Sunday, October 13, 2024

Birdtober Day Thirteen: Wren

At the end of September, the American Ornithological Society (AOS) announced that there are four new Caribbean species of wrens. I learned about this from Birds Caribbean, who dubbed this moment in time "The Wrenaissance." 


Here's part of Birds Caribbean's explanation (you can read the rest, with more details about how these decisions are made, and photos, here, and you can read my ode to taxonomy in this post): 


"These taxonomic updates often come in the form of “splits,” where what was once considered a single species is divided into multiple species due to significant differences in traits such as appearance, genetics, or behavior. In contrast, “lumps” occur when distinct populations are found to be similar enough to merge into a single species. Ornithologists use a combination of genetic analysis, morphology (shape and size), plumage, and vocalizations to determine whether a bird population deserves species status. 

This process can involve differentiating Caribbean birds from their mainland counterparts or recognizing distinct island populations as unique species. . . . The bird formerly known as the House Wren (Troglodytes aedon) has undergone a major revision and is now split into seven different species — four of which are newly recognized as Caribbean endemics! Say hello to the Grenada Wren(Troglodytes grenadensis), St. Lucia Wren (Troglodytes mesoleucus), St. Vincent Wren (Troglodytes musicus), and Kalinago Wren (Troglodytes martinicensis), which is native to Dominica. The Kalinago Wren, named in honor of the island’s Indigenous Kalinago people, was also historically found on Guadeloupe and Martinique, though it has since disappeared from those islands." 


House Wren (St. Vincent) - Photo Source: eBird.com

 

Wrens


Sometimes one day
you’re someone new
though inside
you’re the same old you:
others see you differently,
and they decide who you will be.

You do you, small brownish wren
(who you are now, who you were then):
keep catching bugs, and sing your song.
House Wren,
you’re right where you belong. 


©Ruth Bowen Hersey






Saturday, October 12, 2024

Birdtober Day Twelve: Red-billed Firefinch

Today is October Big Day, and when I was out birding and trying to reach my goal of 40 species (I did, by the way), I was especially looking for Red-billed Firefinches because today's bird is supposed to be a finch. I didn't see one, though I have many times before. But I wrote about them anyway.

Photo Source: eBird.com

Glowing red like an ember
From last night’s campfire,
Little bird starts the day
Cooling off in a puddle.

 

©Ruth Bowen Hersey



Thursday, October 10, 2024

Poetry Friday: Birdtober Day Eleven: Golden Swallow

Here are my Birdtober posts so far:

Last Poetry Friday was Day Four, and contains links to Days One to Three (Plush-crested Jay, American Robin, Mountain Bluebird, Giant Kingfisher)

Since last Poetry Friday:

Saturday: Eastern Plantain-Eater 

Sunday: Red-winged Blackbird 

Monday: Cardinals 

Tuesday: Black-headed Heron 

Wednesday: Gray Crowned-Crane 

Thursday: Speckled Mousebird 

 

Today I'm writing about the Golden Swallow, an island endemic. These birds used to be found on Jamaica, but not any more; they can only be seen on Hispaniola now, the island shared by Haiti and the Dominican Republic. I've seen Golden Swallows - two of them - once. My husband and I were birding with an expert friend in Haiti. You can learn more about these beautiful birds here, on the Birds Caribbean site. And you can see the prompts I'm following (all three versions) at any of the Birdtober posts above.

 


 

Golden Swallow


Hispaniolan birds
Nesting in Hispaniolan Pines
In cavities drilled by Hispaniolan Woodpeckers.
This is the only place you can see
these particular flashes of green and gold,
these swooping, shining, iridescent
golden treasures.


©Ruth Bowen Hersey



Jama has today's roundup.


 

Wednesday, October 09, 2024

Birdtober Day Ten: Speckled Mousebird

In keeping with today's mouse theme (the US prompt is Tufted Titmouse), the Ugandan prompt is the Speckled Mousebird. You can see why someone thought it resembled a mouse, with its hairy-looking head and long tail. I also read that they like roosting close together, similar to the way mice cuddle.  I have to say I find them much more appealing than mice, especially when the mice are in my house.

Fuzzy Mousebird in the tree,
You are not annoying me.
You don’t get inside my house
Like the other kind of mouse.
You just cutely fly around,
Sometimes hanging upside down.
Your hair on end and bright wide eyes
Make you look a bit surprised.
Fuzzy Mousebird in the tree,
You are not annoying me. 


