The Amazing New York Knicks
I admit to being a fair weather sports fan. I like watching tennis, soccer, and basketball, occasional baseball, but mostly towards the end of the season when there is more action and excitement. Instructions Before Visiting Earth
James McRae
I discovered a very interesting substack and instagram from someone named James McRae…and it occurs to me there truly are so many really cool people in this world doing such beautiful work with their hearts and minds in the right place. Sushi Sandwich
This recipe by @seattlehanddoc Wayne and Nancy looks delicious to me and it seems you could just about use any ingredients. In this case, no raw fish involved. They used skipjack tuna from a can for the protein. Painting of the Week Charity of the Week:
Book of the Week
I remember the Knicks of yesteryear in the late 60s, early 70s when Willis Reed was on the team as well as Bill Bradley, Walt Frazier, Dave DeBusschere, Phil Jackson and Earl "The Pearl" Monroe.
I too caught the Knicks fever recently and tuned in, like many of us fellow New Yorkers, to the fourth game. The Spurs dominated the first half and when the Knicks were down 27 points, I gave up on them and went to bed, utterly discouraged. I want NYC to have a win, especially with Mamdani at the helm.
Waking up in the early morning hours, I couldn’t believe my eyes. The Knicks, putting themselves up by one in the last seconds, managed to pull off an amazing comeback, one for the history books! And with this win, we don’t just celebrate the sport but also the diversity that is New York City, where people of all colors, shapes, sizes, religions, genders, etc. live side by side in relative peace…
I share with you here some of the celebratory reels of New Yorkers partying along side each other, including that of our new mayor, Zohran Mamdani…
Right after the Win
The Deeper Meaning of the Win
Celebrating on the Street
Mamdani and The Knicks
Mamdani vs. Trump at the Game
Mamdani Repeals Bedtime for Kid Fans
One of those people is James McRae, “an artist, poet, and teacher who empowers creators to live with purpose and turn imagination into reality. He is the founder of Sunflower Club, a global community dedicated to creativity as a tool for personal healing and social transformation. “
Here is his poem that got me going on him in the first place:
INSTRUCTIONS BEFORE VISITING EARTH
by James McRae
In the event that you wake up
and find your soul separated from source
and manifest into material form, don’t panic.
Your condition is only temporary.
In the event that you wake up
and find your soul separated from source
and manifest into material form, don’t panic.
Your condition is only temporary.
You have been selected for the opportunity
of human incarnation.
This 3D simulation is designed
to break up the monotony of eternity
by giving you a fully immersive experience
as a distinct ego identity.
Your body will serve
as your physical avatar
as you navigate a dense and dramatic reality.
There will be many distractions
causing you to forget your true nature and origin.
You will experience a range of emotions
from joy to loneliness to despair.
But remember – no matter
what trials and traumas you encounter,
your soul remains perfectly safe.
At times you may feel lost or afraid.
This is totally normal.
If you ever need guidance,
simply slow down your busy mind
and bring your awareness
to the quiet place
inside yourself.
On this planet, nothing is permanent.
People and things will come and go.
You will fall in love and form sentimental attachments
only to lose everything you hold dear.
So cling to nothing too tightly, even yourself,
and when it’s time to let go, let go with grace,
for nothing is owned, only borrowed.
As you walk among
the people on the planet,
try to be a good guest.
Tread lightly. Remember
that you are only visiting.
Don’t make a mess.
Listen more than you speak.
Give more than you take.
Don’t keep your soft heart
locked inside a glass cage,
protected from wear and tear.
You’ll never make it out alive
and time passes quickly.
So come back with some battle scars
and good stories to tell.
McRae writes a substack entitled “Being Nobody” (https://jamesmccrae.substack.com/) and his instagram is @wordsarevibrations.
Chani Thompson (@chanipeach), another amazing creator and life coach set McRae’s poem to some cool imagery—
Crispy Pan-Fried Onigirazu
INGREDIENTS
2 cans wild planetfoods Skipjack Tuna
3 tbsp mayo
1 tsp Sriracha (plus more to taste)
1 avocado, thinly sliced
1 cucumber, peeled into thin strips
6 eggs, fried
3 cups cooked short-grain white rice, seasoned with salt
12 sheets nori
24 sheets rice paper
Black sesame seeds
Neutral oil for frying
INSTRUCTIONS
Mix Wild Planet tuna with mayo, Sriracha, salt and pepper. Set aside.
Fry your eggs and prep all fillings before you start building.
Dip 2 rice paper sheets in warm water, overlap on a cutting board. Layer 2 nori sheets on top.
Cut 2 slits to create 4 sections. Place rice in one, tuna across from it, egg in the third, avocado and cucumber in the fourth.
Fold rice over avocado, fold that stack onto the tuna, fold tuna over the egg, fold egg over to the rice, fold rice over cucumber.
Wrap the whole square in 2 more wet rice paper sheets, press to seal, sprinkle with sesame seeds.
Pan fry in neutral oil on medium-high heat, searing all sides until golden and crispy.
Slice in half and try not to film a close up before eating. You will fail.
Fair warning — regular tuna sandwiches are never going to hit the same after this. 🔪✨
Doctor's Without Borders
About The Author
New York City based contemporary artist, Pam Smilow, began writing the creative lifestyle blog “things we love” in an effort to foster a sense of community during times of isolation and reflection. To read more about her and her art, visit her website and check out the essay written by Frank Matheis entitled The Sophisticated Innocence of Pam Smilow.
Blog No. 285: Child Prodigy Alma Deutscher, Anne Frank 80 Years Later, Dogs with Sticks
Alma Deutscher Child Prodigy
This is the story of a young girl named Alma Deutscher (now a young woman of 20) and I think you are really going to scratch your head on this one. For me, it just makes it clear that there is so much we do not understand in this life. I personally find it incredibly exciting to just take it all in with wonder!
Alma Deutscher is a British composer, pianist, violinist and conductor but she had an extremely unusual early start at her career. Her earliest memories were hearing the music of Ricard Strauss as a toddler and being already mesmerized and in love. At three she was already playing piano and violin. When she was four she started having compositions and melodies come to her in her head--"they just popped in" she describes and these were not just things she had heard--they were her original compositions. She composed her first piano sonata at the age of five. At seven, she completed a short opera, and at age 9 she had already written a full violin concerto! If you want to be enchanted, please take the twelve minutes it takes to hear this 60 Minutes piece on her--guaranteed it will stretch what you thought of life and how things come about...
Anne Frank 80 Years Later
I think it is important to keep Nazi Germany fresh in our minds right now as America goes through these scary times that sadly mirror in many ways the rise of fascism there. Let’s hope knowing history might prevent us from making the same mistakes.
Anne Frank has become a symbol of that time. Here are her experiences from Germany to Amsterdam, narrated and told from the viewpoint of Eva Schloss, a contemporary, whose own story mirrored Frank's life but sadly to a very different end.
Through her diary, Anne Frank’s words survived, becoming a symbol of resilience and a testament to the atrocities of the Holocaust, inspiring generations to fight prejudice and embrace humanity.
This documentary, entitled 80 Years Later: Anne Frank’s Sister Breaks Her Silence, directed by Rachel Stirling, interweaves Anne Frank’s diary entries with the parallel experience of other refugees at that time in Amsterdam, and is full of informative archival footage and interviews.
Dogs With Sticks
Photo courtesy on Instagram @dog_rates
Here is a pure fluff piece that I found on youtube: Dogs Carrying Sticks. I have become a true dog lover after having my daughter's dog up with me in Maine for an extended period of time so excuse the obsession if you are not of the same mind. But this story is fun, charming, and guaranteed to put a smile on your face. We all need reason to do that these days...
Painting of the Week
Charity of the Week:
Doctor's Without Borders
Book of the Week
About The Author
New York City based contemporary artist, Pam Smilow, began writing the creative lifestyle blog “things we love” in an effort to foster a sense of community during times of isolation and reflection. To read more about her and her art, visit her website and check out the essay written by Frank Matheis entitled The Sophisticated Innocence of Pam Smilow.
Blog No. 284: Comedian Wanda Sykes, Colorful Food, Stephen Colbert's Musical Send Off
Comedian
Wanda Sykes
Photo courtesy Philadelphia Gay News. Click image for interview
Laughter truly is good medicine for the soul.
Wanda Sykes is one of my favorite comedians. I strongly recommend you take the time to watch this new film of hers Legacy, available on Netflix. It documents her performance at her alma mater: Hampton University and it is funny. We so need the comic relief right now and I am pretty sure you will get some good laughs out of it.
Beautiful Colorful Salad
Have you ever seen such a colorful and aesthetically pleasing salad?
Radishes, cucumbers and oranges contribute to the beauty of this salad.
Recipe follows thanks to journalist Emily Nunn's The Department of Salad and Italian chef and cookbook writer Marcella Hazan:
MARCELLA'S COLORFUL SALAD, serves 6
INGREDIENTS:
2 Persian cucumbers or 1 large seedless
3 oranges
6 small radishes
1 avocado (optional)
12 fresh mint leaves
Sea salt
Juice of 1/2 a lemon
Extra virgin olive oil
INSTRUCTIONS:
*Slice the cucumber into thin disks and arrange on a serving platter.
*Peel the oranges by slicing the top and the bottom off of the orange and using a sharp pairing knife remove the peel. (Try not to leave any of the white pithy part.)
Slice the oranges and add to the platter.
*Slice the radishes into disks and add to the platter
*Slice the avocado and arrange nicely on platter.
*Tear the mint leaves in half and sprinkle them over the top.
*Sprinkle sea salt over the whole salad
*Squeeze lemon evenly over the platter and finish with a drizzle of good quality olive oil.
Voilá!
And here is another beautiful healthy choice--I personally love creating these rice bowls out of all kinds of ingredients. This one looked particularly appealing to me but you can literally put anything in there except the kitchen sink.
RAINBOW RICE BOWL
RAINBOW RICE BOWL
Your choice of protein
1 cup cooked Brown Rice
1/3 cup grated carrots
1/3 cup shredded red cabbage
1 avocado, cut into thin slices
PREPARATION FOR KALE:
1/2 cup chopped kale into small pieces.
Toast the sesame seeds lightly in dry frying pan, then add shredded kale to the pan
Add 1 tsp sesame oil and
1 tsp olive oil.
Turn the heat to medium and sautee for a few minutes until bright green and nicely cooked.
Add 2 tsp tamari and turn the heat down - cook for 1 minute to reduce the liquid then turn the heat off.
DRESSING
1 tsp. olive oil, 1 tsp sesame oil, 2 tsp tamari, 1 tbsp sesame seeds
Stephen Colbert's Send Off
The final send off from Stephen Colbert’s eleven year run on CBS (boycott CBS please) includes two back to back musical numbers: Jump Up by Elvis Costello and finally The Beatles Hello Goodbye, all performed by Colbert himself alongside Louis Cato, Jon Batiste, Elvis Costello, Paul McCartney and the Great Big Joy Machine. It ends in a giant singalong that involves the audience and the entire staff.
