Opening up set to blossom at home. But what about India (her vaccine generosity and her coronavirus surge)?

May 14, 2021Coronavirus, Death and Dying, Equality, Flowers/Blossom, vaccinations

A beautiful blossom for our oh-so-close-to-lockdown-easing here in the UK. The Wayfaring Tree (Virburnum lantana): a sign you’re homeward bound. But spare a thought for India, home to the world’s largest coronavirus vaccine manufacturer, the Serum Institute of India (SII) but now also home to the worst surge in coronavirus since the pandemic began. It’s … Read More

How to Avoid a Climate Disaster: Bill Gates (& Gordon Brown)

March 14, 2021Climate Change, Politics

In this Guardian review of Bill Gates’s How to Avoid a Climate Disaster, Gordon Brown writes: Success [in combating climate change] will come by demonstrating that the real power countries can wield to create a better world is not the power they can exercise over others but the power they can exercise with others. [my bold] Among other possibilities for … Read More

A Valentine to the Earth: Terra Carta

February 14, 2021Climate Change, Creativity, Equality, Good News, Health, Living Standards, One Green Thing, Uncategorized

On 11 January the Prince of Wales announced Terra Carta, Earth Charter, a Magna Carta for the twenty-first century: the basis of a recovery plan for nature, people and the planet. A valentine to the earth, I thought. He said: Humanity has made incredible progress over the past century, yet the cost of this progress has caused … Read More

Feeling Low? Try karunavirus. Seriously.

January 14, 2021Climate Change, Coronavirus, Creativity, Good News, Good Things, Love, News, Science, Uncategorized

I don’t know about you, but I’ve been feeling pretty low about the state of our corona-contaminated world (not to mention other depressing events) so I went looking for something uplifting. And I found karunavirus. Seriously. Nothing to do with that virus; all to do with kindness, compassion, good news, good things and full of … Read More

When This Is Over … and some Christmas Lights for the dark Winter Nights

December 14, 2020Christmas, Coronavirus, Creativity, Good News, Good Things, Love, Poetry

When this is over, may we never again take for granted a handshake with a stranger, full shelves at the store, conversations with neighbours, a crowded theatre, Friday nights out, the taste of communion, a routine check-up, the school rush each morning, coffee with a friend, the stadium roaring, each deep breath, a boring Tuesday, … Read More

Bookshop.org: an online bookshop that supports indie bookshops. And, ‘It’s easier to be a Dad, this morning … .’

November 14, 2020Antiracism, Books, Bookshops, Democracy, Equality, Fiction, Good News, Good Things, History, Human Rights, Living Standards, Morality, News, News Outlets, Politics

Bookshop.org, as the Guardian articles below suggest, is exactly what the publishing world has been waiting for. Bookshop.org supports independent bookshops (it doesn’t undercut them, as the unmentionable does) and it makes it possible for independent bookshops to benefit from online sales wider than they, on their own websites, could reach. From this article: Bookshop.org is being … Read More

October is Black History Month in the UK. But shouldn’t Black history be taught all the time?

October 14, 2020Antiracism, Democracy, History, Human Rights, Psychology, Racism

Black History Month began in America as an annual History Week, in 1925. That year, Black historian Carter G. Woodson, the Father of Black History, announced Negro History Week: A celebration of a people that many in this country at the time believed had no place in history. February was chosen because it marked the birthdays of Abraham Lincoln and Frederick … Read More

George Floyd: I Can’t Breathe: BlackOut Tuesday 2 June 2020

June 2, 2020Uncategorized

LA Reid, record producer and founder of HitCo, posted this on twitter two days ago: And George Floyd’s brother, Philonese, says this on YouTube. He calls for peaceful protests and for people to use their votes in the coming US election to call for the change that’s so badly needed in white supremacy and white fragility … Read More

Shonaleigh Cumbers: Grief is Love with Nowhere to Go; and One Green Thing: clean aviation fuel

May 14, 2020Climate Change, Coronavirus, Creativity, Good News, Good Things, Health, Love, One Green Thing, Storytelling

Shonaleigh Cumbers is a Drut’syla. To quote from here: She’s a living tradition holder. It’s a tradition you probably won’t have heard of. It’s a tradition that flourished in Jewish families, but that was wiped out during the holocaust. Almost wiped out. As far as we know, Shonaleigh is the last Drut’syla. Drut’syla is the Yiddish … Read More

Stories for Children in Lockdown

April 29, 2020Uncategorized

At the beginning of April Yahoo set up a short story competition for stories to entertain children during the lockdown.  Yesterday, 27 April, they announced the 20 shortlisted stories  and mine, FLYING COLOURS, is one of them. The stories are now open to public vote (until 8 May) and if you’d like to vote for mine, … Read More

Poems for these Coronavirus Times

April 14, 2020Coronavirus, Poetry

 Read by Christopher Eccleston, written by Matthew Kelly for his partner, Jill Scully, who is a district nurse. And here’s one from our poet laureate, Simon Armitage, which, as explained in this Guardian article, moves from the outbreak of bubonic plague in Eyam in the 17th century, when a bale of cloth from London brought fleas carrying … Read More

Can we ever know our parents as individuals? And One Green Thing: CLING FILM storage alternatives

March 14, 2020Drink, Food, One Green Thing, Parents, Plastic, Storage, Storytelling, Writing

This year my sisters and I had the family ciné films transferred to DVD and I’ve just watched them all. And as I watched the parts where we children didn’t feature, I wondered if it’s ever possible for children to know their parents as individual independent humans? And I came to the conclusion that it’s … Read More

Good news to begin 2020; Splosh! (to reduce plastic) and beautiful new year lights

January 14, 2020Art, Climate Change, Creativity, Democracy, Equality, Good News, Health, Human Rights, Living Standards, One Green Thing, Plastic, Recycling

So often good news doesn’t make the news, so here are a few good pieces of news to start 2020 with, from Future Crunch (where you’ll find 99 other good pieces of news, divided into categories). One of the founders of Future Crunch, Dr Angus Hervey, says: If we want to change the story of the human race … Read More