Thursday, October 20, 2022

pray we live long lives/seeking our futures out

 Greetings, poetry people! Did you know it's the Dodge Poetry Festival this year? I'm not in New Jersey, but I did buy a pretty affordable streaming-only ticket. I'm looking forward to Friday morning's session called

Poets Forum: Eco-Poetry and Environmental Justice
Featuring Ellen Bass, Forrest Gander, Joy Harjo

especially because it's the 3rd Friday of the month, and although I haven't been explicit about it for a while, that means it's Climate Friday at mjlu. How nice of Ellen, Forrest and Joy to drop in! 😉

 
 
 

This month I'm teaching one of the four sections of a Climate Reset Workshop at my congregation. It's focused on helping folks who are already doing the basics to learn how to reduce their household carbon emissions even further through "cool lifestyle" changes. (What are the basics?  Things like eating more meatless/plant-based meals each week, keeping thermostat at 68* in winter and 78* in summer, and replacing more car trips each week with more earth-friendly transportation.)

We're using the data-based CoolClimate Calculator devised by UCBerkeley and you might like to try it out also--I got a ton of surprises, even from the very first 3-item questionnaire. (Guess what?  My zip code is just shy of being among the greatest emitters in the US.  Turns out the wealthier you are, the larger your carbon footprint--even if you can afford to pay the higher cost of consuming responsibly--in many cases just due to heating and cooling the square footage of your likely larger home.)

The workshop is practical, but it's spiritual too. I opened the first session with this quote and my comment on how it salves climate grief. (The widely shared quote is from "Natural Resources" in The Dream of a Common Language (1978) but I can't find the whole poem online.)

 

Art is an action too. When we make poems, make music, make images, we are making change, inside us and around us. So along with a plant-based recipe that we've been loving, I have this poem which is actually lyrics to a song which is a small masterpiece by Jelani Aryeh, a young musician from San Diego. Definitely play the video to hear how the words and the music create a space for revival.

 

Marigold

Playing your stereo loud
Flaunting your taste
Blazing the space around you
With love, light and marigold sounds
Pray we live long lives
Seeking our futures out

Solaris, young lion
Being of the sun
Come brighten

You're the talk of the town
Prince of the pride, Titan of mighty sound
My highness, will you come down?
Getting a hold of you is like clutching a cloud
But none do surround when you come around
This bearer of lights wearing beams for a crown
Bringing life to the biomes where beings are brown
Sending pockets of solace in equal amounts

You're freeing us from cold seasons
There wasn't even a hum round my place
I'm feeling a rush, a beating, a punch
The heat of the sun in my face

Good god
My head feels hella tall
With dilated awe
Watch all of you
With eight ball eyes
Your maple light

Playing your stereo loud
Flaunting your taste
Blazing the space around you
With love, light and marigold sounds
Pray we live long lives
Seeking our futures out

When the world is still hollow of sound
Permeate the sky, pilot your light
And lay it down where the landscape allows
Blanketing the forest, waking up the world around

You're freeing us from cold seasons
There wasn't even a hum round my place
I'm feeling a rush, a beating, a punch
The heat of the sun in my veins

Good god
What you be about?
What you be about?
What you be about?
What you be about?
Good god

Waking up the morning with this lucid feeling
Hold it in your heart before you lose it
Keep it moving in your solitude steadily breathing
Knowing who you are and what you're seeking
Meet me in the marigold garden shining
Sovereign in the head with your senses heightened
Yellow soul, you are so mellow-minded
Walking through and talking to these little lions

Playing your stereo loud
Flaunting your taste
Blazing the space around you
With love, light and marigold sounds
Pray we live long lives
Seeking our futures out

Playing your stereo loud
Flaunting your taste
Blazing the space around you 
 
 

 
"Getting a hold of you is like clutching a cloud"--what a line. Take a walk with that to blaze your space and move you to action!  Our host this week is Bridget at Wee Words for Wee Ones where the 10.10 Poetry Palooza is still going on. You know what else is action? (Thanks, Michelle K!)
 
VOTE • VOTE • VOTE • VOTE • VOTE • VOTE • VOTE • VOTE • VOTE • VOTE • VOTE
 
 And now for the recipe...
 

"Marigold" Moroccan Stew

  • 1 large onion, diced
  • 5 cloves garlic, gently smashed
  • 3 tablespoons olive oil
  • 1 teaspoon each paprika and cumin
  • ½ teaspoon each ground coriander, ground turmeric, and ground ginger
  • ¼ teaspoon each ground cinnamon and cayenne pepper
  • salt and ground black pepper
Saute all that in a large pot on medium low about 10 minutes while you work on the vegetables.
  • 2 large sweet potatoes, peeled and cubed
  • 1 medium acorn or butternut squash, peeled and cubed (pumpkin chunks would also work!)
Add in the sweet potato and squash and saute about 5 minutes more.  Deglaze the pot with the red wine, add the remaining ingredients except lemon juice, and bring to a simmer.  Cook until vegetables are tender, 15-20 minutes longer.
  • splash of red wine  
  • 2  15-ounce cans chickpeas, with liquid
  • 1  15-ounce can diced tomatoes
  • 3-4 cups vegetable broth
  • 2 tablespoons each chopped fresh cilantro & parsley plus more for garnish
  • juice of 1/2 large lemon 
Stir in the lemon juice off the heat before serving with chopped herbs on top, over couscous, of course. Good right away and even better the next day!
 

11 comments:

  1. Art is action - yes! I've never attended Dodge - great to know they have a streaming option. They always have a stellar line-up. Thank you for the stew, too. xo

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  2. I love your posts, Heidi, because you acknowledge our collective "climate grief" but give us a moment of respite and resources. And today, dinner and a song! Thank you! :)

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  3. Wonderfully rich post Heidi, such a powerful song, I love the marigolds in there, and they also help us in many ways. Enjoy the conference it sounds like one I’d like to attend-though I teach on Friday mornings… Thanks also for the links!

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  4. I'll meet you in the marigold garden ANY time! I so agree about climate grief, but on those occasions when I wake up in "the morning with this lucid feeling" and manage to "Hold it in your (my) heart before you (I) lose it" are times when I feel like it's not wrong to "Pray we live long lives." Great post! Thanks!! As soon as my gut calms down and I can eat more plants, I'll try that recipe for sure!!

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  5. Your posts inspire me to do more, Heidi! Thanks for the recipe! There is so much to think about and do, including voting.

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  6. Enjoyed the song and the calculator! I'm looking forward to hearing what the Dodge Festival session was like.

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  7. So much here to love! I wish I could be in your workshop!

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  8. "My heart is moved by all I cannot save" -- this resounds in me. I listened this week to the podcast How to Be a Better Human and I was encouraged that even if I am only one person, each small step I take to reduce my own carbon footprint is the right thing to do, simply because I know I am trying. Thank you, Heidi.

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  9. Oh, my. This post is so full and explains so much. Thank you, Heidi. I have been FEELING so much lately. Could it be that I'm feeling sad for what's happening to me all around me that I also "feel" I have no control over? You give me things to consider. I'm going to go listen to the music. Thank you for sharing your wisdom and your art as activism.

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  10. Thank you for all of this - the poetry, the climate action, the recipe - everything! I don't know what to do first, write, cook, calculate. But, I don't need to worry about voting because I ALREADY DID!

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  11. Thank you for introducing me to this young song writer/poet, Heidi. Such a joy to hear this generation commited to climate change. And that stew recipe sounds delicious!

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Thanks for joining in the wild rumpus!