Blog

August 15, 2020

Reading The 1619 Project in 2020

The 1619 Project was published in the New York Times Magazine Sunday, August 18, 2019, along with additional material included in the newspaper. The print version sold out quickly, but I was able to obtain a copy after the reprinting. It sat on the table that accumulates papers to be sorted, mail to be dealt with and other detritus of daily life, for months until I thought, it’s time to get busy and read this important work through. The full project can be found online on the New York Times website. I received the standard middle class white suburban school district education, supplemented by my own personal reading list, and there is so much I did not learn in the classroom. Not surprising, given the demographics of my time, but perhaps odd, given my proximity to the 1960s era of civil rights struggles. The Times featured this quote from John Hope Franklin on the cover page of the supplemental section: “We’ve got to tell the unvarnished truth,” followed by a box at the bottom of the page that reads, “Four hundred years after enslaved Africans were first brought to Virgina, most Americans still don’t know the full story of slavery.” Nicole Hannah-Jones, staff writer, conceived of the project that examines the roots of slavery that can be traced through every aspect of modern American society, every institution, every organizational structure, every economic assumption, though multiple essays, painstakingly researched by a team of journalists. It is long past time for all of us to learn, acknowledge and understand the true history of the founding of our nation and the building of immense wealth on the institution of human slavery. The 1619 Project is at times horrifying and enormously painful, but also illuminating and insightful. It takes time to explore and digest,... View Article

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August 15, 2020

Why Blog?

Hello everyone! I hope you enjoy our new website (thank you Louise and William and our photographers!) and also sign up for our Instagram and Facebook. But all this activity, re-designing, learning to use social media, and now blogging has made me wonder, "why exactly do we blog?" There are some easy answers.

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June 8, 2020

Shoveling Mulch and Thinking About Fashion

Whenever I can during gardening season, I try to get out to the town mulch bins. It takes some time and effort to fill up my containers and load them into the car, which gives me an opportunity to think. Today, I thought about fashion.

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January 20, 2020

Creating a Circle of Blessing

Consider creating a circle of blessing in the sphere around you that you carry with you wherever you go. I have long practiced walking around my neighborhood, for fitness and to do my practices in motion.

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March 11, 2014

Rhythm Concepts and Practices

Greetings and a warm welcome to all. This practice reviews some basic concepts and practices on rhythm, with perhaps the added feature of suggesting how to experiment with its practical uses in everyday life. We find it intriguing that powerful spiritual practices, experiences and even concepts are sometimes compartmentalized from most aspects of life, as if the spiritual domain is behind some impermeable membrane, divorced from our other more “worldly” and “material” aspects.

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