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Before yesterdayAggs

Weekly Bread #168

24 April 2022 at 11:16
Traveling through a storm can be dangerous. When there is a storm, especially a windy one, we either stay home or go someplace without a lot of trees for our hikes. Even a day after a storm can be tricky. The weather was calm and bright on Friday, but a large Bay tree had fallen […]

Theories of God: A Small Zen Meditation

24 April 2022 at 09:41
      Today is Orthodox Easter. Blessings on all those who observe the holy day. And I am in Toledo with the Great Heartland Zen Buddhist temple which just celebrated the dedication of its new temple building. A very interesting marker in our Western Zen communities, where if a building is owned it is […]

May Their Memory Be a Blessing (Z”L)

24 April 2022 at 05:00
In Judaism, one of the traditional responses when someone dies is “may their memory be a blessing.” It is a reminder that remembrance is not a passive act–our memories of those who have gone before us should inspire us to live their goodness in the world. Whose memory is a blessing to you today? What … Continue reading May Their Memory Be a Blessing (Z”L)

War in Ukraine Rages So do Poets—National Poetry Month 2022

24 April 2022 at 05:34
Ukrainian volunteers inspect inspect damaged and abandoned Russian tanks.     The brutal war against Ukraine grinds relentlessly on and enters a new phase at the massive Russian offensive in the eastern Donbas region and missile attacks on Odessa in the Crimea and western cities that are both escape routes for refugees and receiving points and staging areas for influxes of Western arms and ammunition .  Ukraine resistance remains fierce and billions of Dollars’ worth of heavy weapons including artillery and anti-tank and anti-aircraft missile systems , and drones as well parts for helicopters and jet fighters are pouring into the country from the U.S. and NATO allies enraging a probably unstable Vladimir Putin . It is just the lates...

Bitter condalia

24 April 2022 at 00:09
This is the underside of the leaf.

All-Ages Worship (24 April 2022)

23 April 2022 at 22:20
Please join us on Sunday (24 April 2022) at 11:00 AM for “Embracing the World” — a service in celebration of Earth Day 2022 featuring a Unitarian Universalist flower communion — with Rev. Barbara Jarrell. We will be meeting in the sanctuary for this worship service.  Please join us in person at All Souls Unitarian Universalist … Continue reading "All-Ages Worship (24 April 2022)"

Online Adult Religious Education — 24 April 2022

23 April 2022 at 22:13
Please join us on Sunday (24 April 2022) at 9:00 AM for our adult religious education class via Zoom. This Sunday we begin our work through the book Me and White Supremacy by Layla F. Saad. As the author says, “This is not a book you read, this is a book you do” and we … Continue reading "Online Adult Religious Education — 24 April 2022"

Children and Youth Religious Education (24 April 2022)

23 April 2022 at 22:00
On this Sunday (24 April 2022), children and youth religious education classes will resume in person and will happen during our 11:00 AM worship service. We will resume our pre-COVID practice where the children and youth will join us in the sanctuary for the first 15-20 minutes and then we will sing them out to … Continue reading "Children and Youth Religious Education (24 April 2022)"

Zoom Lunch Now on Tuesdays (26 April 2022)

23 April 2022 at 21:54
Please join us next Tuesday (26 April 2022) at 12 noon for our weekly Zoom lunch. Bring your lunch and meet up with your All Souls friends, have lunch, and just catch up.

Opinion: The CROWN Act would prevent discrimination against Black hairstyles

23 April 2022 at 17:00
Clio Ajana examines the CROWN Act, a bill currently before the US Congress that would prevent discrimination based on an individual's choice of hairstyle. Continue reading Opinion: The CROWN Act would prevent discrimination against Black hairstyles at The Wild Hunt.

small drawers

23 April 2022 at 11:15
In my home woodshop I've been attempting to finish old projects that have languished for some reason or another. These trial assembled drawers are for two small jewelry chests that I'd begun years ago.  They are made from maple and are made with simple  mortise and tenon joints. I'll show photos of the finished jewelry chests at a much later date. Another project is to finish a silk wood box made using round Vertex hinges. The walnut pull resting on top is left over from a much earlier project and will be fitted to the front of the lid Make, fix and create...

