Archive for the 'On the road' Category



Smooth operation

You can’t say no to royalty. Today’s royalty in Africa are the chiefs of administrative ‘tribes,’ of government ministries and departments. When they arrive late you feed them breakfast, even if 30 people have been waiting in a conference room for over an hour. Maybe they did not even ask for breakfast but you treat them like royalty, nevertheless. That’s the tradition.

So all of us were way off with our bets on how long after the official starting time of 9 AM we would actually begin the formal show and tell. It turned out to be one hour and a half. It never ceases to amaze me that this keeps on happening despite all the rhetoric (and much complaining) about punctuality. I watched people’s reaction intently and was glad that I was not in charge. Some people openly rolled their eyes presumably because they saw the contradictions; others are so used to it they don’t even notice; and finally there are the facilitators who appear to be, as a universal subspecies, in perpetual denial about when people will actually arrive. I stopped proposing to include the expected delays in the day’s programming by padding all the activities with extra time. We never caught up in the morning. Everything got simply moved up. People are used to this. I did not see anyone look at their watch but the participants did decline the afternoon break until the program was officially closed, and the bright yellow ADRA polo shirts and per diem handed out, late in the afternoon.

While the important people ate breakfast the teams used the extra time to get their final presentations in even more final shape. I could not help myself and dragged inserted photos back in shape here and there. People liked it when I helped them look thin again instead of the squashed creatures they had become. Pen drives were exchanged accompanied by queries of ‘how clean is your’s?” or “Are you free of viruses?” With all of us working in public health we have fun with these allusions to safe sex and infections. We, or rather our viruscan software, did ‘catch’ some nasty viruses in the process; Brian, who was first introduced to us as Brain – a name that stuck – lost some files. They were suddenly gone. If ever there was a good reason to back up, this is the place. I travelled with my two laptops, 2 pen drives and 2 multi-gigabyte hard drives. Between the two computers I juggle two versions of MS Office, one readable on one computer but not on the other. It gets rather complicated and it is a challenge and a half to backup the right new versions over the right old versions in such a way that the files (doc or docx) are on the right computer, hard disk or stick and can be opened properly.

During the morning I managed to sit through all 7 PowerPoint presentations without yawning. Listening to the presentations was actually quite enjoyable because they were sharp, tight and short. The facilitators had sprinkled the really good ones in between the less impressive ones but in the end they all came out quite compelling. Yeah for PowerPoint!

And once we started it was one smooth operation from start to finish. The presenting teams were confident and completely owned their challenges, showing results people had not expected possible in only 6 short months. And they promised more results and more impact by the end of the year.

I watched the facilitators guide the show with equal confidence. I was happy. Maybe this is what grandmotherhood feels like, watching the grandchild walk with confidence and seeing the parents enjoy the miracle; that’s how we were all together yesterday morning.

After the presentation a flurry of excited conversations took us through lunch. We discussed a senior leadership program for teams from the central level. The top is usually left out from the sort of practical training district officials often receive. They are occasionally sent to overseas courses but most are theoretical and very cerebral. The senior leaders are very thirsty for having the experiences that their subordinates have, and so the doors are wide open and we started to explore how and what to do. I am thinking about using juggling as a metaphor for learning. I did this many years ago in Turkey and produced some twenty fine jugglers in the process, all wearing suits; they were also to have become better trainers but of that I don’t have first hand experience.

In the evening Naomi and I accompanied the facilitators for a walk on the beach followed by a meal that was slow in coming, and pricy for Ghanaian standards; the worst was my five slice pineapple desert that cost the equivalent of 5 dollars; this in a country where pineapples practically grow by the side of the road as a weed. Everyone agreed I paid ten times too much, so I left the precious pineapple fibers stuck between my teeth for awhile prolonging the delightful taste of Ghanaian pineapple.

On the balcony

Yesterday I arrived in Cape Coast quite rested. Somehow I managed to take a few catnaps on the way down there even those the car rattled and vibrated like a truck. I already knew that, if there is no choice, our bodies are quite adaptable and the mind can simply shut off.

I arrived at the Sanaa Lodge hotel about noon time, expecting to see the entire group at lunch. I was wrong. I was welcomed with applause as I entered the conference room in the middle of the 4th of 7 dress rehearsal presentations. It is then that I realized, once again, that the visa/passport hiccup that had postponed my trip by a day had, after all, been a good thing. I have a hard time sitting through many slide presentations and seven in one morning would have been a bit much; three and a half was just right.

