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Compassion for Campers Client to Headline Crystal Lake Benefit

Gregory Garrison, a Compassion for Campers client seen here from a CD album cover a few years ago will headline Compassion for Campers is Counting on You! Compassion for Campers (C4C), the program that provides essential gear and equipment to the unhoused and underhoused, is presenting a special benefit program.   Compassion for Campers is Counting On You will be held at Crystal Lake Brewing, 190 North Main Street, Crystal Lake on Wednesday, August 30 from 6 to 9 pm. A Woodstock based musician, composer, arranger, and synthesizer player who performs as G Man— A Kaleidoscope of Sounds produced by Gregory John Garrison will be main featured performer.   Garrison is a Compassion for Campers client who was made homeless after a series of...
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Ecojustice Camp comes to Cohasset

I teamed up with Ngoc Dupont and Matt Mulder, two professional educators, to bring the Ecojustice Camp concept to the South Shore of Boston last week. We didn’t have the best of weather for the camp, with rain showers almost every day, and a tornado alert for early Friday morning. The tornado alert meant that … Continue reading "Ecojustice Camp comes to Cohasset"
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Review: Netflix’s “Nimona” – a story of fluid identity and queer acceptance

Noelle K. Bowles reviews "Nimona," an animated fantasy from Netflix with themes of queer identity and acceptance of fluid identities. Continue reading Review: Netflix’s “Nimona” – a story of fluid identity and queer acceptance at The Wild Hunt.
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UU at the Movies: Big Night

Reflections on themes of family, food, and authenticity in the critically acclaimed 1996 film, Big Night . (Join us on Saturday, 8/19, for "Dinner and a Movie Night" - an Italian feast and a viewing of the film.)
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play date

When my kids were young, other parents and I would often arrange “play dates” for our kids. I think those playdates were just as much for the adults as they were for the kids. It was fun to have a designated time where the focus was play. When our kids got older, they didn’t want/need … Continue reading play date
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Weekly Bread #236

Sometimes it is hard to get above the tree line, to a place where the horizon opens up. If the fog has lifted and the air is relatively clear, one can sometimes see for miles. Most of life seems like is merely wandering under a canopy that blocks the sky. We watch where we put […]
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A new sharpening system that works.

Yesterday Mike Taylor from Taylor Tool Company demonstrated their new sharpening system for Megan and I at ESSA. The system works and is far simpler than other systems. It breaks through the assumptions that keeping hand tools sharp is difficult. It does require a special kind of 3M Cubitron™sanding disks, a drill press and a shop made jig. I made three jigs in advance of Mike's arrival, as I wanted one for use at ESSA, one for use in the Clear Spring School workshop and one for my own shop. Making the jig might be the hard part for many woodworkers, but clear plans are included.You can watch the system at work here: https://youtu.be/w3Y1AANySkY The system may seem too simple and inexpensive to be true, but it really does work. https:/...
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What Makes a Place Sacred?

Patheos has a new feature on The 100 Most Holy Places on Earth. Rather than argue about the rankings and the sites that were left off, I’d rather discuss more basic questions: what makes a place sacred, and what do we do when we visit one?
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Taught An Unexpected Moral Lesson from Shopping With Mom in Cheyenne—A Murin Memoir

                                   The clipping that jarred a memory. It didn’t take much to jar the memory.   Stored long ago and jammed tightly in the closet of a dusty recess of my mind, it fell to the floor and rolled to my feet when shaken by a mild tremor.   I picked it, popped the twine, and peeled back the layers of yellowed newsprint that had wrapped it.   There it was.   60 some odd years old and only somewhat dinged and nicked, a small part snapped off here and there,   but whole and hefty in my hands. What shook it loose was of photo posted on a Facebook page for nostalgic old denizens of Cheyenne, Wyoming, the place where I grew up.   It was a .jpeg of a newspaper clipping with the grainy image o...
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Taiko