©Ruth Bowen Hersey




Birdtober Day Nine: Gray Crowned-Crane

Today's official bird prompt is a Ruby-crowned Kinglet, but my colleague's Uganda suggestion was the Gray Crowned-Crane, and I had to pick the Uganda one today because it is Ugandan Independence Day. My husband and I used our day off to take a bike ride and go birding. I was hoping to see a Gray Crowned-Crane or five, but we didn't. Never mind! It's on the Ugandan flag, plus my son sent me the bird from the Bird-A-Day calendar. (See below for both of those GCCs.) 


Yesterday in our school Independence Day celebrations, we were asked what the bird on the flag symbolized, and someone near me was saying loudly, "Uganda moves forward!" The answer given from the stage was "longevity." Apparently both are true. The bird's raised leg shows forward movement. And Gray Crested-Cranes can live 20 years in the wild and up to 30 in captivity - which is a long time! I often see them on the compost pile on our Lakeside campus. I think it must feel warm and cozy to them. And they are gorgeous in flight.You can see them in the video below, which was made five years ago as a promo for a film called "Flight to Extinction." The word is that the population of these birds has rebounded somewhat since then.



Independent
Proud Uganda
Cranes are flying
Moving forward

 

©Ruth Bowen Hersey





Monday, October 07, 2024

Birdtober Day Eight: Heron

I've written a lot about herons in the past; here's a post from earlier this year with lots of heron poems. On Sunday morning by Lake Victoria I watched a Black-headed Heron hunting something, so I decided to write about him.

 

Photo Source: eBird.com


Spear-like bill ready
Looking for Sunday breakfast
He stalks frog or fish


©Ruth Bowen Hersey

Sunday, October 06, 2024

Birdtober Day Seven: Cardinal

I've been enjoying the multiple calendars for Birdtober this year, because it makes me think of families and of the enormous variety of birds across the world. Taking delight in the diversity of birds is one of the things I love about birding. I have three species on my Life List with the name cardinal: the Northern Cardinal (the one you see in the US), the Yellow-billed Cardinal and the Red-crested Cardinal. The Northern Cardinal isn't related to the other two, which are found in South America, but it is related to buntings and grosbeaks. My colleague put the Cardinal Quelea on today's Uganda calendar. That's one I haven't seen before, and it's not related to any of the others I mentioned. Of course what they all have in common is that they have red on them, just like the Cardinals in the Catholic Church.




From top to bottom: Northern Cardinal, Red-crested Cardinal, Yellow-billed Cardinal, Cardinal Quelea, all photos from eBird.com


Cardinal

The Pope gives a red hat
to the Cardinals of the church
but the birds get their red topper
from a higher authority;
the birds live
and move
and have their being
in the skies. 


©Ruth Bowen Hersey





Saturday, October 05, 2024

Birdtober Day Six: Red-winged Blackbird

Photo Source: eBird.com


Red-winged Blackbirds are common birds throughout North and Central America. My eBird records tell me I've had them on my checklists 51 times in nine states. The males are flashy and the females are nondescript. They are loud, too. Here are two poems I had saved with Red-winged Blackbirds in them:


So This is Nebraska

by Ted Kooser


The gravel road rides with a slow gallop

over the fields, the telephone lines

streaming behind, its billow of dust 

full of the sparks of redwing blackbirds.


Here's the rest. ("Sparks." That's perfect.)



Vanishing

by Brittney Corrigan


...

Red-winged blackbirds veer

beyond the veil. Orioles

and swallows, the horned lark

and the jay. Color drains from 

our common home so gradually,

we convince ourselves 

it has always been gray.

...


Here's the rest of that amazing poem.

 

Here's mine for today:

 

 

 Red-Winged Blackbird


“Is it rare to see a Red-winged Blackbird?”
Googled someone hopefully,
for the flash of red and yellow
seemed something miraculous
to one who’d never noticed it before.

Google dampened the unknown Googler’s enthusiasm,
responding that this was one of the most common birds
you were likely to see in North American wetlands.

“Is it rare to read a poem about a Red-winged Blackbird?”
I wonder, turning to Google to look for some
and finding so many that it hardly seems worthwhile
writing another, and yet
a sight doesn’t have to be rare to lift your heart with joy.
You just have to see it with all your attention,
loving it in the moment it’s there.

I, for example,
have seen and heard many Red-winged Blackbirds
and will always stop and stare,
enraptured,
at another.

