Now, back to writing, outlining the next book, finishing the play and maybe hounding a literary agent or two about Williamsburg Hill.
Author ~ Photographer ~ Artist ~ (Actively Blogging Since January 10, 2012)
Friday, February 23, 2018
New Photos
It's time to push my work a little. I've added more photographs to my Fine Art America and Pixels pages. Full resolution photos of the images below (and more) can be found at www.fineartamerica.com/profiles/veronica-batterson.html, and www.veronica-batterson.pixels.com. Thanks for taking a look and if you make a purchase, please let me know. I appreciate it.
Now, back to writing, outlining the next book, finishing the play and maybe hounding a literary agent or two about Williamsburg Hill.
Now, back to writing, outlining the next book, finishing the play and maybe hounding a literary agent or two about Williamsburg Hill.
Friday, January 26, 2018
Six Years
During the last
few months, it has been a struggle for me to keep this blog going. My personal
interest in it has been waning, partly due to my disdain for the role politics
has played in social media, and the desire to remove myself from the animosity
that’s around every virtual corner. It’s
difficult to like being online anymore.
I’ve almost given up a few times, telling myself that it’s time to move
on, but having the blog is goal-driven for me, so it lingers. An anniversary…six years this month. However, keeping it fresh and updated is
getting tougher.
I’ve rewritten the
beginning of this post several times, unsure as to how far I might go with the
words I wish to share. I know what I want to say, but how to express myself
without making people angry is what’s nagging at me. The fact that I worry about this is frustrating. Part of the reason I’ve wished to discontinue
the blog is due to what social media has become: a self-serving, disrespectful,
judgmental and vitriolic place. And this
is where I have the greatest disdain. There isn’t much care if I’m offended or
angered. And I’ve been both quite a bit
lately.
The world’s population
recently reached 7.6 billion people, yet according to the finger-pointing,
fist-shaking virtual world, each unique individual is categorized and
compartmentalized. We’re labeled this or that, either/or, good or bad, liberal
or conservative, right or wrong (this, of course, depends on who is yelling the
loudest at the time); we’re lumped into sameness when we share nothing in
common; we’re stifled from expressing an opinion or asking a question out of
fear of being unfairly pegged something we aren’t; we’re told, not heard. When did people become irrelevant as human
beings?
Things seem to
matter only if they meet certain criteria; a person’s death is tragic only if
the life is lost in a questionable manner; causes are embraced in the heat of
the moment, then abandoned when the next bandwagon rolls in. Making assumptions to support the popular
cause of the day runs rampant: if a person thinks a certain way, then that
person must be (fill in the blank). It seems as if we’re all judged by that
checklist of life, deemed worthy or not as to how we’re generalized to be. That broad brush of acceptance, if it’s given,
holds little substance for me since real need is overlooked in favor of causes
driven by our political climate.
How can we think
need, suffering, neglect, or any level of pain is determined by a checklist?
Hunger pains that tear at a person’s belly aren’t lessened or greater based on
criteria. Poverty, homelessness, illness, and disabilities affect many people
of different walks of life, and are tragic regardless of who is touched or
where they live, yet genuine compassion is lost to the movement of the moment. How shallow and hypocritical our world has
become.
An interesting Chicago
Tribune commentary (What Chicago's South, West Sides and Appalachia have in Common) details the
similarities in poverty, unemployment and violence that plague the areas, but cites
the biggest thing they have in common is despair. It’s the writer’s belief that the overall
population in the areas voted differently not because of any party loyalty, but
because they wanted to have dignity once again. Politicians had failed them,
and I tend to agree with him. Yet, the people of these areas are judged and
ridiculed for how they voted, when each one of them generally wants the same things:
a better life and opportunities for their families. The American Dream.
![]() |
Native Americans living in poverty |
Additionally,
there are over 300 Native American Tribal Lands (Indian Reservations, Pueblos,
Colonies, RancherÃas) in the United States, and the living conditions have been
described as “compatible to third world” countries (www.nativepartnership.org);
Native Americans have a higher poverty and unemployment rate when compared to
the national average. Visit or drive
through one of them; poverty at its ugliest is glaring. Why aren’t the masses “rising up” about
this? Why aren’t there marches and
demands for change?
![]() |
Capitol Crawl - 1990 |
The Americans with
Disabilities Act became law in 1990 (www.ada.gov), but those with disabilities still
don’t always have access to basic services.
