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Travelling lyrics.

Under my skin We run Under my skin

In the woods And forest deep Over seas and oceans by the blue Are you

In the sand The deserts far In the streams and rivers crystal clear You're here

Around the world I am travelling I am travelling Under your skin

In the snow And icey whites In the wind of islands in the sun We run

In the clouds And sorry sky Over hills and mountains sharp and high We fly

I'll keep on runnin' I'll keep on runnin' I'll keep on runnin' Runnin'

(I'll keep on runnin') Around the world (I'll keep on runnin') I am travelling (I'll keep on runnin')... Under your skin

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  • Track 3 on Never Say Never (feat. Caitlin)
  • 2 Fais Moi L'Amour

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Travelling - Single

January 1, 2003 3 Songs, 11 minutes ℗ 2003 Ramaekers Publishing NV

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Travelling

Travelling Lyrics

Belgian Dance Classix 3  by  Orion Too

Song   ·   3:18   ·   English

© 2010 CNR Music Belgium N.V.

Under my skin We run Under my skin In the woods And forest deep Over seas and oceans by the blue Are you In the sand The deserts far In the streams and rivers crystal clear You're here Around the world I am travelling I am travelling Under your skin Around the world I am travelling I am travelling Under your skin In the snow And icey whites In the wind of islands in the sun We run In the clouds And sorry sky Over hills and mountains sharp and high We fly I'll keep on runnin' I'll keep on runnin' I'll keep on runnin' Runnin' Under my skin We run Under my skin Around the world I am travelling I am travelling Under your skin (I'll keep on runnin') Around the world (I'll keep on runnin') I am travelling (I'll keep on runnin')... Under your skin

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  • Belgian Dance Classix (3) Album
  • Travelling (feat. Caitlin) - Radio Edit Lyrics

Orion Too - Travelling (feat. Caitlin) - Radio Edit Lyrics

Artist: Orion Too

Album: Belgian Dance Classix (3)

orion too travelling

Under my skin We run Under my skin In the woods And forest deep Over seas and oceans by the blue Are you In the sand The deserts far In the streams and rivers crystal clear You're here Around the world I am travelling I am travelling Under your skin Around the world I am travelling I am travelling Under your skin In the snow And icey whites In the wind of islands in the sun We run In the clouds And sorry sky Over hills and mountains sharp and high We fly I'll keep on runnin' I'll keep on runnin' I'll keep on runnin' Runnin' Under my skin We run Under my skin Around the world I am travelling I am travelling Under your skin (I'll keep on runnin') Around the world (I'll keep on runnin') I am travelling (I'll keep on runnin')... Under your skin

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Despite a fortified border, migrants will keep coming, analysts agree. Here's why.

Headshot of Sergio Martinez-Beltran

Sergio Martínez-Beltrán

orion too travelling

Border Patrol picks up a group of people seeking asylum from an aid camp near Sasabe, Arizona, on Wednesday, March 13, 2024. Justin Hamel/Bloomberg via Getty Images hide caption

Border Patrol picks up a group of people seeking asylum from an aid camp near Sasabe, Arizona, on Wednesday, March 13, 2024.

The U.S. southern border is as fortified as ever and Texas is carrying out its own enforcement to stop people from crossing illegally, yet observers and analysts agree on this: migrants not only will continue to come, but their numbers will likely increase in the coming months.

The expected surge can be attributed not only to seasonal migration patterns, but an increase of people displaced by war, poverty, and climate factors in all continents.

And why do these analysts say this?

They keep a close eye on the Darién Gap in Panama and the borders between Central American countries, two key points to gauge the number of people venturing up north.

"In most countries (outward) migration has increased ... particularly in Venezuela, and that's not really reflected yet in the U.S. numbers," said Adam Isacson, an analyst of border and migration patterns at the Washington Office on Latin America, a nonpartisan research and advocacy organization based in Washington D.C.

Despite Mexico's cracking down on migrants, Isacson said people are still making their way up north, even if they need to pause for months at different points during their journey.

"There must be a huge number of people from Venezuela bottled up in Mexico right now," he said.

The Darién Gap serves as a good barometer for migration flows.

