• About Tamam
  • Poems
  • NEW BOOK! Reviews & Praise
  • UNTOLD: Book Trailer & Blurbs
  • Fatima’s Touch
  • Reading Schedule

CompleteWord

CompleteWord

Category Archives: Uncategorized

LEAPNOW, education’s future

13 Wednesday Feb 2013

Posted by Tea-mahm in Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

IMG_6291

What I’m writing about here inspires me deeply. Like a birth of a child, or winning a wished-for prize. Like that. Big WoW!

Tuesday Shabda and I drove north for over an hour to what used to be Camp Makama. I was last there in 1974, doing a Zikr hadrat with Murshid Hasan from Jordan, the man who gave me my name, Tamam. That time, Shabda was asked to play an enormous marching-band drum with two drumsticks. Boom-ba Boom-Boom-Boom-ba Boom…. I can still hear it. This time Shabda brought the Dances-of-Universal-Peace to this college-age LEAPYEAR group in their brand-new meeting-hall. I played the djembe drum, he played Bazooki. It was fun.  I did a couple spoken-word pieces. There was laughter and delight present. The silences after the dance were like jewels. But what I want to IMG_6293share here most, are the stories of how these young people are leaping out into far-off places, bringing their service, energy, and enthusiasm. How they open to new experience.

 LEAPNOW.   A brilliant organization created and founded by Sam Bull, in 2002 as “a system of education to create a transformation experience to usher young adults gracefully into adulthood.”

[See below for more info on this global school.] Each group of students is given a name. We were with The Rumi Group!  Shabda is a regular presence each year.

 I interviewed Aaron and Tiffany, mentioning I would post this on a blog. They politely smiled. No cell phones, computers, I pads, Radio TV. Whoa.

Aaron Jones is from Washington DC. I keep asking him about stuff while he was IMG_6296 2trying to finish his sandwich.  What do you like about Leap Year? Initially I was interested in a program for internal growth as well as external opportunity – turning the world into your classroom. That’s about it.

Another question: So the first semester you went with some of the Leap Now folks to India. What was that like? In the fall of 2012 we began in Nepal then crossed the boarder and went to Varanasi and then Rishikesh. From there we trekked in the nearby Himalayan Mountain area for six days or so then we rafted down the Ganges for 3 days, camping by the river at night. I body surfed some rapids.  After that, Delhi for 2 days then I returned home to Washington DC for two months. Now I’m here with the group again. Next week we all spread out and I go to Brooklyn, where I’m entered in the Brooklyn Young Filmmakers Center. I was into filmmaking and I always wanted to do something to help the disenfranchised youth in my DC neighborhood. I’d like to strike up awareness around those issues.  Film is a good way to do it.

Aaron told me his mother was a DC Social Worker, who raised him while a single parent. I’d say she did a terrific job. He’s applying to UC Colorado, Boulder and is inspired by the words of a mentor: “Always strive to be a Global Citizen,” He said modestly, being 18 years old and all, “ I don’t know if I’m (one) yet.”  <>  <>

Tiffany Wu, from Seattle, Washington was next. I asked her: Where did you spend your time this fall? Can you share something about that? I was in North India too. We’d IMG_6298 2raft the Ganges for up to 6 hours a day and camp out on beaches. [a note here: the part of the Ganges where they traveled is way upstream, clean and cold water, not like Varanasi.] The mountains on both sides of the river reminded me we are part of something bigger. The Himalayas. At night it was cold so we would sit around the fire telling stories and singing songs. Here’s one: She sang … the river is my sister—- the river is my brother, we sing together, we sing with one another. [Time out.] Tiffany and I are sitting in the sun by the river outside the main buildings at LEAPNOW now in Sonoma County. Her pretty voice, and the sweet moment made it impossible for me to write down any more of the song. It was just one of those moments.

Next week Tiffany is going to Mana Retreat Center, on the Coromandel Peninsula, North of Auckland New Zealand. It a peaceful and heavenly place.  We taught at Mana about a decade ago. She said, “I wanted to help out there, but Sol Peterson, Director of Mana suggested I concentrate on learning about Structural Integration, Somatic, Body-related, Movement therapy, so that’s what I’ll be studying.”

