Jan 292021
 

Maybe it’s just me, but ever since Pres. Biden’s Inauguration, it seems like there’s definitely been a better vibe in America.  Not that there’s been one huge paradigm shift to explain it, but a number of small “Feel Good” ones.  So I decided I would share a few of them.

Neither Rain, Nor Snow, Nor …

The story of a “Snowstorm-Induced Impromptu COVID Vaccine Clinic” is what really got me thinking – things ARE getting better.

Twenty Josephine County Public Health workers had finished a vaccine clinic in rural Cave Junction, OR and were on their way back to Grants Pass to finish administering the six doses they had left.  But a jack-knifed semi-trailer truck closed the highway for hours.

Realizing they wouldn’t make it back to home base to give the last six Moderna vaccines before they expired, they decided to create an ad hoc impromptu vaccine clinic right there on the snowbound highway.

Like the Pfizer version, Moderna’s COVID vaccine must be used within six hours after it comes to ambient temperature.

Even though they were accompanied by an ambulance which could manage any untoward reaction, it was still difficult to find six willing recipients.  Partly because that area of Oregon is not pro-vaccine.  (Josephine County voted for Trump 62% to 36%.)  And no doubt anyone would be a bit dubious about a knock on your car window while stuck in a snowstorm asking if you’d like to get a shot.

Going car-to-car, it took the team 45 minutes to get their six “yeses”.  And fittingly, the last person to get the last leftover vaccine was a woman who hadn’t made it on time to her appointment earlier that day because of the snow.  A perfect ending!

So six lucky people got (as a six-y/o calls them) their “Fauci Ouchie” shots … al fresco!

An Inclusive Pledge of Allegiance

While not receiving as much coverage as Amanda Norman’s well-deserved  rendition of her “The Hill We Climb” poem, for a certain niche population (myself included) there was another special inclusive moment early in the Inaugural ceremonies.

When Georgia fire captain Andrea Hall (first ever African American female fire captain in Fulton County, GA), it was very personal.  For the first time ever, the Pledge of Allegiance was both simultaneously spoken and signed.  She did it as an homage to her late father, who was deaf.

Describing her use of sign language as a very intimate experience – like being able to speak another language – she said she had decided shortly after being asked to do it in ASL sign language.

“You’re between Lady Gaga and J. Lo.  I mean, come on, that’s it.  And I have like my little 15 seconds of something.”  Hall said, “Those are too hard to be sandwiched between, so I need to put some meat between there, you know?”

 At a time of such division — especially at a place like the Capitol, which is recovering from the January 6 insurrection — perhaps the words of the pledge say it all.

 “It was written for little children who were immigrants,” Hall said.  “And in some way, we’re all immigrants.  You know, we’re a mishmash of people from all over.  And I think that’s the significance of it.  It’s a way to unify all of us by speaking those thirty -one words.”

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/firefighters-sign-language-pledge-of-allegiance-was-homage-to-her-late-father/

There’s PLENTY of Room in the Inn

A little dose of Schadenfreude at Donnie’s expense would also count as a “Feel Good” offering.  And Lord knows Trump richly deserves it.

Jane Mayer, a reporter for “The New Yorker”, provides a video of the Trump Hotel in Washington – now BARREN and EMPTY!  In fact it looks a lot like the lobby from Jack Nicholson’s movie, “The Shining”.

 

I’m not an accountant, but I bet having NO occupants will have a negative impact on one’s cash-flow.

Cathedral Arts Flower Festival

I know I’ve mentioned the Cathedral Arts Project Flower Festival at St. Cecilia Cathedral in Omaha.  In the past I’ve gone most years, or at least every other year, with family and friends.  It’s a wonderful daytrip for a unique experience.

Florists from the Omaha Metro are assigned different areas of the Cathedral (which is really quite beautiful) to decorate.  And while you wait your turn to take the tour throughout the cathedral, there is music from different choirs, orchestras, organists, etc.  (Obviously lost on me, but the others all love it.)

This year because of the pandemic, it’s going to be a virtual tour.  So I thought you might enjoy taking a look online.

Typically the show runs from Friday through Sunday – but I’m not sure how long it will run online.

2020 Cathedral Flower Festival — Cathedral Arts Project 

Saint Cecilia Flower Festival 2021 – Final on Vimeo

 

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Jan 262020
 

I have a very good excuse for being In Absentia for the past 48 hours: I’m pooped!

Yesterday marked the 35th Anniversary of the Cathedral Arts Project Flower Show at St. Cecelia Cathedral in Omaha – and as usual it was spectacular! It’s a delightful trek I’ve made almost annually for over the past quarter century.

I got up before dawn and picked up my 90 y/o “pseudo-uncle” in KCMO (he’s the brother of my aunt-by-marriage) to head to Omaha for the flower show. (His other sister, my “pseudo-aunt” stayed home for a grandson’s B-Day party). And we didn’t get back after a day of restaurant-hopping, flower-peeping and chocolate confectionary-shopping until late last night.

Pretty sure I’ve featured the Cathedral Flower Show before, and this year’s theme was based on the 3rd Chapter of Ecclesiastes: “To Everything There Is A Season”.

And for those of us of a certain age (and when I had hearing), the Ecclesiastes theme certainly revived memories of The Byrds hit “Turn, Turn, Turn”.

As I believe I covered years ago, the show assigns about 50 niches/locations/stations throughout the Cathedral for florists to present their arrangements. And this show clung very closely to the theme (something they not always have done), featuring every major holiday, life event, especially in the Catholic Church (baptism, confirmation, wedding, funeral, etc.), and a particular focus on Hispanic celebrations (Quinceañera, Cinco de Mayo, Día de Muertos, etc.).

The Cathedral is pretty packed with waiting viewers, so while you wait for your group number to be called to start your tour, you’re entertained by violin quartets, opera singers, organists, etc. My uncle is a real music aficionado, so he truly enjoys it. (It’s obviously lost on me.)

I happen to have found a decent YouTube video that at least gives a flavor of this year’s show – so I hope you enjoy it.

 

 

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