Tuesday, February 21, 2012

My water is your air; my lake is your sky

This is a photo taken by Camille Seaman that I saw on Outside Magazine. 
I live on the west coast, near lakes and Puget Sound and the Pacific Ocean.  I am soothed by watching water and smelling rain in the air. 
As silly as it sounds, I often wonder how people in the midwest can't miss what I have.
Seeing this picture, though makes me think the people in this part of the country might have the same sense of peace when they look at the sky and it's various forms. 
This picture reminds me of water upside down.
We all live on a fantastic planet...:)

Saturday, February 18, 2012

Commemorating Friendship 7 - 50 Years Later

On February 20, 2012 it will be 50 years since John Glenn's orbital flight in a tiny space capsule called Friendship 7.
The following transcript from Scott Simon on Weekend Edition nicely captures the wonder, the courage, the "friend"liness of that day.  Godspeed John Glenn.  (And in today's scary times...Godspeed America)

Fifty years ago, John Glenn was alone on top of a rocket waiting to blast into space and around the earth. In these times, when people can become suddenly famous for doing so little, it may be good to recall the daring and imagination of that moment, on February 20th, 1962.
Two Russians, Yuri Gagarin and Gherman Titov, had already dauntlessly orbited the earth. But the Soviets kept their missions' secret until they were underway. John Glenn would fly with the eyes of the world watching every second.
He was a hero before he ever pulled on a silver spacesuit. John Glenn was a small-town guy from the heart of America—New Concord, Ohio, population 2651, and they're very proud—who left Muskingham College to enlist when he just 20 and Pearl Harbor was bombed.
He became a US Marine fighter pilot in the south Pacific, which is a long way from New Concord, flying 59 missions during World War II, and then 90 more in Korea, where his wingman was Ted Williams—a mere Hall of Fame baseball player.
John Glenn was a mild-drinking, clean-joking, fair-haired flyboy among fighter jocks. But his fellow pilots hailed him respectfully as Magnet Ass, for all the shrapnel his plane took.
He married his childhood sweetheart, Annie; they've been married almost 70 years. He became a celebrated test pilot. He was the oldest of the 7 original astronauts and more than 40 when he went into space.
So when John Glenn took off his helmet, Americans saw a sun-creased face under wispy, evaporating strands of red hair, and a crinkly I-Like-Ike-grin.
He circled the globe 3 times in his space capsule, Friendship 7. If you see it now in the Smithsonian, it almost makes you cringe to think of a man inside such a small, frail vessel, alone in the vast universe.
Days and nights flipped in 45 minutes. Excitement crackled in John Glenn's voice when he told the people of Perth, Australia that he could look down from the dark of space and see the lights that they had left on for him. What a neighborly thing to do! And it reminded us how people on opposite sides of an ocean shared the same world.
When an automated steering system jammed, millions of people watching held their breath. But John Glenn was a pilot, not a tourist. He took manual control of this brand new machine and threaded it back into earth's atmosphere. 50 years ago, John Glenn's nervy maneuver was a timeless reminder that the most amazing and marvelous inventions won't work without human skill and a good man's daring.

Monday, February 13, 2012

Yay, State of Washington!

Washington joins six other states and the District of Columbia to legalize same sex marriage.  Good.  I'm proud of Christine Gregoire and the people in my state's legislature who voted yes. 

***

 "Here are the values I stand for: I stand for honesty, equality, kindness, compassion, treating people the way you'd want to be treated, and helping those in need. To me, those are traditional values. That's what I stand for."
                                                                     Ellen DeGeneres. 

Ditto, from Vickster

Friday, February 3, 2012

Spiritual Activism


Following is a summary of the Principles of Spiritual Activism:

1.  Love those with whom we are in conflict
2.  We are all spiritual beings.  See the image of God in everyone.
3.  We are all connected and part of the web of life.
4.  We can pray.  Prayer is powerful and effective and should precede all actions.
5.  We are conscious beings and part of a collective universal consciousness.
6.  Shift our motivation for action from anger to love.
7.  Be aware of any negative thinking on our part.
8.  Be willing to talk openly about love.
9.  To promote peace, we need to become peaceful ourselves.
10.  Develop a non-attachment to outcome.
11.  Let go of the need to be right and in control.
12.  When involved in a dispute, focus on the issues rather than attacking the opposition.
13.  We should not isolate ourselves from the pain and suffering of the world.
14.  God created life and we are intelligent beings capable of creative genius.
15.  Peaceful, nonviolent direct action is an appropriate way to demonstrate our protest to harmful, unjust laws or practices.
16.  We are all One with God, each other, and all life.

A Season for NonViolence

The Association for Global New Thought is preparing for the 15th Annual Gandhi-King Season for NonViolence from January 30, 2012 through April 4, 2012 (the days between the dates when Gandhi was assasinated n 1948 and King was assasinated in 1968.)


Thursday, February 2, 2012

Girl on Girl

This is so not cool.

Susan G Komen For the Cure will no longer fund grants to Planned Parenthood for initiatives to support breast cancer awareness and screenings for poor women. 

Here is a video of Nancy Brinker from Susan G Komen explaining their decision.  Without further information you might be inclined to understand her point of view.

I read Katha Pollit at The Nation magazine and discover Susan G Komen For the Cure has, in the past few years, hired Karen Handel as Senior Vice President of Public Policy.  According to the article, Karen Handel is 'staunchly and unequivocally' pro-life.  Also, the rationale for withholding funding (a bogus hearing about how Planned Parenthood separates federal funds from other funds and how it doesn't use federal funds to provide abortions) sounds flimsy. 

While Nancy Brinker would like me to think their decision is not about influence from pro-life groups, I think the circumstantial evidence proves otherwise - for me, anyway.

It's sad when women don't support each other.  Divide and Conquer is a winning strategy.

I haven't been a financial supporter of either of these groups in the past (though I did participate in my first Walk for the Cure last summer in support of my friend); Susan G Komen won't miss the money I'm not going to donate. They will, however, miss the goodwill I had toward them.
Today I made my first donation to Planned Parenthood.  They've been in the trenches for years, and my financial support is long overdue.


UPDATE 2/3/2012 - Susan G Komen reverses their decision. 
Frankly, if you watch this video from last night where Nancy Brinker was still defending her position, it just doesn't feel right.  I don't trust that SGK has a true change of heart.  Maybe this will be a blip to long time supporters.  I'll remember (but, as I mentioned earlier - I didn't participate or donate much anyway).