Showing posts with label Ceremony. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ceremony. Show all posts

Miles to Go Before We Sleep

SUBHEAD: I have spent half my life trying to stop or slow down that which now comes onrushing like a wave so tall that it blots out the sun.

By William Pitt on 24 November 2016 for Truth Out -
(http://www.truth-out.org/opinion/item/38515-miles-to-go-before-we-sleep)


Image above: A father and child in a frightening landscape. Viggo Mortensen stars in the 2009 postapocalyptic thriller based on Cormac McCarthy's Pultzer Prize-winning novel "The Road". From (http://adventure.nationalgeographic.com/2009/08/survival/the-road-movie-text).

I took my daughter for a long walk under the low November sun, and it turned into an adventure. We are hedged by deep forest to all points on the compass here in the great granite north, home to deer runs that spider-web the fallen pine needles, ghostly moose like towering mystics in the far field, a family of porcupines, one cat-eating coyote and the occasional ominous bear. Serious stuff.

Before our walk, my daughter was content to contend with the lawn that greens the verge of the dark and deep, but Daddy was with her this day, and that meant pressing the edge.

Over the ancient stone wall we went, into the thicket of pines where she learned to snap off the dead branches lest they claw at her eyes, then deeper, over the moss and the deadfalls laid down by a windstorm and further, into the places where the sun only hints at a kiss, her plowing forward and me always aware of the surround, where true north is, the way back to the house.

She found her favorite place in that secret space: Bifurcated trees. Trees with two, three, four, five full trunks growing up and out of one base like a splayed hand, like a crown. She would find one and crawl into the base, the hollow where all the fingers reached up and out toward the sky.

She stood there timeless, three feet of eternity conducting the energy passing through her, speechless, rigid in bliss. She was in the palm of a living thing, and if she didn't know it, the tree did. I felt it, too. I watched a tree sing to my daughter as she stood in its elder grasp, and she heard it full well.

I am thankful for that.

Thankfulness is a hard dollar to make these days. He Who Shall Not Be Named Here Today hasn't yet taken the oath of office, and already the deep stain of his impending presidency marks us all. It is difficult to locate gratitude in this vortex of shame, confusion, hate and greed, but this is an orderly transition of power, right?

He won, everyone else lost, and never mind the shenanigans from overseas and right down the block. We are in the pipe now, five by five, charging into a future that reeks of the past.

Native Americans are being attacked with "non-lethal" concussion grenades and rubber bullets for protecting their water rights out in North Dakota, all in the lead-up to Thanksgiving -- a holiday which, after all, is about celebrating the United States' "heritage."

A new creature now walks the land, most clearly visible on televisions tuned to "news" networks. No zoologist has labeled it yet, so I just call it the "Yeahbut."

Every time a fascist, a racist or an all-out Nazi is tapped for a Cabinet position in the looming administration, all the apple-polishers on the screen say, "Yeah, but how bad can they really be?" or "Yeah, but that was a long time ago" or "Yeah, but those people don't vote anyway," and we are all a little worse for the wear in the stench of the Yeahbut's passage.

Forgiveness is divine, it is said, but watching the TV people exonerate themselves for the ruin they gleefully foisted upon us in the name of ratings and advertising dollars makes me glad, for their sake, that I am a peaceful man.

I am so tired. I have spent half my life trying to stop or slow down that which now comes onrushing like a wave so tall that it blots out the sun.

Yet I remember my daughter standing in that tree, in her simple glory, and all of it shimmers into shards of purpose, and I am thankful to know I have a few good fights left in me. I am thankful for my good right arm and what I will do within its reach.

I will not be still. I will not be silent. I will volunteer at a food bank to help those who will feel the grind of these coming years most keenly. I will volunteer to be an escort at a women's clinic because my daughter has rights.

I will make it known that my home is a sanctuary for anyone who fears being unjustly thrown out of the country. If they try to run Kobach's registry of Muslims, I will be first in line to sign my name. I will do that, and more.

Through it all, some of me will ever be in the forest with my daughter. I am in a horde of leaves amid the hushed susurrations of wind through evergreens with a little girl who knows nothing of sorrow yet as she stands in a throne of wise bark. I feel the low jolt passing from trunk to her hand to trunk, and I know why I am here.

When next we pass over the ancient stone wall into that sacred shrouded space, I will whisper to her the lines from her favorite bedtime poem:
"The woods are lovely, dark and deep,
but I have promises to keep,
and miles to go before I sleep,
and miles to go before I sleep."
And I will mean it. I am thankful for this small patch upon which I make my stand. This far, no farther, and not one step back. Happy Thanksgiving.

• William Rivers Pitt is a senior editor and lead columnist at Truthout. He is also a New York Times and internationally bestselling author of three books: War on Iraq: What Team Bush Doesn't Want You to Know, The Greatest Sedition Is Silence and House of Ill Repute: Reflections on War, Lies, and America's Ravaged Reputation. His fourth book, The Mass Destruction of Iraq: Why It Is Happening, and Who Is Responsible, co-written with Dahr Jamail, is available now on Amazon. He lives and works in New Hampshire.


Stopping by a Woods on a Snowy Evening
by Robert Frost

Whose woods these are I think I know.
His house is in the village though;
He will not see me stopping here
To watch his woods fill up with snow.

My little horse must think it queer
To stop without a farmhouse near
Between the woods and frozen lake
The darkest evening of the year.

He gives his harness bells a shake
To ask if there is some mistake.
The only other sound’s the sweep
Of easy wind and downy flake.

