"A few days after learning I had cancer, a dear friend of mine with his own health problems drove from hours away to show up at our door lugging two huge bags of the very finest from his favorite Italian restaurant. 'When a friend is in trouble, you circle the wagons,' he said. I was reminded of when Lou Gehrig, facing a devastating diagnosis, called himself 'the luckiest man on the face of the earth.'" In the NYT (Gift Article), David C. Roberts gets a terrible diagnosis but also welcomes an unexpected light: Other people who care. Light in the Shadow of a Diagnosis. "Maybe it’s the steroids talking, but what has become clear to me is that without intimate human connection, however fleeting, we are lost. Everything else seems so small by comparison. It feels like something I had always known — perhaps something that deep down we all know — but then real life made me forget." Yes, this is a moving piece with an important message about community and friendship. And yes, it also serves as a reminder of what's most important at a moment when America's diagnosis feels bleak. 2Western Sieve“And the face of the nation keeps changin' and changin’. The face of the nation, I don't recognize it no more.”—John Mellencamp "Naturally, on Oligarchs' Island the premise of Gilligan's Island would have to be adjusted. The castaways on Gilligan's Island were all American, whereas the powerful oligarchs are South African or Russian. Rather than try to find ways to return home, the oligarchs seek a Muscovian promised land of endless wealth, impunity, and immortality. Our oligarchs are stuck with one another, as were the good people of Gilligan's Island, but they cannot be expected to cooperate. Oligarchies are unstable; members disappear." Timothy Snyder compares the new American oligarchy to Gilligan's Island. Oligarchs' Island. (I got so nauseated I barely survived the three-hour cruise.) Related: Elon Musk’s PAC spent an estimated $200 million to help elect Trump. (And he's not going to stop spending. Look as the Tesla share price. He made a profit on the 200.) 3The Emperor Has No BrosYou're not the only one thinking (or at least joking) about moving somewhere very different. Emperor penguin travels over 2,000 miles from Antarctica to Australia in possible first. 4The Stroke Feels Good"There is only one product in my life that I’ve been using for over a decade, longer than anything else. Over the years, my preference in nearly everything has changed and evolved; from the face wash I use to the jewelry I wear to the coffee I drink, everything’s gotten an upgrade. Everything, that is, except for the trustiest pen on the market. Pen lovers already know which one it is—the good ol’ Pilot G2." Esquire: A Love Letter to the Greatest Pen of All Time. (It's been so long since I've used a pen my hand cramps up just signing my name.) 5Extra, ExtraAmsterdamn: "Amsterdam police were bracing for yet another night of unrest on Tuesday as the Dutch capital grapples with antisemitic violence that started with attacks against visiting Israeli football fans last week." Meanwhile, closer to home: Demonstrators wave Nazi flags outside local theater performance of ‘The Diary of Anne Frank’ in Michigan. 6Bottom of the News"Wander into the bathroom products aisle at the supermarket and you’ve entered a topsy-turvy world where numbers shape-shift. A pack of 18 mega toilet paper rolls, for example, magically transforms into 90 'regular' ones. The labeling emphasizes this greater number in large font, lest you foolishly think 18 simply equals 18. Another pack might insist that 12 even-thicker rolls of toilet paper are the equivalent of 96 normal rolls." How Big Toilet Paper dupes us all. (All marketing copy aside, you're paying more for your toilet paper. But this is not high on your list of worries, and the math is almost impossible, so you'll probably just roll with it.) Read my 📕, Please Scream Inside Your Heart, or grab a 👕 in the Store. |