Too much to say about the last few days. The Creation Museum was interesting to say the least. We had a great time interviewing the museums spokesperson. On our drive to Columbus we detoured to a barn declaring in large letters Field of Dreams and got a tour by the owners, a couple who left everything in England to buy a barn in Ohio because of a faithful conviction. Yesterday we met some great Amish people, cooked out with them, visited with a group of people traveling across the state in covered wagons, and then returned to camp out on our new Amish friend’s land. Today we went to a Pow Wow festival and talked with Lance White Eagle who taught us about the political issues facing Reservations today. Time for coffee at starbucks.
J.Walt is a magician of types. In his show Spontaneous Fantasia, an improvisational animation experience, he draws worlds in and out of existence with the wave of a pen. Images dance across the Planetarium’s dome to a range of music from Pachelbel’s Canon to electronic beats of his own.
Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.
There’s a few websites out there that make it easy and free for you to donate to companies. Here are a few:
http://www.thebreastcancersite.com/clickToGive
Click on a button and a sponsor will donate to breast cancer, hunger, child health, literacy, rain forest and animal rescue.
http://www.goodsearch.com/
Enter your charity of choice and every time you search for something Yahoo will send some money their way
www.searchgive.com
Same idea as above
So what are you doing on this website? Start donating.
Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.
The mall walkers of southern California are not at all what I expected. Lead by a study done by University of Essex, I was expecting to meet people who were falling deeper into a depression caused by indoor exercise. Instead I was encountered with a group singing Happy Birthday. It was Leslye’s father’s 91st birthday and all the walkers including their friends and family were celebrating at the mall, a place that several of them meet up 5 days a week for 30 minutes of walking and at least 30 more minutes of talking and relaxing. “On those few days that I don’t walk, it feels strange. I don’t have the energy or the pace that I normally do” comments one of the walkers as she chooses from the assortment of bagel and fruit spread laid out across the table in the food court. “What the mall doesn’t realize is that we turn this place into a restaurant every morning” says Naomi, a woman who shows up even though recent surgery has kept her from walking.
Five years ago several different groups of women decided to walk in their neighborhoods, local parks or at the gym. But eventually they all turned to the mall with its temperature controlled hallways, kosher kitchen and accessible bathrooms. These separate groups numbering 12 women in total, sharing the same schedule and routine eventually introduced themselves and from there an amazing friendship has developed. “To meet people at this age, that you get along with this well, is truly unusual,” comments Judy the oldest, but still very vibrant, member of the group. And this is where I discovered the real reason for walking the mall. It’s the group of people they do it with. They all carry around a laminated card with everyone’s phone numbers. Initially meant for use as emergency contact, they now use it for all sorts of social purposes. If anyone is ever on vacation they make sure to call or text the others during the hour period they’re at the mall just to check in.
It’s become more than a retreat to the climate controlled hallways with accessible bathrooms and kosher coffee shops, it’s become a place to start their day with a little bit of exercise and a lot more of conversation.





