Tom Morley — known for his Global Tribe Retreats with co-founder Nina Nazar, held in travel destinations around the world — has pivoted to virtual yoga and meditation, with more than 200 live classes conducted in the past few months. Going back to 1999, when the news broke that the AIDS virus had been transmitted to humans from a subspecies of chimpanzee, Diamond Delvalle, a first grader from the Bronx, looked up at her mother and asked, ''So I have a monkey disease?'' Nina, a then 23-year-old senior at Hunter College, volunteered to become Diamond's big sister. Ms. Nazar was busy with her schoolwork and her job at the Sony Wonder Technology Lab, an interactive museum on Madison Avenue between 55th and 56th Streets. But she knew that youngsters with H.I.V. were desperate for company. When she first met Diamond, Ms. Nazar said, the young girl was extremely withdrawn. ''She didn't want to talk,'' she said. ''She ran away from me and hid....
Some time in the 80s I was visiting Venice. I came across a columbarium, stopping in front of a plaque of a girl named Angela Venezia who died in 1797. The plaque was decorated with the girl's portrait and a Venetian mask. I then saw what looked like the ghost of that girl by a canal. I seemingly was haunted by her, seeing her image and the mask in a restaurant, a postcard stand, an antique shop, and other places I visited. When the ghost of the girl appeared to me again, I followed it, but I was lured into a secluded courtyard where I found myself surrounded by a group of ghosts wearing carnival masks. Scared, I ran away only to come across the little girl again.