 Some teams had done well, others less so. I noticed that the tendency to call absences (lack of this or that) ‘obstacles’ was still alive and well.  It was good to sit in the back and listen and see where our notes or instructions have not quite had the desired effect. But it was also nice to sit in the back and be an observer for a change. The facilitation team, brand new to each other and the material in January, had nicely come together and was entirely and confidently in charge.

Naomi is here from our partner organization ADRA. She flew in from the Southern Sudan via Kenya and is here to be proud of her organization, especially the team leader William who is the exemplar of a leader and exactly the right person to lead this program.

We walked around the reception area with our laptops trying to ‘catch’ the wireless  signal which the hotel claims to have and we failed to find. The hotel’s IT guy is looking into this but since we are leaving tomorrow we are not holding our breath. The five clothes hangers I asked for have not arrived either and will probably never do.

Susan and her colleague from USAID/Ghana arrived in the afternoon and we sat side by side in the hotel’s internet café having plenty of time to catch up during the innumerable pauses created by slow machines and slow connections.

For dinner we drove into town and had shrimp curry and jollof rice in a little shack on the beach. When we came back I had planned to head straight for bed but was told that a gentleman was waiting in the conference room for me. That was of course William, abandoned by his crew and acting very much like I would have as lead facilitator: taking care of details for tomorrow, getting all the handouts right and working late into the night. I ended up working with him, ‘drawing’ the vision that was created in January on a giant flipchart and reviewing all of the improved PowerPoint slides until it was past midnight.

Today we have been told that a ‘high-powered’ team is arriving from Ghana’s health headquarters to listen to the results of 6 months of intense leadership development work. This we have been promised by the top chief who cannot be with us, unfortunately. I was able to catch him on the phone in between meetings but that is all the contact we’ll have on this trip.

It is a risky thing to invite people for morning attendance at a site that is several hours and many traffic jams away from their usual place of work. We guessed how late some would arrive and when we could actually start. As usual, I am the more pessimistic one on that; all but one of my Ghanaian colleagues think that this time, here, now, things will be different. I have heard that said before and am doubtful but won’t make it my problem. I am, after all, an observer, or, as one of the facilitators said, “you are standing up on the fourth balcony above the dance floor, watching.” Ron Heifetz would be thrilled to know his metaphor is used so fluently in Ghana.

Rush-rush-wait

Given how many things could have gone wrong, it is a miracle that in the end nothing did. But my departure was one long suspense-filled affair. It consisted of a concatenation of just-in-times, starting sometime last week. First there was the late travel approval from Washington, then the last minute visa and passport return, the nearly too late departure from home for the airport, the long lines I was able to circumvent because I am a (very) frequent traveler. Soon this became a pattern of rush-rush-wait like a two-step dance. Once in the New-York bound plane we were put on hold in a far off corner of the airfield waiting for the thunderstorms to pass. Then there was a problem at Gate 1 at the Delta terminal at JFK which kept us sitting within view but out of reach of the jetway for another 45 minutes. And then it was back to rush-rush again, having only 15 minutes left to make my connection to Accra. Then another wait of one-and-half hour before take-off. As if the universe conspired to test and then reward me I was given an unexpected upgrade to the fourth row in business class fort the 11-hour plane ride to Accra.

There is a saying that ‘In the end, everything works out. If it hasn’t worked out yet, that’s because you haven’t gotten to the end. It comes from Brazil; must have been someone who had an experience like me today.

Fitting with the general theme of just-in-time I drove Axel to an appointment in Gloucester that was inserted in the half hour before the scheduled noontime departure from Manchester to leave for the airport. I kept myself busy for the half hour he was occupied, fueling myself with iced coffee and the car with gasoline. I ordered a flower arrangement for Magid’s daughter who returned from the hospital yesterday without her bothersome appendix. The saleslady shook her head when she heard I was on my way to the airport. “You rush to wait,” she added with a tone that indicated she had given up on flying some time ago. Rush-rush-wait, rush-rush-wait indeed.

After all this I arrived in Accra close to the expected arrival time (9 AM) and so did my suitcase, miraculously. I found, as planned,, a driver waiting for me; the same Charles who had chauffeured Cabul and me around 6 months ago. We immediately set out for Cape Coast, several traffic jams and a few hours away. I arrived just in time to hear the last 3 of the 7 team presentations, which was about the right number before lunch.

