Category Archives: Random Musing

Minutiae #8: London Street Art

Dog in fullLone RangerIt’s the unexpected that often tricks you.  I expected to love London. I expected to love all the things I talked about in this blog post here. What I didn’t expect was to having my eyes opened to seeing art in a brand new way and in places I wouldn’t have expected. Here you are in London with its centuries of history, beautiful public art, and culture galore and what I end up falling in love with is street art. Street art is painted on buildings either with or mostly without permission and therefore it’s largely temporary,and created by artists the average person wouldn’t know.

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The tour was advertised as by donation. Tour-goers were told to meet at Spital Market near the statue of the goat. I already felt like I was in an English “who done it” so just finding the goat statue was worth the price of donation.

A group of about 15 of us gathered at the goat when our guide Josh Jeavons arrived. He told us our tour would be 2 hours on foot through the back streets of East London. He would show us not only the street artists  of East London but also provide  context and history of the area as well as the artist.

There is something irrepressible and yes, beautiful about people expressing themselves artistically in  public spaces. About people not going the typical career route of showing their work in curated galleries, in not having to have their art work be permanent but instead be an expression of a moment in time.

I loved the stories behind the pieces and I loved our guides irrepressible love for street art and the artists who create it. When I’m in London next I’m going to do the tour again because a whole other gallery of art will grace the walls of East London. And when I’m in Paris or wherever I am, I’m going to look for this art and these artists. Eyes opened thanks to Alternative London and Josh Jeavons.

Here are some  samples from our tour:

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Carved in stone

Rat

I love LondonBarber Shop

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_DSC3328 1Brick Lane

And that was near and around Brick Lane.

These two are not:

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Art Frame

The best part of this tour is when you looked around, even after 2 hours of walking, there was still so much amazing art to see.

Photos by Dave Vanderkop

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Minutia #7 London Calling!

I have wanted to go to England (specifically London) for a long, long time. Ever since I was a kid it has lived large in my mind. As I pranced around in my mother’s high heels as a little girl (with a towel on my head pretending I had long gorgeous hair) I imagined it to be an exotic kingdom where fancy flight attendants served tea in mod cups wearing adorable and important looking outfits, and who asked you if they could get you anything else in sophisticated accents.

The idea of England as ‘myth’ goes on. It gave birth to the Beatles, Rolling Stones, Joy Division  Adele, Dusty Springfield, Jane Austen, Oscar Wild, Notting Hill, Colin Firth, Downton Abbey, and cute neighbourhoods where every body seems funny and calls each other Love.”LOVE” think about it. Causal conversations even with strangers invoke the word “love”. “How are you love? Can I help you love?”  I could go on and on and on. So who knows why I never went. I have romanticized the lives of a few friends and my niece who picked up and went there to live. I have woken up in the middle of the night wondering why am I NOT in LONDON? WHY?

So this year we went to London. We arrived at Heathrow Airport. HEATHROW. I was in my promised land.I had heard that word so often. There I was getting a train to PADDINGTON STATION.Then there we were on the TUBE.  We counted the kilometres we walked each day. 12 day one, 18 day two, bleeding feet but 13 next day…and so on.It’s a city that doesn’t stop and neither could we.

And the best part, chips every day for every meal. Chips 3 times a day.

Yes chips.

My favourite food of all times is the magical French Fry. My first day in London I quickly discovered that it is easily possible to eat chips, or crisps with every meal. Easily. Would you like chips with your omelette? Yes please. With your curry? Yes, please. WIth your pizza? Umm Yeessss. Chips chips chips. All of them excellent.

Second favourite thing: PUBS  They’re just so easy aren’t they? Easy, cosy, and the centre of community life iin many ways. We ate two nights in a row at Sir Alexander Fleming and it felt like walking into my uncle’s living room.

Third favourite thing: Accents and the word used oh so liberally “Love”. “Can I help you love?”  Oh my. It’s just so warm and beautiful. No more need be said.

Tube Stops. – some Tube stops look like time standing still, they’re that pretty and pastoral.

Kings Cross station and public art- as a Canadian I feel like I am starved for public art. Not so in London and almost all of Europe for that matter. These people like art and they have it everywhere. Here are some great examples just from the station alone.

