Friday, March 27, 2026

“Can we give permanence to the lightnings of thought”: Dad and the Transcendentalists, Spring Actions and Departures.

 





“Can we give permanence to the lightnings of thought”: Dad and the Transcendentalists, Spring Actions and Departures. 


It's been a dozen years since Dad took a detour from this world, on his way somewhere unknown. 


No one really knows what happens after someone goes, after a loved one dies. 

All we, all I have, are the memories, a few dusty old books. 


Every year, I sit on this day, Dad’s departure day, looking through his old letters, the black and white photos and marked up books of poetry and prose, psychology and philosophy, theology and literature, picking up one of the volumes I picked up on the way back from Texas after his funeral.  Will and I drove from Texas to New Orleans after Dad was created, joking, eating crawfish, munching tacos after spreading the ashes, without washing our hands. Spreading more ashes all over NOLA, into the Mississippi, the river of life. 


All, that's an old familiar story at this point.


Still the memories linger, offering surprises, insights, the road trip continuing.  

When I think of Dad, I think of a thousand conversations, backwards and forwards, the jobs he turned down, the Thomasville Law Firm, at Princeton, on the way to class, on the road from Dickenson, leaving Carlisle, after Will's graduation, with Caroline and Uncle Louie in  Moultrie, Ga, by the farm with the cows, at Dunn Brothers Coffee in St. Paul, with his feet up, in San Francisco, at coffee shop on Haight Street, among his piles of books, listening g to Bud Powell records in Chicago, on Belmont Shore in Long Beach, on the way out to Joshua Tree, to camp.

Watching the world, recalling the latest paperback he was reading of Kinky Friedman or Miguel de Unamuno, telling me about the Spanish philosopher whose travails led him through darkness and light.

I don't know who he liked more, Miguel or Kinky, who reminded us:  

"Politics is the only field in which the more experience you have, the worse you get".

"The first thing I'll do if elected is demand a recount".

"We're in a race with Mississippi for the bottom, and we're winning".

"Never apologize for the truth". 

Laughing, he told me about his uncles, “Calvinist sons of bitches,” all of them, he lamented, the children of John B Shepard the Ora Hewitt, Texas, his father Kirk, who went crazy in the war, beating the love out of him when he returned from the Pacific Front, Dr Carl, thrown down the stairs in an S and M accident gone wrong, Winston, who stayed home during the great war, and Louis, who  who outlived them all. They all had stories, none more than Ora, their mother, who lost her first years and years before. All the descendents of Willis Simeon Bowles, whose father drowned at sea on his way back to England, 1829, orphaned; he worked in a sawmill, before he fought in the Civil War, for the wrong side, I would presume. 

I think about about Dad at Harvard, as his grandfather and uncles were, thinking about the Beats and Transcendentalists of Boston and Concord, their 19th-century intellectual movement (1830s–1850s) that embraced idealism, individualism, and the divinity of nature, reacting against rationalism and materialism, looking at the mysteries, at god revealing herself in a walk in the woods, in a cemetery, in the old poetry bookshop in Cambridge ... The poems we read looking at the Pacific Ocean.

I dig through the piles of books that he left behind, stumbling upon his history of Transcendentalism,  marked up passages, leaving us clues. 

"Time is but a stream I go fishing in..." he underlines, sharing a passage from the Essential Transcendentalists ... all these years later…

We thought about Dad all week, taking our annual trip to his favorite NYC restaurant.

“The US has always been afraid of becoming Communist,” he’d say over and over. “But we were never close to that. What we really had to worry about was becoming fascist,” he told me. “We’re a lot closer to that,” he lamented. If only he could see us now. 


While activists were in Albany taking a bust for NY4ALL, we were at El Quixote toasting to Dad, gone 12 tears, recalling the conversations, the dialogue, the books, the stories long passed, his  days staying at the Chelsea, watching football games at the bar, talking in his room, long into the night.

Dad's greatest disdain was for the ontologically challenged. The questions about epistemology, about knowing and being, seeking, never knowing. They fill me as spring awakens, the road opens.

Ralph Waldo Emerson wonders:

"Can we give permanence to the lightning of thought which lick up in a moment these combustible mountains of sensation and custom, and reveal the moral order after which the earth is to be rebuilt anew… Can we give permanence to the lightnings of thought which lick up in a moment these combustible mountains of sensation and custom, and reveal the moral order after which the earth is to be rebuilt anew..."


