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Investigating the evidence for ancient Celtic tattooing

21 April 2023 at 17:00
SianLuc Heart discusses the possible sources and scholarship for an ancient Celtic practicing of tattooing. Continue reading Investigating the evidence for ancient Celtic tattooing at The Wild Hunt.

Raising the Roof for Our Raised Voices Poetry Series

21 April 2023 at 14:37
By Priyanka Ray | In 2021, Beacon expanded our poetry program, adding both new and established poets to sit alongside the classic masters—including James Baldwin, Mary Oliver, and Sonia Sanchez—who have long been an essential part of our catalog. The series, Raised Voices, serves the overarching goals of raising marginalized voices and perspectives, publishing poems that affirm progressive values and are accessible to a wide readership, and celebrating poetry’s ability to access truth in a way no other form can.

Building the Beloved Community

21 April 2023 at 12:31
A sermon preached before the March 5, 2023 congregational vote to adopt a new vision, mission, and covenant for the First Unitarian Universalist Church of Houston. The post Building the Beloved Community appeared first on Colin Bossen.

Youth Battle Government Inaction in New Documentary

21 April 2023 at 10:00
Sonja L. Cohen The film explores the lives and legal case of a group suing the federal government over climate change.

Eid al-Fitr

21 April 2023 at 05:00
At the end of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan is the celebration of Eid al-Fitr. It is a day of sweetness and celebration, of charity towards those in need, and of seeking forgiveness for wrongs. Practice grace and generosity toward others today.

A Woman and Mountains By Helen Hoyt—National Poetry Month 2023

21 April 2023 at 08:03
                                             Helen Hoyt in her years as Poetry magazine's Assistant Editor. Helen Hoyt , also known as Helen Lyman or Helen Hoyt Lyman   was born on January 22, 1887 in in Norwalk, Connecticut.   Her father was Henry M. Hoyt, Civil War officer and Governor of Pennsylvania. Her niece was Elinor Wylie, an American poet and novelist popular in the 1920s and 1930s.   Her younger brother, Morton McMichael Hoyt, married Eugenia Bankhead, sister of Tallulah Bankhead. Hoyt received her AB from Barnard College in 1909. The editors of Poetry , Harriet Monroe and Alice Corbin Henderson included in their 1917 selection for The New Poetry: An Anthology Poems by Helen Hoyt . According to Ad...

What To Do With The Heat

21 April 2023 at 06:05
I’m no electrician, but when I ponder resistance, I continually hear in the back of my mind some old lesson from a physics class.  It’s about electricity and resistance.  My simple understanding is that as electricity tries to move through … Continue reading →

Prayer for Nurturing An Earth Economy

21 April 2023 at 06:00
A Prayer for Nurturing an Earth Economy - Earth Day 2023 Honey of the Rock, we’re searching for sweetness amid so much catastrophe and change. We’re searching for refuge, for protection, for assurance that we will all be all right. Honey in the Rock, Shelter and Refuge, Rock of Our...

The Green Man and a Royal Row

20 April 2023 at 17:00
Controversy kicked up over the use of the Green Man on the coronation invitation. Our UK correspondent, Liz Williams, gives us the rundown from a Pagan perspective. Continue reading The Green Man and a Royal Row at The Wild Hunt.

Fighting for Teachers, Children, and Their Parents: Building a Social Justice Teachers’ Union—Part II

20 April 2023 at 16:29
By Brandon Johnson | In 2012 the CTU went on strike for the first time in twenty-five years. We prepared our members to take this step by, first, making the case that we could better protect our profession by defending public education and our children. Second, we put forward a real plan for what schools needed to look like, and we effectively identified those people, including the mayor, who stood in the way. Finally, we began to raise awareness of the inequities that many people said couldn’t be fixed but we refused to accept. As a result, our members realized that we needed to withhold our labor in order to beat back the mayor’s proposal that would hurt both teachers and students.

