Tsunami

Due to chronic insomnia, I’ve been watching some late-night reruns of science programs about last month’s Southeast Asia tsunami.
I’ve learned some new facts: for example, tsunamis generally come in sets, and the first wave isn’t usually the biggest.
I’ve also learned that tsunamis of 300 or more feet are possible. In fact, a tsunami can reach 1,000 feet – the height of a skyscraper.

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Who’s Your Daddy

The title of this, the Fox “reality” show about an adoptee’s reunion with her natural father, is absolutely stupid and insulting, yes.
But I look with savage amusement at the type of people who are protesting this show – organizations like The Gladney Center, the adoption agency that founded and largely underwrites the National Council for Adoption (NCFA), the primary organization that lobbies against giving adult adoptees access to their records (http://www.txcare.org/atforum/gladneywknd.html).

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Open Records

Among the events to be grateful for this year is the decision by the NH legislature to give adult adoptees the opportunity to see their original birth certificates, starting January 1, 2005.
This makes NH only the seventh state to open records, a legal right granted to citizens of the UK some 30 years ago.

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Slivers of Silver Lining

Time online reports that a “number” of foreign tourists were killed by the tsunami earlier this week in Phuket, Thailand.
Phuket Beach is, of course, a notorious center of child prostitution. Thus, one cannot help but speculate that the world is better off without some of these “foreign tourists”, a tiny bit of good news in what is otherwise an unimaginable tragedy.
Meanwhile, in the Pitchavaram and Muthupet region on the Indian coastline, it was proven that mangrove trees can mitigate the damage from the tsunamis. Conservation of mangroves has been a public/private sector initiative in India for the past 14 years, and precisely for this reason: to act as a buffer between the sea and coastal communities.

Pre-New Year’s Thoughts, Part I

I’ve been sorting through old paperwork – not my favorite chore – and ran across an essay by Susan Polis Schutz on “People Who Achieve Their Dreams”.
The original is a tad sanctimonious (“They never have excuses for not doing something”) and more than a tad unrealistic (“They never consider the idea of failing”).
Even so, there are enough really good thoughts here that I’m copying a good portion of Ms. Schutz’s original, with some thoughts (in italics) of my own.

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