Today is Tessa’ 23rd birthday. I have been celebrating it all along from a distance, capped tonight with a cold beer, the best drink in this very hot and humid climate. I am glad I made it here but I was sorry to have missed the celebration. My spirit was in Lobster Cove, from the early morning birthday girl chair decoration all the way to the perfectly grilled chicken for dinner. These are rituals that go with the day. Happy birthday Tess!

Eleven

I have no time this morning to read all the previous 10 entries for the 14th of the month as I usually do. The last day of the conference has arrived and there is much, too much to do for such an indulgence. It will have to wait for later this day, when we get back home.

The biggest joy of yesterday was having Sita ‘scribe’ my session on MSH’s leadership program. I marvelled how she turned my words into this awesome storyboard.. And then of course introducing her to people here who mean so much to me and who feel they know Sita (and Tessa) from Caringbridge. They are part of the grander family without even knowing it.

Our evening talent show, our last evening together before we part ways later today, is a longstanding OBTC tradition. It was phenomenal this year, with talents ranging from stand up comic, cowboy yodeling, opera, magic on rhyme, skits. I somehow managed to produce my chronicle of the conference in poetic form. I am now expected to do this, so I was put on the program before the conference started. There’s always a lilttle bit of anxiety; will I be able to do this again this year? I first started to write a poetic chronicle in 2002 and somewhere along the line it became a tradition. I have fun collecting the impressions and then turning them into verse.

An now it is time to go see the doctoral students who have created a workshop session out of their learning earlier this week; that too has become a tradition, as well as me having to run because I still have to have breakfast and it is late.

And in between events I will think back on those eleven months that have passed and all the people who helped make it pass so well for us.

Learning

The piercing headache from yesterday was accompanied by severe nausea. Nothing is worse than having to throw up when you are in a dorm that does not have its own bathroom; a bathroom that says it is only for men and you are not one of those. Suffice to say I ended up sleeping an Excedrin-induced sleep till lunch and thus missed the star speakers (Tichy/Schlesinger) and workshops I had so carefully selected.

I attended an afternoon workshop with my OD counterpart from Pathfinder, a sister organization from Boston. Together with 40 other people we were led in 45 minutes through 8 experiential excercises. Good thing the last one was a relaxation exercise that took us down a stair, to our childhood beds, out of the windown, through the clouds, to the moon and back, all very relaxed, in a darkened room. It was an hour well-spent.

I walked out of two other sessions and learned later that my walking out had contributed greatly to some people’s learning; my motives the object of intense speculation. My own learning was more about connection, as it usually is, in spontaneous mini workshops, self-organized and led, outside the formal program, at a picnic bench in the sun.

A Boston harbor cruise took us out past the islands, with planes departing and arriving overhead, sailboats everywhere and a land- and seascape I am used seeing from the air as I fly in and out of Boston. The return into Boston harbor towards the well-lit skyline was spectacular; it also showed where we can save some energy.

I am the unofficial poet laureate of OBTC and so I am constantly collecting images to later turn into verse. This happens usually around midnight. Tonight is our talent show and I will be called on stage for a product that is not finished yet and constantly being re-written. This always creates a slight panic which does seem to enhance the creative process, albeit at some cost.

Today is also my session which I will be presenting with Sita scribing in the back. It was a last minute idea from Axel and Sita agreed. She may well be the draw for my session. I realized I did not make any handouts and feel somewhat underprepared.

Mindblow

I woke up with a piercing headache. This conference is about having your mind blown. Something like that happened last night in the opening session when I found myzelf exploring Plato’s cave with Indian gentlemen. How’s that for starters? Or maybe it is simply the thick yellow pollen that covers everything.

Yesterday we used up our allotted Board time, not planned but still all the way up to lunch. Finally there was the long awaited process check. Not always easy but quite honest and direct. We ended on a high note, waved goodbye to our outgoing members and transferred voting right to the newbies.

I left to pick up Axel in Manchester and we returned just in time for the opening reception. Word about our accident had reached some and not others and so there were some gasps and then a quick up and down scan, “What? You look just fine!” A fellow pilot drew a small Piper Cherokee on my name tag. One of my dorm mates is also a pilot. They are everywhere!

The after dinner kick off session by Bill Torbert and Joan Gallos was staged to ‘Blow our minds,’ as per the conference slogan. It did, and so now this headache.

I am trying to introduce this crowd to the notion of public note taking and, in its more advanced form, graphic facilitation. What better way than to invite Sita to scribe my session on Friday? She has agreed. It may be more of a draw because of her.

