What a night at #TheAlbies for The Man of the Hour. @drdenismukwege you are an astonishing human being. “Hero” isn’t a big enough word. #TheAlbies #clooneyfoundationforjustice #panzifoundation #lifetimeachievementaward
What a night at #TheAlbies for The Man of the Hour. @drdenismukwege you are an astonishing human being. “Hero” isn’t a big enough word. #TheAlbies #clooneyfoundationforjustice #panzifoundation #lifetimeachievementaward
What a night at #TheAlbies for The Man of the Hour. @drdenismukwege you are an astonishing human being. “Hero” isn’t a big enough word. #TheAlbies #clooneyfoundationforjustice #panzifoundation #lifetimeachievementaward
What a night at #TheAlbies for The Man of the Hour. @drdenismukwege you are an astonishing human being. “Hero” isn’t a big enough word. #TheAlbies #clooneyfoundationforjustice #panzifoundation #lifetimeachievementaward
Here bunny bunny…. #HappyEaster
I’ve got joy in my heart for this next year. #birthday
Thank you, thank you @thesarahhepolaexperience She sure loved you too. • I’m lucky to have a great mom, but I’ve borrowed many moms over the years, women who were role models, advice dispensaries, fashion inspiration, travel sages, providers of cookies/pizza and (when I was old enough) wine/margaritas and (when I stopped drinking) seltzer/tea, caregivers and conversationalists alike. This morning, a conversation with the dear @mpagotabeardlikeabillygoat got me thinking about Laura Derby, once Laura March, once Laura Irwin, mother to @marchstephanie and @laudorecharlotte, who are like cool sisters to me, even if distance and busy-ness keeps us from seeing each other much. Laura died in 2017, at 72, which was way too soon for those of us who knew her and loved her, which turns out to be the same thing. Laura was a force, with one of the all-time-great laughs. She was cute as a bug from the get-go & she lived an extraordinary life, some of which I only learned after she died, like how she lived in the Philippines back in the Seventies (#2). I knew her as glamorous, wise, worldly, and kind, a very Texas combo of sweet and soft at once. Her daughters Charlotte (#3, left) and Stephanie (right) are the same. When Laura got sick, I was lucky enough to spend a fair bit of time with her. I would go to her place once a week and read short stories about travel out loud. She would close her eyes and we’d go to Africa (Hemingway), the Old South (Flannery O’Connor), New York (Martha Gellhorn). Oh, we had a time. I took this picture of her bed (#5) when we gathered for her memorial, because I knew I’d want the memory. She died not long after Stephanie’s wedding (#6) to Dan Benton, and it’s pretty astonishing to look at that last photo and know she doesn’t have much time. Whatever was going on inside her, Laura was a champion of keeping it to herself. That quality isn’t celebrated so much in an era of TMI, but what I can tell you about her is that she taught me a lot about grace and beauty. I miss her today, and I know her daughters miss her always. I hope they don’t mind my sharing this story. I just like the idea of her memory and her beauty shining on.
Thank you, thank you @thesarahhepolaexperience She sure loved you too. • I’m lucky to have a great mom, but I’ve borrowed many moms over the years, women who were role models, advice dispensaries, fashion inspiration, travel sages, providers of cookies/pizza and (when I was old enough) wine/margaritas and (when I stopped drinking) seltzer/tea, caregivers and conversationalists alike. This morning, a conversation with the dear @mpagotabeardlikeabillygoat got me thinking about Laura Derby, once Laura March, once Laura Irwin, mother to @marchstephanie and @laudorecharlotte, who are like cool sisters to me, even if distance and busy-ness keeps us from seeing each other much. Laura died in 2017, at 72, which was way too soon for those of us who knew her and loved her, which turns out to be the same thing. Laura was a force, with one of the all-time-great laughs. She was cute as a bug from the get-go & she lived an extraordinary life, some of which I only learned after she died, like how she lived in the Philippines back in the Seventies (#2). I knew her as glamorous, wise, worldly, and kind, a very Texas combo of sweet and soft at once. Her daughters Charlotte (#3, left) and Stephanie (right) are the same. When Laura got sick, I was lucky enough to spend a fair bit of time with her. I would go to her place once a week and read short stories about travel out loud. She would close her eyes and we’d go to Africa (Hemingway), the Old South (Flannery O’Connor), New York (Martha Gellhorn). Oh, we had a time. I took this picture of her bed (#5) when we gathered for her memorial, because I knew I’d want the memory. She died not long after Stephanie’s wedding (#6) to Dan Benton, and it’s pretty astonishing to look at that last photo and know she doesn’t have much time. Whatever was going on inside her, Laura was a champion of keeping it to herself. That quality isn’t celebrated so much in an era of TMI, but what I can tell you about her is that she taught me a lot about grace and beauty. I miss her today, and I know her daughters miss her always. I hope they don’t mind my sharing this story. I just like the idea of her memory and her beauty shining on.
