Monthly Archives: January 2024

See Spot Run

  • Despite its iconic color, researchers aren’t entirely sure what causes the Giant Red Spot to appear red. Some researchers think it could be due to chemicals like ammonia in the upper part of the storm. 
  • The spot seems to be changing color over time, which researchers also don’t understand. Since 2014, it has been taking on a ruddy orange color that is slowly intensifying, according to NASA. The change could be due to changes in the storm’s chemical composition or the distribution of gasses within and above it. 
  • Though Jupiter is very different from Earth, the dynamics governing its storms are similar. Therefore, a better understanding of Jupiter’s storms, including the Great Red Spot, could help scientists better understand the weather on Earth. 
  • The Great Red Spot has a smaller counterpart called the Little Red Spot or Red Spot Jr., which formed between 1998 and 2000 from three white, oval-shaped storms. 
  • The gasses above the Great Red Spot are hotter than anywhere else on Jupiter, according to a 2016 study. Researchers think the reason for the heating is acoustic waves created by the extreme turbulence of the storm.
  • It has been around for at least 359 years, and scientists say it could last for centuries.

Open Letter to an Organ Donor (Samuel Flegel 8/31/78-1/11/2000)


My dearest Samuel,

This marks the first anniversary letter I’ve written to you with an ounce of hesitance. Not for any bad news, though there was some. 

I pause because my mother raised me to fear the jinx. But I believe in you more than any superstition, so to hell with it. 

You see, we met 24! years ago today. Which puts us within a calendar year of a QUARTER-CENTURY together. And, parenthetically, me within spitting distance (five months) of 60 effing years old.

Neither milestone seemed feasible when we began our odyssey in 2000. There were only two hospitals in the nation that even attempted pancreatic transplants, and docs said that the organ lifespan averaged seven years, given successful surgery. Throw in the required kidney transplant, and all forecasts or expectations should go out the window, docs said. 

So out they went. It wasn’t hard; when I caught diabetes at 13, the notion of seeing 60 seemed as far-fetched as me dunking. That’s old age. Granny’s sixty, right, from the black and white pictures?

But then we crossed paths, and suddenly I’m touching rim. 

I know it’s you, lifting me during a layup so lil’ slugger can soar. But air is air. Even when it’s getting thin.

And it’s been thin this year. We lost sis, whose last stop came three nights before Halloween. You would have loved her fire; not so much her rain.

And you know about the back/rib break. Sorry for rattling the windows. This house is creaky as get out. 

But here we are, on the 26th of 25 moonlit miles. The home stretch.

I am being melodramatic. Should I reject tomorrow, today would be no less remarkable, if only for all the ground we have broken so far.

Twenty-four years of not being diabetic. Twenty-four years of standing our ground. Twenty-four years of thinking about you Every. Single. Day.

And I ain’t one for final stops. Gimme late charges all day, anyday. 

So let’s sprint the finish, Sam. And leave the gym door open. We’ll run the mystic marathon as long as these heels still kick dust. 

Cross-Stitch

Cross-Stitch

Each sunrise heralds a new chapter,

a silent promise of renewal,

while the sunset whispers tales of the day’s quiet victories and tender losses.

In the embrace of nature’s cycles,

we find the essence of life’s beauty—

a fragile yet resilient journey where the threads of joy and sorrow weave,

a cross-stitch of vulnerability and strength.