Painting of the Week
Charity of the Week:
Doctor's Without Borders
Book of the Week
About The Author
New York City based contemporary artist, Pam Smilow, began writing the creative lifestyle blog “things we love” in an effort to foster a sense of community during times of isolation and reflection. To read more about her and her art, visit her website and check out the essay written by Frank Matheis entitled The Sophisticated Innocence of Pam Smilow.
Blog No. 283: Artist Activist Natasha Mayers, Stephen Colbert/Anderson Cooper: A Conversation, A Few Short Poems
Natasha Mayer's
Artists' Rapid Response Team (ARRT!)
My friend and fellow artist Terrie Frisbie has been trying to get me to come with her to a monthly artist gathering called ARRT! (Artists' Rapid Response Team), where artists have been gathering once a month for many years to make political signage and artwork for the greater good.
I finally went last Sunday--what a wonderful group of artists, such creative collaborative energy floating in the space, and all of us hard at work all day. There is something amazing about being in a room and creating--that group spirit--and especially if it is for a good cause.
ARRT! was founded fourteen years ago by an extraordinary woman named Natasha Mayers, who is the founder and force behind this artist collective. It has been going strong since 2012, dedicated to political causes of decency, kindness and justice for the less privileged in our society.
In addition to her own art and organzing the artist collective, Natasha has worked with prisoners, children, refugees and local residents to create banners, murals and signs with the purpose of bringing visual reminders of what is important in life and to call attention to crucial issues we face as a society. As one of Maine's national treasures, she is celebrated in this wonderful PBS documentary Natasha Mayers: An Unstill Life. Please watch for inspiration, dedication, and the determination of one person to spark and mobilize a whole group of individuals into collective years of action.
Organized by Natasha Mayers, these lobster buoys, symbols of Maine, are depicted here with flags from all over the world, painted by Portland immigrant students representing their countries of origin.
Stephen Colbert/Anderson Cooper Conversation
Both Anderson Cooper and Stephen Colbert have had their share of major loss. Take the time to listen to this touching, raw conversation between the two of them where they are incredibly open about their life experiences and their personal feelings on their own grief.
To dig deeper, you might also be interested in Anderson Cooper's entire podcast All There Is, where he engages in moving and honest discussion with people who have faced life-altering losses.
Anderson Cooper’s Podcast All There Is has three seasons, currently 56 episodes.
A Few Short Poems
APRIL IS A DOG'S DREAM
by Marilyn Singer
april is a dog’s dream
the soft grass is growing
the sweet breeze is blowing
the air all full of singing feels just right
so no excuses now
we’re going to the park
to chase and charge and chew
and I will make you see
what spring is all about
THE RED WHEELBARROW
by William Carlos Williams
so much depends
upon
a red wheel
barrow
glazed with rain
water
beside the white
chickens
THE CRY OF THE CICADA
by Matsuo Bashō
The cry of the cicada
Gives us no sign
That presently it will die.
HOPE IS A THING WITH FEATHERS
by Emily Dickinson
“Hope” is the thing with feathers –
That perches in the soul –
And sings the tune without the words –
And never stops – at all –
And sweetest – in the Gale – is heard –
And sore must be the storm –
That could abash the little Bird
That kept so many warm –
I’ve heard it in the chillest land –
And on the strangest Sea –
Yet – never – in Extremity,
It asked a crumb – of me.
Painting of the Week
Charity of the Week:
Doctor's Without Borders
Book of the Week
About The Author
New York City based contemporary artist, Pam Smilow, began writing the creative lifestyle blog “things we love” in an effort to foster a sense of community during times of isolation and reflection. To read more about her and her art, visit her website and check out the essay written by Frank Matheis entitled The Sophisticated Innocence of Pam Smilow.
Blog No. 282: Theo of Golden, Singing Bowls, Ajo Blanco Gazpacho Soup
Theo of Golden
by Allen Levi
“Stories cast spells.” And this one certainly does… I just finished the New York Times bestseller Theo of Golden this morning and decided to toss aside all my plans for this lead story on my blog and write about this book. I am not going to say much because I was in many ways left without words upon finishing it and I want the book and the author Allen Levi to speak for themselves...
What I will say very broadly is that the central character is an 87 year old man from Portugal named Theo who shows up in the southern town of Golden, Georgia and gets to know many of the townspeople.
I found the book very inspirational although the author insists it is not a book about idealism--he is convinced that it is realistic... Allen Levi reminds us that life is all about choices.
I just want to encourage you to read it and then please come back to this blog entry and comment. I'd love to hear your thoughts. I hope you like it as much as I did.
If, when you finish, you don’t want to see it end or you have questions and want more information, there is a great conversation between Levi Allen and his old friend, bookstore owner Ben May. Well worth the listen!
Singing Bowls for Stress Relief
To follow Tseyang, click image above
There is so much free floating anxiety in the air these days that we can't help but be affected. As an antidote, I find meditation and listening to these singing bowls from time to time as a way to ground and center myself and release some of that anxious feeling deep in my gut when I think of the state of the world.
I hope this eleven minute video from Tibetan yoga teacher Tseyang helps to reduce some of the stress...Get comfortable and spend the next ten minutes just letting go...
White Gazpacho Soup
Ingredients for this delicious soup
Babbo-Style White Gazpacho (Ajo Blanco Inspired)
Serves 4–6
Ingredients
* 1 cup blanched almonds (Marcona if possible)
* 2 cups seedless green grapes
* 1 English cucumber, peeled and chopped
* 2 slices rustic white bread, crusts removed
* 2 garlic cloves
* 1/3 cup extra-virgin olive oil
* 2 tablespoons sherry vinegar
* 2–3 cups ice
* Kosher salt
* White pepper
Garnish ideas
* Halved green grapes
* Toasted almonds
* Chive oil or olive oil drizzle
* Tiny cucumber dice
* Croutons
Instructions
1. Soak the bread in a little cold water for 5 minutes, then squeeze dry.
2. Blend almonds, garlic, grapes, cucumber, and bread until smooth.
3. Slowly drizzle in olive oil while blending so it emulsifies.
4. Add sherry vinegar and enough ice water to reach a silky soup consistency.
5. Season with salt and white pepper.
6. Strain through a fine sieve for a restaurant-style smooth texture.
7. Chill at least 3 hours before serving.
Painting of the Week
Pam Smilow Fish House. mixed media on canvas. 60” x 40”. in progress
Charity of the Week:
ACLU
Book of the Week
About The Author
New York City based contemporary artist, Pam Smilow, began writing the creative lifestyle blog “things we love” in an effort to foster a sense of community during times of isolation and reflection. To read more about her and her art, visit her website and check out the essay written by Frank Matheis entitled The Sophisticated Innocence of Pam Smilow.
Blog No. 281: The Secret Inner Life of Dogs, Monika Zgustová When Society Tolerates Evil, Playlist: Music About Boats
A Mother’s Job is Never Done!! HAPPY MOTHER”S DAY to all you wonderful, tireless, kind-hearted mothers out there…Not sure who to attribute this photo to—it was posted on René’ Volpi’s substack.
The Secret Inner Life of Dogs
This one is for all you dog lovers out there (like me).
Have you wondered why your dog is always with the nose to the ground--what could all that sniffing mean to them? Or what they are thinking when they give you that stare?...Do they understand and have a sense of time? Do they get bored?
Alexandra Horowitz, author of new book The Secret Inner Life of Dogs as well as multiple other books on the subject answers those questions and many more. As Senior Research Fellow and Adjunct Associate Professor and director of the Horowitz Dog Cognition Lab at Barnard College, she has dedicated her life to the study of animal cognition and most specifically about dogs.
Oprah Winfrey sat down with Alexandra Horowitz and what follows is their very informative just short of an hour conversation--everything you wanted to know and more.
Other books by Alexandra Horowitz
When Society Tolerates Evil by Monika Zgustova
Author, Journalist and Translator Monika Zgustová
Monika Zgustova was one of my closest friends when I lived in Barcelona from 1980-1985. I've stayed in touch with her over all these years although as of late she doesn't travel anymore to the States for obvious reasons...
Originally from Czechoslovakia, her family fled Prague when she was a teenager when the Russians invaded and she and her family ended up in the States, where her father taught linquistics at the University of Illinois Champagne-Urbana (he spoke 16 languages, Monika speaks six). I have watched Monika's career blossom over the years--as the author of many successful fiction and nonfiction books, a translator of prominent Czech and Russian writers into Spanish and Catalan, including such luminaries as Václav Havel, Milan Kundera, and Fyodor Dostoyevsky and she even wrote the Catalan Russian dictionary!
Monika has lived in Barcelona for many years now and regularly contributes articles and editorials in Spain's El País and La Vanguardia newspapers, The Nation and CounterPunch in the United States and Lidové Noviny in the Czech Republic. She is one of the most intelligent people I know and it is my honor to include this article, featured in El País and Counterpunch, where she reflects on tyranny, in my substack newsletter:
"In communist Prague, my father was repeatedly arrested, imprisoned, and tortured for his dissident activities. My mother suffered, and in her attempts to halt that downward spiral, she made small gestures to appease the authorities. Her concessions consisted of the fact that, like most people, during communist holidays—the anniversary of the Russian Revolution, Labor Day, and others—she would place small Czechoslovak and Soviet flags in the windows of our Prague apartment and let them fly together, even though doing so was not strictly mandatory, but was well-regarded by the regime.
My parents are an example of the two attitudes displayed by citizens whose country becomes authoritarian, dictatorial, or totalitarian: a small group of people rebels and maintains its opposition to the regime despite the circumstances (which may include frequent interrogations, threats, imprisonment, and torture, as in my father’s case). The vast majority of citizens, however, choose to make concessions to the regime (like my mother), or to engage in full-fledged collaboration. .
During my student years in the United States, where my parents eventually fled with their teenage children thanks above all to my mother’s courage, I spent a few months in Argentina, which at that time was under military rule. There, too, I observed behavior similar to the totalitarianism of my childhood. I saw a resigned society, because dissidents were in prison or in exile. In Buenos Aires, people rarely went out; the cafés were almost empty. People had little money and much fear. However, some people from various professional backgrounds told me that at first they had welcomed the military because, after years of guerrilla warfare, they wanted peace and security. And I asked them if it was possible to enjoy peace under a regime that controlled and mistreated society. .
When the Argentine junta eventually expelled me from the country for having questioned a military officer’s statement at a meeting of interpreters for the World Cup, where I was supposed to work, I was glad because, like any society under a dictatorship, Argentina was a blind and self-absorbed community that turned a deaf ear to the reality of lives violated and tormented. .
Years later, I interviewed several women in Moscow who had been sentenced to the gulag during Stalin’s time. Those women told me that even in the labor camps—that microcosm of a society under tyranny—those two essential attitudes existed: that of rebelling and that of complying. Some women stood up to the guards and the camp leaders despite the consequences their defiance might bring: if not instant death, then harsh punishment. Other women, the majority, in their search for peace, remained obedient. Strangely enough, a higher number of daring women survived the gulag compared to the pusillanimous prisoners because the guards laughed at their fear, relished their panic, and punished the terrified women with a sadistic glee. .