Others had individualized global plans as well. For example, one of the Rumis will offer care at a place dedicated to primates in South Africa; one plans volunteering in a woman’s clinic in Guatemala; another, teaching English and studying Martial Arts in Beijing; then there’s working at a horse ranch in Patagonia; learning midwifery skills in Bali, and walking The Camino de Sandiago (30-40 day pilgrimage) across the top of Spain, to name a few.

 November in Peru.  The group spent two days building composting toilets for a small Andean community of Huayllacocha.   Before building, they first we had to ask permission and make an offering to Pachamama (Mother Earth) in a traditional ceremony led by their new friends from the Highlands.

November in Peru. The group spent two days building composting toilets for a small Andean community of Huayllacocha. Before building, they first we had to ask permission and make an offering to Pachamama (Mother Earth) in a traditional ceremony led by their new friends from the Highlands.

LEAPYEAR meets in the fall then goes in groups of ten or so to say, South America and India. They return home to their families for 2 months, return to Sonoma and go further into the work, then they complete a rite of passage (this weekend) and are ready to go solo out into the world to a couple months of service and education. They meet back here in May. We will join them once again and hear about their experiences.

Sam writes me:“As a gap year counselor, every day I could see the glaring shortcomings of our traditional system of education, and I didn’t really have a good program that I could refer students to, that would give them everything they needed to successfully navigate the huge transitions involved in the passages from high school to college, family to independence, and adolescence into adulthood.”

In creating LEAPYEAR, Cassie [his wife] and I wanted to create a transformation experience to usher young adults gracefully into adulthood.   The intent was multi-faceted:·        To be an antidote to a system of education that flattens out student’s dimensionality, that robs them of their innate love of learning, that teaches them that education is something that is “done to them” rather than the coolest thing we can do, and that focuses on content rather than giving a context for a live well lived.

·        To give students a chance to reclaim their wholeness, before doing the rest of their education.

·        To give college credit for real learning in the real world.    We are currently accredited through Antioch University Seattle.

·        To incorporate “mystery school” elements, so that students could contact their multi-dimensionality and a connection with mystery.

·        To reconnect students to how amazing it is to be a human being.

·        To build in formal rites of passage involving the parents, so that students would be mentored into a conscious adulthood, rather than initiated through unconscious college rites.

LEAPNOW into LEAPYEAR!

LEAPNOW into LEAPYEAR!

We have graduated over 350 LEAPYEAR students, as well as three groups of LEAPYEAR 2 students.  Cassie and I are committed to using the organization itself as a learning laboratory for the transition into adulthood.   To this end, we created the LEAPYEAR2 program, where students return to our campus, run our kitchen and work on the land and in the office, and in the process learn to hold the container for future generations of LEAPYEAR students.  Tuition is offset by work-study, and LEAPYEAR2 students can earn another year of credit through Antioch.

Our website is www.leapnow.org, for a link from the blog.

<>   <>   <>

Legos, Legos, the update!

02 Wednesday Jan 2013

Posted by Tea-mahm in Legos, Uncategorized, Updates

≈ 2 Comments

billiards

Here is my fourth annual Lego blog!  I’ve assembled some rockin, eye-poppin stats and pix for the Lego fans and would-be Lego fans. I have to start with my zaniest discovery ~10 Google pages of  LEGO HATS – 40 on page 1!  Each one is finger-size and brightly colored. I love that. <http://bricks.argz.com/partcat/Minifig%2C%20Headgear&gt;

Lego science?  Lego as investment? Lego weaponry? Lego Hellfire?  (if you are into the absurd, the colorful, and stunning numbers, you will enjoy this Lego article!) Here we go…….

Literary Lego people, for you –aside from the Merwin piece, to the book, contained in a pop-up book called The Lego Poem; and The Great Order of the Universe: a poem by Christian Bok, I’ve been unable to find good Lego poetry. (They are in an earlier blog: The LEGO and the written word, and on the WEB.) I challenge you to find others!