I remember getting arrested just a few days before Dad died, a strange feeling hitting me a few days later, that he was passing after I got back. 


I always have that feeling in March, the sensation of passing, of flowers, of Spring opening, of bodies in the streets. 


As usual in March, direct action is popping, activists defending neighbors, fighting for the climate, it's all opening up. See you on the streets Saturday, recalling Woody, all you fascists bound to lose.


As Howard Zinn puts it:

“"TO BE HOPEFUL in bad times is not just foolishly romantic. It is based on the fact that human history is a history not only of cruelty, but also of compassion, sacrifice, courage, kindness.

What we choose to emphasize in this complex history will determine our lives.

If we see only the worst, it destroys our capacity to do something. If we remember those times and places-and there are so many-where people have behaved magnificently, this gives us the energy to act, and at least the possibility of sending this spinning top of a world in a different direction.

And if we do act, in however small a way, we don't have to wait for some grand utopian future. The future is an infinite succession of presents, and to live now as we think human beings should live, in defiance of all that is bad around us, is itself a marvelous victory."

Wednesday the 25th of March

After teaching, with still more wondering about the world, I found myself giggling with Al and Baby C, later, uptown at an old restaurant, a men's club, with old and new friends, taking in the news, reports from the demos in Albany, activists imploding the governor to preserve New York's climate laws. Gov Hochul, don't blame Trump. Keep us on the right track. As of March 2026, New York's landmark Climate Leadership & Community Protection Act (CLCPA) faces significant attacks from Governor Hochul, who proposed delaying key emission regulations until 2030 and altering methane accounting to weaken the law. Critics claim these changes are necessary to avoid high costs, while environmentalists decry them as a major step back from climate leadership.


March 24th

Keegan posted:

“The conservative majority on the Supreme Court reversed my appellate win in Linton v. Zorn, a case where a cop was granted qualified immunity for permanently injuring a peaceful protester.

Justice Sotomayor, joined by Justices Kagan and Jackson, dissented—and are dead right. The majority inappropriately construed facts against my client to summarily reverse the Second Circuit—the evidence shows the cop gave my client no warning before twisting her arm behind her back—and this marks a dangerous resurgence of the Supreme Court inappropriately expanding qualified immunity on the shadow docket.

This is a devastating blow to me and the state of the law, but most of all to my client, who was permanently injured and now gets no compensation or justice for her suffering. It really feels like we are losing the war in our struggles for justice right now, but all these actions and cases have real human consequences, so we’ve got to keep fighting the good fight, and hoping we can bend things back in the right direction at some point down the road. At least that’s what I’m telling myself.


March 23

Met Mom for lunch, enjoying some oysters. The secret to longevity is a lot of prosecco, Mom explained, taking a sip. 


March 22

Before taking the kid back to school, I found myself scrolling through the ACT UP 29 pics, putting together the ACT UP 39 blog. There's Mark Milano, Elizabeth Owens, Andy Velez gone. Other heroes still here. There's a nine year old kid and sister, up in the corner and ten years later a 19 year old college kid, acting up!!! 

Up to Boston we drove, spring break over, on the way back to college. 

"Don't go back to Rockville..." we sing. 

"Sometimes I live in the country. Sometimes I live in town. Sometimes I haves a great notion. Jumping in, into the river and drown ... Irene good night" we sing. 

"Some of the most beautiful words ever written," they said before stopping at a diner in Connecticut. "That's a damned good cup of coffee..." On the way back to Boston blues grasping at us. 

I think of Dad, who spent the happiest days of his life here, strolling through Cambridge, hanging out with Mom and Fred. 

“Ireen Goodnight,” I sing, remembering singing with Dad all those years ago. 

Up in Boston, the teenager has a copy of “A Sand County Almanac” by Aldo Leopold. 

Dad loved this ecological tome, “ a 1949 non-fiction book by American ecologist, forester, and environmentalist Aldo Leopold. Describing the land around the author's home in Sauk County, Wisconsin, the collection of essays advocate Leopold's idea of a "land ethic", or a responsible relationship existing between people and the land they inhabit.”

