Monthly Archives: December 2025

walking into the new year with peace.

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Why a quiet walk across America

is becoming a collective call to practice peace

The Walk for Peace began with a simple, radical question: what would happen if a small group of Buddhist monks crossed an entire country on foot, carrying nothing but presence, prayer, and a willingness to suffer just enough to remind the rest of us what peace feels like?

This year, about twenty monks set out from the Huong Dao temple in Fort Worth, Texas, beginning a 2,300-mile pilgrimage to Washington, D.C. that will take roughly 120 days and carry them through ten states. As the monks moved steadily forward, their arrival in Georgia drew quiet attention not because of spectacle, but because of stillness. They walk in sandals. They often eat one meal a day. They sleep wherever kindness allows. They rely entirely on strangers.

Wherever they pass, people respond in the same way. In LaGrange, Georgia, hundreds gathered at a local church after word spread that the monks had arrived. A community organizer described the visit as “inspiring hope” in a divided time. The monks didn’t argue. They didn’t persuade. They walked, bowed, and listened. That was enough.

In Peachtree City, residents, business owners, and city leaders turned out on a gray morning to greet a quiet line of orange robes moving slowly down an ordinary road. A city doesn’t always get to choose its symbols. In that moment, the symbol wasn’t a flag or a slogan. It was patience, made visible.

The impact shows up most clearly in small, intimate encounters. One widely shared video shows a venerable monk kneeling to hug and bless a little boy by the roadside, a moment the child’s family described as unforgettable. Another clip captures the steady rhythm of the walk itself, robes moving forward as people pause and watch, something that feels like a living meditation. Those who spend time alongside the monks often describe leaving calmer and more grounded, calling the experience “soul-touching” and deeply human, as reflected in one such account. And if you’ve seen the long, silent line advancing down the road, you understand why that image continues to travel, quietly stopping people mid-scroll.

Community leaders hosting the walk have been clear about its purpose. Messages shared along the route insist the pilgrimage “is not political. It is not divisive. It is a walk for peace, for healing, for unity, and for hope,” a sentiment echoed as towns across Georgia opened churches, sidewalks, and streets to welcome the monks, as seen in this moment of arrival. The organizers themselves describe each step as a living prayer meant to awaken the peace already inside the people they meet, a message they continue to share through videos from the road.

Watching from afar, many people sound surprised by their own emotions. Some admit they are crying as they watch the monks walk from Texas toward D.C., saying the crowds lining the roads prove people do not want hate, reflections shared among supporters in posts like these. Others keep sharing clips and reactions as the journey unfolds, part of a growing stream of responses now filling feeds and timelines, including this broader collection.

The monks are not asking us to walk 2,300 miles. They are asking something harder: to put one peaceful step in front of another in our own lives. To choose kindness when indifference feels easier. To treat our commutes, our feeds, and our neighborhoods the way they treat the open road, as places to practice compassion.

As the New Year begins, their message feels less symbolic and more practical. Peace is not a destination. It’s a daily practice. Their pilgrimage will end in Washington, but the Walk for Peace continues every time we decide, in the midst of chaos, to let our next step be a living prayer for the world.

And as they keep walking, they will keep sharing the videos and moments from their journey, not as a religious message, but as a shared human experience we can learn from, pass along, and carry into the year ahead.

As we head into a new year it feels like an offering, not a sermon. You don’t have to be religious or spiritual to connect with what’s happening here. This walk isn’t about belief. It’s about how we treat one another when no one’s keeping score.

You can continue to follow the monks’ journey as they continue walking, and think of them as small pauses in the day — reminders of what patience, kindness, and shared humanity can look like in real life.

In a loud and divided moment, this walk offers something quietly radical: people choosing presence over performance and care over contempt, one careful step at a time.

“Choose your mind every morning.

 Forgive yourself every night.

 Replace your worn-out habits with higher ones.

 And declare,

“Today will be my peaceful day.”

-the Huong Dao monks

 

Source/story credits: DEMCAST USA AND JENNIFER CANTER

(they will continue to follow and share the journey on their substack,

click on the link above to follow them)

(and to follow on Facebook options, click on the links below)

Walk For Peace Facebook links:

Official Facebook Pages of Walk for Peace, the 120-day, 2,300-mile journey by Buddhist monks — with loyal dog, Aloka — walking from Fort Worth, Texas, to Washington, D.C. to raise awareness of peace, loving kindness, and compassion across America and the world.

https://www.facebook.com/walkforpeaceusa

street art utopia.