Teach Thyself

After a second long day of board deliberations we sampled another of Wellesley’s restaurants, this time Italian. Each time we are collectively eating too much and once again I returned with a doggy bag. Some of the Thai food was consumed during the night, with permission, by one of my dorm mates. Now that participants to the conference are streaming in there is no way of knowing or controlling what happens during the night. I still plan to drive home with Thai and Italian meals in the cooler on the back seat but I am not so sure about the quantities.

It is tricky to be on the board of an organization that is about organizational behavior and teaching others how to ‘behave’ organizationally in ways that are productive, affirming and satisfying. I cannot help reflect on how we behave ourselves in this organization and I see others do the same, although mostly in private. Collectively we know much about group dynamics, including safety. We have done research and published about this in theses and papers. But that is, of course, always about other peoples’ behavior. Here it is us. I have found that when my reptilian brain get involved (when my emotional buttons get pushed) stuff becomes trickier to handle. In private conversations I discover that, although we follow Robert’s Rules of Order, some people question this and other processes we use. They are inherited from the mother culture (academia), which I do not share. It is not clear to which degree they are adopted consciously or unconsciously. I have so far not dared to question this practice but am emboldened by the private revelations from others. We are all teachers and we are creating many teaching moments in our deliberations; there’s a whole bunch of them slowly dying on the floor.

Yesterday we debated long and hard about our relationship with another group that has a longstanding and rich connection to the conference. There is much emotion that colors the conversation; we ignore it. Times have changed, I hear. What I also see is that the ever increasing complexity and busy-ness of our lives diminishes tolerance and concern for the other; there simply is no time to ‘just talk and work things out the old fashioned way.’ And thus this old relationship is on the block; personal irritations are braided together with rules into hard substances that feel to me more like weapons than the tools they are intended to be. I wish I could be as perseverant as Henry Fonda about our uneasy group dynamics but I have no guts for that.

Our agenda not completed we have to meet again this morning. There is other stuff that is bubbling up, about expectations not met, causing more feelings to come to the surface. I am finding that the stronger the feelings, the more assumptions are attached about ‘the other’ who is (supposedly) causing these feelings. It takes more and more determination to keep separating assumptions from facts.

I had planned to go rowing before picking up Axel but I am beginning to sense that this may not be in the stars. Meditative exercise would be good for all of us.

Yesterday, between meeting and eating I had some free time to work my mailbox and then study the conference program. It was amazed to see that my session is listed right after a session about what we can learn about decision making from an aircraft accident investigation. It is a simulation, not the real thing. Even if I had wanted to go to that session I cannot because it happens at the same time as mine.

A day of sitting for hours on end, and eating too much, is not good for my body. I am hurting all over and the dorm room set up does not help. My room is in the basement and the carpet feels damp when I take off my shoes. Large ants, the size of African termites, traverse the room and halls. Even though I know they carry a message of patience, both Susan and I have crushed a few. We just don’t want half inch ants crawling into our bed (or pants).

Abundance

Right outside our dorm is a giant globe, referred to as the Babson Globe. It is several stories high. Our dorm is called Coleman Map and I am beginning to understand the map thing. The Coleman map was constructed in the 1920s and was the largest relief map in the country, 45 by 65 feet with the map’s curvature corresponding exactly to the earth’s curvature. It was created from 1216 blocks, each representing 1 degree latitude and 1 degree longitude, fitted together meticulously.

A picture on one of the marker at the base of the globe shows long rows of people sitting at high desks doing this painstaking work. From a balcony above, at the time, you could see the same as an astronaut would see at 700 miles above the earth. Remember, this was 1926. The rocket’s eye view allowed people to understand how geography shaped transportation routes and the growth of cities and regions. The map became an important tool for primary school teachers who took their classes to see it. Currently the map is in pieces in a basement of Babson and no longer visible to the public. The giant globe is not quite as useful because you can’t see the whole landscape; it is also disappointing because it no longer rotates as it used to in the 50s when it was considered a ‘tourist attraction and media wonder.’ Now it just hangs there with Africa always looking the same way. I also has become rather shabby; the North Pole is covered with tree pollen and bird poop. The only educational thing about it now is that is shows abundantly clear how the earth needs to be kept clean or else. Other than that it is an eye sore.

We conducted our board meetings with relative discipline, partially because we have a very disciplined president and partially because we would like to complete our business in two days rather than three. That would allow me to go for a row on the Charles before heading back home to pick up Axel for the start of the conference. He will be my room mate. I have re-arranged our dorm room to make it look more like a master bedroom. It does take some imagination but that is what this conference is all about.

