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Before yesterdayAggs

Newborn Delight

28 June 2023 at 06:05
If it’s not obvious this week, my final reflections on “delight” have me out in nature.  A couple of weeks ago, I took my morning coffee out into our back yard which faces into the woods. The sun was just … Continue reading →

It Was A Bad Day at the Globe When a Prop Went Wrong

28 June 2023 at 03:00
                                          A prop cannon firing under the  Globes thatched roof set the straw on fire.  Folks who have been involved in theater, amateur or professional, love to swap yarns about various disasters in front of live audiences.   Ask me sometime about when the set fell on my head in the middle of Jules Feiffer ’ s Little Murders at Shimer College.   But even the most grizzled theatrical veteran would have a hard time topping what happened to the cast of Henry VIII on June 29, 1613.   During a performance a cannon sparked a fire in the Globe Theater ’ s thatched roof, burning the theater structure to the ground.   Fortunately, no one was seriously injured, although one actor w...

Between the Cracks

27 June 2023 at 11:46
Sometimes, in the rush and hurry of our lives, things fall between the cracks. Sometimes, they bloom there, in that transitional, stuck space. What in your life has fallen between the cracks? How might it bloom?

Noted without comment

27 June 2023 at 21:30
From the news story “Coast Guard opens Titan implosion probe,” in USA Today, June 27, 2023: “OceanGate CEO Stockton Rush, who was piloting the Titan when it imploded, had complained that regulations can stifle progress.”

Here's What You Missed at GA 2023

10 July 2023 at 09:00
Elaine McArdle From inspiring speakers to impassioned voices, here are the highlights of this year’s multiplatform UUA General Assembly.

Wednesday Photo: A summer siesta in the Cambridge University Botanic Garden

27 June 2023 at 19:00
Taken with a Fuji X100V using Øyvind Nordhagen’s Kodak Ektar 100 Recipe   Just click on the photo to enlarge it.  

The Troth updates policies and creates Interfaith Committee

27 June 2023 at 17:53
At its annual meeting, TrothMoot, the Troth announced some changes to its policies and activities., including the addition of interfaith work. Continue reading The Troth updates policies and creates Interfaith Committee at The Wild Hunt.

2023 Summer Worship Info

27 June 2023 at 15:55
We’re Taking Summer Worship on the Road! We are delighted to announce that we are collaborating with several of our UU neighbors this summer for shared worship services. Below is a brief outline — stay tuned for more details! 7/2 4th of July – No Sunday service. 7/9  “Sharing Circle” @ UCMH – led by our   [ … ] The post 2023 Summer Worship Info appeared first on Unitarian Church of Marlborough and Hudson.

Stories of Riverside in the Pandemic: Episode 11: How work unfolded under the pandemic

27 June 2023 at 11:05
Marking the third anniversary of the COVID lockdown, I'm using this blog to reflect on this time and to point towards the audio archive Doorstep Revolution, a project I was part of putting together as part of Gentle/Radical.The eleventh episode contains reflections on the pandemic experiences of work, redundancy, unemployment, furlough, working from home, adaptation, work, rest, and balance. You

Difficult Delights

27 June 2023 at 06:05
This little guy showed up at our back door recently the day after our daughter had been visiting from North Carolina. The synchronicity of his appearance (first rabbit I’d seen all spring or summer) immediately became a joke for us. … Continue reading →

How Pride Month Began—Stonewall and The Night the Queers Fought Back

27 June 2023 at 03:00
The Stonewall was a dive bar operated by the Mob in New York's Greenwich Village.  It's patrons were outcasts and the most flamboyant of a rough streets scene--young hustlers, drag queens, butch lesbians.  It was also an inter-racial scene that attracted police attention.  Wealthier and more respectable Gays gathered and partied more discretely in posh clubs that authorities usually ignored. Fifty four years ago on the night of June 27, 1969 something snapped when New York City Police made one of their regular raids on a Gay bar.  Instead of meekly submitting to arrest, the denizens of the Stonewall Inn, a Greenwich Village bar operated by the Mafia and patronized by the most marginalized of folks—homeless street kid hustlers, drag...

Great Turning

26 June 2023 at 05:00
“In this great turning we shall learn to lead in love.” -Karisha Longaker, MaMuse, “We Shall Be Known” The Great Turning describes the necessary shift of human society from one that exploits and colonizes to one that is sustainable for all life on Earth, from a way of life based in violence to one based … Continue reading Great Turning

Pagan Community Notes: Week of June 26, 2023

26 June 2023 at 17:48
In this week’s Pagan Community Notes: Red Album released, ECER hosted by Latvijas Dievturu Sadraudze, The Troth elects officers, Author Amy Blackthorn donation, stunning find in Nemi, the Black Hills demonic portal (yeah, you read that right) and events and more. Continue reading Pagan Community Notes: Week of June 26, 2023 at The Wild Hunt.