This 100-mile-long tropical jungle between Colombia and Panama has claimed the lives of hundreds of migrants, according to a report from the Migration Policy Institute, a Washington, D.C.-based think tank.

Yet the dangers at this jungle are not a deterrent, said Ariel Ruiz Soto, a senior policy analyst with this organization. The majority of people migrating are from Venezuela.

"The reason why I referred to Venezuelans in particular is because they represent a key challenge for removals from Mexico and from the United States to Venezuela," Ruiz Soto said.

Mexico and the U.S. had been flying Venezuelan migrants back to the South American country . However, earlier this year, Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro stopped accepting flights from the U.S. in response to economic sanctions imposed by the Biden administration.

Panama reported a 2% increase in crossings through the Darién Gap in February compared to the previous month.

orion too travelling

Aerial view showing migrants walking through the jungle near Bajo Chiquito village, the first border control of the Darien Province in Panama, on September 22, 2023. LUIS ACOSTA/AFP via Getty Images hide caption

Aerial view showing migrants walking through the jungle near Bajo Chiquito village, the first border control of the Darien Province in Panama, on September 22, 2023.

What the numbers show

Analysts are projecting the increase in the remaining months of the fiscal year, even though U.S. Customs and Border Protection reported a 2.2% decrease in encounters with migrants along the Southern border in March. An encounter is every time a migrant is picked up by immigration authorities.

These numbers are consistent with cyclical patterns of illegal crossings that dip in the winter months, followed by more migrants attempting to get to the U.S. as warm weather arrives, said Ruiz Soto.

In a statement, CBP Spokesperson Erin Waters said the agency remains vigilant to "continually shifting migration patterns" amid "historic global migration."

Waters said the agency has also been partnering with Mexico to curb the flow of people migrating to the U.S.

Mexico has commissioned its National Guard to patrol its borders with Guatemala and the U.S.

"CBP continues to work with our partners throughout the hemisphere, including the Government of Mexico, and around the world to disrupt the criminal networks who take advantage of and profit from vulnerable migrants," Waters said.

Where are migrants crossing the border?

For the last few months, more migrants are attempting to cross through Arizona instead of Texas, according to CBP.

In 2023, the El Paso and Del Rio sector in Texas saw more crossings than any other place across the 2,000-mile Southern border. But this year the Tucson sector in Arizona has seen a 167% increase in crossings, more than any other.

Tiffany Burrow, operations director at Val Verde Border Humanitarian Coalition, an assistance organization for newly border crossers in Del Rio, said she has seen the shift.

"It's empty," Burrow said, pointing to her organizations' office. "There are no migrants."

In March, she helped only three migrants after they were released by CBP pending their court date. In December, they helped 13,511 migrants.

Burrow said that's how migration works — it ebbs and flows.

"We have to be ready to adapt," Burrow said.

orion too travelling

Texas Department of Safety Troopers patrol on the Rio Grande along the U.S.-Mexico border. Eric Gay/AP hide caption

Texas Department of Safety Troopers patrol on the Rio Grande along the U.S.-Mexico border.

Texas' role

Burrow and other immigrant advocates are closely observing Texas' ramping up of border enforcement.

In 2021 Gov. Greg Abbott launched Operation Lone Star initiative and deployed the Texas National Guard. Last year the state started lining up razor wire in sections of the Rio Grande.

Texas is also asking the courts to be allowed to implement a law passed last year by the Republican-controlled legislature, known as SB4, which requires local and state police to arrest migrants they suspect are in the country illegally.

It might be too early to know if all these efforts will have an impact on migration patterns, analysts said, considering that Texas saw the highest number of illegal crossings last year.

But, Mike Banks, special advisor on border matters to Abbott, said the state's efforts are fruitful.

Texas has spent over $11 billion in this initiative.

"The vast majority of the United States' southern border is in Texas, and because of Texas' efforts to secure the border, more migrants are moving west to illegally cross the border into other states," said Mike Banks in a statement to NPR.

Ruiz Soto, from the Migrant Policy Institute, said the impact of Texas' policies on arrivals "is likely to be minimal over the long term."

