December 26, 2024 Acquiring, Digital Currency, E-Commerce, Law and Regulation, Mobile Commerce, Point-of-sale, Transaction Processing
December 26, 2024
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Year: 2024
Taylor, Charbonnet lead Berry’s RB Love list – NBC Sports
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2024 Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race: Alive becomes first casualty of the 2024 Race – Sail World
Defending champion Alive, has become the first casualty of the 2024 race, withdrawing because of engine issues.
The Tasmanian boat, owned by Phillip Turner and skippered by Duncan Hine, won the 2018 and then repeated the feat in 2023.
The boat withdrew shortly after 1600hrs and is in Port.
Martin Cross’ Transcendence Rudy Project, Jeanneau Sun Fast 3300, has also retired and is still at sea. Martin was sailing with his son John when they were dismasted.
Her is why crypto whales are flocking to these 4 altcoins – crypto.news
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Disclosure: This article does not represent investment advice. The content and materials featured on this page are for educational purposes only.
Bitcoin’s surge past $100K shifts focus to altcoins as whales pour in, drawn by unique growth factors.
Table of Contents
With Bitcoin soaring past $100,000 and the bull market in full swing, attention is shifting to certain altcoins that are catching the eye of major investors. These digital assets are seeing significant inflows from large holders, but what makes them so special? Uncover the surprising factors driving whales to accumulate these four altcoins.
XYZverse is the first meme coin universe crafted for sports enthusiasts. From football fans and MMA lovers to gaming aficionados, XYZverse offers a vibrant ecosystem where profits and passion collide. By tapping into the lucrative sports market, XYZverse stands out as a unique contender in the altcoin space, attracting attention from major investors.
Launched at just $0.0001, $XYZ is currently priced at $0.001333 in Stage 9 of its presale. With a listing target of $0.1, the token offers a potential 100X return for early investors. Whales are positioning themselves to reap massive rewards as XYZverse transitions from presale to major CEX and DEX listings.
Massive ROI Forecast: With a roadmap aiming for a 10,000X return, XYZverse has the potential to eclipse past meme coin giants like Pepe and Shiba Inu.
Undervalued Opportunity: Still in presale, XYZ is flying under the radar, providing whales with an early-entry advantage before its full market breakout.
Expanding Appeal: XYZverse combines the viral energy of memes with the global appeal of sports, drawing in both crypto investors and sports fans alike.
Whales understand the value of getting in before the crowd. By accumulating XYZ now, they’re preparing to capitalize on the token’s explosive growth potential in the upcoming bull market. As XYZverse rolls out its ecosystem, including prediction markets and sports betting dApps, its value proposition will only strengthen, attracting more investors and increasing demand.
Ethereum stands at the forefront of blockchain creativity. Since its inception by Vitalik Buterin in 2013 and launch in 2015, it has transformed the digital landscape with smart contracts and a vast ecosystem of decentralized applications (dApps). The shift to Proof-of-Stake with the Merge in 2022 marked a significant milestone, enhancing efficiency and sustainability. Layer 2 solutions like Arbitrum and Polygon improve transaction speed and cost, addressing scalability issues. The upcoming sharding phase promises further advancements, reinforcing Ethereum’s commitment to decentralization. Ether (ETH) remains central, facilitating transactions, rewarding stakers, and serving as a valuable asset.
In the current market, Ethereum’s advancements make it a prominent player in the blockchain industry. The growth of decentralized finance (DeFi) and its diverse applications underpin its strong position. Compared to other cryptocurrencies, Ethereum’s focus on smart contracts and scalability through Layer 2 solutions gives it a unique edge. As the crypto market evolves, Ethereum’s continued innovation may influence its role in the future of decentralized finance. While market trends fluctuate, Ethereum’s technology and potential keep it at the heart of discussions about crypto’s next steps.
Ethena is introducing ENA, a new kind of digital coin built on Ethereum. Unlike other cryptocurrencies, ENA aims to be a stable, crypto-native dollar that doesn’t rely on traditional banks. This means you can use ENA without worrying about the banking system. Ethena is also bringing the “Internet Bond” to the world. It’s a global savings tool in dollars, accessible to anyone with an internet connection. This bond offers a way to save money and earn interest without needing a bank.
