Sunday, May 15, 2022

Life goes on

News blues

Covid has moved off the “front pages” of most news outlets. Now, in the US, Ukraine’s attack by Russia tops the news, followed by the ongoing political slugfest between Republicans and Democrats. (As usual, no-holds-barred Republicans beat spineless Democrats into a stupor, but I digress….)
Britain’s Guardian News reports,
For every 100,000 residents, 291 [Americans] have died from Covid-19, according to the Johns Hopkins University Coronavirus Resource Center. Among the 20 worst affected nations, only two other countries – Brazil and Poland – have higher mortality rates per 100,000 people.
Deaths directly attributable to Covid-19 are only one measure of the pandemic’s toll. Deaths from drug overdoses hit a record high in 2021, killing at least 100,000 Americans. Chronic conditions such as heart disease, hypertension and dementia have contributed to the number of “excess deaths” – a number which includes other ailments exacerbated by the pandemic, as well as those deaths caused directly by Covid-19. This number crossed the one million threshold in mid-February.
The extraordinary toll has set the US apart among wealthy, peer nations, exposing inequality, a unique and fragmented health system, and polarized politics – all of which likely made the crisis worse, researchers said.
…the disproportionate likelihood for people of color to lack the same quality housing, employment and healthcare access as white Americans – are well known and documented. Such disparities are the “intended or unintended consequences of policy decisions”….
…“The US has been experiencing worse health outcomes for some years now. Life expectancy in the US is the lowest of any high income country”….
Read more of this depressing reality of Life in the United States in 2022  >> 
***
The Lincoln Project:
Thank you, Jen  (2:06 mins)
What was that, Elise?  (1:35 mins)

Meanwhile, back at the ranch…

Yesterday’s walk included a lovely and unexpected meeting of a liveaboard couple in a local marina. Both recently retired, Sally and Darrel have lived aboard for more than 30 years, most of those years in this marina. For all those years, they’ve cared for and taken pride in the marina's liveaboards' communal garden.
Two years ago, the harbor master decided the garden must be shut down due to increasingly rough paving posing a danger to the public (therefore exposing the marina to lawsuits).
Sally and Darrel stepped in and, spending their own money, began upgrading the garden. Yesterday, the proud couple told the story accompanying each plant and garden accessory, from the large beds of fragrant roses (each representing one year of Sally’s life – 66 roses) to New Orleans carnival beads draped around the neck of a mermaid sculpture, to the baker who donated a shelf of potted succulents.
What I referred to as “an altar of small treasures” in my post is no more. It had been designed as a “fairy garden” but never quite reached its goal. The space it left behind will allow an expanded welcoming area that I look forward to watching grow.
I was so caught up in the couple’s stories and the garden, I forgot to take photos. One photo I’m determined to take will show two meticulously pruned pines that Darrel and Sally planted decades ago. Back then, the pines were designed as throwaway Christmas saplings in small festively decorated pots. Today, a couple of mature trees form a centerpiece and provide shade for visitors on hot days.
This garden is the essence of community: everything belongs, everything has a story and a history, all is shared, and liveaboards and visitors alike enjoy the nurturing space.

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