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September 19, 2024 |
With the traditional ringing of the bell we bring this meeting to order!
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Visiting Rotarians may complete a makeup form at the end of this meeting; YOUR donation for making up with us helps fund our service projects!
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Our club offers the flexibility of ROTARY ON YOUR TIME!
and an opportunity to remain connected with Rotary!

Welcome to this week’s meeting of the eClub of the State of Jefferson.
Hello and Welcome to Rotary! Enjoy this week’s meeting.
First, I wanted to let everyone know that we had a really enlightening conversation with Tamim Ebrahimi (Rotary Peace Fellow), last Friday (September 13, 2024). If you are interested in viewing the recorded zoom link, please let me know and I will forward it to you directly. Respecting Tamim’s request, we are not publishing it to YouTube, and so I ask you not to share it.
To continue the theme of exploring areas of focus of Rotary, I want to share what Rotary International sees as seven Focuses https://www.rotary.org/en/our-causes:
- Promoting Peace
- Fighting Disease
- Providing Clean Water, Sanitation and Hygiene
- Saving Mothers and Children
- Supporting Education
- Growing Local Economies
- Protecting the Environment
Last week, we took a look at the Rotary Peace Fellowship program; this week I would like to talk about another Focus, Supporting Education. The Rotary eClub of the State of Jefferson does just this through a couple of different avenues.
With the help of VP-DeVere Wolsey, we have the privilege of interacting with children in Uganda! Since I have been in the club, we have created videos to share with the children about reading. We talked about books that we shared with our own children, our favorite books from when we were children and why reading is fun. In turn, the children in Uganda shared with us, a video of them having fun reading in a reading tent. The smiles on their faces were priceless.
Another project is purchasing a bookworm vending machine, INCHY 26310, that we are working on getting installed in the Imagination Station, partnering with Chinle Planting Hope in Navajo Nation in Chinle, Arizona. We were able to make this purchase by receiving a District grant.
I will leave you with this thought. This coming Sunday, September 22nd, is the first day of Autumn, a time for balance and harmony. 
I appreciate all of you and I am grateful for the ability to serve you all and I thank you for your commitment to Rotary.
Patti Eisler
2024-25 Club President
If you have any questions or comments, I am available. My e-mail address is: Patti Eisler
The Four-Way Test
The Four-Way Test is a nonpartisan and nonsectarian ethical guide for Rotarians to use for their personal and professional relationships.
The test has been translated into more than 100 languages, and Rotarians recite it at club meetings:
Of the things we think, say or do
- Is it the TRUTH?
- Is it FAIR to all concerned?
- Will it build GOODWILL and BETTER FRIENDSHIPS?
- Will it be BENEFICIAL to all concerned?
email president@StateOfJeffersonRotary.org

eClub Board Meeting
September 26th 8:00 AM (PST)
Installing solar panels in Chinle Arizona. The dates are September 26-29.
If you are interested in helping, please reach out to Jean Hamilton.
Peace building through Rotary
To mark the International Day of Peace, 21 September, districts can designate a district Rotary Peace Fellowship subcommittee chair for 2024-25 if that role is vacant. These leaders help recruit and mentor candidates from local communities to apply for Rotary Peace Fellowships.
Districts can become Global Peacebuilder Districts by contributing US$25,000 annually in District Designated Funds (DDF) or district cash to support the Rotary Peace Centers or the area of focus in peacebuilding and conflict prevention. Clubs and districts can encourage members to:
- Enroll in the Rotary Positive Peace Academy to take a free two-hour course on peacebuilding. This self-guided course is available in multiple languages.
- Follow the Rotary Peace Centers’ Facebook page to share updates about our peace centers and peace fellows’ work around the world.
Rotary members and participants can register to attend the 2025 Rotary Presidential Peace Conference in Istanbul, Türkiye, 20-22 February 2025.
Do you know a dedicated Rotarian with a passion for service and leadership? Someone who inspires others and embodies the Rotary spirit of “Service Above Self”?
We are now accepting nominations for the position of District Governor for the 2027-2028 Rotary year.
