Thursday, September 21, 2006

Unabashedly breaking blog rules

I have come to realize that my blog breaks two fundamental blogging rules:

Rule 1: Keep it pithy


I do not. Well sometimes, like today, I do.


Rule 2: Write about a narrow topic


Hmm. I do. My perpective on whatever eclectic thing grabs me.


Oh well, rules were made to be....well, you know;
unless you're up to some sort of naughtiness!


(and we wouldn't do that now would we after all that education on
peace and reciprocal civil liberty on my last blog entry).





Education = Peace



...continued from previous post...
For this September 21, International Peace Day...
and of course, the fall equinox,
if you are too busy to read this blog, then you may just want to get out your wine and fine Swiss cheese and click
here.
Then click on the song "Liquid Surfaces", from the hip-hop (yes hip hop for peace, straight, they represent)/electro group, Reverse Engineering. Unlike anything you've heard and
à propos for peace.
[Warning: may cause addictive behaviour, especially with the use of head gear.]

And, back to the blog.
...

"Education is favourable to liberty. Freedom can only exist in a society of knowledge. Without knowledge, men are incapable of knowing their rights; and, where learning is confined to a few people liberty can neither be equal nor universal."

--Dr. Benjamin Rush, 1786
(from Video 2, Section 2 below)




In situations when peace is appropriated in a nation or system, one of the first things to go is education. Bye bye teachers. Bye bye freedom to learn.

So, in honour of all the libraries, books and schools that have ever been burned or bombed, and the teachers who have ever had to go in to exile (or worse), for International Peace Day, I have links to
three online educational references for exploration at one's leisure. Each successive link leads to a more complex and involved place to peruse. To balance all the oppression in the world, the first two links are libertarian (not necessarily reflecting the views of this author).

And, come to think of it, speaking of liberty, many people forget that freedom, like yang, also has a corresponding yin. Responsibility.

My most memorable meme from Law class at McGill:



Liberty consists of freedom to and it equally consists of freedom from.
Freedom to do what you choose, and freedom from others doing to you what you do not choose, and they also have the same freedom.

And hence the tango of life.

And finally, to provide an ivy league university to anyone with time to kill, the third reference below is one of MIT's masterpieces in open coursewear.


1. The Philosophy of Liberty Flash Presentation



This flash presention is presented by the International Society for Individual Liberty. I do not myself belong to or represent this organization and only came upon this video from an indirect link, but I have to admit I was glued to the screen from start 'til end.

Regardless of whether you agree with all, or part, or none, the flow is hypnotic and gives me utopian (with a bit of a Brave New Worldesque lining) visions of what future school presentations might look like! Like political pokyman, as long as it's in good hands...



2) Constitution Class and the Philosophy of Liberty



This segment links to a real class given by none other than a previous US presidential candidate, Michael Badnarik.

From the introductory webpage (brackets mine):

"Does it surprise you to discover that the United States is NOT a democracy? (uh...no) Have you ever wondered why people have to get a concealed carry permit to exercise their right to "keep and bear arms"? (um...no...and I'd rather send the guns back to the dwarves in the mines under Valhalla thanks) Would you like to know - once and for all - what the "electoral college" is, and why we have it? (the what?) And, do you understand how all of your rights derive from the right to private property? (um...duh...no)...

Michael's Introduction to the Constitution class has been "Lighting the Fires of Liberty" and earning enthusiastic support across the country. This class will "rattle your cage" and challenge what you think you know about the constitution". Consider it everyones duty to watch this! (even, and especially, Canadians, who don't care for police states)"

Yes, I know we are inundated with stars and stripes all the time, but not this kind of inundation. And I admit to being pretty provincial in my understanding of the political machine. Yay again for MySpace where I found this link, something you wont find on CNN, on none other than a rap artist's page too mind you. So, for all those of you who think rappers are nothing but gangsta punks, there be some serious processing going on in the dissident ranks.

This course is presented in 7 video clips, all provided from the above link. This is more than one cup of coffee's worth of viewing time pilgrim (a la John Wayne accent).


3) MIT Open Courseware



If you think Wikipedia is neat, you'll love this site. You may start to have faith in the world again after visiting it. From Aerospace Engineering to Women's Studies, if you have time to kill, or are a making time guru, you could spend much of it here.

