2019 Top Ten List

2019 Top Ten List

Happy New Year, Everybody!

I have something to say about 2019. Everybody has a top ten list. Since I am a wise old woman, I compiled mine.

My whole year seemed consumed with all things Donald Trump. But Number One on my list is his impeachment in December. Finally, somebody told him, no more.

Number Two was seeing old women leaders exercise power, like House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, Congresswoman Maxine Waters, Senator Elizabeth Warren and the best Supreme, Ruth Bader Ginsburg.

Similarly, young women showed their muscle and that’s my Number Three. The four Congresswomen of color, known as the Squad, shook up the old white men in Congress, who didn’t much like their chutzpah. And Katie Bouman, the young scientist who helped make possible the image we saw of a Black Hole.

Number Five is youth activism. Greta Thunberg and youth across the planet have taken on the fight for climate change and American teenagers continue to protest gun violence.

The MeToo Movement was my Number Six. The resistance gained traction that led to new laws and corporate policies against sexual harassment and sexual assault.

I joined a huge gathering of some of the most successful, brilliant, and celebrated African Americans in the country. My Number Seven was the History Makers, an important reminder of the contributions that black people have made and continue to make to our communities and the nation.

Like any wise old woman, I feel compelled to speak about some personal things that happened in 2019.

My Number Seven is retirement ain’t all it’s cracked up to be. After 62 years of non-stop working, I retired in 2019, not because I wanted to, I was given a push. I realized that I love to work, so I started this blog.

Children and grandchildren are Number Eight. My son and daughter are both happily married and enjoying their careers, and nothing is better than watching my three grandchildren grow and learn. My best times are spent with them.

Number Nine is my health. I’m grateful to still have most of it. I do what the doctors say, wear sensible shoes and grab handrails.

Now Number Ten may seem inconsequential but it’s not. It’s my pets—my toy poodle Coco-Puff and my Siberian cat, Catarina. They are my home companions. They are glad to see me, happy to cuddle and don’t talk back. They made 2019 tolerable. 2020 may be pretty rough. I expect them to ease the pain.

 

The best to you all.

Children’s Climate Crusade

Children’s Climate Crusade

Hello Everybody.  I have something to say about climate change and our children.

      I don’t know about you, but I was thrilled to see kids all over the world united in a global protest of climate change.  Four million children from countries on every continent and from all 50 states in America, put aside their video games and smartphones and flooded the streets.

       The kids demanded that government leaders around the world do something to stop the warming of the planet because they fear it could be uninhabitable by the time they grow up.

        Then I realized, they probably marched for nothing. World leaders who could do something about climate change probably looked at the demonstrations and thought, “Oh, how sweet. The kids are worried about climate change.” And that’s about as far as their interest will probably go.

        Don’t you know the powers that be don’t listen to children?  They don’t vote. They don’t have big money to spread around to politicians. They don’t run big corporations. They don’t run anything. But on the issue of climate change, they look a lot smarter than many politicians.

    One of the signs the kids carried during their march read: “You know it’s time for change when the children act like leaders and the leaders act like children.”

That’s it for now.