The role of District Governor is a unique opportunity to lead and inspire Rotarians across our district. Our district has a proud tradition of leaders who have made a lasting impact, both in our local communities and beyond. These leaders have demonstrated outstanding dedication, professional expertise, and a commitment to Rotary’s core values.
If you are a current or past club president, a committed Rotarian, and someone who believes in the power of Rotary leadership, we encourage you to consider stepping forward. Alternatively, if you know a fellow Rotarian who possesses the qualities of a great leader and can guide our district into the future, we invite you to nominate them.
This is your chance to “Step up to the Plate” and help shape the future of our district. By nominating yourself or another worthy candidate, you will contribute to the ongoing success and vibrancy of our Rotary community.
Please submit your nominations no later than October 25, 2024 to drgerryk@gmail.com
Let’s continue to build a legacy of strong, effective leadership in Rotary District 5110.
Let’s hear from you!
Weekly eClub "Coffee Chat" Zoom meetings
Tuesday at 12:00 PM PDT
I believe these “fellowship” meetings have been valuable. They are informal opportunities to get acquainted with our members. If it fits your schedule, I look forward to “seeing” you at the meetings.
September is Basic Education and Literacy Month
September is Basic Education and Literacy Month-
More than 775 million people over the age of 15 are illiterate. That’s 17 percent of the world’s adult population.
Our goal is to strengthen the capacity of communities to support basic education and literacy, reduce gender disparity in education, and increase adult literacy. We support education for all children and literacy for children and adults.
Developing our future generation of leaders

Delegates to the Seminar for Tomorrow’s Leaders organized by Rotary Districts 6890, 6950, and 6960. Yellow shirts are first-year students, red-shirts are attending a second year as group leaders.
By Ed Hallock, Rotary Club of Seminole Lake, President, S4TL Board of Directors
In the summer of 2021, as we were all coming out of the COVID-19 pandemic, I had just finished my third year as an assistant governor and one of my final acts was to retire my own Rotary club. The club was small, mighty in service, however it simply could not survive the pandemic as a small club.
I was at a low point personally in Rotary and seriously considered throwing in the towel myself after 28+ years. I had made a commitment and was serving on the board of directors for a joint Rotary Youth Leadership Awards (RYLA) project called Seminar for Tomorrow’s Leaders (S4TL) between my district and two neighboring ones, and I wasn’t quite ready to give up on it.
After having canceled the 2020 seminar due to COVID, we had just held a hybrid (two days virtual and two days in person) seminar for about 80 students in July. I knew the long-term viability of the program was in jeopardy if we couldn’t resurrect it. Before the pandemic, we had gathered 165 high school students transitioning from junior (11th grade) to senior (12th grade) year for leadership development training at Florida Southern College in Lakeland.
The phenomenal thing about S4TL is that it gets these young adults out of their comfort zones, gives them an opportunity to live campus life in college dormitories, eat meals in the college cafeteria, all while developing into leaders who are instilled with Rotary values. They go back and serve in their communities and schools.
People ask me why I give up 10 days of my life, sleep less than six hours each night in a dorm room bunk bed, and eat cafeteria food (it’s not good, but the students love it)? It’s to witness the development of these young people and know that our future generation is in good hands!
S4TL includes lectures, discussions, motivational talks, group activities, and interchanges of ideas and concepts to improve leadership abilities. World-renowned speakers are brought in to provide leadership development skills. Recreational and entertainment programs are also provided, and Rotary principles are injected into many aspects of the seminar.
Rotarians are invited to attend the program on Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday of each week to have lunch with the students and participate in “rap session” discussion groups. These sessions are lively, opinionated, and enlightening, covering a variety of thought-provoking and sometimes emotional topics. Rap sessions allow the students to express and defend their thoughts and opinions in a safe environment with both their peers and Rotarians. This is a highlight of the week for many, both young students and older Rotarians who return year after year to participate.
Rotarians are also involved in sponsoring and selecting students to attend the seminar. A Rotarian from the sponsoring club must provide transportation to and from the seminar for each student. What a difference Rotarians get to see from the shy, quiet, sometimes nervous student they deliver to the seminar to the outgoing, talkative, and engaged young adult they return home!