It was about ten years ago, as Joy and I were enjoying a Taiko performance at an art museum in the Pacific Northwest, that I first thought, “I have to do that someday. “ It was three years ago, during the pandemic, that I looked up a local dojo and noted that,  with a schedule […]
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All Ages Worship (20 August 2023)

Please join us on Sunday (20 August 2023) at 11:00 AM for “So What Do We Do Now?” by Rev. Barbara Jarrell. We will be meeting in the sanctuary for this worship service.  Please join us in person at All Souls Unitarian Universalist Church, 9449 Ellerbe Road, Shreveport LA  71106 if you are able to do … Continue reading "All Ages Worship (20 August 2023)"
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Sacred Geometry — Summer Activities for Children and Youth (20 August 2023)

During the summer, our children and youth participate in various fun artistic and creative activities. On this Sunday, our children and youth will explore the interdependent web by observing patterns in nature and creating art to reflect them.
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Online and In-Person Adult Religious Education — 20 August 2023

Please join us on Sunday (13 August 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. As we gather input and prepare for our next multi-session unit, we are taking a … Continue reading "Online and In-Person Adult Religious Education — 20 August 2023"
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Zoom (and In-Person) Lunch on Tuesday (22 August 2023)

Please join us next Tuesday (22 August 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.
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Salzbach River, again

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two squares

I received these gifts today, made by Mike Taylor of Taylor Tool Company, http://taytools.com. Are they too lovely to use? Or are they too lovely to not use. While visiting Mike demonstrated their new sharpening system using an interesting shop made jig, a drill press and unique sanding disks. I'll publish more about that later. While many woodworkers are nervous to sharpening their tools, Taylor Tools new method should put them at ease. Make, fix and create... Assist others in learning likewise.
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Opinion: The Queer Craft, Old and New

The witch was a figure of both disgust and fear, but, paradoxically, also of sexual desire and temptation. The witch represented that which was forbidden in all its forms. And for that, she was reviled, even as she titillated the minds of the repressed. Very queer, indeed. Continue reading Opinion: The Queer Craft, Old and New at The Wild Hunt.
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no justification needed

So many people seek to justify play because it helps us work harder, or because it helps us learn things. And yet, there is no justification needed for play. It is simply good for our souls, and necessary for our wholeness as people. Don’t let our unhealthy systems commodify play, just have fun. -Michael Tino … Continue reading no justification needed
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Another take on White Christian nationalism.

Andrew Whitehead, who grew up an evangelical Christian, is now associate professor of sociology at Indiana University and Purdue University Indianapolis. In an opinion piece on Religion News Service, he writes: “After years of examining Christian nationalism as a social scientist, I’m convinced the greatest threat to Christianity in the United States is not outside … Continue reading "Another take on White Christian nationalism."
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The Big Burn 1910 Forest Fire was an Omen of Things to Come

  Crews tried to dig fire breaks to contain the 1910 fire but high winds carried embers from tree top to tree top jumping the lines and sometimes trapping the fire fighters. The   Maui fire in Hawaii with the largest number of fatalities since dry timber fed firestorms destroyed Peshtigo , Wisconsin in 1871 ranging over thousands of square miles on both sides of Lake Michigan and fresh brush fires around   Whitehorse in the Canadian Yukan send new waves of smoke pollution across the U . S . Fires are another reminder of the devastating consequences of Global warming and climate change . Welcome to the new normal thanks to the pitiful inaction to avert catastrophe.   What modest steps toward reducing greenhouse gas   emissions and sh...
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Meditation with Larry Androes (19 August 2023)

Please join us on Saturday (19 August 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 (19 August 2023)"
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Pastel painting

It’s a heart-thumping kind of game: I pulled off the tape that was holding this in place, put away the pastels and other materials, signed it, and propped it up, all while averting my eyes. Then I left the room and came back in, glancing over at it from the doorway, as if I had […]
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Crear un Ritual de Música

Alan D.D. nos guia a través de un playlist creada con fines mágicos, con música de Lindsey Stirling, Green Lads, and The Sidh. Continue reading Crear un Ritual de Música at The Wild Hunt.
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Creating a Music Ritual

Alan D.D. walks readers through a playlist created for magical purposes, featuring music from Lindsey Stirling, Green Lads, and The Sidh. Continue reading Creating a Music Ritual at The Wild Hunt.
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Sunday, August 20 ~ The Gift of Renewal ~ 10:00 a.m.

