Thursday, December 4, 2025

A new light

Today’s Advent piece takes us back to early 17th Century Germany and one of my favorite composers of Christmas music. Yes, I’m talking about the meister, Michael Praetorius. There’s something about his works that evokes for me candlelit churches filled with the vocal tapestries of Lutheran choirs, with a faint scent of pine and Glühwein wafting through the space.

The words of “Nun Komm, der Heiden Heiland” were written by Martin Luther as a chorale. It’s been translated into English as “Savior of the Nations, Come” and is typically sung on the first Sunday of Advent. You may know it from J.S. Bach. Praetorius made it part of his seasonal collection, Christmas Vespers. Here’s Cleveland’s ensemble Apollo’s Fire, which specializes in early music, giving us their take.

Light a few candles and listen.


 

©2025 Bas Bleu

 

Wednesday, December 3, 2025

Ding Dong

It may surprise you to learn that today’s Advent carol originated in Ukraine. It was written in 1914, based on the Ukrainian folk chant “Shedryk”, about a swallow that sings the first song of Spring. (Way back when, the New Year began in Spring, and “Shedryk” is kinda focused on the New Year.)

We know it as “The Carol of the Bells.” Here is the Muppets’ version, featuring Beaker, the Swedish Chef and Oscar the Grouch.



You’re welcome.

 

©2025 Bas Bleu

 

Tuesday, December 2, 2025

Washing hair and sparkly water

My friends—after nearly nine years living in this house, I finally have a primary bathroom I can actually use. It took me two months of talking with multiple contractors to understand the components and compare pricing, and 10 days of actual labor to rip everything down to the studs, expand the shower footprint from 32”x32” to 32”x44”, move the shower fixtures to the opposite wall, build out, lay tile and install new vanity (with top, sink and hardware), medicine cabinet, toilet and lighting.

And I am verklempt.

We went from this:




And this floor:

Note, in particular, the embedded medicine cabinet that indubitably dates from 1970:


I expect it’s been unusable since at least the 90s.

To this:

Along the way, we had demo:

Note the cinderblock wall on the left. That necessitated the crew building out the space with 2x4s to accommodate the shower plumbing. (I moved the fixtures from the right to the left because—with the expanded shower footprint blocked from the outside by the toilet, I did not want to have to step into the shower to turn it on, and be hit with a blast of cold water.) Also note the parquet flooring on the right at the back; that’s a closet from my back bedroom, which gave me the space for the wider shower.

We had the shower walls (and dry floor, but it’s covered up) tiled, waiting for the accent tiles:

It's a good thing I don't use the primary bedroom, because this is what it's looked like for three weeks:


After a week waiting for Home Depot to pull its finger out, we had accent tiles, and boy, they were worth the wait:

See—here was my inspiration, from a DIY subreddit:

The color scheme is astonishingly butt-ugly, but I was struck by the idea of the accent tiles flowing down past the shower hardware and filling the floor, like a waterfall. I was thinking of something in blue, but it turns out that HGTV is not doing blues this season, so they are not to be found.

What I did find were these beauties:

Once I had them, I wanted everything else in the room to take a backseat. I have to say, it worked out exactly as I had visualized it. The niche on the right echoes the flow, and it’s situated at exactly the height I need to accommodate my Costco haircare products, pumps and all.

Along the way, the crew discovered a crack in the main drain pipe. That was on a Thursday and necessitated making gigantic holes in my kitchen ceiling and down the column where the pipe flowed.


On the Saturday a master plumber showed up and in half a day, he and his assistant replaced the “black pipe” material (which probably also dated to 1970) with PVC.

Last week a guy drywalled, finished and painted the kitchen with exquisite care, and you’d never know it had suffered possibly mortal wounds.

(Oh—another long story, but there was a thing with the main water shutoff valve early in the project. That resulted in my kitchen faucet conking out. Eric—the mainstay of the project—tried fixing it, but no good. As it happens, I’d intended to replace that tap—the arm was stuck in one position and it had started not getting full flow. I showed Eric the new one, and he spent a couple of hours on a Saturday installing it.)

I now have an all-singing-all-dancing 36”x24” medicine cabinet, with about 32 light phases, including a night light; I’m hoping it will do the heavy lifting for my bathroom storage needs.


I got plenty of mirrors and plenty of light.

New toilet, new vanity/hardware/sink. Recessed light over the shower and another light over the medicine cabinet. You could perform surgery in this theatre.