In today’s market, where many seek stable and accessible financial options, ENA stands out. While other coins might be volatile, ENA focuses on stability and global reach. The idea of a stablecoin that’s not tied to traditional banks is gaining attention, especially after recent banking uncertainties. By providing both a crypto-native dollar and a global savings instrument, Ethena is positioning ENA to meet the needs of users looking for security and growth in the crypto space.
PEPE is the new meme coin making waves in the crypto world. Launched on Ethereum, it’s a tribute to Pepe the Frog, the internet meme created by Matt Furie that charmed the early 2000s. PEPE aims to ride the popularity of other meme coins like Shiba Inu and Dogecoin. With no taxes and a simple, straightforward approach, it’s attracting attention for keeping things pure and fun as a meme coin.
In late April to May 2023, PEPE’s value skyrocketed, pushing its market cap to an astonishing $1.6 billion at one point. Early adopters saw massive gains, and a strong community formed around it. Some are calling this a “meme coin season,” as other meme coins have also seen wild ups and downs. With a clear roadmap aiming for major exchange listings and a “meme takeover,” PEPE has potential. Whether it will reach new heights in the current market cycle remains to be seen, but its momentum and community support make it an interesting player to watch.
ETH, ENA, and PEPE attract whales, but XYZVerse stands out as a sports meme coin with massive growth potential and a strong community focus in the 2024 bull market.
For more information, visit the XYZVerse website and follow the project on X and Telegram for the latest updates.
Disclosure: This content is provided by a third party. crypto.news does not endorse any product mentioned on this page. Users must do their own research before taking any actions related to the company.
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Dear Abby: Tennis instructor, furloughed during the pandemic, wants a free membership for years of service – NJ.com
Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips.
DEAR ABBY: I taught tennis lessons at a private club for 41 years. Then came the pandemic. I was furloughed and not asked to return to work. I wasn’t given the usual parting acknowledgement that previous employees received — no goodbyes, no thank yous.
In the successive years, I have asked for a free membership as a gift for my years of service. So far, the answer is “no.” Is my request valid? Should I continue asking? — SERVING FAIRNESS IN ILLINOIS
DEAR SERVING: You didn’t mention how many times you have asked for the membership as a gift for your years of service, but if it has been more than once, stop asking because it isn’t going to happen. A furlough is defined as a temporary layoff for a specified period of time. Employees retain their jobs and benefits but do not get paid during that period. If this is what your separation from that private club was called, it may be time to speak to an attorney about how you were treated.
***
Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, Pauline Phillips. Contact Dear Abby at www.DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.
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Pro-Palestine activists removed from US university government – The New Arab
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Breadcrumb
For the first time in the school’s history, pro-Palestinian activists were removed from the University of Michigan’s student government over failing to do their job.
Student president Alifa Anam Chowdhury and Vice President Elias Atkinson, both pro-Gaza activists, were found guilty of dereliction of duty based on Chowdhury’s four unexcused absences from assembly meetings and Atkinson’s failure to hold the required twice-monthly meetings.
This was after a seven-day student judicial hearing, which lasted over 20 hours.
The activists were found not guilty of other allegations, with Chowdhury being accused of incitement to violence and cyber access, violations, and defamation and Atkinson also being accused of incitement to violence.
The trial follows Chowdhury’s presidential campaign in April under her “Shut It Down” platform. She promised to withhold funding from student organisations unless Michigan’s Board of Regents agreed to divest its endowment from Israel.
As the university was reluctant to divest, Chowdhury blocked over $1.3 million in funds for student activities for 400 campus groups after being elected.
This led to the student assembly voting to overrule the budget freeze in October, a meeting attended by many protesters. The same meeting also voted down a resolution to redirect some student funds to a university in Gaza.
The former president also allegedly changed the password to the student government account and posted a message about her frustration with the vote’s outcome.
