The world today’s babies will know. It’s…

quieter and cleaner, and more just.

Power from the sun, wind, and water will again be how humankind goes about its day among the myriad forms of life sharing the planet.

Energy democracy, as it comes online for millions, will do away with the former world’s grasp of limited energy, an egregious form of autocracy that just about destroyed the living world.

Everyone in your baby’s life will have energy on the spot, for their homes, businesses, and transportation. All over the world. It’s in the cards, the stocks and bonds, and the science. It’s happening right now.

There will be turbulence, so parents will need to work hard to get their youngsters through it, staying balanced, looking for the light ahead.

A new world is dawning. Young warriors are on the frontlines, supported by grannies. See them around the world standing at the gates of power, signs and songs among them. See the world dawning for your babies.

You must help, show your babes the way. No passivity allowed.

Read from a CNBC article about how to understand and talk about climate change using emotional intelligence.

Its gonna be good, even as a lot of turbulence and rancor rises in the transition. Parents, grandparents, keep your eyes on the light. Show your babes how to be, what to do, and how to discern the truth.

Read

Above all do not lose hope. Look for the forces bringing a better world today and tomorrow, and follow and support them in everyway your can.

Lost River Cave, Bowling Green, Kentucky

Colonels Wanted

In 1959 my father, a Lt. Colonel in the USAF, was assigned to Ice Island T-3 in the Baltic Sea. The iceberg base provided a landing zone in the era of nuclear threat.  However, there was a real physical threat to my father lurking in the shadows of the mess hall trailer.

Dad was a bomber pilot aging out of flight—a prospect he abhorred. Flying was his passion.  My mother believed her husband was banished to the “North Pole” by a tyrannical general at Plattsburgh AFB.  

Plattsburgh, New York is located near the Canadian border, a beautiful small town when we were assigned there. I skied at White Face Mountain and ice skated under the moon, ignoring the travails of adults. However, when Dad received his orders, it got my attention. He would be gone for a year, and Mom had just discovered she was pregnant.

Reality set in hard and stark. We women were moved from the three-story brick home on Officer’s Row to a Levittown-style house. Women and kids were ancillary baggage, last to be considered. My sisters and me took care of Mom. I matured early feeling responsible for her and my little sister.

The only communication with Dad was via Hamm radio. Our go-between in the mid-West became a friend. Desperate were our few conversations in the flickering voice transmission and static. Brief exchanges with Dad left me bereft. Mom was having trouble with her pregnancy—she’d given birth to us three girls and as many miscarriages prior to the Pill. At age 38 she was at risk. I worried constantly. I recall a quiet household. Waiting. Life on hold.

Then came the neighbor pounding on our door one Saturday morning, a Time magazine clutched in his hand. He held it up in front of him with one finger pointing to a small box in the corner where a polar bear glared and which read, “Colonel’s Wanted.”

My sisters and I hovered over Mom’s shoulders reading about the attack that happened one night as Dad left the mess hall. A polar bear foraging in a nearby trash receptacle suddenly turned on him. The reporter described Dad’s desperate attempt to flee in heavy gear and deep snow. He was saved from mauling when a pregnant female husky got in the way, and was mauled but held the bear off long enough for men inside to hear the ruckus, get a rifle and shoot the bear.

The husky survived and gave birth the next day despite her wounds, and not long after, Mom gave birth to a 10-pound baby girl, my sister Kathy. Several months later, Dad arrived at our doorstep looking very much like a bear. He’d gained 30 pounds, was white as a grub with dark circles under his beady black eyes and bushy eyebrows. A frightening countenance but nonetheless our cherished father.

He brought a wooden crate with him. The preserved skin of the polar bear– a parting gift to Dad, reminder of his frigid incarceration. It wasn’t until several years later that mom smelled a foul odor in our garage in Merced, California. The original preservation had been poorly executed and, alas, the bear skin never made it to a wall behind Dad’s desk.

Today, I recall that Time magazine photo of a ferocious polar bear and its cryptic message. The nuclear threat never materialized but the threat of human striving is manifest. T-3 is melting in the warming Northern Hemisphere. Polar bears are at risk in rapid ecological change. In the chronicles of a distant time there may yet be a photo of a human face and a final message, “Humans Wanted.”