Government, corporations, and the rest of us

Trying to sort out the political and civic events over the past month or so has given me a headache (how about you?)!  But I can’t turn away from what is happening – the stakes are way too high to just sit back and act like nothing is going on.  We have reached a time when corporate greed is unprecedented, and the plight of ordinary people in the USA gets worse by the day.  Finally, though, we see a glimpse of possibility that some folks are waking up from the corporate drugs we have beenConsumer vs business fed for far too long.

But a story that a friend told me recently turned my attention to wondering how on earth we can reach folks who seem to be in a perpetual stage of adolescence – simple rebellion against the [government] parent.  My friend, who recently went through a horrendous treatment for a very aggressive cancer, just at a time when she lost her job and subsequently her medical insurance coverage, asked a woman protesting against health care reform: “What exactly are you against — any and all public health care programs?” The woman at least engaged enough to hear my friend’s story, and then brushed her off saying.  Here is my friend’s account: Continue reading

Posted in Health Care, Politics, Social Issues | Tagged , , | 2 Comments

Peace and Power – a dozen and one things you can do!

I am working on the 8th Edition of Peace and Power: Creative Leadership for Building Community.  The 1st edition was published in 1984, with Charlene Eldridge as the lead author.  After Charlene died in 1993, I have continued this work, and like the Nurse Manifest project, it continues to hold a small but steady presence in the Peace and Power: Creative Leadership for Building Communityworld.  The last couple of editions have not involved major changes, and this one will not either in terms of the basic ideas.  But I am giving is a big work-over, with an eye to having an e-book edition as well as lots of web connections for interaction.  Not sure how that will work out yet, but stay tuned!  And send along any and all suggestions along the way!

The main reason I am posting about this now, though, is to share a bit that Charlene and I created for an edition that came out during the 1st gulf war.  This list of “a dozen and one things you can do to create peace” remains so important, and I love to just think about these things from time to time as a gentle reminder that there are important things to do, but also and perhaps more important, things to focus our attention on instead of the angst of all things crazy!  Here is the list: Continue reading

Posted in Politics, Social Issues | Tagged , , , , , | 2 Comments

NCAA Women’s Basketball Final Four!

Of course many reading this blog already know this basic information, but for those who are not avid fans, here is the scoop, and along with a bit of my personal commentary!  So it comes down to an interesting lineup for the women’s basketball final four, with the only two #1 seed teams being [drum roll please] — Connecticut and Stanford!  The other 2 teams are #2 seeds — Notre Dame, and a newcomer toNCAA logo for Women's Basketball Final Four the event – Texas A&M.  Connecticut will play Notre Dame, a team that is a long-time rival in the Big East Conference.  The Notre Dame coach is Muffet McGraw, and for me, it is worth keeping a close eye on the telecast for glimpses of this really wonderful coach in action.  Connecticut has played Notre Dame many times in conference play (3 times this past season), and so Notre Dame is Continue reading

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Amazing music at Yoshi’s in Oakland

Barbara Higbie Linda Tillery Jane SiberryNina Gerber

Last night – what an amazing concert!  Almost like being at Michigan!  Barbara Higbie, Linda Tillery, Jane Siberry, Nina Gerber!  They were clearly having fun together, and sang a few of each Barbara’s, Jane’s and Linda’s best-loved songs. Barbara played piano, fiddle and sang; Linda on drums and vocals, Jane on guitar and vocals, and Nina with amazing bass guitar on everything. You can click on the images here to go to their web sites.  Check out their webs, their music — watch for appearances near you!  I did not realize that the great song “Calling all Angels,” that I love on one of k.d. Lang’s albums (duet with k.d. and Jane) is one of Jane’s; also the ‘Love is Everthing” that was featured on “the L Word” a few years back.

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What teachers make – Taylor Mali

I have shared another version of this video several places so if you are following this blog and have already seen it, you can skip it!  But then you just might want to see it again!  Now it is time for someone to come up with a routine about nurses … wow … would that not be something else?  Any takers for this challenge?  Does anyone know a nurse comedienne?

Posted in Social Issues | Tagged , | 2 Comments

On a lighter note – March Madness

Today the University of Connecticut Women advanced to the second round in the women’s NCAA tournament!  Now that I live in Stanford country, my affinity for these women is not always greeted with the same enthusiasm that we experience in Connecticut, but hey – Stanford broke UConn’s record-setting winning streak in a fabulous contest this season!  The thing is — to see women’s sports advancing to this Logo for Women's NCAA basketball final fourlevel is a wonderful thing, and regardless of the team it is more than gratifying to witness this evolution.  I will never forget the first season when I actually lived in Connecticut and had an opportunity to attend some of the games in person. Every women’s basketball game was sold out (the men’s games were not!), so it was not easy to get tickets.  The games are exciting, but the real “show” to me is seeing the diverse crowd enthusiastically supporting young women athletes … girls, boys, women and men all cheering and knowledgeable about the game, the team, the coaches, the stats!  I was just learning the sport, and had never witnessed crowds anywhere so completely dedicated to something that featured women in a starring role.

