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Author Archives: Rosaliene Bacchus

Thought for Today: The Lifehouse for Mutual Care

04 Sunday May 2025

Posted by Rosaliene Bacchus in Recommended Reading, Uncategorized

≈ 55 Comments

Tags

Climate Crisis, Lifehouse: Taking Care of Ourselves in a World on Fire by Adam Greenfield (UK/USA 2024), Mutual Care, Practical Guide to Urban Community Resilience, Societal Collapse

Front Cover: Lifehouse: Taking Care of Ourselves in a World on Fire by Adam Greenfield
Photo Credit: Verso Books (UK/USA, 2024)

The fundamental idea of the Lifehouse [in a disaster zone] is that there should be a place in every three- or four-city block radius where you can charge your phone when the power’s down everywhere else, draw drinking water when the supply from the mains is for whatever reason untrustworthy, gather with your neighbors to discuss matters of common concern, organize reliable childcare, borrow tools it doesn’t make sense for any one household to own individually and so on—and that these can and should be one and the same place. As a foundation for collective resourcefulness, the Lifehouse is a practical implementation of the values we’ve spent this book exploring.

Excerpt from Lifehouse: Taking Care of Ourselves in a World on Fire by Adam Greenfield, Verso Books, UK/USA, 2024 (p. 167).

Lifehouse: Taking Care of Ourselves in a World on Fire is an urgent and practical guide to community resilience in the face of climate catastrophe and the collapse of late-stage capitalism. Greenfield recovers lessons from the Black Panther survival programs (USA), the astonishingly effective Occupy Sandy disaster-relief effort (NYC/USA), the solidarity networks of crisis-era Greece, as well as municipalist Spain and autonomous Rojava (Syria), to show how practices of mutual care and local power can help shelter us from a future that often feels like it has no place for us or the values we cherish.


Adam Greenfield is an American best-selling author, urbanist, and critical futurist, based in London since 2013. He has spent the past quarter-century thinking and working at the intersection of technology, design and politics with everyday life. Selected in 2013 as Senior Urban Fellow at the LSE Cities center of the London School of Economics, he previously taught in New York University’s Interactive Telecommunications Program and the Urban Design program at the Bartlett School of Architecture, University College London. His books include Everyware: The Dawning Age of Ubiquitous Computing, Urban Computing and Its Discontents, and the bestsellers Against the Smart City and Radical Technologies: The Design of Everyday Life.

Born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, in 1968, he graduated with a degree in cultural studies at New York University in 1989. Between 1995 and 2000, he served as a Psychological Operations Specialist in the U.S. Army Special Operations Command.

“Ricantations” – Poem by Puerto Rican Poet Loretta Collins Klobah

27 Sunday Apr 2025

Posted by Rosaliene Bacchus in Nature and the Environment, Poetry

≈ 38 Comments

Tags

Climate Crisis, Earth Day 2025: Our Power Our Planet, Hurricane Maria/Puerto Rico 2017, Poem “Ricantations” by Loretta Collins Klobah, Poetry Collection Ricantations by Loretta Collins Klobah, Puerto Rican Poet

Puerto Rican Poet Loretta Collins Klobah / Oil Painting on Front Cover: Ángel Plenero by Samuel Lind
Photo Credit: Peepal Tree Press (UK, 2018)

My Poetry Corner April 2025 features the title poem from the poetry collection Ricantations (Peepal Tree Press, 2018) by Puerto Rican poet Loretta Collins Klobah. Born in Merced, California, she earned an M.F.A. in poetry writing from the Writers’ Workshop at the University of Iowa, where she also completed a doctoral degree in English, with an emphasis on Caribbean literary and cultural studies. She spent four of the nine years of her doctoral study in Jamaica (Caribbean) and West Indian neighborhoods of Toronto (Canada) and London (UK). Since the late 1990s, she lives in San Juan, Puerto Rico, where she is a professor of Caribbean literature and creative writing at the University of Puerto Rico.