Thank you, thank you @thesarahhepolaexperience She sure loved you too. • I’m lucky to have a great mom, but I’ve borrowed many moms over the years, women who were role models, advice dispensaries, fashion inspiration, travel sages, providers of cookies/pizza and (when I was old enough) wine/margaritas and (when I stopped drinking) seltzer/tea, caregivers and conversationalists alike. This morning, a conversation with the dear @mpagotabeardlikeabillygoat got me thinking about Laura Derby, once Laura March, once Laura Irwin, mother to @marchstephanie and @laudorecharlotte, who are like cool sisters to me, even if distance and busy-ness keeps us from seeing each other much. Laura died in 2017, at 72, which was way too soon for those of us who knew her and loved her, which turns out to be the same thing. Laura was a force, with one of the all-time-great laughs. She was cute as a bug from the get-go & she lived an extraordinary life, some of which I only learned after she died, like how she lived in the Philippines back in the Seventies (#2). I knew her as glamorous, wise, worldly, and kind, a very Texas combo of sweet and soft at once. Her daughters Charlotte (#3, left) and Stephanie (right) are the same. When Laura got sick, I was lucky enough to spend a fair bit of time with her. I would go to her place once a week and read short stories about travel out loud. She would close her eyes and we’d go to Africa (Hemingway), the Old South (Flannery O’Connor), New York (Martha Gellhorn). Oh, we had a time. I took this picture of her bed (#5) when we gathered for her memorial, because I knew I’d want the memory. She died not long after Stephanie’s wedding (#6) to Dan Benton, and it’s pretty astonishing to look at that last photo and know she doesn’t have much time. Whatever was going on inside her, Laura was a champion of keeping it to herself. That quality isn’t celebrated so much in an era of TMI, but what I can tell you about her is that she taught me a lot about grace and beauty. I miss her today, and I know her daughters miss her always. I hope they don’t mind my sharing this story. I just like the idea of her memory and her beauty shining on.
Thank you, thank you @thesarahhepolaexperience She sure loved you too. • I’m lucky to have a great mom, but I’ve borrowed many moms over the years, women who were role models, advice dispensaries, fashion inspiration, travel sages, providers of cookies/pizza and (when I was old enough) wine/margaritas and (when I stopped drinking) seltzer/tea, caregivers and conversationalists alike. This morning, a conversation with the dear @mpagotabeardlikeabillygoat got me thinking about Laura Derby, once Laura March, once Laura Irwin, mother to @marchstephanie and @laudorecharlotte, who are like cool sisters to me, even if distance and busy-ness keeps us from seeing each other much. Laura died in 2017, at 72, which was way too soon for those of us who knew her and loved her, which turns out to be the same thing. Laura was a force, with one of the all-time-great laughs. She was cute as a bug from the get-go & she lived an extraordinary life, some of which I only learned after she died, like how she lived in the Philippines back in the Seventies (#2). I knew her as glamorous, wise, worldly, and kind, a very Texas combo of sweet and soft at once. Her daughters Charlotte (#3, left) and Stephanie (right) are the same. When Laura got sick, I was lucky enough to spend a fair bit of time with her. I would go to her place once a week and read short stories about travel out loud. She would close her eyes and we’d go to Africa (Hemingway), the Old South (Flannery O’Connor), New York (Martha Gellhorn). Oh, we had a time. I took this picture of her bed (#5) when we gathered for her memorial, because I knew I’d want the memory. She died not long after Stephanie’s wedding (#6) to Dan Benton, and it’s pretty astonishing to look at that last photo and know she doesn’t have much time. Whatever was going on inside her, Laura was a champion of keeping it to herself. That quality isn’t celebrated so much in an era of TMI, but what I can tell you about her is that she taught me a lot about grace and beauty. I miss her today, and I know her daughters miss her always. I hope they don’t mind my sharing this story. I just like the idea of her memory and her beauty shining on.
Thank you, thank you @thesarahhepolaexperience She sure loved you too. • I’m lucky to have a great mom, but I’ve borrowed many moms over the years, women who were role models, advice dispensaries, fashion inspiration, travel sages, providers of cookies/pizza and (when I was old enough) wine/margaritas and (when I stopped drinking) seltzer/tea, caregivers and conversationalists alike. This morning, a conversation with the dear @mpagotabeardlikeabillygoat got me thinking about Laura Derby, once Laura March, once Laura Irwin, mother to @marchstephanie and @laudorecharlotte, who are like cool sisters to me, even if distance and busy-ness keeps us from seeing each other much. Laura died in 2017, at 72, which was way too soon for those of us who knew her and loved her, which turns out to be the same thing. Laura was a force, with one of the all-time-great laughs. She was cute as a bug from the get-go & she lived an extraordinary life, some of which I only learned after she died, like how she lived in the Philippines back in the Seventies (#2). I knew her as glamorous, wise, worldly, and kind, a very Texas combo of sweet and soft at once. Her daughters Charlotte (#3, left) and Stephanie (right) are the same. When Laura got sick, I was lucky enough to spend a fair bit of time with her. I would go to her place once a week and read short stories about travel out loud. She would close her eyes and we’d go to Africa (Hemingway), the Old South (Flannery O’Connor), New York (Martha Gellhorn). Oh, we had a time. I took this picture of her bed (#5) when we gathered for her memorial, because I knew I’d want the memory. She died not long after Stephanie’s wedding (#6) to Dan Benton, and it’s pretty astonishing to look at that last photo and know she doesn’t have much time. Whatever was going on inside her, Laura was a champion of keeping it to herself. That quality isn’t celebrated so much in an era of TMI, but what I can tell you about her is that she taught me a lot about grace and beauty. I miss her today, and I know her daughters miss her always. I hope they don’t mind my sharing this story. I just like the idea of her memory and her beauty shining on.