Carla Angulo-Pasel, an assistant professor who specializes in border studies and international migration at the University of Texas at Rio Grande Valley, said that even with Texas' policies in place, migrants are likely to continue to cross.

"You can't claim, as much as I think Gov. Abbott wants to claim, that Operation Lone Star is going to somehow mean that you're going to see less numbers in Texas because that hasn't held true," Angulo-Pasel said. "We could also argue that things are going to progressively get more and more as the spring months progress."

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A Remote Island Draws Thousands of Turtles Each Year. Could It Attract Tourists?

Green sea turtles swim hundreds of miles to nest on a spectacular West African archipelago. Getting there is quite a journey for humans, too.

Baby turtles make their way across a sandy beach toward the ocean during the daytime. A small boat is visible in the waves.

By Ricci Shryock

Ricci Shryock is a writer and photographer based in Dakar, Senegal.

Each year, thousands of baby green sea turtles clamber across a beautiful, white-sand paradise that is one of the largest hatching sites of this species in the Atlantic, adorably making their way to the sea. There’s one noticeable absence: people.

The spectacular hatching events take place between August and December on Poilão Island, a tiny, uninhabited speck off the coast of Guinea-Bissau in West Africa. It is the southernmost island of the 88 that make up the Bijagós archipelago, a UNESCO biosphere reserve . Last year, turtles laid more than 44,000 nests on its 1.4 mile-long beach.

While the masses of turtles seem to have little trouble finding the spot to lay their eggs — some swim more than 600 miles across the North Atlantic — it’s hard to imagine somewhere more challenging for human turtle-lovers to reach.

The country’s tourism minister, Alberto Demba Touré, said that access is a main challenge. “We want to increase the tourists who go to the Bijagós,” he said. Last year, UNESCO declared its support for the Bijagós Islands to seek World Heritage List status , which, if successful, would increase its visibility and strengthen its environmental protections.

Turtle conservation programs have become a staple of resorts in many popular destinations, including in Hawaii, Mexico and throughout the Caribbean. Guinea-Bissau may like to capture a meager sliver of that pie, but it would be with steep challenges.

Politically fragile Guinea-Bissau has very little infrastructure and is one of the world’s poorest and least touristed nations. Most flights to Bissau, the country’s sleepy capital on the mainland, require a connection in Lisbon or Dakar, Senegal. Then, from Bissau, it’s a bumpy one-hour drive to the coast, and five to seven hours in a speedboat (depending on the route) to Poilão Island.

A limited number of tourists, usually no more than a dozen at a time, are allowed to visit the Poilão Island, which is part of the João Vieira and Poilão Marine National Park. The island is considered sacred by the archipelago’s residents and no construction is allowed on it.

A plane, to a truck, to a speedboat

Last fall I traveled to Poilão at the height of hatching season to witness the baby turtles make their way from nest to sea, and to see how the local workers monitor and ensure the survival of the tens of thousands of hatchlings each year.

I started in Bissau, a riverside city of half a million, after flying there from my home in Dakar. A few blocks from the presidential palace, people sat at plastic tables under mango trees, listening to music and eating grilled oysters plucked from the roots of the nearby mangroves. Women walked by selling cashew fruit, which has a sour, fermented aroma.

Visitors to Bissau might visit the war museum, in an 18th-century fort and an active military base, to see the mainly Soviet-sponsored weapons used by Bissau-Guinean fighters during the independence war against their Portuguese rulers that ended in 1974.

The next morning, another visitor and I climbed into a truck that took us to the coast. I had booked my Poilão trip with a hotel on one of the islands, Orango Parque Hotel, which arranged boat transport, park fees, meals, a guide and simple accommodations for three nights. The whole arrangement cost about $1,470.

We left the capital’s main paved avenue for potholed small lanes. An hour later, we reached the dock, near an abandoned hotel among the mangroves, where I climbed into a white speedboat.

For three hours, we sped through the open ocean, passing small, mostly uninhabited islands of the Bijagós. We occasionally passed fishermen — half a dozen men in brightly painted, long wooden boats — who waved as we buzzed by.