But watch out that you don't read too much and turn into Don Quixote who went mad from too much reading. And remember, the best way to attack a windmill is with a pen, or a paintbrush...



Illustration: Gustave Doré


So that brings me to the end of this long peace day post, but before I go, a Gaelic blessing.

Go n-éirí an bóthar leat.
Go raibh an chóir ghaoithe i gcónaí leat.
Go dtaitní an ghrian go bog bláth ar do chlár éadain,
go gcuire an bháisteach go bog mín ar do ghoirt.

May the road rise to meet you.
May the wind be always at your back.
May the sun shine warm upon your face,
the rain fall soft upon your fields.



Discussion welcome via comments below.

Why little is more

Get your good headphones.

Click here.

When you reach Michal David Little's page, click on "Instrumental".

Enjoy.

Monday, September 18, 2006

Peace Day Activities


"Every move we make in fear of the next war in fact hastens it."
-Gregory Bateson

Considering my previous Kafkaesque ranting on this blog, and the above Bateson quote, I have decided to focus on some of the more positive work being done, that we can all join into, on fostering peace in the world. With International Peace Day on September 21--only two days away--there could be no better time.

The above link will take you to the Canadian site for activities on International peace day across the country, as well as links to activities in other nations. Aside from the grownup activities indicated on the site that one can participate in, one of my favourite ways of joining in is the Kids for Peace activities, and it is still not too late for schools, teachers, parents and children to mobilize to join in (if you can act quickly!). From taking a minute for peace, colouring peace printouts, planting a tree for peace, to pinwheels for peace, there are many suggestions you could try. Anyone can organize participation in Kids for Peace at any scale.

I recently participated in the Vancouver wing of the global Earthdance events last weekend, which happen every year, and provide a happy warm up to International Peace day. I attended the dance in Ceperly Park (inside Stanley Park) with my daughter Roxanna, and also went to the screening of Fire on the Mountain and the psyonic yoga class on Sunday evening with my friend Cedar.

I was quite suprised that there were not more people out at Earthdance on Saturday afternoon as this was a family friendly and FREE event on a beautiful sunny day. Nevertheless, a mix of people, from Gap shoppers, to hippies, hipsters and colourful scallywags enjoyed the DJs, drumming, first nations dancing and didgeridoo playing while we were there. Although we couldn't stay long, Roxanna and I enjoyed ourselves while we were there listening to the music,
dancing, and people watching. This was my first time attending, and as long as I'm in town, wont be my last.



The Earthdance events on Sunday evening were held at the Aboriginal Friendship Center on Hastings Street, made possible by our personable facilitator, Sobey. The film, Fire on the Mountain (presented by Black Cat Cinema), on Sunday was an inspiring documentary about a gathering of shamans and other indigenous spiritual leaders and H.H. the Dalai Lama, who were all invited by Lama Denys Teundroup to the Karma Ling Buddhist retreat center in France (pictured above and source from above link). If you can get your hands on a copy of this video, do so, as it was both informative and inspiring. After the film, two first nations elders, Marie and Dora, gave short talks and led our group on an impromtu Cree chant and circle dance. It didn't take a rocket scientist to look at the smiling and respectful young faces in the room to see that real changes in aboriginal relations were blossoming all around. I did not expect this part of the evening, but it meant more to me than I can say because I have Cree ancestry on my mother's side of the family (too far back to declare status, but close enough to make me feel status in my heart).

The last part of the Sunday evening Earthdance event was an introduction to Psyonic Yoga led by yogini, Alia Gunnlaugson
, assisted by Michael Riel, with music provided by DJ Jay Michael. Although I know the concept of blending trance dance, music and yoga may sound a little far out to many, the marriage is a natural one if you consider that the foundations of dance have indigenous roots to trance music in many global traditions. I suppose those connections are a little easier to see if you've been exposed to such traditions, as I was when I visited Haiti as a child and stood gawking at amazing voodoo dance and ceremonies, albeit watered down tourist versions. At any rate, I tremendously enjoyed the psyonic experience of moving from floor to standing yoga postures, to movement and into free dance, as did the other participants at the session. Wow and Whee! A++ to psyonic yoga! If you want to try it out for yourself, there are email links to Alia for more information on upcoming sessions on the above Psyonic Yoga link page.