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 What happens when male statues become fathers for a day? A creative campaign in Sweden is challenging traditional norms about parenting roles.

Imagine a bronze statue of a stoic leader, now wearing a baby sling with a doll nestled inside.

In November, on International Men’s Day, male statues across Sweden were adorned with baby slings and carriers as part of a unique campaign to spotlight unequal parenting responsibilities.

Traditionally representing power, labor, or other masculine attributes, these statues were reimagined to symbolize fathers as caregivers. The campaign, organized by the think tank Arena Idé, is part of an initiative aimed at encouraging fathers to spend more time with their children and urging employers to play a larger role in enabling this.

Despite Sweden’s globally recognized parental leave policies, significant disparities remain. Swedish fathers take only 30.9% of parental leave days and 38% of sick leave to care for children.

A recent Novus survey, conducted in collaboration with Make Equal, further reveals that expectations around parental leave remain unequal in Swedish workplaces. Through this campaign, Arena Idé hopes to challenge these norms and has proposed an employer bonus for workplaces that encourage an equal division of parental leave.

The statues involved in the campaign were decorated with dolls in baby slings and carriers.This created a contrast between the statues’ traditional symbolism and the modern role of engaged fathers.

Vilgot Österlund, a statistician at Arena Idé, emphasizes the importance of changing workplace norms: “When discussing gender equality in workplaces, the focus is often on women and the negative consequences of inequality for them. But here, we see that men are also losing out on something invaluable – time with their children. Through the statue campaign, the new statistics, and our proposals, we hope to make this clearer!”

‘it is a wise man who knows his child.’

-william shakespeare

Source credits: Creative Street Art on Equal Parenting, Arena Ide

three friends, two seasons, one day.

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 warm and rainy early evening in town

pleasant ending 

to a relaxed day with friends

between the holidays

good balm for the soul

feels almost like spring

later tonight

once we’re all home again

 temperature drops

snow squalls and winds arrive

reminding us that winter is here.

‘happiness is a collection of joyful experiences shared with soul friends.’

-amy leigh mercree

ann arbor, michigan, usa, december 2025

hedgehog food art.

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made a cheese hedgehog but someone said he looked sad

i said he might be blind but was happy go lucky

i added pimentos for eyes and a smile

someone said he looked scary with the red eyes

my granddaughter added a ‘happy hedgehog’ sign

so that everyone would know his demeanor

someone said it looked like roadkill

after we began to eat the cheese part

no one wanted to eat its head or face

we all felt bad for it

the chances you take 

when creating food art

that looks so realistic. )

‘if somebody thinks they’re a hedgehog,

presumably you just give ’em a mirror and a few pictures of hedgehogs

and tell them to sort it out for themselves.’

-douglas adams, english author, screenwriter, and humorist 

holding our communities close this holiday season.

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National Immigration Law Center

‘the greatest nations are defined by how they treat their weakest inhabitants.’

-jorge ramos, global refuge

yes, you can eat your christmas tree.

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How to Eat Your Christmas Tree: Delicious, Innovative Recipes for Cooking with Trees By  Julia Georgallis

This cookbook explores Christmas trees and features recipes for cooking with pine, fir and spruce. It encourages reflection around food waste in an age of deforestation and climate crisis, and asks how we might be able to celebrate nature in an alternative way.

Pine needle tea is made from white pine needles chopped, added to boiling water, steeped, and strained. The drink can be enjoyed hot, iced, or blended with other herbal teas, notes registered dietitian nutritionist Kate Spurgin. The Ohio Department of Natural Resources reports that the tea is rich in antioxidants, vitamin A, and vitamin C, which can boost immunity and soothe colds.

Tea isn’t the only way to utilize your leftover pine needles. They can also be used to flavor other dishes.

“The way that generally I cook with Christmas trees is to use the needles like an herb, in the same way that you might use rosemary,” said UK baker and cook Julia Georgallis  you use the rosemary to flavor a dish but you don’t necessarily eat the rosemary itself.”

Her book includes over 30 recipes that use different parts of the Christmas tree, from drinks to ice cream to “Christmas tree ash”—which is exactly what it sounds like.