I used to be one of those Rotarians who transported students and attended rap sessions until I had the time and opportunity to have this deeper involvement … and I love it!
Now I get to witness “leadership in action” by participation in the actual operation of the S4TL program by students who attended the seminar in prior years. Young adults continue developing their leadership skills as they progress through the program from Yellow Shirt in their first year, to Red Shirt group leaders the second year, to White Shirt program leaders the third year, to Baby Blue Shirt special assistants to the seminar director in their fifth year, following a gap year off in year 4.
In 2022, we returned to the Florida Southern College campus after a two-year hiatus, with 115 students for their first seminar year. That class produced the Red Shirt group leaders for last year, and the White Shirt program leaders this year. I was brought to tears when I realized the growth of those 10 individuals, and how cohesive of a group they were working together, to run a seminar for 151 delegates this past 16-22 June. S4TL was back!
But it doesn’t end there. Many alumni return after a few years to serve as part of senior staff working behind the scenes to ensure the success of the seminar. These young adults continue attending S4TL because the program means so much to them, and in many cases is a life-changing experience. Their involvement ensures the long-term support and viability of the program. It is truly a win-win situation for all involved!
I am honored and proud to be part of this great program and witness the development of our young adults into Rotarians and leaders in their communities.
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Leave a Rotary Legacy, Join the Bequest Society
Over the years, you have generously supported the Rotary Foundation through gifts to the Annual Fund SHARE. This fund generates life-saving projects here at home and around the world. Thank you for your incredible generosity. But what if you could ensure the same measure of serving humanity into this century, beyond your lifetime? Well, you can.
When you give a future gift through a bequest to the Rotary Foundation Endowment, you can designate that the annual interest earned from your gift principle is directed to the Annual Fund SHARE, District 5110! This ensures a sustainable flow of funding for our District to continue District Grants and Global Grants in perpetuity.
Recently, interest payments from past generous Bequest Society Members have earned our District $35,000 to $37,000 in grant funds annually. Without these additional endowment earnings, some worthy projects would not be funded. These additional District Dedicated Funds (DDF) have helped fund a hospital in Uganda, a clean-water system for a school in Cozumel, and a literacy project in Botswana to name a few. It has also helped us fund local grant projects like weekend backpacks of food for hungry school kids, skate parks to promote healthy outdoor activities for youth, outdoor play areas at a relief nursery for needy preschoolers, and personal hygiene packs for Boys and Girls Clubs. But this year several service projects could not be funded because our District’s grant funds fell short.
A Rotary bequest to the Endowment Fund starts at a minimum of $10,000 and is usually funded by a member’s gift designation in a will or trust. The gift could also be funded by a retirement plan beneficiary designation, a life insurance beneficiary designation, or other financial strategies. We are here to help you navigate these incredibly valuable gifts to the Rotary Foundation Endowment. You may contact us at the phone numbers or emails listed below to discuss how you can become a Bequest Society Member in District 5110 or read more at Rotary Plan My Gift. https://rotary.planmygift.org/documents/r/rotary-international-foundation/pdf-legacy-commitment-form-printable.pdf
Any major gift of $10,000 or more will be recognized by RI Foundation Trustee, Greg Podd, at the November 2, 2024 Rotary Million Dollar Gala – Denim to Diamonds, in Eugene, Oregon. As a thank you, we will provide you with complimentary tickets for the dinner gala. We hope to see you as our guests! All Rotarians and their guests are welcome to help us celebrate at the gala for reaching our goal of raising $1 Million in gifts for The Rotary Foundation. Registration for the event opens September 9th on Dacdb in the District Calendar of events.
DRFCC Cindi O’Neil Governor Nelson Maler
Cindi O’Neil Nelson Maler
District Rotary Foundation Chair 2022-25 District 5110 Governor 2024-25
541-480-8848 541-761-5405
dgcindi5110@gmail.com dgnelson2425@gmail.com

Navajo Solar Lights installation trip
~ eClub Rotarian Jackie O.
The Navajo Solar Light Project has been an on-going partnership between the eClub of the State of Jefferson and the Rotary Club of Durango Daybreak.