At the end of the day we met with the students and faculty participating in the annual pre-conference Doctoral Institute; an interesting group of people including some great and well known organization, leadership and management gurus from the abundant local pool of such people whose material I use in my own teaching practice or who are part of this society.

We ended our day in a local Thai restaurant; a sister restaurant to the one near the old MSH office in Newton Corner. The menu had not changed in 10 years and brought back many memories of both happy and sad times at MSH. The manager pulled out all the stops to make us order way more food than we could possibly consume. I scooped all the leftovers in Chinese take out containers, filling two bags with enough for several complete Thai meals that I will deliver to the girls on Wednesday. Everything is temporarily parked in a dorm fridge till then.

Normal

Susan and I settled into our dorm rooms for the next week. It seems we are the only ones in Coleman Hall, an immense two-winged and three-storied building. Most everyone else from our group is in the executive conference center on the other side of the campus or another dorm down the hill. We are doing this on the cheap. After we settled in it was time to do some hunting, the kind of hunting that famous chain hotels never want you to do: for the women’s bathroom, (we couldn’t find any, only men’s), electrical outlets (there are few), a way to get what sounded like a fire alarm (but was not) turned off and sheets (only Susan’s got them). If you get to be a student here all this would be entirely normal.

I am prepared for this sort of bare-bones living arrangement. I have assembled a survival kit over the years based on going to OBTC for nearly 20 years, that include inflatable clothes hangers and four small clips that keeps the sheets from sliding off the plastic mattrass. As it turned out I did not need them; my linen packet from Peoples Linen Rental contained a fitted sheet. Nevertheless, it is comforting to know that I have a car outside and can escape anytime I want, like a safety blanket left by the edge of my bed. Susan does not have that option since her home is in Alaska.

Yesterday was entirely framed by my going away to Wellesley for the week; the size of my luggage was the only thing that gave away that I was not going far. Everything else was just as if I was going on an overseas trip: taking care of to-do’s that cannot wait; the presents for people I will be meeting and preparing for both Board work and my session on Friday.

It was a hot, hazy and humid day. We have lunged from spring into August weather and both plants and human were wilting. I rooted around in the asparagus bed looking for signs of life from the aspargus crowns we planted three weeks ago. I found only two baby asparagus tips coming up; a sad result considering that we planted 12 crowns. It seems that some creature is as interested in the asparagus as we are. It left a trail of small holes and bits and pieces of severed asparagus roots.

Late in the afternoon when the weather began to turn and become more pleasant Amy and Larry arrived from a Harvard reunion. We couldn’t help but talk about retirement. It is suddenly happening all around us; what a concept! For us the word is not even visible on the far edges of the horizon.

It was hard to extract myself from Lobster Cove and the lobster caesar salad that Axel was preparing for dinner. Driving inland into downtown Manchester and then to the highways the temperature always goes up a few notches. The airco in the car is broken and I had forgotten what it was like to drive ‘au naturel.’ When we lived in Senegal we never had airco; not in our car, not in our house, and not in the office. Only the people who worked for USAID or foreign embassies lived, drove and worked in cool places. We considered it normal to have clothes sticking to our skin and papers blown around by fans or open windows.

There is this thing about normal. When everything becomes normal again you realize that you don’t like some normals. Like the multi-tasking and juggling that is normal at my work; or the old car without a normal functioning airco; or the summer racing by much too fast as it normally does. Last August we were both very anxious to get back to normal, as if it was some sort of steady state. Having arrived on this side of normal we discover it comes in many variations, with some we could live without.

I picked up Ken, one of our newly elected board members, who flew in from Kentucky at Logan airport; our colleagues from Ohio did not make it in due to a canceled flight (normal?). They missed our first activity which is our traditional Sunday dinner. Everyone else was there, flown in from Alaska, New Zealand, Iowa, Southern California, South Carolina, or by car from Western and Eastern Massachusetts, Connecticut, New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and Virginia. It is an entirely social affair, clearing the decks for two days of hard work starting tomorrow morning. It was wonderful to see everyone again after nearly 8 months. The last time we were together, in October, I was walking with a cane, limping slowly at the end of the line, requiring all my attention and energy to keep up. Now I am normal again, clothes sticking to my skin and papers flying out of the car window and all.

Good morals and a bad foot

I am woken up this morning by the street sounds of Washington that come in through my open balcony door. It is one of the hotel’s features that is listed under the rubrique ‘guestrooms’ on its website (door and windows that open). I am imagining that litigation about people having thrown themselves out of hotel windows has made such a feature rare in big chain hotels.

