March 29, 2020

Quarantine Goals

Quarantine goals are a sure way to ward off the boredom that accompanies being trapped in your apartment for 1,864 days at a time. Once I cycled through the other boredom-deflecting activities (AKA naps and re-organizing all closets), I found it was time to settle in and start working on some long-term projects. It gave a sense of larger purpose to my Netflix-addled days. In pursuing my quarantine goals, I decided not to order myself a whole new life on Amazon (because, poor Amazon workers!). So, the goals below reflect objectives I can pursue based on the items currently in my possession. After reading, let me know all about your…

March 22, 2020

Lent During Coronavirus Quarantine

Lent and quarantine have three important things in common. First, the root word for both comes from the Latin quadragesima (translated into modern English as ‘forty’). For Lent, this signifies the forty days before Easter. In the case of a quarantine, quadragesima (or quarantino in Italian) represented the forty days passengers were kept in isolation at Mediterranean ports during the era of the bubonic plague. Historically, we consider this to be the first period of quarantine. Though isolation time now varies, the name remains the same. Second, they are activities completed with a degree of loneliness. Quarantine requires a certain measure of solitude. Despite the boom in online communication, the…

March 15, 2020

Coronavirus in Madrid: Updates and Advice

empty steet

Coronavirus has officially arrived in Madrid. As recently as last week, I watched news of the unfolding pandemic with shockingly limited perception. I listened when friends explained the long-lasting effects on the economy and the importance of social distancing. But the phenomenon still felt far away. I scheduled yoga classes. I visited museums, worried about my book edits and generally went on about my life. That’s crazy about everything happening in Italy, I would think when I browsed through Instagram. I agreed that the phenomenon certainly seemed serious. But, even as the streets in Madrid grew quieter, it seemed serious somewhere else. Somehow, the idea that the same measures would…

February 14, 2020

The 10% Rule

In ecology, the 10% rule states that that only 10% of the energy at any given trophic level of an ecosystem can move to the next trophic level. In social media, the principle seems to work a little differently. Somewhere in the arcane documents governing internet-based dialogue, there must be a clause that states users have to break their years into 10% segments. Then, they have to publicly lament or celebrate the loss of each randomly grouped collection of days. As a result, via Twitter I recently received the cheery news that 2020 is 10% over. I know, I know-Twitter always hits you with the truth when you least expect…

February 7, 2020

Historical Museums in New York

bridge under construction

The museums in New York are as varied as the inhabitants of the city. Some locations ooze fancy molding and expensive lunch. Others are blue-haired and tenacious, clenching at their rest-controlled space with a death grip normally reserved for would-be victims of defenestration. Above all, this list is reserved for the elbow-patch wearing, history-obsessed professor set. These museums in New York are off-the-beaten-track. Instead of world class art or cinema displays, they focus on the more obscure aspects of the history of the city. For example, if you are curious about turn-of-the-century religious construction on the Lower East Side or the early life of Theodore Roosevelt, you will delight in…

January 27, 2020

Aconcagua: Interesting Facts

To celebrate the New Year (and my second year on sabbatical, but who’s counting), I climbed Mount Aconcagua in Argentina last week. Aconcagua, at 22,841 feet/6,962 m, has several rather impressive statistics about it’s height: Facts about Aconcagua: Height It’s the tallest mountain in South America. This makes it an uncontested member of the seven summits club. (Not all mountains are so lucky as there is some controversy regarding the European and Oceaniac peaks ) It is the tallest mountain in the world outside of the Himalayan range. The current height was caused by the subduction of the Nazca Plate under the South American plate. This process started 8-10 million…

January 2, 2020

New Years Resolution: Don’t Worry

I’ve spent a lot of time learning how not to worry. The below is what I know after a close-to-forty-year study of the subject. As a child, I took worrying very seriously. I routinely worried about topics ranging from the death of my little finger (long story) to the probability that California would break away from the rest of the United States and float out into the ocean to sink (with my older sister aboard). When we learned to write letters in school, I eschewed the offer of a traditional pen pal. Instead, I promptly reached out to President George H. W. Bush to detail a short list of my…

December 19, 2019

5 Fun Spanish Christmas Traditions in Madrid

Christmas lights

Spanish Christmas is the best time of the year in Madrid! Granted, I’m a Christmas-cheer type of person, so for me Christmas is the best time of year anywhere (see related post here). But in Madrid, holiday beauty and tradition abound. Streets blaze with Christmas lights, markets and shops bustle with people and good food awaits at every turn. Of course, the chance to win absurd sums of money in the Christmas lottery also cranks up the holiday cheer. Read on for my five favorite holiday traditions in Madrid. Spanish Christmas Traditions in Madrid 1 Las Luces de Navidad (Christmas Lights) One of my absolute favorite things about Christmas in…

December 12, 2019

Malaga, Spain: Five Fabulous Things

view from Malaga Castle

The coastal city of Malaga, Spain provides a multitude of things to do all year long. Tourists flock to Malaga, the capital city of the Costa Del Sol, for sunshine, visits to the variety of light, airy palacios reformed as art museums and food, food, food. What’s not to love?! Read on for the best five things to do in Malaga, Spain. Things to do in Malaga Malaga is well-connected to the larger Spanish cities of Madrid and Barcelona by train. If you are traveling internationally, you can arrive at the Malaga-Costa Del Sol airport for easy transport into the city. You can easily appreciate the city sites in a…

November 17, 2019

The Thyssen Museum, Madrid: Five Fabulous Things

View of Madrid

The Thyssen Museum in Madrid provides one of three vertex points in the city’s ‘Golden Triangle of Art‘. This significant collection of art was acquired by Spain in 1992. The Thyssen family collection had previously been one of the largest private collections in the world. Baron Thyssen decided to house the museum in Madrid after finalizing his fifth marriage to Carmen Cervera, a former Miss Spain from Barcelona. (He also, by some accounts, decided to charge Spain $350 million dollars for the collection only after the government appropriated a building and paid to move the collection to Madrid, but that’s a story for a different day.) The current collection provides…