Sunday, November 15, 2009

Thinking outside of the box


Think outside the box this holiday season. Instead of shopping at "big box" or national chain stores, shop instead at your local neighborhood stores. You'll find your neighborhood "mom-n-pop" shops have most everything you need for your holiday gift-giving and home decorating. And you're much more likely to discover some unexpected wonder or unique handmade treasure at a locally-owned shop.

Shopping at locally-owned independent shops also helps strengthen the local economy. Did you know that:

  • A locally-owned shop returns 68% of its revenues to the local economy, whereas a national chain returns only 43%?

  • Locally-owned shops employ more local residents and pay them substantially higher wages, in addition to having a broader range of jobs available?

  • Local businesses buy more than twice as much from other local businesses, and also are more likely to use local banks and other service providers?

  • Local businesses contribute more to the community through charitable giving, school funding, and other non-profit organizations?

Every dollar spent in a locally-owned shop is a vote for the health and welfare of your community and supports your neighbors in their livelihoods. This holiday season, think "outside the box" and support your locally-owned stores. Your neighbors thank you!


via the Mindful Hands Newsletter. Mindful Hands, a specialty shop for serene living, is located at 211 King St.

Oneness is achieved by recognizing yourself

Image: Ganesha at Chidambaram, Sri Gurudev's Mahasamadhi shrine at Yogaville, which is open for prayer and meditation.

Interesting articles I've read recently:

Jung at Heart The Red Book is a volume Jung composed during a state of "active imagination" --that is, of reverie or waking dream. As he said, he wanted to see what would happen when he "switched off consciousness." The result recalls an allegorical-mythological amalgam of Nietzsche's "Also Sprach Zarathustra", Blake's illuminated poems, Renaissance Neoplatonic dialogue, Eastern scriptre, Dante's "Inferno,", Yeats's "A Vision", and even the biblical book of Revelation. According to the editor, Sonu Shamdasani, "The overall theme of the book is how Jung regains his soul and overcomes the contemporary malaise of spiritual alienation. This is ultimately achieved through enabling the rebirth of a new image of God in his soul and developing a new worldview in the form of a psychological and theological cosmogony."
When Jung emerged from this period of midlife crisis, he brought with him the first inklings of his most important contribution to psychology -- positing the existence of a collective unconsciousness common to all human beings. This primordial ocean within us affects our lives through various universal "archetypes." In Jung's view a successful life was all about balance, wholeness. If our lives erred too much in one direction, our unconscious would compensate for the inequality.
The now famous mythic pattern Jung introduced was later elaborated by such Jung-inspired scholars as Otto Rank, Lord Raglan, and Joseph Campbell (The Hero With a Thousand Faces). (paraphrased from the article linked above)

Protests at Sidwell Friends

Potomac Conservancy blames chemical runoff for intersex fish in the Potomac

When I was drinking coffee with my good friend Seungwon a few months ago he told me that this year was the 10th anniversary of when he started studying with his Zen master. I asked him what he had learned after 10 years, and, after a thoughtful silence he responded, "I have learned to have more confidence in my own decisions and trust my own self." I thought this was a great answer. With divine listening, you develop intuition and your connection to the source is strengthened. One has more self confidence in one's decisions. That you are making the decision the divine intended for you, becoming a transmitter of the divine light with confidence.

Monday, November 9, 2009

The Golden Present x3


The Golden Present is a collection of daily inspirational readings from Sri Swami Satchidananda's teachings. This morning I caught up on the past 3 days and these were the ideas I got from each day:
(above picture from the Cold Mountain hike)

Realize that nothing is yours. Things were given to you along the way. At a certain period things and people came to you. At a certain period they might go again. It's all just a carnival. It's always better to be humble, with our feet on the ground, so we don't fall. If you try to rise up and you slip, you will have a terrible fall. The person who is sitting on the floor need not be worried about falling down.

If you are really innocent and beautiful, you will send out a beautiful, innocent vibration.

Accept your karma with gratitude, even bad things be thankful that they are clearing your karma.