But most of all—I have a lovely shower space, with both a rain shower head and a hand-held, which I can step into without climbing over the edge of a bathtub. This is huge.

And it’s got me thinking about water and things that sparkle in it. So, let’s head over to the old world for today’s Advent music. (We're in Advent, remember?) Specifically, Spain, for “Los peces en el río.”

There’s not a whole lot of substance in this one—just the fairly banal activity of Mary washing and combing her hair, washing her hands and laundering diapers. And the fish; the sparkly fish. 

To tell you the truth, I’m a skosh vague about the connection between the Nativity and Mary washing her hair by the river; rivers don't appear to figure large in Nativity stories. But I’m willing to go with it. Woman's gotta do the needful, after all. And why shouldn’t fishes be excited about the birth of the Savior? The Good News isn't just for mammals, is it?

There’s no peg on when this was written or by whom, but it became popular in the second half of the 20th Century. Here we’ve got the Mexican trio Pandora singing it.

If you’ll excuse me, now, I’ll just pop into my new bathroom to take another shower. My fifth of the day.

 

©2025 Bas Bleu

 

Monday, December 1, 2025

Gratitude Monday: Worthy of their hire

I am rounding the final corner on the remodel of my primary bathroom. If all goes well, I should be able to start using it tomorrow, or Wednesday. We’ve got vanity light, shower doors, shower fixtures and toilet yet to install.

The project manager estimated they’d do it in two weeks, which I took to mean 10 days of guys-on-site; today is Day 10. (There was a week off while Home Depot faffed around with the accent tiles, so technically it’s three weeks since they started.) What I’ve noticed in that time is the expertise, attention to detail and amazing work ethic of everyone who’s come in—demolition, plumbing, electrics, tiling, drywalling, installing.

They found a crack in the drain pipe on a Thursday. By Saturday a master plumber was in the kitchen swapping out “black pipe” with PVC. Last Wednesday a guy drywalled all the holes in the kitchen (including ones that predated this project), and on Friday he finished off with sanding and painting. I have a quasi-new kitchen.

Meanwhile, my primary bath is progressing so beautifully—mostly the work of Eric, who has done everything since the demo. He consulted me on the niche—height, width, etc. It’s tall enough to accommodate the shampoo I buy from Costco and at a height that I can pump the bottles one handed.

All this is by way of saying that I’ve been doing a lot of thinking about laborers lately—in particular the people who build and repair, who erect houses and expand roads. They are skilled and they do hard work that I, frankly, would probably literally die before I could get it right. I am in complete awe of their abilities and I am grateful for everything they do. Especially knowing how vulnerable they are to exploitation, harassment and outright criminal attacks these days.

As it happens, the boy who was born in a cow stall in Bethlehem two millennia ago was the child of a laborer—Joseph was a carpenter, and Jesus went into the family business until it was time to take up the other family business. The Messiah was not an accountant, a doctor or a businessman; he was a carpenter. He was a Brown guy who built and repaired things out of wood.

Pretty much like Eric, with the addition of 21st Century plumbing and electrical.

So my Advent piece today honors Joseph, who frankly doesn’t generally figure large in the Nativity narrative. (Just like laborers today.) It’s by way of a lullaby, originating in 16th Century mystery plays in Germany. I’m giving you Voces8 singing it.

A joyous Advent for all workers and laborers.

 

 

©2025 Bas Bleu

 

Sunday, November 30, 2025

Ransom captive Israel

Well, looky here—it’s Advent again, right on schedule. That period before Christmas where Christians are meant to snuggle into the season and prepare for the birth of Christ. It’s a long one this year: four Sundays and four days to get our act together, to gather our thoughts, count our blessings, assess how we’ve done during the previous months and what we might do better in the coming year.

Oh, and maybe let in a little joy. And hope.

You can do this whether you’re religious or not, whether you’re Christian or not.

IMHO, it’s a good thing indeed to press pause—especially at year’s end and when the nights are long and cold in the Northern Hemisphere—and reflect. Reflect on whatever it is you’ve got that needs reflecting.

And I believe that this year in particular, it’s appropriate to consider people around the world who may find it hard to see either joy or hope; I’m looking at Ukraine, at Israel and Palestine, at Sudan, among others. In fact, I’m looking right here in the United States, where Republicans are indulging in an exaltation of authoritarianism as Democrats mostly flap their hands and send stern letters. Where masked federal agents kitted out in the accoutrements of war are tear gassing wine moms, pepperballing ministers in the act of prayer and ripping anyone who looks non-white off the streets to meet Stephen Miller’s quota of detention-to-deportations. Where the Kleptocrat layers gilded plastic gimcrackery over every vertical surface of the White House—that portion that he hasn’t ripped down or paved over—and dreams of a triumphal arch at the entrance to Arlington National Cemetery (it’ll be much bigger, with much more gold, than l’Arc de Triomphe, because Macron just really gets under that orange lizard skin).

