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Presenting matters of personal interest defying categorization. Award winning writer, Nancy Snipper (as of July 2016 see http://sntravelandartswithoutborders.blogspot.ca/) also contributes. Présentation de sujets d'intérêt personnel, défiant la catégorisation. L'écrivain gagnant de prix, Nancy Snipper (des Juillet 2016 voir http://sntravelandartswithoutborders.blogspot.ca/) contribue également.
Joe Biden's plan for COVID-19.
March 12, 2020
My remarks today on
coronavirus:
Below are the remarks I
delivered this afternoon about the threat of coronavirus and the plan I have
introduced to confront this crisis head-on. This is a long email, but I hope
you will read it all the way through and forward this to family and friends.
My fellow Americans:
Today, across the nation, many of us are feeling anxious about the rapid spread of COVID-19, known as the coronavirus, and the threat it poses to our health, our loved ones, and our livelihoods.
I know people are worried, and my thoughts are with all those who are directly fighting this virus -- those infected, families that have suffered a loss, our first responders and health care providers who are putting themselves on the line for others.
And I’d like to thank those who are already making sacrifices to protect us -- whether that’s self-quarantining or canceling events or closing campuses.
Because whether or not you are infected, or know someone who is infected, or have been in contact with an infected person -- this will require a national response.
Not just from our elected leaders or our public health officials -- from all of us.
We all must follow the guidance of health officials and take appropriate precautions -- to protect ourselves, and critically, to protect others, especially We all must follow the guidance of health officials and take appropriate precautions -- to protect ourselves, and critically, to protect others, especially those who are most at-risk from this disease.
It will mean making some radical changes to our personal behaviors -- more frequent and more thorough handwashing and staying home from work if you are ill -- but also altering some deeply-ingrained habits, like handshakes and hugs, and avoiding large public gatherings.
That is why earlier this week, on the recommendation of officials, my campaign canceled the election-night rally we had planned to hold in Cleveland, Ohio.
We will also be re-imagining the format for the large-crowd events we had planned in Chicago and Miami in the coming days.
And we will continue to assess and adjust how we conduct our campaign as we move forward, and find new ways to share our message with the public, while putting the health and safety of the American people first.
Yesterday, we announced a Public Health Advisory Committee of experts who will counsel our campaign and help guide our decisions on steps to minimize the risk.
We will be led by the science.
The World Health Organization has now officially declared COVID-19 a pandemic.
Downplaying it, being overly dismissive, or spreading misinformation will only hurt us and further advantage the spread of the disease.
But neither should we panic or fall back on xenophobia.
Labeling COVID-19 a “foreign virus” does not displace accountability for the mismanagement that we have seen from the Trump Administration.
Let me be crystal clear: the coronavirus does not have a political affiliation.
It will infect Republicans and Democrats alike.
It will not discriminate based on national origin, race, gender, or zip code.
It will touch people in positions of power and the most vulnerable in our society.
A wall will not stop it.
Banning all travel from Europe, or any other part of the world, may slow it -- but as we have seen -- it will not stop it.
And travel restrictions based on favoritism and politics -- rather than risk -- will be counterproductive.
This disease could impact every nation and any person on the planet.
And we need a plan about how we are going to aggressively manage it here at home.
The American people have the capacity to meet this moment.
We will face this with the same spirit that has guided us through previous crises. We will come together as a nation. We will look out for one another and do our part as citizens.
We have to harness the ingenuity of our scientists and the resourcefulness of our people.
And we have to lead the world to drive a coordinated global strategy, not shut ourselves off from it.
Protecting the health and safety of the American people is the most important job of any president -- and unfortunately, this virus has laid bare the severe shortcomings of the current Administration.
Public fears are being compounded by a pervasive lack of trust in this president, fueled by his adversarial relationship with the truth.
Our government’s ability to respond effectively has been undermined by the hollowing-out of our agencies and the disparagement of science.
And our ability to drive a global response is dramatically undercut by the damage Trump has done to our credibility and our relationships around the world.
We have to get to work immediately to dig ourselves out of this hole.
That is why, today, I am releasing a plan to combat and overcome the coronavirus.