Also, from the tricycle daily email, a quote from another one of my gurus, Bhante G:

Ancient Pali texts liken meditation to the process of taming a wild elephant. The procedure in those days was to tie a newly captured animal to a post with a good strong rope. When you do this, the elephant is not happy. He screams and tramples, and pulls against the rope for days. Finally it sinks through his skull that he can’t get away, and he settles down. At this point you can begin to feed him and to handle him with some measure of safety. Eventually you can dispense with the rope and post altogether, and train your elephant for various tasks. Now you’ve got a tamed elephant that can be put to useful work. In this analogy the wild elephant is your wildly active mind, the rope is mindfulness, and the post is our object of meditation, our breathing. The tamed elephant who emerges from this process is a well-trained, concentrated mind that can then be used for the exceedingly tough job of piercing the layers of illusion that obscure reality. Meditation tames the mind.

- Bhante Henepola Gunaratana, from “On Practice: Breathing,” Tricycle, Spring 1995

This quote resonated with me because I feel like my mind is at the point where it is "screaming and trampling, and pulling against the rope for days." I originally assumed my meditations would get easier and better with the more time I spent here, but the longer I stay the more I am just homesick and wanting to get back to normal life. But this quote was perfect for me to get today, it makes complete sense at the stage I am at. I feel like with more practice and training, I can get over this hurdle and re-condition my mind back to that calm, easeful and peaceful natural state to help me "pierce the layers of illusion that obscure reality." Its going to take some time though. But each day, each breath, each moment can be put to good use. "Time is limited, so choose wisely," a good friend once wrote to me.

Another concept that I have been coming across repeatedly throughout my days here is the ego, the self, the true self, the divine nature. Alan Watts says that we all need to stop lying to ourselves because there is no ego, there is only the true self, your divine nature. The whole purpose of life is to realize your divine nature. Gurudev said, "Holding onto an ordinary notion of self or ego is the source of all our pain and confusion. The irony is when we look for this self that we were cherishing and protecting we can't even find it."

Here are some ideas I found important to reflect on that were discussed during our scripture classes so far: Find your center on a daily basis, its all in you, happiness will come from inner peace while pleasure comes from worldly desires which fade. Cultivate a calm, peaceful mind, be present. With expansion of the mind, your whole being is expanded, and you have a more equanimous energy...you lose the highs and lows. Look at the mind and watch the thoughts come up. Know day by day you are becoming the master and we are all from the same source, everything comes from the same source. When thoughts come up just say, its okay because that's my mind. It's not me.

The mind will stay calm and emotions will stay calm if you accept things that happen to you as God's will, God's reason for everything. Be who you are, the source created you uniquely, and what we all need to find is that essential nature, the deep peace. Everyone has natural gifts--figure out what they are and use them, it's your natural tendency. You either use them or you don't. Use them and everything will fall into place; figure out who you are in the cosmic sense as well as the duality sense. Develop radiance and spiritually resonate through your practice.

Tuesday, November 3, 2009

Yoga

Instead of talking about peace and joy, about God, we should do something to realize God. Keep the mind clean, the body clean, the life well-disciplined, the heart dedicated. This is Yoga. Stay away from anything that disturbs your peace, from anything that will bring disappointments, anxieties and worries.

Put others first. Only then will you really find peace and joy. If you want to live happily, if you want to be immortal, let every minute of your life be useful to the world. See that you bring peace and joy to everybody and no harm to anybody.

With that outlook on life, the whole world becomes a beautiful Yoga ashram. We don't need to "retreat" from the world because the world will "treat" us well. Don't worry about theology. Is there a god here or there? Did I live before? Am I going to live again? Think of the golden present.

Let the whole world know by your example that you are something beautiful and divine. Let your actions bring out that cosmic beauty. Lead a simple life, as natural as possible. Be like a child. This will not only take care of you, but your surroundings, your country, and ultimately the whole world. Go happily, joyfully, peacefully, and share this knowledge, this spirit, with the entire world. Share it with all who come close to you. -Sri Swami Satchidananda

Peace is your nature. Do not disturb it.

Went to Charlottesville this weekend, had so much fun :)

Currently reading The Joy of Pi :)

Wiki of the day: Nirvikalpa. Click the link for more definitions, here is one:

In Hinduism, when used as a technical term in Raja Yoga, the phrase nirvikalpa samādhi refers to a particular type of samādhi that Heinrich Zimmer distinguises from other states as follows:

Nirvikalpa samādhi, on the other hand, absorption without self-consciousness, is a mergence of the mental activity (cittavṛtti) in the Self, to such a degree, or in such a way, that the distinction (vikalpa) of knower, act of knowing, and object known becomes dissolved — as waves vanish in water, and as foam vanishes into the sea.[3] The difference to the other samadhis is that there is no return from this samadhi into lower states of consciousness. Therefore this is the only true final Enlightenment.

