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If you missed

If you missed my interview on Ozarks-at-Large, you can find it here: https://www.kuaf.com/show/ozarks-at-large/2022-03-29/doug-stowes-why-to-along-with-some-how-to In the meantime, I've been getting some one-of-a-kind boxes finished, as shown below. Make, fix and create...
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Roots

“Roots hold me close, wings set me free” -Carolyn McDade, from “Spirit of Life” What holds you close to the Earth?
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What Will Your Next Life Be Like?

If you believe in reincarnation, what do you think – or hope – your next life will be like?
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Abigail’s Dear John Letter Laid Down Early Demands for the Ladies

Abigail Adams, painted here as the first mistress of the Executive Mansion in Washington D.C., kept up a frequent and detailed correspondence with her husband John while he was in Philadelphia attending the Continental Congress. On this date in 1776 as the Revolutionary War was still young and Boston was besieged by George Washington Abigail Adams sent a letter to her husband John who was in Philadelphia as a Delegate to the Continental Congress from their home in Braintree, Massachusetts.  The success of the war against the most powerful empire in the world was far from assured and the Declaration of Independence, of which John was a prime mover, was yet months away.  But amidst the turmoil Mrs. Adams admonished her husband not to ne...
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Due To Feeling Oh So Very Unsafe

Due to feeling oh so very unsafe I went though a testosterone driven puberty So now even if I wanted to I can’t ever pass or blend in I instead stand out everywhere I go Meaning my transgenderness isn’t mine to reveal It’s always visible for everyone to see But if I’d felt safe enough … Continue reading Due To Feeling Oh So Very Unsafe
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Monterey cypress

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The latest on Stonehenge: Proposed A303 tunnel, and new grassland acquired

The most recent update on the A303 tunnel, and the new grassland surrounding Stonehenge acquired by the National Trust. Continue reading The latest on Stonehenge: Proposed A303 tunnel, and new grassland acquired at The Wild Hunt.
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Reopening

Here in Palo Alto, it feels like people are starting to return to church. It’s not like the pandemic has gone away. Here in Palo Alto, the Omicron surge has died down, but now we’re seeing a slight uptick in cases, probably caused by BA.2. Or caused by the lifting of indoors restrictions on masks. … Continue reading "Reopening"
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Sunday, April 3 ~ Springtime Awakenings ~ 10:30 a.m.

Sunday, April 3, 10:30 a.m. Springtime Awakenings A Multigenerational Storytelling Worship Service Led by Rev. Alice Anacheka-Nasemann   Spring has sprung! Join us in our beautiful, historic sanctuary this Sunday, April 3, as Rev. Alice introduces our April theme of Awakening with this multigenerational storytelling worship service.    Join us for coffee and conversation after the   [ … ] The post Sunday, April 3 ~ Springtime Awakenings ~ 10:30 a.m. appeared first on Unitarian Church of Marlborough and Hudson.
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Calamity or Martha Jane—Myth and Mundane Reality in the Old West

One of the most widely seen photographs of Calamity Jane taken in 1885 when she was 33 years old and already exploiting a growing public reputation,  Commonly used by debunkers to counter the glamorized portrayals in fiction and film. Calamity Jane is a semi-mythical character out of the rootin’ tootin’ Wild West famous for being famous.  She is a character with serious schizophrenia.  On the one hand she has been portrayed as just an All-American Tom Boy with a crush on Wild Bill Hickok in innumerable novels and in movies.  She was portrayed by Jean Arthur opposite Gary Cooper in Cecil B. DeMille’s wildly inaccurate The Plainsman, by busty Jane Russell in the Bob Hope farce The Paleface, by chipper Doris Day in the musical rom...
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Return and Remember

Summer Albayati When the holy month of Ramadan approaches, it becomes a beautiful reminder to return to myself. Continue reading "Return and Remember"
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Women’s History Month with Alicia Wallace

Learn how Women's History Month is important for Equality Bahamas director Alicia Wallace and what makes a woman a great leader.
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Soil