But there is another aspect to this that generates controversy, sometimes even on the hallowed ground in Connecticut!  And that is the coach – Geno Auriema. Some object to Geno simply because he is a man coaching women; many folks feel that women should be filling the major coaching spots in women’s sports.  They have a point, but overlook the important role of “allies” in any struggle toward greater opportunity for women. Personally, I love seeing the women coaches in action (and there are many very wonderful and colorful women coaches who I admire greatly!).  But notice that Geno’s coaching staff has consistently been women — excellent women who have played an equally important role in developing the UConn program.  It is worth noticing them, each and every one!

Another thing that some folks do not like is Geno – his style, his manner of coaching, his relationship with the media.  Fair enough … not everyone’s style fits everyone’s particular taste. I have to say I like Geno a lot!  Karen and I watch the “Geno show” that is streamed on CPTV in Connecticut, where we not only get a sense of Geno as a person, but also learn heaps about the game, about the players, the coaches, the various controversies that crop up from time to time.  No other women’s basketball program has this kind of “service” the community, and it plays a huge part in the success of the team.

Women’s basketball is not just a trivial sporting event … it is a major “event” shaping the future for all women!  All of you fans out there — whoever your team … here’s to a great tournament!  I am watching it all!!

Posted in Girls, Politics, women's basketball | 3 Comments

Japan’s tragedy (or is it all of us??)

Yesterday Thomas Cox sent around a terrific commentary on what is happening in Japan, and with his permission, I am posting it here.  If you want to see the actual post on the Nurse-Philosophy list, go to this link: http://bit.ly/hUfKBM.

But this is so important, I am posting it here in its entirety:

Risk – The Real Butterfly Effect

by Thomas Cox, PhD, RN, author of  the soon to be available book: Standard Errors: Life, Health & Death When Hospitals, Long Term Care Facilities, Home Health Agencies, Physicians & Nurses Are Insurers.

I have resisted the impulse to comment on Japan. But there are only a few “Teachable moments” as profound as this one.

45+ years ago somebody thought it would be a great idea to build a nuclear reactor along the pacific ocean coastline in a country with high seismic activity and high risks of tsunamis.

That day, a butterfly emerged from its chrysalis and flapped its wings. The gentle flapping of its wings reverberated over the years and the cumulative effect became stronger and stronger each and every day.

Nobody really noticed the effect of the butterfly’s wings. Life went on as usual. In fact, the people who decided to build one reactor took heart from the fact that things were going very well, there were no gale force winds, so they built a second, third, fourth, fifth and sixth reactor at the same site.

And the long term effect of the butterfly just kept growing stronger and stronger. But the people felt only the subtlest of breezes.

Since things were going so well the plant’s owners, the government of Japan and
the people just went about life. Repairs to the reactors were deferred, employees who balked at such practices were malcontents, and anyone who questioned these practices was maligned.

And the cumulative effect of the butterfly’s wings just kept growing. The people felt only the gentlest of breezes. In the summer they felt cooler and in the winter, only the slightest nip in the air.

More and more problems developed. They too were ignored. The gentlest breezes
turned into strong winds. In the summer it blew sand into people’s eyes and in the winter it felt like ice against their faces. They closed their eyes and covered their faces. It worked out just fine.

And the cumulative effect of the butterfly’s wings grew stronger.

Then one day, the entire universe shifted and all those years of ignoring risks
came together.

Why would nurses care about such things? Because the butterfly’s wings for our health care (finance) systems, the decision to transfer insurance risks to health care providers, have been developing for the same last 4 decades and we are seeing and will see more in the future of the full force and effect of those decisions and their cumulative effects.

Ignored risk doesn’t just go away, it builds and builds until one day, like a hurricane, earthquake, tsunami, the collapse of your economy, or of more concern in this email, the collapse of your health care (finance) system, just overwhelms you.

We nurses ought not “…just go gentle into that good night” of our demise, of the loss of all we trained for, struggle to protect, and say we want.

The consequences of compelling health care providers to accept insurance risks, the fact that nurses, doctors, hospitals, nursing homes, and home health agencies are all asked to meet the needs of their patients while inefficiently and ineptly managing insurance portfolios are coming to their full fruition: health care providers leaving their practices, shuttering their facilities, reducing patient services, and abandoning patients.

The loss of health care facilities, health care workers, equipment and supplies in affected areas in Japan has been horrific. But all those facilities, their staff, their equipment and their supplies were barely adequate to meet the needs of people before they were lost. Now the entire health care system in Japan is reeling. The remaining hospitals, physicians, nurses, equipment and supplies are clearly proving inadequate for the new demands being put on them.

Just as the risks of operating nuclear plants on a wing and a prayer, and being relatively unprepared for a health care crisis have come home to roost in Japan, so is there days of reckoning ahead for all of us.