The full details are on JoeBiden.com laying out the immediate steps we must take to deliver: A decisive public health response to curb the spread of this disease and provide treatment to those in need; and a decisive economic response that delivers real relief to American workers, families, and small businesses -- and protects the economy as a whole.
Click here to read the plan on my website >>
I offer it as a roadmap, not for what I will do as president 10 months from now, but for the leadership I believe is required right now, at this moment. President Trump is welcome to adopt it today.
The core principle is simple: public health professionals must be the ones making our public health decisions and communicating with the American people.
It would be a step toward reclaiming public trust and confidence in the United States government.
And toward stopping the fear and chaos that can overtake communities faster than this pandemic.
And it’s critical to mounting an effective national response that will save lives, protect our front-line health workers, and slow the spread of this virus.
First, anyone who needs to be tested based on medical guidelines should be tested -- at no charge.
The Administration’s failure on testing is colossal. It is a failure of planning, leadership, and execution.
The White House should measure and report each day how many tests were ordered, how many tests have been completed, and how many have tested positive.
By next week, the number of tests should be in the millions, not the thousands.
We should make sure every person in a nursing home, a senior center, or a vulnerable population has easy access to a test.
We should establish hundreds of mobile testing sites – at least 10 per state – and drive-thru testing centers to speed testing and protect health care workers.
The CDC, private labs, universities, and manufacturers should be working in lock-step to get this done, and get it done right.
No effort should be spared. No excuses should be made.
Tests should be available to all who need them and the government should stop at nothing to make that happen.
We must know the true extent of this outbreak so we can map it, trace it, and contain it.
Nor should we hide the true number of infections in hopes of protecting political interests or the stock market.
The markets will respond to strong, steady, capable leadership that addresses the root of the problem, not efforts to cover it up.
Second, we need to surge our capability to both prevent and treat the coronavirus, and prepare our hospitals to deal with an influx of those needing care.
This means not just getting out the testing kits and processing them quickly, but making sure communities have the hospital beds, the staff, the medical supplies, and the personal protective equipment necessary to treat patients.
The president should order FEMA to prepare the capacity with local authorities to establish temporary hospitals with hundreds of beds on short notice.
The Department of Defense should prepare for the potential deployment of its resources to provide medical facility capacity and logistical support.
A week from now, a month from now, we could need an instant, 500-bed hospital to isolate and treat patients in any city in the country.
We can do that -- but we aren’t ready yet, and the clock is ticking.
As we take these steps, state, federal, and local authorities need to ensure that there is accurate, up-to-date information easily available to every American so everyone can make an informed decision about when to get tested, when to self-quarantine, and when to seek medical treatment.
And the federal government should provide states and municipalities with clear guidance about when to trigger more aggressive mitigation policies, such as closing schools.
Third, we need to accelerate the development of treatments and a vaccine.
Science takes time. It will still be many months before we have a vaccine that can be proven safe for public use and produced in sufficient quantity to make a difference.
Therapeutics can and should come sooner. That will save lives.
We passed the Cures Act in 2016 to accelerate work at the National Institutes of Health, but now it must have every available resource to speed the process along.
We must fast-track clinical trials within the NIH, while closely coordinating with the Food and Drug Administration on trial approvals, so that the science is not hindered by the bureaucracy.
And, when we do have a vaccine ready to go, it should also be made widely available, free of charge.
We should also immediately restore the White House National Security Council Directorate for Global Health Security and Biodefense -- with a full-time, dedicated coordinator to oversee the response.
Our Administration created that office to better respond to future global health threats after the Ebola crisis in 2014.
It was designed for exactly this scenario.
President Trump eliminated the office two years ago.
Here’s the bottom line -- we have to do what is necessary to beat this challenge sooner rather than later.
I assure you, if we wait for it to worsen then scramble to catch up, the human and economic toll will be far greater and last far longer.
Congress gave the Administration $8 billion last week to fight the virus.
We need to know exactly where that money is going -- how quickly it is going out the door, and how it is being spent.
This brings me to the second half of this challenge -- the economic dislocation the coronavirus will cause in our country.
We must do whatever it takes, spend whatever it takes, to deliver relief for our families and ensure the stability of our economy.
Taking immediate, bold measures to help Americans who are hurting economically right now.