Silence

20 April 2023 at 05:00
Ah, it’s true. When our ancestors spoke of heaven, they were speaking of this moment. When they went on about nirvana they imagined a time like this. When they sang of paradise, it was this morning they imagined. A time when all the mysteries of life and death are blended in a community of praise, … Continue reading Silence

The Weave of Resistance and Its Release

20 April 2023 at 06:06
Resistance has many connotations, but is neither good nor bad. Electricity needs resistance to create heat and do other useful things for us. Unrestricted or too much flow of electricity can do us serious harm if our bodies are what … Continue reading →

By Jorge Carrera Andrade—National Poetry Month 2023

20 April 2023 at 03:00
Jorge Carrera Andrade--distinguished Ecuadoran poet. Jorge Carrera Andrade was an Ecuadorian poet, historian, author, and diplomat of the 20th century. He was born in Quito, Ecuador in 1902 and died in 1978. During his life and after his death he has been recognized with Jorge Luis Borges, Vicente Huidobro, Gabriela Mistral, Pablo Neruda, Octavio Paz, and Cesar Vallejo as one of the most important Latin American poets. He was published in Aurora Estrada y Ayala’s literary magazine, Proteo which she started in 1922. Other contributors to the magazine included future Nobel Laureate Gabriela Mistral. From 1928 to 1933 Carrera first experienced traveling in Europe. He served as Ecuadorian Consul in Peru, France, Japan, and the United State...

Happy Patriots’ Day

19 April 2023 at 22:22
Massachusetts had a state holiday two days ago, on Monday. No, this state holiday is not the Boston Marathon. No, this holiday is not the holiday which recognizes an obscure Revolutionary War event that just happens to fall on the same date as St. Patrick’s Day. No, this state holiday has nothing to do with … Continue reading "Happy Patriots’ Day"

Email: curse / blessing?

18 April 2023 at 21:55
I’m involved in an email thread at the moment. Everyone is very polite. I like everyone on the email thread. The thread has gotten pretty long. New people have been looped in. People in this email thread are carrying on email conversations on the same topic outside the thread. Result: lots of confusion. A couple … Continue reading "Email: curse / blessing?"

Editorial: spiritual warfare rhetoric and anti-Pagan sentiment is reaching contagion

19 April 2023 at 17:00
Editor-in-chief Manny Moreno shines a light on recent rhetoric about "spiritual warfare" within segments of conservative religious communities that have begun targeting occult practices and Paganism, including referring to Pagans as Satanic agents and assassins. Continue reading Editorial: spiritual warfare rhetoric and anti-Pagan sentiment is reaching contagion at The Wild Hunt.

On Predicting the Future 

19 April 2023 at 10:00
William G Sinkford Our faith’s hope is to be found in living as if our deepest yearnings could be fulfilled.

Fighting for Teachers, Children, and Their Parents: Building a Social Justice Teachers’ Union—Part I

19 April 2023 at 15:42
By Brandon Johnson | The moment you sign up to become a teacher in the Chicago public school system you become an advocate, because you’re always searching for opportunities to meet the needs of your students. The system often falls short—from classroom materials, to reading and math support, to social and emotional development. Most schools don’t have social workers and counselors, for example, even though there is an overwhelming need for them.

FUUN Weekly E-Blasts

19 April 2023 at 14:08

Wednesday, April 26 ~ Dinner Church ~ 6:00-8:00 p.m.

19 April 2023 at 12:36
Nourish Your Body & Spirit at Dinner Church! Join us for our first ever Dinner Church next Wednesday, April 26 . All are welcome to this family-friendly opportunity to share food for the spirit as we enjoy time together in community. We’ll have build-your-own burrito bowls with a pay as you can donation to help cover   [ … ] The post Wednesday, April 26 ~ Dinner Church ~ 6:00-8:00 p.m. appeared first on Unitarian Church of Marlborough and Hudson.

NEW – Summer Crafters’ Market at UCMH!  

19 April 2023 at 12:25
This summer, UCMH will host a Crafters’ Market directly across from the Hudson Farmers’ Market on Tuesdays, from June 20 through September 26 (excluding 7/4) from 3:30-6:30 p.m.  Local crafters who hand make items of all kinds are invited to submit applications for a high visibility 10×10 space. Click here for application and pricing. The application   [ … ] The post NEW – Summer Crafters’ Market at UCMH!   appeared first on Unitarian Church of Marlborough and Hudson.