The Flame of Memory

23 April 2022 at 05:00
“We are a People of Memory. As inheritors of our ancestors’ legacy, we hold their stories tenderly. Gleaning wisdom from diverse journeys; united in hope for the future. Guide us to trust in love as we kindle this flame together.” -Kimberlee A. Tomczak Carlson What are you lighting a candle or chalice in memory of … Continue reading The Flame of Memory

Testing

23 April 2022 at 01:04
Can I add media? let’s see

George the Dragon Slaying Saint Inspired Verse—National Poetry Month 2022 April 23, 2021

23 April 2022 at 05:05
St. George in Myth. Today is the Feast Day of St. George as observed in England where he became the nation’s Patron Saint and is represented on the Union Jack by the upright red cross.   George is also venerated by Orthodox Christians and is the Patron Saint of Greece as well, which explains why so many restaurant owners are named George.   But the Eastern and Western versions of why George is such a popular saint are very different. Unlike some early popular saints there was apparently a historical George.    He was born around 256 A.D. probably in Palestine where his father, Gerontius, was a Patrician noble of Greek origin in the Roman Army occupying the province of Syria Palaestina.   The family was Christian .   George follow...

Meditation with Larry Androes (23 April 2022)

23 April 2022 at 04:34
Please join us on Saturday (23 April 2022) 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. The group is free and open to all. For more information, contact Larry … Continue reading "Meditation with Larry Androes (23 April 2022)"

"I have seen in my solitude very clear things that are not true" — on living the liberal religious life *TOGETHER*

23 April 2022 at 03:42
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— “I have seen in my solitude very clear things that are not true.”   So wrote the Spanish poet, Antonio Machado (1875–1939) and, I cite his proverb because, when I write my weekly “thought for the day” for you, I always find myself in solitude at my desk or, more often than not, lying atop the bed with a laptop propped up on my knees and a cup of tea by my side.  However, in at least two senses, I am not entirely alone in my solitude. Firstly, I am “with” the author of the words which form the proximate caus...

Easter! Passover! Ramadan! Liberation! part 2

22 April 2022 at 18:59
To part 1 Two ideas in the Passover festival are central: It is a celebration of freedom. Passover is known as “The Season of our Liberation.” It commemorates the escape from enslavement in Egypt. It is a call to hospitality. The two phrases that echo most loudly through the Passover Seder Haggadah are: (1) "In every generation let each one feel as if he or she came forth out of Egypt"; and (2) “Let any who are hungry come and eat.” These are interrelated and intertwined. The human psyche has three basic categories: ME, US, and THEM. Exodus tells about the liberation of an US. As a story initially and primarily told by Jewish people to Jewish people, it’s the story of how WE were enslaved. Physical needs for food, clothing, she...

Column: Building Connections at Bear Path Cottage

22 April 2022 at 18:03
"Creating a homestead from scratch is a long, slow process, especially for someone with very little practical experience as a gardener, zero experience with livestock and water management, and limited financial resources. At least it has been for me." Continue reading Column: Building Connections at Bear Path Cottage at The Wild Hunt.

My Little d deaf Take on “CODA” and Thoughts on “The Eyes of Tammy Faye”

22 April 2022 at 18:02
A Q&A with Terry Galloway | It’s a Hallmark film of a movie and, as such, has every Deaf cliché you can think of, including how hot Deaf people are in bed—although I’m inclined to perpetuate that myth. “CODA,” written by a hearing person and adapted by another hearing person, made the Deaf family the nominal villains: backwards, unthinking, unfeeling, selfish bumpkins. Until, of course, their hearing, singing savior of a child makes them see the error of their dumb ole Deaf ways.

Earth Day 2022: 52 years of awareness – let’s continue the effort…

22 April 2022 at 15:44
Well it is Earth Day again, so let’s start… Hmmm I have always found that so odd. We are going to begin now, but there are 365 days in a year and it’s now 2022… start already! This will be the 52nd Earth Day celebration, which brings awareness to all about environmental concerns. These issues […] The post Earth Day 2022: 52 years of awareness – let’s continue the effort… appeared first on Nature's Sacred Journey.

Annaliese Cothron, a Trans-Power Mom

24 April 2022 at 09:30
The rights of the trans community and trans children are under attack, with a record number of anti-trans bills proposed in state legislatures across the country. Watch the testimony of the mother of a trans child fighting for the rights of trans families.

Genocide: Understanding a Word With Consequences (Part One)

22 April 2022 at 11:55
President Biden’s recent comments should prompt us to consider the word’s real meaning and demand accountability.

Earth Memory

22 April 2022 at 05:00
Earth holds memory surely as people. It is passed through generations and among species. Find a way to touch the Earth today and feel the memory stored in our mother planet.