On a practical note, how DO you make a Lego piece? I mean really. Plastic and?

All of the basic Lego elements start out as plastic granules composed primarily of acrylonitrile butadiene styrene (ABS). A highly automated injection molding

Lego granules

Lego granules

process turns these granules into recognizable bricks. The making of a Lego brick requires very high temperatures and enormous pieces of equipment, so machines, rather than people, handle most of their creation.

When the ABS granules arrive at Lego manufacturing facilities, they’re vacuumed into several storage silos. The average Lego plant has about 14 silos, and each can hold 33 tons of ABS granules. When production begins, the granules travel through tubes to the injection molding machines. The machines use very accurate molds — their precision tolerance is as little as 0.002 millimeters.
The machines melt the granules at temperatures of up to 450 degrees F (232 degrees C), inject the melted ABS into molds and apply between 25 and 150 tons of pressure. After about seven seconds, the new Lego pieces cool and fall onto a conveyor. At the end of the

assembly hall

assembly hall

conveyor, they fall into a bin. When the bin fills, the molding machine signals a robot to pick it up and carry it to an assembly hall. In the Billund factory, eight robots move 600 bins of elements per hour…. 1

 There are about 6.5 billion people on planet Earth, and about 4 billion Lego minifigures.

Are you kidding? That’s not just pieces or “bricks,” that’s 4 billion “guys,” as my kids used to call them.

Here’s a landscape of minifigures in Hell.

Lego Hell

Lego Hell

It is frightening to see the expressions on their little lego faces. Can you imagine opening this set on Christmas day, stacking up the flames… “Look, Mommy! I finished building my IN HELL Lego set!”

Lego GUNS

Lego GUNS

What are toys coming to? OK this page is really troubling to me. How to build Lego GUNS? What do we do with this kind of craziness? It is hard for me to even think about this.

Calm down, it’s just TOYS……. or is it?

Investment opportunity: $$$$   Investing in Lego bricks may sound ludicrous to those who see them just as toys. But savvy investors can get a big score if they know how to IMG_2917buy the toys from stores, hold them and then sell them online later…. I was told One investor has more than 3,000 Lego sets piled high in a climate-controlled storage facility. Most of the sets he bought years ago, with the plan of selling them a year from now for a profit. Doing this again and again generates a tidy 10 percent to 15 percent annual profit, he said. That tops the 10 percent long-term average return of stocks.

Then there are the adults who get to play with Legos for work:

“I meet a lot of really jealous kids who want my job,” says Certified Professional Sean Kenney, a New Yorker who left a technology job at Lehman Brothers in 2002 to build Lego models full time. “Their parents are often really jealous, too.”
 … Grown-ups forked over more than $1,000 for a recent 5,922-piece Lego Taj Mahal
Lego-Taj-Mahal

Lego-Taj-Mahal

and equally big bucks for rare vintage kits. Lego is catering to the booming market with offerings that make youngsters yawn, like bricks in subtle pastel hues and models of Frank Lloyd Wright houses.2

And this Lego Fan who  has crossed some kind of line beyond hobby time…

Jonathan [Eric] Hunter’s passion for Lego building has led him to create cars, a replica of the Quest Software Building in Irvine and golf carts. He vies to become the new kid on the Legoland block Friday in a contest to pick a master model builder. …Hunter estimated he has about 10 Lego models of his creation on hand at any given time. He also has about 15 models from kits, not of his creation. He started buying bulk Legos by the bin. He bought five bins last week of 180-190 pounds of Legos. “I’m just trying to stock up on parts,” Hunter said. “It has to be over a million at least and that’s probably a conservative guess,” he said of his entire collection.
'61 Jaguar XKE by  Jonathan Eric Hunter

’61 Jaguar XKE by Jonathan Eric Hunter

Hunter shares the home with his live-in girlfriend Patricia Spear, 29. Spear owns two pet pigs and two dogs. And if Hunter doesn’t clean up his Legos in the living room, she said the pigs munch on the Legos. “He undoes some of them,” Spear said of Hunter’s Legos. “Mostly it’s all in his room but gradually it’s been taking over the living room.”3
 