Zen, God, and Doubt: Encountering the Mystery

19 April 2023 at 11:58
  Zen, God, and Doubt: Encountering the Mystery James Ishmael Ford There’s a lovely meme that floats around on social media. The words are by Rachel Held Evans. It goes: “This is what God’s kingdom is like: a bunch of outcasts and oddballs gathered at a table, not because they are rich or worthy or […]

Announcing Pride 2023

19 April 2023 at 11:48

Flying Flowers

19 April 2023 at 05:00
I recently volunteered in my child’s elementary school art class to help the children make ceramic flowers. When they were done, they were asked to draw their flowers, and to imagine where their flowers would be. The third-graders drew their flowers in gardens, and vases, and fields, but also in space and with dinosaurs. One … Continue reading Flying Flowers

Let It Rest

19 April 2023 at 06:07
In the Soul Matters documents for this month I came across this question in the small group work packet – ‘Is it possible that the form of resistance you need to take right now is rest?’ How do we do … Continue reading →

Wondrous Beyond Words

19 April 2023 at 05:23
JD Stillwater Remind me that life is magical and mysterious. Continue reading "Wondrous Beyond Words"

Concord Hymn by Ralph Waldo Emerson—National Poetry Month 2023

19 April 2023 at 08:03
Ralph Waldo Emerson at 35 Yesterday poet Lawrence Raab gave us a glimpse of Ralph Waldo Emerson’s last fading days.   Today we look at the Sage of Concord in his prime 1836 at the age of 33.   That Emerson commemorated the Battle of Concord Bridge, in which his grandfather Rev. William Emerson served, and which took place at the very doorstep of the Old Manse which was both the residence of his ancestor and his own home. In addition to the Obelisk monument that he dedicated fifty years later, verses of his poem were later inscribed on the famed Minuteman statue.   In Lexington an equally famous statue memorialized Captain Parker grandfather of Unitarian preacher and theologian Theodore Parker. Emerson had just concluded his brief ca...

An Apocalypse Is In The Air

19 April 2023 at 05:00
Whatever is going on, it’s no longer just Pagans and witches who are noticing it. People in other religions and other cultures are seeing the same things we are, they’re just interpreting them in the context of their own beliefs.

Wednesday Photo: The Bandstand and West Pier, Brighton, awaiting Storm Noa

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

Co-ministers’ Colloquy – April 18th

18 April 2023 at 17:45
In her powerful poem Earthrise, Amanda Gorman includes these important words: “So I tell you this not to scare you, But to prepare you, to dare you To dream a different reality, Where despite disparities We all care to protect this world, This riddled blue marble, this little true marvel To muster the ... read more . The post Co-ministers’ Colloquy – April 18th appeared first on Unitarian Universalist Society of Schenectady.

Religious Education on Sunday April 23rd

18 April 2023 at 17:40
We all will be meeting at Doane Stuart school for the multigenerational service with the other local UU congregations. It’s geared with children in mind, so children and youth are encouraged to attend with their families There will be childcare on-site for our youngest ones. ... read more . The post Religious Education on Sunday April 23rd appeared first on Unitarian Universalist Society of Schenectady.

Mid-Day Meditation – Thursdays 3pm – 4pm

18 April 2023 at 17:30
Join UU Schenectady member and mindfulness Buddhist practitioner, Tamara Geveci, for five sessions of shared in-person meditation and mindfulness practice. All are welcome for any or all of the Spring sessions in the Emerson Room (or maybe outside if the weather allows). This will be a time of ... read more . The post Mid-Day Meditation – Thursdays 3pm – 4pm appeared first on Unitarian Universalist Society of Schenectady.

Eyes on the Pies Coffeehouse

18 April 2023 at 17:20
Mark your calendar now for music, community, fun and PIES on Sunday, May 7! The Music Team will be hosting a coffeehouse after worship. A pizza, salad and cookies lunch will be provided in the dining room, followed by musical performances with some of our own UUSS talent ... read more . The post Eyes on the Pies Coffeehouse appeared first on Unitarian Universalist Society of Schenectady.

