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10.18.2013
滿心滿星滿月滿林夢舞
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10.06.2013
Exhale
9.23.2013
autumn leaf portraits
9.22.2013
wrist 手腕
9.20.2013
What next?
祝你中秋節快樂!
家人們好!
祝大家中秋節快樂!
上禮拜, 我們去Ohio州採草藥。 我們露營了一個禮拜在當地農夫Paul Strauss的湖邊。Paul 的農場叫Equinox Botanicals. 他特產珍惜和瀕危物種。 Paul也做 傳統Appalachian山(美國東部的老山脈) 的草藥, 和他自己創作的藥膏和藥酒。 Paul 的農場周圍都是森林。 他把邊緣的森林都買下來了, 來保護森林。 這兒就變成一個蠻有名的植物和森林保護地區, 叫做United Plants Savers Sanctuary. Paul 二十幾歲時, 就搬過來了。 他剛好碰到當地又有耐心又聰明的長輩來培訓他, 教他當地農業特殊技術。 他就留在這兒一輩子, 耕田, 培養特別的草藥, 做藥, 教課, 等。 他讓我感到也想要買一塊自己的地, 把它變成美麗的小天堂!
中秋夜晚,
滿月照亮著田的。
夏天的草高高綠綠的。
紅紅橘橘的秋葉
已經開始燃燒黑暗的綠森林。
現在是蘋果季節,
收穫季節。
秋天到了。
冬天要來了。
松鼠在森林中滿地跑,
收藏寶貴的果食。
我們也在急急忙忙的收藏
食物, 藥草,
還有最珍貴的知識和智慧。
冬天一來, 今年的藥草課程就要結束了。
然後呢?
我還在決定。
我在考錄學按摩(六個月)或是去研究所學心理學(三年)。
或是。。。?
什麼都可能。
一隻貓頭鷹
不管白天晚上
他都會在森林裡唱歌。
別的貓頭鷹,
聽了他的歌聲,
也開始唱歌。
我的小木屋很冷。
我的牆壁不算是真的牆壁。
都是洞。
今晚, 坐在木屋旁邊吃湯麵,
陪老師聊天。
我看著太陽下山,
欣賞對面綠油油的山坡
被日弱的太陽
照著閃閃發亮。
我真幸運能住在這麼美麗的森林當中,
看她從四月的冰天雪地
轉變成春天的嫩芽, 鮮花
再轉變到夏天到處都是植物
現在最後的轉變,要 回到冬天的平靜, 一片空白。
我愛上這個地方了。
我感覺像我每到一個地方, 我就愛上那個地方和那裡的人。
在這兒, 我最愛的地點是我老師的家, 因為大部分的時間都在他那兒。 又平靜又美麗, 又有各式各樣的植物。 現在我寫信時, 我正在坐在老師的櫻花樹底下。 旁邊都是蘋果樹。 現在是蘋果季節。 沒幾分鐘, 聽到“噗通!”一聲, 又掉了一顆甜蜜的蘋果。 現在也聽到風聲, 鳥叫, 和小蟲聲。 現在, 太陽和月亮改變了它們天空中的地點了。昨晚, 我睡著以前, 月亮剛好照亮我的床頭。早上, 現在太陽也剛好照亮我的床頭, 把我的小木屋充滿它們的亮光, 不管白天晚上。 好美哦! 我特別喜歡清晨早上從樹林中看到對面的山, 欣賞太陽從山後慢慢的爬起來。
祝你好好享受秋天的收穫, 準備好冰冷的冬天!
敬, 基玲
(照片: (1) passiflora incarnate 花(幫想太多的人放鬆)(2)我和老師同學在Ohio州, Equinox Botanicals 農場 (3) 壓出來的藥酒, 和前面的藥草(hypericum perforatum) (幫助常常難過的人放鬆和開心,也幫助治療意外之後的恐懼)
9.09.2013
New Moon: yuan fen, rivers, moon, bodies, dances, recipes
"Yuan fen" (緣分) is one of my favorite words in Chinese. It translates (somewhat) as serendipity, synchronicity, or affinity. It's that magical invisible red thread of connection that binds me to you before we were even conceived, that line that ties my umbilical cord of past, present, and future destiny to the places, people, plants, and all else that composes my life.
