While celebrating our weekends, and in the spirit of our global collaboration and community of support, we are featuring our personal art as 'Vision to Verb' notecards.
Sunday, December 15, 2013
Our Shoppe Galery
While celebrating our weekends, and in the spirit of our global collaboration and community of support, we are featuring our personal art as 'Vision to Verb' notecards.
Monday, November 18, 2013
Forever Blowing Bubbles
The Bubble Man in Central Park,
New York City
Once you discover this post is in fact about the Age of Aquarius, you have my full permission to roll your eyes and say “There she goes
again!”
But do give me this. After almost three weeks in America this past
October during the government shutdown, hearing Obamacare this, Obamacare that,
and what has this world come to with America spying on her allies, I was ready
to get the hell out of Dodge.
The day we flew back to the Netherlands, we ate lunch with dear friends who
are fit to be tied about personal and worldwide privacy and security invasions,
and, quite honestly, are wanting to flee the country. As though it
happens only in America!
As I sat there listening to their obvious consternations, feeling helpless,
I had one of those brain farts.
“We are living in the Age of Aquarius!” I began….
[hold that thought]
Astrological ages last approximately 2,000+ years each while the vernal equinox precesses
clockwise through the twelve zodiac constellations. Thus far we have
tracked 6 astrological ages by major changes in the development of Earth's
inhabitants…culturally, socially, politically…all the way back to BC 10,000.
The previous age was the Age of Pisces (the fish), from ca. BC 6 to AD
1994. Pisces is about universal love, compassion, self-sacrifice,
altruism, creativity, intuition and deep spirituality…as well as
deception and illusion. It was the age of Monotheism, Spirituality,
and the Fish...the age of Christianity and the effect of the Jesus-fish (Ichthys)
on the entire world, for good and bad.
All astrological ages have a cycle of discovery, trial and error,
progression, growth and resolution related to the traits of their individual
zodiac signs. Starting with the crucifixion of Jesus to everything that
followed, including untold wars, revolutions and reformations, burnings at the
stake, heresies, and sectarian hatreds, all in the name of Christ…you get the picture
of why Universal Love had to climax the end of the Piscean Age.
Thus the logical segue to the Age of Aquarius: universality,
friendship, emotional detachment, individualism, invention, philanthropy,
humanism, vision, enlightenment, intellect, originality, technology, change,
freedom, science, quantum physics, String Theory, space.
And so?????
It means we've begun a new age of figuring out what we can and cannot do in
a world small enough to fit in the palm of our hand!
It means we're ascertaining what controls and regulations are necessary
every time we invent something new, especially related to the world-wide-web.
It means we have to befriend our enemies in order to coexist in one world!
It means we will probably find life on other planets.
And on the heels of our earth's worst "natural disaster" ever, killing over 3,600 people thus far, it means we're figuring
out climate change on this planet, for its survival.
I don't mean to sound simplistic. But instead of despairing, a bit of
pragmatism helps me midst the craziness. We need those right now (like my
Atlanta friends) who hate the misuse of power. Inequality. Slavery
and sex trafficking. Invasion of privacy....
THIS is the time to "fix" it. THIS is the age when it will
happen.
Are we ready for this social awakening en masse? Can we
embrace the individual choice to make it happen? One step, one person at
a time. Each doing our part. Not pannicking. Not
despairing. Believing all things. Allowing Love to win, which
surely was the lesson meant for the last age?
Of course, we can also blow bubbles between our spurts of human and
technological awareness, right? Why not!
Monday, October 21, 2013
Spell-Check
Years and years ago while married to Bill (for 21 years), he often told me
I would be a good proofreader. Seriously. He would catch me
circling (with red-ballpoint pen) any typo in whatever book or magazine I was
reading at the time. And he meant it as a compliment.
Today I’m doing well if I can complete my own sentences without
spell-check, having become a bit of my mother. The more languages she
learned, the worse speller she became.
A month ago Petra wrote about the Charm of Mnenomics, remember? When I read her post, I chuckled because I was already
forming these thoughts after that quickie trip to Ireland two weeks earlier.
Look at that elegant, artistic font above from a book in the Old Library at Trinity College in Dublin. Don’t you wonder how those
scribes of yore corrected typos without spell-check or white-out?! Or did
they?
Take MISSISSIPPI, as a mnemonic example. I bet you learned to spell
it as M-I-crooked letter, crooked letter-I-crooked letter, crooked
letter-I-humpback, humpback-I. HA! It has a sing-song rhythm you
could never forget.
To put me in my place, I remember terrible spelling snafus I made while
growing up. My name happens to be Virginia Louise but my family
called me Bootsie for short (long story). Somewhere along the
line, when I obviously thought my powers of logic were exemplary, I decided the
‘sie’ at the end of Bootsie was the same sound as the ’ise’ at the end of
Louise. You don’t want to know how long I called myself (on paper)
Virginia Lousie (lousy!) before I nearly died in horror on the
spot. Jeez Louise takes on new meaning, right?!
Further demonstrating how those powers of logic did not elude me, I’ll
never forget the day I was singing a Daily Vacation Bible School song…”We’re
going to the mansion on the Happy Day Express. The letters on the engine
R-J-E-S-U-S”…and suddenly “got” it. Though I had sung it
correctly, of course, it hadn’t computed. Yup, very embarrassing.
This, of course, is totally aside from the they’re-there-their,
your-you’re, lose-loose, then-than, its-it’s, led-lead, etc. quirks. For
some reason, those were always easy-peasy for me. I understood that
kind of logic.
Growing up we had a guy in our church, one of the biggest brainiacs I’ve
ever known, who went to MIT. I remember being aghast by letters he’d write home filled with
spelling errors. Later I learned that Einstein had dyslexia and he, too,
was a terrible speller. In fact, the list he’s on has quite an impressive line-up. Long before spell-check!
Bottom-line, don’t you wonder if spelling is relevant at all, as long as
we’re communicating? Have we made it more important than it needs to
be? What does it say about us when we turn our nose down at typos and
those who make them? Especially if it has nothing to do with one’s
intelligence!
Gotta love Winnie-the-Pooh, my guru, when it comes to these spelling
things:
You can’t
help respecting anybody who can spell TUESDAY, even if he doesn’t spell it
right;
but spelling isn’t everything. There are days when spelling Tuesday simply doesn’t count.
(from The House at Pooh Corner, 1928)
but spelling isn’t everything. There are days when spelling Tuesday simply doesn’t count.
(from The House at Pooh Corner, 1928)
My spelling
is Wobbly. It’s good spelling but it Wobbles,
and the letters get in the wrong places.
(from Winnie-the-Pooh, 1926)
and the letters get in the wrong places.
(from Winnie-the-Pooh, 1926)
How can you possibly dispute the logic of that!
Saturday, October 19, 2013
Our Shoppe Gallery
While celebrating our weekends, and in the
spirit of our global collaboration and community of support, we are featuring
our personal art as 'Vision to Verb' notecards.
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