Alan D.D. reviews "Conform or Be Cast Out: The (Literal) Demonization of Nonconformists," by Logan Allbright, from Moon Books. Continue reading Review: Conform or Be Cast Out at The Wild Hunt.
Alan D.D. reviews "Conform or Be Cast Out: The (Literal) Demonization of Nonconformists," by Logan Allbright, from Moon Books. Continue reading Reseña literaria: Conform or Be Cast Out at The Wild Hunt.
I noticed how today, the 20th of May, is a feast for Lucifer in some parts of the Catholic liturgical calendar. Okay, Lucifer of Cagliari, a fourth century bishop of Cagliari in Sardina. Not much remembered these days outside of Sardina, he left a trail of controversy. His fame at the time […]
“I Wonder as I Wander” is a Christian folk hymn that imagines someone wandering through nature wondering about Christian theology. Imagine yourself wandering through nature. What theological questions would you be wondering about?
Join us on Sunday (21 May 2023) at 11:00 AM for “How is it With Your Soul?” with Claudia Harris, Jennifer Russell, and Sally Wood. Do you find yourself worried, sad, and struggling these days, and do you find many of the people around you feeling the same? Whether it’s the state of the state … Continue reading "All Ages Worship (21 May 2023)"
Spring Congregational Meeting — Sunday, 28 May 2023 2023 Pledge Drive — We Need Your Pledge Now June 2023 Building and Grounds Work Day — 10 June 2023 (see our web site for details coming soon)
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 personal spiritual growth and how these ideas connect to our Unitarian Universalist faith. Elementary Class — They will continue work on the banner they are designing as a group and will … Continue reading "Children and Youth Religious Education Classes — 21 May 2023"
Please join us on Sunday (21 May 2023) for our adult religious education class at 9:00 AM. Our adult religious education class is now a dual-platform class — meeting in person in the church social hall and also on Zoom. This week, we will continue our discussion of Patrice Cullor’s An Abolitionist’s Handbook. We will … Continue reading "Online and In-Person Adult Religious Education — 21 May 2023"
Please join us next Tuesday (23 May 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.
Not only are abortion rights under attack but women's control over their own bodies is being criminalized. Note —A version of this first appeared on my blog back in its relative infancy in 2007. And I have re-run it when the simple right of meaningful reproductive choice has seemed particularly threatened. The post was drafted in response to an appeal from NARAL Pro-Choice America for stories about life before Roe V. Wade for use in a new campaign in defense of women’s right to choose, which back then unexpectedly seemed under attack again. Back in 2007 we were in shock that rights considered firmly and irrevocably won were once again under attack. Fifteen years later that attack has become a tsunami. Numerous attempts to...
The collapse of Lehman Brothers in September 2008 (Picture source) 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— As many of you will be aware, serious concerns have recently revived about the state of some American and European banks, following the recent collapse of Silicone Valley Bank, Credit Suisse and First Republic. Although there are significant differences between the situation that is currently unfolding, and what happened in what is now known to us as “the 2007/2008 global financial crisis”, these new bank failures, quite naturally, remind many of us...
Please join us on Saturday (20 May 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 (20 May 2023)"
My younger sister was awarded her second master’s degree today. She now has twice as many master’s degrees as either of her siblings. So that must mean she’s twice as smart as us. Partway through the ceremony, I realized that it felt a little bit strange attending an in-person ceremony like this. There are fewer … Continue reading "Ceremony"
I remember beautiful stores in my home state of California that were cultural hubs, like Gaia in Berkeley, which hosted figures like the late Rachel Pollack and Allen Ginsberg, among numerous others, people who shared their unique talents and knowledge to an eager public... Alas, all these are now but a memory. Continue reading Opinon: Politics, the Economy, and the Growing Pagan Cultural Desert at The Wild Hunt.
The Side With Love Organizing Strategy Team is hiring! Our Democracy Strategist will work with Unitarian Universalist individuals, congregations, and institutions to equip, engage and mobilize them for impactful, values-based pro-democracy organizing. This person will deepen collaborative organizing partnerships with secular and multifaith coalitions and organizations who are working on voting rights, electoral justice, building multi-racial democracy, and fighting authoritarianism and fascism. If you have 5+ years’ experience with electoral and/or voting rights campaigns at the local, regional, and/or national level, look at the job description and apply!
