
Postcards in the Air
Art and Thoughts on the Wing
Friday, November 21, 2025

Thursday, November 13, 2025
30 DAYS ON A CREATIVE WALK
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| Collaged by M. M. from my cut-up watercolors |
A group of friends sat at lunch recently. We were discussing the changes in ordinary things from earlier years to today. We noted the difference from clocks with hands to digital watches and the use of credit cards instead of paper money. Our comments began with how easy these changes have made our lives. Then we remembered our own childhood and our time raising children and how analog clocks and paper money helped teach time, fractions, and the value of money. Without a clock with hands how do you explain what time looks like, or what parts of an hour mean? Without paper money, how do you explain the value of money, setting budgets, and counting? Suddenly we were thinking of creative responses to our questions and we wondered how teachers now explain something that is so simple and so fundamental without using the tools we had.
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| 30 Days of Creativity by D. W. |
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| 30 Days of Creativity by F. C. |
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| What would you make from all of these Inches? |
Two sites for blank calendars:
Friday, November 7, 2025
A REMINDER OF FREEDOM
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| A kite from Ai WeiWei's exhibit seen through a broken window |
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| The Recreation Yard at Alcatraz |
Article about the 50th Anniversary Celebration of the All-Tribes Occupation:
General history of Alcatraz
https://www.bop.gov/about/history/alcatraz.jsp
Because of the development of the Red Power movement, land has been returned to Native people as well as the removal of dams on the Klamath River, Watch the videos to see how the dams were de-constructed:
I have resided on Tongva, Tamien-Ohlone, and Miwok land in California, and Lenape land in New York City.
Thursday, October 30, 2025
COFFEE AND BOOKS
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| photo by Bill Slavin |
Early in his career, Bill worked on a consulting job for the U.S. Post Office, with the result that for the next couple of years, whenever we visited a new town, we would drive around to the back of the post office to view the loading docks. Yes, a quirky thing to do on vacation. This past weekend, we spent a relaxing time in Pacific Grove and Carmel, walking along the Coastal Recreational Trail, taking photos of waves crashing into the rocks along the way, and watching the seagulls, pelicans, and plovers fly about the sandy beaches.
We spent the rest of our time looking for comfortable places to sit since we brought a stack of books and magazines to read. We walked up and down the Pacific Grove streets to see what had changed since our last visit and then headed to one of our favorite places, the town's bookstore and cafe, The Bookworks on Lighthouse Avenue. We wandered through the bookstore with its good selection of books, including a wall of classics aimed at younger readers with Winnie the Pooh, Mary Poppins, and John Steinbeck nestled together. We found a couple of interesting books to add to our waiting stack, walked back into the cafe, grabbed a cup of coffee, and opened up a book to read for a while.
Besides the post office, bookstores are always on our list of things to do while we are out of town. We have found wonderful independent stores such as Bookshop Santa Cruz and also the smaller Two Birds Books in Santa Cruz, as well as a local coffee house, Cat and Cloud. In Carmel, we head to River House Books, which is right next door to Carmel Valley Roasting Company, a good place for a cup of coffee. The original owners of the bookstore recently retired, but the store was purchased by the Lulu Chocolates owners, right next door to the cafe, who have kept the store's tradition of books we can't find anywhere else. How can a reader lose with coffee, chocolate, and books all together in one place?
On our way home to San Francisco, we stopped in Menlo Park at Cafe Borrone, a large cafe next to a sunlit plaza with plenty of seats under colorful umbrellas. Right next to the cafe is Kepler's Books, a store we frequented when we were first married and living in Mountain View nearby. Kepler's is still the best with its large selection of interesting books and themes to choose from. Within the store, tables were set up with displays of banned books, best books from several different decades, as well as shelves of manga with their complex illustrations.
Bill and I sat at Borrone and joked about how our vacations used to be full of physical adventures, such as skiing, cycling, and sailing, but this time we realized we needed a rest from our vagabond existence of the last couple of years. Sitting in a comfortable chair with a good book, a piece of chocolate or pastry, and a coffee was just the right antidote for us this past weekend. We didn't even drive around the back of the local post office.
In Santa Cruz:
https://twobirdsbooks.com/about-us/
In Pacific Grove:
In Carmel:
https://carmelcoffeeroasters.com
https://thecrossroadscarmel.com/shopping/river-house-books/
In Menlo Park:
Friday, October 24, 2025
A MANY-SIDED COIN
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| "Under the Influence of Ben Shahn" by M. Slavin |
Last Saturday was a beautiful day to be outside. The sun was brilliant, and the wind didn't roll down the streets to whip around our faces. Even the weather seemed to be supporting us as we marched toward San Francisco's Civic Center.