Yeah, it's a struggle everywhere.

First Sunday in Advent is in fact about hope. The prophesy of Isaiah looms large, and we open our hearts to the hope of the redeemer’s birth—in whatever form that might take. So we’ll start out with “O Come, O Come, Emmanuel”, which is as clear an invitation as you’re going to get.

Floriani is a quartet of men whose common ground seems to be having attended Thomas Aquinas College, a small liberal arts school in Santa Paula, Calif., that teaches using the Great Books method. The group is focused on sacred music.

May the light of the season warm and strengthen all who struggle against darkness (literally) and those who suffer in captivity.

 

©2025 Bas Bleu

 

Friday, November 28, 2025

Saying, "How do you do?"

Today’s earworm isn’t specifically a Thanksgiving piece, but it is about being grateful for things around us.

Yes, I know—for millions and millions of people around the globe, this is not, in fact, a wonderful world. Millions of Americans, in fact, are struggling to survive, particularly in this political and economic climate.

All the more reason to seek out the good, the beautiful, the kind, the generous.

And who better than Louis Armstrong to show us?


©2025 Bas Bleu

 

Thursday, November 27, 2025

Quick list of thanks

Welp, it’s the big one for gratitude here in the United States. A day set aside for the purpose of counting blessings and acting en famille. (It’s also the official demarcation for The Christmas Season, although Christmas merch has been in Costco since August, and Hallmark seems to run its Christmas rom-coms pretty much all year round now.)

In our current political and economic situation, I can see that it might be difficult for many people to feel gratitude—or to crawl out from under anxiety, fear or even just crushing unease that can pervade our lives. Never in my own lifetime have I felt the disparity between the haves and the have-lesses and have-nots. Billionaires who nonetheless never have enough squeezing ever more out of the middle and working classes, aided and abetted by politicians and politicized courts. There are hundreds of thousands of my neighbors across the country who are living with food insecurity. It’s real, it’s unamerican and it’s disgusting.

So what I have to pull myself out of is continually being pissed off at the perversion of the idea of America; anger can be good, but not when it’s carried around like an extra 20 pounds on the butt. That’s why I make gratitude a discipline, to remind myself that we can refuse to let the world be unremitting horror, and that one way to start that process is to acknowledge the good in it whenever and wherever we find it.

So—today I’m grateful for the friends who include me in their Thanksgiving celebrations every year. I never take their invitation for granted, but when it comes, I’m delighted. I get to make pie! I get to make cranberry relish! I get to spend an evening with friends, eating turkey (which I would never make for myself) and engaging in wide-ranging discussions.

I’m grateful for every protestor at every ICE facility and activity in every city across the country. As wealthy individuals, institutions and corporations kowtow to the Kleptocrat like bobble-head dogs on the back decks of low-riders, it’s the soccer moms, the priests and pastors, the neighbors of all economic stripes and the students who are peacefully locking arms and filming our very own masked Gestapo thugs committing crimes right out in daylight. They have been tear gassed, beaten and arrested, and they still return to bear witness.

I’m absolutely verklempt for the protest that scores of people pulled at a Home Depot in Monrovia, Calif.—buying $.79 ice scrapers and immediately returning them, to tie up the store’s self-service check-out registers for hours. They did the needful for a business that toadies to the thugs.

While I’m talking capitalism—kudos to the millions of people boycotting Target for caving to the anti-Woke nonsense. (Notice: I’m one of the boycotters, but it’s not as though my $50 annual spend there is going to be missed. Still—a lot of littles make a lot.) Target’s hurting and had to replace its CEO after only six or seven months of the boycott.

And—more capitalism: without the workers in the fields (in-country and around the world), the ones in meat packing plants, the people who get food from its starting point to our tables, we'd be SOL. For any and every meal. Thank you to all!

Big, deep, joyous thanks to all the No Kings and other demonstrations of force. Because that’s precisely what they are: demonstrations of the power of what the founders called We the People. You don’t see millions of people turning out around the country (and indeed the world) to laud the Kleptocrat and his authoritarian machinations, but you do see the protestors. Repeatedly. And so do those in power.