 But wait — there is the futuristic teccie-nerd lego product called MINDSTORMS NXT:

The newly-released Lego MINDSTORMS NXT set includes the Mindstorms nxt“intelligent brick,” which contains a microprocessor, as well as three motors, four sensors, programming software and 571 TECHNIC elements. A group of users — the MINDSTORMS User Panel — helped the Lego Group create the new system. On the MINDSTORM NXT: You connect your computer to the brick using either a USB cable or a Bluetooth wireless connection. The wireless connection is very cool. The brick can link with a computer, with other bricks or even with Bluetooth phones or PDAs.
The kit comes with three motors. …The kit also comes with four sensors: a touch sensor, a light sensor, a sound sensor and an ultrasonic range finder. The touch and light sensor are bigger than, but otherwise similar to, their RIS 2.0 equivalents.4  
Lab crane, scientific instrument Lego

Lab crane, scientific instrument Lego

Using a Lego Mindstorms NXT kit, Daniel Strange, 25, built and programmed a crane that moves in a set path, raising and lowering the sample between beakers containing solutions. The lab now has two of them working round the clock. “They’re a bit wobbly but they do the job precisely,” Strange says. The kit retails for around £300; a similar scientific instrument would cost thousands. “We use the kits for a bunch of projects. It’s a very flexible platform.”5

I will end with A tribute to Chanel’s clutch – Lego Fashion, Lego fine jewelry, Legos of famous people, Lego animals, butterflies, lego food, my granddaughter Oona,   and her Duplo house (junior legos), Nephew Jaden, and some lego guys talking story.

OOOO! Chanel Lego clutch

OOOO! Chanel Lego clutch

Jacqueline Sanchez ~ Forever Young jewelry

Jacqueline Sanchez ~ Forever Young jewelry

1″Making Lego Bricks” by Tracy V. Wilson http://entertainment.howstuffworks.com

2 Wall Street Journal 11/17/11 Daniel Michael.s

3  Article: “Anything But Child’s Play” by Jessica Peralta for California Sun Post News.

4  Mactech Journal vol.23, Issue 04 article by Rich Warren.

5  Photo and quotes from Wired Magazine July, 2012 article by Daniel Cossins.

bronx zoo tiger

bronx zoo tiger

The famous Afgan Girl from the cover of National Geo...

The famous Afgan Girl from the cover of National Geo…

after MC Escher

after MC Escher

Oona and her Duplo house (junior Legos)

Oona and her Duplo house (junior Legos)

Jaden and his Lego piece

Jaden and his Lego piece

That's all!

That’s all!

2012 ~ a wrap-up: Mexico

30 Sunday Dec 2012

Posted by Tea-mahm in Uncategorized

≈ 6 Comments

The countries from visitors to my blog. Darker, more frequent visits...

The countries from visitors to my blog. Darker, more frequent visits…

This blog had 23,000 views in 2012.  Where did they come from? See the map above… 131 countries in all!

WordPress just sent me the stats for 2012.  I am amazed especially since my LEGO posts got the most hits of all! In honor of that I will be posting a lego update soon. Next two postings were on Solomon, my beloved son, who died January 31 in Thailand. Then comes my writing. I’m glad that is getting attention, as I’m working on a new book. So here’s to my viewers! THANK YOU! I include some new pix and a new poem  in honor of this amazing sad, beautiful and powerful year.

My granddaughters, Oona and little Maeve

My granddaughters, Oona and little Maeve

These are the posts that got the most views in 2012.

1 The Lego Update… November 2011  (Imagine! Legos RULE!)

2 My son Solomon: 7/11/77 – 1/31/12… February 2012

3 Solomon’s Memorial… April 2012

4 Fatima poems… July 2010

5 Organic Roses of Ecuador… September 2011

SOLOMON honored, December, 2012. Shabda and I went to Sayulita, Mexico for Christmas with Nicole, her parents, Varvara and Jason, and two of Solomon’s close friends, Ryan and Ean. One day we boated to an island off the coast and released some of Solomon’s ashes in a beautiful spot in the lea of the this small bird island. Here are the pictures.