thank you, summer (and dahlias)
You are looking at the newest Board member of @panzifoundation I could not be more honored or more committed. I am humbled by the work of @drdenismukwege & his team, and I am going to fight this fight right alongside. #EndSexualViolence #EndRapeInWar #Panzi (link in bio) “We are very proud to announce that Ms. Stephanie March has joined Panzi’s US Office Board of Directors! Ms. March is a prominent philanthropist, activist, actress, and entrepreneur who brings to Panzi a deep understanding of the challenges women and girls face in accessing sexual and reproductive health services around the world, as well as her passion for social justice and equity.”
Fred Dr. Mukwege Me I went to the #DRC with @panzifoundation and it was extraordinary. 1. Dr. M & two of the proud #PANZI Board Members 2. Crazy Kinshasa 3. The Mighty Congo. 4. In #Bukavu on the shores of Lake Kivu 5. Visiting the hospital 6. the OR 7. The Ladies of Panzi with the Queen, Madame Mukwege 7. A moment I will not soon forget.
Fred Dr. Mukwege Me I went to the #DRC with @panzifoundation and it was extraordinary. 1. Dr. M & two of the proud #PANZI Board Members 2. Crazy Kinshasa 3. The Mighty Congo. 4. In #Bukavu on the shores of Lake Kivu 5. Visiting the hospital 6. the OR 7. The Ladies of Panzi with the Queen, Madame Mukwege 7. A moment I will not soon forget.
Fred Dr. Mukwege Me I went to the #DRC with @panzifoundation and it was extraordinary. 1. Dr. M & two of the proud #PANZI Board Members 2. Crazy Kinshasa 3. The Mighty Congo. 4. In #Bukavu on the shores of Lake Kivu 5. Visiting the hospital 6. the OR 7. The Ladies of Panzi with the Queen, Madame Mukwege 7. A moment I will not soon forget.
Fred Dr. Mukwege Me I went to the #DRC with @panzifoundation and it was extraordinary. 1. Dr. M & two of the proud #PANZI Board Members 2. Crazy Kinshasa 3. The Mighty Congo. 4. In #Bukavu on the shores of Lake Kivu 5. Visiting the hospital 6. the OR 7. The Ladies of Panzi with the Queen, Madame Mukwege 7. A moment I will not soon forget.
Fred Dr. Mukwege Me I went to the #DRC with @panzifoundation and it was extraordinary. 1. Dr. M & two of the proud #PANZI Board Members 2. Crazy Kinshasa 3. The Mighty Congo. 4. In #Bukavu on the shores of Lake Kivu 5. Visiting the hospital 6. the OR 7. The Ladies of Panzi with the Queen, Madame Mukwege 7. A moment I will not soon forget.
Fred Dr. Mukwege Me I went to the #DRC with @panzifoundation and it was extraordinary. 1. Dr. M & two of the proud #PANZI Board Members 2. Crazy Kinshasa 3. The Mighty Congo. 4. In #Bukavu on the shores of Lake Kivu 5. Visiting the hospital 6. the OR 7. The Ladies of Panzi with the Queen, Madame Mukwege 7. A moment I will not soon forget.
Fred Dr. Mukwege Me I went to the #DRC with @panzifoundation and it was extraordinary. 1. Dr. M & two of the proud #PANZI Board Members 2. Crazy Kinshasa 3. The Mighty Congo. 4. In #Bukavu on the shores of Lake Kivu 5. Visiting the hospital 6. the OR 7. The Ladies of Panzi with the Queen, Madame Mukwege 7. A moment I will not soon forget.
Fred Dr. Mukwege Me I went to the #DRC with @panzifoundation and it was extraordinary. 1. Dr. M & two of the proud #PANZI Board Members 2. Crazy Kinshasa 3. The Mighty Congo. 4. In #Bukavu on the shores of Lake Kivu 5. Visiting the hospital 6. the OR 7. The Ladies of Panzi with the Queen, Madame Mukwege 7. A moment I will not soon forget.
Congratulations @latanyamapp on your sharp (and well-timed) new book. May we all be #EverydayFeminists
movie night for blonde people #TheGOTHAM #netflix #labiennaledivenezia
Right back at you, Será. Repost from @thesarahhepolaexperience • When your friend is in your former high school’s Hall of Fame display case, and she is a super-fox. @marchstephanie, you done good.