Unleash the Hounds: April 2023

18 April 2023 at 17:00
We unleash the hounds to do a quick round-up of some interesting archeological finds announced just in the first two weeks of April 2023. Continue reading Unleash the Hounds: April 2023 at The Wild Hunt.

A Robot’s Dream: the Zen Teacher Goes Ego Surfing

18 April 2023 at 16:18
A Robot’s Dream: The Zen Teacher Goes Ego Surfing The latest in ego surfing is asking Chat AI for a bio sketch. A colleague just did it. Found out he was an Anglican priest, although he was pretty sure he’d spent the past thirty years as an English Unitarian minister. And it had him as […]

Dreams

18 April 2023 at 05:00
“My dreams matter. They matter, as they pull me inward and yet simultaneously push me outside of myself; My dreams matter; they matter as they speak to the breadth of love, of pain, of hope, that rest deep in the fabric of my blood and bones.” – from “My Dreams, They Matter,” by roddy bell-shelton biggs … Continue reading Dreams

The Ways Water Weaves the World

18 April 2023 at 09:24
Understanding the vital role water plays in preserving and nourishing our planet.

It’s Good to Resist Perfection

18 April 2023 at 06:01
A Catholic priest, working in the addiction field, said during a workshop “the good is the enemy of the perfect.” Many of us were  brought up with this same belief to constantly seek moral and behavioral perfection, and to be … Continue reading →

Why I decided to like “De Colores”

17 April 2023 at 22:51
Back in 1993, when they revised the Unitarian Universalist hymnal, the editors decided to include “De Colores.” I’ve always hated “De Colores.” It’s a kids’ song. Actually, I like a lot of kids’ songs, but to me “De Colores” sounded like something from that horrible kid show with the ridiculous purple dinosaur. It didn’t help … Continue reading "Why I decided to like “De Colores”"

A Friend’s Umbrella by Lawrence Raab—National Poetry Month 2023

18 April 2023 at 03:00
                                                  Ralph Waldo Emerson in his later years but before his memory failed. Prolific contemporary American poet Lawrence Raab painted a touching portrait of a great mind trapped   by what we now recognize as Alzheimer’s disease.     Ralph Waldo Emerson—the most important and influential American thinker and writer of the first half of the 19th Century—remained active as a lecturer and author into the post-Civil War era.   But by 1879 to the despair of family and friends he had to give up public appearances.   In his own words he explained: I am not in condition to make visits, or take any part in conversation. Old age has rushed on me in the last year, a...

Pagan Community Notes: Week of April 17, 2023

17 April 2023 at 17:03
In this week's Pagan Community Notes, a review of Earth Day events and more news. Continue reading Pagan Community Notes: Week of April 17, 2023 at The Wild Hunt.

Religious Educators Lead a Return to Community

17 April 2023 at 10:00
Sarah Cannon In a world altered by the pandemic, religious educators are finding ways to stitch unraveled communities back together.

Sri Nisargadatta’s Zen Hinduism

17 April 2023 at 11:35
            Sri Nisargadatta’s Zen Hinduism James Ishmael Ford Sri Nisargadatta is arguably the Zen community’s favorite Hindu. At the veryt least we sure like to quote Nisargadatta. As an example, I was reading a book on the practice of Jhanas, pretty inside Buddhist baseball. And there it was. A book […]

Never Forget

17 April 2023 at 05:00
Today is the Jewish commemoration of Yom HaShoah, on which we are tasked to remember the genocide of the Holocaust–and the things that led to it–so that such an atrocity will not be repeated again in human history. How do you remember the past in order to make a better future?

Spring: A Time of Renewal and Transformation

17 April 2023 at 10:41
Spring, as we all know, is a time of renewal of nature, a rebirth of plant life. I think that is a good metaphor for what religion is, or should be—a renewal of our spirit, a rebirth of our life. At All Souls, we pride ourselves on our diversity, like a field of wildflowers, everyone unique. We all have our own light I remember when my parents died, I was invited to a memorial mass at St. Francis Hospital for those who had lost loved ones during the year. During the reception, I was speaking to one of the nuns. […] The post Spring: A Time of Renewal and Transformation appeared first on BeyondBelief.