Solomon, we miss you and love you. Shine on!

Solomon, we miss you and love you. Shine on!

Nicole with the ashes

Nicole with the ashes

my release

my release

Shabda sending the ashes into the ocean

Shabda sending the ashes into the ocean

We had some beautiful, joyful moments together. Here is one:

N+E+R

Christmas Eve in the square in Sayulita. Ryan, Nicole and Ean ~ a moment of JOY!

<>            <>             <>

Here is a recent poem from my new work on the life of Fatima, daughter of Prophet Muhammad.

 
 
 
 
 
 

May the New Year Bring LOVE, JOY, and PEACE to the people of the world! 

<>     <>

me and beautiful Nicole

me and beautiful Nicole

Losing a Child, losing twenty….

16 Sunday Dec 2012

Posted by Tea-mahm in Uncategorized

≈ 7 Comments

Tags

Losing a child

Losing a child, losing twenty

Today I honor the beautiful children and teachers who died on December 14th in a first grade class in America. To lose a child is a terrible thing. Our hearts are with the families, as many hearts were with ours when we lost our son, Solomon, in sudden car accident, less than a year ago. The way back from sudden tragedy of this proportion is full of sorrow. The loss of a child, a sister, a parent, a friend – opens the heart. What we make of that is up to us.

Lets focus on sending love and support to the families.

RIP Rainbow

Gun control, yes, but what about mental health? Here are words from Morgan Freeman, who asks us to not focus on the shooter but instead:

“You can help by forgetting you ever read this man’s name, and remembering the name of at least one victim. You can help by donating to mental health research instead of  just pointing to gun control as the problem. You can help by turning off the news.”

Imagine the media frenzy around the families by today’s voracious, people-hounding press. I send them prayers of protection, and a shield against unwanted, invasive attention. That’s what they need, protection.

And this very powerful article in the Huffington Post from a mother with a violent, mentally ill thirteen year old son she is “terrified of.” This is something we can work to fix, in memory of all these children and teachers who died.

< http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/12/16/i-am-adam-lanzas-mother-mental-illness-conversation_n_2311009.html>

~~ First Graders: Charlotte, Daniel, Olivia, Josephine, Ana, Dylan, Madeline, Catherine, Chase, Jesse, James, Grace, Emilie, Jack, Noah, Caroline, Jessica, Avielle, Benjamin, Allison ~ ~

~~ Adults: Rachel, Dawn, Anne Marie, Lauren, Mary, Victoria.

Victoria Soto,First Grade teacher

      Victoria Soto, First Grade teacher

Victoria died a hero. She hid her first graders in the cabinets and closets after hearing the gunfire. When the shooter came to her classroom, she told him that her students were in the gym. He shot her. She saved the lives of all of her students. Please pass this on if you see it. She deserves to be remembered for her bravery.

May you go peacefully into heavenly fields!  May you be with  angels of light!

Noah Pozner age 6

Noah Pozner age 6

Emily Alice Parker age 6

Emily Alice Parker age 6

Sandy, the terrible storm: Some poetry

30 Tuesday Oct 2012

Posted by Tea-mahm in Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

photo hurricane

photo: Hurricane by Michelle McLoughlin Milford Conn.

…round the clock warnings followed by wet drumming in the flower beds…..  <>Patricia Smith “Ghazal” from Blood Dazzler 

The end of the street here, open like the archetypal breach in a castle wall…  a war of water. Sandy. Then there’s the morning photo of the subway in New York City that made my heart drop [see below]… down there in the shosh and dark water, collapsed dream of cars-on-tracks gliding beneath the city.   It helps to put words to this impossible, terrible wreckage. Here are some poetry lines that speak to catastrophe. Patricia Smith’s National Book Award winner: Blood Dazzler,  about Katrina, has some phrases that resonate with Hurricane Sandy. Here the hurricane speaks:

Weather is nothing until it reaches skin,
Freezes dust, spits its little swords.
Kept to oceans, feeding only on salted water,
I was a rudderless woman in full tantrum,
Throwing my body against worlds I wanted…..   <>Patricia Smith, “Katrina”
 

100 years and more have passed since Bryant wrote these words:

 Lord of the winds! I feel thee nigh,
I know thy breath in the burning sky!…
…in your place
The shadowy tempest that sweeps through space,
A whirling ocean that fills the wall
Of the crystal heaven, and buries all.
And I, cut off from the world, remain
Alone with the terrible hurricane.    <>William Cullen Bryant, “The Hurricane”  
    

Oh Hurricane ravaged East Coast!  You are in my prayers and the prayers of the world. Sending all the people strength!

 

The Blue Mosque

28 Friday Sep 2012

Posted by Tea-mahm in Uncategorized

≈ 3 Comments

Image 

…but this blue I’m compelled to glorify

… this blue must be gold’s daughter… whether in grief or relief,

no one could know…

                        from: Another Poem on Blue by Claire Bateman

Istanbul: I was staying in one of the heavy stone buildings, thick walled as a castle, with high, high ceilings. These rooms hold the cool in summer and keep the radiators steaming in the cold months. I walked the hill on cobblestone and brick until my feet ached. The stones in Beyoglu remind me: this was a powerful empire that lasted many centuries, undefeated. 

On one sleepless night I stared at a thick baroque wall across the ally from my bedroom and promised myself when I was on the other side of Istanbul by the Blue Mosque, I would soak up the womb-like space, would let it nurture me. 

The last three days, we stayed there, at a small hotel in Sultanahmet with a great view of the Blue Mosque. I would wake in the night and see it filling the glass doors of our room – that opened onto a small porch – calling me home like a mother.

Image 

I learned to visit at the right time – between the early morning prayers and the arrival of hoards of tourists. It is quiet and nearly empty then. I would sit by a column and feel as if I were just a tiny child inside that strong, vast, curved space that rises many stories above me, rounding the lift of, say, a cathedral. Instead of an architectural arrow to heaven, here are the breasts and womb from earth. Each patterned dome is complete, yet they link and rise, with one great perfect canopy at the apex. The mother of all buildings.

In grief or relief,  I weep, thankful that I experienced years of meditative concentration which allows me to be present in this sublime environment, to let where I am be in my field, beneath, around and above me. I am here. I sense this enormous room, and let it nurture me, let it hold me. I take in its gifts, I breathe out gratitude.

Beyoglu, Istanbul: On the Road!

17 Monday Sep 2012

Posted by Tea-mahm in Uncategorized

≈ 5 Comments

Beyoglu, Itanbul  (pronounced  Bayolu with a silent G). It’s 3:30 AM and I’m standing at a very tall window against the cool metal radiator – just like the one I had in my room as a child – looking out at the  warm, late night across the Bosphorus water to Asia, South Turkey. Below the window is the old Mevlevi Tekke or Lodge, which survived as a museum during the repressive reign of Ataturk  in the first part of the 19th century. It is filled with a small urban forest that moves in the wind, and between the trees I can see tall, pale gravestones, each crowned with a sikke (tomb shaped hat). A lone grey cat prowls the grounds.

We arrived this evening at this old apartment at the top of Tunnel Square. Our landlord owns the restaurant across the street, where we feasted on yogurt and a house kebab at dinner. Our building has 77 marble steps – to the 3rd floor – the building is like a fortress with 20 foot ceilings. At night,  the broad cobblestone avenue – Istaklal – off Tunnel Square, is crowded with strollers. Beautiful white and blue arabesques are suspended like holiday banners above the street up toward Taksim Square. I saw a woman who looked over 80 years old playing a saz, sitting on the side of the street.  Drummers and other string instruments were on every block. Lots of ice cream stores and bookstores.

Tomorrow we will cross the Galata Bridge across Golden Horn, the channel that runs North East in the European side of this city, separating the Blue Mosque, Hagia Sophia and the Museum area from this busy hill top above Tunnel in Beygolyo. More to come!  I’m a bit intoxicated at the moment. Woke again to the Call to Prayer, which seems to clean the air all over the Middle East. My prayers for World Peace joined in with Allah Hu Akbar!