It means we will need bigger and broader measures to shore up economic demand, protect jobs, keep credit flowing to our job creators, and make sure we have the economic firepower we need to weather this storm and get our people and this economy back to full strength as soon as possible.
This crisis will hit everyone, but it will hit folks who live paycheck-to-paycheck the hardest, including working people and seniors.
Another tax cut to Google or Goldman or millionaires won’t get the job done.
Indiscriminate corporate tax subsidies won’t effectively target those who really need help.
We need to place our focus on those who will struggle just to get by.
People are already losing jobs -- we need to replace their wages. That includes workers in the gig economy who lack unemployment insurance.
Parents who are already struggling with childcare costs -- we need to give them relief.
Children who rely on school lunches will need food. And schools will need help ensuring children who do not have easy access to computers can still learn if their schools close.
People who have difficulty paying their rent or mortgage because they’ve been laid off or had their hours cut back -- we need to help them stay in their homes.
Small businesses that will be devastated as customers stay home and events are canceled -- we need to make sure they have access to INTEREST-FREE loans.
It is a national disgrace that millions of our fellow citizens do not have a single day of paid sick leave.
We need -- both -- a permanent plan for paid sick leave and an emergency plan for everyone who needs it due to the outbreak.
Beyond these national measures, my plan also calls for the creation of a State and Local Emergency Fund to make sure governors, mayors, and local leaders who are battling coronavirus on the ground have the resources necessary to meet this crisis head-on.
These funds could be used at the discretion of local leaders for whatever they most need: expanding critical health infrastructure, hiring additional health care and emergency service personnel, or cushioning the wider economic blow this virus will cause our communities.
We need smart, bold, and compassionate leadership that will help contain the crisis, reduce hardship to our people, and help our economy rebound.
But let me be clear: this is just a start.
We must prepare now to take further decisive action, including direct relief, that will be large in scale and focused on the broader health and stability of our economy.
But we can only protect the health of our economy if we do everything in our power to protect the health of our people.
The last point I want to make today is this -- we will never fully solve this problem if we are unwilling to look beyond our own borders and engage fully with the world.
A disease that starts any place on the planet can be on a plane to any city on earth a few hours later. So we have to confront coronavirus everywhere.
We should be leading a coordinated, global response, just as we did for Ebola, that draws on the incredible capability of the U.S. Agency for International Development and our State Department to assist vulnerable nations in detecting and treating coronavirus wherever it is spreading.
We should be investing in rebuilding and strengthening the Global Health Security Agenda, which we launched during our Administration, specifically to mobilize the world against the threat of new infectious diseases.
It can be hard to see the concrete value of this work when everything seems well with the world.
But by cutting our investments in global health, this Administration has left us woefully ill-prepared for the exact crisis we now face.
No President can promise to prevent future outbreaks.
But I can promise you that when I’m president, we will prepare better, respond better, and recover better. We will lead with science.
We will listen to experts and heed their advice.
We will rebuild American leadership and rally the world to meet global threats.
And I will always, always tell you the truth. That is the responsibility of a president. That is what is owed to the American people. Now, and in the difficult days that still lie ahead, I know that this country will summon our spirit of empathy, decency, and unity.
Because, in times of crisis, Americans stand as one.
Volunteers raise their hands to help. Neighbors look out for neighbors. Businesses take care of their workers.
So we will meet this challenge -- together.
Thank you all,
Joe Biden
Today, across the nation, many of us are feeling anxious about the rapid spread of COVID-19, known as the coronavirus, and the threat it poses to our health, our loved ones, and our livelihoods.
I know people are worried, and my thoughts are with all those who are directly fighting this virus -- those infected, families that have suffered a loss, our first responders and health care providers who are putting themselves on the line for others.
And I’d like to thank those who are already making sacrifices to protect us -- whether that’s self-quarantining or canceling events or closing campuses.
Because whether or not you are infected, or know someone who is infected, or have been in contact with an infected person -- this will require a national response.
Not just from our elected leaders or our public health officials -- from all of us.
We all must follow the guidance of health officials and take appropriate precautions -- to protect ourselves, and critically, to protect others, especially We all must follow the guidance of health officials and take appropriate precautions -- to protect ourselves, and critically, to protect others, especially those who are most at-risk from this disease.
