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Archive for April, 2023

A Whetstone to the Spirit: An Interview with Barbara Kingsolver

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April 30, 2023

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A Whetstone to the Spirit: An Interview with Barbara Kingsolver

Small change, small wonders – these are the currency of my endurance and ultimately of my life.

– Barbara Kingsolver –

A Whetstone to the Spirit: An Interview with Barbara Kingsolver

“I’m reluctant to give advice to people Ive never met. Every relationship is unique. I can only say whats worked for me as a parent, and to boil it down to its essence, its this: I trust my animal instincts. Regardless of our myriad plans, were hardwired for reproduction. Pregnancy is the most natural of processes, not a medical condition, and parenting follows from there. All this hard work is baked into us to give ourselves over completely to that small being. To nurture, support, and hope fiercely for the best. Culture and conditioning have taught us other priorities, and obviously Im glad humans have projects beyond parenting. I’ll fight for a woman’s right to choose not to be a mother. But once we’re on that road, it’s helpful to listen to the long chain of DNA that got us here: you’re an animal. Get the brood outside. Model the behavior you want, but let them play. Make things together. Let them try hard tasks, even if they fail. Confidence comes at the end of the rocky path, not the paved one. Remember your job is to become obsolete. Success isn’t keeping them in the nest, but teaching them to fly away.” Barbara Kingsolver shares more on mothering, farming, ecology, and life in this interview. { read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration, check out, “Hope: An Owner’s Manual,” by Kingsolver. { more }

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Rustling Roots: Engaging Ecological Education

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April 29, 2023

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Rustling Roots: Engaging Ecological Education

And forget not that the earth delights to feel your bare feet and the winds long to play with your hair.

– Kahlil Gibran –

Rustling Roots: Engaging Ecological Education

Is there a place in today’s society where you can live in harmony with the Earth? How far would you have to travel to find it? Rustling Roots lies hidden inside Louisa County, VA, close to Charlottesville, Richmond, and Washington, DC and within 500 miles of half of the US population. There you can find a community striving to live in peace with the world around them. { read more }

Be The Change

Here are some ideas for city-dwellers looking for ways to live more in harmony with nature. { more }

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Barbara McAfee: Voice as Vocation

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April 28, 2023

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Barbara McAfee: Voice as Vocation

The voice is a wild thing. It can’t be bred in captivity.

– Willa Cather –

Barbara McAfee: Voice as Vocation

A master voice coach, author, and singer/songwriter, Barbara McAfee has worked 25+ years midwiving voices across thresholds. Whether it is an individual seeking to express deep truth, or a group looking to embrace its power, she guides them on an intimate journey to find their unique voice, sound by primal sound. Your voice is how you get the gift inside of you out. Nothing much happens in the world until someone gives it voice. Thats why the words voice and vocation share a common Latin root, she says. Her work merges lessons from organization development with the transformative power of sound, aiming to foster awareness of unconscious vocal habits that interfere with us doing our best work. Barbara believes that the gifts uniquely expressed through our voices are part of a shared destiny. So when individual voices are more fully expressed, communities become stronger as well. More in this in-depth interview with Barbara. { read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration, check out, “The Spirit of Yes.” { more }

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Rustling Roots: Engaging Ecological Education

This week’s inspiring video: Rustling Roots: Engaging Ecological Education
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Video of the Week

Apr 27, 2023
Rustling Roots: Engaging Ecological Education

Rustling Roots: Engaging Ecological Education

Is there a place in today’s society where you can live in harmony with the Earth? How far would you have to travel to find it? Rustling Roots lies hidden inside Louisa County, VA, close to Charlottesville, Richmond, and Washington, DC and within 500 miles of half of the US population. There you can find a community striving to live in peace with the world around them.
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The Men of Rice: A Conversation with Eduardo del Conde

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April 27, 2023

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The Men of Rice: A Conversation with Eduardo del Conde

To forget how to dig the earth and tend the soil is to forget ourselves.