Sunday, August 20, 10:00 a.m. The Gift of Renewal Soul Matters Summer Sharing Circle The Unitarian Church of Marlborough & Hudson invites you into a time of spiritual reflection with our Soul Matters Sharing Circle. Once a month, in lieu of a formal worship service, we will gather in Union Hall to create safe, sacred space   [ … ] The post Sunday, August 20 ~ The Gift of Renewal ~ 10:00 a.m. appeared first on Unitarian Church of Marlborough and Hudson.
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little kids

My life always feels infinitely more balanced when I spend regular time with little kids. While that time is always about both care and play, the play is central to how it feeds me — children invite us into finding the joy and fun that always exists right in this moment (and then this one, … Continue reading little kids
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Intro to the Special Edition: Quest for Seekers

Welcome! Welcome to Quest, welcome to the Church of the Larger Fellowship, and welcome to Unitarian Universalism. This is a special issue of Quest meant specifically for those who are new to the Church of the Larger Fellowship (CLF) and Unitarian Universalism, and want to learn more about both.
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Unitarian Universalist Principles & Values

Our Unitarian Universalist faith is bound by covenant — the sacred promises we make to one another — instead of by creed or dogma.
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Our Flaming Chalice: History & Current Use

In the 1940s, as the German army began to impose its totalitarianism across Europe, many people fled in fear of their lives.
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10 things to know about Unitarian Universalism

Despite the theological diversity within Unitarian Universalism, there are many things that we agree on and hold sacred within our communities.
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Philo T. Farnsworth—Primary Suspect in a DNA Test for Father of Television

                              Young Philo T. Farnsworth in Utah. Inventor Philo T . Farnsworth was born in a log cabin on his grandfather’s remote ranch in southwest Utah on August 19, 1906.  His family was of early settler Mormon stock.  Despite the classic 19th Century pioneer circumstances of his birth, Farnsworth would help reshape the modern world with his inventions. By 1918 the family was ranching on its own in southern Idaho .   The new homestead had its own small generator and was primitively wired for lighting and some farm equipment.  Young Philo, a tinkerer in the great tradition and a devotee of Popular Mechanics was soon busy adapting other gadgets and appliances to being run by electricity. Farnswor...
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Wings: Take Off Troubles

This is a repost from May 3, 2014 If you have flown in an airplane more than once, you have likely had the frustrating experience of loading onto the plane only to be told that for some reason the flight … Continue reading →
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Prayer to Embody Generosity

Honey in the Rock, may we embody generosity every day, this giving and receiving that nurtures and thickens connections with good feelings and enoughness and more than enoughness. May our generosity ensure the armor of supremacist notions no longer fit our frames, too binding, too tight, as they have been...
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The History of the CLF

The following image traced the history of the Church of the Larger Fellowship from the first Unitarian “Post Office Missions” in the 1800s, through to the present day. To view a larger version of this visual timeline, click on the image below, or on this link.  
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Quest for Seekers – July/August 2023

As a Unitarian Universalist congregation with no geographical boundary, we create global spiritual community, rooted in profound love, which cultivates wonder, imagination, and the courage to act. —Church of the Larger Fellowship Mission Statement
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silly

Playfulness is often a silly act between two people done by one to make the other smile…for example, sneaking quietly up to someone who is waiting for you and tapping them on the shoulder opposite where you are–they turn and don’t see who did it, but when they turn and see you, you both smile.  … Continue reading silly
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this morning

