• Bridging the Divide

    It’s both a month for love and a month for celebrating  the African American experience. February is loaded. It boasts  two major cultural events: Valentine’s Day, the day for love, and Black History Month, a time to assess and appreciate Black heritage.  It’s ironic  that the  the  love month  is paired with the experience of Black Americans, a seeming incongruity in light of the  prevailing racial attitudes in our nation. Yet, the two are not mutually exclusive; however, having them both occupying the same space  points up  the reality that being the recipients of genuine expressions of love hasn’t been  a  part  of  the Black  experience—here in the U.S.— or…

  • Out with the Old

        A year  ended and another began—seamlessly, effortlessly—like turning on  a light in a dark room. One moment there’s darkness, the next light.  It happened—with precision, unaided.   We went to bed, and when we awoke this morning, there it was—a new year.  We couldn’t do anything to hold it back. What shall we do  with it now that it’s here? Make  big resolutions  we very likely won’t keep? I’ve been thinking  about what to do with this marvelous gift of a new year, and the word defenestration came to mind. Yes, it’s a strange one, but it has a lot of potential for helping us do something positive about…

  • It’s One Wonderful Story

    The story is now an  old one, and  all its parts, from the cradle to the Cross, fit together perfectly. Indeed, the Cross was the reason for the manger.  At Christmas,  the old story  gathers new meaning and luster.   For God so loved the world That he gave his only begotten Son That whosoever believeth in him Should not perish But have everlasting life. John 3:16 (KJV) And it came to pass in those days that a decree went out from Caesar Augustus that all the world should be registered. [2] This census first took place while Quirinius  was governing Syria. [3] So all went to be registered, everyone…

  • The Focus at Thanksgiving

    The many special times and seasons we celebrate have their particular focus. Birthdays,  weddidng anniversaries, Easter, Christmas: all have something unique at their core, and our mind fixes on that essential element when we c0mmemorate the occasion. This month we celebrate Thanksgiving. In the national psyche, this day has its collective focus, which,  more often than not, is a far cry from what the real emphasis ought to be. As the day approaches, it would be good for us to take a few moments to reflect on our individual focus for this major holiday. From years of observing the preparations for celebrating Thanksgiving, I would hazard a guess that we…

  • Book Trailer

      Hello Everyone, Here is a trailer for my new book, Island Hearts. My publisher has prepared this eye-catching trailer that gives you a taste of the story and  invites you into the book to read, enjoy, and share with friends. Copies are available on Amazon, Goodreads, and Barnes & Noble. Get your today. Regards, Judith    

  • A Time to Celebrate

    Welcome to October! Already  stores have  put out their seasonal decorations and their scariest Halloween costumes, but October is far more than door wreaths and spooky creatures.  It is the month that  poet Paul Laurence Dunbar calls “the treasurer of the year.”  it collects some of nature’s most gorgeous bounties and stores them in places where people travel long distances to visit. Besides its captivating beauty, the month also provides a  vast array of occasions that have been singled out for celebration.  October 1 has been designated World Vegetarian Day, and  World Smile Day is on the 2nd.  National Walk in the Park Day occurs on the 10th, and National…

  • Announcing My New Book!

    GET   READY   TO   WELCOME   ISLAND HEARTS. Release Date: September 30, 2022 Love can  blossom  in surprising ways and in unexpected places. So it is  for Claire Wynter, who has returned to the U.S. from a successful search  for her missing grandmother in Jamaica. Claire brings back with her the memory of a nascent romance and her promise to return to Karl Grayson “soon.” But prejudice wears many faces and is found in unsuspecting places.  Claire’s brief brush with prejudice while on the island stalls her plan to return to Karl. She doesn’t connect with him until after three weeks have passed  and  with much soul-searching. She now  tries to reach…

  • Food: It’s Personal

      What has been your relationship to food? Does what you eat have anything to do with who you are? Before you say no, think about it. The question goes beyond having a tendency to like to  eat, which a lot of us do. In high school, I had a good friend whose nickname was Foodie. You can guess why. He was quite popular and had no problem answering to the name.  But our relationship to food  goes  deeper than  merely liking to eat.   Social scientists tell us that a lot of things go into making up our identity, and food is one of them. Their research reveals that food…

  • Assumptions

    Assumption/Noun/a thing that is accepted as true or as certain to happen without proof It happens to all of us. We make a judgment about someone or something and expect things to play out the way we think they will. The dictionary definition given above  says that we  assume something  to be true and expect it to happen without proof. And there’s the rub. We don’t have proof; we merely assume,  based  on our feelings,  our faulty observations, even our prejudices. An excellent short story, “After You, My Dear Alphonse,”  by the famous American writer Shirley Jackson, which  I reread recently,  made me think more seriously  about  assumptions. In the…

  • A Reason to Yield

      Over the past few years,  our county government  has built roundabouts on a number of thoroughfares in the area where I  live.  The idea behind these circles in the middle of well -traveled roads was to replace stop signs and improve traffic flow. Were our county leaders trying to copy Washington DC’s Dupont Circle and Thomas Circle, which handle a great amount of traffic fairly well each day? Perhaps so.  Ours aren’t as elaborate as the ones in DC, however, but they’re working very well. To date, we have six of them, and I have  yet to see or hear of a traffic accident at  any one of them.…