Earth Day Verse with the World at the Tipping Point of Catastrophe—National Poetry Month 2022

22 April 2022 at 03:00
Today is Earth Day which was first observed world-wide with giant marches and rallies on April 22, 1970.  It took the energy and activism of the peace movement and anti-Vietnam War protests and gave people a new purpose.  It has generally been credited with reorienting  somewhat stodgy and human-use focused conservationism into a dynamic ecology movement.  It is still widely celebrated and has become a kind of semi-official holiday.  But it has often been co-optedand is used both by polluting mega corporations and thumb-twiddling governments as green washing and providing support for band aid personal activities like recycling to avoid deeper changes which would cut profits, re-order economies, and fundamentally changehow we live ou...

Olive leaf

22 April 2022 at 02:50

Sunday, April 24 ~ For the Love of Truth ~ 10:30 a.m.

21 April 2022 at 22:16
Sunday, April 24, 10:30 a.m. For the Love of Truth Worship Service led by Guest Preacher Kate Ballas This Sunday, April 24, Guest Preacher Kate Ballas leads us as we explore the life and legacy of Edith Stein, an early 20th Century German philosopher of Jewish heritage whose search for Truth led her to convert to   [ … ] The post Sunday, April 24 ~ For the Love of Truth ~ 10:30 a.m. appeared first on Unitarian Church of Marlborough and Hudson.

Earth Day 2022 – The state of things

21 April 2022 at 17:00
With Earth Day tomorrow, TWH takes a look at some of the environmental events happening and some of the actions that offer hope for the future. Continue reading Earth Day 2022 – The state of things at The Wild Hunt.

Action Alert: We Must Support Children’s Mental Health

21 April 2022 at 13:46
  “The Supporting Children’s Mental Health Care Access Act and the Youth Mental Health and Suicide Prevention Act would increase access to mental health care services and provide direct funding to schools for mental health promotion and suicide prevention. These bills are bipartisan efforts, and they are gaining momentum. Let your elected representatives know you support them. It takes everyone to address this mental health crisis.” — Dr. Deanna Behrens, Pediatric Intensive Care     The Surgeon General has sounded read more... The post Action Alert: We Must Support Children’s Mental Health appeared first on Promise the Children.

Emerson on reparations

21 April 2022 at 13:19
On January 1, 1863, in celebration of the Emancipation Proclamation, Ralph Waldo Emerson read a poem to a Boston audience. In that poem, Emerson considered the then-current idea that slave-owners should be compensated for having their slaves taken away from them. To this ethically bankrupt notion, he replied: Pay ransom to the owner,And fill the … Continue reading "Emerson on reparations"

Sowing Justice: UU the Vote Rises Again

21 April 2022 at 10:00
Jeff Milchen As threats to democracy grow, we’re determined to make 2022 the year love and justice regain the upper hand.

play with blocks

21 April 2022 at 09:01
The kids at Clear Spring School set up the big Froebel blocks as a playfield and obstacle course as you can see. Every school should provide kids the opportunity to design their own playground experiences, including the structures themselves. Make, fix and create...

Walls

21 April 2022 at 05:00
“You can brick up your heart as stout and tight and hard and cold and impregnable as you possibly can and down it comes in an instant, felled by a woman’s second glance, a child’s apple breath, the shatter of glass in the road, the words ‘I have something to tell you’… the brush of … Continue reading Walls

When You Need to Remember that UPG is Personal

21 April 2022 at 05:00
If your spiritual experiences – your UPG, your Unverified Personal Gnosis – involve someone else, either they’ll respond on their own, or you’re mistaking your desires for the message of a God or spirit.

I’m From Chicago Poet Elizabeth Marino Said—National Poetry Month 2022

21 April 2022 at 03:00
Elizabeth Marino. Elizabeth Marino may have been born into a Puerto Rican family in Chicago but the circumstances of her unique childhood and upbringing made her more creature of her city than an ethnic writer.   Chicago was and is a town where neighborhoods can be little realms of their own and where travel between them often seems like it should require passports and stamped visas.   A keen memoirist she recalls that worldand as an adult dared to adventure even wider while honoringher roots. Marino was born to a Puerto Rican couple in Chicago’s old Hyde Park barrio and was raised in an Italian/German American family in the southwest Chicago suburbs, famed for musiciansand gangsters. She holds a Master of Art from the University of ...

Curlleaf mountain-mahogany

21 April 2022 at 02:30
So called because the edges of its leaves sometimes curl under. Here’s a view of a leaf’s underside.