Weathering the Storm

26 June 2023 at 12:42
It was a reprise of the 2007 ice-storm when we were without power for nine days. This time we had no power for four and half days. Difference between the two major events is that the first was in December with freezing rain, saturated ground, and a declining interior temperature when I was able to get enough power to run the sump-pump (hand bailing the sump every few hours is annoying), the refrigerator, the gas furnace, a few lights, and the Internet; this time it is summer, so not enough power to run the AC—only fans, the refrigerator, a few […] The post Weathering the Storm appeared first on BeyondBelief.

Still COVIDing

26 June 2023 at 11:57
There is a phrase I’ve seen online that applies to Margy and I–we are “still COVIDing.” It means that we know the COVID virus is still circulating, still dangerous especially to elders and those with other health issues, and we are still taking all precautions. This despite the end of the declared public emergency and […]

Unitarian Universalists Elect Rev. Dr. Sofía Betancourt to Serve as President of the Unitarian Universalist Association at General Assembly: Multiplatform annual business meeting brought more than 4,000 Unitarian Universalists together online and...

26 June 2023 at 07:25
At General Assembly, the annual gathering of UUs where the UUA conducts business and explores the theological underpinnings of the UU faith, the Rev. Dr. Sofía Betancourt was elected to serve as President of the Unitarian Universalist Association. Continue reading "Unitarian Universalists Elect Rev. Dr. Sofía Betancourt to Serve as President of the Unitarian Universalist Association at General Assembly: Multiplatform annual business meeting brought more than 4,000 Unitarian Universalists together online and in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania; Delegates also voted to advance changes to association bylaws on core religious values."

June Action Alert: Promote Safe Gun Storage

26 June 2023 at 10:58
  In 2015, Ethan Song was only 15 years old when he was unintentionally shot and killed with an unsecured gun in his best friend’s house. Tragically, Ethan is not alone. Every day, eight children and teens are unintentionally injured or killed due to family fire, which refers to a shooting caused by someone having access to a gun from the home when they shouldn’t have it. This includes children as well as those who display behavior that indicates they read more... The post June Action Alert: Promote Safe Gun Storage appeared first on Promise the Children.

William Boyd Took Hopalong Cassidy from Scruffy Cowhand to Shining TV Hero

26 June 2023 at 08:14
  William Boyd as Hopalong Cassidy on his white stallion Topper. Summer days more than 60 years ago in Cheyenne , Wyoming we spent our days recreating in detail elaborate cowboy sagas that lasted all day—or even all week.   The we were my twin brother, Tim, a rotating cast of neighborhood kids—principally Joe Miranda and his assorted younger siblings—and when she was in town our cousin from Des Moines, Linda Strom .   For authenticity real prairie started abruptly at the end of our block complete with sagebrush, tumbleweeds, and low button cactus.   But the back yards the neighborhood with their lilac caves, wild rose hedges, palisade fences , brick walls, window wells , and the low flat roofs of car ports provided plenty of lo...

Two drawings from a visit to the National Gallery, Ljubljana

26 June 2023 at 08:11
Aside from the Rembrandt etchings that particularly drew me to the National Gallery of Slovenia, two things I saw there said “Draw me.” One was “Drama,” a life-size bronze sculpture by a Slovenian artist named Franc Berneker (1905). It appears to be of a family: a man sprawled on the ground on his front, a […]

Perennial Delights

26 June 2023 at 06:09
These beautiful, almost fluorescent orange and purple, Echinaceas (aka Coneflowers) began blooming in our yard recently. One day, it was just a bed of green, mostly mint, with these flowers hiding in the camouflage, and the next these outrageous and … Continue reading →

Abolition

25 June 2023 at 05:00
Our children literally march in the streets begging us for Abolition, in the form of gun control. Our scientists beg for Abolition, in the form of climate justice. Our Black and Indigenous peoples demand Abolition, in the form of reparations. And our Incarcerated siblings demand the Abolition of Slavery, in the form of Prison and … Continue reading Abolition

Metelkova

25 June 2023 at 17:02
Metelkova was a military installation of the Yugoslav army until shortly after Slovenia left Yugoslavia. The complex left behind has an interesting status in the city–have a look at the website. The munchkin had read about it and asked if I wanted to see it. What public art lover could resist? Munchkin came ready to […]

Worship from General Assembly

25 June 2023 at 12:30
Join us for a mix of live music and recorded sermon, as we view portions of Sunday morning worship at General Assembly, featuring a sermon from the Rev. Manish Mishra-Marzetti, senior minister at the First Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Ann Arbor.