Something similar also occurred in the Nazi concentration camps. The Czech journalist Milena Jesenská, a steadfast, intrepid woman who remained inwardly free even as a prisoner, used to rebel through acts of disobedience to the rules: she arrived late for roll calls at the Ravensbrück camp, brought wildflowers into the office where she worked, sent clandestine messages to other prisoners, and jotted down notes for her planned book on tyranny. Strangely, the guards rarely called her out on it. What was the reason? The explanation is simple: they knew that the Czech prisoner did not fear them. The other prisoners in her Ravensbrück barrack adored Milena for her attitude, but most of them were unable to imitate her: fear of the consequences overwhelmed them. One of the few women who gradually learned Milena’s fearlessness was her best friend Margarete Buber-Neumann, who survived imprisonment in Stalin’s gulag and another in Ravensbrück and was able to tell future generations how an attitude that tolerates tyranny gives wings to the oppressor. .
But let’s return to Russia, this time to contemporary Russia, the one that has Putin as its president and Stalin as its deity. Three decades ago, there were plans in Siberia to open museums dedicated to the gulag. Recently, the Russian-American journalist Masha Gessen traveled there to investigate this topic. Her guide was Inna Gribanova, a former enthusiast of historical memory. “However,” Gessen told me, “over the past few decades, Inna has become a different person: she didn’t found any museum; on the contrary, she now claims that the testimonies of the gulag exaggerated their horrific experiences. And to top it all off, she has become a Putin voter.” “How do you explain this?” I asked in astonishment. “She got tired of belonging to the minority,” Masha replied."
In the United States, where I used to travel for work several times a year over the past three decades and where I’ve stopped going since Trump’s second term began, part of society doesn’t want to acknowledge what’s happening. When I ask my American friends why, aside from the No More Kings protests, there are few reactions to the gradual destruction of democracy, they reply: “We don’t act because we’re numb." "Numb?” “Yes, from so much sudden change.” Political science professors at American universities tell me: “This can’t last.” I am stunned: so while armed troops control the streets and airports, while raids are carried out on the homes of immigrants and political opponents, and the number of paramilitary groups loyal to a single man grows, a large part of American society repeats with resignation: “This will pass; this cannot last.”
When in 1990 the opponent of communist totalitarianism, Václav Havel, was elected president of democratic Czechoslovakia (and later the Czech Republic), in his speeches he praised the acts of resistance against the regime carried out by “powerless” individuals and blamed Czech society, which through its passivity and complacency had allowed forty years of tyranny. A state of inaction similar to the one Havel referred to has taken hold of the United States. But when a society grows accustomed to the violation of laws and goes about its daily tasks without reflection, as if everything were normal, that’s the beginning of the end. .
A few weeks ago, I was struck by the words I read in The Guardian in an article by the writer Colm Tóibin, who lives in New York: “I learned first hand not only what evil is like but how evil is tolerated. What is strange about being in America in the time of Trump is how ordinary it is, how what was unimaginable just over a year ago is suddenly, shockingly no longer a surprise.” .
Authoritarian politicians are relying on the apathy of society. Backed by tech moguls, they encourage people to spend long hours scrolling and listening to loud music through headphones. They aim to make the society deaf, blind, and submissive while they, the autocrats, take over the world. .
That is why, instead of closing their eyes and letting themselves be deafened, societies in danger of falling under autocracy should imagine what life would be like in five or ten years if they allowed authoritarianism to take hold. The horror they would see should compel each individual to make every possible effort to prevent that imagined future from becoming reality. .
Playlist:
Music about Boats
Pam Smilow. The Tropics, mixed media on canvas. 50” x 80” approx.
Boats are heading back into the water all over Maine, harbormasters are back at work, and finally spring is approaching (very gingerly I might add...). Thought I would include a playlist of songs related to boats, harbors and the sea...
David Gray Sail Away
Susan McKeown and Chanting House Albatross
Grand Funk Railroad I'm Your Captain
Mazzy Star. Quiet, The Winter Harbor
Tom DiMenna sings Gordon Lightfoot's The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald
Crosby Stills & Nash Southern Cross and
Wooden Ships
Otis Redding, Sitting on the Dock of the Bay
Stanley Samuelsen The Water is Wide
Pam Smilow. The Dock of the Bay, mixed media on canvas, 50” x 80”
Painting of the Week
Charity of the Week:
ACLU
Book of the Week
About The Author
New York City based contemporary artist, Pam Smilow, began writing the creative lifestyle blog “things we love” in an effort to foster a sense of community during times of isolation and reflection. To read more about her and her art, visit her website and check out the essay written by Frank Matheis entitled The Sophisticated Innocence of Pam Smilow.
Blog No. 280: Such an Uplifting Story, Sunshine Cobb Ceramics, Spring Tortellini Sou
Kwa Mbae Boy
Courtesy Michael Sellers
I follow Michael Sellers on Substack. His newsletter Deeper Look with Michael Sellers is informative and always worth the read. Sellers is a kind of renaissance man, having worked across many fields as a filmmaker, non-fiction author of many books and as a CIA agent for ten years operating in Eastern Europe, Africa, Moscow, and the Philippines. I was initially drawn to his substack by his reporting on Russia and the relationship between our president and Putin.
One of his latest posts really uplifted me to the point that I asked his permission to include it in my blog here. It is long and I have taken the liberty of editing it a bit but stick with it until the music at the end--it might just restore a little bit of your faith in people...
Here is the story that Seller's Kenyan wife Abby recounted to him--something that took place locally in her area of Kenya, that recently went viral on TikTok. It is a beautiful story, all about the innocence of a little boy and the wonders of community. I hope it uplifts you, as it did us.
THE KWA MBAE BOY
excerpted from Substack's Deeper Look by Michael Sellers
"It begins on a quiet afternoon in rural Meru. Rural Kenya is not jungles, by the way. It’s savannah and farmlands — driving into the countryside there reminds me of driving through the two land blacktops of Alabama where I grew up — farms on either side of the, occasional pine forests, cows, yes lots of cows.
A small boy stands by the roadside. A stranger asks for directions. The boy answers with absolute seriousness, pointing, gesturing, explaining with the confidence of someone who knows exactly where he is and exactly how the world around him is arranged.
Here’s the video.
(It’s a Tiktok embed — I hope it plays here for everyone.)*
His name is Musa Kihara, though by now much of Kenya knows him simply as the “Kwa Mbae” boy.
The clip is simple. That is part of its magic. Nothing dramatic happens. No one planned it. No one staged it. A boy is asked for directions, and he does his best.
“Unajua kwa Mbae?”
“Do you know Mbae’s place?”
You don’t have to speak Swahili to understand the charm of it, but the words help.
“Hapo, hapo, unaona ukifika hapo kwa Mbae, alafu hapo kwa akina Monda. Unajua hio side ya uncle Mureithi, hapo katikati, nitakuonyesha.”
In English:
“Over there, over there. When you reach Mbae’s place, then near the Mondas’ place. You know the side where Uncle Mureithi is? Right in between there — I’ll show you.”
That is not Google Maps. That is Kenya Maps. And Kenyans recognized themselves in the way the little boy gave directions.
It is a way of giving directions rooted not in street signs but in people, homes, families, memory, and local knowledge. You go past Mbae’s place. Then near the Mondas. Then toward Uncle Mureithi’s side. Somewhere in between, the boy will show you.
It is funny because it is so specific and so familiar—and here he is, only five, but with all that community knowledge on display. It is touching because he is so small and yet so assured. And it is memorable because, without meaning to, this little boy captured something larger than himself.
Social media picked it up almost instantly. Musa’s voice became a TikTok sound. The phrase spread. People laughed. They remixed it. They repeated it. “Kwa Mbae” became one of those national in-jokes that needs almost no explanation once it takes hold.
But then something deeper happened.
Kenyans began asking: who is this boy?
Not as a slogan. Not as a meme. As a child.
People noticed what he was wearing. The torn pants. The muddy shoes. The visible signs that life had not been easy. And instead of just laughing and moving on, people wanted to know more.
TikTokers began going to his village. They found Musa. They brought him clothes and shoes. They met his family. And then the story opened up.
Musa’s family, it turned out, was carrying a heavy burden. His brother was in the hospital with a serious illness, reported as throat cancer. His father was also sick and in the hospital. His mother was trying to hold everything together.
Here’s the brother in hospital, with a Tiktoker.
And this is where the story becomes something more than a viral clip.
In another country, perhaps, the boy might have become a joke for a day. A meme, a sound, a few million views, then gone. But in Kenya, the laughter turned into concern. Concern turned into visits. Visits turned into donations. Donations turned into a movement.
The Gen Z overlay matters here, because Kenya’s Gen Z knows how to move a story. They know how to turn a clip into a campaign, a phrase into a gathering point, a tender public moment into real-world action.
And they did.
What followed was not a government program. It was not a corporate campaign. It was not an NGO rollout. It was people. Ordinary people. Young people. TikTokers. Well-wishers. Neighbors. Strangers. Kenyans who saw a boy by the roadside and decided, almost as one, that he belonged to them.
Money was raised. Clothes were bought. Medical bills were addressed. Promises of longer-term help began to come in. People sang. People danced. People traveled. People gave.
...Thousands of people traveled to Musa’s home area. Reports put the crowd at easily more than 20,000. Whatever the final number, the images tell the story: a huge gathering, music, celebration, people surrounding this little boy who had done nothing more than help a stranger find the way.
A child who began the week standing by a roadside was now being welcomed like a small national hero.
Not because he was powerful. Not because he was famous in the ordinary sense. Not because he had performed or demanded anything.
Because he was helpful. Because he was innocent. Because he was charming. Because people saw him and recognized something good.
And maybe that is why the story has stayed with me.
At a time when so much public life feels poisoned, Musa’s story feels like a reminder from somewhere else — or maybe from some older part of ourselves — that people are still capable of sudden generosity. Still capable of affection. Still capable of being united by something other than anger.
A young child provided the spark. Kenya provided the answer.
And somewhere in that simple question — “Unajua kwa Mbae?” — there is more than a request for directions. There is a map of another kind: toward community, toward tenderness, toward the possibility that people can still see one another and respond with love.
I haven’t done justice to the story. I know that.
But maybe the videos will do what words can’t. The music, the laughter, the crowd, the little boy pointing down the road — all of it says something I needed to hear.
There is still goodness out there.
This week, for me, it came from Kenya.
Monika Zgustova Writer, Translator, Journalist
Sunshine Cobb’s ceramics are raw, the shapes are beautiful and well thought out, the glazes are matte and hit the perfect tone of color—just the way I like it. She is not afraid to show her process and both her wheel and hand built pieces strike the right note of technical ability but without the pursuit of tight perfection…
Based in Helena, Montana, Sunshine has been active in the ceramics world for decades. She has a thriving studio practice, wrote two of the definitive books in the field and gives workshops across the country.
Here are some more examples of her work
To see more of her work, check out her instagram.
Spring Tortellini Soup
Spring Tortellini Soup With Peas and Asparagus, Courtesy Amelia Rampe, a NYC-based food stylist, food writer & recipe developer.Here also is the link to her substack.
