Wednesday, November 22, 2023

Things We Do In the Fall in New Mexico

Visit Origami in the Garden on the Turquoise Trail:








 
 

 



My grandson Max (from Ohio) and grand-daughters, Melody and Rosemerry attended the Balloon Glow

Our daughter and son-in-law from Ohio came this year

Got to have those Ribbon Fries

 
We gathered at my home to watch the Annular Eclipse of the sun on October 14th:

These are the unique shadows  of the eclipse through my
maple tree leaves of the eclipse.


 
My husband, Ron, and Grand-daughter, Melody, went "leaf-peeping" on the High Road to Taos
 





We stopped for lunch at the Rancho de Chimayo:

Rancho Chimayo Restaurante






Enjoying the Full Moon Setting Over Albuquerque in the early morning of October 29, 2023:




Halloween with the Grandchildren:



Spend Thanksgiving with family (and let my daughters make the meal!)



Watch my grand-daughter run the 1 mile Kids Fun Run Turkey Trot:






Tuesday, November 14, 2023

A Forgotten Blog Re-emerges As A Snapshot of the Times

 I was notified by Google that I had an old Blog that they would delete soon because of inactivity: 

"This email address has a legacy Blogger account associated with it that hasn’t logged in since 2007. In 60 days it will lose access to the account and associated content; the data will be permanently deleted unless migrated to the Google Account system at Legacy migration page."

Apparently in 2004 I started my first Blogger blog called Grains of Sand.  I had forgotten about it and began my current blog: The Universe Smiles in 2009.    

Just five posts from years gone by constitute a snapshot of my emotional life and the world around me in 2004.  I was 53 years old.  I was living and working in San Diego and going through some difficult times.  I had been notified by my company (where I had worked for 27 years)  that I was to be laid off December 31, 2004. My boyfriend that I deeply cherished had suddenly died in June, 2004. 

 

Friday, September 17, 2004

 

Remembering Neal Lawrence Burstein



The sage does not distinguish between himself and the world;The needs of other people are as his own.He is good to those who are good;He is also good to those who are not good,Thereby he is good.He trusts those who are trustworthy;He also trusts those who are not trustworthy,Thereby he is trustworthy.The sage lives in harmony with the world,And his mind is the world's mind.So he nurtures the worlds of othersAs a mother does her children.

Tao 49 as interpreted by Peter A. Merel


Neal


How do I remember you
now that the day is done,
when the sun has set,
and night has come?

You were the gentle caretaker
of the smallest creatures,
of wounded souls and broken bodies.
Your heart was like a hearth,
warm and inviting,
to stranger and friend alike,
embracing all pain
as a gentle lover does,
burying it deeply into tender folds.

In this world of forgotten intention
you were a man of integrity and wisdom.
Life for you was a pool of infinite possibility
from which you always drank deeply.

Now when I hear the dove call out
with the first morning light,
I remember your sweet smile
and gentle glowing eyes.
And I hear your soft voice
once again remind me:
“This is a day of infinite possibility.”


-Vicki Powers, July 23, 2004


I wrote "Grains of Sand" in 1997 as an expression of my world view that our true value as a person is in the context of our social selves. 

 

Grains of Sand


We are but grains of sand on this earth -- our lives largely affected by forces beyond our control. There are times when an individual grain may find itself transformed and valued among all other grains of sand. By chance, a small speck becomes trapped within the body of an oyster and, after many years, becomes a beautiful iridescent pearl. We enjoy this pearl and admire its uniqueness and incredible beauty. Other times, a grain of sand is distinguished by its ability to irritate and cause pain as when a single grain becomes lodged within the eye and we curse its presence.

Most of us make up the vast grains of sand on the earth -- our purpose linked with the purpose of other like grains; and our significance apparent in the result of our combined presence. We become glass, useful and beautiful. We become cement, strong and permanent. We become the playground of children, a place of delight and creative imagination.

Free will is an important quality in human beings. It often influences our destiny. Still, only a few of us will have the opportunity to become the pearl. Our lack of such opportunity does not make us worth less. Our worth most often is dependent upon the combined activity of like-mined individuals facing similar conditions. Together we become transformed and valued, like the millions of grains which become the road, the playground or the ceramic vase. Strive to become the pearl. But remember, most of life’s accomplishments will be the result of the joint effort of many. Always value this as your greatest achievement.   Vicki Powers

In 2004, people were hardening their hearts and putting up walls to communication as they retreated to their tribal circles and I was dismayed by the unraveling of our Social Contract. 

 

Wednesday, September 29, 2004

 

Contentious Times That Try Men's Souls

Do we want to do something now or wait until it all falls apart into civil war? We need to look deeply into what is happening to our Nation with extreme partisan politics and self-righteousness dominating civil debate. Differences of course exist and they are profound. But common interests are oft forgotten in the rush to pound the "other side" like some football game that becomes deadly as the participants and fans embrace violence for the sake of vanity or showing who is the most powerful as if "might makes right."
Solutions are not to be found in sound bites and talk shows or even in "fair and balanced" news. We must not allow special interests and selfishness take control of our country. Hitler became strong because of emotional and ideological appeals to ordinary German citizens who felt powerless in the face of great changes in their country and the world. Ordinary citizens who turned a blind eye to the abuses of power later paid a heavy price for their silence and inaction (not to mention the price rest of world paid!).