Some pro-business commentators at the time who were against the act said
that the ADA “was an expensive headache to millions that would not necessarily
improve the lives of people with disabilities.” No doubt the doubters had great
headaches seeing the “Capitol Crawl” of 1990, when disability rights activists
ditched their wheelchairs, canes, walkers and crutches, and crawled up the steps
of the capitol in protest, demanding their voices be heard. Yet, sometimes those who march for other
things today don’t seem to mind too much about parking in a “Handicapped
Parking” space just to be closer; or take no notice that a person in a
wheelchair doesn’t have access to a public restroom, restaurant, movie theatre,
art gallery, or football stadium. Where
is the anger?
Then there is
this: the silence regarding daily gun violence. The site www.gunviolencearchive.org collects annual statistics regarding victims of gun crime. In the last four
years, the incidents and deaths have increased yearly:
·
(2014)
Incidents – 51,862; Deaths – 12,558; Mass Shootings – 271
·
(2015)
Incidents – 53,723; Deaths – 13,513; Mass Shootings – 333
·
(2016)
Incidents – 58,834; Deaths – 15,089; Mass Shootings – 383
·
(2017) Incidents
– 61,437; Deaths – 15,584; Mass Shootings – 345
According to a New
York Times article (Comparing the Las Vegas Attack with Daily Gun Deaths in U.S. Cities), while 58 were killed in the mass
attack in Las Vegas, Chicago had the same number of deaths in a span of 28 days
that started two days before the incident in Las Vegas. All of these incidents, deaths and shootings
are relevant and important. All of these lives matter. Where is the outcry?
I think the times
were better when we didn’t know how anyone voted. It used to be a private right, kept close to
the vest. People went to the polls on
election day, cast their ballots and moved on with their lives. Since social media exploded with “authorities”
behind every keyboard and smartphone, it’s made life online an unpleasant place
to be. Dictating demands, yelling (via
all caps, of course), ridicule and general rudeness have replaced common decency. There’s a lot of talking but little doing.
A balm, in which
to heal the festering anger, might be to disconnect. Turn it off.
Walk away from the virtual world (or at least reduce the time spent
there), find a cause that isn’t politically driven or motivated, and actively
make a difference. Find the need; it’s
there. Then listen to it and hear it. I’m trying.
And the blog? It continues…at least until next time.
Friday, December 29, 2017
A Happier New Year
![]() |
Photo ⓒ VRBatterson |
All I can offer at this time are some wonderful poems by Ella Wheeler Wilcox (1850-1919), and her reflections of the season. Thank you to everyone who continues to read this blog; several years and counting. May it continue.
My wishes to all: 1) a happier new year than the last, 2) don't drink and drive, 3) best wishes for good health, 4) show the people you love that you do, and 5) stay warm!
Peace.
THE YEAR
What can be said in New Year rhymes,
That's not been said a thousand times?
That's not been said a thousand times?
The new years come, the old years go,
We know we dream, we dream we know.
We know we dream, we dream we know.
We rise up laughing with the light,
We lie down weeping with the night.
We lie down weeping with the night.
We hug the world until it stings,
We curse it then and sigh for wings.
We curse it then and sigh for wings.
We live, we love, we woo, we wed,
We wreathe our brides, we sheet our dead.
We wreathe our brides, we sheet our dead.
We laugh, we weep, we hope, we fear,
And that's the burden of the year.
And that's the burden of the year.
NEW YEAR'S DAY
When with clanging and with ringing
Comes the year's initial day,
I can feel the rhythmic swinging
Of the world upon its way;
And though Right still wears a fetter,
And though Justice still is blind,
Time's beyond is always better
Than the paths he leaves behind.
Comes the year's initial day,
I can feel the rhythmic swinging
Of the world upon its way;
And though Right still wears a fetter,
And though Justice still is blind,
Time's beyond is always better
Than the paths he leaves behind.
In our eons of existence,
As we circle through the night,
We annihilate the distance
'Twixt the darkness and the light.
From beginnings crude and lowly,
Round and round our souls have trod
Through the circles, winding slowly
Up to knowledge and to God.
As we circle through the night,
We annihilate the distance
'Twixt the darkness and the light.
From beginnings crude and lowly,
Round and round our souls have trod
Through the circles, winding slowly
Up to knowledge and to God.
With each century departed
Some old evil found a tomb,
Some old truth was newly started
In propitious soil to bloom.
With each epoch some condition
That has handicapped the race
(Worn-out creed or superstition)
Unto knowledge yields its place.
Some old evil found a tomb,
Some old truth was newly started
In propitious soil to bloom.
With each epoch some condition
That has handicapped the race
(Worn-out creed or superstition)
Unto knowledge yields its place.
