Media highlights from the Ladies of Titan 2025 Powerlifting meet held at Titan Barbell May 17, 2025. I totaled 300 kg, which is well below my PR of 327.5 kg (achieved twice in 2023). But I am slowly clawing my strength back after a disastrous 2024 during which I struggled with gluteal tendinopathy. Very please with the following: SQ: 112.5kg; BP 55 kg; DL 132.5 kg. Next meet will be the USA...
5 lessons for living from a haiku master
Haiku as we know it today―a rich means of expression and one of Japan’s highest art forms―can be traced to Bashō, a 17th-century haiku master. An example of his work―one of his most well-known haikus―evokes the Zen koan about the sound of one hand clapping: Old pond― A frog jumps in The sound of water As Stephen Addiss tells it in his 2011 book The Art of Haiku: Its History Through Poems and...
Fountain pens: 6 brilliant pieces of art from Bungubox
I’ve been writing with fountain pens since 2015. When I started, I could not imagine paying more than $25 for a pen. Nor could I imagine owning more than two or three. My favorite was a blue Lamy Safari with a fine nib that I used every day. I ran through about three ink cartridges per week. Today, I own more than 100 pens each of which ranges in cost from $25 to $800. I rarely use cartridges...
Eight Days at Yalta
Diana Preston’s Eight Days at Yalta: How Churchill, Roosevelt, and Stalin Shaped the Post-War World is an excellent, fast read. The stamina required just to travel to Yalta is mind boggling as were the conditions under which FDR, Churchill and staff resided once there. Concise, well-written summary and assessment of the negotiations that took place and the ways in which Yalta shaped world...
Mary Wollstonecraft and Big Ideas
Wollstonecraft: Philosophy, Passion, and Politics, by Sylvana Tomaselli is an accessible overview of Wollstonecraft’s entire body of work. Tomaselli places Wollstonecraft’s books and essays in the political context of her time, with the French Revolution playing a big role. Although this wasn’t a biography of Wollstonecraft, elements of Wollstonecraft as a person are included:...
Ulysses: A grail read
Lordy Jesus. So this was a “grail” read for me. A book I’ve contemplated reading for many years but never got around to tackling until I spotted this centennial edition as a guide. For others who are thinking of diving in, I cannot recommend this edition of the book more highly. The Cambridge edition is organized with short, insightful, and interesting essays that precede each...
Dispatch from the pandemic
The first thing to like about Charles Finch’s What Just Happened: Notes on a Long Year is its cover: a drone’s eye view of a lawn party with individuals, couples, and pods of family/friends socially distanced from one another and outlined by thin, white circles. Finch is best when he describes the ways in which he coped with the pandemic, especially the early months: listening to...
Remember Fiona Hill?
I read Fiona Hill’s memoir, There Is Nothing For You Here: Finding Opportunity in the Twenty-First Century, thinking it was going to be a memoir of her time in the Trump Administration. It was that but so much more. Covers her childhood and adolescence growing up in the mining town Bishop Auckland in Northern England and her extremely improbable career thanks to opportunities of education...