Saying Goodbye

25 June 2023 at 12:17
  Dear PUUF friends, As I get closer to my moving date, I want to express my gratitude to you for your love, your cooperation, your energy, your smiles and encouragement, your interest in my life and future, and also to make it clear(er) what our relationship will be from now on. As of July 1, I will not be your minister; Rev. Mira will be your minister and I will be part of your history.  This is the way ministers and congregations have parted for a long time.  I have a professional duty to my colleague Rev. Mira to stand aside and let her create her own relationships within PUUF. In a small community like ours, it's hard to let a close relationship change, but change it must.  I need to let go and so do you, to make it the best pos...

Weekly Bread #228

25 June 2023 at 11:33
I was busy with church stuff this week so we only got in one 12 mile hike. That long of a hike wore me out some, but then I was sitting most of the rest of the week in front of my computer attending the Unitarian Universalist Association’s General Assembly as an online delegate. It […]

Fledging Day!

25 June 2023 at 11:15
Today all the robin babies fledged from the nest. When I woke, there was just this one left. Its parent came by to check on it, not bringing food, but flying up to the nest and then back down, as if to say, here is what you do now. Shortly after, I saw it take […]

Still true in this century

24 June 2023 at 23:19
“‘You should dream more, Mr. Wormold. Reality in our century is not something to be faced.'” — Graham Greene, Our Man in Havana, 1958

The Day Ignatz Bopped Krazy Kat With his Last Brick

25 June 2023 at 03:00
Probably  the most oft repeated gag in comix history--Ignatz mouse bouncing a brick off love-sick Krazy Kat's noggin. Yet it never grew old . On Sunday, June 25, 1944 the full page color comic Krazy Kat made its last appearance in American Newspapers ending a thirty-one year run as a stand-alone strip.   That was exactly two months since the death of the odd, surrealistic strip’s creator, George Herriman on April 24 at the age of only 63.   Krazy Kat had amused and mystified the public for generations.   Many simply did not know what to make of it, or Herman’s regular defiance of conventions of both comic form and substance.   In fact, it regularly polled among the least popular Sunday strips with the public and more than one lo...

A Better World

24 June 2023 at 05:00
Many transitions are necessary for us to build a better world together. Our economy must transition away from exploitation of people as capital. Our industry must transition away from reliance on fossil fuels and carbon dioxide production. Our society must transition away from rugged individualism and toward community care. What are the transitions your community … Continue reading A Better World

All Ages Worship and Sunday Brunch (25 June 2023)

24 June 2023 at 22:43
Please join us on Sunday (25 June 2023) at 9:30 AM for brunch and at 10:00 AM for a group viewing of the Sunday morning worship at this Sunday’s Unitarian Universalist General Assembly. You can use this link to watch this worship service at home. Join us to be part of the largest annual gathering … Continue reading "All Ages Worship and Sunday Brunch (25 June 2023)"

Upcoming Events Reminders for 24-25 June 2023 and Beyond

24 June 2023 at 22:31
2023 Unitarian Universalist Association General Assembly Livestream Videos (21-25 June 2023 — Pittsburg PA — External Link) 2023 Pledge Drive — We Need Your Pledge Now

No Online and In-Person Adult Religious Education This Sunday — 25 June 2023

24 June 2023 at 22:29
There will be no adult religious education class this Sunday (25 June 2023). Please join us next Sunday (2 July 2023) for our adult religious education class at 9:00 AM. Our adult religious education class is now a dual-platform class — meeting in person in the church social hall and also on Zoom. For that … Continue reading "No Online and In-Person Adult Religious Education This Sunday — 25 June 2023"

Zoom (and In-Person) Lunch on Tuesday (27 June 2023)

24 June 2023 at 22:23
Please join us next Tuesday (27 June 2023) at 12 noon for our weekly Zoom lunch. Our weekly Zoom lunch is going dual-platform — join us from home using Zoom or in person in the social hall. Bring your lunch and meet up with your All Souls friends, have lunch, and just catch up.

Opinion: Greta Thunberg, Misrepresentation, and Ásatrú Climate Change Ethics

24 June 2023 at 17:00
As in the Ziggy Stardust song from more than a half-century ago, we’re simultaneously surrounded by evidence of catastrophic climate change and absolutely unwilling to make the necessary changes to mitigate it. Continue reading Opinion: Greta Thunberg, Misrepresentation, and Ásatrú Climate Change Ethics at The Wild Hunt.

Review: “Vikings: Warriors of the North Sea”

24 June 2023 at 17:00
Sprocket Wagner reviews "Vikings: Warriors of the North Sea," on exhibit at Pittsburgh's Carnegie Science Museum until September 4th. Continue reading Review: “Vikings: Warriors of the North Sea” at The Wild Hunt.