“I sing because I… [have] found it the best way for me to express my joy or sorrow, and I can sense that people are sending back their own feelings. “But it also allows me to step into the emotional shoes of the composer—to step beyond an intellectual empathy with another person and imagine that … Continue reading Singing
By Catherine Ceniza Choy | November 6, 1968, at San Francisco State College was a watershed moment in United States history. It marked the beginning of the Black Student Union and Third World Liberation Front (TWLF) student strike, an action that would last five months and become the longest college strike in US history. The TWLF was a multiracial alliance of Black, Asian American, Latino, and American Indian students who demanded institutional change. Its constituent organizations included the Black Student Union, Latin American Student Organization, Mexican American Student Coalition, Philippine American Collegiate Endeavor, Asian American Political Alliance, and Intercollegiate Chinese for Social Action. Their activism led to the esta...
The group photo from the last day (just click on this, or any other photo, to enlarge it) This week, as minister of the Cambridge Unitarian Church, along with a number of other church members, I was pleased and honoured to welcome into our buildings eight monastics from Thich Nhat Hahn’s Plum Village Community of Engaged Buddhism for two-days of mindfulness meditation centred particularly on the theme of “healing ourselves and the earth.” I could write many things about this but, if you want to know more about Thich Nhat Hahn and Plum Village, I think the best place to go looking is their own website linked to above or, even better, to speak to the two members of our own community who have been very actively involved in it for many...
In the 1990’s I was introduced to labyrinths. At first, they were always large physical structures either built into the landscape like ours at UUCG (some massive, some tiny) or painted onto a giant canvas that could be spread out … Continue reading →
A Prayer for Asking for What We Need Hello, just me over here. Yup, me again. Still asking. Yes, I am still asking for what I need. I have noticed the differences between my desires, my wants, and my needs. Yes, and I really do need. I have gathered my...
The young radical, 1970 with Carlos Cortez (center) and old Wobbly Hungarians, older than I am now and in better shape. This was, as they say in the breathless movie trailer, inspired by true events two years ago. The Old Radical Mid May 2021 Once the somewhat ragged beau ideal of the Red and Black menace, leather lung soapboxer, master of the streets, marcher of marchers, dodger of tear gas and billy clubs. Now a wreck and relic half hearing aid deaf, spasming afib ticker, bad back, tricky ankle, and pre-replacement knee. ...
Elyse Welles describes the Tarxien temples and megalithic structures of Malta Continue reading Malta’s Mysterious Prehistoric Goddess Worship at The Wild Hunt.
We sent our school made flag boat on its journey down the White River. If you see it, note its location, call the school and send it further on its way.
I often wonder how other people think differently than I do. I am fascinated by different kinds of brains, different types of intelligence, and the different ways that people make sense of the world. -Michael Tino (CLF) What is a unique way your brain works? What are connections you make that others do not always … Continue reading Brains
Rodney Katushabe will be the featured speaker at the Juneteenth--Freedom Day Festival on Woodstock Square. Organizers of the Juneteenth—Freedom Day Festival to be held on Saturday June 17 from 3 to 5:30 pm on the historic Woodstock Square are proud to announce that Rodney Katushabe will be the featured speaker. Katushabe just graduated with top honors from McHenry County College (MCC) and was elected as a student commencement speaker. He is a young entrepreneur and business owner, a great motivator as well as passionate speaker. Rodney recently graduated from MCC where he earned an Associate of Arts degree within a period of less than one year while maintaining a 4.0 GPA. He was also involved in student organizations at the college ...
Teamsters renewed their strike after the Citizen's Alliance reneged on recognizing representation of warehouse men and other inside workers. Mass picketing and flying squads both resumed, but without the clubs and weapons used in the May street brawls. Police responded with tear gas and clubs at first. After the short-lived truce between Teamster Local 574 and the steadfastly anti-union employers ’ association, the Citizens Alliance , aggressive picketing to prevent th e movement of scab trucks resumed in Minneapolis . There was no immediate repeat of the epic scale confrontations of the Battle of the Market District on May 21 and the Battle of Deputies Run on May 22, but skirmishes between flying squad pickets and police and Ci...