The following month, Chowdhury and Atkinson were impeached for “inciting violence” against student representatives who opposed the Gaza aid measure and calling critics “Zionists” on the student government’s social media account.
Chowdhury was also impeached for “failing to fulfil the duties of her office”.
The motion says Chowdhury “gravely endangered the security of students and the functioning of the Central Student Government”.
The judges said they had “no choice but to do as the constitution commands and as the evidence compels”.
Chowdhury will be replaced by the former speaker of the Assembly, who will have to nominate a new vice president, who will be approved by the Assembly. An internal election will then be held.
After 7 October last year, the University of Michigan saw intense pro-Palestinian activism with protests and an encampment calling for an end to Israel’s war on Gaza, which has killed tens of thousands of Palestinians.
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Death investigation underway in Burlington, police say – WQAD Moline
BURLINGTON, Iowa — A death investigation is underway after a man was found dead inside a Burlington residence on Christmas, police said.
According to a press release, Burlington police and fire officials responded to a residence in the 1800 block of Madison Avenue around 7:30 p.m. on Dec. 25 for a possible shooting victim.
Officials said they located an adult male inside the residence who was declared dead at the scene. His identity is being withheld pending family notification.
The Burlington Police Department’s Criminal Investigations Division is investigating the circumstances surrounding the death with the assistance of the Iowa Division of Criminal Investigation and the DCI Crime Lab Crime Scene Team.
Anyone with information is asked to call the Greater Burlington Area Crime Stoppers at 319-753-6835 or BPD at 319-671-7001. BPD said more information will be released when it is available.
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Civic Education: The Phoenix Arises – RealClearEducation
The study of American history and government is undergoing an unprecedented renewal, akin to the phoenix – a mythical bird that is reborn by rising from the ashes of its predecessor.
Major universities have recently launched independent institutes, sometimes called “schools of civic thought,” dedicated to the in-depth exploration of an American political tradition that goes beyond partisan politics. These institutes have independent hiring authority and significant state funding.
So far about a dozen civic institutes have sprung up, from Arizona, Texas, and Florida to Tennessee, North Carolina, and Ohio – and others will be founded soon. They not only serve college students, but many also help K-12 teachers learn how to teach American history and government more effectively. Their mission is broad, with wide public programming.
In America, we have the privilege of living in a democratic republic, arguably the greatest the world has known. Citizens can engage in politics, persuade their fellow citizens, and effect real change. Our history offers many such examples.
It is all the more tragic and dangerous, then, that many students know so little about our history and institutions. They feel powerless and disaffected.
Too often, instead of engaging with America’s founding principles and history, students hear about the supposed oppressiveness of Western civilization and the American “slavocracy,” with dogmatic teaching of oppressor-oppressed ideas. Our students are frequently taught to believe the worst of our nation and its people.
By contrast, these new institutes endeavor to tell the complete American story – its warts but also its promise to give freedom and opportunity to all. They highlight our long and torturous journey to get ever closer to achieving the vision in our Declaration of Independence – that all men are created equal and are entitled to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.
This phoenix-like story has been long in preparation at the Jack Miller Center for Teaching America’s Founding Principles and History (JMC). Over 1,200 professors working in the academy today have been a part of the JMC network, writing and teaching about the American political tradition. This network has transformed a struggling subfield into a strong, competitive discipline and created a talent pool of faculty to support this movement’s rapid growth.
The pipeline for a new generation of classroom leaders was started 20 years ago when JMC began its program of summer institutes for young postdocs and professors. Now these professors operate at institutions of all types. Seven of the eight Ivy League schools have partnered with JMC, as have 18 state universities, along with many liberal arts and religious colleges.
Over 300 JMC-supported programs enrich the academic lives of students, providing guest speakers, fellowships, courses, and a chance to interact with dedicated faculty who are outside of the stale, progressive academic mainstream.
