Archive for the ‘Planet Change Heroism’ Category

New Guest Blogger Ethan Steinberg!

Thursday, January 21st, 2010

The Nepal Blog, submitted by our new blog contributor Ethan Steinberg, an 18 year old student at Miami University (Ohio),  is an enlightening array of  lessons and discoveries from a trip he took to Nepal this summer.

But…before you indulge into his wisdom…a few words from Ethan about who he is and why being a part of PlanetChange2012 is important to him:

As an activist and global citizen I believe that Planet Change has hit on something very important: positive change and active dialogue, and I am also eager to make positive change a functioning reality.  As a blogger, I find that we can better understand each other through discourse, the essence on which this blog is based.  Through discussion the world becomes a better place as we choose to search for peace through understanding.  I work to get all the details and as many perspectives as possible when approaching a situation, which I feel is reflected in my writing.  The Nepal blog entries were written to act as an update for my family and friends as I traveled.  The implications of my trip and its lessons have become a helping hand for many and I hope they continue to inspire.  Moreover, I want my writing to inspire as well.

To read the full nepal blog entry pleae click here:  Nepal blog entry

Indigenous Grandmothers Counsel the World

Thursday, December 24th, 2009

Grandmother Agnes Pilgrim Baker

Chairperson of the International Council of 13 Indigenous Grandmothers and the oldest living member of the Takilma Siletz nation of Southern Oregon

Play Audio.
TRT: 28:01
Date: 2009-04-06

Grandmother Agnes Pilgrim Baker, the oldest living member of the Takilma Siletz nation of Southern Oregon, is the Chairperson of the International Council of 13 Indigenous Grandmothers. The Grandmothers who are from Brazil, Nepal, Africa, Mexico, Tibet, Japan, the U.S. etc. travel all over the world sharing the knowledge, wisdom and hope gained through a lifetime of experience. Grandmother Aggie speaks on behalf of all Grandparents, and all those who would learn from indigenous, inherited knowledge in these times and will light our way through the uncertain future. She describes the Council, their mission, and some of their many adventures. She speaks passionately to the Elders of every society and to us all; calling us to greater action, appreciation, and gratitude for the world in which we live.

From meeting with the Dalai Lama to agitating in the Vatican City, the Grandmothers stand as a reminder of the knowledge and prayers that we desperately need in our time for the healing of Mother Earth and her inhabitants. Grandmother Aggie asks us to know the history of our lands, and to build a more positive and beautiful history for the generations that are to come. For they, and not us, own the world. The grandmothers will be visiting Grandma Aggie this August, 2009, in Oregon where they will be holding public events.

Grandma Aggie’s book: Grandmothers Counsel the World: Women Elders Offer Their Vision for Our Planet (Paperback)

Interviewed in February 2009

For more info:   http://www.grandmotherscouncil.com

the technology of community…

Wednesday, November 25th, 2009

Happy Thanksgiving! May your own “network of grace” be filled with abundance and synergy today.

From our friends over at Reality Sandwich: Networks of Grace: A Guide to Sacred Activism* by Andrew Harvey

This article is excerpted from the author’s new book The Hope: A Guide To Sacred Activism, recently released by Hay House.

In a recent article in the “New York Review of Books” Bill McKibben wrote: “The technology we need most badly is the technology of community — the knowledge about how to cooperate to get things done. Our sense of community is in disrepair.”

It is essential, therefore, that sacred activists, while pursuing their individual spiritual paths and embracing their own specific kinds of service, learn to work together and to form empowering and encouraging “networks of grace” — beings of like heart brought together by passion, skill and serendipity to pool energies, triumphs, griefs, hopes and resources of all kinds. When people of like mind and heart gather together, sometimes miraculously powerful synergy can result.

For the complete piece please click here.