I wish they could compare notes, the two Transcendentalists. 

Finishing writing this, I glimpse through Dad’s notes from the Essential Transcendentalists. 

“The lone stryker” Dad scrawled on one page, toward the end, referring to an old poem, one of his favorites. Most of the notes are indecipherable. Baby C helps me decipher a few. You have to unfocus your eyes, says Baby C translating.  I thinking about Dad’s favorite poem, “A Lone Striker” (1936) by Robert Frost, published the year of Dad’s birth. Dad read it to me the last time I saw him in this world:

“He knew another place, a wood, 

And in it, tall as trees, were cliffs; 

And if he stood on one of these, 

‘Twould be among the tops of trees, 

Their upper branches round him wreathing,

Their breathing mingled with his breathing. 

If -- if he stood! Enough of ifs! 

He knew a path that wanted walking; 

He knew a spring that wanted drinking;

 A thought that wanted further thinking; 

A love that wanted re-renewing. 

Nor was this just a way of talking 

To save him the expense of doing. 

With him it boded action, deed “


RIP Dad.






Pics of Dad through time. 





And pics of a week in time. 

































"That's a damn good cup of coffee."




Sunday, March 22, 2026

ACT UP 39!!! AIDS Activists Protest Trump Attacks on HIV/AIDS Programs and Healthcare, ACT UP Marks 39th Year by Protesting ICE and War Profiteer Palantir #ActUp

 

BS and ACT UP, 39 by Ken Schles



ACT UP 39!!! AIDS Activists Protest Trump Attacks on HIV/AIDS Programs and Healthcare, ACT UP Marks 39th Year by Protesting ICE and War Profiteer Palantir

On a sunny Saturday, March 21, ACT UP (AIDS Coalition To Unleash Power) marked its 39th anniversary of fighting the AIDS epidemic by protesting the Trump administration’s slashing of HIV/AIDS budgets while increasing budgets for ICE and the current war on Iran.


As part of ACT UP’s anniversary, the group is honoring member Mark Milano, who was a longtime AIDS and healthcare activist who died of cancer in early January.  He was a leader in the early years of ACT UP and later in the Trump resistance movement through Rise and Resist. Additional ACT UP NY members who have passed away in recent years to be remembered include Nanette Kazaoka, Alan Timothy Lunceford-Stevens, Mel Stevens, Kathy Ottersten, Gerri Wells, and others.


I attended with action with my kid, who was at the ACT UP 29 demonstration with me, a decade ago, with Mark and Elizabeth and Andy, now gone, and Eric and Jim and company, still here. Now grown, they brought a friend, greeting many of the activists who’ve known them all their life. We recalled Elizabeth who greeted them with a hug at the action, Andy who screamed, Mark who was there as always, all three gone. 


BS and the kid, ACT UP 29, ACT UP 39,
Picks by Jackie Rudin


Standing at the AIDS memorial, Jay Walker introduced everyone, recalling Mark Milano, an activist who’d been part of both ACT UP and Rise and Resist. 

“He created wins that I benefit from,” said Jay, who confessed he’d been doing demos with Rise and Resist for 10,000 years. “I like to think Mark’s energy is smiling down on us.”


Jennifer Flynn Walker followed, recalling Milano and ACT UP. 

“The very best people are in ACT UP, are, not were, that is the tradition,” said Flynn-Walker. 

Jennifer Flynn Walker followed, recalling Milano and ACT UP, beginning what would turn out to be the speech of the day.

"The very best people are in ACT UP.

I mean that. Not were. Are. Because what ACT UP built doesn't belong to history — it belongs to us, right now, on this street, in this fight.

That is the tradition we stand in today.

And I want to take a moment to honor one of the people who carried that tradition on his back when it would have been so easy to walk away.

Mark Milano.

When ACT UP was at its height, Mark was there. And when the crowds thinned — when the meetings went from hundreds to dozens to a handful of people in a room — Mark was still there. He never left. He understood something that all of us in this work need to tattoo on our hearts: you don't fight because it's easy. You fight because it's right.

Mark was at every protest. And when he was there, you knew he was there — because Mark Milano had the loudest voice in the room. Not just the biggest lungs. The clearest moral vision.