Soil provides nutrients. It holds water. It anchors growing plants. Each of us has requirements for our growth and each of us deserves to have those requirements met in our world. What provides you a medium for growth?
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Tamarisk

I think I have the right tamarisk here, Tamarix ramosissima (working back to Latin from Spanish, I can guess what that means: many, many branches!). Before leaving on vacation, I jotted down the next several trees by their common names, and noted next to tamarisk that it is deciduous. Another way it deviates from most […]
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March Theme – Paradoxes and Polarities

This month we explore polarities, two things that are both needed, and that exist in tension with one another, such as activity and rest, or an inhale and an exhale. We can’t really choose just one. A paradox is a statement that seems absurd at ... read more . The post March Theme – Paradoxes and Polarities appeared first on Unitarian Universalist Society of Schenectady.
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Co-Ministers’ Colloquy – March 29th

What a joy it was to be with many of you this past Sunday, to hear the wonderful weaving of melody and rhythm from Bill Flanagan and Pete Gernert-Dott, and the choir sing, “Pass on the light, pass on the light, from heart to heart, ... read more . The post Co-Ministers’ Colloquy – March 29th appeared first on Unitarian Universalist Society of Schenectady.
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RE This Week- March 29th

Upcoming Religious Education (RE) Classes, and other RE news: K/1st/2nd Grade OWL (Our Whole Lives sexuality education)  This program is in the works and will begin soon. This curriculum supports parents in educating children about birth, babies, bodies, and families. The sessions will engage children with stories, songs, and ... read more . The post RE This Week- March 29th appeared first on Unitarian Universalist Society of Schenectady.
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Coping in a Covid World

Do you feel more short tempered, anxious, moody, and exhausted, than a few years ago? Maybe it’s harder to get a restful night’s sleep? Not surprising, is it? In addition to all the usual challenges of daily life, since early 2020, the whole world has had to ... read more . The post Coping in a Covid World appeared first on Unitarian Universalist Society of Schenectady.
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Senior Housing Options

Are you considering senior housing for yourself or a loved one? It can be hard to navigate the various options and find a situation that best meets your needs. An online guide published by the Albany Guardian Society, a non-profit organization whose mission is to ... read more . The post Senior Housing Options appeared first on Unitarian Universalist Society of Schenectady.
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Uncovering the Past: New theory on Motya’s sacred pool of Ba’al

A new they about Motya's ceremonial complex and sacred pool to Ba'al suggests the site had multiple functions. Continue reading Uncovering the Past: New theory on Motya’s sacred pool of Ba’al at The Wild Hunt.
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Resources & Recordings from the 2022 Congregational Climate Convergence

Over 300 people signed up for community nourishment, inspiration, and skillbuilding around climate justice on 3/22 as part of Spring for Change: A Season of Sacred Activism. Quick links from the event:   Congregational Climate Convergence video Presentation slides Case study: Cultivating relationships with frontline communities Mentimeter online results and pdf of results. Case study: Engaging a broader spectrum of leadership - Mentimeter online results and pdf of results. UUSJ’s Water Resources Defense Act (WRDA) Call to Action Video and Action alert Side with Love Action Center Congregational Climate Convergence Evaluation Summary of the Congregational Climate Convergence   After a warm and grounding welcome from Rev. Ashley Horan...
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Katherine Lee Bates Saw America from a Mountain Top

This monument was erected in 1993, 100 years after Bates ascended the peak, as a donation from Colorado Springs' businessman Costas Rombocos.  Note the addition of all of the patriotic iconography surrounding the verse.  Katherine Lee Bates would not have approved.   America the Beautiful with lyrics from a poem by college professor and writer Katherine Lee Bates in 1893 is one of the songs often mentioned as a possible replacement for the Star Spangled Banner as the Untied States national anthem.  The flag worshiping anthem although popular with traditionalist is considered too hard to sing by many and a glorification of war by some.  Others in contentionfor substitution include grades school ditty My Country ‘tis of Thee which ...
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Nearly 700 UUs Call on Biden to Restore Asylum

