Culminant: Heather in Brooklyn

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Heather Evans. Mother of one of my closest friends is a true inspiration to me. She is a beautiful, healthy, strong, single mother of four girls, working hard as an investment banker for one of the world’s top firms.  In many ways, she is what I aspire to be like. I would like to be an investment banker for a firm like Goldman Sachs, happy, completely control of my life and have 4 lovely children.  As I sat down for dinner with the Evans family in Brooklyn, NY, it just amazed me how nice, relaxed, and put together this woman was. And it’s no joke raising four children on your own. Thank you Ms. Evans for the pleasure of meeting and dining in your presence and further inspiring me to pursue my future goals. You are at the highest point.

Nosogeography: Too Many Children in the Bronx Have Asthma

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The Bronx is Choking

I found this free newspaper on the seat of the subway. With  nosogeography (the connection btwn disease and geography) in mind, I couldn’t stop wondering why one borough of this city is punished so much more harshly than another by our environmental condition. In this hard-hitting piece, journalist Gabriele Steinhauser tells us about the disposal of waste in the South Bronx and its horrific effects on the daily lives of adults and children.

Jerrybuild and other J words

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Here’s a list of J words that I discovered during my artist Abecedarium:NYC residency at the McDowell Colony. I spent two weeks reading the dictionary, looking for words that sparked my curiosity, sent my brain into a reeling spin, or simply sounded good when read out loud. A few of my favorites in this list include: jejune, jackstone and joey. With all of the ramshackle building going on in New York right now, there seemed to be no choice other than “jerrybuild” if we wanted to reflect the zeitgeist of the day. LS

Lynne’s Possible J words

Click the image to enlarge it for an easier read.

Bibliomancy: The morning of Wednesday, June 4, 2008

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Monday, I was part of a group museum educators that visited a public school in Hempstead. We were invited to be audience to short performances inspired by books, first through fifth graders had read and studied in the school year that’s drawing to an end. Against sets and backdrops created by the students and their parents, the students, often in costume, presented fragments from works by authors such as Eric Carle and Dr. Seuss, and from books like Charlotte’s Web and The Magic Schoolbus. One fifth grade class had chosen poetry—the poetry of Langston Hughes. I enjoyed being reconnected to his poetry, to hear I, too again. Being an immigrant, I wasn’t introduced to his work or that of other American poets, until my thirties. This morning I was stirring, woke up at 5, got up, went to my desk, and took The Collected poems of Langston Hughes off the shelf. I sat down, opened it, and did so, on page 390 and 391—a spread of children’s rhymes.

langston.jpg

By what sends
the white kids
I ain’t sent:
I know I can’t
be President

… was the rhyme my eyes landed on, a rhyme written, at least half a century ago. A rhyme that is being rewritten this year, being transformed by Senator Obama and the America of today, the America of June 4th 2008, the America of the morning after the day Senator Obama clinched the Democratic nomination.

… Tomorrow,
[He]’ll be at the table…