Stories of Riverside in the Pandemic: Episode 10: Creativity and what kept us going

24 June 2023 at 07:24
Marking the third anniversary of the COVID lockdown, I'm using this blog to reflect on this time and to point towards the audio archive Doorstep Revolution, a project I was part of putting together as part of Gentle/Radical.The tenth episode contains reflections on hobbies, creativity, cooking, walking, and watching television - the things we did in lockdown to keep us going. You can listen to

Let us demand our own works and laws and worship

24 June 2023 at 07:20
A short  “ thought for the day” offered to the Cambridge Unitarian Church as part of the Sunday Service of Mindful   Meditation.   (Click on this link to hear a recorded version of the following piece)   —o0o— Without context, the rounded — or, we may say, the fullest possible meaning — of any text, other artefact, or an action is, at best, highly allusive and, at worst, simply not accessible to us. So, what I want to offer you here is something of the historical context which forms the background to the kind of radical changes in the way we do church and religion that we are beginning to explore here in Cambridge, in our attempt to create a relevant, contemporary, liberal, inquiring, free religious community. After I’...

Sunday, June 25 ~ UUA General Assembly

24 June 2023 at 05:53
This Sunday, in lieu of regular Sunday Worship, we invite one and all to virtually attend UUA’s General Assembly Sunday Service, streaming live on Sunday, June 25 at 11:00 a.m. EDT. General Assembly is the annual gathering of Unitarian Universalists, where we conduct business of the Association, explore the theological underpinnings of our faith, and lean   [ … ] The post Sunday, June 25 ~ UUA General Assembly appeared first on Unitarian Church of Marlborough and Hudson.

Study leave and sabbatical activities

24 June 2023 at 05:16
Those who read of these travels might reasonably wonder what the difference is between sabbatical and vacation, especially if (as is very likely) sabbatical is not a phenomenon in their profession. Like other ministers of Unitarian Universalist congregations, I get three kinds of leave. Vacation, of course (four weeks/year), is to be spent however I […]

A beautiful day at Lake Bled

24 June 2023 at 00:58
Lake Bled! A gem set in the Julian Alps, with a smaller gem of an island within it (Slovenia’s only island) topped by a small church. Munchkin dreamed of swimming to the island. Maybe we would also take a boat and rent bikes to circle the lake, and we would certainly swim at the beach, […]

Writer Ambrose Bierce Was the Devil Himself

24 June 2023 at 03:00
                                     Ambrose Bierce in 1892. Ambrose Bierce was born on June 24, 1842 in Meigs County, Ohio, the tenth of fourteen children of a poor, but literary minded couple.  The family relocated to Indiana where Bierce briefly attended high school before dropping out at age 15 to help support his family as a printer’s devil at a local newspaper.  When the Civil War erupted he joined the first rush of volunteers.  As a private in the 9th Indiana Infantry and soon saw action in the Western Virginia Campaign, the first major land action of the war.  He was singled out and mentioned in newspaper dispatches for bravery in the Battle of Rich Mountain in July 1861 for a daring rescue of a wounde...

Meditation with Larry Androes (24 June 2023)

24 June 2023 at 02:19
Please join us on Saturday (24 June 2023) at 10:30 AM for our weekly meditation group with Larry Androes. This is a sitting Buddhist meditation including a brief introduction to mindfulness meditation, 20 minutes of sitting, and followed by a weekly teaching. Please note that this group is still meeting via Zoom.  You will need … Continue reading "Meditation with Larry Androes (24 June 2023)"

Death

23 June 2023 at 05:00
“Life is pleasant. Death is peaceful. It’s the transition that’s troublesome.”-Isaac Asimov How have you faced the transition of death in ways that make it less troublesome?

It’s not just me

23 June 2023 at 21:27
Seen in the blogosphere: “…internet search is broken these days….” I’m so glad others have noticed this. Internet search is broken in many ways. For example: Sometimes I don’t want searches that only apply to the U.S., or another smaller geographical region. I don’t want any search to point me to websites obviously pirated from … Continue reading "It’s not just me"

How an Opossum Healed a Haunt

23 June 2023 at 17:00
That little wet and bedraggled baby shone his light onto a deep, haunted wound and showed me that my part of that haunted space could heal now because the rest is healing, too. It is a big release to let a ghost go. To let that much darkness go. To cleanse a haunting. Continue reading How an Opossum Healed a Haunt at The Wild Hunt.