Gopher in the garden!

29 Tuesday May 2012

Posted by Tea-mahm in Uncategorized

≈ 4 Comments

It began under the gravel. A mound or two. Then we went away for the weekend and the gopher moved in – to the rich squash bed. It had a screen under the newly constructed, raised bed; so the gopher would have jumped in. Palden and I went out to pick some greens. A kale plant had been separated from its roots. Mounds everywhere. Uh-Oh.  I had gone to Ace hardware two days before, and purchased traps. I watched some videos on You-tube. One guy showed how easy it was to pull out a “plug” of soil and reveal the 2 tunnels. How convenient. One for each gopher trap. He twisted them in a flourish and placed the trap with its jaws set in each hole, added peanut butter to pull them over to the traps and filled in the earth. Looked so easy.  Next day he caught 45 gophers. Sarah at the weekend farm party had suggested juicy-fruit gum as the bait. She said wear gloves or they will smell you on the traps and ignore them. OK, Sarah, here we go.

Setting the traps was like a metal mind-bender. Even for a tec-minded person with dexterity. Have you seen those traps? You have to practice, and the metal can easily can snap on your hand. In our family, I would be the one to volunteer to empty a trap if someone else would please set it. I asked Shabda to hurry, because this enormous head was delivering dirt from the hole with no concern for my presence. Or his. Eee-ooo!

Something about women and rodents. Primal instincts. As much of a pacifist, pro-any-life person as I may be, rodents and mosquitos demand quick action. I rushed into the house and grabbed Shabda’s large, impossible-for-me-to-string, bow and a couple of arrows. I knew he was accurate. Lets just take the sucker out.  It was either the gopher or the squash plants. Who knows how many rodent family menders would move in.

I wish I could say he raised the bow and shot the gopher. Clean kill. But it wasn’t that way. The gopher disappeared so we set the traps like the video said. Put in the gum. Went to bed.

I was up early and went out to look, stood nearly eye to eye with the gopher who was right by the trap. Yikes! I ran to get Shabda, the bow and some arrows. The gopher had been caught by just a leg because he was enormous. The trap was meant for smaller creatures. He needed to be put out of his misery. After a couple of tries, Shabda shot a bull’s eye (an unfortunate metaphor) right through the head and killed him instantly.

MY HERO! I carried the creature to the garbage can. Felt like about 3 lbs, at least. We have the pictures. I’m hoping to talk to my nephew-in-law, Christian. He is a policeman, and may have some better ideas of how to deal with the situation next time. You can see where I’m going with this. I Better stop and send out loving kindness to all. Meditate. Wish peaceful ness to all. <>  <>

Meditation Retreat

10 Tuesday Jan 2012

Posted by Tea-mahm in Sufi, Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

 

This time of year I generally spend ten days on a hill in Sonoma County alternating between meditation and playing the djembe, a large drum.

There are fifty to eighty of us who gather  and create a held space which can allow the world to unwind out of the head and nervous system, so the heart have room to experience and express feeling – to clear.  The mind can open, and there it is! Nature and other brothers and sisters on the path of waking up and serving love, harmony, and beauty –  here we are in this place. New challenges and old rise like bread, to be noticed tasted, and released. Over and over. And the meals. Did I say the food was wonderful? Great cook!

This morning, after three days, I did some poetry writing and was amazed at the clarity and power of the words that appeared on my computer screen. I have been working on a piece for several weeks, but during this couple hours each line of words flew toward completion.

So now I go back to  five more days of sitting  on the cushion, twenty minutes at a time, and then rising to drum, feeling complex rhythms in my body as I play alongside  the master drummer.  <>  May the way continue to open! <>

The Lego Update…

19 Saturday Nov 2011

Posted by Tea-mahm in Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

It’s time for my third annual LEGO blog. There was a recent announcement of a forthcoming Lego Movie by Warner Brothers. [More on that below.]