Friday, October 23, 2009

the Yogaville experience

I arrived at Yogaville Sunday night coming straight from the Journey Inward retreat. What can I say, its a beautiful place here and I am loving it. I feel as if a month will not be enough, I can see myself returning here throughout my life. The teachings of Swami Satichandanda are so amazing, and most of his devoted students (who take the vows of a monastic life) are old hippies who met him back in the day when he first came to the US. They're really fun and I love talking to them and hearing their stories. A fun fact, Swami Satichandanda opened Woodstock, among many other amazing things he accomplished in his life. His teachings are very inspirational, I will definitely be posting more quotes and sayings from him in the days to come.

For example: "The goal of Integral Yoga, and the birthright of every individual, is to realize the spiritual unity behind all the diversities in the entire creation and to live harmoniously as members of one universal family. This goal is achieved by maintaining our natural condition of: a body of optimum health and strength, senses under total control, a mind well-disciplined, clear and calm, an intellect as sharp as a razor, a will as strong and pliable as steel, a heart full of unconditional love and compassion, an ego as pure as crystal, and a life filled with Supreme Peace and Joy."

The last part of that quote reminds me of something the one of the retreat leaders, Jonathan Evatt, said last weekend: There are 2 things encompassing the natural state: Deep stillness and Ecstatic Bliss. I thought that was such a perfect way to sum it up, I smile when I read those words. And I am learning to allow myself to feel these things, pure bliss, and deep stillness, as part of my "original mind" which all human beings have, but we have lost through conditioning and society, ect. There is a way to return to it though. Sometimes I feel guilty about feeling peaceful and blissful, that I need to be stressed or worried about something, but I am gradually allowing myself to rest in this nature. And that it doesn't mean that you are lazy or don't do anything in life, you do your work and go about your day, but just with the true realization of your divine nature.

Monday I awoke and did Hatha Yoga in the morning. I really love the style of yoga here because there is an emphasis on relaxing the muscles and the body and having no tension or strain. Asana means "comfortable position" they always say. And there is an emphasis when you relax on really being present internally and noticing the subtle flow of prana throughout your body, going to each cell. It's truly a wonderful practice, yoga is offered in the mornings and evenings, and I have gone to at least one class every day. I am going to make that my goal for the rest of the month-yoga every day.

Meditation begins at 5am, (yoga is at 6:20am), with pranayama (breath of fire, deep three part breathing, and alternate nostril breathing), as well as chanting at the beginning and end of meditation. I still don't enjoy the chanting as much as I do the silent meditation/breath awareness/present moment but maybe it will grow on me. I do feel that there is a vibrational aspect of the meditation that is achieved through the chanting, such as Om, Hare, ect. Meditation is offered three times a day, morning, noon, and 6 pm. I try to go as often as I can. At noon you can also meditate in the Lotus Shrine, a short 15 minute hike/walk away from the main campus of the Ashram. To get there the hike goes through some forested hilly land on the property. The Lotus Shrine is truly beautiful, situated in the mountains with a pond surrounding one side of it. The energy there is incredible because Guru Dev (Swami Satichananda) had crystals from all over the world, blessed by many different sages and religious leaders, added to the foundation as well as water from rivers all over the world. Its really an amazing place, I had one very deep samadhi meditation there during my welcome weekend.

Working ("karma yoga") is supposed to be "selfless service" which I'm getting used to. I'm not to thrilled about working in the kitchen or housekeeping but I'm trying my best to not think its too awful....I don't know though! It's kind of cool to cut up lots of vegetables though, I'm sure it will get old after a few days. We are usually preparing meals for 100-150 people so there's a lot to be done. The meals are great, healthy, and vegetarian and whenever possible we use food grown on the Ashram farm.

There are scripture classes at night, so far I've been to two: one on the Bhavagad Gita and another on Thirukkural by Thiruvalluvar. Last night's class was very enlightening, seriously one of the best classes I've ever been a part of. Everyone here is just on another plane of consciousness it seems, or they have studied a lot of the metaphysical and spiritual world, that we can have great debates and discussions.