It will mean making some radical changes to our personal behaviors -- more frequent and more thorough handwashing and staying home from work if you are ill -- but also altering some deeply-ingrained habits, like handshakes and hugs, and avoiding large public gatherings.
That is why earlier this week, on the recommendation of officials, my campaign canceled the election-night rally we had planned to hold in Cleveland, Ohio.
We will also be re-imagining the format for the large-crowd events we had planned in Chicago and Miami in the coming days.
And we will continue to assess and adjust how we conduct our campaign as we move forward, and find new ways to share our message with the public, while putting the health and safety of the American people first.
Yesterday, we announced a Public Health Advisory Committee of experts who will counsel our campaign and help guide our decisions on steps to minimize the risk.
We will be led by the science.
The World Health Organization has now officially declared COVID-19 a pandemic.
Downplaying it, being overly dismissive, or spreading misinformation will only hurt us and further advantage the spread of the disease.
But neither should we panic or fall back on xenophobia.
Labeling COVID-19 a “foreign virus” does not displace accountability for the mismanagement that we have seen from the Trump Administration.
Let me be crystal clear: the coronavirus does not have a political affiliation.
It will infect Republicans and Democrats alike.
It will not discriminate based on national origin, race, gender, or zip code.
It will touch people in positions of power and the most vulnerable in our society.
A wall will not stop it.
Banning all travel from Europe, or any other part of the world, may slow it -- but as we have seen -- it will not stop it.
And travel restrictions based on favoritism and politics -- rather than risk -- will be counterproductive.
This disease could impact every nation and any person on the planet.
And we need a plan about how we are going to aggressively manage it here at home.
The American people have the capacity to meet this moment.
We will face this with the same spirit that has guided us through previous crises. We will come together as a nation. We will look out for one another and do our part as citizens.
We have to harness the ingenuity of our scientists and the resourcefulness of our people.
And we have to lead the world to drive a coordinated global strategy, not shut ourselves off from it.
Protecting the health and safety of the American people is the most important job of any president -- and unfortunately, this virus has laid bare the severe shortcomings of the current Administration.
Public fears are being compounded by a pervasive lack of trust in this president, fueled by his adversarial relationship with the truth.
Our government’s ability to respond effectively has been undermined by the hollowing-out of our agencies and the disparagement of science.
And our ability to drive a global response is dramatically undercut by the damage Trump has done to our credibility and our relationships around the world.
We have to get to work immediately to dig ourselves out of this hole.
That is why, today, I am releasing a plan to combat and overcome the coronavirus.
The full details are on JoeBiden.com laying out the immediate steps we must take to deliver: A decisive public health response to curb the spread of this disease and provide treatment to those in need; and a decisive economic response that delivers real relief to American workers, families, and small businesses -- and protects the economy as a whole.
Click here to read the plan on my website >>
I offer it as a roadmap, not for what I will do as president 10 months from now, but for the leadership I believe is required right now, at this moment. President Trump is welcome to adopt it today.
The core principle is simple: public health professionals must be the ones making our public health decisions and communicating with the American people.
It would be a step toward reclaiming public trust and confidence in the United States government.
And toward stopping the fear and chaos that can overtake communities faster than this pandemic.
And it’s critical to mounting an effective national response that will save lives, protect our front-line health workers, and slow the spread of this virus.
First, anyone who needs to be tested based on medical guidelines should be tested -- at no charge.
The Administration’s failure on testing is colossal. It is a failure of planning, leadership, and execution.
The White House should measure and report each day how many tests were ordered, how many tests have been completed, and how many have tested positive.
By next week, the number of tests should be in the millions, not the thousands.
We should make sure every person in a nursing home, a senior center, or a vulnerable population has easy access to a test.
We should establish hundreds of mobile testing sites – at least 10 per state – and drive-thru testing centers to speed testing and protect health care workers.
The CDC, private labs, universities, and manufacturers should be working in lock-step to get this done, and get it done right.
No effort should be spared. No excuses should be made.
Tests should be available to all who need them and the government should stop at nothing to make that happen.
We must know the true extent of this outbreak so we can map it, trace it, and contain it.
Nor should we hide the true number of infections in hopes of protecting political interests or the stock market.
