Plus, why sleep controls us; the archaeological Jesus; butterfly heaven. Also, why are seasons out of sync?
A MERMAID'S PURSE
A MERMAID'S PURSE
NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC
WHY WAIT TO
TRY SOMETHING NEW?
Saturday, March 18, 2023
In today’s newsletter, we learn about joy at one of America’s biggest retirement communities, watch baby sharks be released into
the wild ... and venture to Bali to learn about its sacred masks.
The Sun City Poms, a cheerleading squad at the Arizona retirement community PHOTOGRAPHS BY KENDRICK BRINSON
Kendrick Brinson watercolors now. The photographer and self-described perfectionist probably wouldn’t if she hadn’t spent part of
the last few years among residents of one of America’s largest retirement communities.
From the synchronized swim teams, the proms, and the cheerleaders (above), she learned that life isn’t always about perfection.
It’s OK to try something if it’s fun, even if you’re not great at it, she tells Nat Geo. And do it before your later years, too.
See her images from Sun City below, and read how positive thinking may help us live longer.
Please consider getting our digital report and magazine .
Jean Woods
Purple reign: Jean Woods, 77, poses for a portrait at the 2020 Sun City Senior Prom. When she moved to Sun City, she began calling
herself Purple because she loves the color. Last year she had her house painted lavender.
Members of Sun City
I love a parade: Members of the Sun City Players Community Theater (foreground) and the Tip Top Dance Club (rear), before joining
a parade in March 2010 to mark the community’s 50th anniversary.
Swimmers from the Aqua Suns synchronized team
Shining star: Swimmers from the Aqua Suns synchronized team form a star shape while rehearsing for a 2013 holiday show. Sun City
has around 120 chartered clubs, including groups dedicated to square dancing, ukulele playing, fitness, woodworking, and yoga.
Members of the Sun City Aqua Suns
Courting rituals: At a Halloween party in 2017, John and Carla Dykema dress as Bobby Riggs and Billie Jean King to honor the 1973
Battle of the Sexes tennis match. As the drumbeat of mortality grows louder, these activities accentuate the positive. Read more.
STORIES WE'RE FOLLOWING
Two ecologists in a meadow PHOTOGRAPH BY ELLIOT ROSS
Seasons are out of sync, affecting animals everywhere—including humans (above, two ecologists track pollinators)
What we know about the real Jesus
Sleep controls everything—from our sexual desires to our moods
A positive outlook on life leads to longevity
Lower (or heighten) your risk of disease with these foods
A Viking ship under a potato field?
Here's the real story behind 'Cocaine Bear'
Mass release of baby sharks is a bid to save species (more below)
IN THE SPOTLIGHT
A zebra shark in its egg case PHOTOGRAPH BY DAVID DOUBILET AND JENNIFER HAYES
What's inside a mermaid's purse? There's a joke there somewhere, but until we find it, a mermaid's purse is the name for a zebra
shark's egg. And above, shark caretaker Kyra Wicaksono uses a light to illuminate an embryo inside its egg case. It’s part of a
massive new species-saving attempt to release hundreds of baby sharks back into the wild. Will these sharks make it? Find out what
we know.
READ MORE
PHOTO OF THE DAY
Monarch butterflies flying VIDEO BY @JAIMEROJO
All together now: The sun is shining, the days are warming, and just like us, the monarch butterflies—an endangered species—are
happy about it. On the warmest of days in Michoacán (pictured), thousands of butterflies use a flight behavior known as
“streaming” to fly together and drink water from downhill streams, says photographer and Nat Geo Explorer Jaime Rojo.
FLY AWAY
LAST GLIMPSE
A mask of the character Patih Manis PHOTOGRAPH BY FRANCESCO LASTRUCCI
Become one: Putting on a tapel is more than wearing a mask: "You must ‘marry’ that mask and make ritual offerings to create unity
between yourself and the tapel," Nat Geo reports.
Bali's earliest record of mask dances dates back to A.D. 896. Above, the character of Patih Manis was carved from lightweight pule
wood.
SACRED MASKS
Today’s soundtrack: Butterflies, Kacey Musgraves
This newsletter has been curated and edited by David Beard, Hannah Farrow, and Jen Tse. Amanda Williams-Bryant, Alisher Egamov,
Rita Spinks, and Jeremy Brandt-Vorel also contributed this week. Special thanks this week to Women Photograph and to its first
book. Thanks for reading!
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