 

©Ruth Bowen Hersey

 





 

 

Birdtober Day Five: Mocking

Today's Birdtober calendars call for mockingbirds - either the Northern Mockingbird, seen all over the United States and Southern Canada, or any one of the approximately seventeen other mockingbird species in the world. I have four mockingbirds on my Life List, but today I decided instead to go with my colleague's Uganda Birdtober list. She put the Eastern Plantain-Eater down for today, and I immediately knew why. Mockingbirds get their name from their ability to imitate other birds and even non-bird sounds. Eastern Plantain-Eaters don't do that. But while not a mockingbird, this species sounds like someone laughing hysterically, poking fun at the world. (You can hear the call in the YouTube video below, although the one in the video sounds very staid; usually there are groups of them and they sound a lot more mocking than this one!)

 

I guess today's poem is cheating just a bit, since I didn't write it specifically for this post. Instead, I wrote it back in March after attending a Good Friday service. The bird in the poem is definitely mocking, even though I didn't use that word.

 

 

Before the Cock Crows


In the outdoor
Good Friday service
in Kampala
someone read about
Peter denying Jesus
before the cock crowed
three times,
and at that moment
an Eastern Plantain-Eater
called.

It wasn’t a rooster
but with its
slightly menacing laughter
it worked just as well.
Did I deny Jesus too,
I wondered
and the bird kept chortling
as though it knew
all the ways
I could have.
 

©Ruth Bowen Hersey 



Thursday, October 03, 2024

Poetry Friday: Birdtober Day Four: Kingfisher

Welcome to the first week of Birdtober! So far this week we've had:

Day One: Plush-crested Jay

Day Two: American Robin

Day Three: Mountain Bluebird

 

Today's bird is a Kingfisher. The US calendar calls for a Belted Kingfisher and the Ugandan one for a Pied Kingfisher. In 2023 I posted about how rich I felt because I had seen eight different kingfisher species. Then, just a few days ago, I saw a ninth: the Giant Kingfisher. So that's what I'm writing about today.

 


 

 Photo Source: eBird.com


Giant Kingfisher

More than sixteen inches long,
Cackling, squeaky, squawky song.
They catch fish, then beat it senseless —
Never could be called defenseless.
No sooner fledged than they start diving,
Swooping, hunting, just plain thriving.


©Ruth Bowen Hersey


Tabatha has today's roundup.

Wednesday, October 02, 2024

SJT October and Birdtober Day Three: Change and Bluebirds

Our Spiritual Journey Thursday theme this month is Change and Transformation. Visit our host, Leigh Anne, here to see what everyone else is writing on this topic.


These last few years have been times of huge change for my husband and me. This time three years ago, we were still living in Haiti, and since then we have lived on two different continents (three, if you count the weeks spent in the United States in between). I'm teaching a different subject now, and we're living seven thousand miles away from our kids, and I walk as often as possible in wetlands, getting my boots muddy and making a checklist of the birds I see. 


Change is often frightening, especially when it comes unexpectedly. But it can also be life-giving. Wetlands are a symbol of change. Every time I go to Lake Victoria, the beach looks a little different. Sometimes the water is high, sometimes low. Sometimes it's rough, and other times completely smooth. There are different combinations of birds each time. The plant life is different. Sometimes there's a whole new "island" out in the water; it blew in from across the lake and will be around for a while. Wetlands are in between water and dry land. People speak of draining the swamp but that, of course, is the last thing you want to do, as the swamp protects against storms and flooding, filters water, and is downright beautiful. The swamp is always in flux.


Back in 2019, I wrote this post about change. I referred to the hymn "Abide with Me," and particularly the words "Change and decay in all around I see; oh thou who changest not, abide with me." As things change around me, in my work life, my family, and the world, I can trust God's unchanging love that will keep on holding onto me. I hope others can take comfort in this, and I'm thinking particularly of people cleaning up from Hurricane Helene, people struggling with war, and others dealing with huge change, well beyond their ability to control it.


The bird prompts for today are Bluebird, Eastern Bluebird, and Ross's Turaco (which is a very blue bird, and which I wrote about and shared pictures of here). (See the calendars below; one is a US-based calendar, one is more international, and one was made by a colleague and is fully Ugandan.) I decided to choose the international calendar for today, but I've written about the Mountain Bluebird, which is found in the United States.