– Mahatma Gandhi –

The Men of Rice: A Conversation with Eduardo del Conde

“They were working with big baskets. They would cut a few rice plants at a time and hit them on edge of the basket so the rice seeds would shake out. It was like a dance. It was a very beautiful place. It was one of those days when you feel completely overwhelmed.” So recounts photographer Eduardo del Conde, telling of his first encounter with field workers harvesting rice south of Mexico City. Little did he know it was one of the very few places rice was still being organically grown in all of Mexico. Twenty five years later, his indelible memory pulled him back to investigate what he’d seen. What he saw moved him so deeply a book and a film followed documenting a dying tradition producing the finest rice — perhaps in the Americas. More in this in-depth and moving interview. { read more }

Be The Change

Take a little time to think about it. What do we give up by settling for foods produced with pesticides and industrial processing?

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The Skills Necessary to Deal with Anguish

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April 26, 2023

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The Skills Necessary to Deal with Anguish

Sanitizing your thoughts and your preoccupations not only squanders vital energy that would be better spent in your creative endeavors, but your not-so-presentable life can be enormously enriching and provide the compost for the development of compassion.

– Darlene Cohen –

The Skills Necessary to Deal with Anguish

I think many of us have a skewed idea of what “accepting” a catastrophic situation actually is. If you have the idea that coping well should look something like the proverbial “grace under fire,” then you think you should summon the sheer grit to plaster a big cosmic grin on your face, no matter what horrors are being visited upon you. I don’t think this is helpful. Actually, just the notion of “accepting” pain sounds to me too passive to accurately describe the process of successfully dealing with chronic pain or mental anguish that lasts for a long period of time. Because it fails to convey the tremendous amount of energy and courage it takes to accept physical pain as part of your life. Truly accepting pain is not at all like passive resignation. Rather, it is active engagement with life in its most intimate sense. It is meeting, dancing with, raging at, turning toward. To accept your pain on this level you must cultivate particular skills. Then after you have developed some proficiency in these skills, dealing with pain feels much more like an embrace, or the bond that forms between sparring partners, than resignation. Resignation is too passive.” Darlene Cohen was a Zen priest in the lineage of Suzuki Roshi. Her life’s work included helping people work with pain, a subject she was intimately familiar with as someone living with rheumatoid arthritis. More in this valuable piece { read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration, check out this tribute to Cohen, written by Chris Kesser,”Finding Joy in the Heart of Pain.” { more }

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How to Grow Re-Enchanted with the World

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April 25, 2023

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How to Grow Re-Enchanted with the World

To the one who knows how to look and feel, every moment of this free wandering life is an enchantment.

– Alexandra David-Neel –

How to Grow Re-Enchanted with the World

“Katherine May explores what it takes to shed the cloak of meaninglessness and recover the sparkle of vitality in Enchantment: Awakening Wonder in an Anxious Age (public library) a shimmering chronicle of her own quest for a better way to walk through this life, a way that grants us the ability to sense magic in the everyday, to channel it through our minds and bodies, to be sustained by it. May who has written enchantingly about wintering, resilience, and the wisdom of sadness reaches for the other side of that coma of the soul…” The Marginalian shares more on May’s book in this post. { read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration check out this post on the neuroscientist Charles Scott Sherrington, “A Responsibility to wonder.” { more }

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The Extraordinary In The Ordinary

Weekly excerpt to help us remember the sacred.

Awakin.org
Weekly Reading Apr 24, 2023

The Extraordinary In The Ordinary

–Llewellyn Vaughan-Lee

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2628.jpgOur acceptance of the ordinary is part of our spiritual maturity and capacity to be of service. It also helps us to avoid the trap of inflation, which can easily catch us when we glimpse a world beyond the ego. It is only too easy to identify with an inner experience. But when we let go of wanting spiritual life to be about us, when we live in the various dimensions without mixing the levels or imposing expectations and desires, this freedom allows us to fully participate in spiritual work.

Present in both the inner and outer world, one learns to serve the world, serve life, serve others without effort. This is a very careful balance. If one takes upon oneself the onerous responsibility of service, then the ego easily gets caught in it; the psyche gets encumbered by it. But being engaged in an ordinary life allows us to be of service without the burden of thinking we can solve the world’s or other people’s problems, which brings with it self-importance and, worse, spiritual self-importance.