This morning I deliver a box to the Walton Art Center in Fayetteville for an art show that will feature works by Northwest Arkansas Artist.  The box they selected for the show is made of maple with a lid made of spalted maple. The keys at the corners are walnut. The lid opens without hinges. Make, fix and create... Assist others in learning likewise.
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Wings: Getting There

A repost from May 4, 2014 Are we there yet?  The age-old cry from children in the back of the car, impatient to reach the intended destination.  Weary, cranky, eager to get this part of the trip over with so … Continue reading →
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Fantasmagorie Gave Birth to Film Animation

                                                         Fantasmagorie --the first hand drawn animation film. Animated films are big business today.   They dominate family audience releases on the big screen which now sees dozens of films released each year from major American production companies and others from around the world.   These days most are either computer generated or stop action clay modeling.   Many are in 3-D.    Only a relative handful are animated by hand in the laborious process of shooting individual cells.   That process still dominates television cartoons from prime time network and cable shows like The Simpsons and Family Guy and kiddy fare on popular basic cable networks .
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Hearth shrine found in Pompeii points to new understandings of ancient Roman beliefs: the largest Pompeii excavation in a generation

Correspondent Elyse Welles discusses recent findings from the continuing excavation at Pompeii and images of visit to the site. Continue reading Hearth shrine found in Pompeii points to new understandings of ancient Roman beliefs: the largest Pompeii excavation in a generation at The Wild Hunt.
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color and line

This small lift lid box is intended to illustrate how color can be used to create a sense of unity within a box. The black lines of spalted sycamore invited the use of a black shaker knob on top and black stained dowels to interlock the mitered corners. These three things were purposely related to each other in my process of design. Note also how the darker grain of the ash box mirrors similar tones to be found in the lid. Note also how the chamfer on the top edge of the box captures and reflects more light, framing the lid in light. A sense of unity in a box is created by an interplay of design elements. Color and line are powerful forces in design. An interesting thing about the chamfer used along the top edge of this box. A roundover ...
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Women Filmmakers vs. the War of Attrition in Hollywood

By Naomi McDougall Jones | Because filmmaking is hard—for anyone, even in the best circumstances—I am well aware that there are still skeptics about whether there is discrimination against women in Hollywood at all. Thus far, I’ve built the case, I hope, for what is happening. But if you work long enough and hard enough at it, you could suggest reasons why discrimination wasn’t at the heart of each anecdote and career story I’ve provided. Let’s zoom out, then, to look at the wide shot of what is happening to women and their careers in Hollywood. Let’s look at the data.
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fashion

“Fashion should be playful.” -Paloma Picasso How have you expressed your playfulness through clothing or style?
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Harry T. and Harriete Moore—First Bomb Victims of the Civil Rights Movement

Teachers and activists Harriette and Harry T. Moore were killed in a Ku Klux Klan terror bombing. File under outrageous injustice—a day late and a dollar short.   On August 16, 2006 Florida Attorney General Charlie Christ, a Republican who later served a term as Governor and who ultimately became a Democrat after endorsing President Barack Obama for re-election, announced that four white men had been identified as likely responsible for the house bombing that killed Civil Rights champions Harry and Harriette Moore on Christmas 1951.   All four men were conveniently already dead. Their identities were hardly an impenetrable mystery for all of those years.   One man, Joseph Cox, committed suicide in 1952 the day after FBI agents inter...
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Compassion for Campers Benefit at Crystal Lake Brewing Features Carrie MacDonald

Vocalist and guitarist Carrie MacDonald will be a featured performer at the Compassion for Campers is Counting on You benefit at Crystal Lake Brewing. Compassion for Campers (C4C), the program that provides essential gear and equipment to the unhoused and underhoused population of McHenry County, has scheduled a special benefit program.   Compassion for Campers is Counting On You will be held at Crystal Lake Brewing, 190 North Main Street, Crystal Lake on Wednesday, August 30 from 6 to 9 pm. According to C4C coordinator and spokesperson Patrick Murfin, the program which distributes its supplies at the Community Services Days at Willow Friendship Center, 100 South Main Street in Crystal Lake on the first and third Fridays of every month ...
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Flight: Illusion of Separateness