 

Photo Source: eBird.com


Mountain Bluebird


I held your hand
while you told me something about you
I didn’t know before.
We laughed and cried and adjusted.
And the Mountain Bluebirds flitted around the whole time,
being so purely blue,
and filling me with hope
that we could weather the changes coming,
just as these pieces of sky catch bugs
and migrate and
make the best of it all.

 

©Ruth Bowen Hersey

 

 




Tuesday, October 01, 2024

Birdtober Day Two: American Robin

Photo Source: eBird.com


I knew that American Robins got their name from European settlers who thought they looked like the European Robins they were used to back home. Even though the ones back home were far smaller, weighing about a quarter as much. But I didn't know all the details in this great essay by Robert Francis called "How Robins Got Their Name." Specifically, I didn't know that the settlers gave the name Robin to any bird they saw with red on it. "At one time," writes Francis, "Eastern Bluebirds, which have a band of orange on their chests, were also referred to as Robins. Eastern Towhees were called Ground Robins, while Baltimore Orioles were Golden Robins." He goes on to report that there are over a hundred birds in the world now with robin in their name, and most of them have no relationship genetically to the European Robin or the American Robin, but were just given the name because they made Europeans think nostalgically of the Robins back home. Francis makes the deeper point that the newcomers didn't bother asking the people already in America what they called the birds. In fact, go read the whole essay - it's really good.


American Robin



Settlers called the American Robin a Robin
because it had red on it
just like the Robins back home.
In the same way,
I reacted to the African Thrush
and the Rufous-bellied Thrush
 by saying,
“It’s basically a Robin.”

You feel more at ease
when you can recognize something.
You may be in a new continent,
but look around,
see what’s familiar.
No need to ask questions.
You already know what that is.

It’s a tree.
It’s a flower.
It’s a birdy. 


©Ruth Bowen Hersey









Monday, September 30, 2024

Birdtober Day One: Plush-crested Jay

 

The American prompt list today has the Blue Jay, but I decided to go for the more generic Jay on the International version. The video above shows a Plush-crested Jay, which I saw four times in Paraguay, all but once in the Asunción Jardín Botánico. The other time was while visiting my brother's home in the countryside. My brother and I were doing some early-morning birding on my birthday.


Plush-crested Jay

 

Out looking for ants
Soft, fuzzy Plush-crested Jay
Snazzy birthday gift

 

©Ruth Bowen Hersey



Thursday, September 26, 2024

Poetry Friday: Birdtober is here again!

I'm going to attempt Birdtober again this year. Here are the prompts in case anyone wants to join me! This is an art event, and most people do portraits of the birds, but since 2021, I've been using the prompts to write poems instead. I'm planning to do daily poems for as many days as possible, and then I'll post links on Fridays to the week's poems. This year there are two complete calendars, one with US birds, and an international version with more general family groups, so that people can choose a bird that's local to them. I am going to be using both, I think, depending on the day. Plus, a colleague at school did her own version, a fully Ugandan calendar, so I will be using that some days as well!


Irene has today's roundup!

Sunday, September 15, 2024

Reading Update

Book #48 of the year was The Second Mrs. Astor, by Shana Abé. This is the story of Madeleine Talmage Force, who as a teenager in 1910 is noticed by John Jacob Astor, a fabulously wealthy celebrity 29 years older than she is. It's not a spoiler to say that the couple ends up on the Titanic. 


Book #49 was African Holocaust: The Story of the Uganda Martyrs, by J.F. Faupel. I became curious about this story when I saw a statue here in Kampala of a man impaled on a spear. This book tells the story of the martyrs, both Protestant and Catholic, who were killed by the Kabaka in the 1880s.


Book #50 was James, by Percival Everett. This is the story of Huckleberry Finn, but told from the point of view of Jim. There's no longer any humor in the story; it's pure horror now that we recognize the stakes for James and all enslaved people.


Book #51 was Miracle Creek, by Angie Kim, a courtroom drama that's seeking the truth of what caused an explosion at a hyperbaric chamber.


Book #52 was Sparrow Envy: Field Guide to Birds and Lesser Beasts, by J. Drew Lanham. This is a book of poetry about the natural world and what it's like to be an African-American birder.


Book #53 was Kate Bowler's Have a Beautiful, Terrible, Day: Daily Meditations for the Ups, Downs, & In-Betweens. Kate Bowler really gets how hard life can be sometimes.


Book #54 was One Corpse Too Many, by Ellis Peters. This was the second murder mystery in the Brother Cadfael series.