“In the beginning, the Voice was expressing itself, as God. The Voice was and is within the Creator, its vibration shaped the universe, and birthed everything that is. Its breathing fills everything with light that thrives in nurturing darkness.” John … Continue reading →
Another worthy citizen science project…. Here in New England, the Native Plant Trust trains people to be Plant Conservation Volunteers (PCVs) for the New England Plant Conservation Program (NEPCoP): “PCVs support professional botanists and State Heritage Programs by gathering vital data in the field. Across the six states of New England, PCVs conduct field monitoring, … Continue reading "Citizen science project"
Congregations and ministers agree that periodic evaluations of the minister are part of a healthy congregational life, but HOW to evaluate the minister in a way that strengthens the minister’s connection to the congregation can be a puzzle. It is too often the case that ministers feel “picked on” during …
By Margaret Peacock and Erik L. Peterson | “No moral code or ethical principle, no piece of scripture or holy teaching, can be summoned to defend what we have allowed our country to become,” Matthew Desmond says in his transformative book, “Evicted.” Six million Americans are out of a job. Many are surely losing healthcare, unable to pay the rent, have children going hungry. But this situation has been happening to the poor in our major cities long before the pandemic.
“Remembering that the universe is so much larger than our ability to comprehend, let us…stop trying to reduce the incomprehensible to our own petty expectations, so that wonder—that sense of what is sacred—can find space to open up our minds and illumine our lives.” -Marjorie Newlin Leaming When have you let go of a petty … Continue reading Petty Expectations
Today in the Clear Spring School wood shop we made a "flag boat," that we'll launch in the White River tomorrow. The boat is made from white oak and we'll see how far it floats before being found (if found) and picked up. Make, fix and create...
The E-book of Finding Our Way Home is now available! You can get an EPUB version at lulu.com for $9.97. (The link should take you directly to the book, or you can search by author and title.) In 3-5 weeks there will also be versions on Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Kobo, and other ebook stores. […]
Romantic relationships involving different religions present special challenges, but those challenges can be overcome with acceptance, respect, love, and with the willingness to practice alone.
This reflection started with a bottle of seeds. They are Morning Glory seeds. Morning Glories are among my favorite flowers, and they are really easy to grow. They make some of the most stunning flowers in the summertime that you … Continue reading →
The strike kitchen run and managed by wives, mothers, sisters, and sweethearts fed thousands daily and was part of a carefully planned and organized mass strike. After the surprising and relatively easy victory which secured recognition from Minneapolis ’ s coal yards for little Teamster Local , drivers and warehousemen from other local industries flocked to the union clamoring to join. The Trotskyist led union responded with an intense, but necessarily secretive organizing drive. They went public on April 15, 1934 at a mass rally attended by 3,000 at a rented theater downtown. In addition to rousing speeches by leaders Vincent R . (Ray) Dunne, his brothers Miles and Grant, and Swedish born Carl Skoglund, the Central Labor Cou...
Following up on Sunday’s post — I discovered that the Poetry Foundation has a great short essay on “Asian American Voices in Poetry,” with links to lots of poems by dozens of poets. Thre are links to some stalwarts of the older generation of poets, including well-known figures like Maxine Hong Kingston. Among the older … Continue reading "Asian American poetry webpage"
by Bethany Russell-Lowe (Millennial) and Sharon Wylie (GenX) This past March, we attended a gathering of UU ministers, a time for us to rest together, to worship together, and to learn together. During a collegial discussion about the future of church in an increasingly secular world, the idea arose that …
It’s the Coming of Age service! So, things will look a little different from most Sundays: Everyone (except those under 5 who wish to go to the nursery) will start the morning in the Great Hall. After the Time For All Ages, children in grades ... read more . The post Religious Education on Sunday May 21st appeared first on Unitarian Universalist Society of Schenectady.