A stop to meet the priestesses

Eventually, we landed on a beach at the hotel on Orango Island, the largest in the archipelago, where we would spend two nights before continuing the journey. We were shown to our small round houses that contained a single comfortable room, and given a lunch of fresh fish and rice.

Eduardo da Silva, a boat captain and guide at the hotel who grew up on the island, said tourists can learn a lot from the way Bijagós residents interact with nature.

“On Orango, we have always been conservationists,” he said.

One day during my stay, Mr. Da Silva took me to meet the local priestesses . Orango is a matriarchal society; today the priestesses still make decisions about when certain harvests take place and what is allowed to happen on sacred grounds. I offered the women two unlabeled, neon-green bottles of cana, alcohol made from sugar cane, which I had bought for this purpose from a roadside stand when leaving Bissau. After a short ceremony with the cana, the priestesses spoke about how they base their community decisions on what will ensure a continued balance with the environment.

“Conservation can protect what is ours, so that we don’t lose it and so that our children who are born tomorrow can know it,” said Nene Ecane, one of the priestesses, in the Bijagós language via a translator.

Landing on Poilão

When it was time to leave Orango, another speedboat — smaller than the one the day before — drove us through clear waters for two hours. We spotted dolphins and Mr. Da Silva banged his hand on the side of the boat. The dolphins came closer and jumped alongside us.

While most of the speedboat journey from Bissau had been smooth, near Poilão the boat hit rougher waves. It was just before sunset when we landed. Occasional patches of volcanic black rocks, vital for green sea turtles, dotted the small beach.

As we unloaded the boat, a half-dozen workers from the João Vieira and Poilão Marine National Park greeted us, including Tumbulo Garcia Bamba, the park’s adjunct director.

“It’s good for tourists to come and learn and see how we work here for the turtles,” he said. He said he hopes that more attention to the turtles of Poilão will lead people outside of the region to respect the environment.

Mr. Bamba said he had noticed more trash washing up on the island’s shores; the Orango hotel scheduled a clean-up crew for the following week, which is not normally needed. Workers on the islands said many of the products seen among the trash — including bottled water and cosmetics — were not available in Guinea-Bissau and may have come from other parts of West Africa.

“The ocean knows no borders,” said Mr. Bamba.

A mad dash to the sea

Other than our individual tents, which were set up a few dozen feet from the beach, there were few other signs of human life. There is no cell reception.

But we were not alone. All along the beach lay thousands of buried turtle eggs. Every few steps there was another underground sea turtle hatchling family, the park workers told us. Many nests had markers, but not all. We walked gingerly.

The workers, many of whom are from the Bijagós Islands, not only count and monitor the hatchlings, but also help them make their way safely to the sea.

Even though the nests are just 20 or so feet from the ocean, the two-inch-long hatchlings are susceptible to many threats during their brief journey to the water — specifically birds, which wait in the nearby trees ready to snatch them.

We followed the workers throughout the early evening as they dug up nests — sometimes they were chest-deep in sand. They gathered dozens of just-hatched turtles into buckets and held them at the campsite until nightfall and high tide, when it was safer to release them.

A few hours later, in the darkness, the workers took the buckets of turtles back to the beach and let them go. All at once, a few hundred small hatchlings made their mad dash for the safety of the sea. Under the starlight, they used their small front flippers to quickly — and adorably — push their way through the sand to the water.

After the sea turtle release, we sat down for a fresh fish dinner, grilled over an open fire by the hotel staff. The park workers ate next to us, all of us using headlamps and flashlights in the dark.

A laptop, powered by solar panels, blasted a playlist of ’90s and early 2000s love ballads as our dinner soundtrack, giving the evening a surreal feel. It was just us, Usher, Whitney Houston, Mariah Carey and, beneath a few feet of sand, thousands of baby turtles waiting for their first swim through the waves.

Follow New York Times Travel on Instagram and sign up for our weekly Travel Dispatch newsletter to get expert tips on traveling smarter and inspiration for your next vacation. Dreaming up a future getaway or just armchair traveling? Check out our 52 Places to Go in 2024 .