The New Road

17 April 2023 at 06:06
During the pandemic a new road was built behind my neighborhood connecting two busy roads.  This change distressed me. The noise and vibration of clearing the land and laying the road invaded my home environment. Our house literally shook as … Continue reading →

To a Contemporary Bunkshooter by Carl Sandburg—National Poetry Month 2023

17 April 2023 at 03:00
                                   Carl Sandburg--the Chicago years. Dead White guys have taken a backseat to lots of fresh and diverse voices so far in our National Poetry Month series.   But we can’t ignore one of my favorite poets and personal inspirations—Carl Sandburg.   The old   Universalist, socialist organizer, Chicago reporter, folk singer and song collector, and Lincoln biographer remains fresh and topical. Sandburg was mightily put out by the shenanigans of Billy Sunday, the former baseball player and hair-on-fire tent show Evangelist.   He was even more outraged at the capitalist bosses and their bought-and-paid-for politicians who benefited from Sunday’s sideshow freak distraction.   Sandburg...

Natives

16 April 2023 at 20:14
Over the past year and a half, I’ve slowly been learning a little about botany. One of the most amazing things I’ve learned is that somewhere around one third of all plants in the wild are not native where I live here in Massachusetts. And along suburban streets, most of the plants I see are … Continue reading "Natives"

“We are children of the Sun”: new exhibit honors Mexica Coyolxāuhqui stone

16 April 2023 at 17:00
A new exhibit in Mexico City honors the discovery of the stunning Coyolxāuhqui Stone, which tells the myth of the Mexica goddess of the moon. Continue reading “We are children of the Sun”: new exhibit honors Mexica Coyolxāuhqui stone at The Wild Hunt.

A Day of Mourning

16 April 2023 at 14:29
A sermon calling for the end to gun violence. The post A Day of Mourning appeared first on Colin Bossen.

The Art of Resistance

16 April 2023 at 12:30
Resistance to oppression takes many forms. Sometimes that form is art.

Weekly Bread #218

16 April 2023 at 12:01
Sometimes, amid what looks like rubble and decay, surprises can appear. Trails can be dusty, with fallen tree branches rotting and crumbling into the ground. In the rainy season moss, fungi, and lichen compose the most obvious cleaning crew in the forest. They even eat away at rock, turning large stones gradually into dirt. The […]

Some Zen Words for End Times

16 April 2023 at 10:46
  Some Zen Words for End Times James Ishmael Ford Today, the 21st day of the first month of the third season, in the 23rd year of Thutmose III’s reign, or as we may prefer to put it, the 16th of April, in the year 1457 before our common era (okay unless it was 1482 […]

Expanding Good

16 April 2023 at 05:00
“We often forget that there are creative ways of bringing about change in our communities and society at large. When Jesus suggests we love our enemies, he is imaginatively expanding our concept of what it means to be a good person.” -Frederic and Mary Ann Brussat What religious or spiritual lessons help you expand your … Continue reading Expanding Good

Breeding Tree Frogs and Robins

16 April 2023 at 11:01
Our first frog sighting in the pond yesterday, April 15! Much earlier than the last two years, when the first frogs came in June or July. It turned out to be a tree frog, rather than the green frogs that we’ve seen in prior years. We figured it out because in the afternoon, when my […]

At UALR

16 April 2023 at 08:59
I have another day of box making with students at the Windgate Center for Art and Design at the University of Arkansas, Little Rock. It is a beautiful facility with wood working being at the center of it all.  In the  meantime, this lovely state has the highest rate of maternal mortality in the US with a death rate of young mothers 10 times that of California. What an unbelievable shame that is! Our governor is more concerned about drag shows, the ease of getting guns and positioning herself for higher office than about the death of mothers. Go figure, please. Gun violence has become the highest cause of the death of children in the US. So between the death of mothers and of kids, we have a great deal of work to do and it appears that ...

The Lincoln Park Memorial Cemetery By Christell Victoria Roach—National Poetry Month 2023

16 April 2023 at 03:00
                                                            Christell Victoria Roach. No, not the Lincoln Park in Chicago which started out as a boggy burial ground for early settlers and now contains just one neglected mausoleum and the grave of a dubiously alleged Revolutionary War veteran.   No, Christell Victoria Roach is writing a about a boneyard in her hometown of Miami, Florida which seems as neglected and abused as Burr Oak Cemetery in Chicago suburban Alsip where bodies were dug up the burial plots resold, disposing of bones in a remote area ten years ago. Roach is an Emmy-nominated writer and performer from Miami. She is a 2022-2024 Wallace Stegner Fellow in Poetry at Stanford University. S...

