on the water, and the great heron feeds.
I come into the peace of wild things
who do not tax their lives with forethought
of grief. I come into the presence of still water.
And I feel above me the day-blind stars
waiting for their light. For a time
I rest in the grace of the world, and am free.

Wendell Berry

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“Until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”

smiley7's picture

@Lookout
between my youth in the isolation of the farm and trips to the country store were by dirt roads and only occasionally, no more than once a week, if that much. We did walk barefooted through forests and fields to spend the day with neighbors and extended family at times, but for the most part the world outside turned and we didn't notice.

I come into the peace of wild things
who do not tax their lives with forethought
of grief. I come into the presence of still water.

Lovely poem, thank you for bringing it.

Be safe and strum away in nature's harmony.

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Raggedy Ann's picture

The Silence is Deafening
Looking outside
I see no cars
racing to and fro
taking kids to soccer
taking baby to the doctor
stopping to chat with friends
the silence is deafening.

Sitting in isolation
wondering about my world
how different it has become.
Looking out to the west
no one looking back, at best
I can visit online
but that human connection
is gone and never
will be the same
the silence is deafening.

The crashing is all around
stocks fall
systems fail
people die
the silence is deafening.

Thank you for formatting The Dawn of a New World so beautifully. You inspire me, smiley. Thank you for Spring by Vivaldi this morning. It is going to be a beautiful spring day here in the Land of Enchantment. We got rain the last two days. Leaves are out along the Rio Grande - we're two-three weeks behind them, but it's coming as the trees have swelled with their sap running up and forming their beautiful buds.

Stay safe and be well, dear friends. Enjoy your Saturday! Pleasantry

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"The “jumpers” reminded us that one day we will all face only one choice and that is how we will die, not how we will live." Chris Hedges on 9/11

smiley7's picture

@Raggedy Ann

Thank you for the beautiful Dawn and today's Silence.

Never sure when i center poetry, hope it's okay, sometimes it seems to flow better with the page, but i do fear of taking poetic license with other poet's work.

Been meaning to ask, how's the morning tea when made with well water?

Be safe and enjoy the Rio Grande.

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Raggedy Ann's picture

@smiley7 @smiley7
I have to tell you how fortunate we were with the well water. The previous well, the one that is going dry, did not have drinkable water, so we always hauled water in those five-gallon behemoth containers, struggled to turn it over into the dispenser, and have done that for 30+ years.

The new well has beautiful, clear, drinkable water. I'm enjoying my morning tea, right now, with my lovely well water. No more hauling water!

You centered my poem beautifully. I have only been writing poetry for about three years, now, but I really only write it on Saturday mornings, as your weekly OT inspires me, poetically. I thought of submitting the Dawn poem somewhere, as it came out rather nicely and is quite timely.

I have to say, in reading your response to Lookout, that I grew up in Taos, a small community, where I would wander the countryside for hours. I would leave the house and just explore. It was a wonderful childhood full of adventure. I was a secret agent, I was a hunter, I was anything I wanted to be when I was out there. We did not have relatives in Taos, so my wanderings were usually solo, which is why I enjoy my isolation, to a degree.

Be well, dear smiley!

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"The “jumpers” reminded us that one day we will all face only one choice and that is how we will die, not how we will live." Chris Hedges on 9/11

@smiley7

the mind and moods
extend beyond
all those yesterdays

thanks for sharing

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Anja Geitz's picture

@Raggedy Ann

Your words fit the mood these days. Life has become unrecognizable and very unsettling for all of us. In the end, all we have is each other. Be well.

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There is always Music amongst the trees in the Garden, but our hearts must be very quiet to hear it. ~ Minnie Aumonier

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Raggedy Ann's picture

@QMS
experiencing a mild heart attack at home, his dog went crazy until someone noticed and took him to the hospital. Dogs are incredible - wish I liked having them around.

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"The “jumpers” reminded us that one day we will all face only one choice and that is how we will die, not how we will live." Chris Hedges on 9/11

@Raggedy Ann

can not be the domestically animal trainer
it's great dogs have a good nose, tho
people and their pets
kinda funny

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Raggedy Ann's picture

@QMS
with pets. My mother wouldn’t have it cuz she grew up on a farm and wanted no animals in her adult life.

I have two outside cats. I have chickens. I’m pretty good at maintaining both.

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"The “jumpers” reminded us that one day we will all face only one choice and that is how we will die, not how we will live." Chris Hedges on 9/11

smiley7's picture

@QMS

recall reading years ago of a diabetic dog owner with no circulation in his toes which were apparently becoming gangrene and his dog ate the toes off in his sleep. Amazing, isn't it?