INGREDIENTS:
4 medium scallions or spring onions
4 cloves garlic
10 cups homemade chicken stockor store-bought low-sodium chicken or vegetable broth
1 (1-ounce or larger) Parmesan cheese rind (the larger the rind, the bigger the flavor)
1 large sprig fresh parsley
1 pound asparagus
1/2 teaspoon kosher salt, plus more as needed
1/4 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper, plus more as needed
1 cup frozen peas
1 (12 to 14-ounce) package fresh or frozen cheese tortellini
SERVING OPTIONS:
* Basil pesto
* Pea leaves
* Parmesan cheese
* Lemon wedges
INSTRUCTIONS
1. Chop off the whites of 4 medium scallions or spring onions (reserve the greens for another use or slice and use for garnish). Crush 4 garlic cloves with the flat of your knife. Place both in a large pot or Dutch oven. Add 10 cups stock or broth, 1 Parmesan rind, and 1 large fresh parsley sprig.
2. Cover and bring to a simmer over medium heat. Uncover and simmer until the flavors meld, 30 to 35 minutes. Meanwhile, trim off the woody ends of the asparagus, then cut crosswise into 1 to 2-inch pieces.
3. Using a slotted spoon, remove the scallions, garlic, Parmesan rind, and parsley and discard. Add 1/2 teaspoon kosher salt and 1/4 teaspoon black pepper to the broth. Taste and season with more salt and pepper as needed.
4. Bring the broth back to a boil. Add 1 package tortellini and cook according to package instructions. About 2 minutes before the pasta is cooked, add the asparagus and 1 cup frozen peas. Simmer until the vegetables are bright green and crisp-tender, 2 to 3 minutes.
5. Remove from the heat. Serve hot with a small dollop of pesto, a garnish of pea leaves, shaved Parmesan cheese, and lemon wedges if desired.
Products of the Week for Mother's Day
Charity of the Week:
ACLU
Book of the Week
About The Author
New York City based contemporary artist, Pam Smilow, began writing the creative lifestyle blog “things we love” in an effort to foster a sense of community during times of isolation and reflection. To read more about her and her art, visit her website and check out the essay written by Frank Matheis entitled The Sophisticated Innocence of Pam Smilow.
Blog No. 279: Poem by Meg Falley, Keith Haring, Interview with Katherine LaNasa, Nurse Dana
Tornado
by Megan Falley
This is an absolutely beautiful poem about grief. Maybe one of the best I have read on losing someone.
In 2025 Megan Falley lost the love of her life poet Andrea Gibson.
TORNADO
by Megan Falley
I admit, you drove me crazy.
The careless way you’d salt a tomato,
no napkin or plate beneath it.
Just right over the floor,
your summer snow, trusting
someone else would sweep it.
And you never took your boots off.
Only ever used half a stevia packet.
The rest would collect in the crevices
of car doors, divots no vacuum could reach.
There was nothing you couldn’t fix
with duct tape, or shoelaces
stolen from other people’s shoes.
And you broke everything
you borrowed. All those stains
you called heart-shaped.
Plus you lost my heirlooms.
Not because you didn’t care,
but because you moved so fast,
like maybe you always knew
you would leave too soon—
so why waste a minute
screwing the cap back on
the pickle jar? Do you remember
how many times you thought
something was stolen?
That we’d been invaded?
Because you couldn’t wait
that extra breath to look.
There is a wonderful film about their life entitled Come See Me in the Good Light which is so worth watching if you haven't seen it already. And this New York Times interview with Megan Falley from the Modern Love section of the newspaper.
Keith Haring at the Brant Foundation
I am never at a loss for cultural things to do in Maine. There is a tradition here of opera houses in many of the small towns (although the term opera is used loosely--they are more gathering spots for cultural events and general town meetings). Between great independent films, first class concerts, open mics, poetry readings, theater, museums, I could be busy every day and night.
But there truly isn't any place like New York City, where I was last week, just for the sheer quantity of exciting choices. And I took advantage of that and packed it in during the six days I was there...I shared some of that in last week's newsletter but below are some of the images from a Keith Haring show I saw at The Brant Foundation on 6th Street in the East Village. The building itself is stunning and a perfect place to see art. (I still remember the Basquiat show there several years ago). Here are some of Haring's work on display that stood out to me:
Keith Haring at the Brant Foundation in NYC
Interview with actress Katherine LaNasa
I have always had a special place in my heart for nurses. Nurses and teachers. As Mr. Rogers said, the helpers…And hospital shows have always fascinated me, although I shut my eyes a lot. So no surprise that I LOVE The Pitt. The characters are very well developed and my favorite is Nurse Dana, the charge nurse, played brilliantly by Katherine LaNasa.
I am done binge watching the second series (can't wait for the third, out most likely in January 2027), so I have been fishing around for some behind the scenes videos about the show and came across this interview with Katherine LaNasa on the podcast Q with Tom Power.
I love this woman. Self described as the "pretty girl that was weird", she got a late start to acting and her approach to the craft is intuitive (much like how I approach painting). "I am not a cerebral actor--I kind of squint at it." I can relate...Her conversation is frank, open, even when she talks about her experience with breast cancer and the humbling that took place with her diagnosis. Nurse Dana is for her a love letter to all the people who treated her kindly during that time.
Katherine La Nasa has some important lessons to teach us: she believes it is never too late to stop growing, to perservere, know that life contains its hills and valleys, and to believe in yourself. As beautiful as she is as Nurse Dana, I take away from this interview (and her time on Stephen Colbert) that she is equally beautiful in life.
Why am I not surprised that the Tom Power podcast and the interviewer Garvia Bailey are Canadians...
Products of the Week
Charity of the Week:
ACLU
Book of the Week
About The Author
New York City based contemporary artist, Pam Smilow, began writing the creative lifestyle blog “things we love” in an effort to foster a sense of community during times of isolation and reflection. To read more about her and her art, visit her website and check out the essay written by Frank Matheis entitled The Sophisticated Innocence of Pam Smilow.
Blog No. 278: Amy Goodman Documentary Steal This Story, Please!, The Whitney Biennial 2026, The Tailor Bird and Other Nest Weavers
Amy Goodman,
Steal This Story, Please!
Amy Goodman, courtesy Democracy Now and Amy Goodman
Tireless, intrepid, gutsy, moral, unrelenting...these are words that come to mind when I think about journalist (and national treasure) Amy Goodman, founder of the independent media company Democracy Now.
Goodman has been in the trenches her whole life, growing up in a political family, always eager to spotlight the underdog and let the voices of the people silenced by corporate media be heard. In honor of her commitment, unbeholden to corporate America, Directors Carl Deal and Tina Lessin have produced a documentary entitled Steal This Story, Please! which is as much a profile of this incredible individual as well as a portrait of the news organization she created: Democracy Now. The filmmakers follow her into war zones, protest marches, world political conferences, and corporate boardrooms, overseas and at home, where she relentlessly calls out the powers that be, bearing witness fearlessly, broadening the spotlight to include real life people whose voices have been too often ignored by mainstream media. "Independent media is the oxygen of a democracy...It is critical that we expose what is done in our name."
Beginning first as a radio show in 1996, Democracy Now soon expanded the radio show into television. It is now one of the leading U.S.-based independent news broadcasts in the world, produced daily as an hour long international news program. Look for it and if you don't find it on radio or TV, ask for it from your local stations. Goodman goes where others don't. Her information and footage is often quoted in other news organizations who no longer have boots on the ground due to profit margins...
Don't miss the documentary--hopefully coming soon to a theatre near you and catch the daily news broadcast to hear news you won't get anywhere else. On the east coast it airs live at 8am...and is available online too.
The Whitney Biennial
I went to the Whitney Biennial today and was surprised that there was so much art that I found interesting this year, which has not been the case in many previous years. It is a show that is always controversial--and you will always find so many varying opinions good and bad. Here is the review in The New Yorker and another from the New York Times. I am going to share with you some artists whose work held my interest:
Sula Bemurdez-Silverman, born 1993 NYC
Sula Bermurdez-Silverman, born 1993 NYC
Oswaldo Maciá, born Cartagena de Indias, Columbia, lives in Santa Fe, NM and London
Taína H. Cruz, born in NYC, lives in New Haven, Connecticut
The Tailor Bird and other Nest Weavers
Have you ever really looked at a bird nest and realized the engineering that goes into its construction. The main goal for a bird is to create a place safe from predators and well camouflaged in order to protect its babies. Some birds create very elaborate structures and one example of that is the tailorbird, who actually sews its nest using cotton lint, plant fibers, and silk from cocoons and spider webs. Notoriously difficult to study because they are tiny and very well camouflaged, thanks to the Museum of Natural History we have a pretty good idea of how these tailorbirds build their nests:
"The female tailorbird carefully chooses a broad, strong, supple leaf which can provide good structural support once folded...
A leaf in the middle of thick foliage is usually chosen to avoid the nest being seen, and at the end of a branch to reduce the possibility of a predator entering the nest.
The female wraps the leaf around herself to make sure it is the right size. If it isn’t, she adds another one or two leaves.
She then uses her feet to pull the leaf together and pierces a series of miniscule holes along the leaf’s edge, using her long, slender beak, which is shaped like a needle. The holes are so tiny that the leaf holds its shape, and it doesn’t go brown.
The female threads plant fibres, such as cotton or lint, or silk from insects, such as cobwebs or caterpillar cocoons, through the holes."
To explore other birds and their incredible nests, click here
Illustration courtesy RB Davis
Painting of the Week
Pam Smilow. Flower Power Series: Blue Bird. mixed media on paper. $1500
Charity of the Week:
ACLU
Book of the Week
About The Author
New York City based contemporary artist, Pam Smilow, began writing the creative lifestyle blog “things we love” in an effort to foster a sense of community during times of isolation and reflection. To read more about her and her art, visit her website and check out the essay written by Frank Matheis entitled The Sophisticated Innocence of Pam Smilow.
Blog No. 277: The Portland Museum, We Share the Same Sky Podcast, Poem by Hannah Stephenson
The Portland Museum of Art
Portland Museum of Art, Maine
I planned an outing to the big city (Portland, Maine) this past week with my friend Anne, a dear dear friend who I have known for a lifetime but only met a year and a half ago. It was on the occasion of her 70th birthday.
We had the idea of going to the Portland Museum of Art and a lunch at one of her favorite restaurants in Portland, The Honey Paw.
I was so pleasantly surprised about the Portland Museum. In fact, I don’t think I have ever had a bad visit there. The curators are good at choosing!
There were so many pieces of art I loved that I can only write about a few, starting with the special photography show Ming Smith: Jazz Requiem—Notations in Blue. I hadn’t heard of this artist before but at 78 she is finally getting some of the recognition she deserves for her innovative photos, often of the jazz world but not restricted to that, sometimes combining drawing and interesting aspects of light. “Her photographs pulse with the same energy and spontaneity that define jazz, reflecting her deep admiration for the music and its leading figures, whom she photographed with intimacy and respect.”