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Pianos in train stations. I saw this in France and at Kings Cross. What a fantastic idea. They are there at the disposal of the ‘artists amongst us’. And artists there are. Talented people play them all the time. And it is lovely. So lovely. More to come on this.

Notting Hill

Markets – must go back to go to markets alone. In particular the vintage clothing market at Spital Market.

Victoria and Albert Museum. Amazing clothing collection and FREE.

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Street art tour:  this was almost the highlight for me in which I will share more in the next post but wow. What a great way to see the not so obvious things in a city (in this case East London) and also be exposed to some amazing art. More to come in next post.

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Downton Abbey: yes, I’m one of them. I desperately want to go on the tour but our stay on this trip was too short which is just a great excuse to come back and see more.

Thank you London! You are everything I thought you would be and more. I will be back.

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Minutiae #6: The Incredible Lightness of Been

She walks with unrestrained joy, sits with unrestrained happiness. Like a hummingbird her tail moves with rapid fire speed, her entire body shaking back and forth, back and forth like a combustion engine. Her eyes are saucer bowl round with none of that drooping arrow in your heart look of deep sadness that some will pierce your heart with. She walks side to side, side to side smelling the world. Her only care is birds. Spring is for chasing robins.

Sometimes I look at her and all I see are birds inside her head, blue skies, robins and the undiluted thrill of meaningless chase. This is Happiness at its simplest. We call her Been. She’s been here and she’s been there. Little Being. My friend calls her Perpetua for her perpetual happiness. Perpetua/Been graces the world with a purity that lifts me – makes me feel lighter.
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We start our mornings when it’s still dark with a walk on the wooded path out back and I’m greeted with the chatter of bird song. I often wonder what they’re talking about – what is it exactly that they’re saying to each other in these sing song conversations that punctuate the quietness of the early, early morning. What is this wild orchestra that brings in the early morning light?

Meanwhile Been the little dog chases real and imagined birds and there’s a lightness in these early morning transactions, there’s a lightness in Been that elevates me to a place that I think might be called peace.

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Minutiae #5: Choices

She always said she’d had a good life. That she had seen the world, had laughed and danced, raised a family and had gone on adventures she couldn’t have imagined. In the last few weeks of her life we sat outside at a coffee shop. She had put on her red necklace, her red peblum top, khaki pants,her leather running shoes, lipstick and earrings. We sat quietly on the patio outside on a burningly beautiful warm autumn day.

In the last few months she had become quiet, introspective, something that happens I imagine when you’re faced with life changing circumstances. Your mind travels the distance of memories, constantly feeding on a life well lived, pausing at regret, at all the things one wishes had been done – choices not made.

The cafe where we sat is next to a river called the Port Credit River. She surveyed the river, the small town traffic, and people walking by.  We had sat for a long while in silence until she said “I’ve had a good life” she said. “This place has been a great home to me. I’m glad I came.” Port Credit, is where I grew up and the place she and my father had moved to from Holland over 50 years before.

If you asked her about her husbands and depending on her mood she’d say something along the lines of “They were bastards” to “Your father and I sure had some good times” and most often”He showed me the world”. As an adult I would sometimes look at my mother and wonder at her enormous bad luck at falling for dangerous men – dangerous good looking men. The first, a German soldier who beat her until she finally left taking one child with her…only to find when she went back for the second, her first born son, she couldn’t take him with her. Women had no rights over their children. So she left him and escaped into the arms of my father. She must have fallen for those blue eyes, or his crazy story telling, or how he would grab her hand and fill it full of vitamins telling her this was the secret to a long happy life. She was wowed by his charisma, so much so that she overlooked the smaller things that might have given her clues to his real identity. His true self, his hidden character…the things that good looks, charisma and money often disguise.

I think of the photograph that hung at the end of my mother’s bed in her bedroom. A picture of her first son at the age  of nine which is when she left him. And then another photograph when he married. She never took those pictures down. I imagine she must have looked at them every night before she went to sleep.

I found out about him when I found a photograph of a handsome young man in my mother’s wallet. “Who is this? I asked. “That’s my son”she said. “You look alike.” I said and the conversation ended.