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enhydra lutris's picture

poetry fest, nothing has emerged from my subunconscious and it is not a thing i can will and then sit and do. I envy those of you with the gift. As of last night we had planned to sneak out today to the farmers' market for a few necessaries and maybe also a regular grocery for a few more. It is a risk, especially if we both go, for if we both get ill, then neither one of us will be a fit caregiver. All the same, it is a chance to score some nice fresh salmon, and we are horribly low on onions, spuds, and a few other fresh items and could stand to hit the meat counter for some roasts and chickens and such, the types of things that one can cook once and then eat from for many days. We can also hit the water dispenser for a gallon of purified water, out tap water isn't good for our sourdough starters due to the chloramines and other stuff therein.

No rain today, unlike magi, so we can maybe get out into the garden again. The bird feeders need attention again too.

take care of yourself and have a good one.

EDITED to fix typos 08:08

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That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --

@enhydra lutris

what a company / government can do to you
feel feardom as it is
but a blip on the radar

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TheOtherMaven's picture

@QMS

for what we're living in now.

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There is no justice. There can be no peace.

enhydra lutris's picture

@QMS
body tingling and shaking fear more than once in my life; also visceral, gut wrenching trepidation fear. I feel nothing like that and don't intend to let myself go there if I can help it. We are simply cautious, maybe overly so, because neither wants to have the other suffer at all,nor wants to suffer at all themselves. Then there is the serious disinclination to be caregiver and go through all that aggravation, concern, and added workload. We have a pretty nice life together and are disinclined to see alterations which would wreck that.

Feardom is, as Maven said, one helluva great word. I don't plan on sinking into it. I know, gut know, and grok exponential curves. This is just starting, and we are now sufficiently stocked that we can comfortably go for weeks without venturing out except to go outside for enjoyment and indulging ourselves in those outdoor pleasures that don't require close contact with ROW (a useful acronym from my past occupation, meaning Rest-Of-World).

Have a good one.

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That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --

Anja Geitz's picture

A most welcome selection for this weary soul. Saw most of his work at the Musee d'Orsay years ago but cannot recall this one. Interesting how different works of art strike us at different times. I remember looking at one of his pieces, a very simple painting of a chair, and I cried. Who knows why art touches us the way it does. A good thing, no? Thank you for the quiet moment, the Van Gogh, and the reminder of the beauty around us. You couldn't have chosen a more perfect piece of art to fit the mood. Be well, my dear Smiley.

image_110.jpeg
~
On a Lane in Spring

A Little Lane, the brook runs close beside
And spangles in the sunshine while the fish glide swiftly by
And hedges leafing with the green spring tide
From out their greenery the old birds fly
And chirp and whistle in the morning sun
The pilewort glitters ‘neath the pale blue sky
The little robin has its nest begun
And grass green linnets round the bushes fly
How Mild the Spring Comes in; the daisy buds
Lift up their golden blossoms to the sky
How lovely are the pingles and the woods
Here a beetle runs; and there a fly
Rests on the Arum leaf in bottle green
And all the Spring in this Sweet lane is seen
~ John Claire

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There is always Music amongst the trees in the Garden, but our hearts must be very quiet to hear it. ~ Minnie Aumonier

smiley7's picture

@Anja Geitz

I've just woke from a marathon sleep which began yesterday with a couple of brief risings in between this afternoon.

Beautiful image, thank you for it and touching poem of nature's gentleness.

‘þetta reddast’ an icelandic slogan i learned yesterday from an article, may apply to our collective situation, translation: "everything will work out all right in the end." https://getpocket.com/explore/item/the-unexpected-philosophy-icelanders-...

And as fate will have, i had a craving for a particular food i thought i had on hand; but nope. Found a substitute and made do. Also forgot to store popcorn for munching. Not to worry, most everything else one needs fills the shelves.

Sending virtual hugs and wishes to you for a peaceful and gentle day.

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slept very late this morning, the coffee was good, the call from my friend to just ask if I needed anything.
I have this small network of a dozen or so friends. We support each other every which way but loose.
That is the perfect way to start a day.
It is in the low 50's, raining, and I have to rifle through the closet to find a heavy sweater.
I have a couple of errands, then will come home and not go to work.
That is so strange!
I will attempt to put some seeds in my potting plant tray. It will be flowers. I will feed the birds and the bees.
Stay in, stay well!

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"We'll know our disinformation program is complete when everything the American public believes is false." ---- William Casey, CIA Director, 1981

smiley7's picture

@on the cusp

Sleep came easily for me yesterday, guess the old body and mind needed relief.

Thought of you when reading about American tourists and a medical mission team being stranded in Peru; of course Trump's state department didn't give those travelers a fair warning before they departed.

I know bees enjoy my beer, wonder if birds do? Smile

Take good care and be safe.

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Unabashed Liberal's picture

regarding plan structure.