When Al Gore — then a presidential candidate — was working to prevent South Africa from importing lifesaving generic AIDS medications to protect pharmaceutical profits, Mark was in his face. Think about that. A man who wanted to be President of the United States was letting people die on another continent for a patent. And Mark Milano said: not on my watch. He disrupted that campaign event and he helped force a reversal. People in South Africa and around the world, are alive today because Mark showed up loud and refused to back down.

I can still hear Mark Milano yelling, ACT UP, Fight Back, Fight AIDS (3 times)

My name is Jennifer Flynn Walker and I’m the chief of the fightback team at Popular Democracy, a network of 48 of the most badass community organizations in this country. We come from different places, different fights, different frontlines. But we are connected by a single belief — that power doesn't give up anything without pressure. Without disruption. Without people like Mark Milano who stay in the room even when the room gets small, and raise their voice even when the powerful would rather not hear it. I had the honor of working closely with Mark while I was at Health GAP. He took the time to teach me the science behind HIV medications. He took the time to teach everyone the science behind HIV medications. He also called me up and took the time to teach me about retirement funds.

ACT UP taught us that the most radical thing you can do is refuse to accept that people are disposable.

Mark deeply believed that every single human being was worth fighting for and he never stopped even when his own illness made it difficult for him to do so. He showed up, over and over, time and again. He put his body on the line. He called other activists to check-in. He never gave up on any of us and he never gave up on the fight. He was a self professed media whore. He believed that everything, we, the moral majority, had to say was important to be heard by the masses. I hope we remember that.

Let us carry that lesson into every fight we take on — for housing, for health care, for workers, for immigrants, for everyone this system has decided doesn't count.

They thought ACT UP would go away. They think we'll go away.

We won't. The spirit of Mark Milano won’t let us.

Silence equals death. And we are not silent.

Thank you to each and every one of you in the streets today. You matter. I will fight for you.

ACT UP, Fight Back, Fight AIDS”

Mark Hannay followed by recalling Mark’s work with Rise and Resist, the Cough and disruption of Trump’s inauguration. 


“Trump care makes us sick!!!” we screamed. 


“You elected a fascist,” we all jeered at Trump was taking his oath of office. 


Jerry, Mark’s partner, followed.


It's been loss after loss of late. 

Jay called for us to remember those who are gone. 

Andy, 

Keith, 

Tim, 

Mel, 

Gerri, 

Otter, 

Bob, 

Dean Johnson

Elizabeth Owens, 

Name after name of people who were here. 

Name after name. 

We remember you, we followed. 

People who are gone, but still remembered. 


Eric Sawyer, one of the co-founders for the group, followed. “Jay referred to the similarities between the current occupant of the white house  and Reagan, the doddering old man who was there when this started, who thought we were disposable.” Sawyer recalled Larry Kramer calling him in 1987 asking that he come to the Center for his speech about AIDS. He thought we’d all die if something wasn’t done. He wanted us to start a group that would engage in civil disobedience, like the civil rights movement, with waves of arrests. “Our first action would be on Wall Street, screaming ‘Sell Welcome’ on the floor of the market.”

And the group fashioned a response to the carnage. Sawyer was instrumental in the global response, helping push Bush to create PEPFAR, and keeping the funding going administration after administration. He has court this week, because of his recent DC arrest, calling for those in power to support full funding and allocation of PEPFAR funds. The money is there. Congress has allocated. They refuse to spend it.


Last summer, the Trump administration and its congressional allies enacted spending cuts of $1 trillion that decimated federal healthcare and HIV/AIDS programs and the agencies that operate them. These funds were essentially reallocated from the fight against AIDS to dramatically increase funding for Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and Customs and Border Protection (CBP).

 

Since Trump took office, funding for ICE and CBP has tripled to nearly $200 billion. The ICE portion expanded the personnel who abduct mostly Black and Brown immigrants and their families from their communities and imprison them in concentration camps before deportation.  “The living conditions in these camps are inhumane, and healthcare services are nearly non-existent resulting in numerous deaths including people with HIV,” said ACT UP NY member Ryan Foster.

 

To accomplish this work, ICE contracts with software company Palantir Technologies, which profits handsomely and has an office in the Chelsea neighborhood of Manhattan.  Activists are calling for divestment from Palantir Technologies and the defunding of ICE and the war effort.