 

Book #55 was My Lady Jane, by Cynthia Hand, Brodi Ashton, and Jodi Meadows. This is a ridiculous but fun retelling of the Lady Jane Grey story, in which people change into animals and there is no effort at realism.

 

Book #56 was The Women, by Kristin Hannah. This is a heartrending story of military nurses in the Vietnam War, both what they went through during the war itself, and how it shaped the rest of their lives.

 

Book #57 was The Expats, by Chris Pavone. Kate and her family have moved overseas to start a new life, but it seems as though there's a lot of concealment going on and Kate doesn't know whom she can trust.

 

Book #58 was Edwidge Danticat's new book of essays, We're Alone. Danticat does an amazing job of communicating what it's like to be connected to Haiti.

 

Book #59 was Hello Beautiful, by Ann Napolitano. This novel is the story of a family of sisters over several decades. I found the characters completely believable and I couldn't put the book down.

 

Book #60 was Kololo Hill, by Neema Shah. This is a novel about the expulsion of the Indians from Uganda by Idi Amin in 1974. We follow the Indian family in the story through leaving Uganda and arriving in their new home with all the adjustments that brings.



Thursday, August 15, 2024

Poetry Friday: Back to School Edition

Tomorrow's Poetry Friday, the first one of the school year! We're finishing our first week with kids. It's gone pretty well, all things considered. 


One of the exciting things that happened this week was that I received Irene Latham's National Poetry Month postcard! This means it only took four months to wend its way to Uganda. I looked up my thank you note to her for the NPM postcard from 2023 and found that it took six months last year, arriving on November 9th. It's a National Poetry Month miracle, my friends!



Today I'd like to share a poem that I got recently in the Poets.org Poem-a-Day email. It's called "When it Really is Just the Wind, and Not a Furious Vexation," by Kyle Tran Myhre. It's hard to excerpt it, but I'm going to share the last four stanzas. You can read the whole thing here, and I recommend reading the whole thing, for sure!


So here's the end:

 


Because in every universe in which  

 

I am alive, it is because of other people. And I 
don’t always like them, but I love them. In every 
universe in which I am alive, it is less because I 
could fight, and more because I could  
forgive. Because I could cooperate. Because   

 

I could apologize. Because I could dance. Because 
I could grow pumpkins in my backyard and leave 
them at my neighbor’s door, asking for nothing in
return. In every universe in which I am alive, I am
holding: a first aid kit, a solar panel, a sleeping

 

cat. Never a rusty battle ax or rocket launcher—
sure, maybe sometimes a chainsaw, but only for 
firewood. I am holding: a cooking pot, a teddy bear, 
a photo album, a basketball, a bouquet of flowers.
Survival is not a fortress. It is a garden.  

 

Survival is not a siren. It is a symphony. And
yeah, we fight for it sometimes, but survival is not
the fight. It is the healing after: the soft hum of
someone you trust applying the bandage, the
feeling of falling asleep in a safe place. 

 

(from "When it Really is Just the Wind, and Not a Furious Vexation," by Kyle Tran Myhre, here.)

 

 

So good, right? I'm glad to be holding, instead of "a rusty battle ax or rocket launcher": a white board marker, a French textbook, a dishcloth, a pair of binoculars, a feather. "Survival is not a siren. It is a symphony." 


(P.S. That last stanza made me think of Emily St. John Mandel's novel Station Eleven, of which I wrote here in 2016, "'Twenty years after the end of air travel,' we meet the Traveling Symphony, a company of actors and musicians who travel around the ruined United States in horse-drawn caravans performing Shakespeare and various types of music, because 'survival is insufficient.' It's about connections, the power of the past, and healing.  'What was lost in the collapse: almost everything, almost everyone, but there is still such beauty.'")


Janice is hosting this week's roundup.



Friday, August 02, 2024

Reading Update

I haven't done a reading update since May, but I've been reading. Some of the recent books:

 

Book #33 was Maame, by Jessica George, a novel about the child of Ghanaian immigrants navigating her twenties in London. 


Book #34 was a rererereread, The Silver Chair, by C.S. Lewis. I'll never stop reading these books again and again. "No one suggested doing anything. There was so obviously nothing to be done. For the moment, they did not feel it quite so badly as one might have expected; that was because they were so tired....'Now don't you let your spirits down, Pole,' said the Marsh-wiggle. 'There's one thing you've got to remember. We're back on the right lines. We were to go under the Ruined City, and we are under it. We're following the instructions again.'"