The Center for American Studies at Christopher Newport University is an example of this transformational work. Begun in 2007 with JMC’s assistance, it has grown to be a major force on campus. Co-directed by Professors Elizabeth and Nathan Busch, it has a full-time faculty of six who mentor many undergraduate students. The Center has brought to campus distinguished scholars and public officials, including the late Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia, Jonathan Turley, John Yoo, and William J. Perry, for presentations to the university community.
The American Council of Trustees and Alumni (ACTA) works alongside JMC to promote the formation of new independent institutes. ACTA has redoubled its efforts to ensure that all undergraduates pass a required course that covers core American founding principles.
For 30 years, ACTA has warned of the cost of higher education’s malfeasance. In 2000, its extensive survey of students at the 50 most elite colleges and universities revealed a shocking level of historical and civic ignorance. ACTA’s survey report, “Losing America’s Memory,” led to a joint, unanimous resolution passed by Congress that called for improving the civic knowledge of college students.
ACTA’s 2024 survey that polled 3,000 college students shows that we must redouble our efforts.
Our work so far has helped South Carolina adopt the REACH Act. Since 2021, all of the state’s public universities require a course in which students study the key documents and moments in our nation’s story.
The new institutes of civiceducation, which began at Arizona State University in 2017, have now expanded into eight states on 13 campuses. Most recently, Ohio passed legislation that has already led to new institutes being set up at its five public universities. The goal is to expand civic education programs into many more states.
ACTA’s National Commission on American History and Civic Education is convening 24 of America’s most distinguished scholars, thought leaders, and educators to produce a white paper on the urgency of restoring the undergraduate requirement in American history and government at every college and university in the nation. The white paper will provide guidance on the scope of that course and how trustees and legislators can make America’s civic rebirth a reality. An anthology of essays, “American History and Government: What Every College Student Should Know,” will enhance the national conversation.
The new civic institutes will re-engage students with America’s story of freedom and opportunity for all. The joint contribution of JMC and ACTA, made alongside other civic-mineded organizations, private and public, will renew students’ understanding of our nation as the land of the free. This is how Americans can mend our flaws and face the challenges of the future together.
Jack Miller is the founder and chairman emeritus of the Jack Miller Center for Teaching America’s Founding Principles & History. Michael Poliakoff is the president of the American Council of Trustees and Alumni.
3 Underrated Altcoins That Could Surpass XRP and Cardano by 2025 – CryptoDaily
Opinion | The Best of 2024: The Books, Movies, Habits and Hobbies We Loved This Year – The New York Times
Endless wars, expensive groceries, extreme weather — those are just some of the issues in the E section of our index of things we’d prefer to have skipped in 2024. So we asked Times Opinion staff members to share how they escaped it all this year. These are the habits we started, the ones we quit, the culture that brought comfort and the memes that made us laugh so hard, we momentarily achieved a state of Zen. This is what we’ll carry with us as we turn the page to 2025.
My oldest friend and I do synchronized viewing of each new episode of the show ‘Shrinking’ (which follows a rogue therapist and his patients) and text commentary and our fave quotes back and forth. We definitely want our own Derek. (IYKYK.)
In the dark months of the sailing off-season, I get my fix from the Sampson Boat Co. YouTube series. It follows a shipwright and sailor, Leo Goolden, as he rebuilds a historic wooden gaff cutter designed by the renowned yacht designer Albert Strange. From the bowsprit to the capstan, every detail of the boat is lovingly crafted and joyfully documented. This year the team finally launched the boat, and watching it sail in all its glory has been a true joy.
The streaming service Dropout, formerly known as CollegeHumor, offers delightfully smart, unscripted comedy and is my go-to when I need a laugh.
I got my dose of peace by watching the Netflix show ‘Pokémon Concierge’ while playing Pokémon on my Nintendo Switch. The double distraction blocks any thought from entering your head, and the low-stakes, low-conflict world of cute little guys provides a needed infusion of bliss.
‘L’Agence,’ or ‘The Parisian Agency,’ is a Netflix reality show about a family-run high-end real estate agency at the edge of Paris. It refreshes my French slang, the B-roll boasts endless views of Paris, and it allows a voyeuristic look into apartments and homes worth millions of euros.