Photo courtesy Ming Smith
Handpainted photograph Courtesy Ming Smith
Then I went straight up to the fourth floor and visited my old friends, the raw animal sculptures of Bernard Langlais. Made from found objects, mostly old blocks of wood, Langlais shares his whimsy and pure joy in these raw, strong representations of birds and other living things. And on the same floor going down the steps are the paper maché birds of artist Christopher Patch, featuring 37 distinct species. Colorful, playful, this collection is a perfect complement to Langlais' work...
The museum is a nice size with lots more to see (and write about--maybe next time). I will mention that the shop is also a great place to buy unique gifts...
Photo Courtesy Christopher Patch
We Share the Same Sky Podcast
Down the rabbit hole! Researching Özlem Cekic, the Danish Muslim parliament member from last week’s blog, it lead me first to hear about the head Danish Rabbi Bent Melchior, a fascinating figure unto himself and then onto Hana Dubova, the subject of Rachael Cerrotti’s outstanding podcast We Share The Same Sky (also a book with the same title). The seven episode podcast chronicles Rachael’s attempt to know her grandmother in a deeper way by retracing her steps as a holocaust survivor, (based on writings her grandmother left as a guide). The story began with Hana Dubova's birth in Kolín, Czechoslovakia and encompassed her long journey through multiple countries in her quest for freedom from the Nazis during World War II and eventually ended up emigrating to the United States after the war. Throughout the podcast Cerrotti weaves the story of her own life, living in the places of meaning to her grandmother and interacting with future generations of people her grandmother knew who helped save her. This intimate story transcends the personal to become living universal history and shows us the indomitable human spirit and that kindness can reverberate over time and through many generations.
Cerrotti’s podcast really touched me in a deep way, partly because of my own family’s history of the Nazis, her connection to Denmark and the losses she endured during her own life.
If you would like to know more, here is a talk by Cerrotti on the occasion of her book publication We Share the Same Sky at the Jewish Museum. Very worth the listen!
Hannah Stephenson Poem
Pam Smilow Black Tree. 60” x 22”. mixed media on paper. $4000
My friend and yoga teacher Molly always starts her sessions with some words of wisdom, some different kinds of breathing exercises and often a poem. As I am a big lover of trees, this one by Hannah Stephenson really struck me.
ANCIENT LANGUAGE
by Hannah Stephenson
If you stand at the edge of the forest
and stare into it
every tree at the edge will blow a little extra
oxygen toward you
It has been proven
Leaves have admitted it
The pines I have known
have been especially candid
one said
that all breath in this world
is roped together
that breathing is
the most ancient language
Pam Smilow Turquoise Tree 60” x 22”. mixed media on paper
Painting of the Week
Pam Smilow. mixed media on canvas 46” x 76” $8500
Charity of the Week:
ACLU
Book of the Week
About The Author
New York City based contemporary artist, Pam Smilow, began writing the creative lifestyle blog “things we love” in an effort to foster a sense of community during times of isolation and reflection. To read more about her and her art, visit her website and check out the essay written by Frank Matheis entitled The Sophisticated Innocence of Pam Smilow.
Blog No. 276: The New Yorker Documentary, Özlem Cekic: Building Bridges, Mary Oliver Poem
The New Yorker Documentary
Cover courtesy Maira Kalman and The New Yorker
The New Yorker turned 100 last year and for that occasion Marshall Curry produced and directed a documentary that is now currently available on Netflix. It is a beautiful portrait of my favorite magazine and it contains answers to every question one might ever have about the inner workings of this iconic magazine. If you ever wondered how they choose their famous cartoons and magazine covers, or are curious about the personalities of Editor David Remnick and his staff, this film is for you.
Curry takes us through their back offices where we meet and get an intimate look at all the main players—the movie critic, the art critic, the art director, the various section editors, etc. etc. down to the multitude of meticulous fact checkers whom the magazine is known to employ. The film covers the history of the publication and gives a glimpse of the personalities of the past editors and reminds us of some of the groundbreaking articles that they dared publish. James Baldwin's powerful essay
Letter from a Region of My Mind which became the basis of his book The Fire Next Time was first published here, as was a John Hersey full magazine article in 1946 on the bombing of Hiroshima, a topic that other magazines stayed far away from. Truman Capote published his famous In Cold Blood in serial form over four issues in The New Yorker and broke ground by introducing readers to a new form of nonfiction writing. Indeed, so many of the most influential and notable writers of the 20th and 21st Centuries have graced the pages of The New Yorker with their essays, fiction, poetry, etc.
As a long time reader, I came away with an even more enthusiastic and renewed appreciation for the magazine. I highly recommend the film and the magazine!
Below are some of my favorite covers:
Cover courtesy Art Spiegelman and The New Yorker
Cover courtesy Maira Kalman and The New Yorker
Cover courtesy Maira Kalman and The New Yorker
Özlem Cekic, Bridge Builder
Özlem Cekic is a bridge builder. She is also the first Muslim person to enter the Danish Parliament between the years of 2007 and 2016. Although we think of Danes as being very progressive, there is a racist element that exists there too and she encountered it, often receiving a lot of hate mail which she promptly threw away. Until one day when one of her colleagues suggested “what if you answered and said you would like to meet.” She picked out one guy who was very prolific in his correspondence to her and invited him to sit down over coffee. Which led to her Ted Talk “Why I Have Coffee with People Who Send Me Hate Mail This attitude of hers opened up hearts and minds. Click here to find out more of the details.
To leave you with one of her quotes: "You can't make peace with your friends. You have to make peace with your enemies."
Mary Oliver Poem
Spring
Spring
by Mary Oliver
Somewhere
a black bear
has just risen from sleep
and is staring
down the mountain.
All night
in the brisk and shallow restlessness
of early spring
I think of her,
her four black fists
flicking the gravel,
her tongue
like a red fire
touching the grass,
the cold water.
There is only one question:
how to love this world.
I think of her
rising
like a black and leafy ledge
to sharpen her claws against
the silence
of the trees.
Whatever else
my life is
with its poems
and its music
and its glass cities,
it is also this dazzling darkness
coming
down the mountain,
breathing and tasting;
all day I think of her—
her white teeth,
her wordlessness,
her perfect love.
Painting of the Week
Pam Smilow. mixed media on paper. 30” x 22”. $1500. Also available as a giclee print $750
Charity of the Week:
ACLU
Book of the Week
About The Author
New York City based contemporary artist, Pam Smilow, began writing the creative lifestyle blog “things we love” in an effort to foster a sense of community during times of isolation and reflection. To read more about her and her art, visit her website and check out the essay written by Frank Matheis entitled The Sophisticated Innocence of Pam Smilow.
Blog No. 275: Fashion Designer Max Alexander, Phone Addiction And What To Do About It, Trude's Flourless Orange Cake Revisited
Max Alexander: Fashion Prodigy
How many 10 year olds have shown their fashion collection in Paris during Fashion week? If you don’t believe in past lives, this might just change your mind.
At the age of four, Max Alexander announced to his family that he was a dress maker and began to create amazing clothing—-designing, draping and sewing creations worthy of any top designer. Just this month, Max made history as the youngest designer to show at Paris Fashion Week, featuring his collection of sustainable clothing shown here in this YouTube video and an Instagram post.
To see his entire runway show inspired by flowers and sustainable materials, crafted from deadstock, surplus, recycled and biodegradable materials, inspired by flowers and sustainable materials. 90% of his collection was crafted from deadstock, surplus, recycled and biodegradable materials.
click here.
Phone Addiction: What To Do About It
If you are anything like me, we feel we cannot live without our phones. We get mad at ourselves for wasting so much time scrolling, freak out when we forget where we put it, and feel totally naked without it…Simply put, we are addicted big time to these little devices and feel we cannot live without them, even for minutes…46 percent of Americans say they are addicted and look at their phones for an average of 186 times a day! For more detailed statistics on phone usage,
click here.
Recent studies and the outcome from this week’s Meta/Google court case have made us realize that this addiction is not really our fault. “The systems running on your phone were designed by behavioral scientists and engineers specifically to be as hard to put down as possible.” Much like the tobacco industry that knowingly sold a harmful product that was manufactured for maximum addiction, the tech industry has done the same.
This week they were actually held accountable, in a case that has serious and wide ramifications. My good friend, tech journalist Jennifer Jolly of USA Today and the Today Show (and her own site, Techish) has been covering the California social media court case, one that normally would have gotten much more attention (if there wasn’t so much madness going on in the news these days).A California jury found that Meta and Google's YouTube were to blame for the depression and anxiety of a woman who compulsively used social media as a small child, awarding her $6 million in a rare verdict holding Silicon Valley accountable for its role in fueling a youth mental health crisis. And it seems that this case is just the first of many…
But it is not all bad news—there might be some things we can do to at least partially cure ourselves: Researchers at Heidelberg University and the University of Cologne have conducted a study—taking 25 young adults and restricting their cell phone use for 72 hours. They ran MRI scans on them before and after and found that just three days (72-hours) produced measurable differences in brain regions linked to reward processing and impulse control…showing that just that short period of time without a smartphone can significantly alter brain activity, similar to breaking an addiction.
So folks, for starters: let’s try to put down our phones more often, and leave them outside of the bedroom. In Jennifer’s Techish newsletter this week, she talks about how going back to an old fashioned alarm clock cut her screen time dramatically and led to an almost instant boost in her energy and creativity. I’m going to find a new alarm clock too and have a good old book on my night table in case I wake up, as I often do, in the middle of the night…Being conscious is the first step towards a cure and I am even trying to figure out a time to go for those three days cold turkey…
Jennifer Jolly is a great source for anything tech-ish—not so much gadgets or Silicon Valley, but as a nationally syndicated tech-life columnist and host for USA Today and a regular contributor to The Today Show, CNN, HLN, Time, Yahoo! and ABC among other media outlets. You can read her very informative
newsletter Techish on substack and listen to her podcast Techishly Jenn on Apple, or wherever you get your podcasts.
OK GO Band
With Passover coming up, I thought I would republish the most delicious Passover friendly Orange Cake (in memory of Trude Victor). Incorporating the whole orange, rind and all, you don't have to be Jewish to love it.
Trude Victor’s Orange Cake
INGREDIENTS:
2 large navel oranges
6 eggs
1 1/2 cups grated almonds
1 cup sugar
1 tsp. baking powder
pinch salt
INSTRUCTIONS:
Boil oranges-organic would be good- in water to cover for 30 minutes or so. I would let it cool for a while, and then process the whole oranges rind included in a food processor
Beat the whole eggs and then add the rest of the ingredients.
Bake in a greased form (I use a round springform- but I don't think you have to) for 400 degrees for one hour (that might be a bit long)
Let it cool- She served it with confectionary sugar on top.
For a slight variation on this same recipe, check out RecipeTinEats with cook Nagi Maehashi on instagram.
Painting of the Week
Pam Smilow. Mandala Series: Plaid Yellow Bird 60” x 42”. mixed media on canvas. $1500
Charity of the Week:
ACLU
Book of the Week
About The Author
New York City based contemporary artist, Pam Smilow, began writing the creative lifestyle blog “things we love” in an effort to foster a sense of community during times of isolation and reflection. To read more about her and her art, visit her website and check out the essay written by Frank Matheis entitled The Sophisticated Innocence of Pam Smilow.