We took a trip together to meet him and his wife many years later. We went to my aunt’s house in Den Haag, Holland where we were to meet him. I was nervous meeting this brother I hardly knew existed. My mother didn’t help.  She seemed edgy and nervous  and kept saying things like she couldn’t speak German anymore. She paced. And when he arrived and he hugged her, I remember thinking how small she looked. This big strapping boy with his arms around his mother. And we all gathered awkwardly in my aunt’s living room. But somehow magically a week later, at the end of the trip our nervousness had been replaced with the sense that we had all shared something together as a family. We had laughed and cried, and danced and told jokes. I spoke broken German, he spoke broken English, my mother’s German magically came back to her.

Once when I asked my mother do you still miss him she looked at me and said, “Life goes on.” and that was it. And I thought to myself here is a woman who has survived. And when I thought about all the other pieces of her life and what came after the leaving behind of a son, and how I know something important that the son doesn’t. And this is the truth.  As painful as his mother leaving must have been, it was better for him to have been left behind than for him to have endured my father. And these are true things. Rosie’s choices.

So today is my mother’s birthday. Many, many years ago a man and a woman had a child and they called her Rozalia. She was their eldest daughter. A hellion they called her. A beautiful  Dutch girl is how I think of her. Her spirit which vexed her parents stayed with her throughout her life. She carried it with her through her ups and her many downs and it gave her the resilience to bear some of life’s most terrible hurts. So happy birthday mom. I miss being able to send you flowers and I still miss you every day.

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I’ll Have Baked Pasta Please

There was a time when I loved cooking. I truly loved it. Now all I want is to be cooked for. Life change. That’s it. I have nothing more to say.

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HOW FICTION WRITERS CAN SAVE THE WORLD or LET THE POETS TAKE OVER,

For some time I’ve been throwing around the idea of writing a post along the lines of HOW FICTION WRITERS CAN SAVE THE WORLD or LET THE POETS TAKE OVER, or WHO NEEdS MORE BUSINESS SCHOOLS or WHERE HAVE ALL THE LIBRARIES GONE or THE IMPORTANCE OF READING AND THE GODFUL-NESS OF WRITERS.

I apologize for the all caps. But this is important. The world, we can agree, is a mess. Hey, I live in a country where the Prime Minister is destroying all our science libraries because who needs information when you can have pure dogma.

My thinking behind my all cap exhortations is that the world requires and needs to breed empathy, imagination, innovation and empathy and more empathy and to want less and do more. Let’s unleash the potential to empathize the hell out of greed until greed disappears. I am prepared to make the bold statement that the world needs, indeed requires more imagination. We need more fiction readers, poets and poetry readers. We need people to feel the heartbeat of others through words, to see other worlds, to imagine to reach beyond ourselves and into ourselves.

Books saved my rocky turbulent childhood. They were my older sister’s saviour and through her I loved them too. As soon as I could I worked at a library for Hazel who was a little old lady who taught me how to put books in order according to the dewey decimal systems. I would go to work and breathe in the calm atmosphere and lose myself in the stacks looking at books just as I would much later working in bookstores and then in publishing companies. I lived in many worlds and wore the heart and soul of thousands of characters. My world got bigger.

I escaped. I wanted to write an ode to books, to writers, to readers, to empathetic souls but someone beat me to it. I read this piece in the Guardian the other day…ode to the library and I couldn’t have said it better if I tried. I am coincidentally reading a Neil Gaiman novel right now “American Gods”. I reached for something utterly different this time because I want my world to be unimaginably big and bold and heartbreaking in ways that only new things, new words and experiences can bring to you. So thank you Mr. Gaimon and thank you all you librarians and fiction writers and poets out there. This is a long piece but read it all. Read it all and pass it on.

Neil GaimanNeil Gaiman: Why our future depends on libraries, reading and daydreaming

A lecture explaining why using our imaginations, and providing for others to use theirs, is an obligation for all citizens

It’s important for people to tell you what side they are on and why, and whether they might be biased. A declaration of members’ interests, of a sort. So, I am going to be talking to you about reading. I’m going to tell you that libraries are important. I’m going to suggest that reading fiction, that reading for pleasure, is one of the most important things one can do. I’m going to make an impassioned plea for people to understand what libraries and librarians are, and to preserve both of these things.

