Monthly Archives: November 2021

Documentary “Strong Island”

I stumbled across this documentary two weeks ago, and finished watching it two weeks apart. It consists of very “intimate” interviews conducted with family members and close friends of this Black man who was killed, and no trial or prosecution taken place…

Strong Island | Full Feature | Netflix (FREE ON YOUTUBE)
Picture taken from blacklongisland.net

The documentary is directed by Yance Ford, the sister of the William Ford, the man who was shot. William was a teacher, and if he was still alive today, he’d be a correctional officer. At the time of shooting Yance identified herself as a queer but now, as I learnt, is a transgender man.

It is not just about a family grief and racial inequality, it is also an interrogation of the criminal justice system. This is not the first, this is definitely not going to be the last either. How many lives lost like that went under the carpet?

I think that [The Grand Jury] didn’t care, because my son was a young man of colour. I will always believe that. Always, until the day I die. – Barbara D. Ford

Very much reminded me of a patient that I worked with when I was working in the forensic hospital in north London. He is more than 1.9m tall, big, black. He only came to our medium security ward briefly, from one of the highest security hospital in the country, before he was sent back again, just because he was angry and shouted. He didn’t even do anything violent yet, like many of the other patients would do and would still not be “managed”. Being tall and big can be intimidating, that’s understandable, but how about being a person of colour? Why? I’m quite sure statistics show that there are more White serial killers than any other people of colour. Does this mean we are going to treat all the White people as serial killers…?

Anyway, do watch it if you have a chance, it’s not the kind of true-crime documentary with the most plots but it is likely to make you think…

Book: Tuesdays with Morrie (1997)

I’ve heard about this book and intended to read it for quite many years, till recently, I finished listening to it on the Libby app.

Tuesdays with Morrie, audiobook on the Libby app. Written and read by author Mitch Albom.

This is its 20 year anniversary edition, I guess for a book that’s still fairly popular 20 years after it was first published, I do not have to say too much about it?

If you haven’t read it, it’s about life lessons from the author’s professor, Morrie, who was dying from ALS (Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis, a progressive nervous system disease that affects nerve cells in the brain and spinal cord, causing loss of muscle control – from Wikipedia). I have to say these are many lessons that we probably are aware already but shall still re-learn, and always re-learn. I hope one day I’d come back to read it again. I’ve also recommended the book to a client I have who was diagnosed with a similar Muscular dystrophy disease that’s also fatal…

If you listen to the audiobook, there’s excerpts from the interviews with Morrie, you get to hear exactly from him. I also like audiobooks that are read by the author.