We're pushed today, since we're getting ready for an online meeting (regarding our upcoming healthcare workshops/forums--unless, of course, they have to be cancelled. We're hoping that by late May, this awful threat will have blown over, and we can proceed as planned. Time will tell.)

Anyhoo, this'll be very brief, but, will drop by later this weekend, or next Saturday, to share the "overview" I've found regarding Denmark's healthcare system.

In a nutshell, in Denmark, they have two types of "insurance groups" that citizens can enroll in.

One insurance group is equivalent of our MA (Medicare Advantage)--there's a "gatekeeper" if you want to see a specialist, since a referral is necessary.

Second choice of insurance group - equivalent of our Original Medicare, but, without a Medicare supplement to pick up the co-pays, etc.

IOW, in the second group, a beneficiary is free to see a Primary Physician in Group One (with no co-pays), and, is free to see a specialists without a referral. Again, co-pays may be required. (Since the paper made no mention of the availability of a Medigap-like insurance product to pick up the extra cost, I'm assuming, for now, that there is no provision for such a policy to offset the additional cost.)

Obviously, very few folks are enrolled in the second option--I'm guessing, because of having to pay the additional co-pays, or, out-of-pocket costs.

So, basically, there's is a 'managed care' healthcare system. Will elaborate with excerpts and link next time.

(Of course, the financing is tax-based. Everyone has coverage. But, there's no reason we couldn't do something similar with our Original/Traditional/FFS Medicare, so that it's not necessary to deny folks needed medical services/referrals to specialists.)

Apparently, in both systems, specialists are in private practice.

Hey, hope you're still doing well. Take good care, until I check in with you again.

Pleasantry

My best to Everyone, especially, our friends in states of WA, CA, NY, and all other states with high numbers of contagion. Hope the Feds get the services you need!

Mollie

Special Health Care for Congress: Lawmakers' Health Care Perks
A little known office on Capitol Hill provides quality care at a low price.

Excerpt:

Sept. 30, 2009— -- This fall while members of Congress toil in the U.S. Capitol, working to decide how or even whether to reform the country's health care system, one floor below them an elaborate Navy medical clinic -- described by those who have seen it as something akin to a modern community hospital -- will be standing by, on-call and ready to provide Congress with some of the country's best and most efficient government-run health care.

Sources said when specialists are needed, they are brought to the Capitol, often at no charge to members of Congress.

"If you had, for example, prostate cancer, you would go to one of the centers of excellence for the country, which would be Johns Hopkins. If you had coronary artery disease, we would engage specialists at the Cleveland Clinic. You would go to the best care in the country. And, for the most part, nobody asked what your insurance was," Balbona said. (Balbona was a former OAP Staff Physician.)

In addition to Balbona, several former staff members and private physicians who have consulted at the OAP as recently as last year agreed to talk to ABC News on background. They described a culture centered on meeting the needs and whims of members of Congress, with almost no concern for cost.

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Everyone thinks they have the best dog, and none of them are wrong.

smiley7's picture

Found this of interest, our regional hospital system's Covid 19 plan calls for those wanting a test to reply by phone or online to a third party triaging corporation and they will determine if someone needs a test. And this screening costs $49. Fuckers, the damn test is supposed to be free.

Not much we folks can do with the ineptness of our healthcare system and government but sit tight and hope the storm passes.

Sending virtual treats for doggie and hugs to you two.

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smiley. I'm a day late and a dollar short. Actually I'm two days late and two dollars short. Story of my life Smile
Hope you see my comment, I don't expect you will so I will have to PM you, I hope you don't mind. I just wanted you to know I appreciated your Saturday column. The Tolkien brought me to tears, can't explain that except to say that these times contribute to an unusually high degree of emotional lability and besides, I do love Tolkien.
Initially I thought that Munch painting was called Spring Power but after I put my glasses on I saw better. Spring power is apt though, what an awesome painting.

Anyway, my stress level is high, as is no doubt true for most, and I'm finding that I'm attending to essentials and have lost the capacity to engage in what is non-essential like reading a really long work of fiction, or watching a movie, or going to an over-the-top but incredible opera. So, that avenue of respite is not open for me right now but what I can do is go outside. Someone posted a poem by Wendell Berry that describes that dilemma to the 'T'. I know the poem and it works for me.

I think many people are in this same boat. We are finding ourselves thrown further down on that ladder that Maslow described as our hierarchy of needs. The things that I consider the best of humanity are becoming increasingly out of reach. I hope we collectively find ways to maintain a sliver of engagement in those things. You do that every Saturday so many thanks. I will just have to catch as catch can.

Take good care of yourself, I know you are. As things unfold I hope we can all touch base on this site to exchange information as well as inspire our best qualities.

Be well, be safe.

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