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Archive for the ‘Climate Change is Real’ Category

As part of a Unitarian Universalist service focusing on Environmental Justice, I revisited the concept of gratitude in the midst of chaos. The talk is on YouTube and below the video is the text.

Most mornings, for the past year, I wake up, play gratitude affirmations on my phone and go back to sleep. I continue doing it because I can feel the positive results.  My vibrational frequency is becoming higher. Just this morning the person saying the affirmations emphasized that expressing gratitude is essential for change. She also said that expressing gratitude is one of the quickest ways to experience happiness and that true expressions of appreciation are one of the most direct ways to experience the divine.

I have found that being consciously grateful has changed my life. I am grateful for it all. I am grateful for the air in my lungs. But this morning as I write, the air in Pennsylvania is dangerous to breathe. I am doing the things that I need to protect myself—such as staying indoors and foregoing my daily walk. My partner, Barbara, and I are wearing masks when we have to go out and are also checking on friends and family who have breathing conditions.

It shouldn’t be this way and it could have been different, but this is the reality of the situation that we live in.

I am still grateful for the air in my lungs. I am still grateful to be alive. I am still grateful to be living on this beautiful planet we call Earth.

As we can see from the realities of climate change, or climate devastation as some call it, we are living in a time that requires change. It is sad—for many reasons. But it is also the reality we live in.

When I was going to a plant-based diet, for health reasons—now almost four years ago—I heard the motivational speaker and author Dr. Will Tuttle say that animal agriculture is responsible for more greenhouse gasses than the entire transportation sector combined.

I’ve also heard and experienced that people following plant-based diets feel better because they know they are helping the planet and the animals as well as themselves.

Going to a plant-based diet has changed my life. I am here, for starters.

I feel like the gratitude affirmations work better for me because I now am more open to messages from the universe because I no longer have the suffering of animals in my body. We are living in a time of change–and to be around to be part of that change and to witness the change requires us to take care of ourselves—now, perhaps more than ever—and that includes our mental health.

Taking care of my mental health has led me to listen to the gratitude affirmations. I have the same impulses as any other human animal.  Because of our ancient fight-flight response, it is more natural for human beings to be negative than positive. But we can train our brains to respond more to positive stimuli. The complexities of neuroscience are simplified in the statement that neurons that fire together wire together.

Since I am rewiring my brain to be positive, I see the signs of positive change rather than simply observing all the negative things and becoming depressed. I am delighted when I see the electrical outlets resembling gas pumps that are popping up here and there to fuel electrical cars. When my partner, Barbara, and I run errands in our hybrid and I see food trucks that offer fresh fruit and fruit smoothies without scary dairy, I am equally excited.

The earth is changing. In many ways, it is protecting itself from further harm. When we change with the earth instead of clinging to the old ways that harm ourselves as well as the earth, we are part of the change. I am deeply grateful for being part of the change just as I truly appreciate being here with all of you.

I am going to end with a mantra or a prayer:

May the earth and all her inhabitants be healthy. May we all be free.

–Namaste–

For more information on my most recent published novel Loving Artemisan endearing tale of revolution, love, and marriageclick here:

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The following is a recent review that I wrote for the Alexander Artway Archive, a very interesting photo collection that I have been working with. Alexander Artway was an architect and photographer who photographed New York City in the 1930s. You can view the photos by clicking here.

We have decided to review photography books for the Alexander Artway blog — and this first book by David Freese documents that climate change is real.

Working with the Alexander Artway Archive inspired me to write the novel Looking At Pictures. You can click here to read excerpts (or watch me on YouTube).

The blog post/review is reprinted below:

artway blog

Last year or so when taking photography classes at Temple University (so that we could apply the learning to our photo archive ) we had the good fortune of taking David Freese’s course on World Photography.

When we heard that David was introducing his new book at the Print Center in Philadelphia (formerly the Print Club), we were delighted and went to the lecture and to buy David’s book, East Coast: Arctic to Tropic, Photographs by David Freese with text by Simon Winchester and Jenna Butler.

After Hurricane Sandy — when Freese saw the devastation first hand — he was, as he writes in the book on a mission to “show the connection between a warming climate and these fragile and vulnerable low-lying areas.” The result was this coffee-table sized photography book with stunning black and white images.  The images (most of them aerial) are so visually appealing that many to us were reminiscent of trips we had taken or evocative of places we had read about.

That these images are important is underscored by the fact that this coast line with be vastly different in a generation or two. In other words, people living in the future will not see what we see if global warming is to continue its cataclysmic course.

 Freese  — who writes that he “did a lot of research on the topic” of climate change – shows us the pristine beauty of ice and cloud in Greenland at the start of his journey.

As he writes, “water, water is everywhere” and we see that this is true – not only of glacially pure remote areas but major cities as he descends down the Eastern Seaboard in his book coming to the conclusion that “the albatross of global warming and a rising sea is around our collective necks.”

Among other places, the images take us to Quebec, Boston, New York City, and Philadelphia where the heavens seem to shine down in sun rays from above. Freese also shows us remote views such as “Bubble Rock and Eagle Lake,” Acadia National Park, Maine.  The image, dominated by a boulder atop a mountaintop under a sky that is palpable startles with its bold simplicity.

 The book ends in Florida with images that are as equally beautiful and stunning.  The photography is done with such skill in the tradition of landscape photographers (think Edward Weston and Ansel Adams) that at times it’s easy to forget that everything might be underwater soon.

East Coast: Arctic to Tropic is published by George F. Thompson Publishing – www.gftbooks.com

 

 

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