Gathering at Chinle Planning Hope to get instructions to load up where we’re going and who we’re working with.
The Navajo Nation is comprised of about 27,000 square miles of land in NE Arizona, Southern Utah, and NW New Mexico and is home to about 180,000 members of the Navajo Tribal Council. Approximately 16,000 people currently live "off the grid" with no access to electricity, sewer or water supplies. Since gasoline for their generators is frequently too expensive for these remote, mostly elderly tribal members, the illuminated portion of their day largely ends with the setting sun. A solar lighting kit that utilizes a roof-mounted solar array to provide charging power to three lithium-iodide battery packs that, in turn, provides power to an LED array. The included wiring systems allow us to place the three lights in areas designated by the clients, while a fourth line provides power for charging cell phones.
The primary beneficiaries of the project are Navajo elders (over 60 years), and those for whom light is needed to maintain indigenous crafts that perpetuate the Navajo culture. Additionally, an installation contributes to the success of a young student with their studies, children who can now do their homework each evening.
eClub Rotarians Jean and Jackie assisted with the May 2024 installation. We we’re only able to do one installation because the other locations that were given us either did not have the owner at home, wasn’t answering their phone, and the last case scenario was that the person that requested the solar was not actually needing it.
(Photo Left-Robin handing Dan the panel)
A solar light installation can be difficult because of the different types of homes ranging from Hogan’s to shacks. At the installation Jean and Jackie assisted in, Dan tried to drill the hole through both walls of Leonard‘s house, but was unsuccessful, his drill bit was too short. Suddenly, Leonard went outside and retrieved to 2/12 inch long drill bits, he said he had never used him before. Dan was then successful in getting through both inside and outside walls. His wife Robin was outside trying to feed the solar panel wires into the house, but there was too much insulation and even with two different wires, she was unable to get the wires through.
Again, Leonard went out and brought back in a pair of surgical forceps, viola, mission completed. He had no idea what they were, or what they were used for but he found a new use for them outside of the medical field.
The groups were split up with folks only doing one day of installs to avoid too many on a team going to people's homes. A tour was available so that folks who want to do the tour, could do the tour one day and installs on the other! (Photo Below - Music! Jean & Leonard then find a good country music radio station. Look at the smiles on their faces!)

(Photo Below - Stringing the light lines. With Leonard's help, the crew places the light lines where he wanted them to be hung.) (Photo Right - Solar panel installed.)


Installations complete! From left to right, Jean Hamilton, Jackie Oakley, Robin Clark, Dan Clark, Leonard Chee, and Nancy Dosdall.
Nancy is an engineer who helped Joe Willams start this program eleven years ago. She rocks!

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What School Was Like in the 13 Colonies
Standards of education varied widely, and corporal punishment was the norm.
By: Dave Roos
A child’s education was anything but “standardized” during America’s colonial era, which spanned most of the 17th and 18th centuries. The modern institution of the public school—a free, tax-supported education for all children—didn’t get a foothold in America until the mid-19th century.
For children living in the 13 colonies, the availability of schools varied greatly by region—and race. The vast majority of colonial schools catered to children of European settlers who could afford to contribute a fee for their children's education. There were, however, a small number of schools, such as the Bray School in Williamsburg Virginia, that offered education to around 400 free and enslaved African American students between 1760 and 1774.
The quality of education offered during colonial times was highly variable—even young George Washington was taught by a schoolmaster who, according to an early biographer of the Founding Father, knew next to nothing.
For Puritans, Reading Was a Religious Duty
The Protestant Reformation was founded on the belief that the faithful could commune directly with God by reading the Bible. That’s why the English Puritans who founded the Massachusetts Bay Colony in the 1630s put a high priority on education.
“Literacy took on a religious element,” says Edward Janak, an educational historian and professor at the University of Toledo. “If you look at the New England colonies, the construction of schools outpaced all other types of buildings. That tells you the value they placed on reading.”
Massachusetts passed the first laws governing education in America. The “Massachusetts Compulsory Attendance Law,” passed in 1642, didn’t require children to go to school, but stated that all Massachusetts heads of household were responsible for the “education” of any children living under their roof (including the children of servants and apprentices), which meant instruction in “reading, religion and the laws,” says Janak.
