Follow via email
Archives
Categories
Tags
- #AdventWord
- Advent
- Advent Word
- Arizona
- Book of Common Prayer
- books
- cancer
- cemetery
- coming of age
- COVID-19
- definition
- discrimination
- education
- etymology
- First Amendment
- free speech
- friendship
- Globe
- grace
- healing
- history
- hope
- identity
- Kairos
- language
- literature
- love
- meaning
- memories
- mentor
- metaphor
- ministry
- mot juste
- music
- Orwell
- photography
- poetry
- politics
- religion
- semantics
- student
- teacher
- word
- World War I
- writing
Author Archives: Boz
Journey: Advent Word 2
Journey (n.) c. 1200, “a defined course of traveling; one’s path in life,” from Old French journée “a day’s length; day’s work or travel” (12c.), from Vulgar Latin diurnum “day,” noun use of neuter of Latin diurnus “of one day” … Continue reading
Posted in Advent
Leave a comment
Awaken: Advent Word 1
This year, I have decided to participate in the daily discipline of #AdventWord, a project of the worldwide Anglican Communion designed to create a global Advent calendar where we can share images and meditations that reflect the spirit of this … Continue reading
Posted in Advent, photography, religion
Tagged Advent, awake, photography, religion, sunrise
1 Comment
The Armistice: A Remembrance
The 99th anniversary of the Armistice that ended World War I took center stage in my English 112 class on Friday, November 10. For more than a year, I have been preparing to guide my students on this journey through … Continue reading
Posted in books, education, history, literature, movies, poem, World War I, writing
Tagged education, history, poem, World War I
2 Comments
The Classroom, the Headlines, and a Lesson in Perspective
By the time I was in the third grade, in thrall to the eccentric Mrs. Nina Williamson, who taught us our multiplication tables, read aloud to us from Thornton W. Burgess or The Jungle Book after lunch each day, and … Continue reading
The Land of the Free
Despite the turbulent events in the world outside the mountains that sheltered our childhood, we in the Globe High School class of 1971 were little concerned with politics. In her Social Problems class, Mrs. Allison Roenigk … Continue reading
Posted in current events, First Amendment, free speech, history, politics
Tagged First Amendment, free speech, history, politics
2 Comments
Let Me Count the Ways
I am not certain I ever heard the name Harvey Weinstein before October 5, when The New York Times published its initial exposé of sexual-misconduct allegations and hush-money payoffs. Nor have I followed the increasing media firestorm with any interest though the … Continue reading
Posted in language, movies, politics, sexuality
Tagged definition, First Amendment, Harvey Weinstein, language, meaning, media, Orwell, politics, rape, semantics, sexual violence, word
4 Comments
Naming Evil
I write today in the bloody wake of the most recent in an increasingly frequent series of mass killings–this time, the deaths of 58 country music fans at the hands of a gunman poised 32 floors above the concert venue … Continue reading
Posted in current events
Tagged definition, etymology, good and evil, history, language, meaning, politics, religion, semantics, word
Leave a comment
Something Old
I still have the tattered Golden Book of Nursery Tales (1948) and Mother Goose Book of Nursery Rhymes (1953) presented to me at birth. At a time in my life when preserving the past evidently mattered less to me, I removed the … Continue reading
Posted in cemetery, education, history, language, memories, photography, World War I
Tagged cemetery, discrimination, history, identity, language, memories, photography, World War I
2 Comments
Viewing the Eclipse with the Sororal Twins
I was ten years old when I made a pinhole projector from a shoebox for my first solar eclipse on July 20, 1963. It reached a mere 30% totality over Globe, Arizona, but I was a curious child, and seeing … Continue reading
Charlottesville, Boston, Berkeley and the Desecration of the First Amendment
August 19, 2017 Speaking my mind today may be impolitic. However, because what I fear most is the silence following the premature death of the First Amendment, speak I must. I am reminded of Paul’s recital of his unblemished pedigree: … Continue reading
Posted in critical thinking, language, politics
Tagged definition, discrimination, First Amendment, free speech, history, language, politics, word
5 Comments