Open Up Your World

Considering a trip, or just some armchair traveling here are some ideas..

52 Places:  Why do we travel? For food, culture, adventure, natural beauty? Our 2024 list has all those elements, and more .

Mumbai:  Spend 36 hours in this fast-changing Indian city  by exploring ancient caves, catching a concert in a former textile mill and feasting on mangoes.

Kyoto:  The Japanese city’s dry gardens offer spots for quiet contemplation  in an increasingly overtouristed destination.

Iceland:  The country markets itself as a destination to see the northern lights. But they can be elusive, as one writer recently found .

Texas:  Canoeing the Rio Grande near Big Bend National Park can be magical. But as the river dries, it’s getting harder to find where a boat will actually float .

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  4. Orion Too ft. Caitlin

    orion too travelling

  5. Orion Too feat. Caitlin

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    orion too travelling

COMMENTS

  1. Orion Too ft. Caitlin

    The official video in High Quality. I couldn't find any version on youtube that was in HD so I decided to put mine

  2. Orion Too feat. Caitlin

    Enjoy the official video of Travelling, a catchy dance song by Orion Too feat. Caitlin, with stunning visuals and lyrics.

  3. Orion Too feat. Caitlin

    [Artist: Orion Too feat. Caitlin ][Title: travelling (Extended Mix) ][More Infos: http://www.discogs.com/Orion-Too-Travelling/master/61438 ]

  4. Travelling lyrics

    Under my skin We run Under my skin. In the woods And forest deep Over seas and oceans by the blue Are you. In the sand The deserts far In the streams and rivers crystal clear You're here. Around the world I am travelling I am travelling Under your skin. Around the world I am travelling I am travelling Under your skin. In the snow And icey whites In the wind of islands in the sun We run

  5. Orion Too

    Orion Too - Travelling Video Clip

  6. Travelling

    Listen to Travelling on Spotify. Orion Too, Caitlin · Song · 2005. Orion Too, Caitlin · Song · 2005. Listen to Travelling on Spotify. Orion Too, Caitlin · Song · 2005. Sign up Log in. Home; Search; Your Library. Create your first playlist It's easy, we'll help you ...

  7. Orion Too Featuring Caitlin

    Orion Too feat. Caitlin - Travelling (Spanish Radio Mix) 3:10. Traveling (Radio Edit) 3:21. Orion Too - Travelling (Extended Mix) [HQ] 5:26. Explore the tracklist, credits, statistics, and more for Travelling by Orion Too Featuring Caitlin. Compare versions and buy on Discogs.

  8. Orion Too Feat. Caitlin

    I am travelling I am travelling Under your skin Around the world I am travelling I am travelling Under your skin In the snow And icey whites In the wind of islands in the sun We run In the clouds And sorry sky Over hills and mountains sharp and high We fly I'll keep on runnin' I'll keep on runnin' I'll keep on runnin' Runnin' Under my skin We ...

  9. ‎Travelling

    Travelling (Extended) Caitlin & Orion Too. 5:24. 3. Travelling (Spanish Radio Edit) Caitlin & Orion Too. 3:07. January 1, 2003 3 Songs, 11 minutes ℗ 2003 Ramaekers Publishing NV. Also available in the iTunes Store.

  10. Orion Too

    Orion Too - Travelling (Extended Mix) [HQ] 5:26; Orion Too Featuring Caitlin ‎- Travelling (Extended) (2003) 5:22; Lists Add to List. PARA VENDER - TO SELL by djcharliestyle;

  11. Orion Too Featuring Caitlin

    Orion Too - Travelling (Extended Mix) 5:25; Orion Too feat. Caitlin - Travelling (Spanish Radio Mix) 3:10; Traveling (Radio Edit) 3:21; Orion Too - Travelling (Extended Mix) [HQ] 5:26; Orion Too Featuring Caitlin ‎- Travelling (Extended) (2003) 5:22; Lists Add to List. Add to List ...

  12. Orion Too Featuring Caitlin

    PRODUCER Frank Lester William J. DeGryseGery Francois, Serge RamaekersMUSIC BY, LYRICS BY Frank Lester William J. DeGryseGery Francois, Laura Furia, Serge Ra...

