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Healing from religion

Winter has a way of telling the truth. The hills go bare. The woods qui­et down. There’s less to hide behind. And once the noise fades, what­ev­er we’ve been car­ry­ing has a way of ris­ing to the sur­face — old ques­tions, old griefs, the places where faith once lived and then broke apart. Lately, in con­ver­sa­tions that hap­pen the way they always... 
Woman blowing on a dandelion seed head

Latest stories

An image representing the concept of hope. A human embracing the sunrise with outstretched arms.
Commentary

The Hope in Remembering

Wow. Things have been heavy, eh? The world is clear­ly on fire. People are clear­ly hurt­ing. It’s us. We’re peo­ple. Of course, writ­ing this from my view of an absolute­ly mono­chro­mat­ic world of grayscale out­side isn’t help­ing my mood or the abil­i­ty to digest what the above-aver­age amount of doom­scrolling I’m doing has giv­en me. Where’s the abil­i­ty to dis­so­ci­ate when you need it? Am I right? In all seri­ous­ness, though, I hope you’re hanging... 
Monochrome image of a child's and adult's hands clasped together symbolizing trust and connection.
Commentary

When the world forgets its humanity

Some days, the news doesn’t just inform, it set­tles into the bones. It arrives like a weath­er change you feel before you can name it. A pres­sure drop in the chest. A tight­en­ing behind the eyes. Something in the air that tells you harm is mov­ing in, whether we’re ready for it or not. What we are wit­ness­ing right now is not pol­i­cy writ­ten on paper. It is flesh and breath and fear made small by power.... 
Some of the signs that were brought to the vigil on January 31.
Commentary

Winchester holds candlelight vigil for victims of ICE

On a cold, icy Saturday night in late January, about 40 peo­ple gath­ered on the steps of the Clark County Courthouse to show sup­port for Renee Good, Alex Pretti, and oth­ers harmed by what many see as ICE’s over­reach. Adam Johnson, a Winchester employ­ment attor­ney, orga­nized the event, along with his wife. He spoke to the crowd at the start of the event. Ryan Bloyd-Wiseman, Priest in Charge of Emmanuel Episcopal Church, also offered remarks and... 
This Ogden Studio photograph shows A. D. Fisher at work on Daniel Boone in his shop. Though short and stout, Fisher’s Boone exhibits some fine detail with the exception of the long rifle (should be a foot longer) and the coonskin cap (Boone despised them).
History,  People

Clark County’s Other Sculptor: A.D. Fisher

One of Clark County’s most tal­ent­ed crafts­men was the sculp­tor Joel Tanner Hart (1810−1877), who won his renown cre­at­ing busts and stat­ues of Andrew Jackson, Henry Clay, Cassius Clay and oth­ers.  His most famous work, Woman Triumphant, stood in the Fayette County cour­t­house until destroyed by fire in 1897.  He moved to Florence, Italy (1846) and returned only for the unveil­ing of his Henry Clay stat­ue in front of the U.S. Capitol. 

Editorial picks

Joe Jackson at his desk in Hollywood.

Winchester’s Famous Joe Jackson

Have you ever asked, “Wonder why I haven’t heard of this guy before?”  That was my thought when learn­ing of the accom­plish­ments of Winchester native Joe Jackson.  He was a not­ed author, play­wright, Hollywood screen­writer and pub­li­cist, and Academy Award nom­i­nee.  Called one of filmdom’s great­est sce­nario and dia­logue writ­ers, “with a longer list of full-length talk­ing pic­tures to his cred­it than any oth­er writer.”  Locally it was said that Jackson was one of the most suc­cess­ful men ever to leave this city.  So what was his story? 

Regulate, THEN Rewire

In the last year, sev­er­al peo­ple in recov­ery I know have “fall­en off the wag­on.” I’ve seen a return of dis­or­dered eat­ing in lots of my yoga stu­dents. My class sizes have swelled and my pri­vate somat­ic ther­a­py ses­sions* are wait­list­ed. I’m hear­ing over and over how the things that once helped peo­ple heal no longer feel like enough. How their talk ther­a­py and med­i­ta­tion prac­tices are no longer pro­vid­ing the same amount of insight and relief. They are baf­fled as to why, despite doing “all the right things,” they still feel stuck, over­whelmed, and on edge. 

Podcasts

The Voices of Winchester Podcast is our audio pod­cast fea­tur­ing our voic­es, your voic­es, and all the voic­es of Winchester and Clark County. Check out some of our recent episodes!

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