Welcome . . . to another Friday in the Sanctuary.

May you find a few moments of peace and respite here today. Life is tough. We all need to protect our peace.

C’mon in.
Take a break with me.

First, let me explain where I am . . . right now.

So. I know that a lot of you are aware that I have a particular soft spot for . . . animal stories. Or, to clarify . . . animals IN stories. (And especially dogs.) (But also, well . . . horses. Or really . . . any animals.) (But. Mostly dogs.) What you might not know, though, is where that comes from.

Well. It comes from Jane Goodall, my friends.

My “love affair” with chimps began early. In the 1960s, I adored the show Daktari – which featured Judy the chimp. And I remember watching a TV special (it must have been Miss Goodall and the World of Chimps) when I was very young. And then . . . I remember Lancelot Link when I was probably too old to be watching Saturday morning TV anymore (but, really . . . who cares?) Anyway. Let’s just say . . . I was smitten with chimps, and I really wanted one for a pet. My mom was . . . not keen on the idea. At all. And eventually I gave up my love for chimps with my crush on Bobby Sherman. (The world turns. . .)

But I still loved Jane Goodall. Who showed me that caring for animals was important and the right thing to do.

So learning of her death this week . . . has surfaced all kinds of feelings. And that’s where I am this week. Down a Jane Goodall rabbit hole.

C’mon with me. Let Jane Goodall inspire us all. It’s an okay place to be right now!

“You cannot get through a single day without having an impact on the world around you. What you do makes a difference, and you have to decide what kind of difference you want to make.”

   — Jane Goodall

Let’s begin with this short tribute video, created by the Jane Goodall Institute . . .

Next, I want to share these most excellent “lessons learned from Jane Goodall” . . . from Sharon McMahon (aka Sharon Says So).

Jane Goodall, New York Times

What I learned from Jane Goodall
by Sharon McMahon @sharonsaysso

The answer is, of course, so many things. Beautiful things about animals and the natural world that we are all a part of. But here are three things about Jane Goodall that seem especially important today:

  1. She did what she could where she was, with the resources available to her. And that was so much. That was enough. History will not criticize Jane Goodall for never ascending the ladder of political power or for not working to amass a vast personal fortune. What she did, where she was, with what she had was exactly what the world needed.
  2. She cared about her legacy. She knew she had important work to do, and that included work out in the field and work to educate the next generations. She cultivated who she became. And that is something that’s available to each of us, too.
  3. Jane Goodall was small, and she was mighty. She looked for the next needed thing and she did it. She had the audacity to try, and to let other people judge her for it. She never let the enormity of the world’s problems keep her from doing — not everything — but something.

Here’s a recent message from Jane Goodall about making the world a more peaceful place . . .

Dr. Goodall served as a United Nations Messenger of Peace.

And, finally, the clip that always makes me cry . . .

I have seen this clip played many times since I was a child, and every time I get emotional. (And likely you’ve seen it more than once or twice, yourself.) But it’s a most excellent reminder . . . that all of us in nature are connected.

And that’ll do it for this week, my friends.

I hope you’ve found some . . . Sanctuary. . . here today.
At least for a few minutes.

Enjoy your weekend.
Rest.
Do what you can with the resources you have.

Be like Jane.
Decide what kind of difference you want to make.

ONWARD.
Protect your peace!