The markets will respond to strong, steady, capable leadership that addresses the root of the problem, not efforts to cover it up.
Second, we need to surge our capability to both prevent and treat the coronavirus, and prepare our hospitals to deal with an influx of those needing care.
This means not just getting out the testing kits and processing them quickly, but making sure communities have the hospital beds, the staff, the medical supplies, and the personal protective equipment necessary to treat patients.
The president should order FEMA to prepare the capacity with local authorities to establish temporary hospitals with hundreds of beds on short notice.
The Department of Defense should prepare for the potential deployment of its resources to provide medical facility capacity and logistical support.
A week from now, a month from now, we could need an instant, 500-bed hospital to isolate and treat patients in any city in the country.
We can do that -- but we aren’t ready yet, and the clock is ticking.
As we take these steps, state, federal, and local authorities need to ensure that there is accurate, up-to-date information easily available to every American so everyone can make an informed decision about when to get tested, when to self-quarantine, and when to seek medical treatment.
And the federal government should provide states and municipalities with clear guidance about when to trigger more aggressive mitigation policies, such as closing schools.
Third, we need to accelerate the development of treatments and a vaccine.
Science takes time. It will still be many months before we have a vaccine that can be proven safe for public use and produced in sufficient quantity to make a difference.
Therapeutics can and should come sooner. That will save lives.
We passed the Cures Act in 2016 to accelerate work at the National Institutes of Health, but now it must have every available resource to speed the process along.
We must fast-track clinical trials within the NIH, while closely coordinating with the Food and Drug Administration on trial approvals, so that the science is not hindered by the bureaucracy.
And, when we do have a vaccine ready to go, it should also be made widely available, free of charge.
We should also immediately restore the White House National Security Council Directorate for Global Health Security and Biodefense -- with a full-time, dedicated coordinator to oversee the response.
Our Administration created that office to better respond to future global health threats after the Ebola crisis in 2014.
It was designed for exactly this scenario.
President Trump eliminated the office two years ago.
Here’s the bottom line -- we have to do what is necessary to beat this challenge sooner rather than later.
I assure you, if we wait for it to worsen then scramble to catch up, the human and economic toll will be far greater and last far longer.
Congress gave the Administration $8 billion last week to fight the virus.
We need to know exactly where that money is going -- how quickly it is going out the door, and how it is being spent.
This brings me to the second half of this challenge -- the economic dislocation the coronavirus will cause in our country.
We must do whatever it takes, spend whatever it takes, to deliver relief for our families and ensure the stability of our economy.
Taking immediate, bold measures to help Americans who are hurting economically right now.
It means we will need bigger and broader measures to shore up economic demand, protect jobs, keep credit flowing to our job creators, and make sure we have the economic firepower we need to weather this storm and get our people and this economy back to full strength as soon as possible.
This crisis will hit everyone, but it will hit folks who live paycheck-to-paycheck the hardest, including working people and seniors.
Another tax cut to Google or Goldman or millionaires won’t get the job done.
Indiscriminate corporate tax subsidies won’t effectively target those who really need help.
We need to place our focus on those who will struggle just to get by.
People are already losing jobs -- we need to replace their wages. That includes workers in the gig economy who lack unemployment insurance.
Parents who are already struggling with childcare costs -- we need to give them relief.
Children who rely on school lunches will need food. And schools will need help ensuring children who do not have easy access to computers can still learn if their schools close.
People who have difficulty paying their rent or mortgage because they’ve been laid off or had their hours cut back -- we need to help them stay in their homes.
Small businesses that will be devastated as customers stay home and events are canceled -- we need to make sure they have access to INTEREST-FREE loans.
It is a national disgrace that millions of our fellow citizens do not have a single day of paid sick leave.
We need -- both -- a permanent plan for paid sick leave and an emergency plan for everyone who needs it due to the outbreak.
Beyond these national measures, my plan also calls for the creation of a State and Local Emergency Fund to make sure governors, mayors, and local leaders who are battling coronavirus on the ground have the resources necessary to meet this crisis head-on.
These funds could be used at the discretion of local leaders for whatever they most need: expanding critical health infrastructure, hiring additional health care and emergency service personnel, or cushioning the wider economic blow this virus will cause our communities.