This is a repost from May 5, 2014 On any given day, I do not spend much time on philosophy. Don’t get me wrong, philosophy is a fine and noble subject, and someone needs to study it… just not me. … Continue reading →
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The First Color Cartoon Film

    As it happens it was today, the 16th of August in 1930, that’s 93 years ago today, that Ub Iwerks produced his first theatrical cartoon short since a fight with Walt Disney and leaving employment with Disney studios earlier that year. Featuring his character Flip the Frog, Fiddlesticks was the first cartoon filmed […]
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25 June 2023 UUA General Assembly Sunday Worship

We did not have an in-person worship service on Sunday, 25 June 2023. Since church staff and church members were attending the 2023 Unitarian Universalist General Assembly (GA) in Pittsburg, Pennsylvania, we had an all-ages potluck and watched the livestream video of the Sunday GA worship from Pittsburg instead. You can watch the GA worship … Continue reading "25 June 2023 UUA General Assembly Sunday Worship"
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18 June 2023 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 "18 June 2023 Worship Livestreaming Video"
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11 June 2023 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 "11 June 2023 Worship Livestreaming Video"
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4 June 2023 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 "4 June 2023 Worship Livestreaming Video"
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Co-Ministers’ Colloquy – Aug. 15th

We grieve deeply the tragic fires on Maui. Our sorrow is sharp as we consider all that has been lost, that we as a species are losing in this season of weather events that are dangerous, even catastrophic. What is precious enough to commit to ... read more . The post Co-Ministers’ Colloquy – Aug. 15th appeared first on Unitarian Universalist Society of Schenectady.
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Parliament of the World’s Religions Reconvenes in Chicago to Little Notice

The 2023 Parliament of the World’s Religions flew largely under the radar of local media when it opened a packed agenda for the week at Chicago’s McCormick Place on Monday despite being the largest and widest international assembly of religions from every continent and faith tradition.   It also has historic roots in one of the city’s seminal events—The World Columbian Exhibition of 1893. Officially the seventh gathering since a centennial revival in 1993—the 2021 gathering had to be held on-line due to the global coronavirus pandemic—the theme this year is “A Call to Conscience: Defending Freedom & Human Rights.”   It attracts participants from more than 200 diverse religious, indigenous, and secular beliefs from more ...
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Honeybee enemy may offer a solution to plastic pollution

The waxworm is a honeybee pest that may offer some new ways to manage plastic pollution. Continue reading Honeybee enemy may offer a solution to plastic pollution at The Wild Hunt.
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Remembering Maiken (Dani) Cooper

Remembering Maiken (Dani) Cooper August 15, 2023 Last November, Maiken (Dani) Cooper was shot by the RCMP, resulting in an investigation by the Independent Investigations Office (IIO) of British Columbia. In its recently released report (August 3, 2023), the IIO announced that it found no wrongdoing by the RCMP officer involved in the shooting. Maiken […] The post Remembering Maiken (Dani) Cooper first appeared on Canadian Unitarian Council Conseil unitarien du Canada. The post Remembering Maiken (Dani) Cooper appeared first on Canadian Unitarian Council Conseil unitarien du Canada.
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Home sweet home

Just a listicle. I’m still kind of jetlagged. Five Things That Are Great About Being Home Luna She seems very pleased also. Photo by Munchkin. Being able to read all the books I’ve been ordering all summer. Most are for the grad school class that starts next month. I opened all the packages from Better […]
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curiosity

“It’s sort of a mental attitude about critical thinking and curiosity. It’s about mindset of looking at the world in a playful and curious and creative way.” -Adam Savage What sparks your curiosity?
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Gratitude and Prayer - audio reflection