Naqshbandi Sufis have always lived this way, forsaking special robes and working in ordinary jobs, traditionally often as craftsmen – Baha ad-Din Naqshband was a potter, Attar a perfumer. And of course many of the great Zen and Taoist teachers emphasized the ordinary and the dangers of spiritual importance:

Emperor Wu: ‘I have built many temples, copied innumerable Sutras and ordained many monks since becoming Emperor. Therefore, I ask you, what is my merit?’

Bodhidharma: ‘None whatsoever!’

Emperor Wu: ‘Why no merit?’

Bodhidharma: ‘Doing things for merit has an impure motive and will only bear the puny fruit of rebirth.’

Emperor Wu, a little put out: ‘What then is the most important principle of Buddhism?’

Bodhidharma: ‘Vast emptiness. Nothing sacred.’

Emperor Wu, by now bewildered, and not a little indignant: ‘Who is this that stands before me?’

Bodhidharma: ‘I do not know.’

If we can allow ourselves to live an ordinary life while also staying awake to the great void at the center of all that is, then we can be this intermediary place between that intoxicating, mystical bliss of oblivion and the wonder of how the Divine creates and reveals Itself in all the forms of life. Our lives are the expression of this bridge – ordinary and extraordinary, all things in their place, everything free to be as it is, and our consciousness, our heart, free to be used as needed.

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What do you make of the trap of inflation in spiritual life? Can you share a personal story of a time you resisted the temptation of inflation and saw the extraordinary in the ordinary? What helps you serve without effort?

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Irises: Shape-shifters and Magical Reinventors

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April 24, 2023

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Irises: Shape-shifters and Magical Reinventors

Praying. It doesn’t have to be the blue iris, it could be weeds in a vacant lot, or a few small stones; just pay attention, then patch a few words together and don’t try to make them elaborate, this isn’t a contest but the doorway into thanks, and a silence in which another voice may speak.

– Mary Oliver –

Irises: Shape-shifters and Magical Reinventors

“In grocery stores iris buds are bundled together, like perfectly sharpened purple-pointed pencils, like slender indigo-edged spears, like a quiver of Spring arrows poised to unbend unhappy bents of mind. Take a sheaf home, place it in a glass vase and by morning, from poised purple-tipped silence, spill sepals and petals frothy with filaments and ruffles, loquacious little fountains self-released into sunshine, newly aware of the greater world. An iris in a bud understandably assumes the bud is the world. An iris outside its bud is suddenly adrift. Its erstwhile home is gone, irretrievable, like misspent youth or last Wednesday’s sunset. Yet this turn of events does little to disturb an iris’s equanimity. Unlike many mortals, irises are not unsettled by dramatic changes in circumstance. Perhaps this is because they cradle memories of their ancestors, who fell asleep in autumnal earth as knobbly rhizomes or bulbous bulbs, only to dream and wake some seasons later, tall, slender, studded with purple possibilities, and brandishing green leaves like pirate swords.” { read more }

Be The Change

This week, take Oliver’s invitation to, “just pay attention, then patch a few words together,” as a doorway into thanksgiving.

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The Mongerji Letters

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April 23, 2023

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The Mongerji Letters

It is not the voice that commands the story: it is the ear.

– Italo Calvino –

The Mongerji Letters

“Since the collapse of one of the last dynasties of the common era and the subsequent end of the era itself, historians have searched for descendants of the Mongerji family, as well as descendants of the scribes who, under their employ, collected samplings of flora and fauna from around the world. The only evidence discovered thus far are the letters that follow. They are from Mr. Mongerji, his wife, Kavita, and two of the three Mongerji children, all addressed to a Mr. Chappalwala, thought to have been the last of the Mongerji’s scribes. Archivists continue to seek Mr. Chappalwalas side of the correspondence.” Geetha Iyer won the 2013 Calvino Prize for the following fantastic and fantastical short story. { read more }

Be The Change

Take a flight of fancy today. See where it leads you.

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