I made coffee in the small coffee maker (also advertised) and despite using only half of the recommended amount of water it comes out the color of tea. I enhanced the coffee sensation with a stick of instant coffee brought back from Holland; emergency rations that live permanently in my travel gear.

Yesterday morning we had a strategy breakfast with the MSH troops, rehearsing elevator speak messages and looking out for good partners and good people and then we swarmed into the various enormous ballrooms to do our good works. Kristen and I ran a three-hour workshop on leading for results. We had a full house, some 50 fifty people, and took them onto a journey mimicking the way we work with groups out in the field. We had people in the room from all over Africa, Nepal, Guyana and the Middle East with Americans in the minority. As it happened, we had many people from countries where we have teams on the ground. It was wonderful to make all these new connections. My big regret is that we did not get an attendance list so we can stay in touch. In the end many people rushed off to the various other activities programmed or lunch. It is a packed program and there is a huge social networking component to it that Facebook and LinkedIn could not compete with.

The opening session of the conference took place in Geneva and Washington at the same time; two gigantic screens connecting us with one another. This year is the 30th anniversary of the Alma Ata Declaration that focused attention of the public health community on primary health care, away from hospitals in the capital cities (tertiary care). In the past 30 years a whole new crop of public health professionals has grown up taking this for granted. The conference theme this year is Community Health and a stock taking of sorts. It was interesting to hear the giants from the field share their insights although I would have liked to hear them address the young professionals who will have to carry the torch. There was something slightly contradictory about the theme and the process: impressive talking heads, the experts, talking to a crowd that represented an enormous reservoir of expertise. Yet, by the very act of talking to them rather than listening and learning from them, the espoused message about empowerment was not practiced by these very well intentioned and expert advocates of Lao Tsu’s exhortation: ‘start where the people are.’ There was no way of knowing ‘where those in the audience were.’

I ran into Iain and his wife who is from Finland and whose name has so many vowels in such odd places that it took me years to get them in the right quantity and in the right place. Out of laziness most of us refer to her as RLKA. She pointed me to an exhibit about the treasures from Afghanistan at the National Gallery they had just returned from. It is a magnificent display of the various cultural streams that ran through Afghanistan (Bactria) at the time of Alexander the Great, before and after. I did not need much exhortation and played hookey from the conference; I felt I had put in enough hours for the day.

The exhibit was indeed magnificent. I was lucky to share the space with a small group that clearly consisted of insiders and hoverered around the edges to catch some of the stories that accompanied nearly every piece in the display. It made me realize how much of such exhibits is hidden from us ordinary visitors. There were stories of heroism about hiding treasures in vaults and smuggling them away from fanatic Taliban and there were stories about great stupidity, of not recognizing that, as the slogan at the door says ‘A nation stays alive when its culture stays alive.’

One particular piece caught my eye. It was a Greek inscription on a fragment of a funerary monument found at Ai Khanum in what is now Northern Afghanistan. It read: “as a child learn good manners; as a young man learn to control your passions; in middle age be just; in old age give good advice; then die, without regrets.” I learned that this came from a wandering Greek philosopher who was intrigued by eastern religions and had made it to Bactria in the 3rd century BC. The exhortation was one of several maxims for moral behavior said to have been presented to Apollo at his sancturay in Delphi by the 7 Sages of Ancient Greece. These sages knew something that is still current and relevant today and resonated stronlgy with me as I am now in this phase that is about giving good advice.

I met Larry in the Kogod courtyard of the National Portrait Gallery/Museum of Americann Folk Art that is housed in the restored Patent office. The restoration story itself is worth going there; the place beautiful in an eery sort of way.

We ended up in Adams Morgan in a restaurant where Amy met us and talked and talked and talked over elegantly served fish and soft shell crab dishes.

When I arrived back at the hotel my right foot was in bad shape from what I call ‘museumwalking’ and required a long soak in the bathtub. It was an early night for a change.


May 2026
M T W T F S S
 123
45678910
11121314151617
18192021222324
25262728293031

Categories

Blog Stats

  • 141,177 hits

Recent Comments

Edith Maxwell's avatarEdith Maxwell on Boosted out
Sallie Craig Huber's avatarSallie Craig Huber on Rays for real
Lucy's avatarLucy on Probabilities
Olya's avatarOlya on Cuts
Olya Duzey's avatarOlya Duzey on The surgeon’s helpers

Enter your email address to follow this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 78 other subscribers