More Information for Nashville Pride

15 April 2023 at 17:21
What we're doing at Nashville Pride | Ride Sharing | Hosting out of towners

Ecstasy and the Craft

15 April 2023 at 17:00
The core of Witchcraft has always been carnal in nature. It is rooted in the wisdom of both the land and the body, recognizing the physical world as the holy temple through which we worship the omnipresent divine, the indwelling consciousness within all things and places. It is this consciousness which we often deify, calling it Goddess or God or some other equally nebulous title meant to inspire a sense of awe, reverence, and mystery. Continue reading Ecstasy and the Craft at The Wild Hunt.

Camp

14 April 2023 at 23:12
Ngoc, Matt, and I are gearing up to offer a week of Ecojustice Camp here on the South Shore beginning August 14. I’m looking forward to translating the California Ecojustice Camp curriculum, which I helped develop, to southeastern Massachusetts. We still haven’t figured out how much we’re going to charge, or what ages we’re going … Continue reading "Camp"

All Ages Worship (16 April 2023)

15 April 2023 at 13:44
Please join us on Sunday (16 April 2023) at 11:00 AM for “Ya’ Know . . .  ?  We Don’t” by Rev. Barbara Jarrell. We will be meeting in the sanctuary for this worship service.  Please join us in person at All Souls Unitarian Universalist Church, 9449 Ellerbe Road, Shreveport LA  71106 if you are able … Continue reading "All Ages Worship (16 April 2023)"

Upcoming Events Reminders for 15-16 April 2023 and Beyond

15 April 2023 at 13:34
Announcement of Special Congregational Meeting (16 April 2023) 2023 Pledge Drive — We Need Your Pledge Now

Children and Youth Religious Education Classes — 16 April 2023

15 April 2023 at 13:34
Children and youth will attend the worship service for the first 15-20 minutes and then are dismissed to their classes. We are now discussing peace, social justice, and the interdependent web and these ideas connect to our Unitarian Universalist faith. Elementary class with Ash McLain and Kevin Henry will be exploring what makes a family … Continue reading "Children and Youth Religious Education Classes — 16 April 2023"

Online Adult Religious Education — 16 April 2023

15 April 2023 at 13:01
Please join us on Sunday (16 April 2023) as we continue our new series in our 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. We have several persons in the adult religious … Continue reading "Online Adult Religious Education — 16 April 2023"

Zoom (and In-Person) Lunch on Tuesday (18 April 2023)

15 April 2023 at 12:53
Please join us next Tuesday (18 April 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.

Paradise

15 April 2023 at 05:00
“If you want to view paradise, simply look around and view it. Anything you want to, do it. Want to change the world? There’s nothing to it.” -from “Pure Imagination,” by Leslie Bricusse and Anthony Newley Where do you see paradise around you today? How can you imagine it?

At the Windgate Art and Design Center, UALR

15 April 2023 at 08:51
I had a very nice time last night making a presentation to an audience of hand enthusiasts at the Windgate Center for Art and Design in Little Rock. I think there may have been as many as fifty in the audience... not bad on a Friday night when there are thousands of other things to do.  At one point, I asked the audience whether they thought that providing means of maintaining mental health should be a primary mission of American education. And of course that should be the case, and the audience agreed. We know there's a significant link between the development of hand skills, and a sense of well being. Woodworkers may call what we do, "sawdust therapy" knowing that what we do with wood make us feel better. And all other craftsmen in ev...

From Words of War: New Poems from the Ukraine—National Poetry Month 2023

15 April 2023 at 07:06
The war in Ukraine drags on, mostly ignored by the U.S. media.   Boring stuff, you know.   Yesterday’s news regurgitated.   Unless, of course, there is a particularly unfortunate atrocity or a visit by some high muckety-muck or rock star. The book Words for War: New Poems from Ukraine (Boston, Academic Studies Press, 2017) edited by Oksana Maksymchuk and Max Rosochinsky reflects the experience of war back when it was a supposedly low-boil regional conflict with Russian supported separatists. The words and images created an impression of a shimmering landscape that kept shifting and changing. It is these moments that move us most—the moments when things no longer make sense but are about to start making sense again. Meanings change...