Book #35 was Cahokia Jazz, by Francis Spufford. This was a rollicking read, in a hard-to-categorize way. It's a murder mystery, an alternative history, an adventure story. It imagines a world where Native Americans have not been marginalized, but are instead full and equal participants in US society. 


Book #36 was Written in My Own Heart's Blood, by Diana Gabaldon. This is the eighth Outlander book. I'm kind of thinking the tenth one is going to be coming out pretty soon (though no publication date has yet been announced and Gabaldon is still writing it), so I've been rereading these. 


Book #37 was The Summer of Songbirds, by Kristy Woodson Harvey. This is the story of three best friends who grew up going to the same summer camp, Holly Springs. I am a sucker for these tales of long friendships, but this one was a bit forgettable.


Book #38 was Trevor Noah's memoir Born a Crime: Stories from a South African Childhood. If you've listened to Trevor Noah talking at all, you'll recognize his distinctive voice in this book. 


Book #39 was Wrath Goddess Sing, by Maya Deane. As I've frequently written here, I love retellings of mythology. This one takes its inspiration from a story about Achilles that's found in ancient sources outside the Iliad. Thetis, Achilles' mother, doesn't want him to fight in the Trojan War, and she hides him in the court of Skyros, where he dresses as a princess and is discovered by Odysseus through a clever ruse of presenting a sword that Achilles can't resist. In this novel, the time in Skyros becomes a gender transition and Achilles is a powerful female warrior. As always when I'm reading retellings, I was fascinated to see how the author would include the characters and scenes from the story. The book is full of erudition and research, and while some of the content was a bit over the top for me (no spoilers so I won't say what), it was well-written and thought-provoking. 


Book #40 was Dear Committee Members, by Julie Schumacher, a novel made up of recommendation letters. 


Book #41 was The Other Mothers, by Katherine Faulkner. It's a "twisty thriller" set among wealthy new mothers in London. I didn't find it believable or like any of the characters at all, but it kept me reading.


Book #42 was How to Walk into a Room, by Emily P. Freeman. This only came out in March and it was already my second time through. This time I read it aloud to my husband, something we like to do while on road trips. We both found it compelling and it gave us a lot to talk about.


Book #43 was The Hunting Party, by Lucy Foley, another thriller about rich unlikable English people. 


Book #44 was The Husband's Secret, by Liane Moriarty. I just looked back over all my reviews of Liane Moriarty books, and a common thread seems to be that they seem light-hearted but then have heavy themes. This one was the ultimate example of this. If you think the husband's secret of the title (and actually a few husbands have secrets, as well as other people who aren't husbands) is going to be fun and amusing, you are WRONG. It is a terrible, awful secret that will make you feel bad the whole way through the book. Or at least, that's what it did to me. I HATE books where everyone has a secret and there are hundreds of pages of deception. So stressful. That said, I had to know what happened, so I read every word.


Book #45 was Running Scared: Fear, Worry, and the God of Rest, by Edward T. Welch, and book #46 was Corrie Ten Boom's Don't Wrestle, Just Nestle. Both were about dealing with anxiety and how we can trust God to take care of us. They both were full of good reminders that I needed. And if anybody has earned the right to talk about this topic, it's Corrie Ten Boom, who spent time in a Nazi concentration camp. 


Book #47 was Go Tell the Bees that I Am Gone, by Diana Gabaldon. #36 was the eighth in this series, and this one was the ninth. I think it's my favorite. I really like Claire and Jamie as an older couple, surrounded by children and grandchildren. I read this in 2022 and reread lots of it while lying awake for hours in the throes of jet lag after our recent trip back from the US. Now I'm ready for the tenth book to come out. Soon, I hope?

Thursday, August 01, 2024

SJT: Pause to Reflect

A Facebook friend posted the following picture yesterday:




I'm sorry to say that nobody succeeded in preventing August from getting here: not the Grinch, not my Facebook friend, and not me. It's here, and that means we're going back to school in just a few days.


Our SJT host this month, Carol, is encouraging us to pause to reflect. That's a good idea, because it's going to be my last chance for a while. Ready or not, school is coming, with all the work and stress. We just got back to Uganda, and we're slammed by jet lag, but we're also enjoying a brief pause before the school year begins.


Psalm 46:10: "Be still and know that I am God." A pause to reflect reminds us that we're not in charge. God is. Even in August.


Read what others have to say about this topic here.