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...
Latest stories
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...
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....
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...
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
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.