Minorities languages skirt censors to tell the truth about the war in Ukraine

20 April 2022 at 17:32
Despite Russian attempts to control the narrative and suppress criticism of their war on Ukraine, the use of minority languages have allowed some to express their opposition and the truth of what is happening while avoiding censorship of the Russian State. Continue reading Minorities languages skirt censors to tell the truth about the war in Ukraine at The Wild Hunt.

An Enduring Legacy: The Role of Financial Institutions in the Horrors of Slavery and the Need for Atonement

20 April 2022 at 11:46
By Daina Ramey Berry | Good afternoon, Chairman Green, Chairwoman Waters, Vice Chair Williams and members of the Committee. It is an honor to come before this body to share my testimony on the legacies of slavery and connections to financial institutions. I have been studying this history for thirty years and I appreciate the invitation.

Wooden Boat

20 April 2022 at 07:53
Yesterday in addition to helping my students make boxes and turn on the lathe, I received my copy of Wooden Boat Magazine containing Joe Youcha's review of "The Wisdom of Our Hands." It is a good review. Joe wrote of the book— "I read it in two big gulps, and as I did, I identified with the book’s message so much that I began making a list of everyone I thought should read it. By the time I finished, that list included anyone studying at a craft school, all the people I work with, and all the people I’ve ever taught. I especially wish I could buy copies for all the people who taught me, and who are no longer here. I actually want to buy it for everyone I know." Joe Youcha, a graduate of Columbia University, but no stranger to handw...

Iftar

20 April 2022 at 05:00
At sundown, the fasts of Ramadan are broken with the meal of iftar, traditionally begun with the sweetness of dates. What is something you can do to add sweetness to your spiritual practice?  

My GI Tract Is Wack

20 April 2022 at 04:51
My GI tract is wack But it be more wack If I didn’t watch the Things I eat and drink This knowledge it docent help Me to feel any better When I go number 2 And it drains me completely I feel I’d rather be Less aware of my body If I could go disassociate … Continue reading My GI Tract Is Wack

Current Black Poets You Should Know—National Poetry Month 2022

20 April 2022 at 04:21
  With a tip-o’-the-hat to Hannah Eko who featured these talented Black poets and others last year in her Colorlines blog post here are some creative forces you should know.   Descriptive text by Eko. Camonghne Felix’s work a musical blend of the poetic and the political. A Cave Canem fellowand National Book Award finalist, she is also a former political strategist for the Ms. Foundation, speechwriter for New York Governor Andrew Cuomo, and was a strategic communications directorfor the Elizabeth Warren’s presidential campaign. Her poetry wrestles with the complexities of Black womanhood, sexual assault, and the legacies of heartbreak. Badu Interviews Lamar Badu: This cyclone of good fortune.                   

Yewleaf willow

20 April 2022 at 01:05
For those who recall that aspirin is derived from willow bark, here we are: Salix taxifolia, as in salicylic acid. Ah, the teeny tiny veins of yewleaf willow. And of most of the leaves to come, I suspect. I’m not good at them yet, but this year will be an intensive course.

Flower Communion, May 1

19 April 2022 at 20:22

Flower Communion, May 1

19 April 2022 at 20:22

Child Dedication, May 8

19 April 2022 at 20:21

Mid-Week Message 4-19-22

19 April 2022 at 19:08

Green Policies and the battle in Florida

19 April 2022 at 18:47
As more "rights of nature" lawsuits both within and outside of the U.S. are being filed, Florida may end up being one the proving grounds for the legal theory. Continue reading Green Policies and the battle in Florida at The Wild Hunt.

Co-Ministers’ Colloquy – April 19th

19 April 2022 at 15:47
On Monday afternoon, we had a visit scheduled with the wonderful Unitarian Universalists who live at the Glen Eddy, a senior living community in Niskayuna. Wendy needed to be at the church building for the AV installation, so Lynn visited with the ten folks who ... read more . The post Co-Ministers’ Colloquy – April 19th appeared first on Unitarian Universalist Society of Schenectady.

Not Drowning, But Fighting

19 April 2022 at 12:53
Pacific Climate Warriors advocate for climate justice in the Pacific through powerful storytelling and organizing work.

Youth Movement Building for Action on Climate Justice

19 April 2022 at 12:52
Youth are a vital part of the solution for achieving climate justice. UUSC’s partnership aims to amplify and center their voices and facilitate their access to decision-making spaces.