And I am biased, obviously and enormously: I’m an author, often an author of fiction. I write for children and for adults. For about 30 years I have been earning my living though my words, mostly by making things up and writing them down. It is obviously in my interest for people to read, for them to read fiction, for libraries and librarians to exist and help foster a love of reading and places in which reading can occur.

So I’m biased as a writer. But I am much, much more biased as a reader. And I am even more biased as a British citizen.

And I’m here giving this talk tonight, under the auspices of the Reading Agency: a charity whose mission is to give everyone an equal chance in life by helping people become confident and enthusiastic readers. Which supports literacy programs, and libraries and individuals and nakedly and wantonly encourages the act of reading. Because, they tell us, everything changes when we read. Continue Reading

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January 24, 2014 · 4:45 am

Twenty-Five Things – 2013

I love making lists. It makes me feel like I’m putting together a plan for world domination so I turn to it gleefully at the end of each year.It includes highlights, great books, things learned, things to be repeated, and objectives for the new year.

Here it is:

1. Having fun with someone you’ve known for a long time in a whole new way. Dave and I laughed our asses off when we got on the plane to Europe. Grief, challenges, the weight of life all thrown back at the universe in gales of laughter.

2. Realizing I don’t know any other way to travel except like the 18 year old I was way back when and that Dave is the same and neither of us knew that about the other.

3. Adventure is the spice of life. I’d forgotten how fun unplanned things are – that making your way, walking your way, getting lost, not showing up on time, showing up wherever you want whenever you want is the greatest most carefree feeling.

3. That daring to speak broken French really is fun so I will go back and do it again – hopefully a little better this time.

4. Watching someone who doesn’t realize his gifts create those gifts is a beautiful thing.

5. I love reading fiction and poetry much more than my books on sustainability. I need fiction and poetry for my soul. Great art gives me great hope that the world isn’t as terrible a place as I often think it is.

6. That reading books and taking courses on sustainability are giving me tools to fight against the mess we have created and at the end of the day that gives me hope.

7. I need hope.

8. I’d rather die trying than not try at all.

9. Once upon a time I thought I would have 8 children. All boys. They would call me mom and I would cook awesome meals and build a family of love and joy. They would adore me. There never was a father in this picture until I met Dave.

10. That didn’t happen.

11. But other great things did so I don’t worry about what I didn’t get.

12. I transferred all my maternal love to my beautiful boy Reuben.

13. When he left I transferred all that love outwards to animals.

14. That I am walking a path towards activism. I would rather die trying than not having tried at all.

15. That I have already learned from a committed group of people about ACTION. The only thing that works is ACTION. You have to do things to change things.

16. I feel overwhelmed by the weight of things to be done.

17. I feel less overwhelmed because I can start measuring success where I see it.

18. I am arming myself with knowledge so I can fight better and this makes me laugh inside. Really laugh.

19. I love seeing my niece Ella become immersed in the world of animals and all she does for them. Seeing that gives me hope. EllaPhant she calls herself. She’s a fundraiser. And she shares her knowledge when she can.

20. I love talking stupid talk on the phone with my brother Johnny. I love my brother Johnny.

21. I like the look of shock on people’s faces when I tell them this is the year I will become a righteous bitch.

22. I finally realize that I really do need down time. That I learned that from Dave but now I need it.

23. I can learn and understand science and this has been a big, big surprise. I won’t be the best but I’m not the worst.

24. My sisters. I love that I can even say that. My sisters.

25. I love spending time with Dave more than anybody else. We are best, best friends and I can’t believe how lucky we are. Even though he’s messy:)

26. My mom took her red necklace back but I got something else instead. And I’m happy she has it back. I want her to look beautiful wherever she is.

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Minutiae #4 – Little Friends and Swimming Pools

Little Friends and Swimming Pools

I was one and he was three. He was five and I was three. His name is Lynn although I call him Lynnie. Our mothers were best friends since childhood. My mother introduced Aggie to her future husband at a dance hall in Scheveningen, Holland.He was a Canadian soldier who stole his bride away to live in a faraway cold, vast country. My mother met a man too. A more dangerous kind of man though. They say the devil has blue eyes. And then my father moved his family to Canada as well to build new lives  And so ended the days of Aggie and Rose singing together, rollerskating arm and arm through the streets of Den Hague. No more flirting with soldiers or riding bikes in the country side looking for rabbits to eat. A new era began in the new country.