On Wednesday I went hiking to Cold Mountain in the George Washington National Forest (I believe) with a group of 7 other Ashramites :) It was one of the most beautiful hikes I've ever been on...pictures to come...and it was just so interesting being with an eclectic group of people. Getting out of my usual comfort zone, its great to stretch your mind with new ideas and thoughts. The leaves were so beautiful, with the sunshine, I felt like I was walking in a sea of yellow half the time. And there was a beautiful meadow at the top of the mountain where you could see in all directions--stunning. The sky and clouds were magical :) Before the hike we ate at a local side of the road Thai restaurant, which was yummy to have non-ashram food!, but it was cool. It was totally unexpected. And on the way back we stopped for hot chocolate at a quaint little coffee shop, Rapunzel's, where the walls were lined with used books and some locals were sitting around in a circle playing amazing bluegrass. It was quite a day.

Will write lots and lots more later! xoKatie

Galilean Nights are here!


The latest International Year of Astronomy 2009 cornerstone project, Galilean Nights, is underway. This global celebration of the 400th anniversary of Galileo's observations is taking place between 22 and 24 October. Find an event near you and learn more, click here! Also, for those in the DC area, there are a number of astronomy events around the DC region this weekend in conjunction with the IYA Galilean Nights. Take a look at this link which has a google calendar of public events in the region. Star parties, lectures throughout the weekend.

Thursday, October 22, 2009

Ayurveda + Fall

Ayurveda is beginning to blossom in the West because of its practical approach to self care. At it's foundation, Ayurveda is logical, accessible, and truly holistic. With a few basic concepts we are able to maintain and restore balance physically, mentally, and emotionally.
In Fall the air element is dominant. In Ayurveda we call this the Vata time of year. Imagine a windy Autumn day. The air is dry, cool and moving. Vata, like the wind, cannot be sensed directly--its expression is more subtle. We experience Vata by the way it colors our physical, mental and emotional experience. As these qualities in nature increase during the fall and winter seasons these qualities increase in our nature as well.

General Guidelines for Balancing Vata:
Follow a regular daily routine
Keep calm, meditate, listen to calming music, breathe, relax
Keep warm, avoid extreme cold. Take warm showers and baths
Do gentle exercises like yoga, tai chi, take walks
Massage the body daily with warm sesame oil
Go to bed early, rest when tired, take naps
Follow creative and artistic passions

Diet:
Foods that are in season such as root vegetables and winter squash will help nourish and balance the body. Try carrots, beets, sweet potatoes, pumpkin, acorn, butternut, and delicata squashes. These have the qualities of sweet, heavy, smooth, dense and moist and are the most balancing for vata. Casseroles, soups, and stews are easily digested and can be very nourishing for Vata, warming the body from the inside out.

Eat warm nourishing, fresh cooked foods and warming spices
Favor foods with sweet, sour and salty tastes
Limit foods with bitter, pungent and astringent tastes
Eat warming spices like ginger, cumin, coriander, cardamom, black pepper, and cinnamon
Incorporate ghee, sesame oil, and other healthful oils in the diet
Avoid ice cold drinks, particularly taken with meals or immediately after
Limit raw, cold foods such as salads and raw vegetables
via the Seventh Heaven Yoga Studio newsletter

Monday, October 19, 2009

Blissful


I spent the past weekend at SevenOaks, a beautiful retreat center, in Madison, VA. The energy of the Journey Inward retreat was indescribable and many thanks to Ashley of Deep Green Wellness for organizing the event and bringing us all together. It was great to be at this very sacred place for spiritual growth surrounded by nature, with the cool crisp air, the mountains, walking trails, and the river all so close to us. At the retreat we did yoga, ate healthy vegetarian meals, listened to a very enlightening speaker, Jonathan Evatt. I also received a chakra cleansing (my first) from Sanjivani, which I am very grateful for. Ashely led the yoga classes and also an herb walk around SevenOaks. I have much more to write (and pictures too) but I just wanted to post a brief note here while I am still beaming with the pure bliss I felt at the retreat :) Now, onto hatha yoga here at yogaville, and a guest speaker, Dr. Sullivan, tomorrow morning who will be speaking about Ayurveda (he owns an Ayurvedic spa) which I am so looking forward to!! It just feels as if everything is starting to fall into place.
xoKatie

Autumn Winds

Some thoughts on fall, with inspiration from natasha's pureprana newsletter:
October is my favorite month, really the heart of the Fall season. The abundant days, cool autumn winds, vibrant colors of the changing leaves, and majestic beauty embody this season of change. In this busy season it's important to remember to stay connected with your true divine nature (deep stillness and ecstatic bliss) and your breath. Cherish the abundance, rich colors, and crisp air...and find gratitude with every step you take. You will elevate and radiate total truth in all you do!