At home, the youngest children often learned their letters from something called a “hornbook,” a thin wooden board held by a handle with a piece of paper fastened to it. On the paper was the alphabet, written in lowercase and capital letters, and the Lord’s Prayer. To protect it from sticky toddler fingers, the paper was covered in a translucent sheet of pressed and polished animal horn (this was centuries before lamination).
“A child would take a piece of velim, which is very thin paper, put it over the letters and they would trace,” says Janak, author of A Brief History of Schooling in the United States: From Pre-Colonial Times to the Present. “That’s how children learned to write.”
The first law related directly to schooling came in 1647, when Massachusetts passed the “Old Deluder Satan Act,” named for the opening line of the act (“It being one chief project of that old deluder, Satan, to keep men from the knowledge of the Scriptures…”). The law required every town with 50 households to provide a “petty school” (the equivalent of elementary school) and towns larger than 100 households to provide both a petty school and a “grammar school” (a “Latin grammar” or secondary school).
(Photo left By DanielPenfield - Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0, )
Inside a New England Schoolhouse
Every Massachusetts town held meetings and voted on how many schools to build (children weren’t expected to walk more than a mile or two to school), how much public funds to use, and how much the students would pay to attend.
“In the colonial era, all schools were ‘public’ in the sense that anyone who could afford it could go,” says Janek.
In Massachusetts towns, tuition at a petty school was 6 pence per week for reading and another 6 pence for arithmetic, according to Old-Time Schools and School Books, published by Clifton Johnson in 1904. In rural areas, produce from the family farm was accepted as payment (barley, wheat, “Indian corn” and peas). And during the winter, every student was required to supply a bundle of wood for the fire, or be fined 4 shillings.
New England petty schools were one-room schoolhouses filled with boys (and often girls) of varying ages. Children attended school when the circumstances allowed, says Janak. They might attend for five or six weeks and then take a month off to help on the farm or in the shop. Then they’d come back and pick up where they left off.
The petty schools taught reading, writing, spelling, grammar, and basic arithmetic, all infused with a healthy dose of religious and moral instruction. The most popular textbook was The New England Primer
(pronounced “primmer”), a pocket-sized volume with rough-hewn drawings and a rhyming alphabet of Puritan couplets: “In Adam’s fall, we sinned all.” “Heaven to find, the Bible mind.” Students would mostly memorize and recite passages, a type of rote learning popular at the time.
Goose quills and ink were the only writing implements available, and much of a schoolmaster’s time was spent preparing and repairing quills. The students had to supply their own ink, which was made by dissolving an ink powder in water or by boiling the bark of swamp maple.
The youngest children, ages five to seven, might go to a “dame school,” an informal school run by an older woman (often a widow) in the neighborhood who kept watch over the children in her home and taught them “the rudiments of knowledge,” wrote Johnson, in exchange for a “small amount of money.”
In New England, grammar schools were reserved for the wealthy (boys only) who needed to master Latin and some Greek for admission to Harvard College (founded in 1636) and the seminary.
Schools in the Middle Colonies and the South
Massachusetts Bay Colony was essentially a theocracy, and its fervent commitment to Bible literacy is what drove the government’s interest in compulsory schooling. Outside of New England, colonial governments let the burden of children’s education largely fall on families, churches and a few privately endowed schools for the poor.
In 1671, the governor of Virginia, William Berkeley, wrote that when it came to education, Virginians were following “the same course that is taken in England out of towns; every man according to his own ability in instructing his children.”
In the Middle colonies (New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Delaware), schools were mostly run by local churches. Janak says that there was an Enlightenment-era influence in the Middle colonies, so the curriculum leaned more philosophical and less theological. Most schools charged tuition, but there were also charity schools (free schools) for the working class and poor.
The Southern colonies presented a geographical challenge because the population was spread out on farms and plantations. The Southern economy was closely tied to England and Europe, so the wealthiest Southern planters either hired private tutors or sent their children overseas to study.
Some Southern communities pooled resources to hire a schoolmaster and build a “field school,” a school that literally sat in a fallow tobacco field for a season. When it came time to plant the field, they would “put the schoolhouse on log and roll it from one plantation to the other,” says Janak.
