Intersection

17 February 2026

Morning snow, 11 February 2026

Today, Tuesday, 17 February 2026, marks the beginning of Ramadan, the celebration of Mardi Gras, and the Lunar New Year of the Horse, as well as the second anniversary of my sister Jane’s passing, and the birth of our twin granddaughters, now 24 years old.  Is’t possible?  What to make of such intersections, global and personal, past and present—especially given my shaken and stirred response to my car’s being totaled at the busy intersection of Madbury Road and Route 4 in Durham, NH a week ago Sunday? Dear Reader, that is the question.  Seeing Hamnet for the second time one week post crash afforded me opportunity for a really good cry, but that has not settled the unsettled.

Accident scene, 8 Feb 2026

I’m off to a yoga class soon, to be followed by two different book club discussions later on, one on Shakespeare’s early play Two Gentlemen of Verona, exploring and exploding past comic conventions, and the other on Kiran Desai’s epic novel, The Inheritance of Loss, rendering the collision of private lives and public events arising from the effects of colonialism on those who leave India and those who remain.  I’m grateful for such salutary distractions, physical and intellectual, and for the insights art affords.  I’m grateful for the restorative company of dear friends joining over a delightful meal to speak, deeply, of all manner of things, celebrate Valentine’s Day, and toast our host’s cozy new home together.  And I’m grateful that no one was seriously hurt when my car was hit, that emergency services and insurance company have been so helpful, and that the hours of daylight grow appreciably longer with each passing day.  But what’s to come?

My friend SP, student of lunar cycles, has declared this Year of the Horse marks the beginning of a new one.  Could be worse, could be better, but it will be different.  I’m choosing to think things will get better, that perhaps the U.S. has reached a tipping point, that we’re finally waking up to take action against oppression and the psychic damage wrought by epistemic uncertainty.

I’ve certainly found myself in a new personal era of late, noticing more and more signs that I’m neither ascending nor even maintaining level flight, but am rather on the glide path down.  I’m spending a lot of time—perhaps too much—thinking about offloading stuff and attending Death Cafés.  What am I contributing?  WordPress, host of this blog, reports my site had 442 visitors in January, so Dear Reader, I’m wondering what YOU are thinking?  Have these messages in a bottle reached you?  Do you also find yourself at the intersection of hüzün, the Turkish word I’ve just learned signifying melancholy and longing/spiritual yearning, and hope?  I recently noticed that some Google bot describes this blog as “witty, entertaining, and thoroughly engaged with all manner of subjects . . . .”  What does one make of a such a snippet, a compliment manufactured by an A.I. algorithm?

I don’t know.  But I do remain curious.  And I propose reviving a 16th century word now largely obsolete but I think useful in this new cycle:  “respair,” meaning the return of hope after a period of despair, from the Latin respirare, to breathe again.  Deep breath, Everyone!  And like Jess Jackson, who departed this dimension earlier this morning, Keep Hope Alive!

Happy new year!

I am curious Squirrel, peeping into the bathroom, 15 Feb 2026

3 responses to “Intersection”

  1. Happy New Year Georgeann! You are not alone dear friend, and thank you for asking these questions so eloquently. Right on, Respair is exactly the word I need now!

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  2. Hello,

    I just read this blog. It is an incredible day of intersections! I sent you a text on my way home from work prior to reading it. I truly believe the timing is serendipitous. I especially feel the depth related to two years since Jane’s passing. And I am happy and relieved you are OK from the car accident.

    I just returned from a “Galentine’s” trip to FL to see some old college friends. Part of our motivation was to celebrate some of our 1/2 century birthdays. In our discussion of passing time and how we want to spend it, I shared I have a second cousin I’ve always wanted to know. I set the intention to reach out to you. I guess today was the day.

    I often read and enjoy your pictures and writing. It is a point of connection that I long for. You are the only person on my maternal side that is relatable (beyond my brother) and likely the sole, reliable family historian. It is very meaningful to me to know about your life.

    I turn 50 on August 17th and have been debating what to do to celebrate. Your holiday card encouraged a visit and I would love to figure out how to make that happen if it works for you. I’ve been to most of the 50 states, but never been to Maine, NH, NJ, VT or RI. I think you would enjoy meeting Steve and Azalea too. He is a great guy and I think Azalea may have some of your attributes. She loves to learn and started a daily journal this year. She will be 12 on 3/28…. Born the year of the horse. I am choosing to embrace the shedding of the snake and the power of the horse as a hopeful year. Azalea does swim team at our local pool through mid July. My Social Work/School-Based Therapist job will start August 10. We have a window of a few weeks for potential travel. Whenever you have time, please let me know if you would like visitors for part of our New England journey. I would love your input about what you would recommend beyond where you live given we may have a week or so in total.

    I’m looking forward to connecting with you soon,

    Erin

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  3. futuristicallyelectronic06f2fe77a9 Avatar
    futuristicallyelectronic06f2fe77a9

    Your words and images are a healing balm. Both beautiful, which makes this art historian very happy. Take the AI compliment. Why not??? So sorry to hear about your car!

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