We need smart, bold, and compassionate leadership that will help contain the crisis, reduce hardship to our people, and help our economy rebound.
But let me be clear: this is just a start.
We must prepare now to take further decisive action, including direct relief, that will be large in scale and focused on the broader health and stability of our economy.
But we can only protect the health of our economy if we do everything in our power to protect the health of our people.
The last point I want to make today is this -- we will never fully solve this problem if we are unwilling to look beyond our own borders and engage fully with the world.
A disease that starts any place on the planet can be on a plane to any city on earth a few hours later. So we have to confront coronavirus everywhere.
We should be leading a coordinated, global response, just as we did for Ebola, that draws on the incredible capability of the U.S. Agency for International Development and our State Department to assist vulnerable nations in detecting and treating coronavirus wherever it is spreading.
We should be investing in rebuilding and strengthening the Global Health Security Agenda, which we launched during our Administration, specifically to mobilize the world against the threat of new infectious diseases.
It can be hard to see the concrete value of this work when everything seems well with the world.
But by cutting our investments in global health, this Administration has left us woefully ill-prepared for the exact crisis we now face.
No President can promise to prevent future outbreaks.
But I can promise you that when I’m president, we will prepare better, respond better, and recover better. We will lead with science.
We will listen to experts and heed their advice.
We will rebuild American leadership and rally the world to meet global threats.
And I will always, always tell you the truth. That is the responsibility of a president. That is what is owed to the American people. Now, and in the difficult days that still lie ahead, I know that this country will summon our spirit of empathy, decency, and unity.
Because, in times of crisis, Americans stand as one.
Volunteers raise their hands to help. Neighbors look out for neighbors. Businesses take care of their workers.
So we will meet this challenge -- together.
Thank you all,
Joe Biden
Gorgeous Gulf Island Retreats Soothe your Body and Soul
by Nancy Snipper
Ever feel the need to heal in
a tranquil place where the ocean is before you and the forest surrounds you? I recently
traveled to two islands in British Columbia to stay in two extraordinary bed
and breakfasts. Rooms were remarkable,
and breakfasts went beyond the standard of eggs, toast and jam. Their hosts
have talents that help you unwind while cocooning you in comfort and serenity -
not to mention the spectacular views you get to enjoy from your own big balcony
every day.
Serenity by the Sea
Last year, I suffered a back
operation with an unfortunate painful outcome. I needed a retreat where I could
self-reflect, distress and reset. The first place I headed for was Serenity by
the Sea on Galiano Island. Luannah
Livermore, its owner, is an internationally trained healer, who also happens to
be a marvelous baker – among other things.
Cottages with rustic charm
Knowing I like view variation, Luannah offered
me the chance to stay in two different fully equipped deluxe cottage-like
cabins that nestle in the forest. Lush views greeted me every day until I moved
into the main building. Perched high on a rock, this reception area has a
stunning upstairs room with floor to ceiling windows and a huge balcony overlooking
the sea. I could hear the lapping of waves hitting the rocks. I slept like a babe.
Healing treatments
I looked forward to receiving her healing
therapies held in her spacious studio. After talking about her plan for me, she led
me to a bed made off amethyst crystals. Using an ancient Hawaiian method of treatment
and combining it with others. She also uses sound and laser therapies on your
body that give off vibration frequencies that actually heal pain. Indeed, every time, she applied them, my pain
diminished. While massaging me for three hours, she continuously sang in the
Hawaiian language to a CD playing in the background. Her 25 years of studying (five with an Elder
in Hawaii) includes Lomi Lomi Temple Style. This incorporates traditional
Hawaiian prayer, song, life coaching, energy release and deep joint massage and
deep breathing. Body, mind and soul
become integrated in her approach. Her hands were remarkably strong; her
angelic voice and her directions to breathe deeply at certain key moments
during her treatments deepened my relaxation and eradicated kinks. When it
was over, I felt an incredible surge of energy; my body felt renewed. My spirit picked up.
Having traveled all over the
world, Luannah has acquired a vast knowledge of healing therapies which she is
eager to share with you. Personally, I
found her guidance to be beneficial. She
helps us locate in ourselves a way to accept and actually love ourselves.
