Saturday, December 6, 2025

Sip and sculpt

This is me with one of the ornaments I made yesterday. If you look closely you'll see a cat 🐈 ðŸ˜ŧ ðŸū on it. That event was a lot of fun for everyone who participated. 
Now I'm waiting for my evening events--very excited but also a little nervous. True confession.  Unlike most of my much more sophisticated fellow performers I can't memorize a routine to save my life. I had the same problem acting. Memorizing the script--easy. Memorizing blocking--nightmare. Choreography is a language I don't speak. I come alive in front of a live audience. For me drag is a spontaneous conversation between me and the audience. That's where the magic comes in. Wish me luck. 
Jules Hathaway 



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Friday, December 5, 2025

The House Without Lights (picture book)

     In America the month leading up to Christmas tends to be an over the top celebration of all things Christmas and Christmas adjacent from the decorated stores with their Santas through parades and school pageants to homes illuminated with colored lights with Santas and reindeer parked out front. It can be very easy, even with token acknowledgements of Hanukkah, for kids from other faith traditions to feel left out. In The House Without Lights Reem Faruki addresses this issue through a most unusual narrator. 
    The only unlit house in a neighborhood longs for the seasonal accouterments of its neighbors: the beautiful Christmas trees, the stockings hung by the chimney with care, and the cards filled mailboxes. The night before Christmas it hopes that its new family, now settled in, will finally get around to decorate...
     ...Nope, not gonna happen. But in a few months House will get its chance to shine in the celebration of Eid.
     The House Without Lights is a great introduction to diversity and inclusion in religious holiday celebrations. 
On a purrrsonal note, well my Friday was totally AWESOME!!! Bailey gave me a ride to campus which let me bring a lot of presents in to give out. Bailey surprised me with a gift from her and Cam--an adorable teddy ðŸ§ļ wearing a Santa 🎅 hat. At First Friday Bagels I got my favorite sweet cinnamon. I gave out more gifts 🎁 which people were happy to get. Bailey had a sip and sculpt with air dry clay. I took pictures and made Christmas ornaments. I gave away 2 and kept one for my tree. Bailey gave me a ride home where I found Eugene safely back from camp. 
A great big shout out goes out to Bailey for giving me rides in inclement weather and creating engaging crafts events and saving returnables for Tobago's emergency surgery fund and being a caring and true friend.
Jules Hathaway 


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Thursday, December 4, 2025

My Squishmallow Advent Calendar

It arrived yesterday along with a really cute Squishmallow dog. Now opening a window each day is adding a touch of magic to the holiday season. 
Advent calendars go way back in my family. Well as far as I can trace. Although my mother was big on genealogy pride, neither of my parents really talked much about their growing up years. Harriet and I took turns opening doors on the family Advent calendar. By my children's childhood each had their own because the religious pictures had been replaced by chocolates. When they grew up I thought my Advent calendar days were over. Then in 2023 as my first post stroke Advent rolled around I was for the most part stuck in the house, desperately missing my friends, and spending much of each day doing skills regaining exercises. When Amber gifted me with a lovely Advent calender featuring miniature toys ðŸ§ļ it was a most welcome touch of seasonal Christmas magic. This year I found myself wondering if Squishmallow Advent calendars were a thing. When I checked out Ebay and saw them I felt like I had to have one. Fortunately Eugene was quite amenable to ordering it. Hope you enjoyed this stroll down memory lane. 
Jules Hathaway 



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Wednesday, December 3, 2025

Terms of Respect (adult nonfiction, particularly relevant to higher education professionals)

     I'm sure you must have heard some of the criticisms of today's higher education: that students are sheltered little snowflakes who insist on being overprotected by trigger warnings and safe spaces; that they're "woke " and intolerant of views that challenge their own unchallenged assumptions; that their "left-wing" professors are indoctrinating them with propaganda; and that colleges and universities themselves are stifling any ideas that aren't "politically correct".
     Christopher L. Eisgruber, President and formerly Provost of Princeton University, begs to disagree. He's not claiming that academia is perfect. He's aware of instances of what he calls mob censorship as in crowds disrupting speeches by people they disagree with. But in Terms of Respect: How Colleges Get Free Speech Right he asserts that in reality institutions of higher education and their students are part of, rather than different from, the rest of America, a nation confronting a serious civic crisis.
     "We divide into distinct, cohesive political groups that not only disagree with but also dislike and distrust one another. We also increasingly communicate through media that privilege provocation and extremity over deliberation and comity. As a result, America's civic discourse has become ruder and more partisan than in the recent past, and we are risk of losing our ability to talk through our differences."
     Drawing on both extensive background research and candid narratives of his and his colleagues experiences of campus controversies, Eisgruber weighs in on topics such as:
*the complex and situational nature of free speech and its potential compatibility with diversity and inclusion;
*the importance of civility rules and professional standards,
*the ways in which what is considered acceptable speech has evolved over time;
*the dangers created by political polarization  and social media, 
*and how free speech can easily be weaponized. 
A unifying message throughout the book is that many concepts are way more complicated than we think and that our conceptualizations may contain implicit bias. There are a few points that I had a little trouble grasping. But the value of the book as a whole made the extra effort feel worthwhile.
     Although he offers no silver bullets to solve the crises and misunderstandings, Eisgruber offers recommendations on how institutions of higher education can better handle the current landscape. Although he doesn't sugarcoat the obstacles standing in the way of transcending today's hostility and intolerance or pretend that it will happen easily or quickly he confirms throughout the book that it is possible and necessary. 
     "We must accept our responsibility to achieve free speech and equality together, for all Americans, now. We must demonstrate unstinting fidelity to both values if we are to vindicate our constitutional ideals and escape the civic crisis manifest on our campuses and in our polity."
       I highly recommend Terms of Respect for higher education professionals. I also recommend it for anyone who is concerned about the current state of affairs on and off campuses. 
On a purrrsonal note, this review has what I think is an interesting back story. I was tracking a higher education relevant book I wanted to review as a Christmas 🎄 gift for the UMaine higher education professors. When I started getting short on time and that book still wasn't in a Minerva library I sought an alternative book. I requested Terms of Respect when it was being processed in one library. 
A great big shout out goes out to Elizabeth Allan, Leah Hakola, and Kathleen Gillon who not only bring discussions of controversial topics into the classroom but model professionalism and commitments to free speech and equality. Their course of studies beautifully prepares grad students for the challenges of student services work in such contentious times. Truly they are a credit to Maine's flagship university. 
Jules Hathaway 
     