RE This Week – April 19th

19 April 2022 at 09:37
How beautiful, fun, and special it was to have so many children in the Great Hall this past Sunday, to participate in the flower ritual, the Easter egg hunt, visiting with the Easter Bunny, and working on puzzles!  Watching the children spill out the back ... read more . The post RE This Week – April 19th appeared first on Unitarian Universalist Society of Schenectady.

Earth Week Events!

19 April 2022 at 09:15
We hope you can attend at least one of these Earth Week events listed below! Friday, April 22 Climate Can’t Wait March and Rally in Albany. Co-sponsored by NY UU Justice (NYUUJ). – 11 am: Greet NYC to Albany bikers and start march at Jim DiNapoli Park, Broadway & ... read more . The post Earth Week Events! appeared first on Unitarian Universalist Society of Schenectady.

Fasting

19 April 2022 at 05:00
The central practice of Ramadan is the daily fast, from sunrise to sunset. Fasting is used in many religious traditions as a practice of self-control, concentration, and as a reminder of the abundance that exists so often in our lives. How can you help your mind concentrate on something important today?

The Two of Swords – Choose Wisely

19 April 2022 at 05:00
Let’s examine the consensus meaning of the Two of Swords at a deeper level than your typical little white book. And let’s explore wisdom of the Two of Swords in the context of living in these “interesting” and “unprecedented” times.

More Leaves from the Tree of Life—National Poetry Month 2022

19 April 2022 at 04:46
  Some how I got the reputationas THE poet of the Tree of Life Unitarian Universalist Congregationin McHenry ,Illinois largely on the strength of being pushy and obnoxious about putting myself forward on every occasion possible —worship services, special readings ,coffee houses, benefit events, vigils, and demonstrations .   If folks would stand or sit still long enough , I was sure to declaim original versein their faces.   It helped that 18 years ago Skinner House Books, a publishing arm of the Unitarian Universalist Association (UUA) issued my little collection We Build Temples in the Heart from which a handful of poems have been regularly used in denominational services.   I also have the benefit of a platform on this blog whic...

More elusive leaves

19 April 2022 at 01:57
The second tree in the “untoothed simple leaves” section of the field guide, like the first, is a spiny desert dweller that has barely any leaves at all. Finally I spotted one clinging to a twig in a photo that was clearly meant to showcase the thorns and the brilliant indigo flowers. But short-lived though […]

When things work out.

18 April 2022 at 21:18
Today in woodshop I did an experiment in preparing an elm log for turning on the lathe. What I wanted to do was to simply take a slice off each side so that the short firewood-length log could be mounted on the lath chuck. Woodturning is nearly always experimental and of course that's part of its appeal. We wonder, "can I do that?" and "how?"And then are pleasantly surprised when things work out. Normally in cutting a log on the bandsaw, that it is round causes difficulties as it passes through the cut. If it twists even the slightest amount, the blade can bind and the flat surface desired will not result. What's needed is a way to hold it steady without twisting as it passes through the cut.  There are of course, more complicated proce...

Pagan Community Notes: Week of April 18, 2022 – Earth Day edition

18 April 2022 at 17:53
In this week's Pagan Community Notes, Earth Day, meteor showers, music, and more news. Continue reading Pagan Community Notes: Week of April 18, 2022 – Earth Day edition at The Wild Hunt.

A Collective: World Cafe on Justice

18 April 2022 at 15:20
After discussion, participants move to a new table with different people and a different question. Someone at each table collected notes and below is a collective of those discussions. The post A Collective: World Cafe on Justice appeared first on BeyondBelief.

Faith

18 April 2022 at 05:00
From April 2 to May 2, Muslims throughout the world are observing their holy month of Ramadan. This is a time for study, prayer, and deep introspection about one’s faith, a “cleansing of the soul,” as it has been called. What is something that you need to rekindle your faith in?

Gina Puorro’s I Hear There’s a Bounty on My Womb—National Poetry Month 2022

18 April 2022 at 04:07
Gina Puorro . Gina Puorro describes herself this way:   “I am a student of magic, love, grief, intimacy, myth and story, ritual arts, and the wild and vast terrain that we call nature.   My writing is inspired by the exploration of good questions, by relating with my human and non-human kin, and by my pursuit of beauty and awe.   I hope to live with my heart open, my voice free, my mind curious, and my feet rooted in love.” She blogs and shares her poems at Gina M. Puorro Writer and Poet.   Her new book is The Wild Will Call You Back now available on Amazon.                                                 Puorro's new book of poetry and prose is available on Amazon. I Hear There’s a Bounty on My Womb...