Growing up in an English and Spanish working-class household has influenced Klobah’s style of blending Spanish and English in her work. Her mother had Spanish and Scottish heritage, her father Cherokee and Irish. Her Mexican American godparents taught her Spanish, widely spoken in Merced where she grew up. The title of her collection Ricantations appears to be a blend of these two languages.

Klobah began writing poetry in primary school as a way of processing life and engaging with the world. At eighteen years, on becoming part of the active poetry community in Fresno, California, she began receiving serious mentoring from former US Poet Laureate Philip Levine and other award-winning poets.

“I don’t write love poetry, and I don’t rhyme,” Klobah told Trinidadian poet Andre Bagoo during a 2012 interview for the Caribbean Beat magazine, following the release of her award-winning debut poetry collection. “I write because I want to communicate with readers in a way that matters, makes an impact, or makes some kind of beneficial difference in the reader’s thoughts and in the society.”

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The Writer’s Life: An Easter Story

13 Sunday Apr 2025

Posted by Rosaliene Bacchus in Brazil, The Writer's Life

≈ 60 Comments

Tags

Easter Short Story, Fortaleza/Ceará/Brazil, Rescued: An Easter Story by Rosaliene Bacchus

Downtown Fortaleza – Northeast State of Ceará – Brazil

Today marks the beginning of Holy Week in the Christian Church calendar. During these seven days, the church commemorates Jesus’ triumphal arrival in Jerusalem (Palm Sunday), His betrayal (Wednesday), the Last Supper with his disciples (Maundy Thursday), crucifixion (Good Friday), and ends with His resurrection on Easter Sunday. When we dare to speak truth to power, retribution can be swift. It’s not easy to follow in His footsteps: To love one’s neighbor can come with risks to one’s safety and life. Sometimes, we may also lose what we hold dear.

In my short story “Rescued: An Easter Story,” the protagonist Dwayne Higgins, an innocent man caught up in a crime not of his making, is forced to examine the direction of his life. The story is inspired by a scary incident that occurred during the period we lived in Fortaleza, capital of the Northeastern State of Ceará in Brazil.

The year was 1990. At the time, I was working at a small family-owned international trade consultancy firm. On July 16th, sometime after 2:00 p.m., my estranged husband (hereafter called Husband) called me at the office. He had been robbed at gunpoint at the office of a local cambista (a black market foreign-exchange broker) with whom he worked in downtown Fortaleza buying and selling foreign currency. The bandits seized US dollars and Brazilian cruzeiros, amounting to over forty-one federal minimum salaries. My monthly salary as an import-export assistant was only two minimum salaries.

Several attempts to reach Husband failed. The cambista he worked with claimed that he knew nothing about Husband’s whereabouts. After leaving the office at 6:00 p.m., I picked up our five- and seven-year-old sons at school and told them what had happened to their father. We went to the apartment where Husband lived with his Brazilian amante (mistress). Also distraught, she had not heard from him since his call earlier that afternoon.

Fears of him being locked up in a Brazilian prison or, worse yet, “disappeared” by the police muddied my thoughts. The gravity of their father’s disappearance subdued the boys.

Our shared ordeal ended after nine o’clock that evening. Husband arrived in the company of two burly plainclothes police officers in search of the stolen money. Surprised to see me and the boys, one officer headed into the bedroom with Husband and his amante. The other officer remained with me and the kids in the living room.

In a polite manner, he questioned me about my name, where I lived, where I worked, our country of origin, how long we had been living in Fortaleza, our residential status, how long we were married, how long we were separated, and my relationship with my husband’s mistress. I assumed these questions were intended as verification of the information they had obtained from Husband—their major suspect of the theft. Our sons remained quiet and motionless, seated on the only sofa in the small space.

My sons and I did not get home until after ten o’clock that evening. We had missed a bullet. For now.