Unitarian Universalists (UUs) from around the country urge the administration to end the misuse of Title 42, halt expulsions, and restore asylum access at U.S. borders.
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Ozarks-at-Large

Our local NPR affiliate station, KUAF will air an interview by Kyle Kellams about my new book at noon and at 7 PM today on Ozarks-at-Large. If outside the area you can listen through any radio streaming service. A longer version will be aired on the Sunday weekend show at 9AM Central Time. Ask Alexa or Google, "Play KUAF." Make, fix and create...
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SUUSI 2022

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Compost

Decay is an important part of the interdependent web of existence. Excrement and dead matter can be turned into rich soil by the beings whose job it is to decompose. What are the things in your life that need to be discarded and returned to the web of life?
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Have a Vision That’s Yours and Follow It for the Rest of Your Life

Hustle culture tells you to just work harder. Slacker culture tells you you’re already working too hard. I say you should work as hard as it takes to get to where you want to go, and no harder. Start by finding a direction.
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Giant sequoia

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Pagan Community Notes: Week of March 28, 2022

In this week's Pagan Community Notes: University delays formal recognition of an occult club, a Witches ritual against Putin, La Fallas festival and more news. Continue reading Pagan Community Notes: Week of March 28, 2022 at The Wild Hunt.
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American Woodturner Review

The American Woodturner Review of "the Wisdom of Our Hands: Crafting, A Life" arrived in my mail box today. In it Davide Heim notes Readers of this journal already understand the value of one’s hands and the wisdom they possess. The Wisdom of Our Hands explains it for everyone else. Stowe’s book presents important lessons, taught with patience and grace. It merits everyone’s attention. Make, fix and create... 
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New Member Class

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Biology and Spirituality, part 2

To part 1 It happened, to the best of our ability to tell, just once: an archaeon and a bacterium merged, and both survived as parts of one organism. That happened just once in 4 billion years, and it very easily might not have happened in 8 billion years or 16 billion. (The universe itself, remember, is less than 14 billion years old.) Life out there may not be all that rare, but eukaryotic life? Maybe in 200 billion galaxies averaging 100 billion stars per galaxy, and 1 to 10 planets per star, only one single spot in the whole wide vast universe happened to produce such a monumentally unlikely thing as eukaryotic life. Maybe. The science inspires our spirits into the awe and wonder of this amazing fluke – an archaeon absorbing a bact...
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“The United Nations is not an island”

Introducing the #OpenTheDoors2NGOs campaign
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Biology and Spirituality, part 1

from “Song of Myself” Walt Whitman 1. I celebrate myself, and sing myself, And what I assume you shall assume, For every atom belonging to me as good belongs to you.... My tongue, every atom of my blood, form’d from this soil, this air.... 51. The past and present wilt—I have fill’d them, emptied them, And proceed to fill my next fold of the future. Listener up there! what have you to confide to me? Look in my face while I snuff the sidle of evening, (Talk honestly, no one else hears you, and I stay only a minute longer.) Do I contradict myself? Very well then I contradict myself, (I am large, I contain multitudes.) I concentrate toward them that are nigh, I wait on the door-slab. Who has done his day’s work? who will soonest...
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101 Years of All Souls!

On March 28, 1921, 27 people signed a charter to create All Souls’ Liberal Church. The post 101 Years of All Souls! appeared first on BeyondBelief.
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Happy Birthday Comenius

If John Amos Comenius were alive today he'd be 430 years old, and he being called the "Father of Modern Education" one would hope we'd have learned a few things, particularly about how learning works. Jimi Hendrix had a song that asked the question, "Are you experienced?" And while Jimi may have been referring to either sex or drug use, Comenius asked the same in his request that schooling rely on actual experience as the basis of learning. "The ground of this business is, that sensual (sensuous) objects be rightly presented to the senses for fear that they not be received. I say, and say it again aloud, that this is the foundation of all the rest; because we can neither act nor speak wisely, unless we first rightly understand all the th...
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Petrichor