Canotia / Crucifixion thorn, finished

18 April 2022 at 02:56
It has mistakes, as always, but for me this is a successful drawing: when I get into the paper what I love about the subject: here, the tangle and depth of the twigs and thorns, and the light that filters through it.

From Ishtar to Ēostre: a conversation with Steff V. Scott

17 April 2022 at 17:26
In a new book, Steff V Scott, presiding officer of the Scottish Pagan Federation, lays out an argument for a connection between the Near Eastern goddess Ishtar and the Anglo-Saxon Eostre. Continue reading From Ishtar to Ēostre: a conversation with Steff V. Scott at The Wild Hunt.

Building the Legacy of Tomorrow

17 April 2022 at 15:04
as preached April 3, 2022 at the First Unitarian Universalist Church of Houston It is good to be back in the pulpit. It feels like I have been away for a long time. I have missed you. The last time I was supposed to offer you a sermon I came down with COVID. It was […]

Troubling the Truth (Easter 2022)

17 April 2022 at 14:37
In my Easter sermon for 2022 I challenge us to go beyond the idea that there is such a singular thing as the truth.

Easter! Passover! Ramadan! Liberation! part 1

17 April 2022 at 14:49
Today is a holy day in the Christian tradition. It’s Easter. This week is a holy week in the Jewish tradition. Passover began last Friday evening and lasts until next Saturday evening. And this month is a holy month in the Islamic tradition. It’s the month of Ramadan. We have three great traditions overlapping, and each tradition offers us a story, redolent with meaning and possibility whether we are adherents of the faith tradition from which it comes or not. At Community UU, our theme of the month for April is liberation, and our journey groups are exploring this issue, and looking at what sorts of things from which a person might need to be liberated. There have been and are groups that are oppressed, beaten down. Liberation is ab...

Easter Is a Word for Defiance

17 April 2022 at 12:30
Why the Easter story matters, even to Unitarian Universalists.

Possum tells the old story of Easter

17 April 2022 at 12:16
Possum decides he’s going to tell the old story of Easter this year. His friends Rolf, Birago, Nicky, and Dr. Sharpie help him out. Click on the image above to view the video on Vimeo As usual, the script is below the fold. (The script has not been corrected against the actual video, and may … Continue reading "Possum tells the old story of Easter"

Weekly Bread #167

17 April 2022 at 11:14
It rained Friday night. We needed it. And the sun came out on Saturday morning and welcomed me with a rainbow. A fitting image for both Passover and Easter I think. Liberation doesn’t come easy nor does resurrection. But the awe a rainbow inspires can bring us hope of both. I believe liberation is possible […]

Easy to read

17 April 2022 at 09:48
I got a nice email this morning from a reader related to my new book, Wisdom of Our Hands. He said the book was "easy to read and enjoyable," those being two of the goals I'd set for myself. There are many books of note on the subject of the hands and crafts that rely on second and third hand information, leaving them somewhat abstract. My own goal was to make it personal, meaning that I would tell my own story as well as invite my readers to explore their own experiences to bring the message home.  I hope this simple strategy—moving from the concrete to the abstract helps my book to enter a popular market. Good sales are good, the message is important. Make, fix and create...

Dual awareness

17 April 2022 at 09:36
I have this belief that we are connected with each other in unseen ways, and if we are attempting to find clarity, those ways are gradually revealed. Sometimes suddenly that is the case. It's called enlightment.   There’s a phenomenon described in Nuclear Physics called “quantum entanglement” according to which, if two particles are introduced to each other and then thrust apart to the furthest reaches of the universe, what’s done to one is known to the other. Perhaps our own beings are too complex and too distracted to register and make conscious to ourselves the myriad connections between us. We spend endless hours spinning outwards  toward   greater  complexity without seeking that which lies within. Friedrich Froebel, th...

Easter

17 April 2022 at 05:00
In the Western Christian calendar, today is Easter Sunday, the holiest day in the Christian year, and the celebration of the resurrection of Jesus. What is most holy to you?

Alternative Eyes on Easter—National Poetry Month 2022

17 April 2022 at 05:34
  That wandering Spring holyday is back again and means so many different things through different eyes—the hope of humanity, the critical validation of a faith, a fable, a fraud, rebirth, disguisedfolk fertility customs, community, family tradition, bunnies and eggs for the children.   Maybe pick one from column A and two from column B with eggroll. Today we will look at Easter through three alternative eyes.   Poet and novelist Jim Harrison was an outlier—semi-reclusive , curmudgeonly , prone to profound melancholy and ecstatic joy in nature.   “Someone has to stay outside,” he told a friend and admirer.     Theresa Novack is a retired Unitarian Universalist minister, now a dedicated hiker in lovely and wild places with h...