When the news cycle has my nervous
system going berserk, a challenging
vinyasa series is sometimes the only thing
that keeps me semisane.
When the news cycle has
my nervous system going
berserk, a challenging vinyasa
series is sometimes the only
thing that keeps me semisane.
JoJo Siwa’s single “Karma” signaled her queer reinvention, from a ponytailed princess into something resembling a Gene Simmons-ified K.D. Lang, but Ms. Siwa’s new persona provoked relentless, unfair bullying from critics and, well, the entire internet. If you can get past her Kidz Bop-style sound, her naïve campiness perfectly embodies L.G.B.T.Q. culture. This year I found comfort in her transformation’s implicit story: There’s a greater future ahead if you shamelessly claim it for yourself.
The novel ‘All Fours’ by Miranda July was the most revelatory, exciting book I read this year.
If my mind is too busy to sleep at night, I turn on the Met’s YouTube art lectures — the longer, the better. The videos’ tone is soothing, and the content helps me connect with something beautiful and interesting from another time or place. Once my mind is immersed in, say, Greek vase paintings, I’m out like a light.
I’m still a pretty terrible player, but spending 30 minutes playing virtual chess with a stranger on the Chess app makes for a better commute than yet another half-hour wasted on Instagram.
I have learned to relax the tiny muscles
around my eyes. I visualize the muscles and gently tell them to let go, one by one.
They do! And then I feel a deep calm. It’s a
great way to go back to sleep at night.
I have learned to relax the
tiny muscles around my
eyes. I visualize the muscles
and gently tell them to
let go, one by one. They do!
And then I feel a deep calm.
It’s a great way to go back
to sleep at night.
This year, as ever, I found distraction and refuge in the stalwart comforts of ‘The Great British Baking Show.’ It won’t be lost on future cultural historians that a decade of unceasing global tumult coincided with the sturdy popularity of a TV series about a bunch of collegial normies in a tent in the English countryside, seemingly far from society, being nice to one another and baking pies.
Nobody needs this recommendation — Beyoncé’s album ‘Cowboy Carter’ — but it has become my go-to, regardless of my mood. I start humming some tracks before they even begin. I look forward to the reformulations of classics like Dolly Parton’s “Jolene” and the Beatles’ “Blackbird” and the nods throughout to greats like Linda Martell and Patsy Cline. What makes me smile every time is the quiet confidence Willie Nelson exudes (and, behind the scenes, Beyoncé herself) in his interludes. “And go to the good place your mind likes to wander off to,” he counsels. “And if you don’t want to go, go find yourself a jukebox.”
Amid the slop of artificial intelligence, there
are diamonds: deepfake audio recordings of
presidents singing karaoke. Donald Trump
croons. Joe Biden joins in on a second verse.
Frank Sinatra and Queen. Mariachi and
musicals. The Carpenters — Karen and
Richard and Sabrina. For just a moment in the
algorithmic feed, politics is harmonious.
Amid the slop of artificial
intelligence, there are
diamonds: deepfake audio
recordings of presidents
singing karaoke. Donald
Trump croons. Joe Biden
joins in on a second verse.
Frank Sinatra and Queen.
Mariachi and musicals.
The Carpenters — Karen
and Richard and Sabrina.
For just a moment in the
algorithmic feed, politics is
harmonious.
Given the scale of violence in Gaza and the fallout from it in the United States, it’s a weird moment for ‘Nobody Wants This,’ the Netflix series about a blond shiksa podcaster (Kristen Bell) who falls in love with a rabbi (Adam Brody). I kept waiting for the series to grapple with the issues in Israel and Gaza, but the moment never arrived. Maybe that’s part of the charm: The series is a fantasy about how true love can transform us.
I have a 1,726-day (and counting) streak on Duolingo French — screen time I don’t have to feel bad about.
I love everything Alfonso Cuarón does, and that’s held true for his TV series ‘Disclaimer.’ On the surface, it seems like a soapy tale of infidelity and betrayal, but it’s actually a deeper, “Rashomon”-like examination of how our biases shape the way we interpret events and then create stories out of them. It’s the kind of show you immediately want to rewatch when it’s done.
