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Stories From Women Who Walk - 60 Seconds for Thoughts on Thursday: Bombs Are Falling & Brave Souls Are Singing

60 Seconds for Thoughts on Thursday: Bombs Are Falling & Brave Souls Are Singing

03/06/25 • 2 min

Stories From Women Who Walk

Hello to you listening in Jasper, Indiana!

Coming to you from Whidbey Island, Washington this is Stories From Women Who Walk with 60 Seconds for Thoughts on Thursday and your host, Diane Wyzga.

In the early 1990s a cellist in Sarejevo, Vedran Smajlovic, went out into the square when the bombs were dropping and started playing his cello. A journalist asked him, "Why are you out here playing your cello while the bombs are dropping?" The cellist replied, “Why are they dropping bombs while I’m playing the cello?”

In the face of tragedy art and beauty might be all some of us have to offer. Art and beauty give us hope, remind us of our humanity even when someone else denies it, as well as help shape the stories of the society they reflect.

Walking life’s path can be made a bit more hopeful when we have art, music and brave souls to walk along with us.

Whether the voice of a child singing a tune from the movie, Frozen; Vera Lytovchenko, violinist and teacher playing in a bomb shelter dressed in an evening gown; a piano player outside a train station; or men singing their country’s anthem.

Click HERE to listen a 2 minute broadcast from 2 years ago. It’s the voices and music of a determined nation fighting for its unbowed Ukranian soul and winning albeit at great cost.

But music alone won’t do it. Hear us, world leaders: if Ukraine maintains its determination and gets necessary external military support, it can win this war of attrition!

NOTE: During the nearly four-year siege of Sarajevo that ended in 1996, Vedran Smajlovic played Albinoni’s Adagio in G Minor on his cello in ruined buildings, including the Vijecnica, the Bosnian capital’s destroyed city hall. He also played at funerals despite the threat of sniper fire. His powerful music became a sign of resilience and of the triumph of humanity over brutality.

You’re invited: “Come for the stories - stay for the magic!” Speaking of magic, I hope you’ll subscribe, share a nice shout out on your social media or podcast channel of choice, (including Android, Amazon Music, Audible & Pandora Radio) and join us next time! Remember to stop by the Quarter Moon Story Arts website, check out the Services I offer, arrange a Discovery Call, and Opt In to stay current with Diane and Quarter Moon Story Arts as well as on LinkedIn and Substack as Wyzga on Words

Stories From Women Who Walk Production Team

Podcaster: Diane F Wyzga & Quarter Moon Story Arts

Music: Mer’s Waltz from Crossing the Waters by Steve Schuch & Night Heron Music

All content and image © 2019 to Present: for credit & attribution Quarter Moon Story Arts

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Hello to you listening in Jasper, Indiana!

Coming to you from Whidbey Island, Washington this is Stories From Women Who Walk with 60 Seconds for Thoughts on Thursday and your host, Diane Wyzga.

In the early 1990s a cellist in Sarejevo, Vedran Smajlovic, went out into the square when the bombs were dropping and started playing his cello. A journalist asked him, "Why are you out here playing your cello while the bombs are dropping?" The cellist replied, “Why are they dropping bombs while I’m playing the cello?”

In the face of tragedy art and beauty might be all some of us have to offer. Art and beauty give us hope, remind us of our humanity even when someone else denies it, as well as help shape the stories of the society they reflect.

Walking life’s path can be made a bit more hopeful when we have art, music and brave souls to walk along with us.

Whether the voice of a child singing a tune from the movie, Frozen; Vera Lytovchenko, violinist and teacher playing in a bomb shelter dressed in an evening gown; a piano player outside a train station; or men singing their country’s anthem.

Click HERE to listen a 2 minute broadcast from 2 years ago. It’s the voices and music of a determined nation fighting for its unbowed Ukranian soul and winning albeit at great cost.

But music alone won’t do it. Hear us, world leaders: if Ukraine maintains its determination and gets necessary external military support, it can win this war of attrition!

NOTE: During the nearly four-year siege of Sarajevo that ended in 1996, Vedran Smajlovic played Albinoni’s Adagio in G Minor on his cello in ruined buildings, including the Vijecnica, the Bosnian capital’s destroyed city hall. He also played at funerals despite the threat of sniper fire. His powerful music became a sign of resilience and of the triumph of humanity over brutality.

You’re invited: “Come for the stories - stay for the magic!” Speaking of magic, I hope you’ll subscribe, share a nice shout out on your social media or podcast channel of choice, (including Android, Amazon Music, Audible & Pandora Radio) and join us next time! Remember to stop by the Quarter Moon Story Arts website, check out the Services I offer, arrange a Discovery Call, and Opt In to stay current with Diane and Quarter Moon Story Arts as well as on LinkedIn and Substack as Wyzga on Words

Stories From Women Who Walk Production Team

Podcaster: Diane F Wyzga & Quarter Moon Story Arts

Music: Mer’s Waltz from Crossing the Waters by Steve Schuch & Night Heron Music

All content and image © 2019 to Present: for credit & attribution Quarter Moon Story Arts

Previous Episode

undefined - 60 Seconds for Wednesdays on Whidbey: “Take Heart - We Will Endure”

60 Seconds for Wednesdays on Whidbey: “Take Heart - We Will Endure”

Hello to you listening here, there and everywhere!