“That’s basically when you char the tree in your oven, so you blacken it and then blitz it down into a black powder, and that’s actually really flavorful. It’s very delicious — you just need a tiny bit of it — but it’s quite chef-y,” she explained in a recent interview with Christoper Kimball’s Milk Street.

Part of Georgallis’ motivation in writing the book was conservation. More than 25-30 million Christmas trees are disposed of each year. While the author and chef knows 30 recipes aren’t going to save the world, she hopes her book can “start a conversation. It’s absolutely huge what leaving one year’s worth of Christmas trees globally in the ground could do,” she explained.

*Disclaimer: I’ve never read the book, so this is not a review, but the title is interesting, an idea I’d never considered.  (If you still have room left after all of those Christmas meals, you  might want to take a closer look at your tree.)

 

‘you ask me if I keep a notebook to record my great ideas.’

i’ve only ever had one.’

-albert einstein

 

 

 

Source credit: Meredith Kile, Vice

santa math.

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Santa math To reach an estimated 238 million homes worldwide in 34 hours, Santa must visit 7 million per hour—116,667 per minute or 1,944 per second. Explore the Christmas science that might make it possible. Or is it magic?

‘it is the month of cakes and candles, snow and songs, carols and joy, laughter and love, it is December. wishing you a Merry Christmas.’

-author unknown

 

 

 

source credits:discover, factsite

heading off to Christmas Eve.

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‘december is a simple wish that brings spectacular moments.’

 

 

 

 

art credit Alissa Adams, Reindeer Games, gicllee print on art paper

quote credit: fillingthejars.com

wish I was here.

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What do you get when you mix young adult nerd romance, suspense, mystery, humor, sci-fi, and action? You get ‘Wish I Was Here’ the first book in author, Ilsa Rey’s series, The Wish Trilogy.

High school is a time when everyone tries to find themselves, but as you follow Ana and Isaac throughout the novel, they quite literally disappear, each in a different way. In this adventure, Ana, who has never had much confidence at all, has to muster all her courage to find a way to save Isaac before it’s too late. 

There are many ups and downs along the way, especially when an old flame enters the picture, along with their dysfunctional families, and things get even more complicated. The stakes get higher, there are secrets, hard decisions have to be made, and things get more dangerous. Who can be trusted? What to do next? Will Ana find her confidence and use her wit to outsmart everyone? Can things be solved in time? You’ll find yourself cheering her along, and even laughing at times, but there are no guarantees and everything is on the table. You won’t be able to put this down until the very end. It’s definitely a page-turner and a great escape!

Books go on sale today at the following locations:

Amazon

Barnes and Noble

Black Rose (Publisher) https://www.blackrosewriting.com/youngadult/p/wishiwashere

* About the Author: (blogging friend and martial arts master)

At age twenty-one, Ilsa Rey packed everything she owned into her little red Ford Focus and drove from Cleveland to California for good. She is now a recovering chicken owner and a martial artist with a black belt in Taekwondo and a blue belt in Jiu-Jitsu. Her favorite things are writing, training, and teaching self-defense to young women. She lives in southern California with her husband, four children, and the ghosts of chickens past.Find her online: X: @IlsaReyAuthor; Instagram: @Ilsa_Rey; Blog: IlsaRey.com

“Logic will get you from A to B. Imagination will take you everywhere.”
-Albert Einstein

Wish I Was Here: Even When Invisible, There’s No Place to Hide

(Book 1 of The Wish Trilogy) for Teens and Young Adults

  • Publisher  :  Black Rose Writing
  • Publication date  :  December 23, 2025

the gift of nothing.

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The Gift of Nothing considers two main subjects:

the concept of nothing and the value of friendship.

What do you give a friend who already has everything?

Why, you give them nothing at all.

One of my favorite books, now celebrating its 20th anniversary, ‘The Gift Of Nothing,’ explores the meaning of friendship and the meaning of gifts.

What is a friend and what is a gift? Things might not be what actually make people happy. Perhaps it is the people and our relationships with them that really make us happy.

Why do we give gifts? Is it to show that we care about the person and that we are happy to be with them? If so, is the gift truly important or could the real gift be spending time with them?

Originally written for children, but loved by all ages.

 

Author/Illustrator: Patrick McConnell, New York Times best selling author and Caldecott honor artist, creator of the popular comic strip Mutts.

Publisher: Little, Brown Books

“the greatest gift you can give someone is your time.

because when you give your time,

you are giving away a portion of your life that you will never get back.”

 -author unknown