I loved ‘Say Nothing,’ the TV series based on Patrick Radden Keefe’s book about the Troubles. Both actresses who play the I.R.A. bomber Dolours Price — young and older — are amazing.
I can’t stop rewatching clips of Novak Djokovic
winning his first Olympic gold medal after
chasing one for over a decade. I don’t know much
about tennis or Mr. Djokovic, but I don’t need to.
The joy that he radiates as he collapses onto the
court in tears and then bounds through the crowd
to see his family transports me every time.
I can’t stop rewatching
clips of Novak Djokovic
winning his first Olympic
gold medal after chasing one
for over a decade. I don’t
know much about tennis
or Mr. Djokovic, but I don’t
need to. The joy that he
radiates as he collapses onto
the court in tears and then
bounds through the crowd
to see his family transports
me every time.
The novel ‘Last Summer in the City’ by Gianfranco Calligarich is a master class in dissociation. Avoidant lovers, alcoholic friends, an uncertain career in journalism — this book has it all.
My husband and I had two cats for many years,
but one — our beloved Stanley — died last year.
The surviving cat needed a friend, but I was
hesitant: When you adopt a cat, you adopt all its
weird, sometimes destructive and annoying
behaviors, too. I finally gave in, and now I’m not
sure how I would’ve gotten through the election
without our new funny, fuzzy goober. Just looking
at him lowers my blood pressure.
My husband and I had
two cats for many years,but
one — our beloved
Stanley — died last year.
The surviving cat needed a
friend, but I was hesitant:
When you adopt a cat, you
adopt all its weird, sometimes
destructive and annoying
behaviors, too. I finally gave
in, and now I’m not sure
how I would’ve gotten through
the election without our
new funny, fuzzy goober.
Just looking at him lowers my
blood pressure.
Nancy Lemann’s ‘The Ritz of the Bayou’ is a hallucinatory, gin-soaked account of the trials of the former Louisiana governor Edwin Edwards.
The novels of Anthony Trollope pulled me away into a tranquil setting in the 19th-century English countryside populated by squires, churchmen and minor nobility. The milieu is rarefied and the language gentle, but the matters are serious: ambition, arrogance, resentment, love. Trollope has a charming habit of finding the positive in his most odious characters, and there is something calming about how he injects his authorial voice into the narrative, like a confiding friend.
The books of David Rakoff, particularly “Half Empty.” Hyperarticulate, hilarious and eerily prescient.
When I checked out Doug Wheeler’s latest exhibit, ‘Day Night Day,’ at the David Zwirner gallery, I walked into an empty, glowing, immaculately white room. I kept my eyes trained forward, and the light seemed to radiate through the space, which has no corners or edges. As I walked in, my depth perception became warped, and I lost my sense of spatial awareness. I raised my arms, afraid I might run into something or perhaps fall off the edge. I’d like to keep that sense of wonder and timid delight as I move forward into the unknown next year.
I worried that ‘Illinoise,’ the musical based on the 2005 Sufjan Stevens album “Illinois,” was just a ploy to make money off millennial nostalgia. But “Illinoise” was just so well done — infusing new and bold artistry into a stream of songs. Though the music was familiar, I responded to it in an entirely new way.
I’ve been ditching my smartphone every Saturday in a ritual I’ve dubbed No-Scroll Saturday. Want to listen to music? Put on a record. Read the news or cook dinner? Grab a newspaper or a cookbook. I do allow myself to call my mom or look up directions. The one sacrosanct rule: Don’t scroll.
I found a level of peace and serenity I didn’t know I was missing when I finally kicked my habit of browsing property websites for fancy houses I had no intention (or means) to buy.
I’ve started listening to classical music in the morning instead of jumping immediately into news podcasts the way I once did. It creates a peaceful, slightly romantic way to start the day.
In 2024 I accepted that I am an overpacker. Small bags just do not work for me. I need space for my portable bidet, mini prayer mat, four lip glosses, dental hygiene supplies, a snack, hand creams, sticky notes, phone wipes and much, much more.