 Gratitude and Prayer - an audio reflection
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Montana

Heather Cox Richardson in her daily newsletter, Letters from an American noted a significant court finding in Montana, concerning the violation of the state's constitution by the state's continued and continuing support for the fossil fuel industries. In 1972 the state of Montana adopted an amendment stating,"    “[t]he state and each person shall maintain and improve a clean and healthful environment in Montana for present and future generations," and thus commanding the state legislature to make rules protecting the environment.  In a rare court case on behalf of the children of Montana, a federal judge, as described by Richardson, agreed with the children that " the state’s support for coal, oil, and gas violated their constit...
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Wings: Ride the Heat

This is a repost from May 6, 2014 The mountains of north Alabama are home to me, and there are many beautiful places there to visit, still largely untouched by developers or even park fences.  There is a spot in … Continue reading →
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Recalling Zen Master Keizan Jokin

      In Japan today, the 15th of August, is marked as a time to celebrate the life of the second founder of Soto Zen in that country, Keizan Jokin. He’s a fascinating figure, one I wish was a bit better known among Zen students in the West. He is, among other things, the […]
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Holy Spirit Activate

The pop star Chynna Phillips (from the group Wilson Phillips) was on Family Feud a while back, and just before she had to answer questions to win money for a charity she needed to psyche herself up, so she started … Continue reading →
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What Punishments of God Are Not Gifts? Job and the Hope of a Mysterious God

For a long time, Job agrees with Stephen Colbert.  You know, Job. The one whose life was the epitome of #blessed. That is, until he lost everything.  His money. His land.  All ten of his children. Even his own health. By … Continue reading →
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Pagan Community Notes: Week of August 13, 2023

In this week's Pagan Community Notes: Parliament of the World's Religions begins, Cherry Hill Seminary has new mission and vision statements, cosmic question marks and more events and gatherings. Continue reading Pagan Community Notes: Week of August 13, 2023 at The Wild Hunt.
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Sunset over New Square, Cambridge

Taken with a Fuji X-T2 using Kevin Mullin’s “Parr” recipe Just click on the photo to enlarge it  
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Flight: Everyday Heroes

This is a repost from May 7, 2014 About a week ago I went for a walk with my ten year-old son and our next door neighbor’s nine year-old daughter, in our surrounding neighborhood.  Before we even got off our … Continue reading →
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How to Write Your Own Gospel

                        Memory is such a tricky thing. I have a memory that some gnostic schools, perhaps it was the Valentinian school, which required potential initiates to compose their own gospel. However, I’m having a little trouble finding the citation. And I notice among the […]
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good dog

Who’s a good dog? Yes, you’re a good dog. Who’s the best dog? Yes, you’re the best dog. Be a good dog.
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Love Beyond Belief

When you have a church that is bound together by a promise rather than a belief system, you free people to be honest about what they believe and don’t believe. At All Souls Unitarian Church, in Tulsa, over 2,000 members are united by a covenant of love and service. That means that we have Christians, Jews, Buddhists, agnostics, atheists, and people who draw from a mixture of faiths and philosophies, all together in one community. One member said recently, “After listening to the sermons for two years, I realized it isn’t Jesus that I don’t like; it is the version […] The post Love Beyond Belief appeared first on BeyondBelief.
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Social Security is Still Insecure on its Birthday

Franklin D. Roosevelt signs the Social Security Act.  Labor Secretary Frances Perkins, behind the President was the administration point person for the Act. Note— Your scribe, the Old Man, in the interest of transparency admits that he is a recipient of Social Security and Medicare and damn glad of it! On August 14, 1935 President Franklin Delano Roosevelt signed the Social Security Act into law.  It was the crowning achievement of the New Deal.   It has rightly been acclaimed “the most successful American anti-poverty program in history.”  Once considered so popular that proposals to alter or abolish it were widely considered the third rail of American politics—too dangerous to seriously advance.  But that was before years...
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August 14, 2023