Thoughts on Early Morning Sadhana (via the pureprana website):
Here's how Yogi Bhajan explained sadhana: http://www.3ho.org/lifestyle/yogapractice.html. And here's how to do it:
Eat less for dinner the night before, and get to bed by 10pm.
Awake at 4am & take a shower, cold at least in part.
Put on white warm ups and a head covering, such as a bandana or ripped TShirt
(if you don't have white, no problem). If you're late, even by an hour, still show up - you'll still get the benefit.

Sadhana starts with a chant of a 15 minute sacred poem whose Sanskrit-like language incorporates
permutations of the mouth that directly stimulate the endocrine system - the guardians of health.
We then practice a 40 minute kriya workout like any typical kundalini yoga class.
For the final hour we sing seven mantras in meditation, reaching an incredibly elevated state.
By adhering to Yogi Bhajan's urging to practice yoga before sunrise, we work on our personal issues
in the most neutral time of the day (called the Ambrosial Hours), and we catch the awakening waves of the earth which sustain us throughout the day.


Practicing nadi shodhana (alternate nostril breathing/channel cleansing) will bring balance to the right and left hemispheres of the brain leaving you well grounded and energized at the same time. The yogis consider this to be the best technique to calm the mind and nervous system.The most important thing to remember is that the breath should never feel forced.

To begin...

  • Find a comfortable seat.
  • Gently close off the right nostril using the right thumb.
  • Inhale through your left nostril to a count of four seconds. Close off the left nostril with the pinky finger and at the same time remove your thumb from the right nostril and exhale for a count of eight.
  • This completes one half cycle of nadi shodhana.
  • To continue, inhale through the right nostril to a count of four seconds. Close the right nostril with the thumb and exhale through the left nostril to the count of eight seconds. This comepletes one full round nadi shodhana.

Start by doing three rounds, adding one per week until you reach seven rounds. As you advance, add breath retention to the top and bottom of each inhalation and exhalation.

You should not practice alternate nostril breathing if you have a cold or if your nasal passages are blocked in any way. Always be mindful when practicing any pranayama exercises that nothing should ever feel forced.

Tuesday, October 6, 2009

our basic heart nature yearns to relax into love


Will's awesome chairs made from unexpected objects! So cool :) What a genius!

Google earth launches climate layer

2009 Solar Decathlon on the National Mall! The model homes will be assembled right on the Mall and will be open to the public on Oct. 9-13 and Oct. 15-18.

A fun site :)

The practice of seeing clearly is what finally moves us toward kindness. Seeing, again and again, the infinite variety of traps we create for seducing the mind into struggle, seeing the endless rounds of meaningless suffering over lusts and aversions (which, although seemingly urgent, are essentially empty), we feel compassion for ourselves. And then, quite naturally, we feel compassion for everyone else. We know as we have never known before that we are stuck, all of us, with bodies and minds and instincts and impulses, all in a tug-of-war with our basic heart nature that yearns to relax into love. Then we surrender. We love. We laugh. We appreciate.

– Sylvia Boorstein, from “On the Cushion,” Tricycle, Summer 2002

Tuesday, September 29, 2009

Harvest Moon


The Full Moon closest to the fall equinox (this weekend) rises soon after sunset on several consecutive evenings. During this period, the time between successive moonrises is relatively short. Traditionally, this bright moonlinght allowed farmers additional time after sunset to bring in their crops, hence the term Harvest Moon. The reason for the shorter-than-usual rising time between successive moonrises around the time of the Harvest and Hunter's Moon is that the ecliptic — the plane of Earth's orbit around the sun — makes a narrow angle with respect to the horizon in the evening in autumn.

JupiterMoon These two celestial bodies appear together in the evening and at sunset today and tomorrow.

MercuryJoinsMarsVenusMornings From about September 28 to October 23, Mercury can be seen in the morning sky.

PegasusSquare The fall sky is anchored by the large Square of Pegasus. Four bright stars make up the corners. On one side are two sets of diagonal stars; one set points to Markab, the other to Scheat. The other two stars making up Pegasus are Alpheratz and Algenib.