When it comes to humor, I choose
stupidity. This video of a toothbrush covering Eminem’s “Lose Yourself” found
me on Instagram, and I’m grateful for it.
When it comes to humor,
I choose stupidity. This video
of a toothbrush covering
Eminem’s “Lose Yourself”
found me on Instagram, and
I’m grateful for it.
To combat the feeling of being overwhelmed that comes with endless daily decisions, I outsourced some by asking friends for recommendations and following them. I’ve added music to my playlists, purchased art, tried (and fell in love with) oysters and added healthy habits to my routine. Saying yes to their suggestions has made my life richer.
After a year of nonstop news, the fields and
forested trails that weave through Rock Creek
Park in Washington, D.C., have become the
perfect reprieve from the endless notifications
and stress of everyday life.
After a year of nonstop
news, the fields and forested
trails that weave through Rock
Creek Park in Washington,
D.C., have become the perfect
reprieve from the endless
notifications and stress of
everyday life.
Like many middle-aged people, my schedule is both packed and unpredictable. I used to think the best way to see friends was making explicit time for them days or weeks in advance. But inevitably, something gets in the way — a sick kid, an extra work deadline — and that long-awaited hang gets canceled. I have had way more luck randomly texting my local pals with an hour’s notice.
These difficult days, it’s wonderfully distracting to tend the cider apples and wine grapes on our family farm. In my day job, I shout at the world, and it pays no attention; on the farm, the grapes obediently turn into fine pinot noir. It is refreshing to duck from a world whose problems seem overwhelming and find my own nook with problems that are solvable — and when solved can be celebrated with a glass of pinot.
This year, I bought a Triumph Bonneville and keep it in Southern Indiana, where I regularly spend time. Riding country roads and rolling hills led me to conversations I never would have had otherwise — with the burley Harley rider by the lake, the couple at the gas station or the young girl who also always dreamed of having a bike of her own.
Right before dropping off to sleep, I like to read
the sometimes silly, sometimes weighty
conundrums people face in the r/AITAH
subreddit and r/amiwrong. It’s a fun, low-stakes
way of asking myself: How would I approach
this? Does my judgment match up with
the crowdsourced wisdom?
Right before dropping off
to sleep, I like to read the
sometimes silly, sometimes
weighty conundrums people
face in the r/AITAH
subreddit and r/amiwrong.
It’s a fun, low-stakes way of
asking myself: How would I
approach this? Does my
judgment match up with the
crowdsourced wisdom?
Every morning, I choose a card from Oblique Strategies, a card set created by Brian Eno and Peter Schmidt in 1975 to help break creative blocks. Prompts range from “Use an old idea” to questions like “What would your closest friend do?” and occasionally surreal statements like “In total darkness, or in a very large room, very quietly.”
It’s been over two decades since I tried a new sport. Learning to play tennis has been humbling, but it has provided solace in a chaotic year. The achievement, I’ve learned, is just finding joy through play.
When I began kite surfing, I questioned why anyone would ever do something so difficult. It felt like taking a geometry and anemology course and simultaneously doing cardio and a functional body workout, all while calling on muscle memory. And yet when it all connects, I’m flying on autopilot on the water. You suddenly feel you can do anything in life.
I don’t have a great memory, and I often forget the content of a book once I finish it. I’ve started writing down quotes and leaving them in books when I’m done reading them. I keep a little bookshelf of my favorite books, with handwritten notes sprouting from most of them. When I pluck the bookmarks and read the scribbled quotes, I get instant access to the feeling I had reading it.
Needlepoint instantly clears my mind of any worry beyond where I am going to stitch next. The more detailed and fussy the design, the more I enjoy it.
Growing up, I moved around a few times. In each new place, my mom would get both of us cards at the local library. As an adult, I’ve rekindled my love for libraries, but it’s more than just books. It’s one of the last places you can enrich your life for free.