As Bill and I moved with the joyful, peaceful No Kings crowd, we decided to shift to the edge of the marchers so that we could find a place to sit for a while. A young Latino walked towards us, looking at the marchers, and muttered, "It's all White people."
If I had the wherewithal, I would have stopped to ask him about what he meant, but from an early age, I'd learned, as a small woman, not to stop to talk with strangers in any city. I'm still thinking about his comment. He was mostly right. The crowd was majority White, but other ethnicities filled the streets too. Or maybe he was expressing the same idea that the 92% Black women who voted in 2024 might be thinking, "We told you so!" or maybe he was a Trump supporter and didn't like the large crowd. Or he could easily be resentful of our White privilege to be able to freely walk the streets in protest while people of color are being dragged from Home Depot parking lots, from their homes, and off the streets. I wish I had asked him what he meant.
As we walked home, we turned the corner onto the Embarcadero and merged with a large group of young people clustered at the corner of Mission and Embarcadero. They were not part of the march; instead, they all stared down at their phones, moved in unison down the Embarcadero, and stopped in front of the Google office just past Folsom. A virtual scavenger hunt was in progress. So focused on their screens, they barely looked up as we passed them to catch the streetcar.
At our stop, we looked back at the Bay Bridge and saw a long, slow line of cars coming into the City across the Bay Bridge, and wondered what else was going on that would bring so many people in. We watched as several sailboats came into the docks near Oracle Park. When we got home, we ran into a few residents carrying protest signs. We all expressed our enthusiasm for being part of something so huge and so peaceful as that day's march, and also wondered among ourselves what the next step would be.
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Ben Shahn is one of my favorite artists. He was alive and working on artwork from World War I to the end of the 1960s. His art contained images of Sacco and Vanzetti, union workers, and other protest figures. His calligraphy is a style that is popular now among calligraphers. The Jewish Museum in New York City has a retrospective of his work until this Sunday. If you can, go see it. You will see a different view of our history.
https://thejewishmuseum.org/exhibitions/ben-shahn-on-nonconformity/ till October 26
Shirley Chisholm, Ophra, Ida B. Wells, and Ruby Bridges, all Black women who made their mark in history and fought for equality, voting rights, and inclusion. Find out more about them:
https://blackwomenvote.com/about
https://www.today.com/popculture/celebrate-black-history-4/black-women-in-history-rcna12963
Friday, October 17, 2025
RAINY DAY CHANGE
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| Seen on the Street: Ghost leaves after the rain |
We had weather yesterday! It feels like fall, finally. Rain hit our windows and streaked down to the ground. Rain in October in California, just a hint of what's to come. After our dry-as-usual summer, rain is welcome in the state. Rain can be celebrated until we end up with one of those torrents that wreak havoc with neighborhoods and landscapes. But today is a good day for a little rain and a good day to find a good book to read.
I am behind in my reading. I picked up Lessons in Chemistry by Bonnie Garmus, which was published several years ago and has already been made into a movie. But it is worth the read. The main character is a woman and a chemist, and her story includes all the prejudices and misogynistic behavior that women have endured, especially while seeking a career in what was considered a male profession. The book reminded me of a college friend, one of three women at a tech college. She was first in her class in engineering. When she applied for graduate school, if she put down her first initials with her last name, S. A. Smith, she received numerous positive responses. When she included her full name on applications, Susan A. Smith, she got no response at all. Lessons in Chemistry is still relevant today and a good reminder of the rights of women that are being lost. On my list of favorite books for this year.
Other books that caught my eye include Olivia Hawker's The Ragged Edge of Night. I've had my fill of World War II novels, but I couldn't resist this one. It's a novel based on the true story of the grandfather of the author's husband, and what he did as a German living in a small village in Germany during the war.
I needed some uplifting this fall and turned to We Are the Change We Seek, the Speeches of Barack Obama. His words are a good reminder of the promise of America, of our ability to learn from our past and to overcome dark and difficult periods in our history.
Louise Penny is one of my favorite mystery writers and I am giving her more credit because she is a Canadian who has spoken out about the direction America is heading. I've missed several of her latest books. She is prolific. Her characters, Inspector Armaud Gamache, the police officers who he has carefully chosen to work with, and the quirky people who live in Three Pines still entertain. Penny reminds me a little of Alice Hoffman since she imbues the world in her stories with threads of history and a life force running through the natural elements of her story.
Two other recommendations:
Ten Birds That Changed the World by Stephen Moss
Charlatans: How Grifters, Swindlers, and Hucksters Bamboozle the Media, the Markets, and the Masses by Moise Naim and Quico Toro
Friday, October 10, 2025
CITY SOUNDS
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| "Mark Making" for my first Inktober exercise |
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| by Martha Slavin |

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