Though in folly and in blindness
And in sorrow still we grope,
Yet in man's increasing kindness
Lies the world's stupendous hope;
For our darkest hour of errors
Is as radiant as the dawn,
Set beside the awful terrors
Of the ages that have gone.
And in sorrow still we grope,
Yet in man's increasing kindness
Lies the world's stupendous hope;
For our darkest hour of errors
Is as radiant as the dawn,
Set beside the awful terrors
Of the ages that have gone.
And above the sad world's sobbing,
And the strife of clan with clan,
I can hear the mighty throbbing
Of the heart of God in man;
And a voice chants through the chiming
Of the bells, and seems to say,
We are climbing, we are climbing,
As we circle on our way.
And the strife of clan with clan,
I can hear the mighty throbbing
Of the heart of God in man;
And a voice chants through the chiming
Of the bells, and seems to say,
We are climbing, we are climbing,
As we circle on our way.
NEW YEAR RESOLVE
As the dead year is clasped by a dead December,
So let your dead sins with your dead days lie.
A new life is yours and a new hope. Remember
We build our own ladders to climb to the sky.
So let your dead sins with your dead days lie.
A new life is yours and a new hope. Remember
We build our own ladders to climb to the sky.
Stand out in the sunlight of promise, forgetting
Whatever the past held of sorrow and wrong.
We waste half our strength in a useless regretting;
We sit by old tombs in the dark too long.
Whatever the past held of sorrow and wrong.
We waste half our strength in a useless regretting;
We sit by old tombs in the dark too long.
Have you missed in your aim? Well, the mark is still
shining.
Did you faint in the race? Well, take breath for the next.
Did the clouds drive you back? But see yonder their lining.
Were you tempted and fell? Let it serve for a text.
Did you faint in the race? Well, take breath for the next.
Did the clouds drive you back? But see yonder their lining.
Were you tempted and fell? Let it serve for a text.
As each year hurries by, let it join that procession
Of skeleton shapes that march down to the past
While you take your place in the line of progression,
With your eyes to the heavens, your face to the blast.
Of skeleton shapes that march down to the past
While you take your place in the line of progression,
With your eyes to the heavens, your face to the blast.
I tell you the future can hold no terrors
For any sad soul while the stars revolve,
If he will stand firm on the grave of his errors,
And instead of regretting--resolve, resolve!
For any sad soul while the stars revolve,
If he will stand firm on the grave of his errors,
And instead of regretting--resolve, resolve!
It is never too late to begin rebuilding,
Though all into ruins your life seems hurled;
For see! how the light of the New Year is gilding
The wan, worn face of the bruised old world.
Though all into ruins your life seems hurled;
For see! how the light of the New Year is gilding
The wan, worn face of the bruised old world.
NEW YEAR
As the old year sinks down in Time's ocean,
Stand ready to launch with the new,
And waste no regrets, no emotion,
As the masts and the spars pass from view.
Weep not if some treasures go under,
And sink in the rotten ship's hold,
That blithe bonny barque sailing yonder
May bring you more wealth than the old.
As the old year sinks down in Time's ocean,
Stand ready to launch with the new,
And waste no regrets, no emotion,
As the masts and the spars pass from view.
Weep not if some treasures go under,
And sink in the rotten ship's hold,
That blithe bonny barque sailing yonder
May bring you more wealth than the old.
For the world is for ever improving,
All the past is not worth one to-day,
And whatever deserves our true loving,
Is stronger than death or decay.
Old love, was it wasted devotion?
Old friends, were they weak or untrue?
Well, let them sink there in mid-ocean,
And gaily sail on to the new.
All the past is not worth one to-day,
And whatever deserves our true loving,
Is stronger than death or decay.
Old love, was it wasted devotion?
Old friends, were they weak or untrue?
Well, let them sink there in mid-ocean,
And gaily sail on to the new.
Throw overboard toil misdirected,
Throw overboard ill-advised hope,
With aims which, your soul has detected,
Have self as their centre and scope.
Throw overboard useless regretting
For deeds which you cannot undo,
And learn the great art of forgetting
Old things which embitter the new.
Throw overboard ill-advised hope,
With aims which, your soul has detected,
Have self as their centre and scope.
Throw overboard useless regretting
For deeds which you cannot undo,
And learn the great art of forgetting
Old things which embitter the new.
Sing who will of dead years departed,
I shroud them and bid them adieu,
And the song that I sing, happy-hearted,
Is a song of the glorious new.
I shroud them and bid them adieu,
And the song that I sing, happy-hearted,
Is a song of the glorious new.
Copyright ⓒ Ella Wheeler Wilcox
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