In the middle of the journey of my life, I am--as always--a woman on a bike. Although I do not know where this road will lead, the way is not lost, for I have arrived here. And I am on my bicycle, again.
I am Justine Valinotti.
07 September 2022
I'll Bet You've Never Had A Ride Home Like This One
12 May 2022
Sometimes It Takes A Ukrainian To Do What An American Won't
Not many people have to look for reasons to support Ukraine in their battle against Puto's, I mean Putin's, invasion. Even so, I will offer one more.
A Ukranian prosecutor has done something law enforcement officials and the justice system in the US rarely, if ever, do. Prosecutor General Iryna Venediktova has filed to indict someone for killing a cyclist.
Of course, the circumstances are a bit different from the all-too-typical DUI hit-and-run or the MAGAt in a pickup truck who plows into an organized bike ride. So far, the victim in this case has been identified only as a 62-year-old Ukranian civilian who was riding his bike home in the Sumy region of the country when Russian militants shot him in February, shortly after Putain's, I mean Putin's, invasion begin.
Veneditkova announced her action Wednesday on social media websites. Her indictment of one of those soldiers--identified as Vadim Shishimarin--is the first of a soldier for killing a civilian during the conflict. If convicted, he could face 10 to 15 years or life, depending on the charge.
A cyclist in Debaltseve, Ukraine, 20 February 2015. Photo by Vadim Ghirda for AP. |
It's terrible that someone riding his bike didn't make it home because soldiers shot him. I feel bad for his loved ones, whoever they are. But it's good to know that a prosecutor is actually trying to bring his killers to account--even if she's charging one of them for a war crime (at least, as I understand the definition of that term) rather than a crime against a cyclist.
20 April 2022
Cyclist: A Survivor In Mariupol
Yesterday I wrote about the world's first acid trip, which Dr. Albert Hofmann took, if unwittingly, on his bike ride home.
If you've ever been on an "acid trip," you know that it can include visions heavenly or hellish. The latter could describe what this cyclist--who, I assume, was not under the influence of LSD or any other substance--exprienced:
Photo by Alexander Ermochencko, for Reuters |
Reports I've read and heard say that Mariupol, a port city in Ukraine, has been "wiped off the face of the earth," or words to that effect. I have no reason to doubt such reports: The reports and accompanying images show steel stick-figures, the skeletons of destroyed buildings and rubble everywhere. And though there is death and destruction everywhere, thankfully, many have survived. Their lives, like the ride of that cyclist, will go on.
09 July 2018
A Ride That Leaves Nobody Behind
That includes Gennadiy Mokhnenko. He's a pastor who directs the Pilgrim Republic Children's Home in his native Ukraine. Its focus is on orphans and other "vulnerable children"--of which the Ukraine, like many other countries experiencing upheval and poverty, has many.
In fact, one of those children became one of 32 childen Mohnenko and his wife, Lena, have adopted. Andrey Dudin was the first of them, in 1999, when he was 12 years old. He'd been homeless for six years when the Mohnenkos took him in. Now he is accompanying Gennaidy on the US leg of his World Without Orphans bicycle tour, which began in 2011.
They ride every summer and the US leg of their ride is being supported by Serving Orphans Worldwide, a nonprofit organization based in Bristol, Tennessee. Its work complements that of the Pilgrim Republic Children's Home, in that it rescues, trains and supports struggling childrens' homes worldwide. Both organizations want to dispel some of the myths about adoptive children: namely, that they can't be loved as much as biological children and that if their biological parents were addicted to drugs or alcohol, they will end up the same way. "It's a stupid idea," says Mokhnenko. He uses himself as an example: "I grew up in an alcohol addicted family and I'm a pastor of 27 years."
As of this writing, he, his adoptive son and other cyclists are riding through Tennessee. They began this part of the tour in Los Angeles in May and will end in about three weeks, he says, when they reach Miami, Florida after "pedaling 60 to 80 miles a day."