 

Meanwhile, the Pentagon is using its new additional funding of $155 billion to wage an unauthorized war against Iran and fund weapons to Israel in the Palestinian genocide.  Activists are demanding an end to the war in Iran and the Palestinian genocide.


Finishing speeches we marched and staged a die at Palantir Technologies, in Chelsea at 620 Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY 10011. This location serves as a key hub for their East Coast operations, focusing on financial services and media.


“We’re not going back,” we screamed.

“We’ll never be silent again.”

"Health care is a right!!!"


“Who do you have to blow to get arrested around here,” wondered Virginia, the police not arresting us. 


Finally, we stood up and declared victory.

The world is changing as are we. 


But ACT UP is still here, pushing and reminding on a gorgeous

spring day. 

We all get old and sick.  It's magnificent to fight while

we can and to remember.


Out for a snack after the demo, we talk about our lives and bodies,

how the demo went

and what’s next.


Cypress mentions a group he’s in, dedicated to the five

remembrances:

“Aging: I am of the nature to grow old; I cannot

escape it. Illness: I am of the nature to get sick; I cannot

escape it. Death: I am of the nature to die; I cannot

escape it. Separation: All that is dear to me and everyone I love

are of the

nature to change; I cannot escape being separated from

them. Karma: I am the owner of my actions, heir to my

actions, born

of my actions; my actions are my only true belongings.” Walking about in the sunlight after the demo, I thought

about the

strange confluence of events the last few months, Mark Milano’s zoom meeting

last fall,

the one he

insisted we all join, in which he dropped the news that his cancer was getting worse,

not better.

I knew it when I saw him last March at our reading at the

Center for the

Friendship and Fighting book

talk and Nanette's memorial; his interview runs throughout

the story.

I thought about all the zaps with Mark, at Trump's

inauguration, when the war started in Iraq,

on the streets, when Tommy Tompson,

the Bush era Health and Human Services

secretary was in town.


I thought about getting off the Zoom call with tears in my eyes

and running

to see Ryan’s one-person show, What Happens to boys in Chelsea, his story about

life and death

in New York City, his body flying through the air, presumably flung through the air after a date

gone wrong

in Chelsea. And there he was standing on the scaffolding in Chelsea,

courageously

leading

our chants. None of our bodies are disposable. None of us are, no kids in

ICE detention,

no school kid in Iran, no protester in Iran, no one with HIV or AIDS. I thought of the years of AIDS demos, started in 1993, the ashes in the air, the ghosts joining us for the anniversary actions.