Saturday, September 18, 2004

 

See What Is -- Letting Go of Judgement

For us, as people sitting here meditating, as people wanting to live a good, full, unrestricted, adventurous, real kind of life, there is concrete instruction that we can follow, which is the one that we have been following all along in meditation: see what is. Acknowledge it without judging it as right or wrong. Let it go and come back to the present moment. Whatever comes up, see what is without calling it right or wrong. Acknowledge it. See it clearly without judgment and let it go. Come back to the present moment. From now until the moment of your death, you could do this. As a way of becoming more compassionate toward yourself and toward others, as a way of becoming less dogmatic, prejudiced, determined to have your own way, absolutely sure that you're right and the other person is wrong, as a way to develop a sense of humor about the whole thing, to lighten it up, open it up, you could do this. You could also begin to notice whenever you find yourself blaming others or justifying yourself. If you spent the rest of your life just noticing that and letting it be a way to uncover the silliness of the human condition -- the tragic yet comic drama that we all continually buy into -- you could develop a lot of wisdom and a lot of kindness as well as a great sense of humor.

Excerpt from: "The Wisdom of No Escape" by Pema Chodroin http://www.shambhala.com/pc/html/winoes-ex.cfm/


I moved to New Mexico in March of 2005, ready to start a new life.  I found love and was married for a second time in 2006.  We will have been married in January for 18 years.

Some of these posts are as current as ever.


 

 

Monday, September 25, 2023

How Corporations and the Media Belittle Consumer Complaints

I read this article in today's Albuquerque Journal:  

McDonald’s being sued over hot coffee

Suit hearkens to 1990s case in New Mexico that awarded plaintiff $2. 7M

BY MARÍA LUISA PAÚL THE WASHINGTON PO ST

A spilled 49-cent hot coffee from McDonald’s became a national punchline, a lyric in a Toby Keith song and endless fodder for talk shows after a 79-year-old woman successfully sued the company for the third-degree burns she got from a steaming cup of joe in 1992.

Now, three decades later, another woman says she was seriously injured by the same scalding liquid. Mable Childress, 85, allegedly suffered first- and second-degree burns from a McDonald’s coffee while leaving a San Francisco drive-through earlier this year.

According to a lawsuit filed last week in San Francisco Superior Court, Childress’s June 13 trip to McDonald’s ended with “severe burns” after she was handed a cup with a lid that hadn’t been properly secured. When she tried to take a sip, the lid came off, drenching her legs, groin and stomach with hot coffee, according to the lawsuit, which does not specify the temperature of the spilled drink.

Childress immediately attempted to report the incident and asked to speak to a manager, but three employees “refused to help her,” according to the lawsuit. After an hour spent without anyone coming to her aid, she went to the emergency room, said Dylan Hackett, Childress’s attorney. “What it comes down to is negligence on the part of McDonald’s,” Hackett told The Washington Post. He added that the incident left Childress with scarring, ongoing physical and emotional pain, and a slew of medical expenses.

McDonald’s did not immediately respond to The Post’s request for comment. Peter Ou, the owner and operator of the franchise location that Childress visited, told Today that his “restaurants have strict food safety protocols in place, including training crew to ensure lids on hot beverages are secure.”

“We take every customer complaint seriously — and when Ms. Childress reported her experience to us later that day, our employees and management team spoke to her within a few minutes and offered assistance,” Ou told the program in a statement. “We’re reviewing this new legal claim in detail.”

It’s not the first time McDonald’s has faced complaints from customers about its hot food items.

In July, a jury in Florida awarded $800,000 in damages to the family of a 7-year-old girl who got second-degree burns after a Chicken McNugget fell on her thigh in 2019. And in the well-known 1992 case, coffee as hot as 190 degrees soaked into Stella Liebeck’s cotton sweatpants, sending her to the hospital for eight days as she underwent skin grafting.

“The hot coffee temperature has already been litigated before. . . . So it’s an ongoing issue, it seems like, with McDonald’s,” Hackett said, adding that Childress hopes the case makes McDonald’s rethink its food items’ high temperatures.

In 1994, a jury in New Mexico unanimously decided to award Liebeck $2.7 million in punitive damages for the coffee spill that burned 16% of her body. Liebeck was widely villainized in the court of public opinion, said John Llewellyn, a communications professor at Wake Forest University.