Eyes on Eastern Europe: Queer Svit

23 June 2023 at 15:17
A series on UUSC’s partners in Eastern Europe.

Drawing # 3–Waves of Delight

23 June 2023 at 06:01
When I stared at the blank drawing paper on this particular day, I suddenly felt these waves of water washing across the page.  Over the next half hour, this drawing is what emerged–a sort of semi-abstract, semi-symbolic portrayal of waves.  … Continue reading →

The GI Bill Jumpstarted White Middle Class Prosperity but Left Blacks Behind

23 June 2023 at 07:22
President Franklin Roosevelt passes a pen used in signing the GI Bill in 1944.    On June 22, 1944 President Franklin D . Roosevelt signed the Servicemen’s Readjustment Act of 1944, better known as the G . I . Bill of Rights .   Barring Social Security , it was the most successful social program in American history .   It set the stage for the long economic boom of the ‘ 50s and ‘ 60s and the rapid ascendancy of the middle class by forestalling an immediate post-War crisis, fueling an unprecedented housing boom, and by providing American industry and government with a highly educated workforce .   Getting that result was not easy . In 1944 the end of World War II was in sight even if more than a year of bloody conflict still l...

Stories of Riverside in the Pandemic: Episode 9: Navigating our emotional and mental health, through the pandemic

23 June 2023 at 06:46
Marking the third anniversary of the COVID lockdown, I'm using this blog to reflect on this time and to point towards the audio archive Doorstep Revolution, a project I was part of putting together as part of Gentle/Radical.The ninth episode contains reflections on mental health and mental illness. The pandemic was a crisis of mental health as much as physical health, and I think we're all still

Prayer for Loving Well

23 June 2023 at 06:00
A Prayer for Loving Well - Prayer for Week of June 26, 2023 Beloved, may we lean against your sun warmed legs by those trees and breathe deeply together, resting our hearts and whole beings. When we are weary of a world of people that criminalizes same-gender loving, when we...

This has been going on for a while

22 June 2023 at 23:04
The whole nonbinary gender thing is new and different, right? I mean, that’s why old people are so worked up about transgender and nonbinary, because it’s so new. Right? Well, no. Now that I’m officially past the age of sixty, I qualify as old people (you can’t call me middle-aged, that’s for sure). And to … Continue reading "This has been going on for a while"

Calling

22 June 2023 at 05:00
Sometimes, we are called–from within or without–to venture forth into something new. We sense an insistent voice telling us that we must do something. To what are you being called today?

Abuse in school sports

22 June 2023 at 17:05
One of the reasons some people give for leaving organized religion is that they’re disgusted by the hypocrisy of organized religions in allowing sexual abuse to go on. But from what I can see, all of our human institutions are open to abuse. Schools, politics, the for-profit world, entertainment, sports — all of these human … Continue reading "Abuse in school sports"

Want to guess what city we’re in?

22 June 2023 at 17:24
And the answer is: Ljubljana, Slovenia, a city I had never heard of until we started planning this trip. The sum total of what I knew about Slovenia, in fact, was that it was in central Europe, was not Slovakia, and was the home country of Melania Trump. A friend of Joy’s has recently moved […]

“Magic is queer:” New Blood and Inhuman Beings team creates inclusive and Pagan paranormal series

22 June 2023 at 13:09
Two new paranormal shows that are very likely to appeal to Pagan paranormal fans are set to be released if they can reach their crowdfunding goal. Continue reading “Magic is queer:” New Blood and Inhuman Beings team creates inclusive and Pagan paranormal series at The Wild Hunt.

Let’s End a Decade-Long Legal Travesty

22 June 2023 at 11:00
Jeff Milchen Unitarian Universalists must work to defend voting rights for all.

Eyes on Eastern Europe: Martynka

22 June 2023 at 09:15
A series on UUSC’s partners in Eastern Europe.

Stories of Riverside in the Pandemic: Episode 8: Landscapes of Grief and Loss

22 June 2023 at 08:15
Marking the third anniversary of the COVID lockdown, I'm using this blog to reflect on this time and to point towards the audio archive Doorstep Revolution, a project I was part of putting together as part of Gentle/Radical.The eighth episode contains stories of death and grief. This to me is the most powerful episode, as residents talk about tender stories of losing loved ones. This was a time

Those Burning River Blues

22 June 2023 at 07:12
The Cuyahoga River in Cleveland burns in 1969. Fifty-four years ago on June 22, 1969 sparks from a passing freight train ignited a thick scum of oil and gunk that built up around the pilings of a railroad trestle across the Cuyahoga River in Cleveland , Ohio.   The results were impressive .   Within minutes the fire spread from bank to bank and downriver.   Roaring red flames licked up into the air five stories high and thick black smoke enveloped the city and rose high into the air.   The fire burned intensely for about half an hour and died down only when the oil slick was consumed.   The fire made national headlines, was covered by all of the TV evening news broadcasts , and became a cover story exposé on industrial pollution in...