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Tuesday, December 2, 2025

My third tattoo

Well here it is!!! Just purrrfect for December, wouldn't you say? I just adore it.
Eugene would have gone to camp yesterday if not for the uncertainty of the weather. It was still iffy last night. There was some mass of something heading straight for Maine. Down Portland way it could be a rain/snow mix. In the Bangor area all snow ❄️ was more likely. When Eugene and I went to Governors for breakfast the only thing in the sky was a gorgeous sunrise 🌅. On the way home I learned that UMaine would close at noon. About eleven it started snowing ðŸŒĻ. I just heard of a power outage on campus. Yikes! I'm glad I can stay home. I feel bad for Eugene who will have to plow the white stuff. 



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Monday, December 1, 2025

The Last Time We Say Goodbye (YA fiction)

   "The whole thing has warped me, I think. I'm a board left out in the rain, and it's impossible to go back to being straight and undamaged ever again. This is who I am now. 
    The girl whose brother died."
   Many years ago my cousin, Ken, my Uncle Ken's only son, committed suicide in what we tend to think of as the prime of life. He left behind his parents, his three sisters, three very young children, and unanswerable questions. Of all the ways people can die it's one with quite unique challenges for those left behind. The knowing that he/she/they chose and actively carried out a plan to cease living can cause guilt layered over the pain of loss for survivors, especially family members and close friends who feel they should have seen/done something before it was too late.
     If the deceased is a teen chances are good that the bereaved will include siblings who are already faced with the myriad challenges of the transition between child and adulthood and immersed in an environment where peers and teachers usually deal quite awkwardly with the situation. That's the plight of Lexi, narrator of Cynthia Hand's The Last Time We Say Goodbye. 
     Lexi is a dedicated and really smart student in her senior year of high school. Her favorite subject is math. She loves and relies on its predictability, certainty, and proofs. She's shooting for MIT's highly competitive math program. 
     "I was born with numbers on the brain. What I would do, if I could really put this pen to paper and produce something useful, is take my memories, these fleeting, painful moments of my life, and find some way to add and subtract and divide them, insert variables and move them, try to isolate them, to discover their elusive meanings, to translate them from possibilities to certainties."
     Lexi has painful moments that have collectively shattered her world. A few years ago her father broke up her family by divorcing her mother and moving in with the cliche younger woman. She's not sure how to deal with him at very awkward mandatory weekly dinners.
     Then last year right before Christmas her brother, Tyler walked into the garage and shot himself. 
     Lexi misses her only sibling. Her mother is constantly crying and self medicating with alcohol. In fact she's not sure she can leave her mom, even to go to her dream school. Her classmates see her as the sister of the boy who killed him, either smothering her with unwanted sympathy or ignoring her as if suicide was contagious. 
     And Lexi has a secret. Only she knows that the night Tyler died she blew a chance to save his life. 
     Although the narrative is purely fictional Hand lost her younger brother to suicide when she was 20 and he was only 17. That's why it has such a poignant ring of authenticity. 
     A lot of adults don't want to talk to teenagers about suicide. They think it's too morbid for younger people. Some even think they'll put the idea into their head. So a book that addresses the topic openly and candidly is a  much needed breath of fresh air.
On a purrrsonal note, well today was great. I found more books at Orono Public Library. I got my third tattoo. It is totally gorgeous. Everyone who's seen it totally agrees. I got more people engaged in Operation Valentines. It probably will be a great success. And I have leftovers 😋 ðŸĪŠ ðŸ™‚ ☺️ to heat up for supper. Tomorrow the weather is supposed to be gross--lots of that yucky white stuff. If my Black Bear Mutual Aid Fund meeting is on I have to bus commute in that mess. So I'm hoping for a snow ❄️ day.
A great big shout out goes out to Rob Lucchesi of Black Cats Tattoo in Orono. He's a body artist extraordinaire (as you'll see in tomorrow's picture) and a really kind person. 
Jules Hathaway 


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Sunday, November 30, 2025

My accomplishment

OK, I know this is a very basic scarf. But I had to relearn how to knit after the stroke. It took me about 14 months to knit this. I made it for my friend Kevin in his favorite shade of green. I am quite proud of it. 
I'm really into Christmas gift prep. I've wrapped gifts for my 3 kids and 12 of my friends. I'm really enjoying getting ready for the big day.
I cooked the huge turkey Eugene got from work along with corn, sweet potatoes, stuffing, cranberry sauce, and rolls. Everything was delicious.
Now Eugene and I are binge watching Christmas movies: The Santa Claus 1, 2, and 3 and Home Alone. The Christmas season is the only time I watch much of anything beside the evening news.
I'm really excited for tomorrow. I'm getting my 3rd tattoo. 
I hope this week that's just starting will be a good one for you.
A great big shout out goes out to my amazing son, Adam, who is starting a new job tomorrow. 
Jules Hathaway 




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