Blog Summary
Thoughts and Musings
2021 - Present
How do we cope when our bodies and minds aren’t what they were? How do we find purpose in life? Is adventure still on the horizon? Can we cope much less thrive in today’s chaotic environement? How might adventure change as we sprout wrinkles?
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Adventuring
- Jun 20, 2023 Must an Adventure be Extreme?
- Apr 15, 2022 Adventure finds you when least expected
- Nov 2, 2021 Marooned in Memphis
- Oct 10, 2021 Why Girl Scouts?
- Dec 29, 2020 When will it end?
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Commentary
- Jul 18, 2023 AI is not the Monster, is it?
- Jul 1, 2023 Zooming with Ukrainians
- Jun 20, 2023 Must an Adventure be Extreme?
- May 15, 2022 Missed Rebellion
- Feb 23, 2022 Alone and Inbetween
- Jan 17, 2022 Troubling Times
- Dec 23, 2021 Holiday Cards
- Dec 16, 2021 It’s not about me at Christmas
- Nov 27, 2021 Opera is not dead
- Nov 2, 2021 Marooned in Memphis
- Oct 19, 2021 Art Fights Gun Violence
- Jul 3, 2021 Humbled and Renewed
- Jun 26, 2021 Buckshot not Bullets
- May 28, 2021 Dog Sitting
- Apr 28, 2021 Assumptions are Stupid
- Apr 22, 2021 First Kiss
- Mar 19, 2021 Messing with Meditation
- Feb 25, 2021 What’s in a Nickname?
- Feb 18, 2021 Confinement Messes with the Mind
- Feb 12, 2021 Breadth or depth?
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Medical Adventure
- Jun 11, 2023 Spine Surgery Epilogue
- Jun 4, 2023 Pushing too hard almost defeated me…
- May 30, 2023 A Step in the Wrong Direction
- May 21, 2023 No Bending, Lifting, Twisting
- May 16, 2023 Creeping Disabling Pain Got Me
- May 21, 2021 Pretzel Pain
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On Ageing
- Jun 7, 2022 Wise or Just Old?
- Nov 17, 2021 Memory on My Mind
- May 21, 2021 Pretzel Pain
- Apr 12, 2021 Pandemic Isolation Thwarted
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On Writing
- May 8, 2023 Pandemic Stress
- May 16, 2022 They liked it!
- Feb 23, 2022 Alone and Inbetween
- Feb 10, 2022 Rabbit Hole
- Oct 24, 2021 Fiction vs. Memoir
- Jun 26, 2021 Buckshot not Bullets
- Jun 19, 2021 Claustrophobia
- Apr 5, 2021 Ode to Southern Writers
- Mar 25, 2021 Criticism - Gift or Fault Finding?
- Mar 19, 2021 Messing with Meditation
- Mar 5, 2021 When writing ‘what you know’ is not enough
- Apr 22, 2020 The Writing Life
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Pandemic
- May 8, 2023 Pandemic Stress
- Jun 19, 2021 Claustrophobia
- Apr 12, 2021 Pandemic Isolation Thwarted
- Feb 18, 2021 Confinement Messes with the Mind
- Dec 29, 2020 When will it end?
Why Girl Scouts?
I was one — starting in first grade as a Brownie and hanging-in until I graduated from high school as a Senior. In the early years, I was enthusiastic because my friends were in the troop. However, as I entered hgh school, many friends left. I missed them, hated the uniforms, and felt geeky for staying, but Mom was my troop leader. To avoid confrontation, I stayed. Why?
Our troop camping 1960 - 8th Grade
I was one — starting in first grade as a Brownie and hanging-in until I graduated from high school as a Senior. In the early years, I was enthusiastic because my friends were in the troop. However, as I entered hgh school, many friends left. I missed them, hated the uniforms, and felt geeky for staying, but Mom was my troop leader. To avoid confrontation, I stayed. Why? Because secretly, I loved camping and making s’mores over an open fire. After high school, I leaped into adult life, a life without Girl Scouts.
I realize now those years in scouting prepared me for living the life of adventure. I was 22-years-old ready to risk everything for economic and personal independence. But there were roadblocks. In 1970, a woman could not get a credit card in her name, own a home, or qualify for a business loan. I embraced the challenge and faced the reality of success and failure, pushing against the norm. Girl Scouts gave me the courage, confidence, and character to help make the world a better place for my daughter’s generation.
A single incident at my last Girl Scout event in 1965 brought my inner power to consciousness. I was sitting in a sea of senior scouts from across the nation in an amphitheater size tent in Idaho at the National Roundup—the culmination and reward for years in scouting. A panel of women talked about our futures. Their words came across as telling me what I should think, that my future was set. My mind exploded. I stood and thundered at them, “If we are the future, isn’t it up to us, not you adults, to determine what that future might be?” Everyone went quiet until the panel chair asked for the next question.
An assistant wove through the sea of Scouts to find me after the session. “The panel leader wants to talk with you.” I froze, afraid I was in trouble again. But to my surprise, she asked me to take part in the closing panel discussion. This Girl Scout experience gave me the confidence to question and challenge. It served me well throughout my life.
Fifty+ years later, I served as a Girl Scout Adult Volunteer supporting the leaders of 30 troops in Northern Virginia. It was my way of paying it forward to help today’s young girls have the opportunity to live a life of adventure.
Don’t believe the impact Girl Scouts can have on your daughter’s life? Over 50 million American women alive today took part in Girl Scouts growing up. Just look at some famous Girl Scout Alums:
Actors Taylor Swift, Mariah Carey, Abigail Breslin, Gwyneth Paltrow, and Dakota Fanning
Star athletes include tennis players Venus and Serena Williams
Media greats Katie Couric, Barbara Walters, and Robin Roberts are Girl Scout alums
Businesswomen Susan Wojcicki, CEO of YouTube, and Virginia Rometty, CEO of IBM
Former Secretaries of State Hillary Clinton, Madeleine Albright, and Condoleezza Rice
72% of current female U.S. senators and 58% of women serving in the U.S. House of Representatives
Five of nine current female governors
To volunteer, reconnect, donate or join, visit www.girlscouts.org.