Drawing # 2–The Heart’s Delight

22 June 2023 at 06:04
In yesterday’s post, I shared how drawings have become, at least for the time being, my way of journaling. In this sort of journaling, we invite an image to present itself to us. My way is to sit in front … Continue reading →

Solstice Stillness

21 June 2023 at 05:00
Solstice is associated with stillness–when the sun reaches the extreme point of its cycle and seems to pause in the sky. But that pause is not real–it is just an indication that we have reached a place where it needs to begin going the other way. That pause is a transition–to shorter days at the … Continue reading Solstice Stillness

Three tiny drawings

21 June 2023 at 15:20
A couple of sights recently made me want to try to create something like their luminosity. One was a circular reflection of light on a painted white wall, and the other was a painting I saw when Joy and I visited the museum Ca’ Pesaro yesterday. I thought I would remember the artist’s name, but […]

This is the Darién Gap

21 June 2023 at 15:00
A brief look into what it means to cross one of the most dangerous migrant passages in the world.

June 21, 2023

21 June 2023 at 14:19

Reading list: Search

21 June 2023 at 13:25
Bev loaned me the book Search: A Novel (Penguin, 2022), by Michelle Huneven. Search is the story of a ministerial search committee in a Unitarian Universalist congregation in southern California during their year-long process to find someone to replace their retiring minister. Michelle Huneven actually served on a ministerial search committee, and the book is … Continue reading "Reading list: Search"

NOAH’s 2023 Mayoral Candidates Public Meeting

21 June 2023 at 13:16
Hear from nine mayoral candidates at NOAH’s mayoral town hall on Sunday, July 9, at 3:00 pm, at Fifteenth Avenue Baptist Church, 1203 9th Ave N, 37208.

An Introduction To Asylum-Seekers, Refugees, and Global Migration

21 June 2023 at 12:37
Compassionate understanding of those fleeing danger is key to advancing justice for this vulnerable population.

Is that what’s going on?

20 June 2023 at 23:28
I was talking with someone about how we were both feeling a bit out of sorts — little things like getting appointments slightly wrong, nothing really serious but constantly annoying. We both had good reasons for feeling a bit out of sorts (for my part, I moved, started a new job, my partner’s father died). … Continue reading "Is that what’s going on?"

another step

21 June 2023 at 12:03
The photo shows the lift tabs for a variety of boxes after being fitted and shaped. I sketch the shape I want on the oversized lift tab that I've already fitted in the groove routed in the lid. Then I cut it using a scroll saw and sand its edges smooth. Compare this picture with one I posted yesterday and you'll see progress. Make, fix and create.

Drawing Delight # 1

21 June 2023 at 06:09
For most of my life, I have kept a journal. It’s not been every day for 64 years, but it’s been for stretches of time, writing daily in a notebook about whatever was going on in the internal and external … Continue reading →

Practicing Democracy

21 June 2023 at 06:17
Shaya French May we be active participants in the liberatory potential of democracy. Continue reading "Practicing Democracy"

The Ancient Awe of Summer Solstice

21 June 2023 at 08:56
You can still celebrate the Summer Solstice with the Tree of Life Unitarian Universalist Congregation, 5603 Bull Valley Road in McHenry this Friday, June 23 beginning at 8 pm. with   readings, chants, drumming, dancing, and singing.   The public is welcome to attend. We’ll mark the first day of Summer, when the Sun reaches the highest point in the sky. This moment is sacred for many Earth-centered religions. Weather permitting, we will meet outside. Bring a lawn chair, bug spray, a drum if you have one, and a snack for the fairies—something shaped like the Sun, colored like the Sun, or grilled over fire. In gathering, we share our delight in the abundant sunlight, take a moment to send prayers to the wind, and affirm our sacred lov...

The Ancient Awe of Summer Solstice

21 June 2023 at 08:18
Although the Summer Solstice in the Northern Hemisphere, has been marked and celebrated across cultures since pre-historic times, it is today celebrated mostly—understandably—in the most northern climes.  A day on or near the Solstice is still a widely celebrated public holiday—Midsummer’s Day—in most of Scandinavia, the Baltic nations and in Quebec.  It is a widely observed unofficial celebration in Ireland and northern England and in several other countries. Of course, in the Southern Hemisphere it is the Winter Solstice and celebrated with many of the traditions imported by Europeans for that occasion .   At dusk on Midsummer's Eve young women neo-pagans launch miniature rafts with burning candles in Baltic areas like Est...

Stories of Riverside in the Pandemic: Episode 7: Perspectives on Covid, health, and what our bodies have needed

21 June 2023 at 07:29
Marking the third anniversary of the COVID lockdown, I'm using this blog to reflect on this time and to point towards the audio archive Doorstep Revolution, a project I was part of putting together as part of Gentle/Radical.The seventh episode contains stories of health, illness and healing. These are some of the stories of people who caught the virus, as well as reflections on masks, social

June Solstice Blessings!

