Venerable Bhikkhu Pannakara walked on rose petals outside the Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of Fredericksburg, VA, Feb. 6, 2026, where he spoke to supporters who came to see the Walk for Peace, a group of two dozen Buddhist monks who walked from Texas to Washington, D.C. / Reuters / Photo: Evelyn Hockstein
The invitation comes: Close your eyes to breathe, to arrive, as Buddhist monks,
step by step, walk into the nation’s capital 110 days after setting out on their 2,300-mile
journey for peace. Some days I wish that I had not arrived at this too-tender spot,
my whole body a fleshy, aching mass, mourning for what has vanished.
The monks remind us, day after day, that change is inevitable, that everything
dies—and too soon adds Mary Oliver. They teach that there is no past, no future, only now.
I have arrived; I am home, Thich Nhat Hanh calligraphed in a circle again and again
before his spirit made its final journey. He, like so many others, taught that this moment,
this now, is where we have all arrived. Which is when I remember that none of us
walks alone. If I look over my shoulder, I see a long line of beloveds following,
stopping when I stop, moving forward when I take a step. I close my eyes,
breathe and feel them, the arrived, right here, peacefully, all of us
going on and on as one.
•••
In honor of the venerable monks who have walked over the past 110 days from Fort Worth, Texas, to Washington, D.C., spreading and being met with kindness from thousands who have volunteered to feed them, tend their aching bodies and give them shelter and all manner of support. May our journey of peace continue on this planet as the monks are taken safely home, as we, forever changed, follow in their footsteps.
Venerable Bhikkhu Pannakara and Aloka before thousands assembled on the National Mall, Washington, D.C., on Feb. 11, 2026 / Photo: Walk for Peace USA
Though they appear spontaneous to onlookers, pop-up music happenings require a fair amount of planning and set-up. Music stands
and sound equipment, tympani, euphoniums and baritone saxes must be transported across campus to the library—a lot of work
for a mini concert by a jazz band and a symphonic wind ensemble after only three rehearsals with some of us still learning our parts.
Oddly, I am surprisingly calm about it crawling through rush-hour traffic, heading east into rain, clouds spitting on the windshield.
Dry and warm, I hum my bells part, hoping to link the tune in my head to my still-awkward hands as we commuters near the Sunrise offramp,
when, against the gray sky ahead, a leg of rainbow faintly appears, teasing those of us slow poking our way to wherever we are going.
Practically at a standstill, I wonder how many of us ensconced in our cars sit entranced by the spectacle of the full-spectrum light show as it
blooms, intensifies, then oh, so gradually fades—this literal pop-up that earns our wide-eyed, wow, look at that! admiration for those high up
in the Rainbows Department diligently working behind the scenes, the ones busily polishing the prisms, shining their little hearts out.
•••
With thanks to Dr. Molly Redfield and the Folsom Lake College Jazz Band and Symphonic Wind Ensemble for all the work (and fun!) of our first pop-up concert of the semester.
I am like every boy kid who races outside when he hears a siren, hoping to catch a glimpse of the huge red truck zooming by.
Though in my case, I am a bonafide oldster who leapt up from the computer like a much younger being when I heard the telltale scrape-scrape of the claw in front of my house on a sunny Monday afternoon.
The blesséd yard guys had tidily draped half a season’s worth of yard detritus along the curb, a dull shawl of brittled sycamore leaves, whips of spent wisteria vines topped off by some of my neighbor’s tired greenery.
It all sat there for two weeks, decomposing, each day sending me into a tiny tizzy: Are they coming? Did claw season end, and I missed it?
But hearing the unmistakable sound, I looked out the front window, and there they were—the two-man crew— one throttling the big scraper that scoops up all manner of debris off our streets, and the other green-vested driver standing in the street alongside his big blue behemoth of a city vehicle whose open mouth receives what the claw delivers.
Theirs is a finely choreographed dance worthy of Ailey or Graham, and even after three months of collecting what our city of trees has discarded, it still makes for a delightful performance.
I went outside, took photos, grinning as the green-vested man struck a sidewalk pose, his hand raised in an open-fingered wave as his partner clawed up the last of the leavings.
Then the waving man performed the pièce de résistance, retrieving a wide push broom from the big blue truck and sweeping the remains into a tidy pile for the claw’s final pass before they departed, waving like firefighters off to save other citizens,
these servants of civility who, I hope, get as much of a kick out of admirers like me as I do them.
Thanks to the claw crew of the city of Sacramento for keeping us tidy! (Photos: Jan Haag)
On the last day, before your daughter turned your house over to people who would go through every drawer,
as we had, pull out everything saleable from closets and cupboards, assign value to each item, then donate
or throw away the rest, I sat at your piano— the creamy Baldwin baby grand that your beloved bought you after the two of you
moved into the house three decades ago. I lifted the fallboard over the keys that looked back at me, unblinking.
I wanted to play something lovely, but your sheet music had been bagged, your binders of music and hymnals boxed,
so my fingers noodled through scales, attempted some chords. I watched the strings sheltered by the open lid
leap at the touch of the hammers, and the ghosts of pianists wafted out, those who’d sat on the pink velvet
bench and played all manner of etudes, hymns and jazz—and on one memorable night, my favorite Joplin concert waltz
by a famous jazz pianist whom we all loved. And you, too, rose with the notes, floating into the empty living room
where you hosted so many parties and family gatherings, where last Christmas you gave us the best gift—
you, one last time—which we could not fit into any of the dozens of boxes we carted away to live with us.
But we carried you with us as we flicked off the lights, locked the back door one last time, saying
goodbye, then turned to see you and your beloved standing in that doorway, as you had
a thousand times, waving us off into our lives—ta, ta for now!— the strings of our hearts pulled
taut, the notes dissolving into a gentle pianissimo before they drifted gently into the good night.
•••
And in memory of so many who played Margery Thompson’s lovely Baldwin piano—among them Rev. Harvey Chinn and jazz pianist Bob Ringwald, who so memorably played from memory (as he did everything on the piano) “Bethena: A Concert Waltz” by Scott Joplin.
Janis Ian (who spells her first name the “correct” way, according to the woman
who gave it to me) sang that she learned the truth at 17. I believe her.
But, at 67, this Janis is 17 again— another odd truth. For instance, I’m back
in band, the only girl percussionist, playing orchestra bells, whose ringing steel keys
I knew well at 17. My teeth are being straightened again, voluntarily this time,
with molded plastic hugging all 28, instead of tortuous clamps and wires.
I’ve also lately dug out the ModPodge, dabbing blank postcards with watercolors,
affixing stanzas of my poems. At 17, I decoupaged images and words cut from
magazines onto clean cardboard tubs in which rainbows of ice cream once lived.
And later this spring, I’ll play in a band concert honoring America’s 250th birthday,
50 years after my bandmates and I struck up patriotic tunes for the nation’s bicentennial.
Just as I’m trying to wrap my (now gray) head around the half century ago part, I chuckle
at the time machine that’s put me here in my spacey poet brain (also part of 17),
picking up mallets and a gluey brush, preparing postcards with abstract washes
of color and typed words and who knows what else to fling me backward across decades
to land in the frame of that skinny girl percussionist with braces and aching teeth,
who directed the pep band and edited the school newspaper, scribbling daily,
hoping she’d be a Real Writer someday, someone who wanted to live a creative life,
without understanding that she, lucky girl, already was.
The Bandstand Bears are much more adept at the bells than I am at the moment, but I’m practicing. You can hear the bears play here. / Photo: Dick Schmidt