In an opinion piece on Religion News Service, Tyler Huckabee quotes from an interview with Russell Moore. Moore has become semi-famous for having called out the Southern Baptist Conference on their sex abuse crisis, and getting savaged for it. Anyway, in the interview Moore says: “…multiple pastors [told] me, essentially, the same story about quoting … Continue reading ""
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28 May 2023 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 "28 May 2023 Worship Livestreaming Video"
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Classics of Pagan Cinema: A Dark Song

Meg Elison reviews Liam Gavin's 2016 occult horror drama, A Dark Song, for our Classics of Pagan Cinema series. Continue reading Classics of Pagan Cinema: A Dark Song at The Wild Hunt.
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21 May 2023 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 "21 May 2023 Worship Livestreaming Video"
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14 May 2023 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 "14 May 2023 Worship Livestreaming Video"
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7 May 2023 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 "7 May 2023 Worship Livestreaming Video"
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Weekly Bread # 235

Hiking hats do wear out, but this one isn’t quite done yet, just a little worse for wear. Kind of like my body feels sometimes. Aging isn’t particularly fun, but it is important to keep going and keep moving and be thankful that I still can. The heat slowed me down again this week, with […]
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You Are Welcome Here, You Are Not Alone

In the face of so much uncertainty and chaos in our world, we're all looking for a way to forge meaningful connections and make a difference. None of us are alone in this desire. This week, some reflections on what Unitarian Universalism has to offer those in search of meaning in community.
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Native wild flowers

We have now lived in our home in Portland for 7 years, and are gradually getting to know the plants around us. We have our share of invasive plants, but today I want to highlight a few of the beautiful native wildflowers that are blooming right now in our yard. They come up on their […]
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challenge

My daughter begged me to buy her a Rubik’s cube. When it arrived, she played with it for a few minutes and declared that it was a lot harder than she thought it was going to be. She asked me to solve it, and was astonished when I told her that I’d been playing with … Continue reading challenge
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Rebel Worker and Icon Carlos Cortez—My Presentation at the National Museum of Mexican Art Program in His Honor

Note —Here is the text of my remarks about Carlos Cortez a today’s book launch and exhibit opening at the National Museum of Mexican Art in Chicago. My name is Patrick Murfin. I was Carlos Cortez’s close friend and Fellow Worker in the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW) from 1968.   We collaborated in the Chicago Branch, at General Headquarters and on the Industrial Worker , lived together twice, and worked at the same trade school as custodians.   I am an amateur historian who co-authored The IWW:   It’s First Seventy Years 1905-1975 with Fred W. Thompson.   I have continued as a life-long social justice activist, is an obscure poet, and maintain a daily blog Heretic, Rebel, a Thing to Flout—An Eclectic Journal of Opini...
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All Ages Worship (13 August 2023)

Please join us on Sunday (13 August 2023) at 11:00 AM for our annual water communion worship service — an all-ages celebration where we return after the summer with with Rev. Barbara Jarrell and the All Souls congregation. We will be meeting in the sanctuary for this worship service.  Please join us in person at … Continue reading "All Ages Worship (13 August 2023)"
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Potluck Lunch with Live Music (13 August 2023)

We will have a potluck lunch with live music provided by Bob Jordan, Gail Burt, and Jean Kelly immediately after our 11:00 AM worship on 13 August 2023. Bring a dish to pass or just show up to join us after the 11:00 AM service for a potluck featuring live music by our own Bob … Continue reading "Potluck Lunch with Live Music (13 August 2023)"
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Online and In-Person Adult Religious Education — 13 August 2023

Please join us on Sunday (13 August 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. Since it’s our first time for us to meet together after a 3 week break, … Continue reading "Online and In-Person Adult Religious Education — 13 August 2023"
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End of Summer Swim Party (13 August 2023)