Monday, September 28, 2009

Don't worry


SKoss Digital Paintings - amazing art work, highly recommended to check out this link

I love all of these foods! I love superfoods

The White House Farmer's Market <3

The international economic recession has led to the steepest drop in greenhouse gas emissions in 40 years, according to a new study by the International Energy Agency.

Cowpooling, check out localharvest.org to find more info for your area

Mastery Conference in LA: Science, Consciousness and Healing

Earth Cinema Circle

Spiritual Cinema Circle


Wholphin DVD Magazine

Wednesday, September 23, 2009

Now is the time to speak out, take action, and bring about real change. Climate change is an immediate, severe, and serious crisis.

via Democracy Now:
World leaders gathered at the United Nations on Tuesday for a one-day global summit on climate change. The conference drew nearly 100 heads of state and came 70 days before the major climate summit in Copenhagen in December to update the 1997 Kyoto Protocol. UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon opened the talks saying the failure to reach a new treaty this year on fighting global warming would be “morally inexcusable.”

President Barack Obama, in his first speech at the United Nations, said the United States was “determined” to act on global warming but offered no specific proposals to jumpstart talks on a UN climate pact: "It is true that for too many years mankind has been slow to respond or even recognize the magnitude of the climate threat. It is true of my own country as well, we recognize that...I am proud to say that the U.S. has done more to promote clean energy and reduce carbon pollution in the last 8 months than at any other time in our history."

All eyes were also on China’s president, Hu Jintao. China and the United States account for more than 40 percent of the worlds carbon emissions. In his address, Hu Jintao spoke of reducing emissions by a “notable” margin but did not give a specific target.

Hu Jintao and Obama are scheduled to meet for one-on-one talks after the summit. Both leaders will then head to Pittsburgh for the G20 summit where climate change is a top agenda item.

Scientists and activists are warning that the international community is at a crossroads and must take decisive steps to tackle global warming. Earlier this week, Nobel peace laureate Rajendra Pachauri, the chair of the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, warned that current emissions trajectories were speeding the world toward the panel’s worst-case possibilities, including heatwaves, droughts, melting glaciers, loss of the Greenland ice sheet and other dangers.

Continuing the discussion on Democracy Now: For more we are joined by three guests, Andrew Revkin is an award-winning science reporter with the New York Times and writes the “Dot Earth” blog for the Times website. He was at the UN covering the climate summit yesterday and he joins us in our firehouse studio. Joining us from Washington DC is Ted Glick, policy director of the Chesapeake Climate Action Network. And joining us from Pittsburgh is Anna Pinto, she is an indigenous rights activist from India who is there as part of the New Voices on Climate Change program. She represents the Meitei from northeastern India and is the co-founder of CORE.

Here are some of the highlights from the conversation:

AR: India could triple their emissions in the next 30 years, so they are offering a more specific position than the vague positions taken by the US and China. India almost matters more than China in the future because China's population will stabalize.

China and the US are basically equal on gross carbon emissions, with China having 3 times the population of us. Basically we've had a fossil fuel party the past century, and now nations that have done this are rich. Some are saying the established powers owe a climate debt to the developing nations if the developing nations are expected to cut emissions as well. Obama must get 2/3 senate approval before signing any treaty, therefore he must be realistic and sober about what he can and can't do. Environmental groups are unhappy about the lack of specifics caused by this real world stance taken by Obama. The Maldives are one of the countries very threatened by climate changed already.

AP: Tells the story of the sub Himalayan region in India where climate change has already directly affected the population, by causing melting of the Himalayan glaciers which causes flooding. Also erratic monsoon season rains due to climate change cause drought as well as flash flooding. When your land has dried out years in succession due to droughts, or your land is flooded, you don't have anything in terms of options but to move away. These severe weather effects are driving massive migrations and these people end up in slums and vunerable to human trafficking, among other dangers. Very often development is posited against climate change action and that is a fallacy.

TG: One of the underreported presentations at the UN was made by the president of the Maldives, "We come to these conferences , we rail against the injustices, we go back home and cool off, and the world continues as it is." Given the seriousness and the severity of this crisis, and the fact that it is here, its not in the future, the response is just not sufficient. This statement includes people who see themselves as progressive activists, as people who care about justice, as people who believe that we need to organize and mobilize to bring about change.