Stay after the June 11th worship service for ice cream sundaes and socialization! If you are willing to help that day, click HERE. We’ll have dairy, vegan, gluten-free and low sugar/keto versions of ice cream available, as well as a variety of toppings. ... read more . The post Sundae Sunday is June 11th! appeared first on Unitarian Universalist Society of Schenectady.
This Sunday is the Coming of Age service. Our Coming of Age program at UUSS encourages youth in our congregation to explore their own ideas and feelings about religion, faith, and beliefs. This year the advisors, Emma Horvath, Erin Piotrowski, and Arron Tyo have been ... read more . The post Dispatch from Your Interim DLRE – May 16th appeared first on Unitarian Universalist Society of Schenectady.
A new survey suggests that relative importance of religion in the lives of Americans appears to be on a decline. Continue reading New survey suggests religion less important in American lives at The Wild Hunt.
Join us for a Town Hall on Wednesday, May 24 at 7 pm. The event will be in person and online. Everyone is encouraged to come! Members of the architectural team from Hastings and Chivetta Architects will be coming to Tulsa to discuss the plans for our church’s expansion and renovations. The next step after this meeting is for them to put pens to paper to generate the conceptual designs. This is a chance to meet the team, to hear them describe to us what they understand we are hoping for and envisioning and to ask questions and give final […] The post Meet the Architects appeared first on BeyondBelief.
I’ve waited to post about the baby robins because I didn’t want to presume anything or jinx it. But it seems after the mama robin laid three eggs in the nest on our back porch beam, we now have two babies who have feathers and are poking their heads up to be fed. They don’t […]
“There is, finally, only one thing required of us: that is, to take life whole, the sunlight and shadows together; to live the life that is given us with courage and humor and truth. We have such a little moment out of the vastness of time for all our wondering and loving. Therefore let there … Continue reading Take Life Whole
Sunday, May 21 Blessing of the Animals Service IN PERSON in our beautiful, historic sanctuary. This multi-generational worship service will be led by Rev. Alice Anacheka-Nasemann on May 21 at 10:30am. Well behaved animals of all varieties are welcome to join on leashes or in appropriate enclosures. There will be a slide show presentation of pets [ … ] The post Sunday, May 21 ~ Blessing of the Animals Service ~ 10:30 a.m. appeared first on Unitarian Church of Marlborough and Hudson.
The best midwives know that birth is best left to nature,That their role is to hold space for that moment of raw creation –That moment where Mother and Child are born,Roared into reality, trial by ring of fire and labor of love They know pushing on one’s back is easier for the doctorAnd works against […]
One way to look at creativity is the creation of ourselves. Many children naturally make up and try out personas and express themselves through chant, songs, dance, mudpies, swinging, and making up stories! This occurs in children living through war, … Continue reading →
After Minneapolis Teamsters stuck city-wide in 1934 police try to move a scab truck using force against unarmed pickets. Police and Citizen Committee thug violence and mayhem would soon both spread the strike defiantly and cause workers to take up clubs and brick bats to battle it out in the streets. Note: The epic story of the events in Minneapolis in 1934 is too much for one entry. We will cover it in three parts. Before 1934 Minneapolis, Minnesota was a conservative , anti-labor bastion. A railroad and river transportation hub for the upper-Midwest breadbasket and a significant manufacturing city, the local elites organized in the Citizens Alliance in conjunction—or collusion—with local authorities had long kept the cit...
There’s a species of seaweed that grows along the coast here in Cohasset with the scientific name Ulva intestinalis; so named because it looks like intestines. A common English name for it is Gutweed, though I’d rather call it Intestine seaweed. Anyway, it’s one of my favorite seaweeds. How could I not like something that … Continue reading "Intestine seaweed"
On his Substack newsletter Counter Craft, Lincoln Michel writes: “Corporations like Google and Microsoft are moving ahead with unreliable chatbots to “power” their search engines by, essentially, plagiarizing the web. The plan is that when you search for information online, Google’s AI will spit back an answer so you don’t ever have to read an … Continue reading "Big Tech’s AI"
In this Week's Pagan Community Notes: Univision, Smithsonian Taino exhibition, the Earth-Based Spirituality Team event, conference announcements and more news. Continue reading Pagan Community Notes: Week of May 15, 2023 at The Wild Hunt.