Petrichor is what we smell when rain falls on dry soil. It is the scent of the forest floor, of ozone made by lightning, and of the bacteria at work in the earth. It is an intricate expression of the interdependence all around us. Notice something in nature that reflects interdependence.
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Once more, with shading (and shining)

The leaves I drew yesterday were so shiny that I didn’t want to stop with a line drawing, but went back and added the shadows, shades and sheen. So here is the Western red cedar again.
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27 March 2022 Worship Livestreaming Video

Due to the impact of the COVID-19 (coronavirus) pandemic, we have begun to broadcast a livestream video of our Sunday morning worship services. This worship video will be available live and in recorded formats. For our livestream video of our worship services, we are using Facebook Live.  One does not have to log into Facebook … Continue reading "27 March 2022 Worship Livestreaming Video"
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20 March 2022 Worship Livestreaming Video

Due to the impact of the COVID-19 (coronavirus) pandemic, we have begun to broadcast a livestream video of our Sunday morning worship services. This worship video will be available live and in recorded formats. For our livestream video of our worship services, we are using Facebook Live.  One does not have to log into Facebook … Continue reading "20 March 2022 Worship Livestreaming Video"
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13 March 2022 Worship Livestreaming Video

Due to the impact of the COVID-19 (coronavirus) pandemic, we have begun to broadcast a livestream video of our Sunday morning worship services. This worship video will be available live and in recorded formats. For our livestream video of our worship services, we are using Facebook Live.  One does not have to log into Facebook … Continue reading "13 March 2022 Worship Livestreaming Video"
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6 March 2022 Worship Livestreaming Video

Due to the impact of the COVID-19 (coronavirus) pandemic, we have begun to broadcast a livestream video of our Sunday morning worship services. This worship video will be available live and in recorded formats. For our livestream video of our worship services, we are using Facebook Live.  One does not have to log into Facebook … Continue reading "6 March 2022 Worship Livestreaming Video"
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27 February 2022 Worship Livestreaming Video

Due to the impact of the COVID-19 (coronavirus) pandemic, we have begun to broadcast a livestream video of our Sunday morning worship services. This worship video will be available live and in recorded formats. For our livestream video of our worship services, we are using Facebook Live.  One does not have to log into Facebook … Continue reading "27 February 2022 Worship Livestreaming Video"
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The Bee Balm is Rioting

Sheri Barkers considers how energy work and gardening can combine to create change. Continue reading The Bee Balm is Rioting at The Wild Hunt.
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Life Saving Life

Reading: Instructions on Not Giving Up by Ada Limon  More than the fuchsia funnels breaking out of the crabapple tree, more than the neighbor’s almost obscene display of cherry limbs shoving their cotton candy-colored blossoms to the slate sky of … Continue reading →
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What’s Your Story?

Unitarian Universalists speak often of “seeking truth”. Sometimes we are trying to find objective factual confirmable reality - a worthy and almost impossible task. At other times, when we consider our individual “truths” it can be a more nuanced and evolving concept. Let’s explore the complex and competing truths that have shaped each of us uniquely and hold all of us in a shared humanity. Rev. Bowen is a birthright Unitarian Universalist, raised in All Souls Church in Tulsa, OK. She served the Unitarian Universalist Association as a district and regional congregational consultant for 25+ years. Now retired in Albuquerque, she pursues her passion for Unitarian Universalist congregations with a little preaching, coaching and co...
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The Holy Life, Farts & All

The Holy Life, Farts & All Mo Myokan Weinhardt Senior Dharma Teacher Empty Moon Zen I’ll begin with a story: One day, the venerable Ananda, the Buddha’s first cousin and beloved attendant, sat by the Buddha’s side beholding all that was before them. Ananda said to the Blessed One, “This is half of the holy […]
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Weekly Bread #164