Coming to you from Whidbey Island, Washington this is Stories From Women Who Walk with 60 Seconds for Wednesdays on Whidbey and your host, Diane Wyzga.

My dear friend, colleague, and fellow podcaster Charlene Norman, the voice behind The 5Cs podcast sent me a post on LinkedIn written by Terry Szuplat (Obama speechwriter 2009-17) and founder Global Voices Communications.

Mr. Szuplat’s essay, Take Heart - We Will Endure, calls to be shared because we are down in the trenches and welcoming any sign of how to keep our good selves going. This is what he wrote:

"To our friends around the world asking, “What’s going on?” Well... 77 million Americans voted for Trump. 78 million voted for other candidates...

So, no, it was not a “landslide.”

It was another close election in a very divided country.

How are we doing, you ask?

Yes, we’re disheartened.

Like you, we are deeply, deeply concerned about what we’re witnessing every day.

Good, innocent people are being hurt -- across the United States and around the world.

There's a lot of anxiety and fear, especially about what comes next.

But we want you to know -- we’re still here.

The majority of Americans did not vote for this.

A majority of Americans, according to the latest polls, do not approve of this.

We know we are not alone.

We are not powerless.

And we’re not going anywhere.

Yes, Trump won the most votes. He won the election. He has a right to pursue his policies.

But we are still a nation of laws, and he does not have a right to violate them.

So we’ll keep standing up for the country we believe in.

For rights enshrined in our Constitution.

For the rule of law.

For justice.

For treating one another with empathy and compassion.

For a country where power comes from the people, not a king.

It may not always make the headlines, but know that we’re standing up.

We're standing up in town halls in our communities.

We're standing up in the streets.

We’re standing up in Congress.

We’re standing up in the courts.

We’re standing up in our neighborhoods, schools, companies, libraries, and our organizations.

We’re standing up here online—connecting with, empowering, and inspiring each other and lifting up the stories and voices of Americans who are courageously speaking out.

We’re under no illusions.

This is not a time for blind faith or wishful thinking. It's not to say that everything will be OK.

It won't, especially for vulnerable people.

We're only a few weeks in. This will get worse before it gets better.

As we stand up, sometimes we’ll win. Sometimes we’ll lose. We may not be able to stop the worst abuses.

But we promise you — we're not giving up.

We’ll do everything we can everywhere we can every day we can to preserve this country that we love.

As a nation, as a people, we’ve been through challenging times before -- horrors and hardships that have tested whether this great American experiment could survive.

Slavery.

A civil war.

Segregation.

A Great Depression.

Social unrest.

Mass movements for justice and equality.

And now, as then, we draw strength from each other and what we know in our hearts:

We shall overcome.

We will endure.

Because when it comes to standing up for the country and values we believe in, we’re still guided by those words of long ago:

“Never give in, never give in, never, never, never, never.”

Though hard to see right now, the America you know is still here, and — after the storm — we’ll still be standing."

2024 election results: https://lnkd.in/eNVkcXdB

Written by Terry Szuplat, Obama speechwriter (2009-17) | Bestselling author of SAY IT WELL: Find Your Voice, Speak Your Mind, Inspire Any Audience | Keynote Speaker | Adjunct Professor, Amer...

Next Episode

undefined - 60 Seconds for Story Prompt Friday: Like a Cracked Pot There Is Beauty in Your Flaws

60 Seconds for Story Prompt Friday: Like a Cracked Pot There Is Beauty in Your Flaws

Hello to you listening in Eugene, Oregon!

Coming to you from Whidbey Island, Washington this is 60 Seconds for Story Prompt Friday with your host, Diane Wyzga.

In various conversations lately I've been talking about being broken or, at least being cracked. We are cracked. We complicate being cracked by creating inner stories about our worthiness while trying to ignore our pain and hide our flaws.

Maybe it’s true and maybe it isn’t but there once was a woman who carried water from the river to her hut. Her pot was cracked while her neighbors had perfect pots. Each looked at the other with envy or disdain. Until one day the woman noticed that along the path she walked with her cracked pot flowers had sprung up from the watering the seeds received every day.

Story Prompt: Without you being just the way you are, flowers of strength, courage and wisdom would not have bloomed where you are walking. Flaws and weaknesses are natural parts of life. Where is the beauty in your flaws? Write that story!

Practical Tip: The magic of stories is also in the sharing. If you wish share your story with someone or something. All that matters is you have a story.

You’re invited: “Come for the stories - stay for the magic!” Speaking of magic, I hope you’ll subscribe, share a nice shout out on your social media or podcast channel of choice, (including Android, Amazon Music, Audible & Pandora Radio) and join us next time! Remember to stop by the Quarter Moon Story Arts website, check out the Services I offer, arrange a Discovery Call, and Opt In to stay current with Diane and Quarter Moon Story Arts as well as on LinkedIn and Substack as Wyzga on Words

Stories From Women Who Walk Production Team

Podcaster: Diane F Wyzga & Quarter Moon Story Arts

Music: Mer’s Waltz from Crossing the Waters by Steve Schuch & Night Heron Music

All content and image © 2019 to Present: for credit & attribution Quarter Moon Story Arts

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