Rachel Walden Long before Mother’s Day was celebrated with brunches and flower bouquets, Unitarian Julia Ward Howe wrote her Mother’s Day Proclamation.
DREAMING EMILY DICKINSON James Ishmael Ford Originally a sermon preached back when Jan & I lived in New England, revisited, dusted off, and lightly rewritten in honor of the 146th anniversary of Emily Dickinson’s death. 1263Tell all the truth but tell it slant –Success in Circuit lies Too bright for our infirm DelightThe Truth’s […]
“You see old things anew. You turn them and test them. Your wonder exhausts our old words to express them.” -From “You Matter,” by Matthew Rosin See something old in a new way today. Wonder about it.
Have you ever heard of Zentangle? Maybe not. How about this? Have you ever found your mind too cluttered with non-stop thoughts especially when you needed to focus on something else? Here’s where Zentangle might just help. Zentangle is an … Continue reading →
Pomo survivors of the massacre on the island in Clear Lake were gunned down by militia men as they swam to shore. The few who got away were hunted along the Russian River and 50 more were killed over the next days. May 15, 1850 was a very bad day for the Pomo, a Native American people from northern California that you have probably never heard of. Because no one wants to talk about them, or what happened that gruesome day when Lt . Nathaniel Lyon led troopers of the U . S . First Dragoons Regiment, against a village on an island in Clear Lake. Sketchy and contradictory accounts claim that between 100 and 400 mostly women, children, and old men were killed and another 50 or more were run down and slaughtered as they tried to escap...
“God does not die on the day when we cease to believe in a personal deity, but we die on the day when our lives cease to be illumined by the steady radiance, renewed daily, of a wonder, the source of which is beyond all reason.” –Dag Hammarskjold What is the steady radiance of wonder … Continue reading Radiance
Finally back on the trails this week and although I tripped a couple of times, I stayed upright and did NOT hit the ground! Yay! This pic is of the beach we hiked to and where we had lunch before looping back to the car. Only 6 miles, but it was a sweet loop on […]
Dreaming of My Three Mothers James Ishmael Ford Mother’s Day. I find myself thinking about my mother now long dead. My auntie, my “junior mother,” more recently dead. Although also slipping back in time and memory. And, looming behind their mother, my grandmother. Each of them now among the great cloud of witnesses. A […]
Note — This is becoming my default Mothers’ Day post. A version first appeared in August 2015. My wife, Kathy , was noodling around on Ancestry . com and discovered that my birth mother, Margaret High, died in June 2014 in Cheyenne, Wyoming. She was 91 years old. I never had any contact with her and only discovered her identity through the diligent research by my late brother’s ex-wife Arlene Brennan a few years ago. Bustling downtown Twin Bridges, Montana about the year of my birth. Margaret High may have met my birth father some Saturday night at the bar on the left. Who knows? Margaret High came from a pioneering Montana ranching family in aptly named Twin Bridges in the remote high country of the Missouri Brakes....
Our Gods are virtuous and They rarely ask us to do things that would violate our ethics. They often ask us to do things that are uncomfortable, difficult, or dangerous. We need to learn to tell the difference.
Mary Baker Eddy and America’s Last Witchcraft Trial Today, the 14th of May, might be counted as a minor religious holiday of some sort. I try to note it when it rolls around. It was, as it happens, on this day, in 1878, that the last trial on a charge of witchcraft was initiated […]
The best I can do, in my spells, is to throw myself towards the chaotic overlap of symbols that I like. I try to aim for the area where, even if I miss, I will enjoy the consequences. Continue reading Crabapple at The Wild Hunt.