Humble gratitude to people who show everyday kindness in a time when I cannot imagine anyone is without angst. The smiles, the nods; patience—oh, my, what a grace that is when I encounter it. “Please” and “thank you.” Just wow!

I give thanks for the people who looked after my sister in her final days. She had progressed to the really ugly stage of Alzheimer’s, but both friends and professionals cared for her with respect and love. I cannot be more grateful for that than I am, even a year later.

The dogs I meet on my morning walks fill me with delight, and I’m thankful I can share even a few moments with them. There’s one who positively dances down the sidewalk; she stops me dead every time in admiration. Dogs are an unexpected and unlooked for grace.

I’m grateful for my friends—the ones down the street and the ones across an ocean. They make me a better person, they talk me down from the ledge, they spark laughter when I need it the most, they give me comfort.

Nature—large and small—fills me with both awe and delight. When I’m having a terrible, horrible, no-good, very bad day, a quick walk outside mitigates even the worst things. Thank God for that.

And you know what else? Thank God for the internet. That’s where I got the recipe for pumpkin pie (thanks, Martha!), how I learn about legal issues (thanks, Bluesky), join communities and get reporting from publications around the world. (Take that, WaPo!) Yes, it’s a cesspool of misinformation and malevolence, but—just like the world—it contains powerful good and it’s up to you do decide which roads you’re going to follow.

I give thanks to those who stand watch for us—whether they’re wearing cammies and tactical gear or scrubs and a stethoscope; for those who serve us—whether in a government agency or a retail store; for those who keep the neighborhood clean by picking up the trash; and for those who deliver packages, groceries and mail. They’re like the air we breathe—necessary for a good life, but often overlooked until it turns bad.

And, finally, I’m grateful for the 22nd Amendment. I hope not even this SCOTUS will find a way to abrogate that.

Happy Thanksgiving, all.

 


©2025 Bas Bleu

 

Wednesday, November 26, 2025

No toiling, no spinning

All I’ve got to say today is glory be to God for Japanese maples.


This guy is in my back yard and every single year, when things start turning to crap, he struts his stuff and fills me with joy.

Take some of that for yourself, too. He’s got plenty.

 

©2025 Bas Bleu

 

Tuesday, November 25, 2025

Eyeball to eyeball

I was looking at autumn foliage a while ago and noticed this guy.

That’s it. That’s the post.

 

©2025 Bas Bleu

 

Sunday, November 23, 2025

Gratitude Monday: those who care

Last Sunday, I attended an event featuring the former host of NPR’s “All Things Considered” talking with Anthony S. Fauci, MD. It was a fascinating discussion, all the way from Fauci’s upbringing in an Italian-American neighborhood in Brooklyn to his leadership of the US scientific and medical efforts to identify, treat and prevent COVID-19 during the pandemic five years ago.

Fauci is a personable guy (as is Siegel) and I was taken by the sense of curiosity and the commitment to service that have obviously shaped his life. (He also spearheaded the American investigation into HIV and AIDS in the 1980s and 1990s that eventually led to effective treatments, changing what was at one time a death sentence to a chronic condition for sufferers.)

Since that interview, I’ve been thinking about how deeply grateful for Fauci and men and women like him—the whole gamut, from pure researchers who want to find out where a microorganism came from and how it interacts with its environment; to the applied scientists who carry that further to develop new therapies and ways to improve life; to the healthcare professionals and public health officials who take it where the rubber meets the road.

I don’t often spend time on all of this—in the same way that I don’t often consider how the engine in my Saab works…until it doesn’t. But when things began to go south in January of 2020, every member of every bioscientific, medical and public health organization did everything possible to contain, mitigate and turn around the most devastating virus to strike the world since 1918. And in the United States, they did it despite active attempts by Republicans at every level of government to deny, diminish and deter the efforts, while maximizing the prospects of making both money and political hay out of it.

I’m thinking in particular the doctors, nurses and support staff at hospitals all over the country who worked exhausting shifts, often without proper protective gear, to treat thousands of patients at the stage where no one really knew what was going to work. I also recall that they died in their hundreds.

The thing is—this stuff goes on all the time: the research, the scientific iterations (and sometimes breakthrough innovations), the medical care. And we don’t notice it, really, until there are problems—a new drug is too expensive to buy, surgery is unsuccessful or the insurance company denies the claim. But today I am in grateful awe for everyone involved in these things, because they all rely on humans who really care about making things better.

We need all of them we can get.

 


 

©2025 Bas Bleu