 In the new country our mothers remained close for a long time. Our families prospered and summers were spent playing  in each other’s swimming pools. Pool parties, diving from balconies, cannon balls.Playing in the shed and then back out screaming as we ran under hot, bright, summer skies diving into the crisp cool water of the  swimming pool.

I was three and Lynn was five. I remember being swept up into his mother’s arms and then carefully put down by the steps of the pool. My little hand in hers, holding it as tightly as I could as we slowly descended the watery steps. It felt so much less dangerous than with either of my parents.

And then later when we moved to the bigger house with the even bigger swimming pool Lynnie and I and our brothers and sisters took swimming lessons together. The worst of it was when we practiced rescue techniques.We were to jump into the pool with all our clothes and sneakers on.I reluctantly tied the laces to my white canvas shoes agonizing that I would have to get them wet and when I finally finished lacing them I  stood up and  (bitterly) leapt in. I could feel myself sink to the bottom of the pool looking up at the summer sky twisting away from me as I sank further and further.

It was my first experience with the notion that I might die. Much like the time I would have soon after when I  put each one of my seven year old legs inside the arms of my life jacket and climbed on to my father’s back as he lounged at the side of the pool talking to friends. And suddenly he flipped me up and backwards so I hung suspended upside down in the water each leg still stuck in the life jacket. The devil, my father,  was not the saving kind of guy. But Lynnie was. He dove in and dragged me upward toward the hot, humid, thick Ontario summer air. “You okay?  he asked. “Yes”, I gasped. He was nine and I was seven.

When we played I was always the princess. Long blond hair, a wardrobe of beautiful clothes, gowns, fancy pant suits, party dresses. Practical stuff. I had a big pink car that I cherished which my Barbie drove around in. She would drive in circles navigating her way between roadways of my clothes and toys and imaginary parking lots. Sometimes I would let my boyfriend drive in the car beside me. GI Joe. But only sometimes.I was a princess after all and if I didn’t get my way Lynnie’s GI Joe would be walking, or sleeping on the park bench and was generally the brunt of my seven year old sense of righteousness and justice. Lynnie was good natured so he let me get away with everything. And he was my best friend.

And then the devil  got himself into trouble and in the dark of night we moved to Europe and years later when we returned the magic between our families had been broken. Houses with swimming pools were under court lockdown and our summers of carefree fun were broken.  Afterwards, our mothers only saw each other occasionally and then not at all until  many years later. The devil when he could, stole everything.

I saw Lynnie for the last time when I was fourteen or fifteen.  The seal of our summery childhoods had been broken as our families and our friendship drifted apart. Years later I saw him at a party. I was there with my brothers and sisters and he was there with his wife and small children. “Lynnie” I said. He nodded awkwardly. Then even more years later when our mothers dared be friends again I saw him with his three children at his mother’s house – the other half of the house of summer fun.

Everything in the house was exactly as I remembered it. When I wandered upstairs to look around I heard my mother and her friend Aggi, laughing and singing songs. Lynnie and I chatted and I was surprised at the ease with which we were able to talk about this and that. It was smooth. And comfortable. And I wandered around outside to the pool we used to play in. And we laughed and talked about how he fished me out of the pool that summer long ago when I wore  little white canvas sneakers with blue trim — that summer when I believed I would drown – twice.  When I believed my father would kill me. When I learned he would leave me to drown just a little bit longer than needed because he was showing off.

Lynnie left a message recently. “I’m in Vancouver.” it said. “And who do I know in Vancouver? I know Tessa. That’s who I want to see. ” So he came for dinner. And I was so excited. And I worried about everything.. What are we going to eat? What are we going to do?  And I worried that grief would show up as an unwanted guest for dinner. Because that happens sometimes. And not just grief for my mother and his mother but grief for times gone by.  Those summer days playing in the pool. Those days before I worried about losing people and sunscreen and flossing my teeth, the days before I knew who that blue eyed devil really was. I know so many more things now.  And I haven’t been home since she died. And he was coming on the day that Reuben left us. And I said to Dave what happens if I see Lynnie and all I can do is cry. And he said, don’t worry about it. Lynnie will get it. And Lynnie came and grief didn’t show up. We talked and laughed like old, good friends and for a few hours we allowed ourselves the luxury of visiting those warm, summery childhood days.

