• LGBTSR,  Travel,  Travel Time

    Gay Travelers Magazine: Provincetown – Where LGBTQ+ Can Be Themselves

    Reprinted with permission from Gay Travelers Magazine

    By Steven Skelley and Thomas Routzong

    Provincetown, Massachusetts stands out in history as not only the first place where the Pilgrims landed, it is constantly evolving to accept those who seek refuge, a place to be free and a place to be themselves. We asked locals to give us the inside scoop on the past, present and future of LGBTQ+ Provincetown.

    How would you describe Provincetown in one sentence?

    From Tony Fuccillo, Director of Tourism:

    Provincetown is a place where you feel you can truly be proud of being gay; all LGBTQ+, yes everyone is welcome in Ptown and can be themselves when they are here without any judgment from anyone.

  • Book Reviews,  LGBTSR

    Book Review: Tough Mothers: Amazing Stories of History’s Mightiest Matriarchs, by Jason Porath



    By Terri Schlichenmeyer

    The Bookworm Sez

    “Tough Mothers: Amazing Stories of History’s Mightiest Matriarchs” by Jason Porath
    c.2018, Dey Street $24.99 / $31.00 Canada
    244 pages

    Your mom is tough as nails.

    The minute you were placed in her arms, she became your personal warrior, cheerleader, and banker. She remembers the good things you did and (sigh) the dumb things you tried. She pretends to forget why she ever gave you That Look. And in the new book “Tough Mothers” by Jason Porath, you’ll meet other women just like her.

  • LGBTSR,  Travel,  Travel Time

    Travel Time: What Venice Taught Me, by Sandra de Helen

    Sandra de Helen, photo by Bev Standish

    Travel Time is a regular feature at LGBTSr, highlighting destinations, travel suggestions and travelogues for the LGBTQ traveler.

    What Venice Taught Me
    By Sandra de Helen

    The only place outside the United States my mom dreamed of visiting was Venice, Italy. She was entranced by this city built on water. As for me, I wanted to go everywhere, see everything. But we were working class poor, living in rural Missouri. We became even poorer when my father died at age forty-two leaving my mom who was nine years younger with two little girls, one of who wasn’t quite two years old. I was the other daughter, and I was seven. Any traveling we did was through reading. Every book offered another world. I spent my childhood dreaming of those worlds.

    My first trip out of state was to New Orleans. I was eighteen. At twenty-one, I flew to Alaska and stayed for two months. Later that year I moved to Texas. Over the next decade, I lived in Alaska, Kansas, Arizona, and Missouri again. By the age of thirty-two, I had visited seventeen states. I was ready to go to Europe. When my credit union offered a chartered trip to Seefeld, Austria for only five hundred dollars for eight days, I placed a down payment and invited a friend to join me.

  • Lee Lynch's Amazon Trail,  LGBTSR

    Lee Lynch’s Amazon Trail: A Poem and a Plant

    Photo by Sue Hardesty

    By Lee Lynch
    The Amazon Trail: A Poem and a Plant

    The day was typical for the Pacific Northwest. The brightening sky had stopped sputtering its fine dewdrops for the moment, the wind had blown itself out, and the development where I live came to life. People took advantage of the disappearing dreariness to walk their dogs, scurry to our centrally located mailboxes, or meet their step goals.

    I dropped off a copy of New York Magazine in the common room. The cover quoted Melissa Shusterman, who’s running for the Pennsylvania state legislature. “My 16-year-old turned to me after the election and he said, ‘America doesn’t want a smart, qualified woman in office.’ By Friday, I was running.”

  • LGBTSR,  Savvy Senior

    The Savvy Senior: How to Choose a Good Estate Sale Company



    By Jim Miller

    Dear Savvy Senior,

    Can you provide some tips on how to choose a good estate sale company who can sell all the leftover items in my mother’s house?

    Inquiring Daughter

    Dear Inquiring,

    The estate sale business has become a huge industry over the past decade. There are roughly 22,000 estate sale companies that currently operate in the U.S., up nearly 60 percent from just 10 years ago. But not all estate sale companies are alike.

  • LGBTSR

    SAGE Issues Pledge to Stand with LGBT Elders in Face of Discrimination

    From SAGE:

    The Trump administration is giving businesses and medical providers a license to discriminate: to deny services to LGBT individuals based on religious or moral beliefs. Freedom of religion is important to all of us; that’s why it’s protected by our Constitution. But that freedom doesn’t give anyone the right to harm others or to discriminate. In response, SAGE is enlisting the power of the LGBT community, their allies, and the people who care for them to take a stand.

  • Latest

    SAGE Issues Pledge to Stand with LGBT Elders in Face of Discrimination

    From SAGE:

    The Trump administration is giving businesses and medical providers a license to discriminate: to deny services to LGBT individuals based on religious or moral beliefs. Freedom of religion is important to all of us; that’s why it’s protected by our Constitution. But that freedom doesn’t give anyone the right to harm others or to discriminate. In response, SAGE is enlisting the power of the LGBT community, their allies, and the people who care for them to take a stand.

  • Columns,  Savvy Senior

    The Savvy Senior: How to Choose a Good Estate Sale Company


    By Jim Miller

    Dear Savvy Senior,

    Can you provide some tips on how to choose a good estate sale company who can sell all the leftover items in my mother’s house?

    Inquiring Daughter

    Dear Inquiring,

    The estate sale business has become a huge industry over the past decade. There are roughly 22,000 estate sale companies that currently operate in the U.S., up nearly 60 percent from just 10 years ago. But not all estate sale companies are alike.