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Solidarity: The People’s Power

06 Sunday Apr 2025

Posted by Rosaliene Bacchus in Anthropogenic Climate Disruption, Nature and the Environment, United States

≈ 69 Comments

Tags

Biodiversity, Climate Change, Copernicus Charts of Global Atmospheric Concentrations of Carbon Dioxide and Methane 2024, Copernicus Global Climate Report 2024, Environment, Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), nature, Planetary Life Systems, Sustainability, UN Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework (GBF), UNFCCC Paris Agreement 2015, WMO State of the Global Climate 2024, WWF Living Planet Index (LPI)

Hands Off Nationwide Protest – Los Angeles – California – April 5, 2025
Photo Credit: Keith Birmingham/MediaNews Group/Pasadena Star-News via Getty Images

I know… I share your pain. I’m also scared. These are dangerous times for immigrants in America—scapegoats for the social and economic ills of our nation. Our trade partners, too, have come under attack. It’s now tit-for-tat for unfair trade practices. “Liberation Day” on April 2nd has unleashed import tariffs/taxes, ranging from 10 percent to 54 percent, for all countries that sell goods to the United States. What a high-risk economic strategy! But this is just the latest drastic change assaulting us daily since January 20, 2025.

Regardless of our political views or ideology, we the people will have to deal with the negative or unexpected consequences of dismantling our government agencies and picking a fight with our closest allies since the end of World War II. Judging from these developments, it seems that the globalized capitalist economic system is under stress. And so it should be. For how much longer can we sustain an economic model of continual growth and profits that is pushing our planetary life systems to their limits?

Non-human life faces extinction and more frequent, extreme weather events are disrupting and threatening human life. The minority billionaire ruling class (MBRC) believes that environmental and other deregulations are the answer to renewed economic growth. Their insatiable greed blinds them to all the warning signs of economic and societal collapse. Instead, they now grasp at AI, an energy guzzler, to preserve their way of life.

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Poem “Expropriation” by Brazilian Poet Rubens Jardim

23 Sunday Mar 2025

Posted by Rosaliene Bacchus in Brazil, Poetry

≈ 76 Comments

Tags

Brazilian Poet Rubens Jardim, Poema “Expropriation / Expropriação” by Rubens Jardim, Poetic Catechesis / Catequese Poética Movement, Poetry Collection Outside of the Bookshelf / Fora da Estante (2012) by Rubens Jardim, São Paulo/Brazil

Brazilian Poet Rubens Jardim (1946-2024)
Photo Credit: Brazilian Editora Arribaçã

My Poetry Corner March 2025 features the poem “Expropriation / Expropriação” from the poetry collection Outside of the Bookshelf / Fora da Estante by Brazilian poet and journalist Rubens Jardim (1946-2024). Born in Vila Itambé in the interior of São Paulo, he was one of three siblings, with an older brother and younger sister. Poetry was always a part of his life. An aunt, passionate about poetry with a magnificent collection, would always recite Brazil’s renowned poets at family gatherings. He attributed his skill at public poetry readings to her.

In an interview with Revista Arte Brasileira, following the publication of his Anthology of Unpublished Poems / Antologia de Inéditos in 2018, he spoke a lot about poetry and its importance in his life.

“Poetry for me is alchemy. It is the transformation of the ignoble into the noble, of the invisible into the visible, of the unspeakable into utterance….

I believe that true poetry increases humanity in man. It shows that if there is a flower, there is also hunger…. Furthermore, poetry is a constant struggle against alienation. It’s nonconformity. Indignation…. What’s more, poetry does not bend to anything. Averse to classification and closed thinking to transformation, poetry does not tolerate dictatorship—not even dictatorship of the word…. It’s also a way of living. It’s an attitude towards and within life. And if I continue writing poems—even knowing that poetry is useless—as the poet Manoel de Barros enlighteningly said—it’s because I like to believe that, thanks to poetry, I have kept the flame of hope for transformation alive.