21 June 2023 at 00:34
Solstice Blessings from The Wild Hunt! Continue reading June Solstice Blessings! at The Wild Hunt.

Bridging

20 June 2023 at 05:00
Many Unitarian Universalist congregations celebrate the transition of youth into young adults this time of year, in a ceremony known as Bridging. Too often, though, we fail to meet people on the other side of the bridge. It is up to all of us to make transitions like this one celebrations of change within a … Continue reading Bridging

Wednesday Photo: A shady spot among the pines in the Cambridge University Botanic Garden

20 June 2023 at 19:00
Taken with a Fuji X100V using Anders Lindborg and John Sevigny’s Kodak T-Max P3200 recipe Just click on the photo to enlarge it  

Beyond Juneteenth

20 June 2023 at 17:54
The celebration of Juneteenth has come and gone, but we continue to celebrate Black Excellence every day, recognizing the remarkable contributions and resilience of Black individuals and communities throughout history. It is essential that we continue to honor and uplift Black voices, support Black-owned businesses, and engage in ongoing dialogue to foster a more inclusive and equitable society. Amplifying Black voices is a powerful way to celebrate Black Excellence. Seek out literature, art, and media created by Black artists, authors, and filmmakers. Embrace diverse perspectives and stories that reflect the richness of Black experiences. By doing so, we expand our […] The post Beyond Juneteenth appeared first on BeyondBelief.

Rights of Nature Updates

20 June 2023 at 17:00
Sean McShee reviews the current status of the legal concept described as the "Rights of Nature" Continue reading Rights of Nature Updates at The Wild Hunt.

shaping lift tabs

20 June 2023 at 11:50
To install lift tabs in box lids, I first rout a groove on the front edge of the lid with a 1/8 in router bit about 3/16 in. deep. I then saw stock to a thickness of 1/8 in. and about 3/4 in. wide which I then cut to the length of the grooves cut in the lids. I work in fitting one tab to a lid at a time due to possible variations.  I use a piece of self-adhesive sand paper on a flat board to round the corners to fit the grooves. Can't fit a square peg in a round hole except by making it too small to fit. What you see in the photo are lids with the lift tabs fitted but not yet shaped. Make, fix and create...  

UUAMP Pro Day 2023 Program Book

20 June 2023 at 10:52
UUAMP Program Book 2 The post UUAMP Pro Day 2023 Program Book appeared first on Unitarian Universalist Society of Schenectady.

A Look Back at Murfin’s Seven Books in Seven Days

20 June 2023 at 08:24
Note:   Five years ago, on the suggestion of old Shimer College pal Sammie Moshenberg I undertook the Facebook challenge of Seven Books in Seven Days.   It took me more than seven days, but I got it done.   Because my half-assed literary tastes may be of some limited wider interest or the subject of bemused bewilderment, I am including lightly edited versions of all seven posts here. I was not exactly sure what the rules are for Seven Books in Seven Days—favorite books? Most influential? Fiction only? Anyway, I decided yes to all of those questions .  The book covers shown are from the paperback editions in which I first read them.   Day 1—Thomas Wolfe ’ s Look Homeward Angel bit me while I was in high school. I was gobsmacked...

Ice Cream

20 June 2023 at 06:14
Whenever I am in Phoenix seeing my daughter, we always practice the delightful ritual of visiting her favorite vegan ice cream shop. Not only does this magical establishment sell vegan ice cream it also has, wonder of wonders, gluten free … Continue reading →

Pee-on-earth Day is June 21!

18 June 2023 at 21:56
It’s that time of year again — if you’re in the northern hemisphere, get ready to pee on the earth! June 21 is annual Pee-on-earth Day, a day to urinate outside. By urinating outside, you don’t have to use water for flushing. As climate change gets weirder we’re going to have more droughts, so why … Continue reading "Pee-on-earth Day is June 21!"

Pagan Community Notes: Week of June 19, 2023

19 June 2023 at 23:06
In this week’s Pagan Community Notes: Juneteenth, Christian Pastor idealizes suicide bombers, Extraordinary Sword found, more news, announcements and upcoming gatherings. Continue reading Pagan Community Notes: Week of June 19, 2023 at The Wild Hunt.

