Sunday, December 4, 2022

Christmas 2022

 Greetings and Merry Christmas!

Our year started with a warm winter in Florida.  This year Cathy's cousin Debbie joined us and was a great roommate.  We played plenty of pickleball, swam, biked, had some nice visits with Bill Blaney and the Earlys and had some great meals.  


Before we left Florida, my cousin Bill Early gifted me one of his greatest treasures, his recumbent bike.  I have to admit it took some getting used to, but I spent the summer learning and enjoying it.  Thanks Bill!



While we were in Florida, Erin took a big step that she had been considering for many months.  In February, she adopted Buddy, a 2 year old rescue dog from Tennessee.  Her life will never be the same and Buddy has become a beloved addition to our family.   


In June we were proud to be with Kathleen as she accepted an alumni award from Marquette University for her leadership in public health during the COVID pandemic.  Kathleen accrued nearly a year of comp time working during NYC's COVID response and has been spending time with us in Wisconsin and doing some traveling.  


The summer was spent at the cottage in Fish Creek.  It's always a treat to visit with family and friends and now Mike and Mary are only a few miles away and Jon and Mary Jo are in nearby in Egg Harbor.


In September we were saddened when our 95 year old neighbor passed away.  Lorraine was a strong, independent, liberal, well educated, well read, interesting woman who frequently joined us for holidays and birthday celebrations.  She will forever serve as a role model for all of us.  



Spearheaded and wonderfully planned by Kathleen, the four of us headed to Europe in November.  Our first stop was in Paris, followed by several days in Bruges, Belgium.  After all of us fell in love with Bruges, Erin headed back to Green Bay and back to work. Cathy, Kathleen and I continued to Brussels, Amsterdam, London and had a wonderful time.  We kept a blog while we traveled.  It can seen at 
The blog is in reverse order.  It begins with our arrival home.



Merry Christmas and as always, we'd love to hear from you.
Ken and Cathy

Friday, June 3, 2022

Alumni Speech

              Alumni Speech


I can’t tell you how much it means to me to be here with you all this morning, in a place that was foundational to who I was as a student over a decade ago, as well as the person and the nurse I am today (and I’m not just saying that because it’s flattering to still be considered young). To be back here this morning, having lived what feels like a lot of life in those years in between, is incredibly humbling. I am truly grateful to you all, to Marquette, and specifically the College of Nursing for his honor. 

As touched and appreciative of this award as I am, I have to confess that it there is something deeply uncomfortable about being celebrated for your role in one of the hardest things you’ve ever had to live through. I suspect that this feeling is not unique to me, and perhaps is something many of you in this room have grappled with the last couple of years. Nursing has always had an important role to play at the forefront of a crisis, but I would argue that never has there been a time and place where, globally, nurses were needed to serve in such specific ways at such a specific time as has been asked of us during the COVID pandemic. 

As a student at Marquette, I learned the importance of cura personalis, care for the whole person. This tenet has always been central to the profession of nursing, and one of the things I love most about my job in public health is that I get to be a nurse who cares for the whole community. In New York, that community just happens to be 8.5 million people. When that community was brought to its knees in spring of 2020, it was nurses who brought it back to life. I am always proud to be a nurse, but those moments of paralyzing unknowns, those nights of unrelenting sirens, followed but months of unbearable silences, forged in me a renewed sense of what it means to carry those credentials with pride.

To you all, who woke up each morning over the last two and a half years and put on your scrubs, or logged into Zoom, or like me, worked with your local government to develop an infrastructure for response and recovery, I extend my heartfelt gratitude. I am also profoundly grateful to have this opportunity to thank my family, who is here with me today, for answering the phone at 3 AM as I commuted home on empty streets, who let me cry as friends got sick co-workers and passed away, and who even drove 1000 miles to pick me up and take me home at a time I was tired in my bones. Thank you for your love, support and for always leading by example.

It was at Marquette that I first heard a prayer by Fr. Pedro Arrupe that says, “Grant me the ability to see things now with new eyes.” Marquette provided me with a lens through which to view the world around me and my place in it. While I do not and cannot see the world around me the way I did as an idealistic 22-year-old, Marquette gave me the tools I needed to take all that I’ve seen, and felt, and learned during these challenging times and let that inform my vision moving forward. I believe deeply that it is our responsibility as nurses to carry these lessons with us as we continue to care for the whole person, and for whole communities. Nurses were here before COVID started and are still standing long after the 7 PM clapping has ended. It is a true privilege to be one of you. Thank you!