Finally, of course world peace doesn't happen in one day, and the links I've provided in this blog are just the tip of the iceberg. If you would like to participate in other positive efforts for peace you may want to consider joining the work of zen monk Cheri Huber who works for peace in many ways, from daily peace quotes to international peace and poverty work. Cheri's vision, in accordance with the introductory Bateson quote to this blog is positive, "for peace. Not against anyone or anything." Cheri also has a portal to a virtual peace center, interestingly linked to a Christian monk, Saint Francis of Assisi (who coincidentally was the patron saint I chose for my confirmation when I was still a practicing Catholic). But before you go there I suggest you get a nice cup of chai and get ready to have a nice cozy read. In addition, I've signed up in the past for Cheri's email classes, which are a convenient way to practice meditation on your own time, if you, like me, are busy and have a hectic schedule. I noticed that Cheri has had to cancel the classes due to low sign up, so if you are interested, I suggest you contact her organization and let her know you are interested.

"One of the things we have talked about concerning the preparation for the new century is how to handle our garbage. Because during this twentieth century we have produced a lot of garbage, a lot of suffering. We have created a lot of war, created a lot of suffering, a lot of discrimination, a lot of death. If we don't know how to take care of that garbage, the twenty-first century will not be pleasant."
--Thich Nhat Hanh, 1996


I would also like to refer you to a transcription of a darma talk by the venerable Thich Nhat Hanh called The Art of Healing Ourselves, from which the prophetic above quote was taken. Thich Nhat Hanh is an internationally renown worker towards peace, nominated by none other than Martin Luthor King Jr. for the Nobel Peace Prize in 1967 for his work towards peace in his war ravaged homeland of Vietnam, and his international peace efforts as well. I find that although actually doing peaceful things out in the world manifests peace, such literature often lights the inner fire that makes such work posssible.

Finally, I leave you with a link to a project by Michael O'Callaghan, of Global Vision, which I have just stumbled upon called: When Dreams Become Real. I haven't gone through it yet, but it looks interestesting, so I invite you to check it out with me and share what you think.




If you want to send me comments or be added to my mailing list for new posts, you can contact me at chere DOT isabella AT-SIGN hotmail DOT com. Email is chopped up to fend against automatic web crawlers, so you have to write it the normal way like a.b@c.d . Alternatively, you can post a comment by clicking on the link below. Please feel free to forward the link to this blog to others who you feel may be interested.

Saturday, September 16, 2006

BOOK REVIEW: Last Child in the Woods

Author: Richard Louv


From the preface:

THERE was a child went forth every day,

And the first object he look’d upon, that object he became,

And that object became part of him for the day,

or a certain part of the day, or for many years, or stretching cycles of years.

The early lilacs became part of this child,

And grass, and white and red morning-glories, and white and red clover,

and the song of the phoebe-bird,

And the Third-month lambs, and the sow’s pink-faint litter,

and the mare’s foal, and the cow’s calf…

—Walt Whitman


I like to play indoors better ‘case that’s where all the electrical outlets are.

—A fourth grader in San Diego


And so begins Louv’s profound and disturbing book, an eye opener for the urban parent. When I first saw this book on the bookstore shelf it drew me in like a magnet. It was one of those rare finds I knew I had to read right away. I found out later that the Boston Globe agrees: “"This book is an absolute must-read for parents..." My addendum to the Globe would be, “…if you aren’t blessed to live on a greenbelt, a farm, or in the little house in the woods.”

I know no one wants yet another depressing environmental thing to worry about, but alas, this one can’t be ignored. Louv simply and elegantly presents his case. The premise: children in contemporary societies are indoors more than ever and disconnected to the kinds of nature play that their own parents took for granted. Worries regarding safety, a plugged in culture and a lack of access to wild spaces are all part of the etiology of this ‘disorder’.