Mnemosyne Affirming: Reflecting on Sacred Space/Between the Worlds 2023

14 April 2023 at 21:12
Nathan Hall reflects on the Sacred Space / Between the Worlds conference, an event that he found "enormously powerful, challenging, and revivifying." Continue reading Mnemosyne Affirming: Reflecting on Sacred Space/Between the Worlds 2023 at The Wild Hunt.

Meditation with Larry Androes (15 April 2023)

14 April 2023 at 20:28
Please join us on Saturday (15 April 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 (15 April 2023)"

Moral Good

14 April 2023 at 05:00
“The great instrument of moral good is imagination.” – Percy Shelley How has imagination led you to do good things?

Whales

13 April 2023 at 21:06
Carol and I went for a day trip to Cape Cod. The first place we went was Sandy Neck in Barnstable. As we walked from the parking lot to the beach, someone said, “Are you here for the whales?” About 80 North Atlantic Right Whales have been hanging out around Cape Cod. The Cape Cod … Continue reading "Whales"

today in Little Rock

14 April 2023 at 07:23
I'll be in little Rock for the next three days at  UA Little Rock’s School of Art and Design leading a lecture and a workshop as part of the artWORKs series.   Made possible through the Windgate Foundation, the UA Little Rock artWORKs Series brings renowned artists to the UA Little Rock campus where they can collaborate and craft a community that values learning and the visual arts.   Details, times and  locations  can be found in this link:  https://ualr.edu/news/2023/04/06/stowe-artworks-artist/ Make, fix and create...

Whereas by Layli Long Soldier—National Poetry Month 2023

14 April 2023 at 06:56
Oglala poet and advocate Layli Long Soldier. Layli Long Soldier , and enrolled member of the Oglala Lakota Nation, poet, writer, feminist, artist, and activist reflected in a very personal way the gulf of understanding between the experiences and lives between Native peoples and even the most would-be White sympathizers in her acclaimed poem Whereas .   It’s a hard lesson for even the most self-proclaimed White to understand. Long Soldier grew up in the four corners region of the Southwest, where she continues to live and to advocate against the continued, systematic oppression of indigenous populations.   She graduated from the Institute of American Indian Arts in in Santa Fe, New Mexico with a B.A. in Fine Arts, and went on to earn...

Three Kinds of Resistance: Part 3

14 April 2023 at 06:01
In my life, it seems that resistance can come from three places. I want to talk about the third of those three places,the one where I think we may be required to dig in and become the resistors ourselves: internal … Continue reading →

Prayer for Connecting Deeply with Earth

14 April 2023 at 06:00
A Prayer for Connecting Deeply with Earth Rock of Our Hearts, connect us deeply to the earth wherever we live, wherever we are migrating, wherever we are exiled, wherever we travel, wherever we are. Connect us deeply to the earth, so we learn the ways of the land as it...

23S Week 6.

14 April 2023 at 01:16
Click here to hear Lindsa Vallee's focus talk. The main lecture was given by Peter Wohl, author of Wild Mind, Wild Heart: Discover Your True Self in Nature , Zen Buddhist teacher, registered Maine Guide.  Click here to hear him. Listen to the dragonfly....          by Ival Stratford Kovner

Research finds that breathwork improves mood and eases stress better than meditation

13 April 2023 at 18:38
Two new research studies offer evidence that breathwork - an easily taught and affordable technique - can reduce anxiety, depression, and stress effects. Continue reading Research finds that breathwork improves mood and eases stress better than meditation at The Wild Hunt.

What is Loss and Damage?

13 April 2023 at 13:48
A look at UUSC’s partners’ approaches to loss and damage.

Mental Health, Youth, and UU Support

12 April 2023 at 10:00
Elaine McArdle Strong connections with caring adults matter when young people are struggling.

Curiosity

13 April 2023 at 05:00
Imagination is tied to curiosity for me. Being curious about the world around me sparks my imagination…why is that flower that color? what kind of evolution had to happen to make the platypus? Imagine if that had gone a different way! -Christina Rivera (CLF) What sparks your imagination?

