The Wildfire that is Covid

I took this photo just before sunset last night.

Smoke and the Sunset.jpg

Those nearby mountains are usually crisp and clear but smoke from fires near and far are tanking air quality here in the west. Our eyes are burning, we break out into random campfire songs, and s’mores seem like an excellent dinner plan…

Pozy Clarkia

Pozy Clarkia

But life on the edges of the fires pales in comparison to those near and in the fires (human and animals), and to those fighting those fires. I am officially ready for a good snow storm.

The Covid pandemic is surging among the unvaccinated, who are not only getting sick and dying but also serving as incubators for mutations of the virus, putting all of us at risk.

I am teaching my Death, Dying, and Grief class this summer and tonight we have a Zoom session to discuss this question: When those who choose to be unvaccinated get Covid, do they then have a right to access (finite) health care resources?

From the New Yorker

From the New Yorker

The answer, in my opinion, has to be yes but the conversation helps us consider the social costs of individual choices.

At the very micro level, I can tell you that deaths viewed as preventable (vaccination = prevention) and/or caused by an external force (i.e.,unvaccinated Covid spreader) and/or that are what we call “off-time” (e.g. 56-year-old Clark dying of Covid) are much, much, much more difficult for the heart-shattered bereaved left behind.

Lisa Kaufman photo of Clark at the end of our driveway

Lisa Kaufman photo of Clark at the end of our driveway

Individual choices often have broad consequences — like the gender reveal party that started a massive (expensive) wildfire and resulted in the death of a firefighter, breaking the hearts of his loved ones.

Most of us do not intend bad outcomes for others when we make personal choices, and that is why considering the possibilities is so important.

A decision is not truly an informed one without honestly and accurately considering the potential impact on others.

Source: https://tfsweb.tamu.edu/PreventWildfire/

Source: https://tfsweb.tamu.edu/PreventWildfire/

…and Covid. Only YOU can prevent Covid.

Six Months Old!

Can you believe the Bright Stars are already six months old? This is Zuber Heze…

Thank you, Alison!

Thank you, Alison!

Xenna Zaniah…

Thank you, Kim!

Thank you, Kim!

Capella with Claire…

Happy Half-Birthday to each and every Baby Bright Star.

Connect the Humans: The Work of a Dog

Dogs are community builders — it is one of their super powers. There is Buttercup and Zeus (Wildflowers) who have created a lovely friendship among their humans…

Penny photo

Penny photo

And now their brothers have planted friendship seeds as well…

Thank you, Bridget, for the photos and video

Thank you, Bridget, for the photos and video

Kjempe lives in Colorado but his brother, Kitsap, is from back east. Kitsap’s human has work in Colorado for a few weeks (lucky her!) and so the brothers had a playdate…

Building connections two puppies at a time. Well done, Boys.