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California: Winter Garden Reflections During Chaotic Times

16 Sunday Mar 2025

Posted by Rosaliene Bacchus in Nature and the Environment, United States

≈ 74 Comments

Tags

Adversity, Flowering Aeonium Mint succulents, Flowering Aloe Saponaria (Soap Aloa), Los Angeles/California, Self-Sacrifice, Succulent Garden Winter 2025, White Azalea flowering plant

Flowering Aloe Saponaria (Soap Aloe) – Los Angeles – California – March 2025

While a two-headed monster is creating havoc, anxiety, and pain across the land of the living, Mother Earth signals that life finds a way in the face of adversity. The captioned photo features the explosion of orange flowers from the succulent Aloe Saponaria (Soap Aloe) in my neighbor’s garden on March 3rd. The photo below is a closeup of the early blooms captured on February 22nd.

Closeup of Flowering Aloe Saponaria (Soap Aloe) on February 22, 2025

In another adjacent garden plot, the potted white azalea plant defied last year’s extreme summer temperatures that scorched its foliage. During a dry winter, my concern grew for its survival. Just three days of continuous light rainfall in early February were enough to give it new life again. What a joy! 

White Azalea – Winter 2025
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Thought for Today: State Sovereignty Under New Threat

09 Sunday Mar 2025

Posted by Rosaliene Bacchus in United States

≈ 65 Comments

Tags

Greenland-USA Threat, Greenland/Denmark, UN Sovereign State Equality, United Nations Charter 1945, US Presidential Joint Address to Congress 2025, World politics

Map of North America and Greenland
Source Credit: World Atlas

The [United Nations] Organization and its Members, in pursuit of the Purposes stated in Article 1, shall act in accordance with the following Principles.

1. The Organization is based on the principle of the sovereign equality of all its Members.

2. All Members, in order to ensure to all of them the rights and benefits resulting from membership, shall fulfil in good faith the obligations assumed by them in accordance with the present Charter.

3. All Members shall settle their international disputes by peaceful means in such a manner that international peace and security, and justice, are not endangered.

4. All Members shall refrain in their international relations from the threat or use of force against the territorial integrity or political independence of any state, or in any other manner inconsistent with the Purposes of the United Nations.

~ Excerpt from the 1945 Charter of the United Nations, Chapter – Purposes and Principles, Article 2 (1-4). (Emphasis mine)

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Weather/Climate-Related Disasters in the USA 2024

02 Sunday Mar 2025

Posted by Rosaliene Bacchus in Anthropogenic Climate Disruption, Economy and Finance, United States

≈ 50 Comments

Tags

Climate Crisis, NCEI/NOAA, NOAA USA 2024 Billion-Dollar Weather and Climate Disasters, Weather/Climate-Related Disasters

NOAA National Centers for Environmental Information (NCEI)
U.S. 2024 Billion-Dollar Weather and Climate Disasters (released Jan/2025)

During 2024, thousands of our American brothers and sisters lost loved ones, property, and jobs to various weather/climate-related disasters that struck their state. Many of them are still recovering from their losses. Without resources, others will never recover. Tragedy does not impact us all in the same way.

On January 10, 2025, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) released the data and analysis quantifying the economic costs of the disasters that reached or exceeded US$1 billion. They confirmed 27 weather/climate disaster events, amounting to a total of US$182.7 billion. This places 2024 as the fourth costliest on record, trailing behind 2017 (US$395.9 billion), 2025 (US$268.5 billion), and 2022 (US$183.6 billion).