Virginia Vitzthum





















































Michael Negro




"Today was the protest in Observation of ACT UP's 39th anniversay. I joined in 1990, so it's "only" been 35 years for me, but still hard to imagine that it has been that long. It's a protest about money for AIDS and healthcare, not warfare, a perennial theme, but it also has a theme of remembering Mark Milano. I pushed for a civil disobedience in honor of Mark, who did so much of it in his lifetime, and Ryan ran with that, so there was a plan to block 6th ave with banners at the very end. We started out at the AIDS memorial, an oddly shaped spot where the microphones tend to be set up so that anyone sitting is either behind them on the stone benches or too far away on the park benches closer to 7th Ave. The beginning of these things is always a lot of greeting and mingling, with activists you see all the time and some you see more rarely. Banners are hung, t-shirts get sold, and the speeches begin. I was half-heartedly following along on the planning chat and I knew there was concern about the number of speakers, but there really were way too many speakers. And some of them, instead of giving a pithy call to action, droned on sounding like lecturers in policy or the history or activism. "This would be better for a conference," I said to Ben during one speech. Towards the end of the speeches people who had been standing for too long began to leave. I was sitting with Andy, Cypress, and Ben and we started to yell "Let's march! Time to march!" Heckling doesn't work as well from behind, and Jay who was MCing stubbornly stuck to the program. At the end of the speeches, Jay invited the crowd to say the names of lost activists and people with HIV/AIDS. Without specifying a time frame, a hail of names from the whole epidemic came pouring out. "This could go on for a long time," I said. The reading of the names on World AIDS Day takes 24 hours and I don't even know if that's the whole country or just NYC. As we were gearing up to march, a young ACT UP member I don't know, came bustling over and asked if I could speak to a reporter. I had been warned there might be press looking to speak to us ACT UP dinosaurs. This guy was from The Advocate, so I answered his questions. Then I joined the March, chatting with various people as we made our way down the street. Not only was healthcare a theme of the march, it was a topic of many conversations. As we walked, one activist told me about her hip pain and her upcoming steroid shot. Having had steroid shots everywhere from my foot to my neck, I warned her about the burning pain of the steroid when its first injected. Another activist, when I invited him to block the street with us, told me couldn't because he had just started chemo and radiation for stage 2B colorectal cancer. Then, stopping for a beverage with Ben and a couple of activist friends, another activist told us about the emergency surgery for his bleeding ulcers and about the cyst on his kidney. People's health was a constant topic of conversation way back in ACT UP as people with HIV/AIDS compared notes and shared treatment research and anecdotes about things like bitter melon enemas. Now it's more about aging, and the wear and tear on our bodies. Bob Lederer turned up beside me in the march, and told me about the book he's writing. It seems like everyone is writing a book these days. His is about "activist heroes" - he is careful to include she-roes and trans people - which I appreciate since people tend to think of the men when they think about ACT UP. He says he is writing about people who faced real consequences for their activism and persevered. I promised to be interviewed at some point, but just then we arrived at Palantir and Ryan scrambled up the scaffold to hang a banner and I had to slip through the crowd to get in position for the die in. Lying on 6th ave, looking up at the blue, blue sky, I felt strangely relaxed. Once we had been down a while and the press had rushed in to take their photos, Ben broke the pose a little to take a few photos of his own,  hilariously winding up with one of both our legs, which he labeled and posted, although I'm pretty sure my rainbow sneakers probably didn't need the label. Once we got up, the small group of us that had been planning the cd rushed to block 6th ave with the two main banners. I couldn't tell what was happening on the right side, I just saw multiple officers talking to Ryan, but then that banner was forced back, opening that lane. We all sat down in the remaining lane chanting,"we're queer, get rid of Palantir." A cop came along and gave us a first warning, but Ben and I had suspected the new, mellower NYPD might not arrest us. Sitting anywhere without back support is painful and lately I keep getting cramps everywhere but especially my hands and legs, so I kept having to change position, often kneeling instead of sitting. "None of them have plastic cuffs," Ben said to me. "They don't have buses, either" I said. They had one van, not enough for a whole group. We pointed out to the others that they were clearly not prepared to arrest us, "What should I do?" Ryan asked me. "Declare victory and then we'll go," I told him. "Palantir has heard us!" Ryan declared with his megaphone and we got up. Afterwards, Ben and I and a couple activist friends wandered down 6th ave. to what for many years was a health food restaurant but is now kind of a japanese take out place. We bought various snacks and beverages, protesting is thirsty work, and settled down at one of the few tables. I had expected chatting, or debriefing, and there was a little of each but most of the conversation was unexpectedly dark. We talked about assisted suicide, and the underground forms it took during the bad years of AIDS, about the final parties. Ken, who knew Basquiat, talked about how his death was not the accidental overdose people think it was, but an escape from worsening symptoms. He also told us about a couple he knew who had a suicide pact but then one man did it without telling the other and the police conviscated the drugs   so the other man could not do it. I told them about the Very Sick client, and how, unexpectedly, death has become such a theme of this blog and how it hovers around me, gossamer thin, so delicate I could put my hand right through. Cypress talked about a Buddhist group he attends where they focus on the five remembrances: I cannot avoid aging, I cannot avoid illness, I cannot avoid death, I must be separated from all that is dear to me, and the only thing I own are my actions. Ben was trying to write it down. "There are also four remembrances," said Cypress. "Four remembrances sound easier to remember," I quipped before I could stop myself. Later I was reminded of a poem we learned in school, "Nothing Gold Can Stay." On the train on the way home, Ben and Ken talk about their college age kids, both of whom identify as LGBTQ, and Ken pulls up pictures to show us how his son throws big dinner parties and has a tribe of friends. When I switch to the R, I really start to feel the pain in my lower back intensifying. I know the cats have probably been busy knocking things over, and I also know whatever is on the floor is staying on the floor for now.