Articles from: October 2007…and not a drop to drinkI hadn’t planned on doing another environmental post so soon after Blog Action Day, but a few environmental links hit my email inbox, and those led me to others and before I knew it, I was sitting in front of my computer hearing the tickety-tick of the keys. In Global warming, deforestation and bark beetles, I talked about how decreased precipitation and warmer temperatures over the past couple decades were wreaking havoc on the forests in the Rocky Mountains, allowing bark beetle to gain the upper hand and kill pine trees at an alarming rate. Fewer living trees means the earth’s natural ability to cleanse the air is compromised, and as the trees die, they shift from consuming CO2 to producing it as they decay. Reduced precipitation has another effect; there is less water available for personal, commercial, industrial and agricultural use, and it’s not just in the Rocky Mountain region. Many areas of this country – and the world – are facing this problem, some due to reduced precipitation and warmer temperatures, some due to population growth, and some a combination of the two.
Tears from HeavenMy good friend Frank DeMarco forwarded an email to me the other day with a story in it called Tears from Heaven and it’s one of those stories that touches the heart. As he says, I know nothing about the story other than what is there. Is it a true story or is it just something someone wrote to illustrate a point? I don’t know, but I choose to believe it true. I want to believe it true simply because it points to the fact that there are good people out there, and sadly their stories are seldom heard, particularly in mainstream media. It’s not sensational enough, not controversial enough, won’t boost ratings, but it gives me hope that there is a chance we just might make it out of the quagmire we see all around us.
The absurd notion of oneFellow blogger and friend, MuseEditions in his post titled Monday Morning Philosophy has a link to a six minute YouTube video called The Absurd Notion of One that is more than worth the time to watch and listen to. For any of you on dial up it will of course take more than six minutes, but still I believe it worth your time.
Siren SongWhile perusing the internet for things obscure I ended up at a poetry site reading Margaret Atwood’s poem, Siren Song, which I had not read in many years. I’ve included the poem, which you can find by clicking the “continue reading” tag below, but first a little review of mythology for those of you who may not be familiar with the Sirens.
One can claim that this is all just fantasy, flights of imagination, myth, but the sad fact is that history is full of examples of the Siren Song captivating and seducing mankind. There are almost endless verses to the Siren Song with many yet unsung, and with each successive generation new Sirens take up the lyre and begin to sing. Always the result is the same; people are seduced and jump into the sea. When we leap into the sea at hearing a Siren Song, we give our personal power away to the Siren, and once given it is not easy to get back. It is vitally important that we each think calmly and clearly before giving our personal power to anyone. It is our responsibility to ourselves and to the entirety of existence, and we should not take this responsibility lightly.
For those of you who might be wonderingI have bitten the bullet and gotten my own domain name and have transferred most of my blog at wordpress.com (thesacredpath.wordpress.com) over to my new domain. I have other things going on and having my own web host will allow me much more flexibility including being able to get my photographic website up and running, and having a incredible array of themes to choose from (wordpress.com is a little limited on the themes they offer). I’m still for the moment existing in two places with The Sacred Path, and there are a couple posts I have yet to transfer over here. When I officially make the change, I will put one last post on my wordpress.com blog letting everyone know of the change and give a link to this blog. I’ll delete everything off of that blog except for the “We’ve Moved” post and leave it up for about six months.
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