 
 
efault
The 1992 case of 79-year-old Stella Liebeck that eventually was settled for less than $500K in punitive damages became an example of an URBAN LEGEND that distorted the true facts of the cases of a terrible accident. Rep. Newt Gingrich and other Republicans used her case to try to outlaw or severely limit tort cases for consumer products.  Watch the following video to understand what really happened:
 
  
 

Wednesday, August 23, 2023

This Is How We Remember Lahaina Town

 

From: You Tube

A Tribute to Lahaina, Maui: to the town and the community

103K subscribers

On Erica and Jordan's website, they have listed links to donate to Maui's relief efforts:

"Our hearts go out to those lost in the Lahaina Fire and the community members who lost everything. Lahaina and its community are beautiful. This is how we will remember Lahaina. Hawaii charities that are making a difference are listed below for donations. Rebuilding the homes, buildings, and businesses that have been lost is going to be a marathon. The community will need support for a long time, so please don't forget them after the news cycle moves on. 

MAUI STRONG by the Hawai’i Community Foundation: https://www.hawaiicommunityfoundation... MAUI FOOD BANK https://mauifoodbank.org/donate/ 

MAUI UNITED WAY https://mauiunitedway.org/disasterrelief "

Sunday, August 13, 2023

Reposting "Leadership and Climate Change" from 2015 - Because It STILL Matters

 
 
 


Everywhere people are talking about the extreme weather events we are experiencing. Flooding in the United Kingdomsevere tornadoes and flooding in winter in the United States, and record number of Category 4 and 5 hurricanes and typhoons in 2015.  How many of these people will recognize that the extreme weather is a result of climate change?

Climate change is the world's most dangerous security threat.  The cost in money and lives will exceed the costs of any war we have fought before.  Can you imagine for a minute the cost to retrofit communities, homes, and infrastructure to sustain our way of life with the new reality of extreme weather events?  Can our governments begin to calculate the cost as they make national budgets to include the cost of emergency response to extreme weather events?  Can businesses survive the extra costs?  How much more in taxes will each citizen pay to fight the effects of climate change?  How can the poor and marginal communities survive?  How many more refugee crises and violent social conflicts will we see as a result of the struggle to deal with dissipating resources?  Woe to us if we do not choose leaders who  have the guts to recognize and respond to climate change as a world wide crisis. Some think it is too late.
 
Update (August 13, 2023):
 

  😭 So sad to hear ofthe fires in Maui  August 8-9, 2023 that have destroyed so much of what we saw.  Lahaina is gone! The lovely people of Maui are facing so much devastation, may they get relief as soon as possible. I am crying for their losses.😭 Donate to Maui Strong to help the people recover.

Sunday, June 11, 2023

The Last Voyage (Rotterdam, The Netherlands Part 6)

 We arrived in Rotterdam very early on May 28th from Dover (See Part 5).  We had now completed  our Transatlantic Cruise on Holland America's MS Zuiderdam that began in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida on May 12, 2023.  


View of Rotterdam from the ship


The Maas River













We went to our hotel (Bilderberg Parkhotel), got our new wheelchair and checked our luggage.  Ron and Janti Marcar (friends from Amsterdam) were picking us up for a reunion lunch.  We last saw them when we were in Amsterdam in 2018.  Ron and Janti took us to a lovely lunch at Tante Kee in Kaag on the canal which we gladly hosted.













They then took us for a tour of  the scenic countryside in The Hague and Delft areas. It was so pleasant and rewarding that we were able to re-unite.


We stayed at our hotel for two nights.  It was centrally located with views of downtown. 




Our first night there, we experienced a noisy celebration of Turkish citizens who were celebrating the run-off election win of Recep Tayyip Erdogan, as President of Turkey.  Hundreds of honking cars and flag waving Turkish people were just below our window on the street.  Smoke bombs, loud drumming and the revving of engines and honking of horns continued for hours well past midnight.  I am glad we had not gone out that night as we would never have been able to get home due to the cars that were stopped in all lanes of traffic.


The next morning, we walked the Witte de Withstraatt to the Markthal (Market Hall), enjoyed lunch at the Bazar and snacking at the Markthal.  



































 

Ron wanted to have Italian food for our last night in Rotterdam.  Many restaurants are closed on Mondays and this was also a holiday (Pentecost).  We found Messina's Pizzaria and took a cab there.  The owner and waiter helped Ron to get in over the step at the door and seated.  This place was an absolute gem.  The owner, Gianni,  is Sicilian.  We ordered the Mussels in Sicilian Sauce.  Then we had a wonderful Linguini with Truffle and Mushrooms prepared in melted Parmesan Reggiano cheese wheel at the table.  I ordered the Prawns in a Cream Sauce.  The food was wonderful and I gave it a great review on Trip Advisor.

The next day, we went to Schiphol Airport in Amsterdam.  This was the worst part of our trip. We arrived three hours early to get through the check-in. Then we had an 8 hour+ flight on Delta in the space of a sardine can, landing in Atlanta for customs and a layover of 3 hours. 

 

 We connected to our last flight to Albuquerque and got home about 10PM (local time and 6am Amsterdam time).  We got to bed finally after 25 hours of being awake.  

The Last Voyage was indeed a big adventure.  I don't believe it would be possible for us to repeat such an exhausting journey again. So, folks, do your adventures while you are young and able.  Enjoy the world and Bon Voyage!