Please join us for our end of summer swim party for all ages on Sunday (13 August 2023) from 3:00 PM to 6:00 PM. This swim party will happen at the home of Kathy Osuch and Mike Roberts. Join us on Sunday afternoon — and please note the different time for this year’s swim party. … Continue reading "End of Summer Swim Party (13 August 2023)"
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Alternatives to Violence Project Basic Workshop (18-20 August 2023)

All Souls is hosting an Alternatives to Violence Project (AVP) Basic Workshop with facilitators Kathy Osuch, Susan Yellott, and Bob Jordan. Here are the dates / times for this workshop: Friday, 18 August 2023 // 5:00 PM – 9:00 PM Saturday, 19 August 2023 // 9:00 AM – 12:15 PM //  1:15 PM – 5:00 … Continue reading "Alternatives to Violence Project Basic Workshop (18-20 August 2023)"
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Zoom (and In-Person) Lunch on Tuesday (15 August 2023)

Please join us next Tuesday (15 August 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.
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Editorial: Philanthropy is the problem

Weekend Editor Eric O. Scott critiques the way philanthropy structures our ideas about the pagan past to match the priorities of museum mega-donors. Continue reading Editorial: Philanthropy is the problem at The Wild Hunt.
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The Quest for Novelty in the Spiritual Life

                                          I have seen the freest and best educated… in the happiest circumstances the world can afford; yet it seemed that a cloud hung on their brow and they appeared serious and almost sad even […]
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Made it

I recovered enough to make my way to the Museu Nacional do Azulejo, and I am making  my way around  it very slowly. Joy was right; I wouldn’t want to have missed this. I like the strabismus-eyed angels: And these 17th-century trompe-l’oeil diamond patterns. They look like they truly jut out from the wall: But […]
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skipping stones

My taught me to skip stones on a calm, clear lake. Choose a flat stone if you can find it. Flick with your wrist just so. Let it go parallel to the surface of the water. Sometimes, if you’re careful, there’s magic. Four, five, six skips!  -Michael Tino (CLF) How have you found magic in … Continue reading skipping stones
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my Arrowmont box

This is a box that I made while teaching at Arrowmont in 2002. I wanted to suggest to my students the incorporation of found objects, so we took a brief walk across campus to see what we could find. The piece of weathered wood on top is one that I found and decided to incorporate unaltered in my own box.  The body of the box and the lid, are made with sycamore displaying its typical lacewood pattern found when it is quarter sawn. I used the hidden spline joint in the corners, and brass pins to elevate the piece of found wood on top. This box is  out in the world someplace unknown, as are most of the boxes I've made. Make, fix and create... Assist others in learning likewise.  
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When Cavalry Clashed in an Industrial Scale War—Battle of the Silver Helmets

The glorious charge of the German cavalry at Haelen, Belgium as portrayed in propaganda for the folks back home. It should have been a perfectly splendid affray at the onset of what all sides seemed to think would be a glorious war providing for noble spectacle and opportunities for gallantry and honors sadly missing from Europe for generations .   The Great War was all shiny and new and all of the powers leaping madly into the melee were sure of rapid victory and Christmas at home.   And what could be a more fitting opening chapter than a clash between the dashing cavalry of two opposing armies, each still fitted out in splendor as if for a victory parade down a broad avenue.   It happened near a river ford town named   Haelen in Be...
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Last day

It’s our last day in Europe. I was waiting for a bus to take me to the National Tile Museum, when I began to feel increasingly sick to my stomach. I headed back to the apartment and got there just in time. While my body was hunched miserably, my mind ran the inventory, as they […]
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Building and Grounds Work Day (Saturday, 12 August 2023)

We will have our monthly building and ground work day on Saturday (12 August 2023) from 10:00 AM to 2:00 PM. We will have tasks for all ages and abilities — indoor and outside. And we will have snacks for our volunteers.
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