Posts by Anita Diamant
New blog
Am I cheating on myself? I don’t understand the etiquette. I just started a new blog, co-written with my daughter, Emilia, 27, who just moved back to Boston. www.motherdaughtermashup.wordpress.com And then there’s the fact that my past two posts here also went up at http://cognoscenti.wbur.org/2013/01/24/inauguration-blanco-anita-diamant According to my blogpost stats, I have 29 followers here.…
Read MoreInaugural poetry
Poetry in Motion: The Inaugural Offering On Monday, the millions who tuned into watch the second inauguration of President Obama heard Richard Blanco read his open, “One Today.” One sun rose on us today, kindled over our shores, peeking over the Smokies, greeting the faces of the Great Lakes, spreading a simple truth across…
Read MorePride and Prejudice: 200 Years of Pleasure Jane Austen’s “Pride and Prejudice” has been a best-seller for 200 years. Published in 1813, the British novel about the shabby-genteel Bennet family saddled with five penniless daughters is a “classic” that appears near the top of virtually all “favorite reads of all time” lists. There are, by Wiki-count,…
Read MoreLife Change Mikveh
Life = Change Once upon a time, in 2001, five women signed legal papers petitioning the Commonwealth of Massachusetts to incorporate an independent non-profit entity to be called Mayyim Hayyim Living Waters Community Mikveh and Education Center. The signatories were Dr. Paula Brody, Roz Garber, Judy Green, Rabbi Barbara Penzner and me. The papers required…
Read MoreColumbine
I wrote this May, 1999 Columbine The massacre at Columbine High School occurred six months before my daughter started high school, and she took to heart the frightening idea that something like that could happen “anywhere.” Personalizing the cliché given voice by so many commentators and public officials, Emilia said, “Newton, Massachusetts…
Read MoreDon’t Tell Me It’s a “Minor” Holiday I like Hanukkah I like the candles, especially the ones that look like crayons with the twisting sides that look like they’re made of sugar instead of wax. I also like the imported ones from Israel, all fancy and for some reason made to look like trippy 1970s…
Read MoreArchtecture in Time
Milestone is an old word, as solid as a pillar marking distances along an old post road. In contemporary use, the meaning is temporal; a milestone is a significant event, the beginning or end of a stage in life — the stuff of memory. I was married in the sanctuary of Congregation Beth El of the Sudbury…
Read MoreNora Ephron
I could really use a pin or a necklace that says, “I remember nothing.” It is my motto and I repeat it at least once a day, giving credit to Nora Ephron and her book, I REMEMBER NOTHING I just reread it for the third time. And because I remember nothing it was almost like reading it…
Read MoreBe here now
I faced my usual challenge walking the dogs this morning. (If you noticed a change from singular to plural, that’s because Mabel, my daughter’s pup is with me for the summer.) The challenge is to try to stay present in the beauty of the moment instead of letting my mind race through a to-do list or…
Read MoreListen to that …
I am a ham. I like getting up in front of people and holding forth. My first career goal was to become a big Broadway star. I still watch the Tony Awards acceptance speeches for hints about what to say when I win for best leading performance in a musical. When I speak in bookstores…
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