“Anne Frank believed that people are really good at heart.”

Here’s Why You Can’t Lose Hope

(April 3, 2019) by John Palovitz

Every day in my travels around this country (both in person or online) people ask one question:

“How do you stay hopeful right now; how do you keep going when there is so much to grieve over, so much cruelty in front of you, when there is such daily violence to contend with?”

I often tell them I stay hopeful for Anne Frank.

The Jewish teenager wrote these words in the early 1940s, while confined within the cramped upper rooms above an Amsterdam business, that became the entire world for three years of her far too brief life while her family hid from the Nazis:

It’s really a wonder that I haven’t dropped all my ideals, because they seem so absurd and impossible to carry out. Yet I keep them, because in spite of everything, I still believe that people are really good at heart.

Every time I read or I think of those words, I remember why I stay hopeful right now.

I stay hopeful because she stayed hopeful. Despite every reason to abandon the will to continue or the optimism to sustain her, she refused to. The beautiful defiance of her young heart revealed in those words is reason enough to keep going.

I stay hopeful because hopeless is not an option. Hopelessness is defeat and resignation; it is a willing surrender to darkness that insults the memory of so many who have courageously made this planet their home long before we ever showed up here.

I stay hopeful because people of every nationality, religious affiliation, and life circumstance who have preceded us, have experienced all manner of hell during their lifetimes: unspeakable suffering and unthinkable fear—and would not relent. They faced genocide and slavery and war; endured murderous regimes and malignant dictators and corrupt governments and yet chose to persevere. They made the daily, sometimes hourly decision to speak and live and create and work and resist and love when it proved difficult. We need to do that now.

We who inhabit this planet in these days have inherited it from them: the children, activists, caregivers, soldiers, helpers, and parents—the ordinary people who would not allow themselves to become so despondent or so weary in their present circumstance that they stopped giving a damn or making a life or bending the arc of the moral universe toward justice in any way they were able.

Now it’s our turn. This is our moment to spend our fragile and fleeting sliver of space and time here, and for the sake of our predecessors in humanity and for our descendants who will be here after we’re gone—we can’t blow it.

We can’t allow our present troubles to overcome us.
We cannot be overwhelmed by the pain in our path, to the point where we are no longer willing to feel it or respond to it.
We can’t wilt in the face of hateful, fearful people who would make the world less diverse and less equitable.
We can’t become apathetic or stay silent or sidestep the turbulence of engaging the ugliness outside or doors or on our social media feeds—because the multitudes whose feet traversed this place previously, refused to.

So stay hopeful:
for Anne Frank,
for Rosa Parks,
for Mahatma Gandhi,
for the Suffragettes,
for the Little Rock Nine,
For Harvey Milk,
For Malala Yousafzai,
for Syrian refugees,
for the Parkland Students,
for Greta Thunberg.

For them, for the other recorded heroes of our shared story, and for the billions of human beings whose names and faces and stories you’ll never know, who refused to lose hope even as all hell broke loose around them, and allowed you to inherit a world worth saving.

Anne Frank believed that people are really good at heart. Nearly 70 years later, you get to prove her right. You get to be the good people. You get to hold on to your ideals and you get to carry them out even in days when it feels and seems impossible.

Stay hopeful because you have breath in your lungs and a working heart planted firmly in your chest, and you have this day in which you can speak and live and create and work and resist and love.

You’re here and alive.

Don’t waste your chance.

(by John Palovitz)

❣️❣️❣️

Reading, Writing, and Responsibility

I love fiction, but I’m not good at writing fiction. When I was in second grade, I wrote a fiction story. Years after, I posted one picture on “Twitter” of my book. One person said,

“Great … they used to ask that doors be removed so kids don’t suffocate. Rethink your story line before morgue starts investing in baby caskets. Remove that one just in case. Its dangerous”

D’oh! https://twitter.com/Maureen_2me/status/1336042321872293898/photo/1
Oh well 😉


RRBC “BOOKS & BUDZ” HOLIDAY POP-UP BOOKSHOP 2023!

HAPPY 10 YEAR ANNIVERSARY, RRBC!

This momentous milestone makes this event that much better!  RRBC has been here changing the writing game for a full decade!  Pushing writers to write more, to write better, to publish only the best writing!  Yes, that’s RRBC!  We’ve lost some, we’ve gained more, and we are still here pushing forward and doing the work! If you’ve ever been on the RRBC roster and are now attentive and highly focused on the writing you publish, you can thank RRBCfor that!

CONGRATULATIONS, RRBC and Nonnie Jules!  What great staying power you have!  You’re still here, and still changing the writing game! …”

(more at):

#RRBC’s #Holiday #BooksBudzPopUp Bookshop 2023!