The underlined words and many of the images in the newsletter are linked to more in depth information
Blog No. 274: Mr. Nobody Against Putin Documentary, The Poster I Dreamed Of, Ok Go Band (Copy)
I hate to lecture but please please please contact five friends and make sure you all show up for the nationwide No Kings Protest on Saturday March 28th (www.nokings.org to find an event near you). We are the last line of defense to save our democracy and we need to come out IN FORCE with a showing bigger than ever. Please don’t just worry and complain, even if you have never come to a protest… JUST SHOW UP WITH FRIENDS. It might be Now or Never…
Mr. Nobody
Against Putin
I love documentaries. I have my 8th grade social studies teacher, Mr. Green, to thank for introducing so many of us at Byram Hills High School to the world of film. It was one of his passions and like any good teacher, he conveyed that passion to his students and it became contagious. Thank you again Mr. Green, if you are reading this and for being a subscriber to` my substack, and for the A+ grade you actually gave me a while back on it (unsolicited)...
Mr. Nobody Against Putin won the Academy Award for best documentary this year and I think it was well deserved! It is the story of a school in the very polluted town of Karabash, located in the middle of nowhere in Russia, (life expectancy 38 because of the pollution from the copper mines there), and the kindness and passion of one single quirky very popular teacher, Pasha Talankin, a videographer in the school who was in charge of organizing and videotaping special school events. The students gravitated to him, hanging out in his classroom and looking to him as a mentor.
As a result of his invasion of Ukraine, Putin began a propaganda campaign in the schools with the aim of indoctrinating kids to eventually become soldiers, similar to Hitler Youth.
To say this didn’t sit well with Pasha Talankin is an understatement. As someone who was assigned to document school events, Talankin went about his job of documenting this indoctrination process, but with the idea of doing something with the material. Mr. Nobody against Putin, a joint venture between this brave teacher and filmmaker David Borenstein, an American living in Denmark, is the result of this process.
Pasha Talankin, with much to lose, is an example for all of us. He stood up to the regime but he refuses to accept the idea that he did anything brave or extraordinary. "No," he told me, "it's just normal.”
The Poster I Dreamed About
Yosano Akiko, Japanese Poet. She wrote the feminist poem that was on the poster: Mountain Moving Day
For years now, I have been remembering a poster I got when I visited my honorary big sister at college in Boston when I was about 13. We did a lot of fun things like buying purple converse sneakers and going to some cool shops in the Cambridge area and one of the things I brought home as a memento from the trip was this cool poster. The image of it has stuck in my mind for all these years and from time to time I have tried to search the internet trying to see it again but to no avail.
Until today!
Upon picking up another poster that I had gotten framed at a local frame shop, I had that other poster on my mind and mentioned it to Darryn, the woman working there.
She had a suggestion—describe it to AI.
So ironic! I had just written about AI recently and how I hated and feared it…
Never say never. I went home to my computer and typed in: “I am trying to find a poster from the 1970s out of an art collective in Boston: blue and green silkscreen with an African woman with a baby on her back.” What came up in literal seconds astounded me:
AI: “What you’re describing actually matches a very specific genre of political screenprints from the 1970s—so you’re on the right track. The details you gave (Boston, silkscreen, blue/green palette, African woman with baby) point strongly toward radical print collectives tied to the Black Arts / liberation movements.
Here are the most likely leads, based on your description:
The first lead was
👉 a Boston Collective known for its political posters—I had a look at their selections but no luck there.
The second choice said:
👉 Chicago Women’s Graphics Collective (important clue)
One documented poster shows
A woman with a baby tied on her back
Done in blue/green silkscreen
Strong political / liberation imagery
lornebair.cdn.bibliopolis.com
Then it said: “That description is almost eerily close to what you said.”
➡️ Even though they were Chicago-based, these posters circulated nationally, including Boston activist spaces."
And voila! Here is the poster I have been searching to see again after 55+ years!” And it just literally took a few seconds…
So I guess I am going to eat my words—AI can come be an incredibly useful tool in many ways. But sadly, us humans always will put things to negative use as well and we don't think of implications when we create something new… and that is exactly why we must regulate and set up rules to control artificial intelligence so it doesn't become the death of us…
And below are a few of my other favorite posters from my childhood:

The “No War Toys” poster is an anonymous or unattributed work from the Vietnam-era anti-war movement rather than something definitively tied to a single known artist.
Artist: Lorraine Schneider
Poster by Ben Shahn for the Gene McCarthy presidential campaign 1968
Not a political poster but one that hung in my room for many years…advertising a Matisse show at the Knoedler Gallery in NYC. The gallery was later convicted of fraud.
OK GO Band
Ok Go is a band, originally out of Chicago but now based in LA, known for their wild videos. I have included my favorite one here-—I featured it in a past blog—but share it again because of its sheer ingenuity and the joy that it brings me…Take a few minutes to watch—it will make your day…And as always, I welcome any reactions you might have about it or anything else in this newsletter...
OK GO: Upside Down & Inside Out
OK GO: Love
A Stone Only Rolls Downhill
Poster&Painting of the Week
Poster by Lorne Bair enlarged…
Pam Smilow. 60” x 42”. mixed media on canvas. $7500
Charity of the Week:
ACLU
Book of the Week
About The Author
New York City based contemporary artist, Pam Smilow, began writing the creative lifestyle blog “things we love” in an effort to foster a sense of community during times of isolation and reflection. To read more about her and her art, visit her website and check out the essay written by Frank Matheis entitled The Sophisticated Innocence of Pam Smilow.
The underlined words and many of the images in the newsletter are linked to more in depth information
Blog No. 273: Jean Michel Basquiat, The Iditarod Trail Race, Poet Leonara Speyer
Jean Michel Basquiat
at the Louisiana Museum
Two great things in one place! One of my most favorite artists Jean Michel Basquiat in a wonderful gem of a museum in Denmark.
Basquiat (1960-1988) is an artist I greatly admire and he is now being featured in the Louisiana Museum located in Humlebæk on the Oresund Sound just north of Copenhagen, Denmark. The museum itself is a work of art--designed by Catalan architect Josep Sert, who also designed a number of beautiful buildings including the Miro Foundation in Barcelona, Spain, the Maeght Foundation in Vence, France and an apartment complex on Roosevelt Island in NYC.
The Danish exhibit Headstrong focuses on Basquiat’s drawings of heads that he created between the years of 1981 and 1983, at the height of his career. During those years, he was already exhibiting worldwide and was the youngest artist to ever take part in the world renowned exhibit Documenta in Kassel, Germany. At 22, he became one of the youngest to be included in the Whitney Biennial in New York. He had come a long way from his roots as a street artist from the lower east side of Manhattan and was very quickly noticed by critics, gallerists and artists alike...
Basquiat’s art often focused on the human body (he was given the book of Gray’s Anatomy as a child) combining text and image to explore such ideas regarding social injustice: wealth vs. poverty, integration vs. segregation, racism, while also drawing on his own inner emotional life and experiences.
Not all of the illustrations here are part of the exhibition at the Louisiana Museum but the focus on the human head has been a prominent image in the artist's vocabulary.
If you can, hurry to see this show before May 17th, 2026.
P.S. Denmark is one of my favorite countries so hit me up for recommendations if you decide to go…
The Iditarod Trail Race
Lance Mackey, champion musher
I have been interested in sled dogs, perhaps first as a result of the statue of Balto in Central Park which I often made a pilgrimage to with my daughter Morgan. She simply loved the story and the statue and the subsequent book and movie about this famous dog. For those who don’t know it, Balto was an Alaskan husky who led a team of sled dogs to Nome Alaska under harrowing weather conditions, carrying crucial medicine to counter a diphtheria outbreak in that town. Their effort ended up saving the day for many inhabitants of Nome.
Joe Redington Sr., known as the “Father of the Iditarod” and Dorothy Page (Chair of the Wasilla-Knik Centennial Committee) founded the Iditarod Trail Race in the 1960s as an attempt to save the dog sled culture and Alaskan huskies, both of which were disappearing rapidly by the introduction of snowmobiles in that state. I have followed the Iditarod from a distance every year about this time…
It seems there are quite a few films that have come out recently about the Iditarod, so I guess I am not the only one who is fascinated by this 1049 mile race through the Arctic wilderness of Alaska. Looking for a documentary to watch today on Netflix, The Great Alone caught my eye. It is the story of Lance Mackey (of the famous Iditarod Mackey family) and the obstacles Lance overcame over the years--from drug addiction, to homelessness and cancer, he came to the conclusion that “life is too short to be screwing up” and set his mind to following in the family footsteps and entering the race...Lance Mackey has an indomitable spirit and just didn't give up, determined to make something of himself and to make his family proud.
This is his story. If you are a dog lover as I am, if you love to see the stark, beautiful Arctic wilderness scenery of our 49th state, or you just want a good survival story, this film is for you...
Poet Leonara Speyer
Leonara Speyer, Poet (1872-1956)
And Was There Not a King
by Leonara Speyer
And was there not a king somewhere who said:
“Back, waves! I do command you!” I forget
His name, beloved, or his race, and yet
I know the story and am comforted.
The tides will rise, are rising—see, they spread
About your robes, your ermine will be wet,
Your velvet shoes, your dear dear feet! Ah let
Me warn you, sir, the waves will reach your head!
My king, my kingly love, how shall we stay
The bold broad lifting of this lovely sea?
What is the master word that we must say
To bring these roaring waters to the knee?
The other king went scampering away!
Will you so do? Or will you drown with me?
This poem is in the public domain. Courtesy Poem-a-Day on March 1, 2026, by the Academy of American Poets.
Painting of the Week
Portrait of my Uncle Stan, who passed away this month at the age of 96. He was my cool uncle, taking me and my sister Judy around New York City in the 1960’s. I remember the crispy chickpeas on the table of Max’s Kansas City and his afghan hounds Niko, Joffrey, and Boris. He will be missed!
Charity of the Week:
ACLU
Book of the Week
About The Author
New York City based contemporary artist, Pam Smilow, began writing the creative lifestyle blog “things we love” in an effort to foster a sense of community during times of isolation and reflection. To read more about her and her art, visit her website and check out the essay written by Frank Matheis entitled The Sophisticated Innocence of Pam Smilow.
Blog No. 272: San Francisco Bay Podcast, Is the Internet Dying?, Music is a Refuge
The underlined words and many of the images in the newsletter are linked to more in depth information
Kate and Mike
Mike Herz
Kate Josephs
I am new to small towns, after living in New York City most of my life. I kind of moved up to mid-coast Maine without realizing I was really making a move and now, as I find myself settled in, I realize here I really am!
Maybe I just got lucky but I seemed to have stumbled on a town and area full of really cool people! So many involved in life in deep ways, enlightened, learned, connected, full of a lifetime of interesting experiences. Maybe Maine just attracts these types and has some kind of special allure...