  13. TRAVELLING

    Orion Too Feat. Caitlin - Travelling (Letra y canción para escuchar) - Under my skin / We run / Under my skin / In the woods / And forest deep / Over seas and oceans by the blue / Are you / In the sand / The deserts far / In

  14. Orion Too

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  15. Travelling Lyrics

    Listen to Travelling on the English music album Belgian Dance Classix 3 by Orion Too feat. Caitlin, only on JioSaavn. Play online or download to listen offline free - in HD audio, only on JioSaavn.

  16. Orion Too

    I am travelling I am travelling Under your skin Around the world I am travelling I am travelling Under your skin In the snow And icey whites In the wind of islands in the sun We run In the clouds And sorry sky Over hills and mountains sharp and high We fly I'll keep on runnin' I'll keep on runnin' I'll keep on runnin' Runnin' Under my skin We ...

  17. Key & BPM for Travelling Extended

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  18. Orion Too

    Orion Too - Travelling (Extended Mix) 5:25; Orion Too feat. Caitlin - Travelling (Spanish Radio Mix) 3:10; Traveling (Radio Edit) 3:21; Orion Too - Travelling (Extended Mix) [HQ] 5:26; Orion Too Featuring Caitlin ‎- Travelling (Extended) (2003) 5:22; Lists Add to List. Add to List. Contributors.

  19. Orion Too

    High Qualityhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SnK-CSlrfcI&fmt=18

  20. Could Trump Go to Prison? If He Does, the Secret Service Goes, Too

    Anthony Guglielmi, the spokesman for the Secret Service in Washington, declined in a statement to discuss specific "protective operations." But he said that federal law requires Secret Service ...

  21. Migrants will keep coming to the U.S., analysts agree. Here's why. : NPR

    It might be too early to know if all these efforts will have an impact on migration patterns, analysts said, considering that Texas saw the highest number of illegal crossings last year.

  22. Changes coming to fish barrier work zones on US 12 in Grays Harbor

    Real-time travel information is available on the WSDOT app and statewide travel map. Website feedback: Tell us how we're doing. ... lives are on the line. In 2023, speeding continued to be a top reason for work zone crashes. Even one life lost is too many. Fatal work zone crashes doubled in 2023 - Washington had 10 fatal work zone crashes on ...

  23. Orion Too feat. Caitlin

    Orion Too - Travelling (Extended Mix) 5:25; Orion Too feat. Caitlin - Travelling (Spanish Radio Mix) 3:10; Traveling (Radio Edit) 3:21; Orion Too - Travelling (Extended Mix) [HQ] 5:26; Orion Too Featuring Caitlin ‎- Travelling (Extended) (2003) 5:22; Lists Add to List. Add to List. Contributors.

  24. Orion Too

    Orion Too feat. Caitlin ‎- Travelling RemixesLabel: Mostiko Country: BelgiumReleased: 23 Apr 2003Genre: ElectronicStyle: TranceIF YOU ARE THE COPYRIGHT OWNER...

  25. Washington State Ferries to share options to replace the aging

    Public invited to community meetings and online open house. SEATTLE - Washington State Ferries needs to replace the aging Fauntleroy ferry terminal to maintain safe and reliable ferry service for the 3 million people who travel the "Triangle" route between West Seattle, Vashon Island and the Kitsap Peninsula each year.

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    Destructive tornadoes gutted homes as they plowed through Nebraska and Iowa, and the dangerous storm threat could escalate Saturday as tornado-spawning storms pose a risk from Michigan to Texas.

  27. Orion Too feat. Caitlin

    Artist: Orion Too feat. CaitlinTitle: TravellingYear: 2003

  28. Orion Too Discography

    Explore music from Orion Too. Shop for vinyl, CDs, and more from Orion Too on Discogs.

  29. A Major Sea Turtle Nesting Site, on Bijagos Islands, Is Worlds Away

    Green sea turtles swim hundreds of miles to nest on a spectacular West African archipelago. Getting there is quite a journey for humans, too. By Ricci Shryock Ricci Shryock is a writer and ...