LIKE A SHOT OF HEROIN Jack Kerouac on Buddhist meditation Complex, by turns wonderful and awful, the beat writer Jack Kerouac is one of the handful of people responsible for bringing Zen into the popular English speaking imagination. Any number of people have struggled to contextualize Kerouac’s beatnik Buddhism. Some with more success than […]
The spring/summer issue of the Harvard Divinity School Bulletin features a number of essays on ecological spiritualities. I turned first to the essay by Vanessa Chakour titled “Rethinking Weeds.” As someone deeply interested in urban and suburban ecology, I was curious to see how someone might reassess the presence of weeds. Unfortunately, the article starts … Continue reading "“Rethinking Weeds”"
“Sponges grow in the ocean. That just kills me. I wonder how much deeper the ocean would be if that didn’t happen.” – Steven Wright What is a ridiculous question you sometimes wonder about?
The spring/summer issue of the Harvard Divinity School Bulletin features essays on ecological spiritualities. Dan MacKanan, the Ralph Waldo Emerson Senior Lecturer in Divinity, provides the introduction, “Making a Space of ‘Alternative Spiritualites’,” saying in part: “When the Divinity School committed to offering a fully multireligious master of divinity curriculum about 20 years ago, we … Continue reading "Ecospirituality at Harvard"
Fenceposts (“priests of stillness”) standing alongside Kirby Creek, Essex, in the summer of 2020 (click to enlarge) 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— As many of you will know, this coming week, the church where I am minister is to host a two-day event on mindfulness being offered by a number of Zen Buddhist monastics from Thich Nhat Hanh’s Plum Village community in France. And then, the following week, my own meditation teacher, a Higashi-Hongan-ji, Jodo Shinshu priest now living in New York, Miki Nakura sensei, will be visiting me, and he has kindl...
Mother's Day founder Anna Jarvis, right, and her own mother and inspiration, left. The celebration of Mother’s Day as we know it now is generally credited to Anna Marie Jarvis in memory of her mother, who died on May 9, 1905. The first commemorative service was held at the Methodist Church in Grafton , West Virginia where Jarvis’s mother had been a Sunday school teacher 116 years ago today on May 12, 1907. The following year on May 10 the church, at Jarvis’s urging, expanded the service to include honoring all mothers and Jarvis’s friend, Philadelphia merchant prince John Wanamaker conducted a public observance in the auditorium of this store. Jarvis tirelessly dedicated herself to spreading the observance. She wro...
Join us on Sunday (14 May 2023) at 11:00 AM as members and friends of All Souls share original works and the works of favorite poets that have connections to the mothers and others who have filled that kind of role in their lives or to their own experience as mothers and children. Readers will … Continue reading "All Ages Worship (14 May 2023)"
From: Board Secretary Rovena Windsor To: All Members, Inactive Members, and Friends In accordance with the Bylaws of our church I hereby announce that All Souls Unitarian Universalist Church will hold a Congregational Meeting on Sunday (28 May 2023) at 12:00 PM or immediately following the 11:00 AM worship service in the sanctuary and via … Continue reading "Spring Congregational Meeting — Sunday, 28 May 2023"
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 personal spiritual growth and how these ideas connect to our Unitarian Universalist faith. Elementary Class: Toolbox of Faith, Part II — We started the year with Unitarian Universalist identity by exploring … Continue reading "Children and Youth Religious Education Classes — 14 May 2023"
Please join us on Sunday (14 May 2023) for our adult religious education class at 9:00 AM. Our adult religious education class is now a dual-platform class — meeting in person in the church social hall and also on Zoom. This week, we will take a quick look at progress (or the lack thereof) on … Continue reading "Online and In-Person Adult Religious Education — 14 May 2023"
Please join us next Tuesday (16 May 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.
Please join us on Saturday (13 May 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 (13 May 2023)"
The COP27 Loss and Damage Fund must learn from past initiatives and prioritize supporting migration decisions, long-term assistance, and community-specific needs for successful climate action.
If a corporation has the same constitutional rights as an individual, why couldn’t an ecosystem? Continue reading Opinion: the Rights of Nature – Securing Personhood for All of Us at The Wild Hunt.
Vibe check. Or should we say mind check? Although May 11 was declared the end of the COVID-19 health emergency, we can’t move on like the pandemic didn’t happen. Lockdown overturned the societal rock to expose many issues, including mental health. And isolation wasn’t the only thing that went at the psyche nationwide. What happens in our surroundings—housing, neighborhoods and cities, the R word—is just as important to track as what goes on in the mind. Which is why we’re recommending this handful of titles from our catalog for Mental Health Awareness Month.