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Minutiae #3: Opera Man

My daily life is broken by tiny extraordinary moments – those dashes away from whatever you’re doing, the silly laughter with a colleague, the email from your sister, the mystery of the missing necklace and the “If you find this necklace” poster that Dave hid in my skating bag along with a roll of tape. These are the little things, the  minutiae that nudge  me outside myself to something greater and leave me with that feeling of being in the middle of it all, in that beautiful stream of life.

The Red Beaded Necklace

My necklace left me and now I have a hole in my heart.  I want my necklace back. My sister, maybe you remember her. I refer to her as Don Quixote on some days, Napoleon on others. She sent me an email after she read my post on the red necklace.  All it said was  “Sorry about your necklace. Mom probably took it . She needs it for her next life. Don’t’ worry. It’s safe.” And I laughed.

And then a few nights later, I am  in a deep sleep. I don’t see her but I feel her in my dream. Maybe it’s her standing by the door. Yes, it’s her but she’s leaving.  She’s always leaving in these dreams. I don’t  see the beads but I know she is paying me a rare visit and when I wake up, I”m okay. I’m really okay. She wanted her beads back.

Opera Man

I walk at lunch. I find it unnatural to sit all day at a desk – so I walk every day. I walk in Central Park – no,  not the one in New York. Not the one with those quaint 19th century lantern lights that create wintry shadows on crisp white snow. The one where you can still hear a horse and carriage carrying the ghosts from its past. My Central Park houses killer fish illegally dumped in  ponds. Though I have never seen it myself, this fish grows rapidly, stalks its prey from the murky depths of the pond and eats small dogs.That’s my Central Park.

Like others I walk Central Parks’ trails at noon. I see lovers, friends, colleagues, strangers, lost souls winding their way through the wooded pathways. Sometimes young lovers stop to kiss – long lingering kisses. They’re lost to each other. When they’re old they’ll think back on the sweetness of this love – and while their lover’s face may fade from memory, the thought of them still holds a light deep in their heart.

I walk  and take in the quiet setting. I say hello here and there but mostly I just walk. Lately though I’ve noticed someone new. We pass each other on our routes. He is going the opposite way to me. I know he is coming before I see him because he’s singing. Opera – beautiful, resonant notes joyfully executed . His  confident baritone lands smoothly on the fragrant fall air.  I hear him before I see him. When I see him he continues singing. He’s by no means a young man. He’s tall with white hair and he has a lazy way about him. As we pass each other he stops, pauses, looks me in the eye and says hello with his slightly accented almost ordinary voice. And then he continues on his way singing. Opera Man I think to myself and once again I feel lucky. Really lucky.

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Dr. Sheldrick Wildlife Trust for Elephants and Rhinos: Chemi Chemi November Update

ImageAs a foster parent to Chemi Chemi one of the orphaned baby elephants at the Sheldrick Wildlife Trust, I receive monthly reports written by Dame Sheldrick. The report includes an update on all the orphans including some of the battles lost and won in their frontline struggle against illegal poaching of elephants. The orphaned baby elephants are there quite often because their families have been slaughtered for their tusks. Those who support the Sheldrick Trust are supporting the important work of a frontline organization that is waging a battle to save elephants from being hunted to extinction. Every day I’m astounded by the human audacity to use, break, destroy, terrorize, mutilate, parade all manner of wildlife for greed and self-interest.

Elephants have the same life span as human beings. They have the same development growth as humans. They are social, sophisticated, smart, complex animals with an enormous capacity to remember, love and mourn. The more people are aware of the slaughter that is going on in Africa and the war that is being waged against its wildlife the greater chance these animals have of surviving. Standing by and watching species go extinct one by one, as the same time as we wage war on our planet is starting to make me sic.  Those are my sober thoughts for a Sunday night. Elephants are not bracelets or trinkets.

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