Sometimes a trail looks easy and turns out to be much harder after you get half way up a steep part. You need to place your feet carefully on the loose rocks and plant your hiking poles in firm ground. There is always a risk of sliding back down the hill. The hardest thing, I […]
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Food

We are fed by other beings. We are fed by sunlight and rain, taken in by plants and made into sugar and starch and fruit and leaf. Our survival depends on the interdependent web of existence to feed us. What is feeding you today?
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Prophetic Feminist Poet Adrienne Rich Remembered

Adrienne Rich as a young poet. Adrienne Rich was 82 when she died ten years ago in California, a long way from the life of privilege and learning into which she was born in Baltimore on May 16, 1929.     Her father was a noted professorof medicine at prestigious Johns Hopkinsand her mother had been a concert pianist.   He was a secular Jew, she a lady-like Southern Protestant.   Adrienne and her sisters were raised as nominal Christians. Both parents cherished learning.   Before she was of kindergarten age Adrienne was reading from their vast library, mostly English poets.   Not trusting their bright children to a drab public education, Adrienne and her sisters were educated at home in that library until the fourth grade.   In her...
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Western red cedar

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All-Ages Worship (27 March 2022)

Please join us on Sunday (27 March 2022) at 11:00 AM for “Companions for the Journey” with Laurie Lyons, Bennett Upton, and John Tuggle. 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 (27 March 2022)"
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Children and Youth Religious Education (27 March 2022)

On this Sunday (27 March 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 (27 March 2022)"
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Online Adult Religious Education — 27 March 2022

Please join us on Sunday (27 March 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 — 27 March 2022"
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Zoom Lunch Now on Tuesdays (29 March 2022)

Please join us next Tuesday (29 March 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.
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Joe Pepitone and the Long Shadow of Abuse

As painful as Joe Pepitone’s story is to read, it can be a meaningful learning experience for the wider Pagan community – especially for those of us who serve in the clergy or other leadership roles. Continue reading Joe Pepitone and the Long Shadow of Abuse at The Wild Hunt.
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FDMC

The book review written by Will Sampson has appeared in FDMC magazine that's delivered to folks in the  woodworking business. In case you missed it, you can read the review online here:  https://www.woodworkingnetwork.com/opinion/book-review-wisdom-our-hands/ Make, fix and create...
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Oriental arborvitae

Scientific name Platycladus orientalis. The branch is so beautiful, I longed to draw every detail. That lasted for, well, you can see. A few twiglets. I need to copy works of some of the great draftspeople to learn better how to combine detail and a more impressionistic approach. It’s so mysterious to me. This is […]
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Mysterious Illness and Melting Ice

I recently read Sarah Ramey’s memoir, The Lady’s Handbook for Her Mysterious Illness. Published just last year, it is described this way: “In her harrowing, darkly funny, and unforgettable memoir, Sarah Ramey recounts the decade-long saga of how a seemingly minor illness in her senior year of college turned into a prolonged and elusive condition […]
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The Lioness Who Roared—Ida B. Wells and a War on Lynching

                                 Ida B. Wells, undaunted. The word to describe Ida B. Wellswas fierce.  The word more commonly used, formidable, is entirely inadequate for a life of defiance and struggle that began in slavery during the Civil War and ended just before the New Deal.  Along the way she was the associate or opponent—sometimes both the with the same person—of Fredrick Douglass, Susan B. Anthony, Francis Willard, Jane Adams, Booker T. Washington, W.E.B Dubois, Alice Paul, and Marcus Garvey.  She exposed the lynch mobs running rampant in the Jim Crow South, helped found the NAACP and half a dozen other important organizations, pioneered the Great Migration from the rural South to Chicago and other No...
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Measuring growth (and other things)

When my daughter was small we would mark with a pencil on the inside of a door frame how tall she had grown. It was a ritual in which she found pleasure, comparing how tall she was now, in comparison to how tall she was then. The early marks were painted over years ago when we neglected to tell the painter, not to paint in that spot. But the ritual of marking resumed and now there are marks for the growth of our niece Olivia when she comes to visit as well as Lucy's markings into her adult years. Measuring growth is a good thing. Standardized testing is not. It doesn't measure the things that matter most—the ability and inclination to be of service to others. And the measurement should not be in some kind of abstract form, decipherable...
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Fruit