Today I write about two of these people--my neighbors on Water Street, Mike Herz and Kate Josephs, who split their time between mid-coast Maine and a houseboat (an old trawler) in Point Richmond, California. They are the authors of the newly launched podcast Once Upon A Bay, available on the typical podcast platforms: spotify, apple, etc.
Mike Herz is a passionate guy who doesn't sit still. Environmental causes are one of his many passions and his secret to staying young at the ripe young age of 90! As SF baykeeper (in the tradition of Pete Seeger and the Hudson River), Mike has dedicated much of his time to exploring all the myriad of stories around this large tidal estuary, the second-largest estuary on the Pacific coast. HE has made a significant impact on the protection of many west coast waterways through successful fights against pollution and contamination.
Kate Josephs has worn many hats over the years from venture capital and community development finance to political organization and activism. She can now add podcasts to her list of accomplishments as creator and producer of Once Upon a Bay. In many ways this podcast, being released in segments, is a love letter to the San Francisco Bay. From shipwrecks to the wildlife around the Bay, they share so many fascinating stories that capture the beauty and dynamism of this amazing living body of water...
P.S. And one more important piece of information: Mike and Kate are also the parents of my granddog, Frenchy's best friend, Holly, a beautiful and rambunctious foxhound.
Frenchy and Holly
Is The Internet Dying?
I recently heard a statistic that sent chills up my spine on a Canadian Broadcast Corporation (CBC) podcast called IDEAS: The Internet is Dying. The Internet is Dead. It stated that "slightly more than half the traffic on the internet is non-human activity. Bots. We see the same comments over and over. The same style of response. Near-instant polarization. The humanness of the internet is receding and it's left our online spaces feeling haunted, like a deserted mall where the fountain is still gurgling, the canned music is still playing, but the people are nowhere to be found. When did the internet begin to die? And what will happen to us when it's dead." I can't get that image of the empty shopping mall out of my head...
With all of us here in America asleep at the wheel, being bombarded with all kinds of SH_T from every angle: The Epstein Files, the War in Iran that is rapidly spreading, the abject corruption of the current administration, the attack on our democracy and constitution, ICE, etc. etc. we are being taken over by AI, perhaps the biggest transformation our world will ever experience since the industrial revolution and maybe even bigger...
This Canadian Broadcast Corporation IDEAS: The Internet is Dying, The Internet is Dead is a interview between CBC host Nahlah Ayed and Cory Doctorow as they explore what the internet has become and what it could be. Fascinating talk which frames and clarifies a lot of issues that I bet many of us have never even thought about, as seen from a Canadian perspective.
Music as a Refuge
Thank God for music! Here is what I am listening to these days in between activism and trying to run away from the news…
Blues Run the Game Jackson C. Frank
Jersey Girl by Tom Waits
Joan of Arc by Jennifer Warnes
Mr. Tanner by Harry Chapin
Border Reiver by Mark Knopfler
Song for a Winter's Night by Gordon Lightfoot
Painting of the Week
These yoga mats double as kitchen mats. Very high quality, nice and thick, a little pricey due to the fact they are made in America and pass California environmental standards…Worth the price…
Check out the artSHOP on my website for the whole line of products based on my art and that of my late husband, Danish artist Gert Mathiesen.
Charity of the Week:
ACLU
Book of the Week
About The Author
New York City based contemporary artist, Pam Smilow, began writing the creative lifestyle blog “things we love” in an effort to foster a sense of community during times of isolation and reflection. To read more about her and her art, visit her website and check out the essay written by Frank Matheis entitled The Sophisticated Innocence of Pam Smilow.
Blog No. 271: A Friend of Dorothy Short Film, Creative Uses of Artificial Intelligence, Ky Dickens Interviews
The underlined words and many of the images in the newsletter are linked to more in depth information
A Friend of Dorothy Short Film
This twenty minute Live Action Short Film entitled A Friend of Dorothy, written and directed by Lee Knight, has been nominated for an Oscar. It is a little gem of a movie: light hearted, touching, kind...just what the doctor ordered. Run, don’t walk to see it…It will counter all the negative vibes around us at least for a bit...
Creative Uses of Artificial Intelligence
Click image to see Kelly Boesch’s Instagram. Image courtesy theknollergroup.com
I’m not a fan of Artificial Intelligence—in fact I am terrified of it and worried sick over its repercussions for our world but I can’t help but find some AI generated videos fascinating from a creative and artistic point of view. If only us humans would stick to the good uses of this new technology…
I happened upon these video creations by Kelly Boesch and The Knoller Group and couldn't help but be captivated...You might want to follow them on instagram as well
Bite My Lip- Official AI Music Video - 4K by Kelly Boesch AI Music Video
Born to Start Again by Kelly Boesch Official Music Video (AI) - Born To Start Again
"Betrayal” – A Surreal Journey Through Strange Beauty (AI Animated) by Kelly Boesch
The Genius of Kelly Boesch
Tests of Flying by Kelly Boesch
Courtesy Kelly Boesch https://www.theknollergroup.com/
Courtesy Kelly Boesch www.theknollergroup.com
Courtesy Kelly Boesch https://www.theknollergroup.com/
Two Interviews with Ky Dickens
Here are two powerful interviews with Ky Dickens, award winning filmmaker, director and creator of the podcast The Telepathy Tapes, which I have written about previously on this substack. After listening to both seasons of The Telepathy Tapes, I was curious about Dickens, her background, and where she was coming from since so much of what she reports is “out there.” Turns out her journey into the paranormal took a similar path to my own, after losing loved ones and asking basic questions like “where did they go” and “does consciousness survive death.”
The first interview is with Tami Simon, founder of Sounds True, a multimedia publishing house with a mission to disseminate spiritual wisdom. Listen to that interview here.
The second interview with Jay Shetty on his substack podcast gives a lot of insight into Dickens and how as a documentary filmmaker she stumbled on the work of Diane Hennacy and the subject of telepathy amongst nonverbal autistic children (Season 1 of The Telepathy Tapes). Her curiosity and inquisitive mind lead her onto a longer journey into the paranormal and more extensive psi phenomena (Season 2 of The Telepathy Tapes). Highly recommend the interview and both seasons of The Telepathy Tapes if you haven't listened to them yet...
Product of the Week
These yoga mats double as kitchen mats. Very high quality, nice and thick, a little pricey due to the fact they are made in America and pass California environmental standards…Worth the price…
Check out the artSHOP on my website for the whole line of products based on my art and that of my late husband, Danish artist Gert Mathiesen.
Charity of the Week:
ACLU
Book of the Week
About The Author
New York City based contemporary artist, Pam Smilow, began writing the creative lifestyle blog “things we love” in an effort to foster a sense of community during times of isolation and reflection. To read more about her and her art, visit her website and check out the essay written by Frank Matheis entitled The Sophisticated Innocence of Pam Smilow.
Blog No. 270: A Lecture We All Need to Hear, For the Love of Animals, Kahil El’Zabar's Ethnic Heritage Ensemble
The underlined words and many of the images in the newsletter are linked to more in depth information so don’t hesitate to click…
For those of you in NYC on Thursday February 26th , my musician friend Tom DiMenna will be back in the City playing Story Songs of the 70’s including covers of Cat Stevens, Harry Chapin, Gordon Lightfoot, and James Taylor at The Cutting Room, 44 E 32nd St, New York, NY 10016. For those who saw him last time at City Winery, he has increased his repertoire to include some new greats and I guarantee an evening of joy—Click here for tickets
Important Message For These Times
Nobody likes to be lectured but hear me out on this one. I found this from Jean and the Sisters of Charity on instagram and I think it is a message we all need to hear right now. Please spend the few minutes clicking on the image above and listening to it. If you can, please share it with friends and acquaintances--although the message addresses older people, it is something we all need to hear--there is a lot at stake!
For the Love of Animals
Dedicated to my animal loving friend with the huge heart, Tina Carro.
We all need a break sometimes from the news of the day. If you want your heart warmed, take a few minutes to watch this series of uplifting anecdotes—amazing animal stories brought to you by the kind-hearted Steve Hartman of CBS Evening News. It includes segments on an emotional support alligator, a dog that thinks he is human, and a duck called Snowflake who sleds in the winter and goes trick or treating for Halloween…
If you find yourself wanting more (or are procrastinating from a task you "should" be doing), these extra Steve Hartman stories might just be what you need right now.
Kahil El’Zabar's Ethnic Heritage Ensemble
Kahil El’Zabar on multi instruments, Corey Wilkes on trumpet, Alex Harding on baritone sax.
Off the beaten track in Waldoboro Maine, I saw a mind expanding concert last night at the Waldo Theatre. Hard to believe and how lucky we were to experience such an amazing musical event in such an unassuming town…Kahil El’Zabar’s music is very hard to classify. It has been described as bebop, Afro-Cuban jazz, free jazz, hypnotic soul—all over the place… When I asked David Kowalski, owner of Brunswick’s premier vinyl shop Deep Groove Records and one of the sponsors of the event how he would describe this type of music, he called it Spiritual Ethno Jazz Groove. No surprise that no one can actually put their finger on how to define it. Which is what makes it so great—it is so innovative that it doesn’t fall into existing categories. Best description I have come across is simply “a wide open vision of the musical concept” and “a higher consciousness of sound and spirt.”
Kahil El’Zabar is primarily a percussionist—he got his first drum when he was four years old—but aside from a normal drum set, in the performance he played the cajón (meaning box in Spanish), the kalimba (part of a family of musical instruments called Mbira, traditional to the Shona people of Zimbabwe), bells around his ankles, and his voice, used in a different way than I have heard before—“everything but the kitchen sink.” He was accompanied on the stage by two amazing musicians: Corey Wilkes on trumpet and Alex Harding on baritone sax and you could tell they had been playing together for a long time and were in total sync.
For someone who has little experience with jazz music and I certainly don’t profess to know anything, what amazed me the most about the Kahil El’Zabar concert was that it forced me to really listen to the sounds coming off that stage in a new way and to appreciate and isolate the sounds that were coming into my ears. (It reminded me of the first time I ate sushi. It was a different experience…making me eat in a different way—savoring every bite rather than just filling my mouth up with food in an unconscious way…).
The concert began with isolated nature sounds, bird whistles, tiny bells, similar sounds to what I had heard on my morning walk that day when the birds were out in full force. I loved that it began so quietly and forced me into a kind of meditative state. What followed was a feast—“blurring the edges of traditional jazz, Afrocentric rhythms and cosmic expanse.” I am sharing some of the songs that stood out to me:
Compared to What, written by American songwriter Eugene McDaniels. Sad to say it was written in 1966 and is still relevant today
Where Do You Want To Go
Full Live Performance at the 2021 Erie Blues and Jazz Festival
The Timeless Maestro: A Conversation with Sir Kahil El’Zabar
And a short documentary
The band is on tour now and the live experience is essential in my opinion to the full appreciation of this music. Here are the tour dates. Hopefully they will be coming to a city near you...
Painting of the Week
Pam Smilow. House in Fog, mixed media on canvas, 60” x 40”
Charity of the Week:
ACLU
Book of the Week
About The Author
New York City based contemporary artist, Pam Smilow, began writing the creative lifestyle blog “things we love” in an effort to foster a sense of community during times of isolation and reflection. To read more about her and her art, visit her website and check out the essay written by Frank Matheis entitled The Sophisticated Innocence of Pam Smilow.
