A friend enjoys playing Spelling Bee, one of The New York Times games, so I’ve just given it a try to unspectacular results. She said it’s good brain exercise. I worry it will be a time sponge. I’ll have to set a limit. Can you spell ...
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  1. Service of Spelling Bees: Anachronism?
  2. Service of Poison for Sale
  3. Service of Coincidences
  4. Service of I Just Wanted to Know
  5. Service of Politics vs. Family
  6. More Recent Articles

Service of Spelling Bees: Anachronism?

A friend enjoys playing Spelling Bee, one of The New York Times games, so I’ve just given it a try to unspectacular results. She said it’s good brain exercise. I worry it will be a time sponge.  I’ll have to set a limit.

Can you spell bromocriptine?

The 14-year-old California eighth grader, Shrey Parikh, can. He won the 2026 Scripps National Spelling Bee. The competition was a nailbiter. His competition was brilliant. He won the runoff against another whiz kid and was celebrated on network TV. I’m not the only one impressed.

But is the skill an anachronism in the world of AI? Or will the character of children who dedicate themselves to such a win pushing themselves above and beyond impact their futures in a good way whether or not they win?

   

Service of Poison for Sale

Why do we allow ourselves to be poisoned? We have been content to subject ourselves to toxins in favorite foods no less.

I was glad to see that New York State has banned the manufacture and sale of potassium bromate in flour which is already banned in California, Canada, China, the European Union, UK and India. It won’t be removed, for example, in our bagels and pizza–which use this additive–until next year. It improves the performance of dough in commercial baking.

And there is a cousin of poisons in food– flavored vapes that are thought will be especially enticing to young people. “The F.D.A. issued new guidance that could pave the way for major tobacco companies to begin selling flavored vapes and to snare a chunk of the $6 billion e-cigarette market away from illegal Chinese competitors. The new policy bypassed the F.D.A.’s regular rule-making process,” Christina Jewett and Kenneth P. Vogel wrote in The New York Times. The title of their article, “With a Friend in Trump, the Tobacco Industry Secures a Lucrative Win,”

Regarding the potassium bromate, what about the rest of the States? Shouldn’t they ban it too? Will pizza and bagel sales plummet in New York waiting for the law to kick in in 2027? How come so many other countries have forbidden it and we haven’t?

The title of the New York Times article explains why we can expect to see flavored vapes on the market. Why aren’t they banned or strictly controlled by exorbitant pricing regardless of where they are made?

   

Service of Coincidences

Coincidences fascinate me. My mother’s next-door neighbors–husband and wife–shared the same birthday. Babies born naturally on an important date for the family—a grandpa’s birthday for example—are marvels.

I often will begin to text someone when the phone rings and it’s them. ESP? Coincidence?

On the anniversary of the day I met my husband a memory inspired this post about an incident after we started dating.

When we met, Homer worked and lived in Manhattan and I lived in Brooklyn. He would take a car service to pick me up for dinner in Manhattan. About a year later he was in a car service vehicle on his way to the airport leaving from his NYC office. The driver said, “I remember you. What ever happened to the woman you picked up in Brooklyn—I was your driver–and then I dropped you off at a restaurant in the city?” [Did he eavesdrop on our conversation? Did he see Homer reach for my hand for the first time? Did he suspect something lovely was happening?]

“I married her,” said Homer.

Do you have fun coincidences to share?

   

Service of I Just Wanted to Know

A friend grumbled the other week because he’d poured his soul into a proposal and when he followed up the recipient said, “I just wanted to know the price. Thanks. I’m hiring a local company.”

The most blatant example that happened to me involved someone I had worked with at a different company–and I trusted–who upon receiving my proposal said, “This is great. I’ll hand it to my staff. Great roadmap. They are terrific and will carry it out. Thanks.”

I always wondered if there are repercussions for this type of business behavior. Legal? Yes. Ethical? No.

Then there are those who barge to the front of a line at a store. You say, “Excuse me, there’s a line.” Their response, “I just wanted to know….”

Have you bumped into situations like this?

   

Service of Politics vs. Family

ASK, who writes great comments here, suggested a topic based on a recent New York Times column in “The Ethicist.” She wrote “Philip Galanes had a letter from someone who did not want to attend the graduation of a young relative from the Naval Academy because of the current administration. I was aghast that someone would even consider such a move…And I wonder how your readership feels. (By the way, I liked Galanes’s answer.)”

As background she wrote, “I am always surprised at questions dealing with that subject. I have close friends who run the range of views from arch conservative to progressive. When with those whose views I don’t share, I don’t discuss politics because I know I am not going to change anyone’s opinion.”

Galanes wrote to the reader aunt: “But elected officials come and go, and it would be wrong to conflate politicians with the brave men and women who dedicate their lives to defending our country in the armed services. The president may be commander in chief, but only until the next one is sworn into office.”

And “I understand your ambivalence about attending a ceremony that features a speaker with whom you may disagree strongly. So, how about excusing yourself for that portion of the ceremony (provided that the actual speaker this year is objectionable to you)? If attending is still impossible, make sure to explain your absence to your niece in a way that distinguishes politics from the greater cause to which she is dedicating her young life.”

The topic is bigger than one aunt and her niece as ASK pointed out. It reflects the terrible place we are in right now. If a person as seemingly intelligent as this aunt who is proud of her niece and loves her, can’t sit through a graduation speech, we are in worse shape than I thought. It’s also up to the polarizing voices to tone down the rhetoric so cooperation and progress can commence.

Someone has to be the grownup.

Echoes of this intransigent point of view impact speakers booed off stages of universities or disinvited to speak because not everyone in the institution is on board.

How are we going to build bridges, fill gaps, learn once again to live and work together for the better of all?

   

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