Holy Saturday, the Fracturing of the Divine, and the Eternal Invitation

16 April 2022 at 17:16
    It’s Holy Saturday. Not very long ago a friend sent me a copy of the Deptford Trilogy. Jan and I actually went through a Robertson Davie’s orgy of reading many years ago, and I’d read all his fiction. But, it had been, well, possibly as many as twenty years ago, and I realized […]

Opinion: Beyond Bathrooms – the Bigotry of Being Uncomfortable

16 April 2022 at 17:02
Storm Faerywolf surveys the recent set of attacks on marginalized identities that are part of the culture wars in the United States. Continue reading Opinion: Beyond Bathrooms – the Bigotry of Being Uncomfortable at The Wild Hunt.

Is your identity set in stone?

16 April 2022 at 11:49
If you’re reaching sexual maturity today, you have a wide array of sexual orientations with which you might identify. There are the old categories of straight, bisexual, gay, and lesbian. There is a continuum from asexual through graysexual to allosexual, though it’s not a linear continuum since it also includes demisexual and aspec and other … Continue reading "Is your identity set in stone?"

Birthday Wish

16 April 2022 at 11:15
This picture is my 6th birthday in 1971.  Monday April, 18, marks exactly 51 years later.  When I was six, my biggest wishes were for model cars and G.I. Joes.  The boy to my right was also named Adam the other boy was named Paul (?) and the girl Natalie or Natalia (?)…not sure why […]

L’chaim! — to life!: A religion without God and an ethics without absolutes—A short Easter Sunday reflection

16 April 2022 at 07:48
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— Last year, whilst we were still in lockdown, I offered you my Easter reflections only via my blog and podcast. Should you want to read or listen to that piece it was called “Cancelling my subscription to the Resurrection and truly living the death of God”, and you can find links to it in all the usual places. What I am offering you here is simply the central idea it contained.  To begin it’s important to know that the theological position from which I am writing  — one which, given the free-thinking ethos of this ...

Gatherings

16 April 2022 at 05:00
The gathering of family and loved ones at Passover for a Seder is an important part of the ritual. In recent years, this has often been difficult, as the ongoing pandemic has made travel harder and being together sometimes unsafe. Who do you wish you were gathering with tonight?

Two Man and Two Mothers Verse by W.S. Merwin and Wesley McNair—National Poetry Month 2022

16 April 2022 at 05:09
                              A mother at the wash basin. Today we share two verses by master American poets.  Each of them begins with a glimpse at a mother. One is remembered by a child grown up and the other shares an intimate moment with an adult son. W.S. Merwin. W.S. Merwin was born in New York City on September 30, 1927. He grew up in Union City, New Jersey, and lived there until 1936, when his family moved to Scranton, Pennsylvania. As a child, he was enamored of the natural world, sometimes finding himself talking to the large tree in his back yard. He was also fascinated with things that he saw as linksto the past, like a building behind his home that had once been a coach house.  At the age of five he start...

Crucifixion thorn

16 April 2022 at 02:52
Several plants bear this common name, but this is the first I’ve ever drawn (or heard of), and it is sheer coincidence that I came to it on Good Friday. I’m not sure if the drawing is finished, or I’m just tired. I think the latter, in which case I will finish it tomorrow. These […]

All-Ages Worship (17 April 2022)

15 April 2022 at 20:25
Please join us on Sunday (17 April 2022) at 11:00 AM for “Spring Cleaning” by Rev. Barbara Jarrell. This is our first in-person Easter worship service in three years. Our Easter service will feature special music, a communion ritual slightly different from years past (but still with the focus on community), and lots of festivities … Continue reading "All-Ages Worship (17 April 2022)"

Easter Cookie Sale Fundraiser (17 April 2022)

15 April 2022 at 20:18
On this Easter Sunday (17 April 2022) immediately after the worship service: Cookie Sale Fundraiser (brought to you by our Middle School / High School Class) This fundraiser benefit Laughing Dog Ranch (a non-profit animal rescue in North Caddo Parish). If you want to bake or shop for cookies (or you just need more information), … Continue reading "Easter Cookie Sale Fundraiser (17 April 2022)"

No Online Adult Religious Education Class on 17 April 2022 — Class Resumes 24 April 2022