Colonial Teachers and Corporal Punishment
Qualified teachers were hard to find in the colonial era since there was no such thing as teacher education or professional training. “Teaching was very much a commercial endeavor,” says Janak. “Whoever hung up a shingle as a ‘schoolmaster’ got to do it.”
Outside of the “dame schools,” colonial-era schoolmasters were almost exclusively men. Some were itinerant teachers who traveled from town to town teaching a single subject area or specialty like arithmetic or penmanship. “Once they exhausted the local population, they’d leave and go to the next town,” says Janak.
In Virginia and the Southern colonies, debtors and petty criminals were sometimes “sold” into teaching as bondsman or indentured slaves. “Not infrequently they were coarse and degraded, and they did not always stay their time out,” wrote Johnson, who found an advertisement from the era: “Ran away: a servant man who followed the occupation of a Schoolmaster, much given to drinking and gambling.”
George Washington’s first teacher was a bondsman purchased by Washington’s father, a Virginia plantation owner. “He was a slow rusty man by the name of Hobby,” wrote Johnson. Hobby was also the church sexton, who swept out the building and dug an occasional grave.
Corporal punishment was acceptable and expected in colonial schools. In Puritan New England, beating students was divinely sanctioned. “The rod of correction is a rule of God necessary sometimes to be used on children,” read the rules of a Massachusetts school from 1645. “The schoolmaster shall have full power to punish all or any of his scholars, no matter who they are. No parent or other person living in the place shall go about to hinder the master in this.”
Across the colonies, the preferred tool for “correcting” misbehaving students was a long, flat-ended ruler called a ferule, although a stiff cane of rattan or even a medieval-looking cat-o-nine-tails “was not unknown,” wrote Johnson.
Janak says that some colonial schoolmasters got more creative. “Caging” meant that a disobedient student would be locked in a small cage suspended in front of the school, so the whole town would know they had misbehaved. “Cooping” was a worse fate. The errant pupil would be forced to lie on their back underneath a chicken coop for the day.
Even the old widows of the dame schools had their limits. “Most dames had great faith in a thimble tapped sharply on the delinquent’s cranium,” wrote Johnson. Other students would be forced to wear a dunce cap or be affixed with signs reading “Lying Ananias” or “Idle Boy.”
weekly@StateOfJeffersonRotary.org

3 Simple Tricks for Remembering Strong Passwords
You need to lock your password manager with one strong master password, and you must remember it yourself. Here's how to do it.
By Neil J. Rubenking
Back when you just had to remember your email password and maybe a couple of others, it wasn’t too hard. These days, though, you probably have dozens or even hundreds of secure sites that require a password. If you use an easy password like your birthday or your dog’s name, hackers can guess it in a trice. Even if you strain your brain to remember a painfully random password like Q,ga3{6n]9j0[4TJ1}[x, it’s no good if you use it on more than one site because a breach at one service could expose all your others. The only solution (and it’s a good one!) is to rely on a password manager. With the help of such a utility, creating and memorizing a different strong password for every website is a snap. We'll show you how.
Hard to Guess Can Mean Hard to Remember
Proper, full-scale password managers work on all your devices, be they desktops, laptops, smartphones, or tablets. They generate unguessable passwords like VjwF(wj]]SH1eeuw, remember them for you, and automatically use those saved passwords to log in to your secure sites.
There's one problem with this plan, however! Almost every password manager relies on a master password to lock up all those saved passwords. The master password must be uncrackable because anyone with access to it can unlock all your secure sites. But it also must be memorable, not like the gibberish from random password generators. If you forget the master password, nobody can help you. On the plus side, this also means a dishonest employee can't break into your password store, and the NSA can't force the company to turn over your data.
Let's assume you've done everything right, security-wise. You've installed an antivirus or security suite. A Virtual Private Network, or VPN, wraps your network traffic in protective encryption. And you've enlisted a password manager to deal with your plethora of passwords. You’re still stuck with remembering one insanely secure master password to lock down that password manager. Here are some tips on selecting a password that's both memorable and unguessable.