Fruits attract animals that help a plant spread its seeds. They represent the connection between different parts of our natural world. They represent a plant’s effort to carry itself forth into the world. What will carry you forth into the world today?
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Love is the Hard Thing: A smallest meditation on a poem by Wendell Berry

A Zen teaching friend shared this Wendell Berry poem today. Now you know the worst we humans have to know about ourselves, and I am sorry, for I know that you will be afraid. To those of our bodies given without pity to be burned, I know there is no answer but loving one another, […]
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Meditation with Larry Androes (26 March 2022)

Please join us on Saturday (26 March 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 (26 March 2022)"
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March 26, 2022

  DUNE x THE FIFTH SEASON
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March 26, 2022

I was interviewed today for a local podcast. They asked who my fave sports team might be. I answered NERDS. 
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From Here to Eternity: Pagan Theologians Share Their Thoughts on Extraterrestrial Life

We check in with some Pagan theologians regarding extraterrestrial life. Continue reading From Here to Eternity: Pagan Theologians Share Their Thoughts on Extraterrestrial Life at The Wild Hunt.
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Video Engagement Strategy with Peter Bowden

Unitarian Universalist coach and trainer Peter Bowden offers a live video series to help congregations support online visitors, increase engagement with worship, and amplify advocacy and witness efforts. Continue reading "Video Engagement Strategy with Peter Bowden"
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Sunday, March 27 ~ Woven in a Single Garment of Destiny ~ 10:30 a.m.

Sunday, March 27, 10:30 a.m. Woven in a Single Garment of Destiny A full-length video worship service Provided by the Unitarian Universalist Association   We’re all connected: an interdependent whole. And as UUs, says UUA president Rev. Susan Frederick-Gray, “Covenant is our religious response to our fundamental interdependence.” We make promises about how to be together,   [ … ] The post Sunday, March 27 ~ Woven in a Single Garment of Destiny ~ 10:30 a.m. appeared first on Unitarian Church of Marlborough and Hudson.
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A meditation on a Pietà, written for a Mothering Sunday during a time of war

Pietà carved & gifted to us by Celia James for our Memorial Garden 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— In Christian art, any image that depicts Mary cradling her executed son, Jesus, after his dead body was removed from the cross is today known as a “Pietà”, which simply means “pity” or “compassion.”  But, of course, the title, “Pietà” can be applied to any such depiction because it is a universal, humanist image that speaks to all people regardless of their religion or philosophy of life. It goes without saying that every hour of every da...
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Pollen

For many of us, with the rebirth of spring comes the season of pollen, of allergies, of hayfever, of sneezing and congestion. Our interdependence with nature is sometimes a struggle. What is making you struggle today?
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Shelley’s Grand Exit from Oxford

      It was on this day, the 25th of March, in 1811 that Percy Bysshe Shelley was expelled from Oxford for publishing, and at the same time sending copies to the heads of all the colleges, a brief tract, The Necessity of Atheism. In 1813 he published a somewhat revised and expanded version […]
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Maya Lin and the Vietnam War Memorial Almost No One Wanted

The Wall of the Vietnam War Memorial in the gloaming with flags, photos, and mementos left daily by visitors. On March 26, 1982 a groundbreaking ceremony was held for the hugely controversial Vietnam War Memorial in Washington, D.C.  Less than eight months later on November 13 it opened with recriminations still swirling around it.  The idea for a memorial sprang from Jan Scruggs, who had served as a corporalin the 199th Light Infantry Brigadeand was attending college in Washington studying counseling and hoping to help the notoriously troubled veterans of an unpopular war.  He felt that a national memorial honor the Vietnam War dead would help with the healing.  Scruggs conceived of the project as one that would inscribe the names o...
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Incense cedar