Esoteric as it sounds, she revealed that cells respond to good “frequencies” -
that the messages we send them profoundly affect our emotions, bodily feelings
– and this in turn affects how we relate to others. She also spoke about embracing both the shade
and light parts along with the incongruities that we have in ourselves, and
that we can learn to harmonize. She guided me in strategic ways to do this,
emphasizing aloha (love). Luannah aims to bring our lives into goodness and
love. “The world needs to be lovingly
corrected,” she said, smiling.
I came away from the retreat
looking ten years younger. Most
importantly, I learned more about myself - how I was hurting myself by focusing
on that which is not productive to my well-being. Certainly, my pain had greatly diminished; my
ankle was stronger, and my walking was steadier. Yes, I still use my cane but
not all the time now. Most of all, Luannah gave me a spiritual strategy to deal
with pain, and that alone has helped me when a setback arises.
I wanted to linger longer at
Serenity by the sea, not just because of her remarkable gifts, but her breakfasts
were great! Those raspberry, strawberry crepes and delicate pancakes soaked in
home-made caramel and chocolate sauce were out of this world. I also joined her family for a home-made
Peruvian-style barbecue chicken dinner, made by her husband, Juan Carlos.
Visit www.serenitybythesea.com
Email: info@serenitybythesea.com
Salt Spring Island and Armand Heights B and B
Leaving
Galiano, I took the
two-hour ferry ride to Salt Spring Island. Here the harbor and Ganges
town were buzzing with people. Still seeking solitude, I traveled
further north to stay
at Armand Heights – a B and B located 1000 metres above sea level. My
luxurious
room gave a panoramic tree-high view of mountain and ocean. I loved it.
The
grounds comprised almost six acres of gardens with a flourish of over
160
hybrid roses and dozens of fruit trees and herbs that Irina, the Russian
owner
uses in her breakfast dishes and every meal she loves to cook.
Irina Floreke, owner of this exquisite property
wears many hats: she makes baroque style cakes and raises chickens whose eggs
she sells at the Tuesday and Saturday Ganges markets. She also makes dozens of different flavored fruit
wine, using the fruit that grows on her property. Every guest gets a
complimentary bottle in their room. A
home-made gourmet breakfast is delivered to each of the four rooms by Irina
herself. She’ll even cook dinner for you if you ask her in advance. Her borscht was brilliant!
I came to know just how caring Irina is when
on my last day I was determined to visit Truckle Park – at least a 30-minute
drive from her place. But I had not
rented a car. This park is reputed to be the most beautiful of all the parks on
the Gulf Islands. Irina went right to work; she arranged for me to get a ride there
with a couple staying in one of the rooms who also wanted to explore this park.
It was beautiful indeed with its coves and
groves of trees that offered a solitary bench for gazing out to the endless
blue of sea. She even wanted to know how I would get back and to call her.
Irina even drove me me to the
market in Ganges, the main town, and it was here that she dragged me to her hairdresser,
insisting that my hair definitely needed cutting. I appreciated Irina’s
authenticity and frankness, but her hairdresser was too busy. I think she was
more disappointed that I was. Clearly, Irina always puts her guests first. “I
love working, but the most important thing for me is my guests. I want them to
be very happy here.” I certainly was.
Salt Spring is beautiful and welcoming. Musician, Randy Bachman homes here as do many
artists and creative if not maverick innovators. Parks, lakes, kayaking and
festivals abound. This scintillating island has its own healing magic, and
Armand Heights is part of it.
Visit www.armandheights.com
Email: reservations@armandheights.com
HEROINE WITHOUT A HELMET
written by Nancy Snipper
Are we
women drawn to helping others whom we don't even know, no matter the danger
you might put yourself in? Do you create your your own dare? Think of your experiences, your drives that plunged
you into the unknown. What happened? Did you have to sacrifice pieces of
friendships by doing it? Did others disdain you for your courage that they did
not have?
Has the
terrible visited your health, and the journey into deterioration gets worse
every day as does the pain? Are you still working on climbing up that daunting
mountain to make your health better? Do you despair when you slip back down a
bit?
