Reflections

Independence Day

Excerpt from Losing the Middle: Essays & Ramblings from the Disappearing Middle Class              Iwalk to a small lake to drop in some money.  The change in my pocket is my offering to the universe.  If I were a Cuban priestess in training, I would have cut up a rooster with a meat cleaver and […]

Thought Police and SPIN

Simple Lessons from Orwell’s 1984 to James Holmes 2012 The other day I was cleaning out my books trying to get rid of some, put them in a large cardboard box that I’d drag over to the thrift store.  It wasn’t easy.  I even worked to get my son and daughter to clear out their […]

How Do We Build A Truly Global Humanitarian Society?

Local to Global & Global to Local:  A Spotlight on Valerie Amos, Under-Secretary General and Emergency Relief Coordinator (OCHA) “The era when the international humanitarian system was dominated by a few countries and a few agencies from the West is over.  The richest countries as we can see, are struggling with a long and persistent economic crisis and […]

Breathing The Revolutionary Pen

“But I wasn’t sure that I considered myself a Latino writer, though not because I didn’t think of myself as “qualifying” as one.  I was undecided about the term “Latino writers” – indeed, about all such plural designations when applied to work as solitary and individual as fiction writing—words seeming to affirm an affinity with […]

The Outsiders: Latino Perspectives on Voice, Agency & Leadership

What are the implications for educators?   With Dr. Xaé Alicia Reyes, Professor of Education & Puerto Rican & Latino Studies, University of Connecticut & Hector Luis Alamo, Jr.,  Blogger, Assoc. Editor, @BeingLatino “The problem is us and how we usually think about ourselves. We have so many positive attributes…but we think they are a […]

Stepping Out of the Box: Cross Cultural Identity Literature for Young Adults

With Patricia Dunn, Author of Rebels by Accident   Out of the Box, 2007, Rios I have a bone to pick when it comes to labels.  Labels even as seemingly harmless as “multicultural.” Maybe it goes back to high school, when I attended a prestigious prep school in New Hampshire.  On the first day I […]

The Mindful Lighthouse

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