I found this Elvis mural in an alley on Main St. in Tupelo, Mississippi.

New Stories for Washington Post Magazine, AARP and More

I’ve received wonderful reader responses to recent stories, including:

Leaders from all faiths are encouraging people to get vaccinated

 

Bronze Award for
COVID-19 Story
 

I was thrilled to win bronze in the Spring 2022 Digital Health Awards for a VaccineVoices.org story about how faith leaders are promoting COVID vaccinations (VaccineVoices.org is a joint project between the Association of American Medical Colleges and the CDC).

For another recent Vaccine Voices story, I drove through rural Virginia with two healthcare workers from UVA Health as they vaccinated homebound patients. My other pieces have looked at the challenges of vaccinating immigrants, why pro athletes have high vaccination rates, and efforts to increase vaccinations among nurses.

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My friend Todd and I hiking at Deception Pass in Washington state.

New Washington Post Magazine Story Looks at Love and Masculinity

My new feature for The Washington Post Magazine explores a subject that guys rarely discuss: Why is it so hard for heterosexual men to tell their buddies, “I love you?”

The piece, titled “Why Can’t More Straight Men Say ‘I Love You’ to Each Other?,” focused on my 35-year relationship with Todd, a close friend and former college roommate. For years, the huggy, outgoing Todd told me “I love you” — and I never once said it back. The story has generated a large discussion on social media. Here are some comments from the Post web site:

“When my dad dropped me off at college my first semester, I shied away from a goodbye kiss in the dorm lobby. I immediately saw the hurt in his eyes and vowed never to be embarrassed about saying ‘I love you’ or kissing my dad again. It is liberating indeed.”

“I'm 65 years young. When I was in my 30’s, I heard my older brother tell our dad he loved him. I was taken aback. That was not something I ever thought any of us siblings would ever say to dad. See, dad was a good man but emotionally distant for all 10 of us siblings. So I thought, ‘Hey, if he can say it so can I.’  So I started hugging my Dad and telling him I loved him. Then one day he said, ‘I love you too.’ That changed everything between us… Men who are unable to tell another male that they are close to I love you are wasting their life on a fairy tale of manhood.”

“In our culture, men aren’t supposed to show a full range of feelings. Furthermore, they’re taught at a  young age to abhor all that is ‘feminine,’ i.e., emotional — so the repression begins. Yet it’s much more serious than that. It creates hatred and a lack of respect for women. This false feeling of the power of stoicism is reinforced by sexist, economic disparity and by the lack of family leave legislation, which all too often leaves women as the caretakers of the family.”

“Great piece. It was a shared tragedy of a loss of a close friend in our twenties that fixed this dynamic in my close friend group of three. After that, we were and are very free and easy with each other on this side, but it took a major emotional event to get us to that point. I know the dynamic well and this was an excellent explanation of it.”

“I have said I love you to my best friend on occasion. While shirking most male-oriented rules, I still find it difficult, but I think that’s because I know he won’t say it. However, when I made the decision a few years back to say it to him, I also decided it was time to say it to anyone who I consider a very close friend (which would include three others) regardless of their sex. I find it liberating and this article has reaffirmed my belief I’m doing the right thing.”

 To sign up for my monthly 650,000 Hours newsletter, which covers travel, giving back, and living your best life, go here.

Yellowstone was one of the Suberts’ stops on a unique cross-country trip.

Yellowstone was one of the Suberts’ stops on a unique cross-country trip.

 

New Pieces for The Atlantic and Travel + Leisure

Last summer, my neighbors Marianna and Sándor Subert embarked on a cross-country road trip with an altruistic twist. After driving their 2006 Volvo S40 from Virginia to California, they ended their two-week trek by donating the car to Goodwill in San Francisco. I wrote about their experience in a new piece for Travel + Leisure.

I also wrote my first essay for The Atlantic. The premise? COVID-19 has brought death. And fear. And emotional, financial, and spiritual pain. But we humans are remarkably resilient. I think we’re underestimating our plague-defying, atrocity-surviving grit, as I explain in this piece (and quasi-pep talk).

To sign up for my monthly 650,000 Hours newsletter, which covers travel, giving back, and living your best life, go here.

My story focused on my volunteer work at the Calvary Zion children’s home in Kenya.

 

Washington Post Magazine Story Selected for The Best American Travel Writing

I’m thrilled to announce that my story for The Washington Post Magazine on the Calvary Zion children’s home in Kenya appears in the 2020 edition of The Best American Travel Writing, published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. The story also won a silver award in October 2020 in the prestigious Lowell Thomas travel writing competition. 

The piece examined orphanages and the complexities of voluntourism, and told the tale of how God told Jane Karigo, the home’s founder, to care for the street children in her town near Mombasa. It was also re-published in the New Zealand Herald.

To sign up for my monthly 650,000 Hours newsletter, which covers travel, living your best life, and giving back, go here.

Tammy Neblock-Beirne, M.D., has performed pro bono surgeries around the world.

Tammy Neblock-Beirne, M.D., has performed pro bono surgeries around the world.

 

Three Stories Win Prestigious Travel Writing Awards

Two stories that I wrote for my “Everyday Heroes” column in The Saturday Evening Post were winners in the 2020 North American Travel Journalists Association awards. My profile of Warren Stortroen, titled “An Environmental Megastar at Age 86,” won gold in the 60+ travel category. Since his retirement from the insurance biz, Warren has volunteered around the world over 100 times with Earthwatch, a scientific research organization, and he even has his own fan club called the Warrenites. 

My piece on Tammy Neblock-Beirne, MD, took honorable mention in the profile category. Tammy has volunteered her surgical skills in countries such as India, Guatemala, and Uganda, and she is one of the founders of One Global Village, which runs a school at a clinic in the tiny village of Dagabo, Mali. I’ll be featuring Tammy in the 650,000 Hours podcast, which will debut this summer.

My story for The Washington Post Magazine on the Calvary Zion children’s home in Kenya won a silver award in October 2020 in the prestigious Lowell Thomas travel writing competition. It also appears in the 2020 edition of The Best American Travel Writing, published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt.

To sign up for my monthly 650,000 Hours newsletter, which covers travel, living your best life, and giving back, go here.