Louv shows how the lack of experience with nature profoundly influences modern children, not only in their views and behaviours towards the natural world, but in their health and development. On the bright side, depression, ADD, obesity and other disorders in children can be alleviated by more immersion in natural environments. This is partially because experiences in nature (with reasonable and informed safety precautions) allow children to make complex and satisfying connections to wild spaces. And as Whitman and poets of old have always know, a child that really connects to nature will carry that sweet tie for a lifetime.

Louv writes with a spirit linked to the views of deep ecology[1], that I also relate to. For a time when I grew up, my mother decided that we should get away from it all and live up in the mountains of BC on Cariboo Lake[2]. I had never lived anywhere so remote before. We had only one neighbour: a retired Swiss trapper and his wife. No telephone. No power save that from the generator. Propane lighting. A view of the milky way unlike anything I've seen before or since. As an only child I spent most of my days running through the daisies in the long grassy yard, mucking about with the frogs in the mud by the lake, learning to spot new bird songs and species, swimming, chasing garter snakes by the stream, but never venturing too far into the deep dark woods.

Did I ever catch a tick? No. Was I ever chased by a wild animal? No. Did I get a disease from the dirt? No. I did get stung by stinging nettle once, and learned to recognize the species well enough to never be stung again. But mostly I learned things that schools try to reproduce through labs, lectures and film, but are never quite as memorable as experiencing it for oneself. I noticed, for instance, that that the beaver swam by every day around the same time, that porcupines walk funny, that moose eat plants in the lake, that eagles like to fly in circles and that bears are usually more afraid of you than you are of them. Perhaps I was lucky to have never encountered a hungry cougar or grizzly, or perhaps the horror stories we hear about the dangers of nature are the exception, and there is more risk in our children playing video games than foraying like Red Riding Hood down the woodland path. Regardless of the stats, my own experience affected me enough to cause me to go into studying environmental science, biology and geography in university. And, although my family lives in the city now, we have only ever lived in houses where our daughters can have access to greenbelts and well planted yards. Come to think of it, every home we have had in the Vancouver area has been visited by not only racoons, but eagles, deer and bears; and though cleaning up a toppled garbage can makes me grumble like the rest of them, there is a certain comfort in having mother nature living right next door.

As a girl my heart was lit with the green flame, and I've never turned away from Kernunos since, nor the lady of the lake, and as time goes on I value my experiences in nature more and more. I only wish my children, and their chidlren, and theirs too, will not only have such experiences themselves, but share them with their friends and banana slugs all over the world.

If you have never spent considerable time in nature, it’s easy to be annoyed with the bugs, upset by a lack of running water etc. But, if you can let go of your wired urban buzz to really be there, it will start to sink in, and the more keyed up we are the longer it may take. Thankfully, it takes less time for kids to get into and be one with nature than nature disenfranchised adults. And, as Louv points out, the good part for over scheduled modern parents planning nature trips is that it is unstructured play in nature that is most beneficial to kids, allowing their imagination and spirit to open up in free play. A trip to a sandy beach with young children is evidence enough of that.

Fortunately, as well as pointing to a host of associated troubles associated with a denatured childhood, Louv provides solutions besides the beach, such as hiking, bird-watching, camping and other excursions—especially ones that foster disorganized creative play in a natural setting. Wow! Playing in nature as a remedy to an environmental problem? If only all our environmental issues could have such lovely solutions. But don’t take my word for it. Read this book, and you’ll be itching to grab your kids and head for the hills with a great big grin on your face too.



[1] A philosophy that calls for a profound shift in our attitudes and behavior based on voluntary simplicity; rejection of anthropocentric attitudes; intimate contact with nature; decentralization of power; support for cultural and biological diversity; a belief in the sacredness of nature; and direct personal action to protect nature, improve the environment, and bring about fundamental societal change.
From: http://highered.mcgraw-hill.com/sites/0070294267/student_view0/glossary_a-d.html

[2] Cariboo Lake - Cariboo Lake is situated about 24 km (14.88 miles) north of Likely on the Keithly Creek Rd. A large lake with a mean depth of 18 meters (59 feet), it contains wild stock rainbows, Lake Char, Kokanee and Dolly Varden.

If you have GoogleEarth you can view the map and satellite images of this area of BC: http://www.anglersatlas.com/googlemap.php?pr=bc&id=16643