This year I received a piece of beautiful Lego jewelry – a necklace from  Jacqueline Sanchez<http://www.jacquelinesanchez.com/> When I wear it, small Lego fans put their tiny guys on the little plastic rectangle. “Cool,” they say.

Shabda and Ammon around '76

Our family has a heritage of lego builders. Now there are two generations. I used to get down on the floor with my eldest for restful half-hour of architecture time. Now he builds with daughter Oona, who is nearly two and a half.  They play with a Winnie-the- Poo DUPLO set, the “junior” lego blocks, bigger and easier.

Oona and Duplo blocks

A snipet of a lego poem….

 
 
 
Lego, lego, all over the floor,
Blocking the bed and blocking the door.
Building towers with little people inside,
To get through your room just push it aside… FlaminFuse

Mark Twain by Morgan 19

 

 

 

LEGO GUYS: Now this is amazing: a breathtaking set of a couple hundred historical figures from the “Flicker Historical Figure Contest contest in 2007 from 2004-2007.

<http://www.flickr.com/photos/kaminoan/sets/72157602244759515/?page=3&gt;

Lego the story. How did this begin, anyway? According to the Guardian, UK, “Charlotte Simonsen, the company’s spokeswoman, says more than 400 million people will play with Lego this year. After 50-odd years of production, there are apparently 62 Lego bricks for every man, woman and child on the planet.”

Lego Taj Mahal!

Ole Kirk Christenson (1891­–1958) INVENTED LEGOS. He came up with the name LEGO from the Danish leg godt (“play well”) and the company grew to become the the Lego Group. (“lego” coincidentally means “I put together” in Latin. Christenson was the 10th son of an impoverished farmer family in western Denmark. He started making wooden toys and  in 1947 moved onto using plastics. The Lego System of Play was born in the small town of Billund  in 1955, but it wasn’t until the famous studs-and-tubes platform was launched in 1958 that the toy really took off. His descendants still own the company today. A toy that grasps simply, brilliantly even, what millions of children (and their parents) want, that today sells seven sets a second and has twice been named Toy of the Century.

Lego: the Movie:  November 14, 2011 ~  Warner Bros has given the green light to a CGI/live action film based on the much-loved children’s building blocks, after toying with the project since 2008. The Danish toy company has historically been fiercely protective of its property in the face of regular Hollywood overtures, but warmed to the idea of a family-oriented flick embracing its key values of fun, creativity and boundless imagination. Warner Bros has asked Australian firm Animal Logic, which worked on the Oscar-winning Happy Feet and its forthcoming sequel, to take charge of the animation for the movie.

 (History info. And film announcement from the Guardian UK Monday November 14, 2011 and March, 2009 <>  <>
← Older posts
Newer posts →

Solomon Posts

Untold Book

Enter your email address to follow this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 157 other subscribers

Tamam’s Links

- Poetry Group - Oracular Pear

- Youth Speaks: Poetry Slam

Links

  • Book: Physicians of the Heart the 99 Names of God – amazing book
  • Fred Chappell: short review
  • Gulf Coast Poems Poets for Living Waters
  • How a Poem Happens
  • Jamaica Osorio's website
  • Mari L'Esperance, poetry
  • Mark Doty, amazing poet read and listen to this poet
  • New Formalism Where is formal poetry today?
  • Oona and Maeve Granddaughters Oona Beatrix and Maeve Clementine
  • PoemShape Formalist Poetry
  • Poetry Out Loud! supporting the next generation!
  • Seven Pillars Book Review by Tamam Mother of The Believers by Kamran Pasha
  • Seven Pillars, POETRY poetry on Pir Zia’s blog/7 Pillars
  • Sufi Ruhaniat International Ruhaniat web site!
  • The Accidental Theologist Lesley Hazelton – a favorite writer and author…
  • The Sound Journal Tamam edits this Journal: NEW!
  • very like a whale good poetry reviews
  • West Marin radio show Sufism: The Heart of Islam, with Wendy McLaughlin

Archives

Blog at WordPress.com.

  • Subscribe Subscribed
    • CompleteWord
    • Join 157 other subscribers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • CompleteWord
    • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
 

Loading Comments...