The woods are lovely, dark and deep,
But I have promises to keep,
And miles to go before I sleep,
And miles to go before I sleep.
.

Thirty things for Thanksgiving

SUBHEAD: The bright side of the environment, sustainability, renewable energy, and healthy food.

By Reynard Loki on 26 November 2015 for Alternet -
(http://www.alternet.org/environment/30-reasons-be-thankful-thanksgiving)


Image above: Illustration of visiting the grandparents for Thanksgiving.  From (http://postcardy.blogspot.com/2010/11/vtt-thanksgiving-ideals.html).

t is hard to argue that 2015 has been a good year for the environment. Due to a steady increase in temperature—the year is on track to be the hottest year on record—we have witnessed an increase in the frequency and severity of storms, widespread ocean acidification that is creating marine dead zones around the globe and numerous species that are struggling to survive amid what has been termed the "Sixth Extinction."

Droughtsfloods and wildfires are negatively impacting natural ecosystems, crops and local communities. The effects of climate change, in particular a growing lack of resources like water, food and fuel, have also acted as catalysts for conflict, sparking regional violence, terrorism and the civil war in Syria.

Climate change is also exacerbating the refugee crisis, driving people from their homes by destroying their livelihoods.

Rising seas threaten to drown coastal cities and engulf island nations. Scientists have identified dozens of "global warming tipping points" that could trigger natural disasters.

The pernicious climate denialism in the U.S. is not helping: In just three years, secretive donors have given climate denial groups over $125 million to help undermine rules to reduce carbon pollution.

Across the world, consumerism, overpopulation and globalism are also taking a heavy toll on our planet's limited resources. Plastic trash is polluting the seas and killing wildlifeInternational trade deals are expanding corporate rights and challenging regulations meant to protect the environment and public health. In the U.S., environmentalists and conservationists are fighting battles on many fronts. Environmental racism is rampant. Oregon's wolves lost their endangered species protection. The well-intentioned but ultimately destructive biomass industry in Europe is decimating America's southern forests, home to the endangered Louisiana black bear and more than 600 imperiled, threatened or endangered species.
On the food front, there is also much concern. As of 2014, more than 48 million Americans live in food-insecure households. Almost 15 percent of Americans live in poverty. Over 600,000 Americans are homeless. Against this worrisome background of widespread hunger, big food companies are pushing legislation to prevent consumers from knowing whether or not foods contain GMOs. Pesticides that are killing critical food crop pollinators like bees and butterflies and endangering human health continue to be used worldwide. Coca-Cola has been exposed for funding research that misleads the public about the health effects of its sugary drinks.
Still, amid all the bad news are some striking victories, stories of hope and visions for a better future. The good news is the result of action by people who care, from environmental activists who dangled from a bridge to stop Shell's icebreaker ship from going to the Arctic, to farmers suing agrochemical giants, and even to readers like you who have signed petitions, some of which have helped make things better, one issue at a time. Deeds such as these serve as an important reminder that, while it may be easier to complain than to commit, only action will enact positive change.
If you care about the environment, sustainability, renewable energy, food safety, food security, organic food systems and animal welfare, there is still much work to be done. But if you're looking for things to be thankful for this Thanksgiving, you also have many reasons. Here are 30, in no particular order.
  1. Shell abandoned Arctic drilling.
  2. Pope Francis released a powerful encyclical on the environment.
     
  3. An Illinois farmer sued the world's largest agrochemical company over GMO corn.
  4. Taco Bell decided to source only cage-free chickens.
  5. Colorado established a new GMO-free zone to protect traditional farming.
  6. Kikkoman, a popular soy sauce brand, decided to end animal testing.
  7. The Women's Collective of Tamil Nadu in India is restoring traditional foods and farming methods.
  8. The United States is finally ending invasive experiments on chimpanzees.
  9. Palau created the world's sixth largest marine sanctuary.
  10. The $2.6 trillion fossil fuel divestment movement is growing.
  11. Pop Weaver, the second largest popcorn supplier in U.S., became the first American company to phase out bee-killing seed coatings.
  12. India is home to the world's first solar-powered airport.
  13. A group of humpback whales tried to save a baby gray whale from a killer whale attack in a remarkable display of interspecies empathy.
  14. The World Health Organization classified Monsanto's herbicide as a "probable carcinogen."
  15. Following the tragic murder of Cecil the lion, several major airlines banned the transportation of animal parts from the trophy hunting industry.
  16. 1President Obama rejected the Keystone XL pipeline.
  17. SeaWorld decided to put an end to its orca shows in California.
  18. Morocco is poised to become a solar energy superpower.
  19. Washington became the first state to crack down on illegal wildlife trafficking by a people's vote.
  20. Scientists discovered that plastic-eating mealworms can safely digest Styrofoam.
  21. Across the world, urban agriculture projects are changing the way food is grown.
  22. Fracktivists crashed Monday Night Football.
  23. Texas finally put a stop to greyhound racing.
     
  24. Poland became the 14th European nation to ban GMOs.
  25. Jon and Tracey Stewart converted a 12-acre farm into a farm animal sanctuary
  26. U.S. and Russia have teamed up to save polar bears.
  27. The Swansea Bay Tidal Lagoon in Wales will use ocean tides to power more than 150,000 homes.
  28. Activists promised the largest climate civil disobedience ever at the Paris summit.
  29. Prop 2 took effect, banning extreme confinement of hens, pigs and calves in California.
  30. After years of resistance, Ringling Bros. Circus announced it would retire elephants from its traveling circus acts.
What are you thankful for this Thanksgiving? Now is the time to consider.



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