Fortunately there are opportunities this fall for those of us who get it, on the severity, the seriousness, and the immediacy, to take action. Most immediately, on October 24th, an international day of action is being organized by 350.org, and 115 countries are participating in this day. A very important way to keep building momentum leading up to Copenhagen. Non-violence/civil disobedience happening on November 30th around the world organized by Mobilization for Climate Justice. During Copenhagen, on December 12th, a global day of action is being organized by the Global Climate Campaign. Major opportunities at the grassroots level can, from below, bring the kind of pressure that absolutely needs to be brought. There has been movement on this issue but its absolutely time to step it up and intensify it.

The Obama administration certainly gets the issue in a way that the Bush administration did not. The problem is that Coal and Oil interests still have a major stranglehold on Capitol Hill. We need to break this stranglehold to get the kind of legislation we need to get on a clean energy path, and that wont happen without significant mobilization on a global scale.

Fall!!

Washington Area Bicyclist Association 50 States and 13 Colonies Ride this Saturday Sept 26!

"Venus Music and Arts Festival is a three day, two night camping festival featuring over 100 artists from complimenting genres and mixed media of expression! Festival goers will enjoy fire artist competitions, workshops, graffiti paint exhibition, and art market. Van Hoy Farms, in scenic Harmony, NC, features amenities such as a swimming pool, showers, primitive camping, a general store, and 80 RV hook-ups! Come and be a part of this landmark event for the Carolinas!"

Carl Jung: the Holy Grail of the Unconscious

Autumn Leaves: Walks and hikes an easy drive from Washington with splendid foliage

Another list of Good Outdoor Walks for Fall via the Washingtonian

Monday, September 21, 2009

Full Moon Vision Quest Retreat

This retreat will be held at the sacred retreat center Wolf Run October 2-4th, and hosted by Cherokee caretaker, Pam Tinker. The retreat will allow you to reconnect with your spirit and your vision quest in the spectacular fall of the mountains of Virginia. East and West in a fusion of self exploration through yoga and yoga nidra, sharing at the medicine wheel, sweat lodge ceremony, sacred dance and drumming.

Click here for the link
to more information about the Full Moon retreat and Wolf Run Gatherings.

...

Remember, all the answers you need are inside of you; you only have to become quiet enough to hear them.

Wednesday, September 16, 2009

The National Parks :)


The National Parks: Our American Landscape, a breathtaking new coffee table book. Click here for an interview with the photographer, Ian Shive, about his work over the past 4 years. The photos are absolutely breathtaking! Click here for the direct link to his website.

Great Inns only open to those with good hiking shoes :) also via Mother Nature Network

NASA Photos: Cities at night

Tuesday, September 15, 2009


Art on the Avenue, a regional multicultural arts and music festival in Del Ray, is Saturday October 3rd from 10am-6pm.

Monday, September 14, 2009

Learn to tap the source, dive deep within!


I'm so excited that fall, my favorite season, is almost officially here. I am looking forward to the warm days, cool night breezes, harvest moons, and changing colors of the leaves. And the overall sense of a time of change...

A link to a great article on the Six Elements meditation, from Tricycle magazine.

Even more reason to help fight global warming and love our Mother Earth, a study shows that the outlook is poor for the Great Barrier Reef. :(

Olive Leaf, traditional to ancient Egypt and hailed by Hippocrates.
Seasonal foods: winter squash, apples, pears
A recipe I want to try: Vegan Spinach Artichoke Dip

Water Filter: Too much of the world lacks access to clean drinking water. Engineer Michael Pritchard did something about it -- inventing the portable Lifesaver filter, which can make the most revolting water drinkable in seconds. An amazing demo from TEDGlobal 2009.

The Virginia Wine Festival is this weekend in Centerville! Also, the Fall Festival Guide from the Washingtonian.

Quote of the day:

In meditation we seem to be sitting by ourselves, but we do not sit just for ourselves. By focusing our attention on the breath, the body, thoughts, feelings, and sensations, or any other facet of our experience in meditation, we become more mindful—not mindless—through the transformative power of moment-to-moment alertness and presence of mind. Instead of absentmindedly stumbling through life like sleepwalkers, we can use contemplative practice to achieve extraordinary insight into ourselves and the world in which we live; to inhabit and appreciate more fully the here and now; to free our minds and open our hearts, and to relax into our natural state. The cultivation of mindfulness helps us wake up to things as they are rather than as we would like them to be. And as we wake up to truth, to reality, we become a force for universal awakening, working with what actually is, not delusive fictions.

–Lama Surya Das