🙂

“Congrats to #RRBC October Member of the Month, @Maureen_2me @RRBC_Org #RRBCMOM “

Thank you RRBC … 🙂

MEMBER OF THE MONTH

OCTOBER, 2023

Maureen Twomey

Maureen Twomey has been on our roster since February of 2016… over 7 years! When she was only thirty-three years old, she experienced a massive stroke—one that took away her ability to read, write, walk, and even speak (AAAAAAAHHH!!). Well, she wasn’t about to go down without a fight. In Before, Afdre, and After, Twomey offers a sometimes heartbreaking, sometimes comical, and ultimately inspiring account of what it is to lose everything when you’re supposed to be in the prime of your life—and what it takes to get it back, piece by tiny piece.  Maureen has been ingratiating herself with the membership, supporting her fellow authors and with her participation in club events.  It’s no wonder that we find her here as our OCTOBER MEMBER OF THE MONTH!  

Check out her book, “BEFORE, AFDRE, AND AFTER   (My stroke… oh what fun).”

BEFORE, AFDRE, AND AFTER MY STROKE by Maureen Twomey

You can connect with Maureen by following her on social media @Maureen_2me  

Let’s make her month uber-extra-special!!!

Please use the hashtags #RRBC #RRBCMOM in all your tweets of support for this active member!

CONGRATULATIONS, Maureen, on being October’s MEMBER OF THE MONTH!!! 

Enjoy it!

***

We’ll see you next time when it could be YOU sitting in this awesome seat!


🙂

“Thank You to America’s Librarians for Protecting Our Freedom to Read”

by Barack Obama

“I wrote a letter thanking librarians across the country for everything they’re doing to protect our freedom to read.

“To the dedicated and hardworking librarians of America:

In any democracy, the free exchange of ideas is an important part of making sure that citizens are informed, engaged and feel like their perspectives matter.

It’s so important, in fact, that here in America, the First Amendment of our Constitution states that freedom begins with our capacity to share and access ideas — even, and maybe especially, the ones we disagree with.

More often than not, someone decides to write those ideas down in a book.

Books have always shaped how I experience the world. Writers like Mark Twain and Toni Morrison, Walt Whitman and James Baldwin taught me something essential about our country’s character. Reading about people whose lives were very different from mine showed me how to step into someone else’s shoes. And the simple act of writing helped me develop my own identity — all of which would prove vital as a citizen, as a community organizer, and as president.

Today, some of the books that shaped my life — and the lives of so many others — are being challenged by people who disagree with certain ideas or perspectives. It’s no coincidence that these “banned books” are often written by or feature people of color, indigenous people, and members of the LGBTQ+ community — though there have also been unfortunate instances in which books by conservative authors or books containing “triggering” words or scenes have been targets for removal. Either way, the impulse seems to be to silence, rather than engage, rebut, learn from or seek to understand views that don’t fit our own.

I believe such an approach is profoundly misguided, and contrary to what has made this country great. As I’ve said before, not only is it important for young people from all walks of life to see themselves represented in the pages of books, but it’s also important for all of us to engage with different ideas and points of view.

It’s also important to understand that the world is watching. If America — a nation built on freedom of expression — allows certain voices and ideas to be silenced, why should other countries go out of their way to protect them? Ironically, it is Christian and other religious texts — the sacred texts that some calling for book bannings in this country claim to want to defend — that have often been the first target of censorship and book banning efforts in authoritarian countries.

Nobody understands that more than you, our nation’s librarians. In a very real sense, you’re on the front lines — fighting every day to make the widest possible range of viewpoints, opinions, and ideas available to everyone. Your dedication and professional expertise allow us to freely read and consider information and ideas, and decide for ourselves which ones we agree with.

That’s why I want to take a moment to thank all of you for the work you do every day — work that is helping us understand each other and embrace our shared humanity.

And it’s not just about books. You also provide spaces where people can come together, share ideas, participate in community programs, and access essential civic and educational resources. Together, you help people become informed and active citizens, capable of making this country what they want it to be.

And you do it all in a harsh political climate where, all too often, you’re attacked by people who either cannot or will not understand the vital — and uniquely American — role you play in the life of our nation.

So whether you just started working at a school or public library, or you’ve been there your entire career, Michelle and I want to thank you for your unwavering commitment to the freedom to read. All of us owe you a debt of gratitude for making sure readers across the country have access to a wide range of books, and all the ideas they contain.

Finally, to every citizen reading this, I hope you’ll join me in reminding anyone who will listen — and even some people you think might not — that the free, robust exchange of ideas has always been at the heart of American democracy. Together, we can make that true for generations to come.

With gratitude,

Barack

https://barackobama.medium.com/thank-you-to-americas-librarians-for-protecting-our-freedom-to-read-80ce373608b3

Sally The Snow Girl by Maureen Twomey (when I was in second grade)

Is it almost Christmas? No, but you can read the book any time (including now!)

😉

(Review by David Butler):

“While reading the touching story of Sue and Sally, I was amazed to see several words that you were to use 20 years later in a variety of Nissan ads. Words such as: the, and, hot, outside and big. Yes, Maureen, big things were in store for you, even then.”

Whoohoo! 😉