
Saturday, March 27, 2010
Momfulness
I heard a great lecture this past week on 'momfulness' -- the art of meditating in the right now moment as a mother. A great idea. One I am familiar with -- I could have written her book, or, perhaps, I did write poems like her book. I'm tired and it's hard to post tonight. But I'm greatful for Denise Roy. Buy her book here. Read about it here. Her books are MOMFULNESS: Mothering with Mindfulness, Compassion, and Grace and My Monastery Is a Minivan: 35 Stories from a Real Life. Even though I don't drive a minivan, I know the feeling of safety and prayer inside a car. I'm not much for peace of mind, but I am hopeful.


Friday, March 12, 2010
We Had to Tell Doctors to Read To Understand Us

"The humanities can remind them that they're dealing with very complicated, whole individuals with their own needs and opinions," said Elizabeth Sinclair, coordinator of the Maine Humanities Council's literature and medicine program.
Scalpel, stethoscope, Tolstoy: Doctors embrace literature as tool to connect with patients - latimes.com
Posted using ShareThis
Tuesday, March 9, 2010
Your Mind is What You Do
The most interesting and beautiful and powerful radio show I've heard in a long time: discussions between science and philosophy about the nature of the mind.
KQED Radio: Beyond the Brain

KQED Radio: Beyond the Brain


Labels:
brain,
medicine,
mind,
neuroscience,
philosophy,
radio
Tuesday, March 2, 2010
The Most Beautiful Song About Being Depressed Ever
Go ahead, push you luck, find out how much love the world can hold,
Once upon a time I had control, and reigned my soul in tight.
Well the whole truth, it's like the story of a wave unfurled,
But I held the evil of the world,
So I stopped the tide,
froze it up from inside,
And it felt like a winter machine that you go through and then,
You catch your breath and winter starts again,
And everyone else is spring bound.
And when I chose to live, there was no joy,
it's just a line I crossed,
It wasn't worth the pain my death would cost,
So I was not lost or found.
And if I was to sleep, I knew my family had more truth to tell.
And so I traveled down a whispering well,
To know myself through them.
Growing up, my mom had a room full of books, and hid away in there,
Her father raging down a spiral stair,
Till he found someone, most days his son,
And sometimes I think my father, too, was a refugee,
I know they tried to keep their pain form me,
They could not see what it was for.
But now I'm sleeping fine,
Sometimes the truth is like a second chance,
I am the daughter of a great romance,
And they are the children of the war.
Well the sun rose with so many colors,
it nearly broke my heart,
It worked me over like a work of art,
And I was a part off all that.
So go ahead, push your luck, say what it is you gotta say to me,
We will push on into that mystery,
And it'll push right back, and there are worse things than that,
Cause for every price, and every penance that I
could think of,
It's better to have fallen in love,
Than never to have fallen at all,
Cause when you live in a world,
well it gets into who you thought you'd be,
And now I laugh at how the world changed me,
I think life chose me
after all.
Dar Williams, songstress extraordinaire. From her The Green World cd, 2000. I couldn't listen to this song then, without weeping, and many days I couldn't listen to it at all. My husband was furious, but it wasn't about not loving the music. I think it's a measure of how much 'better' I am that I can listen to this song so happily, even eagerly now.
I'm not sure about the line breaks, but that's kind of the way it is in a Dar song.
Once upon a time I had control, and reigned my soul in tight.
Well the whole truth, it's like the story of a wave unfurled,
But I held the evil of the world,
So I stopped the tide,
froze it up from inside,
And it felt like a winter machine that you go through and then,
You catch your breath and winter starts again,
And everyone else is spring bound.
And when I chose to live, there was no joy,
it's just a line I crossed,
It wasn't worth the pain my death would cost,
So I was not lost or found.
And if I was to sleep, I knew my family had more truth to tell.
And so I traveled down a whispering well,
To know myself through them.
Growing up, my mom had a room full of books, and hid away in there,
Her father raging down a spiral stair,
Till he found someone, most days his son,
And sometimes I think my father, too, was a refugee,
I know they tried to keep their pain form me,
They could not see what it was for.
But now I'm sleeping fine,
Sometimes the truth is like a second chance,
I am the daughter of a great romance,
And they are the children of the war.
Well the sun rose with so many colors,
it nearly broke my heart,
It worked me over like a work of art,
And I was a part off all that.
So go ahead, push your luck, say what it is you gotta say to me,
We will push on into that mystery,
And it'll push right back, and there are worse things than that,
Cause for every price, and every penance that I
could think of,
It's better to have fallen in love,
Than never to have fallen at all,
Cause when you live in a world,
well it gets into who you thought you'd be,
And now I laugh at how the world changed me,
I think life chose me
after all.
Dar Williams, songstress extraordinaire. From her The Green World cd, 2000. I couldn't listen to this song then, without weeping, and many days I couldn't listen to it at all. My husband was furious, but it wasn't about not loving the music. I think it's a measure of how much 'better' I am that I can listen to this song so happily, even eagerly now.
I'm not sure about the line breaks, but that's kind of the way it is in a Dar song.
True Tangled Swans


Such beautiful photos. Posted at the Elements Village Gallery. I'm not sure what an elements village is, but the swans are lovely. And they are definitely tangled all together, the nasty little loves.
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