The plight here (the USA) and elsewhere is as clearly in focus at this moment in history as the problems at the nuclear plants and the health care system in Japan should have been a year ago. The question for those plants, that health care system and for our health care (finance) systems was/is WHEN, not IF.

And yet nursing and we nurses close our eyes and cover our faces. We ignore the risks that abound all around us and it only hurts a little bit…

We just keep cutting back on Medicaid, Medicare, VA facilities in the
USA. We “Transform” the NHS by foisting insurance risks on local trusts. We are systematically ignoring the consequences for public health services, eviscerating safety net programs, sacrificing emergency preparedness, ordering equipment and supplies only when they have failed to work or as they are running out. And the distance between health care workers and those replenished pieces of equipment and supplies are growing, relying more and more on remote supply lines.

We in the US continue to staff health facilities by compelling health care workers to work mandatory overtime on what are regular “emergency” bases as our only solution to maintaining staffing on a regular basis.

It only hurts a little bit more every day…

But, in those dark hours of the night, when the monsters and ogres keep
pushing open the closet door, don’t you have to ask:

“Is that a butterfly, a breeze, a wind, or a tornado I am feeling?”

Posted in Health Care, Politics | 1 Comment

Social Media — are we ready?

As many of my friends know, I have been a “techie” of sorts for many years.  However, even though I have been aware of an used the major social media tools, I am only now really beginning to be an active user.  This video is a re-make of one that I posted on my web site about a year ago … it is fun to watch, informative, and …. well — watch it and decide for yourself!  Note: When you click the play button you will be prompted to go to YouTube to watch it … don’t let that stop you!

Posted in Technology | 1 Comment

The “pink princess” culture

When I heard about Peggy Orenstein’s new book “Cinderella Ate My Daughter” I immediately downloaded it to my iPad!  We had just taken my granddaughters Sophie (age 6) and Elodie (age 5) on a whirlwind trip to DisneyWorld and the main thing they wanted to do was to get princess dresses with the Holiday gift money sent to them by their granddad!  I had observed their great interest in all the Disney princesses (most of whom I had no knowledge of), and their love of all things pink, but since they are also equally interested in things like Star Wars, the human body, their playlists on iTunes, the latest drawing app on their Dad’s iPad, the USA presidents, Rosa Parks and other women of history, I viewed their love of pink and princesses as something typical of little girls in their generation. What I did not realize until we went to DisneyWorld is how much of a culture this has become, and I had no idea how it got to be so. They did get their dresses, much to their delight, but interestingly they choose yellow and blue dresses, not pink!  Then a couple of weeks later I came across a KQED interview of Peggy Orenstein and knew that her book is a must-read for this feminist grandmother!  I have not finished it yet, but I am finding it entertaining, thought-provoking, and informative. Would love to hear from others who might have come across this book, or who have little girls in their lives who are also part of this culture!

Posted in Books, Feminism, Girls, Social Issues | 1 Comment

Prop 8 hearings on Dec. 6

From time to time I come across an issue or a resource that is important to me and that I want to share. And in sharing, invite others to comment and share your thoughts!   This blog will do just that!

So to start, I went on line to find out what is there if you google “Prop 8” or something similar to this tag.  The hearing at the next level of appeal is set for December 6, and the proceedings will be broadcast on CSPAN from 10 to noon PST.

Amazingly, I did find a number of links but none of the top links led to the spot where you can download the actual PDF file of Judge Walker’s ruling.  This is quite distressing, because the ruling is extremely important and so I have posted a link to the PDF here.  BUT the issue I want to mention here is that almost every link that google shows, includes a link to a web site called faith-freedom.com — the intent and content of which of course you can guess!

The intensity of this issue is amazing. And in instance after instance, the only “voice” or “reason” or “justification” that comes up in opposition to gay rights is that of the religious right.  Judge Walker’s ruling makes this very clear.   The “lame duck” congress is sitting on the edge of the DADT policy in the military, we have the gay marriage thing going on, and the gay marriage issue is on the brink and in both instances, they are not being held back by public opinion (although there is a significant proportion of the public still against us), but rather by an “army” of religious zealots.

Bottom line, I have strong opinions about “militarization” and “marriage” — the two of which are strangely related, after all.  So stay tuned .. I just might blog a bit more about the links I see here!  But despite my “strong opinions” that contradict both militarization and marriage, the reality is that we live in a world where both prevail, and the bottom line on human rights in our contemporary social context is that  1)DADT needs to be repealed, and 2) barriers to same-sex marriage need to be dismantled.  The larger “causes” of course are further down the road:  1) pursue diplomacy above aggression, and 2) disconnect the civil rights of committed partnerships (the state’s recognition, in come countries called civil unions) for all people, from the optional religious traditions of “marriage”.

I welcome your comments and thoughts!

Posted in LGBTQ, Politics | 1 Comment