Gender

19 June 2023 at 05:00
“It’s not a cis-man becoming a cis-woman. It’s a trans person just being who they want to be. This is how I’ve always felt, and this is who I’ve always been. But so much focus is put on the transition or the change because it’s so visible. But that’s not even what it is… That’s … Continue reading Gender

Celebrating Juneteenth

19 June 2023 at 18:05
Recently, I read an article quoting a Juneteenth activist saying something like: The time between Juneteenth and July 4 should be a sixteen day celebration of American freedom. Now I can’t remember where I read this, or who said it (maybe Opal Davis?). But as someone who grew up celebrating Patriot’s Day — April 19, … Continue reading "Celebrating Juneteenth"

Pagan Community Notes: Week of June 19, 2023

19 June 2023 at 16:27
In this week's Pagan Community Notes: Juneteenth, the Troth elects new Steer, Christian Pastor idealizes suicide bombers, Extraordinary Sword found , more news, announcements and upcoming gatherings. Continue reading Pagan Community Notes: Week of June 19, 2023 at The Wild Hunt.

the reason

19 June 2023 at 15:24
Today I'm working on a bunch of boxes. I've cut slots where lift tabs will fit the lids, and I've done the first sanding of the cuts made when separating the lids from the bodies of the boxes. I sand them using a flat piece of 3/4 in. MDF covered with self-adhesive sandpaper to keep them absolutely flat where the surfaces meet. Some of my readers know that I'm interested in history, and I've seen eyes glaze over when I mention the history of Friedrich Froebel's Kindergarten, or Educational Sloyd.  It is good to know our history for two important reasons. Knowledge of history can help us avoid repeating things that we must not repeat. It can also inspire us to repeat things that should be repeated. With Kindergarten and the Educational S...

Cute fuzzy heads

19 June 2023 at 15:08
During this cold rainy spring season, we have been delighted with the baby robins, batch number two. There seem to be four babies this time, and they seem more lively than the first batch of two. But maybe it is just that there is less room in the nest. Still, they all can fit underneath […]

Racist or Antiracist

19 June 2023 at 10:00
Ibram X Kendi Fundamentally racism—its heartbeat—has always been denial.

UnPacking

19 June 2023 at 06:09
Some relationships are keepers. They go deep and last long. And then, for one reason or another the relationship changes. Someone moves, retires, or passes. And right there we are heartbroken. We are split wide open. We can hardly contain … Continue reading →

Woodstock’s First Juneteenth—Freedom Day Festival Was a Joyous Afternoon

19 June 2023 at 10:21
From left to right Ken Davis, Darlene Brown, and host Gloria Van Hoff at opening. It was a near ideal Saturday afternoon on Woodstock Square for McHenry County’s inaugural Junteenth—Freedom Day Festival.   There was an excited but chill vibe as people gathered as organizer/host Gloria Van Hof, a long time social justice activist and first term McHenry County Board member stepped to the mic in the Gazebo to greet the gathering crowd. Organizing Committee Member Regina Ferguson and Rev. Norval Brown. Rev . Norval Brown, Lead Pastor of the Cary United Methodist Church, resplendent in a white and gold dashiki and cap opened the proceedings with an inspiring benediction. Darlene Benton singing from the Woodstock Square Gazebo . Things go...

Parenthood

18 June 2023 at 05:00
Ten years ago this week, I became a parent, a major transition in my life. I suddenly had incredible clarity about what my priorities in life were–because my child would always be first. -Michael Tino (CLF) When has a transition led you to a moment of clarity?

Bells

17 June 2023 at 21:18
The Guild of Carilloneurs in North America (GCNA) held their annual “congress” at St. Stephen’s church in Cohasset. St. Stephen’s has a 57-bell carillon — this gives it a range of over four octaves, and apparently qualifies it to be called a “great carillon” (it’s the largest carillon in New England). There aren’t that many … Continue reading "Bells"

Guest Column: Thinking in New Directions

18 June 2023 at 17:00
TWH welcomes Christian Cooper, Pagan, author of the new memoir "Better Living Through Birding," and host of the new National Geographic TV series "Extraordinary Birder," to consider new directions for magical practices beyond the classical elements. Continue reading Guest Column: Thinking in New Directions at The Wild Hunt.

Seeing the Light—A Pilgrimage

18 June 2023 at 12:30
SERVICE PARTICIPANTS Stephen Ledoux, Guest Speaker Thomas Graves, Worship Associate Yelena Mealy, staff accompanist Nelly Case, piano Patrick Webb, Renae Mitchell, Mike Begnaud, Galen Gisler, and Rick Bolton, AV techs WELCOME! New to our church community?  Sign our guestbook and let us know if you’d like to get more connected. If you would like to …<p> Seeing the Light—A Pilgrimage Read More »

Weekly Bread #227

18 June 2023 at 11:13
We spent a few days up in (more) Northern CA this week. We stayed in Redding because we had some free nights with points, but drove up into the mountains each day to hike. The hotel had free breakfast and of course there were cocktails and dinner out each night we were away. The above […]
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