15 April 2022 at 20:07
For this Sunday (17 April 2022), our adult religious education class will take a break for Easter. Next Sunday (24 April 2022), we will resume our work using the book Me and White Supremacy by Layla F. Saad. As the author says, “This is not a book you read, this is a book you do” and … Continue reading "No Online Adult Religious Education Class on 17 April 2022 — Class Resumes 24 April 2022"

Children and Youth Religious Education (17 April 2022)

15 April 2022 at 20:02
On this Sunday (17 April 2022), children and youth religious education classes will resume in person and will happen during our 11:00 AM worship service. We will resume our pre-COVID practice where the children and youth will join us in the sanctuary for the first 15-20 minutes and then we will sing them out to … Continue reading "Children and Youth Religious Education (17 April 2022)"

Zoom Lunch Now on Tuesdays (19 April 2022)

15 April 2022 at 19:58
Please join us next Tuesday (19 April 2022) at 12 noon for our weekly Zoom lunch. Bring your lunch and meet up with your All Souls friends, have lunch, and just catch up.

Meditation with Larry Androes (16 April 2022)

15 April 2022 at 19:56
Please join us on Saturday (16 April 2022) 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. The group is free and open to all. For more information, contact Larry … Continue reading "Meditation with Larry Androes (16 April 2022)"

Column: A Personal Wheel of the Year

15 April 2022 at 18:37
Alan D.D. considers the need to remember and celebrate the important milestones in our lives - our own personal Wheels of the Year. Continue reading Column: A Personal Wheel of the Year at The Wild Hunt.

Columna: Una rueda del año personal

15 April 2022 at 18:36
Alan D. D. examina la necesidad de recordar y celebrar los hitos importantes en nuestras vidas: nuestras propias y personal ruedas del año. Continue reading Columna: Una rueda del año personal at The Wild Hunt.

Where Form & Emptiness Meet: A Buddhist Reflection on a Truth of Good Friday

15 April 2022 at 17:51
      Here we are. And in 2022, today, the 15th of April is Good Friday. (Not coincidentally, it’s also the first day of Passover) Within the Christian tradition, Maundy Thursday kicked off the events that led to today’s horror, tomorrow’s mystery, and then Easter. Not just because of the season, but certainly helped […]

UUA Launches UU the Vote for 2022 Elections

15 April 2022 at 09:00
Nonpartisan Civic Engagement Initiative Will Focus on Strengthening Democracy, Organizing for Justice and Accountability

Robin Building a Nest

15 April 2022 at 11:07
A robin is building a nest in the beam under our deck roof. I thought she would stop yesterday, after I went out and in a few times–it is our entryway. But she is back today. It seems to be a great place for a nest. The way the beams are fastened, the center board […]

A sad day...

15 April 2022 at 08:35
Yesterday my wife and I learned we'd lost an old friend in a tragic accident the night before. Lin Welford was the co-founder with my wife of the Books-in-Bloom Literary Festival here in Eureka Springs, an avid environmentalist, and library supporter. She was also the author of a whole series of books about painting on rocks, and a whole lot more than that. She played a very important transformational role in my life. In about 1994 or so, and as a best selling author for F&W Publications, she invited David Lewis to come to Eureka Springs to meet various artisans who might be interested in writing a book for them. David's trip to Eureka Springs led to my being invited to write my first book, Creating Beautiful Boxes with Inlay Techniques....

Stories from Days of Old

15 April 2022 at 05:00
The central task of the Passover Seder is the annual retelling of the story of Exodus. The story connects the Jewish people to their ancestors who were slaves in Egypt, to a God that made their liberation possible, and to those today who are not yet free. What stories are important to your heritage?

Patrick Passover Poems Revisited—National Poetry Month 2022

15 April 2022 at 03:39
Lambs blood on the lintel--a sign to God's avenging angels to pass over the homes of Jews as the first born sons of Egypt are slain. Tonight at sundown Passover or Pesach began when Jews around the world gather around   ritual tables to remember and give thanks for the events that lead to the ultimate freedom of the Hebrew people and a Promise Land of their own.   That came at a terrible price for their oppressors—a pain that they thank God for inflicting.   It is an uplifting night, a hopeful night, but also a terrible one. The story of Passover and the Exodus from Egypt is a saga of freedom that not only gave comfort and hope to Jews through centuries of persecution but inspired others who were enslaved and oppressed.   Blacks he...

Utah juniper

15 April 2022 at 02:46
This is the last of the conifers. I’m looking forward to entering the world of broadleaf, deciduous trees. Thank you for your beauty, pines, firs, spruce, cedars, cypresses, junipers!
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