J.R.R. Tolkien and white supremacy

12 April 2023 at 22:59
An interesting essay by Tolkien scholar Robin A. Reid points out that the beloved author’s works are also loved by neo-Nazis, white supremacists, etc. Why? Perhaps because Tolkien’s fictional universe sets up a fictional racial hierarchy similar to the real-world racial hierarchies promoted by neo-Nazis, white supremacists, etc. The essay’s title is, in of itself, … Continue reading "J.R.R. Tolkien and white supremacy"

Three Kinds of Resistance: Part 2

13 April 2023 at 06:00
In my life, it seems that resistance can come from three places, and only one of those requires me to dig in and continue the force of resistance. I want to talk about the second of those three places: a … Continue reading →

The Sikh Tradition: A Small Celebration

13 April 2023 at 04:00
        The Sikh TraditionA Small Celebration James Ishmael Ford There is one god, named truth, the creator, without fear, without hate, timeless in form, beyond birth, self-existent, (known by) the grace of the Guru. It was today, the 13th of April, in 1699 that the Guru Gobind Singh created a formal initiation […]

Mayor Harold Washington by Gwendolyn Brooks—National Poetry Month 2023

13 April 2023 at 03:00
I not only voted for Harold Washington for Mayor, I rang doorbells in Dick Mell's hostile ward for him. Monday was the 40th anniversary of Harold Washington’s election as the first Black Mayor of Chicago.   I remember how thrilled and excited I was to see the Congressman from Hyde Park win after a hard-fought, racially divisive vote.   He had captured the official Democratic Party nomination on the strength of a massive Black turn-out and faced Republican Bernie Epton—suddenly anointed the white savior of the city’s White ethnic wards.   I was proud to pound pavement on his behalf in both elections in Dick Mell’s 33rd Ward on the Northwest Side. Just a couple of weeks ago another Black progressive, Brandon Johnson, won his rac...

Patron Deities in Modern Paganism

12 April 2023 at 05:00
Some contemporary Pagans and polytheists have patron deities. Most don’t. “Finding your patron deity” is far from the most urgent matter for someone on this path.

Luxury condo plans opposed on Miami Ancestral site as old as Stonehenge

12 April 2023 at 17:00
A prehistoric archaeological site in Miami appears to be a contemporary of Stonehenge and Brú na Bóinne. The area around the site is under threat by development plans that are being opposed by Indigenous leaders and archeologists. Continue reading Luxury condo plans opposed on Miami Ancestral site as old as Stonehenge at The Wild Hunt.

t-rex

12 April 2023 at 17:05
Today in the Clear Spring School wood shop the Kindergarten students and I made dinosaurs. Last week when I asked the students what they would like to make next, one student immediately responded "dinosaurs!" And education at its best adheres closely to "the interest of the child," whatever the age of the "child" might be. That's a thing just as true for my adult students. This week I'll go to Little Rock where as a guest at UALR I'll make a Friday night presentation on the Wisdom of Our Hands, and then follow up on Saturday and Sunday with classes in box making. The details can be found in this link: https://ualr.edu/news/2023/04/06/stowe-artworks-artist/ Make, fix and create... Assist others in learning lifewise.

Luxury condo plans opposed on Miami Ancestral site as old as Stonehenge

12 April 2023 at 17:00
A prehistoric archaeological site in Miami appears to be a contemporary of Stonehenge and Brú na Bóinne. The area around the site is under threat by development plans that are being opposed by Indigenous leaders and archeologists. Continue reading Luxury condo plans opposed on Miami Ancestral site as old as Stonehenge at The Wild Hunt.

Apple Tree Transplant

12 April 2023 at 15:08
Four years ago I attended an apple grafting workshop, and created four grafted plants to bring home. I planted them in a “nursery” bed in the orchard, a Black Oxford variety in the center to remain there, and the others to later transplant. The root stock was called M111, a semi-dwarf variety. But I wasn’t […]
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