These leaves take my breath away.
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Unwinding

I wrote “unwinding” with one thought in mind and realized I missed the common thought: unwinding, settling down and into a slower, mindful pace at the end of a hectic period. But what I’m thinking of is the physical motion of taking thread off a bobbin or pulling the air compressor’s red rubber hose from … Continue reading Unwinding
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Ukraine fights to protect its cultural heritage

Ukrainians have sprung into action to safekeep and preserve their cultural heritage housed in the many museums and other institutions from the predations of war. Continue reading Ukraine fights to protect its cultural heritage at The Wild Hunt.
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Easter Egg Hunt, April 17

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When Women Organized their Own Olympics

A program from the first Women's Olympic in Monte Carlo formally known as the  1er Meeting International d’Education Physique Féminine de Sports Athlétiques in 1922. When the International Olympic Committee (IOC) decided to ban women from competing in almost all events at the 1924 Olympiad to be held in Paris, some European athletes decided to take matters into their own hands and hold their own female international competition which was held from March 24 through March 31in 1921 in Monte Carlo.  Popularly known as the 1921 Women’s Olympiad ( Olympiades Féminines or Jeux Olympiques Féminins ) the games were the first of three held annually in the Riviera resort principality. The games were organized by Alice Milliat, the French...
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Making Buddhism and Its Various Forms Accessible to Newcomers and Skeptics

A Q&A with C. Pierce Salguero | I had been teaching Introduction to Buddhism courses for over a decade to both college students and the general public and felt that there was a real need for a better introductory book. I couldn’t find a text for my students that provided an objective introduction to the various forms of Buddhism without being overly scholastic.
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On Clownish Senators and States’ Rights

Can they be stopped? They can, if enough people vote against them. But we have to persuade people to be concerned about fundamental rights to outvote those who vote Republican because they blame Joe Biden for high gas prices.
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Blossom

“Beside the porch step the crocus prepares an exaltation of purple….” -from the poem “Mud Season,” by Jane Kenyon What do you need to shout an exaltation to the world about? How do you do that?
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Wildly Intimate: A Meditation for the Feast of Oscar Romero

        In some corners of the Christian church today is marked as a feast in celebration of the life of Oscar Arnulfo Romero y Galdamez. He is usually more simply known as Oscar Romero. He was archbishop of the Roman Catholic church in El Salvador. And he outraged many for speaking out on […]
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Alaska cedar

And I am at the back page of the sketchbook my daughter gave me a year or two ago. The last entry: a weeping branch of Chamaecyparis nootkatensis.
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Rights of Nature case in Pacific Northwest

A legal filing by the Sauk-Suiattle Indian Tribe in tribal court on behalf of the Skagit River salmon could help further rights of nature cases. Continue reading Rights of Nature case in Pacific Northwest at The Wild Hunt.
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National Book Foundation Selects Linda Hogan’s “The Radiant Lives of Animals” for Inaugural Science + Literature Program

By Bev Rivero | In the early evening on the first Thursday in March, an excited crowd of invitees gathered at the Museum of the Moving Image to celebrate the first three titles honored by the new Science + Literature program from the National Book Foundation. In addition to the excitement of chatting in person with book folks, the event was a great start to Women’s History Month, as all three books are authored by women.
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Tuesday was the day

My new book, The Wisdom of Our Hands: Crafting, a Life was released yesterday. If you pre-ordered it watch for it in the mail. The book was 20 years in the planning and writing and a long wait for me as the publisher and I worked to edit it, and promote it and the concepts it presents. What comes next is up to you. Will you buy it? Will you enjoy it? Will you find it useful? Will you share your enthusiasm for it to encourage others to read it also? Working with a small press I do not have access to the same level of promotion that's offered to the big names. So at this point, if it has a large impact, it will be because you've helped to make it so. The most valuable thing you can do besides buying it and offering reviews is to tell other...
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Linda Hogan Wins National Book Foundation’s Inaugural Science + Literature Award!