Today I completed a 5 day class at the Marc Adams School of Woodworking. I had 15 students in the class with each having made between six to eight boxes. I suspect the total number would be a record. We all had fun. I'll be headed home in the morning, grateful for a very nice week. Make, fix and create. Assist others in learning likewise.
When I was a scientist feeling called to the minister, a friend once asked me about the leap between the two. It occurred to me that as a scientist, I mostly asked “how” and as a minister, I mostly ask “why.” -Michael Tino (CLF) What are the kinds of questions you find yourself asking today?
Focused as I am on my favorite obscure corners of popular culture, I usually miss the really big worldwide trends. So I was completely unaware of The Wiggles until I read about them on a science fiction fandom blog. If you too have remained blissfully unaware of The Wiggles, they’re an Australian band that released … Continue reading "A cultural phenomenon"
I am currently listening to a book entitled, “The Good Life”, written by Robert Wagner, MD and Marc Shulz, PhD. I heard about the book on NPR. It covers the longest Harvard study on happiness and spans over 80 years … Continue reading →
A Prayer for Rest Gracious Love, may we rest. May we have spaciousness to rest in dappled or deep shade on a hot day, with a nice breeze, and on a cool day in a pool of warming sun. May we have spaciousness to rest from persistent violence and aggressions...
A Prayer for Mothers' Day 2023 Mother-Parent of All, we give thanks for this day and for being birthed into being in our amazing diversity of expression, culture, movement, perception, thinking, reverence, and feelings. There are so many ways of being a person and we all come to being a...
Yogi Berra in 1953. Note —This is an experiment. The following blog post on Yogi Berra for his birthday was not written by you reliable scribe but created, including the title, by the Artificial Intelligence (AI) program AI Article Writer 4.0. I have not edited it in any way. What say you? Should the Old Man turn over his posts to this electronic gizmo, which undoubtedly contains fewer spelling errors and typos, or should he continue to bang out stuff the old fashion way? Lawrence Peter “Yogi” Berra was an American professional baseball catcher, coach, and manager. He was born on May 12, 1925, in St. Louis, Missouri. Yogi Berra was o...
Auroras are becoming more frequent as we enter the peak of the 11-year sunspot cycle. An event tonight may result in the aurora borealis being visible as far south as southern Oregon and northern California, Denver, Kansas City, and Cincinnati as well as the Outer Banks of North Carolina. Continue reading Auroras are becoming more frequent at The Wild Hunt.
Q: What’s the difference between cats and dogs? A: Dogs look at people and say, “They feed us. They give us shelter. They take care of our every need. They must be gods.” Cats look at people and say, “They feed us. They give us shelter. They take care of our every need. We must be gods.” In the 19th century Thomas Starr King was asked to describe the differences between the two denominations Unitarianism and Universalism. He replied, “Universalists believe that God is too good to damn them to hell forever. Unitarians believe they are too good to be damned.” And so we might say that Unitarians are cats and Universalists are dogs. As I mentioned earlier, I have been conte...
Are you off-center? I mean off balance internally and/or off balance between your inside and the outside world. Sometimes I feel I am. Sometimes I know I am. Sometimes I am, but I don’t know it. Near the end of my career as a psychotherapist—this was over 25 years ago-- I noticed some things about myself. I was more tired than usual during work hours, finding myself even getting sleepy between clients. I wasn’t as interested in my work. Before that time, I attended many Continuing Education programs, always interested in learning more, talking with colleagues about various techniques, strategies, and client types, and taking on clients with novel conditions—many of whom other ...
I have learned a little about myself as I have traveled this life. One of the important lessons I have learned is that if I don’t set something, even an important something, as a priority and carve out specific time just especially for it, I will get distracted and will not make time for it in my life. Does that resonate with you? Back when I was new to ministry, serving Peoples Church Unitarian Universalist in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, I felt something stirring in my heart and soul. I wasn’t clear what it was and I was prepared to ignore that restlessness, and just keep doing what I was doing. That would have been easy. But I was also aware that stirrings if ignored might leak...