Has hope gotten you through the day or simply
that you do not know what will happen to you that day. You are a heroine with little
protection, and that defines you: valiant, strongly independent and full of
tears to shed fears that do nothing to shield you from anything. You see, you
are a heroine without a helmet. Embrace it, as you are a rare remarkable human
being; you just don’t know Hommage à Yolande Simard Perrault (1939-2019)
COMMUNIQUÉ DE PRESSE
Pour diffusion immédiate
Montréal, le 9 juillet 2019
- Notre chère, fidèle et grande collaboratrice Yolande Simard Perrault
nous a quittés la semaine dernière. Fascinée par le fleuve, par
l'énergie et la richesse du territoire, témoin de son histoire humaine
et géologique, Yolande Simard Perrault a amoureusement vanté les mérites
et les charmes incontestables de nos régions. Originaire de Charlevoix,
cette femme plus grande que nature a fait comprendre à Pierre Perrault,
avec qui elle s'est fiancée sous l'ardeur du soleil, toute la poésie de
ce lieu et, surtout, de ses habitants. Sans elle, Pour la suite du monde, cette œuvre phare dans la cinématographie québécoise, n'aurait sans doute jamais vu le jour. La Trilogie de l'île-aux-Coudres est
donc teintée de l'attachement et du respect profond de Yolande,
d'abord, puis de Pierre, envers ce territoire qui les a tant marqués,
tant inspirés. On retient aussi de Yolande sa soif de connaissances,
effectuant même un retour aux études à l'âge de 45 ans afin de
poursuivre sa passion pour l'archéologie. C'était une chercheuse, une
fouilleuse qui a toujours été fascinée par le sol qu'elle foulait.
Récemment, deux documentaires ont pu faire découvrir la personnalité lumineuse de Yolande : L'avenir du passé, Pierre et Yolande Perrault de Mina Rad, présenté au Festival International du Film sur l'Art (FIFA) plus tôt cette année, et La fille du cratère,
réalisé par les documentaristes Nadine Beaudet et Danic Champoux
présenté en première mondiale aux Rendez-vous Québec Cinéma (RVQC).
Grâce au prix Pierre-et-Yolande-Perrault, remis au meilleur premier ou
deuxième long métrage documentaire québécois dans le cadre des RVQC,
leur legs se poursuit en soulignant le talent des créateurs d'ici.
Récemment, de magnifiques œuvres se sont vues récompensées de ce
prestigieux prix, notamment L'autre Rio d'Émilie Beaulieu-Guérette, Sur la lune de nickel de François Jacob, Les Terres lointaines de Félix Lamarche, La démolition familiale de Patrick Damien, Le cosaque et la gitane de Nadine Beaudet et Transatlantique de Félix Dufour-Laperrière.
«
Ma chère et immense Yolande, au destin façonné par tes rêves et ta
détermination, tu as su, comme toujours, rendre la vie passionnante et
riche de rencontres, jusqu'à la dernière journée. J'ai eu la chance
d'être l'une de tes nombreuses amies et de te côtoyer durant plusieurs
années. Tu as tant donné au cinéma québécois et particulièrement aux
Rendez-vous avec la création de ce prix destiné à la relève. Ce prix qui
porte ton nom et celui de ton grand amour, Pierre Perrault, gardera ta
mémoire bien vivante. Merci pour tout ma chère amie, merci pour la
grande et belle inspiration. Tu seras dans nos cœurs à jamais. Je suis
triste aujourd'hui, mais aussi heureuse que tu sois partie comme tu as
toujours vécu : avec force et simplicité », confie Ségolène Roederer,
directrice générale de Québec Cinéma.
Amoureuse
de la langue vernaculaire, de ses couleurs et de ses accents, Yolande a
toujours défendu l'apport des régions et leur unicité. À présent, celle
qui se décrivait comme une « rêveuse raisonnante » a rejoint son époux,
vingt ans après son départ. Sa force et son intelligence en ont fait
une femme aux convictions profondes, marquant au passage chaque personne
qui a eu le bonheur de croiser son chemin.
- 30 -
SOURCE Diane Leblanc | directrice communications-marketing | Québec Cinéma
dleblanc@quebeccinema.ca | 514 917-4425
MÉDIAS Cindy Blanchette | Annexe Communications
cblanchette@ annexecommunications.com | 514 844-8864, poste 119
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