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Archive for January 20, 2015

Newsletter Art & Hope – Editor’s Introduction Newsletter #33

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Interviews with Social Artists, Uncommon Heroes

January 20, 2015

From the Editor

richard.jpgRichard Whittaker

“Everything that needs to be said has already been said. But since no one was listening, everything must be said again.” Designer/photographer Jerry Takigawa quote Andre Gide at the beginning of his small book Grace in Uncertainty. Please read on… [more]

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Grace In Uncertainty – A Conversation with Jerry Takigawa

Grace In Uncertainty - A Conversation with Jerry TakigawaThe creative process often includes learning about ourselves and how we stand in our own way. So how do you find your authentic voice in art making? Jerry Takigawa points out that the next step is pretty clear. You actually want to evolve…

Charting the Labyrinth – A Conversation with Archana Horsting

Charting the Labyrinth - A Conversation with Archana Horsting“I had to go away to discover what was authentically mine. I’d read Dante who talked about the myth of the labyrinth in Crete. I started asking myself, how am I going to put all these art courses, philosophy courses, literature courses together. All those things combined in my mind in this one symbol, the labyrinth.”

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Firsts Are The Antidote To Stuck

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January 20, 2015

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Firsts Are The Antidote To Stuck

Even the smallest changes in our daily routine can create incredible ripple effects that expand our vision of what is possible.

– Charles F. Glassman –

Firsts Are The Antidote To Stuck

Sometimes in life we find ourselves stuck. We live our lives by to-do lists or get caught up in making the ‘right’ decision and neglect our other interests and passions that help to define who we are. To rediscover happiness and our sense of self, we must be open and willing to change and to take the first step towards getting ‘unstuck.’ Read further for an inspirational story of one woman’s journey to do just that. { read more }

Be The Change

What is holding you back from being the person that you want to be or doing the things that you love? Identify a solution to the problem you identify.

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Awakin Weekly: Working With Soil, Attending To Soul

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Working With Soil, Attending To Soul
by Gunilla Norris

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1033.jpgA garden tends to get inside us. If we go there to accomplish something or to get something, the garden soon becomes a burden. With expectations that it must look good or that it has to produce no matter what, we will soon grow tired. The garden is really a place in which we can give ourselves away. This is true of any serious contemplation, too. We are transformed by it. We are reduced and revealed by it. In it we may experience a lived sense of our connection to the earth, to our inner freedom, and to the Sacred, the ground of our existence.

"For me gardening is a process that invites me to be fully engaged. It is also a constant exercise in letting go since so much happens that is not in my control. Strangely this duality seems to cultivate a joy that embraces impermanence and finds refuge in the invisible.
"Gardening brings food and flowers to the table and sustenance to the soul. I am not talking about having a perfect garden. Ours certainly isn’t! Weeds are as happy here as are flowers. Bushes get bushier and need trimming. What may start out as an elegant garden plan becomes more haphazard over time. With the years our garden has turned out to be a bit of this and that and always too big to really tend properly.

"From the start this is not the garden I designed. Someone else did, and before that there was a yard of sorts. Coming here to live I have inherited what already was, just as I inherited my parents, my siblings, and my particular time in history. We work with what we are given. That’s the real garden. I can’t claim anything here. I can only ‘be’ in the garden, tend it, and further it. Isn’t that what we all do, what life asks us to do? […]

"In my garden while I am digging I am also tilling inner soil. My garden is a place of commitment and of neglect, of arrogance and humility. It is a place of taking stock and of deep silence — a place of contemplation. And so for me over time it has become a place of grace.

"I experience as the particular human being I am. I have no choice about that, but I trust that I am more like other people than not, and that what I find working the soil might also be what others find working theirs. I want to trust that with reverence for the place and awareness of my foibles, I can grow to be more present and a better steward of my small corner of the earth.

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Working With Soil, Attending To Soul
What do you understand by the garden being a place of commitment and neglect, of arrogance and humility? Can you share a personal story of a time when you felt aware of your gardener role? What spaces serve as your garden where you till your inner soil?
navin sata wrote: tilling inner soils=daily introspection day to day life ,just like garden water is must,same way in our spiritual garden introspection and silence are must.in my backyard is my small sanctuary rose g…
Abhishek wrote: Extending this beautiful metaphor, the edge for me is in dealing with weeds and with the trimming of bushes….who am I to decide what is weed and what is not? Who am I to decide when does a bush nee…
david doane wrote: In Care of the Soul, Thomas Moore refers to the soul as a garden and we are the gardeners. The soul is our real self, our essence, our sacred being that is a piece of Sacred Being, and we can b…
Kristin Pedemonti wrote: A Garden just like Life goes through growth and dormancy. In life at times we may fully commit to a person, a job, a task, meditation, exercise, a certain place and then many of us enter an ebb…
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