Blog No. 269: Robert Rauschenberg, Buddhist Monks Again, John Prine Playlist
The underlined words and many of the images in the newsletter are linked to more in depth information so don’t hesitate to click…
Robert Rauschenberg Exhibition
You still have time to get to Houston and see the Robert Rauschenberg show at the Menil Collection. It closes on March 1st. I wish I could go! Since most of us won't make it there, I thought I would include some photos of the exhibition, which centers on his love of fabric.
Rauschenberg is definitely one of my first and most important influences. I loved his use of bold color, and how he mixed different media and wasn't afraid of unconventional materials. He described his work as "a juxtoposition of images that are hopefully non-logical."
One of my most favorite paintings growing up (and I still love it) incorporated a real log cabin quilt. It is not included in this show but I saw it at the Museum of Modern Art when I was a kid and it will always be engraved in my mind...
Robert Rauschenberg, Bed, Museum of Modern Art
Buddhist Monks Revisited
Photo courtesy Wikipedia
I just had to not let this moment go by without writing one more time about the Buddhist Monks and their Walk for Peace. Their remarkable 2300 mile, fifteen week journey came to an end this week when they reached their destination of Washington DC from Fort Worth, Texas…These monks carry a message that is especially important right now at a time when our country is in such turmoil. We have so much to learn from them and their way of life. I share with you their valuable advice through a couple of the speeches they delivered upon their arrival.
American University Speech
High Point, North Carolina Speech
Meditation from the Lincoln Memorial
John Prine Playlist
Seldom has there been a songwriter who was so beloved, who has produced so many amazing songs and has been covered by so many musicians over the years. I share with you a two hour playlist of John Prine’s favorite hits for your listening pleasure. If you don't have two full hours, Here are a few performances that jump out at me:
Souvenirs
Hello In There
"That's the Way the World Goes Round--Tribute to John Prine with Stephen Colbert
Long Monday
Clay Pigeons (written by Blaze Foley but I just love the way John Prine sings it)
CBS Sunday Morning: At Home with John Prine
Just realized that John Prine was born, like me, on October 10th! We are both libras! And coincidentally, I just read on instagram an entry from astrologer @marcus_vale_that after studying astrology for decades, one sign consistently stands out for bringing together the most positive qualities. According to this guy, Libra balances everything naturally. They are ambitious without being ruthless, social without being fake and confident without arrogance. Known as the diplomat and peacemaker, they make others feel valued and heard. Their charm is genuine, their style effortless, and their presence uplifting…Relationships stay balanced because they understand give and take better than anyone...
Their only weakness is avoiding conflict and sometimes sacrificing their own needs to keep the peace…The sign described is Libra, often considered the most balanced and harmonious sign of the zodiac.
Painting of the Week
Pam Smilow. Flower Power Series: Earth. mixed media on canvas 44” x 90”
Charity of the Week:
ACLU
Book of the Week
About The Author
New York City based contemporary artist, Pam Smilow, began writing the creative lifestyle blog “things we love” in an effort to foster a sense of community during times of isolation and reflection. To read more about her and her art, visit her website and check out the essay written by Frank Matheis entitled The Sophisticated Innocence of Pam Smilow.
Blog No. 268: Mon Rovia Music, Takashi Yasui Photographer, New York's Cutest
The underlined words and many of the images in the newsletter are linked to more in depth information so don’t hesitate to click…
Mon Rovia Music
Quite a while ago I came across the sweet voice of a singer named Mon Rovia on Instagram and his music blew me away. Where had he come from? How was it that I hadn't heard of him before? I wondered whether others felt the same way. It turns out, many people did, including the personal growth expert Mel Robbins, who like me, was really taken by this guy and did an extensive interview with him--so worth a listen.
Named for his city of origin in Liberia, Mon Rovia was born in the midst of civil war when young boys were being kidnapped and trained as child soldiers. At the age of 7, his grandmother brought him to the home of American missionaries and literally asked them if they would take him in, in hopes of giving him a better life. Thus began his life in the United States…He loved his new family but left behind a brother and sister and in an attempt to cope with life in America and to process grief, trauma and a whole lot of survivor guilt, Mon Rovia turned to music. To say his music is deep, sincere and heartfelt is an understatement.
Thanks to social media, his music, described as “Afro Appalachian” has spread and he now has over 17 million likes on TikTok. He is currently on tour in Europe and has just released his first full album. His most famous and timely song and everyone's favorite is called Heavy Foot but the entire album Bloodlines is great.
Takashi Yasui Photography
I love Substack for the fact that it has the ability of leveling the playing field and democratizing creativity. Anyone can be found and appreciated through their writings, thoughts, and images without having to be “famous."
I came across an amazing photographer recently whose work just spoke to me in such a deep way. His work is all about light. Takashi Yasui's photography epitomizes a word that was very important to my mid-century modern furniture designer dad, Mel Smilow. The word is SHIBUI—there is not really a good translation in English but it is something in-between beauty, elegance and simplicity as I understand it. I share with you some photos that spoke to this concept as well as an essay about how Takashi Yasui became a photographer that he published on his substack.
New York's Cutest
A different kind of politic is happening in New York City these days and I personally am finding it incredibly refreshing. This instagram clip above of a recent Mamdani press conference on universal childcare just might put a big smile on your face and take your mind off of other things for a few minutes…
Painting of the Week
Pam Smilow. mixed media on canvas 62” x 52”. approx. I came back from California a few months ago with a lot of commissions. This is my second to last one—going to a home in Palo Alto…
Charity of the Week:
ACLU
Book of the Week
About The Author
New York City based contemporary artist, Pam Smilow, began writing the creative lifestyle blog “things we love” in an effort to foster a sense of community during times of isolation and reflection. To read more about her and her art, visit her website and check out the essay written by Frank Matheis entitled The Sophisticated Innocence of Pam Smilow.
Blog No. 267: Monks Walk for Peace, Lewiston Soccer Team, Amanda Gorman Poem
The underlined words and many of the images in the newsletter are linked to more in depth information so don’t hesitate to click…
19 Monks:
A Walk for Peace
Click image above to see a brief report of the Monks. Photo courtesy Kaitlyn Ross Journalist’s Facebook
I always had a dream of starting a TV station on a national/international scale like CNN but just with good news. I haven't quite gotten there yet. Ha ha. But what if there was a news programs devoted exclusively to celebrating the good in humankind--switching our focus to inspirational stories, welllness, biographies of heroic figures, etc. etc., the ones Mr. Roger's mom called "the helpers." Sounds kind of sappy but it might also just change our focus and lead us to examples of better ways of living...
There is an event going on right now that is definitely worthy of such coverage and a few stations have taken note. It is happening through rain and snow across a portion of the United States and I am not sure many of us know about it. A group of Buddhist Monks, 19 of them, and a beautiful dog called Aloka are walking from Fort Worth Texas to Washington, D.C. every day, all day, with no regard to weather on a Walk for Peace. Their goal is to raise awareness of peace, loving kindness, and compassion across America and the world and it will take 120-days and cover 2,300-miles. Their intent is a simple yet meaningful reminder that unity and kindness begin within each of us and can radiate outward to families, communities, and society as a whole. Check it out…especially if you need a little relief from the horrible news of the day. We have to continue our fight against the terrible things going on but we also can’t let them take our joy away…
Lewiston
Soccer Team
My grandson Toran
My 15 year old grandson Toran lives in England and his passion is soccer. He won the equivalent of the lottery when he was spotted by a scout while playing on his local school team. Toran is diligent, extremely kind hearted, tall (6'2"+) and with the wingspan of an eagle...This scout introduced him around and gave him the opportunity to be seen by some of the top football leagues in England. Long story short, he is now on the development team of Manchester City and has moved from London to Manchester, going to school there and training every day.
He was here visiting over Christmas holiday—he comes often to the States—and as a gift, I gave him the book One Goal, about the Lewiston soccer team comprised mainly of Lewiston residents from Somali. Toran is of mixed race so I thought the story would be especially meaningful to him as I am not sure he is an avid reader….
I decided to read the book as well….
Turns out it is particularly relevant right now as Lewiston is in the news and I am learning a ton about the history of the town and how it has been revitalized more than once by immigrants. It approaches the question of immigration in a different and personal context--aside from a great sports read, through the book we get to know the players and what they have gone through previous to being repatriated to Maine.
One cannot help but show enormous compassion for what these immigrants have gone through, many of them living previously in refugee camps in Africa under terrible conditions, only to face racism here in Maine as well…
This is a good book for our youth—-it is also a good read for anyone interested in sports and learning first hand accounts of the plight of Somalis and Bantus in Lewiston.
Elizabeth Strout’s book The Burgess boys is a fictionalized version of a true hate crime that took place in Lewiston, Maine
Amanda Gorman
Poems
"For Alex Jeffrey Pretti"
Murdered by I.C.E. January 24, 2026
by Amanda Gorman
We wake with
no words, just woe
& wound. Our own country shoot
ing us in the back is not just brutal
ity; it’s jarring betrayal; not enforcement,
but execution. A message: Love your people & you
will die. Yet our greatest threat isn’t the outsiders
among us, but those among us who never look
within. Fear not the those without papers, but those
without conscience. Know that to care intensively,
united, is to carry both pain-dark horror for today
& a profound, daring hope for tomorrow. We can feel
we have nothing to give, & still belove this world wait
ing, trembling to change. If we cannot find words, may
we find the will; if we ever lose hope, may we never lose our
humanity. The only undying thing is mercy, the courage to open
ourselves like doors, hug our neighbor,
& save one more bright, impossible life.
Amanda Gorman also wrote a poem right after Renee Nicole Good was shot and killed. Here it is:
For Renee Nicole Good
Killed by I.C.E. on January 7, 2026
by Amanda Gorman
They say she is no more,
That there her absence roars,
Blood-blown like a rose.
Iced wheels flinched & froze.
Now, bare riot of candles,
Dark fury of flowers,
Pure howling of hymns.
If for us she arose,
Somewhere, in the pitched deep of our grief,
Crouches our power,
The howl where we begin,
Straining upon the edge of the crooked crater
Of the worst of what we’ve been.
Change is only possible,
& all the greater,
When the labour
& bitter anger of our neighbors
Is moved by the love
& better angels of our nature.
What they call death & void,
We know is breath & voice;
In the end, gorgeously,
Endures our enormity.
You could believe departed to be the dawn
When the blank night has so long stood.
But our bright-fled angels will never be fully gone,
When they forever are so fiercely Good.
Painting of the Week
Pam Smilow. mixed media on canvas 59” x 87”. $8500
Charity of the Week:
ACLU
Book of the Week
About The Author
New York City based contemporary artist, Pam Smilow, began writing the creative lifestyle blog “things we love” in an effort to foster a sense of community during times of isolation and reflection. To read more about her and her art, visit her website and check out the essay written by Frank Matheis entitled The Sophisticated Innocence of Pam Smilow.
