I catalogued the different colors we saw: orange, white, periwinkle, and purple flowers; orange and blue butterflies or moths; and dragonflies with electric blue or green bodies. And of course, many shades of green. The creek even smelled like moss--a very green smell.
Welcome to my Album of Photographs and Memories of Travel, practicing Medicine, culinary Experiments, and other Exploits.
Saturday, June 20, 2026
On a Saturday in June
I catalogued the different colors we saw: orange, white, periwinkle, and purple flowers; orange and blue butterflies or moths; and dragonflies with electric blue or green bodies. And of course, many shades of green. The creek even smelled like moss--a very green smell.
Saturday, May 30, 2026
May Memories, Part III
Finally this May, we have been busy about town:
The third w.eekend of the month, I submitted some of my anatomical artworks for display at the Second Annual Humanism in Medicine Night, "Rock & Scroll." The music, spoken word, food, and community were all very good. Then I met up with a spirited group for dinner with the medical school commencement speaker
Saturday, May 23, 2026
May Memories, Part II (my garden)
On the way back from Maryland, I stopped to pick up some native plant starts for my garden, as I was itching to pull out the dead stuff and plant some green and some color.
Walk around the yard with me:
While gardening I listened to Kristin Hannah's The Nightingale (slow start and a little formulaic but ultimately worth the read) and our local NPR radio station, 90.5 FM WESA. I donated my banged up Turquoise Torpedo to them and finally got the letter advising me they had received <$200 for it. 😅
Finally, in the fenced-in plot in the back, I've given up on having the time to grow berries or vegetables--I mean, the deer could easily jump the fence, so what's the point--so I'm slowly cultivating what I hope will become a pollinating garden with natives plants.
Saturday, May 16, 2026
May Memories, Part I
I have taken so many more pictures than I have shared to Facebook over the last month, so I thought I would put some of them together here in a post written after eating a delicious spring-like lunch (salad and Triskets with brie; the secret is Green Goddess dressing). It feels so good to sit at the dining room table--while Dear Husband eats lunch and watches soccer in the next room--with my wet braid hanging between my shoulder braids, refreshed from a shower after three hours of trimming bushes and pulling weeds and raking up the long grass left by the mower, fueled only by NPR radio on my phone, since I skipped breakfast. That's okay: more room for a piece of the heaping strawberry pie DH baked this morning. It's my turn to have the kitchen for the afternoon: I will watch Persuasion on Netflix Legally Blonde on YouTube while I make banana bread with the over-ripe bunch I brought home from the office.
The first weekend I attended two films at the Jewish Film Festival on the Carnegie Mellon Campus. Validity is a Pittsburgh-produced film starring my colleague's sister as a scientist struggling with whether to use unethically sourced data about hypothermia collected on concentration camp prisoners. It's based on an actual person and controversy, and I don't know why the film's promotional material didn't name Robert Pozos's work at the University of Minnesota (perhaps he asked them not to?).
Meanwhile, Dear Husband was playing and conducting a choral service at church with the Schubert Mass in C (WordSung).
That afternoon I hung out at the main Carnegie Library before watching Disposable Humanity, a documentary about the Aktion T4, when healthcare providers helped the Nazi government sterilize and kill disabled Germans. Theirs are the only Holocaust victim names that by law have to be redacted, as if it is still so shameful to have been diagnosed with a disabling condition that it would be embarrassing for yourself or your family to have it known.
I brought a bunch of "I <3 medical history" ribbons to leave at check in and was gratified to find someone wearing one. (Even though you can't see either of ours in the picture!)



































