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The Writer’s Life: The Growing Threat of AI

23 Sunday Feb 2025

Posted by Rosaliene Bacchus in The Writer's Life

≈ 71 Comments

Tags

AB-2013 Generative Artificial Intelligence: Training Data Transparency, AI Licensing, ChatGPT, Copyright and Artificial Intelligence, Craft of writing fiction, Created by Humans licensing platform, Creative Writing Course, Database for Large Language Models (LLMs), Dataset Providers Alliance (DPA), Generative AI Companies, Generative AI Copyright Disclosure Act of 2024, Generative Artificial Intelligence (GAI), Human Authored Certification, OpenAI, Technology, The Authors Guild (AG), UK AI Opportunities Action Plan 2025, Writers Guild of America West (WGA West)

Rosaliene’s Collection of Books on the Craft of Writing

In 2004, when I decided to share my story of overcoming abandonment and loss, it became imperative to learn the craft of writing fiction. With limited funds and a crazy work schedule at a large department store in West Hollywood, I opted for a correspondence course. Through an ad in a magazine, I found the Stratford Career Institute (Vermont, USA). Their Creative Writing Course guided me from crafting my first scene of up to 500 words to finding my voice in a 3000-word short story. Working at my own pace, I completed their writing course within two years. On the left in the captioned photo, the five books on the “Elements of Fiction Writing,” all published by Writer’s Digest Books (Ohio, USA), comprised the reading materials for their course study.

After obtaining my Creative Writing Diploma from the Stratford Career Institute in February 2006, I spent four years writing short stories to develop my craft. At the same time, I began working on my writing project: research for the historical setting, the plot, and character development. I completed the first manuscript of Under the Tamarind Tree: A Novel in 2012. Several revisions followed over subsequent years. Believing in the value of my book, despite several rejections from literary agents and publishers, I finally self-published my novel with Lulu Press in 2019.

After years of developing and honing our writing craft, writers are now being ripped off by AI. Without consent from authors or publishers, generative artificial intelligence (GAI) companies have been illegally using copyrighted materials to develop and train their large language models (LLMs) that power chatbots like ChatGPT. Worse still, writers receive no compensation for the copycat books, mimicking or incorporating an author’s work, generated by these LLMs.

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“Who made me a stranger in my world?” – Poem by Saint Lucian Poet John Robert Lee

16 Sunday Feb 2025

Posted by Rosaliene Bacchus in Poetry

≈ 65 Comments

Tags

Alienation, Caribbean Identity, End to US Soft Power, Masks we wear, Poem “Who made me a stranger in my world?” by John Robert Lee, Poetry Collection Pierrot by John Robert Lee (UK 2020), Saint Lucia/Caribbean, Saint Lucian Poet John Robert Lee

Cover Art by Saint Lucian Artist Shallon Fadlien, 2015  
Saint Lucian Poet John Robert Lee

My Poetry Corner February 2025 features the poem “Who made me a stranger in my world?” from the poetry collection Pierrot by poet, preacher, and retired teacher and librarian John Robert Lee, published by Peepal Tree Press (UK, 2020). Born in 1948 in the Caribbean Island nation of Saint Lucia, he majored in English and French Literature, including Caribbean Literature, at the University of the West Indies in Barbados (Cave Hill Campus) and Jamaica (Mona Campus) in the early 1980s.

His main interests and occupations include teaching, library service, literature, theatre, literary journalism, and media (print and electronic). Ordained in 1997 as an Elder of Calvary Baptist Church, he preaches at his local Baptist Church and teaches the Adult Sunday School Class. Father of three children, he lives with his wife in Saint Lucia.

During the poet’s 2020 interview with Adam Lowe of Peepal Tree Press, when asked what drew him to the image of the Pierrot as a core motif for this collection and why now, Lee said:

“In the Pierrot cover…the eyes and mouth seemed to reveal the person beneath the costume, the actor under the masquerade, with all his heart pain, bewilderment and anguish…. I also saw in that face, under the harlequin’s colors, a Christ figure, the Man of Sorrows…

“Why now? Perhaps the times we live in call for masking and unmasking, speaking plainly or through various aliases, pseudonyms, characterizations—which perhaps is a device for speaking truth to power and to each other and to ourselves, and that, self-protectively.”

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