1. Make Poetic Passwords
Everybody has a favorite poem or song they'll never forget. It might be from Shakespeare, or BTS, or the Bonzo Dog Doo Dah Band. Whatever the stanza or verse, you can turn it into a password. Here's how.
Start by writing down the first letter of each syllable. Use capital letters for stressed syllables, and keep any punctuation. Let's try this line from Romeo and Juliet: "But soft, what light through yonder window breaks?" From that, you'd get bS,wLtYdWdB? You could add A2S2 for Act 2, Scene 2 if that's something you'll never forget. Or 1597 for the play's year of publication.
If the passage doesn't have a strong meter, you can just take the first letter of each word, using the existing punctuation and capitalization. Starting with the quote "Be yourself; everyone else is already taken. - Oscar Wilde", you could come up with By;eeiat.-OW. Adding a memorable number rounds out the password, perhaps 1854 (his birthdate) or 1900 (his death).
Your poetic password will be completely different from these examples, of course. You'll start with your own meaningful song or quotation and convert it to a unique password nobody else could guess.
2. Make Your Password a Passphrase
Password pundits always advise including all four types of characters: uppercase letters, lowercase letters, digits, and symbols. The reasoning is that by expanding the pool of characters, you vastly expand the time required to crack the password. But sheer length also serves to make cracking harder, and one way to achieve a long, memorable password is to use a passphrase.
Snarky, smart webcomic XKCD took aim at wacky password schemes that suggest starting with a common word, replacing some of the letters with similar-looking numbers, and tacking on a few extra characters. That can leave you wondering. Was it Tr0ub4dor&3, or Tr0ub4dor3&? Or maybe Tr0m30ne&3? A passphrase like correct horse battery staple is significantly more difficult to crack, due to its length, but also much easier to remember.
Not all password managers permit spaces in the master password. No problem! Just pick a character like the hyphen or equals sign to separate the words. Pro tip—don’t use a character that requires pressing the shift key. Pick words that don't naturally go together, then invent a mnemonic story or image to link them. What would you picture for "iceland-wired-red-totally?"
If you have trouble coming up with unrelated words for your passphrase, there are many online passphrase generators, including the aptly named CorrectHorseBatteryStaple.net. You may quite reasonably worry about using a passphrase generated by someone else's algorithm. In that case, you could generate multiple passphrases and clip out a word from each.
3. Make Longer Passwords
Long-time PC maven Steve Gibson suggests the secret to long, strong passwords is padding. If an attacker can't crack your password using a dictionary attack or other simple means, the only recourse is a brute-force scan of all possible passwords. Every added character makes that attack massively more difficult.
Gibson's website offers a Search Space Calculator that analyzes any password you enter based on the character types used and the length. The calculator estimates how long a brute-force attack would take to crack a given password. It's not a password strength meter but rather a cracking-time meter, and it's instructive to see how the cracking time goes up when you lengthen the password.
I don't try to watch people enter their passwords, but I've noticed quite a few that, based on hand motions, appear to end in three exclamation points. That's not the padding I'd suggest. First, it requires the shift key. Second, it's too predictable. I wouldn't be surprised if password-cracking toolkits already included "!!!" in their dictionaries.
Instead, pick two close-at-hand keys and alternate, adding something like vcvcvcvc. Or choose three characters, like lkjlkjlkjlkj. Gibson's calculator says it would take over 45 years for a "massive cracking array" to crack bS,wLtYdWdB? (the Romeo and Juliet password from my earlier example). Adding vcvcvcvc raises that to more than a quadrillion centuries.
Long, Strong, and Memorable
Once you've invested in a password manager and converted all your logins to use strong, unique passwords, the only password you’re still stuck with remembering is the one that opens the password manager itself. That master password unlocks everything else, so you really need to spend some time coming up with a master you can remember easily but that would be impossible for someone else to guess or crack.
Work up a password based on a poem, song, or famous quote. Or create a passphrase, linking unrelated words with a memorable image or story. Then, add some easy-to-type padding. You'll wind up with a master password that's both memorable and uncrackable.
For more password tips, read How to Create a Strong Password Generator.

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