Six months have passed since my last entry in this blog. I have to reflect on why that is.
Could it be that my nomadic tendencies have begun to wane? When we made the move to Miami over a year ago, our son gave us an ultimatum: five years in one place so that he could get through middle school...or else. We decided to heed his wishes.
We've begun to settle in like proper rooters. We've become part of a school community, have re-connected with some of our friends, but in truth have been so wrapped up in our own ambitious scheduling that we have not gotten to spend quality time with many of them.
My husband was on a crazy work schedule in which his nomadic tendencies were being fanned and fueled, as he went zigzagging east and west on a weekly basis...until he wasn't.
I've been on a pace one might not expect of someone trying to root: I was published in a journal http://www.tandfonline.com/eprint/Ss5fwBpxYcmCBHGCA2EW/full; have pursued a full-time school load and am now one class shy of my Masters; started a non-profit organization www.voicesunitedusa.com and was asked to join the Miami Country Day School as full-time faculty to oversee their Broadcasting Lab and studio and help start an Entrepreneurial program for kids.
So I guess it boils down to this: my nomadic tendencies really are those that propel me to act, to move, to work, to be. Even if I am rooted, I will remain peripatetic, engaged, busy, seeking opportunity and encouraging change. It's in my nature.
So onward Urban Nomads! (I'll try to fit in blogging more...)
Urban Nomads are internationalists who roam freely in search of their next career opportunity. The world is indeed their oyster. Is that you? Interested in those who are, maybe? Then read on, add comments, pose questions and join us as you may just be an Urban Nomad yourself.
Saturday, October 5, 2013
Monday, April 8, 2013
Margaret Thatcher and Me
In today's press, we will read and hear countless anecdotes of former Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, who died today after suffering a stroke. For me, there is a personal element to the story- one that changed the course of my life. My mind goes immediately to the woman I watched control a room full of swaggering, blathering, excited gentlemen yelling over each other and posturing for position during the 1980 Parliamentary sessions during the year I served as an intern for MP Julian Critchley of Aldershot. Of democracy and his constituents, Critchley once said to me with piercing conviction, "My dear, when power gets into the hands of the people, it's all over." So much for my naive beliefs that I was surrounded by the upholders of democracy itself. Critchley, a well-known columnist for the newspaper The Guardian, had a particularly identifiable writing style and was later outed for penning an anonymous-- and scathing -- critique of the leader of his own party, Mrs. Thatcher. I felt a pang of respect for Mrs. Thatcher at that moment, as she realized what an imbecile she had in her party and she did the right thing: she ousted him. Good on you, Maggie, I said.
The months I spent working in the British Parliament, walking proudly through the St. Stephen's entrance, flashing my ID and credentials were months that shaped my life's work. I was not a fan of Margaret Thatcher (no upstanding liberal Democrat from NY would have been at that moment in time); yet seeing her take on that room of men embedded in my mind's eye a lasting and indelible impression. It was only years later that I realized those PM talks gave me the deepest respect for her, a realization that hit me as I came into my own in the working world in which I was surrounded by smart and snarky men.
Paraphrasing her, "if you need someone to speak, get a man; if you want to get something done, get a woman." How right you were. And how feminist was your position.
RIP Mrs. Thatcher. May you be with your Denis and may you preside over the many debates up on high.
The months I spent working in the British Parliament, walking proudly through the St. Stephen's entrance, flashing my ID and credentials were months that shaped my life's work. I was not a fan of Margaret Thatcher (no upstanding liberal Democrat from NY would have been at that moment in time); yet seeing her take on that room of men embedded in my mind's eye a lasting and indelible impression. It was only years later that I realized those PM talks gave me the deepest respect for her, a realization that hit me as I came into my own in the working world in which I was surrounded by smart and snarky men.
Paraphrasing her, "if you need someone to speak, get a man; if you want to get something done, get a woman." How right you were. And how feminist was your position.
RIP Mrs. Thatcher. May you be with your Denis and may you preside over the many debates up on high.
Friday, January 25, 2013
Little Voices
While waiting outside the office of the lower division director at my son's school yesterday, I wrote the following:
Little voices screaming powerfully down the hall
On tiptoe they march to and fro
On steps of concrete, in sand and grass.
Children oh children
With joy and mirth they cry for help
Quizzical looks as teacher talks
Tears of joy at friendships lost
Renewed each morning at roll call.
To be young is not to be free
When those around are on constant watch.
Listen now to the little voices
For in them lie the future.
-- Karen Davis 2013
Little voices screaming powerfully down the hall
On tiptoe they march to and fro
On steps of concrete, in sand and grass.
Children oh children
With joy and mirth they cry for help
Quizzical looks as teacher talks
Tears of joy at friendships lost
Renewed each morning at roll call.
To be young is not to be free
When those around are on constant watch.
Listen now to the little voices
For in them lie the future.
-- Karen Davis 2013
Sunday, January 6, 2013
RIP Uncle DIck
My husband and I have entered an age when our parents, aunts and uncles and those of our friends begin to fizzle like mosquitoes to summer bug zappers. My Uncle Dick, we were notified, passed early this morning, after suffering a stroke about a week ago. Dick was my mother's brother.
Dick, may you find peace in wherever it is that you land and may you be comforted by your parents, sister and brother there. Look down at us now and then and give a sign. You come from a long line of sign-givers. Your mother turns the lights on and off in our place every once in awhile. Your sister trips people when she wants us to remember her. Aunt Blanche, well, I think she used to appear on the street and stick out her tongue. But that stopped years ago. We are all part of this very strange and yet wonderful DNA mixture.
May you find comfort in that land beyond.
XOXO,
Your loving niece
Dick, may you find peace in wherever it is that you land and may you be comforted by your parents, sister and brother there. Look down at us now and then and give a sign. You come from a long line of sign-givers. Your mother turns the lights on and off in our place every once in awhile. Your sister trips people when she wants us to remember her. Aunt Blanche, well, I think she used to appear on the street and stick out her tongue. But that stopped years ago. We are all part of this very strange and yet wonderful DNA mixture.
May you find comfort in that land beyond.
XOXO,
Your loving niece
Tuesday, January 1, 2013
MEND in Los Angeles is a "Force for Good"
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