By Bev Rivero | In the early evening on the first Thursday in March, an excited crowd of invitees gathered at the Museum of the Moving Image to celebrate the first three titles honored by the new Science + Literature program from the National Book Foundation. In addition to the excitement of chatting in person with book folks, the event was a great start to Women’s History Month, as all three books are authored by women.
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The Power to Save

Sara Palmer May we forever perceive the ways we can empower others. Continue reading "The Power to Save"
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Kitty Genovese—Accidental Icon of Urban Street Violence and Attacks on Women

                              Kitty Genovese behind the bar at Erv's. Fifty eight years ago today, the grisly murder barely attracted much notice in the press.   Then, as now, street crime in New York and other big citieswas too common to make front page headlines, even when the victimwas a pretty young white woman.   If it hadn’t been for an offhand comment by Police Commissioner Michael J. Murphy to a New York Times editor “That Queens story is one for the books” the paper would not have launched an investigation that two weeks later splashed across the front page and seared the conscience of a nation. The sensational account of the crime by Martin Gansberg claimed, “For more than half an hour thirty-eight r...
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UU the Vote 2022 launches April 10!

Elections have consequences. Progress is not an incident, but the cumulative impact of our commitment to justice. Right now, we are witnessing one amazing and crucial consequence of the 2020 election, the nomination of Judge Ketanji Brown Jack­son to the US Supreme Court.  But we know our work is not done. In both Judge Jackson’s confirmation hearing and in state legislatures across the country, hateful ideology and rhetoric are used as a political tool to win points or gain power at the expense of marginalized communities. We see reproductive rights under assault and attempts to systematically strip away voting rights. Our 2022 midterm election will have consequences. It is our work to support and build power in our communities to m...
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Notes from Amy Banks' focus and lecture on Friendship

Amy Banks WomenExplore March 17, 2022 Amy Banks, our speaker, gave both the Focus and the Lecture.  In the focus talk she told us about a very personal experience which is addressed in her book, “Fighting Time," coauthored with Isaac Knapper. Additionally she has authored Wired to Connect , Four Ways to Click , and Mental Health for Women (Coauthor). Several of her lectures are available on YouTube.  Raised in Orono, ME, Dr. Banks is a psychiatrist in Lexington, MA and a Founding Scholar at the International Center for Growth in Connection (ICGC) and a Senior Scholar at the Wellesley Centers for Women.  As Amy told us in the opening of her focus, her father was killed in front of the Hyatt Regency in 1979, while at a conference in N...
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Sunlight

Sunlight is used by plants to create food from carbon dioxide in our atmosphere. Sunlight warms our bodies and helps us make Vitamin D. As the days in the Northern Hemisphere lengthen, let us all, everywhere, appreciate the warmth of sunlight. How does the natural world provide you comfort and sustenance?
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The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community Begins

      It was on this day, the 23rd of March, 1889, forty admirers of Hazrat Mirza Ghulam Ahmad, took hands and pledge themselves as his followers as the promised messiah and Mahdi. This moment is considered the inauguration of the Ahmadiyya Muslim movement. Ghulam Ahmad was born into an affluent Mughal family on […]
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Sawara false-cypress

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Spring is here! Plant seeds to work on your physical & mental gardens

Spring conventionally arrived on Sunday, March 20. Yes, as Pagans, we held rituals and welcomed Ostara, or if you are Druid as I am – Alban Eilir. This is only the beginning though. Seeds, just like the spells we create, take more than uttering words. There is work involved, lots of work. Spring is a […] The post Spring is here! Plant seeds to work on your physical & mental gardens appeared first on Nature's Sacred Journey.
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New report on climate change

In February the IPCC released their summary report for policy makers on what the stark impacts of climate change and what must be done to mitigate those impacts. Continue reading New report on climate change at The Wild Hunt.
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Mid-Week Message 3-22-22

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Your Words Matter: The #CallItGenocide Campaign Succeeds

UUSC advocates helped push Biden administration to formally acknowledge the Rohingya genocide.
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