I love perfumes, but when I’m on
Fragrantica — the online home of aroma
lovers — I have little interest in smelling
or purchasing most of what I’m reading
about. The pleasure comes entirely from
reading attempt after attempt at
accomplishing the impossible: conveying
scent through words alone.
I love perfumes, but when I’m
on Fragrantica — the online
home of aroma lovers — I
have little interest in smelling
or purchasing most of what
I’m reading about. The
pleasure comes entirely from reading attempt after
attempt at accomplishing the impossible: conveying scent
through words alone.
One-day choirs assembled by the Gaia Music Collective bring together hundreds of people to learn and perform arrangements in just a few hours. You don’t need singing experience to participate. Making harmonies with strangers is a welcome reprieve from our self-involved culture.
Wednesday is mahjong day: Each week, I’m either teaching someone about the complex game or learning as I lose to someone better than me. Either way, I become a more strategic player.
Putting sugar in my coffee. Austerity is out. Smallness and sweetness — a teaspoon of turbinado — is in.
Cooking through Dwight D. Eisenhower’s personal cookbook is not for the faint of heart — my guests are still recovering from the cavernous melon stuffed with Jell-O and grapes — but what started as a culinary curiosity has brought me immense joy and become a delightful way to bring friends together.
Fresh watermelon juice, gin, Lillet rose, a highball glass. I don’t know what else there is to say.
Tea is great. Tea with biscuits? Better. But what about biscuit-flavored tea? For a gimmicky product, Yorkshire Tea’s Malty Biscuit Brew is shockingly subtle — more malty than actively biscuity but still biscuity enough to live up to the promise on its package: “biscuity goodness that doesn’t get crumbs on your jumper.” You won’t get better momentary peace without a prescription.
Technically I can’t blame a cookbook for my 15-point increase in LDL cholesterol, but the recipes of ‘Meat Illustrated,’ a cookbook dedicated to meat, probably have something to do with it.
“The Great Gatsby” left me cold when I read it in high school, but ‘Gatz,’ the Elevator Repair Service’s seven-hour dramatization of the novel is — like the rich — different. I’ve seen “Gatz” three times, and on every viewing, I’ve been absorbed by Fitzgerald’s examination of Americans’ conflicted attitudes toward wealth and the elite, a conflict on vivid display in this year’s election.
Over the summer I found a copy of J. Anthony Lukas’s ‘Common Ground’ in a little free library. It’s an immersive masterpiece in nonfiction that helps make sense of American life today, even though it was published 40 years ago.
When the workday is over and I’m not ready to
tackle adulting, I head to a pier near my San
Francisco home. From this windy, run-down spot,
you can wedge in between the fishermen catching
crabs and sardines to glimpse the sunset and
migrating whales. Then, cold and refreshed, I
head home wishing I knew how to catch dinner.
When the workday is over
and I’m not ready to tackle
adulting, I head to a pier near
my San Francisco home.
From this windy, run-down
spot, you can wedge in
between the fishermen
catching crabs and sardines
to glimpse the sunset and
migrating whales. Then,
cold and refreshed, I
head home wishing I knew
how to catch dinner.
Simon Critchley’s new book, ‘Mysticism,’ has been on my night table for months. He is the rare philosopher who doesn’t flinch at religious experience. And this book does something miraculous: It saves the baby of mysticism from the discarded bathwater of institutional religion. It reminds us that our attention matters, that even in our fractured digital age, ecstasy is possible. That’s not religious hokum. It’s practical, and most of us need reminders of it every day.
‘The Oppermanns,’ a novel written in 1933 by Lion Feuchtwanger, revolves around the rise of the Nazis in Germany and the responses of one Jewish family — the Oppermanns, the owners of a furniture company — and the people around them. The book exerted such a pull on my psyche that I have been recommending it whenever the topic of books or reading or Nazis or danger has come up in conversation. Almost a century later, “The Oppermanns” remains resonant, no matter the country or the autocrat.
What helped you escape in 2024? Tell us in the comments.
Video by Curt Walheim/Getty
Produced by Meher Ahmad, Frank Augugliaro and Shoshana Schultz
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