"Heaven determined my Fate, but I choose my Destiny," said one of my first teachers. "It's all a choice," laughs Jeremy. We'd decided not to brave the cold river with our bare toes, walking upstream on the slippery rocks toward the place where the river turns, where we can't see anymore. Those unexplored places can wait.
On the edge of the waterfall, Dave and I decided to walk across that river, rushing and tumbling down towards the bottom of Ithaca Falls. Walking against the current, he quickly slips and slides his way across to the opposite bank, skiing across the slippery stone with arms akimbo. I slowly move across, thinking of the slow Tai Chi practitioners weaving their arms and legs with intention and chi through the invisible air currents, with grace and precision, bodies relaxed yet strong. We move across the river in completely different ways, one slow yet steady and calculated, the other quick yet a little messy. Both successful. Metaphors?
My new intention is to write an English blog post with each new moon, and a Chinese blog/ letter with each full moon. Dear reader, I hope you enjoy. And please, always, give me feedback. Thank you.
"What's the difference between the full moon and new moon?" asked my sister. This is for you, Ah Mei. During the new moon, we don't see any moon at all. It's completely a new beginning. These are the darkest nights, when the stars are brightest, a fitting time to plant bright intentions for the coming moon. From here, the moon waxes or grows day by day, and our seeded intentions sprout and grow, until the moon is absolutely full again. The full moon, pregnant with gifts, and bright with light, is a great time to give thanks for all that we are grateful for, and go on moonlit hikes, have celebrations with friends, and more. From here, the moon wanes or shrinks night by night, back into the darkness of the new moon.
In the olden days, when we lived outdoors and our bodies were connected with the rhythms of the moon, women would often bleed in sync with the moon. We would bleed with the new moon, and feel the exultant heat of ovulation with the full moon.
I am feeling grateful for my sisters. We started a weekly dance project, where we come together to share songs, visions, and exploratory dances. We just began, and already, I feel my heart aching and breaking wide open, and filling with love and gratitude.
"Let's experiment," I said to Dave, practicing yoga outside of my cabin as the sun dispelled the mist over the fields, through the trees, "I've never tried this before, but have always wanted to." And thus was born Yoga Exchange, where one person leads an asana/ movement, and then the next person leads the next asana… and on and on like so. It births many new asana sequences that just might get traditional yogis rolling in their graves, but got me inspired with fresh ideas and full delight.
"Core, move from your core," said Larry. And I remember Teacher Wu at NTNU, showing us how to move from our two places of core power: our Heart, and our Dan Tian (solar plexus). "And move as if you have eyes in your palms, and on the bottoms of your feet," added Teacher Wu. He taught us how to fly, how to use our weight like a pendulum, dancing with gravity like a lover. I'm practicing leg lifts, boat pose (navasana), bridge pose (setu bandhasana), and posting regularly again, to cultivate core strength. Simple asanas like mountain pose (tadasana) and down dog (adho mukha svanasana) reveal my imbalances and tendencies: a slight pelvic tilt (minor lordosis), and leg muscles that angle in different directions. "Posting" is a basic practice that I learned from Mauro (who learned it from Rinpoche) at an underground Tibetan Buddhist sanctuary where we nourished our chi and cultivated our innate ability to be amazing human beings. Posting: feet are wide apart and slightly bent in horse stance (the wider the stance and the deeper the bended knees, the more difficult the pose), arms are rounded in front of you, hands slightly cupped and open in front of your heart. Relax into this pose… you'll be here for a while. Stay here from 15 to 30 minutes everyday. With deep breaths, enjoy the burning, shaking, sweating, and grounding sensations.
Ecstatic dance. Basically the music plays, and you surrender to it in ecstasy. Dance. And thus began a month of big red giant (fast burning star) dances with a stranger turned adventure companion.
Contact improv. I give you my weight. We share it. You give me yours. I take it and translate it into something else. We roll across each other, flipping and spiraling across the floor. You pull me up from the floor, translating my weight back down into the earth. I fly upward, in response, laughing in surprise at the momentum and sheer freedom of weight, released, returning back to the ground in a sideways tilted angle, surprised yet delighted to catch another person on the way down with my spine. I surrender my spine to their shoulder, contouring my curves against their body as we all coalesce together, jellyfish-like, interweaving across the studio space, expanding outward and contracting back in again like a giant communal breathing apparatus, or a swirling supernova, until an explosion occurs, and off we go dancing back into pairs and trios again, at times slow and earthy, other times airborne and explosive.
I'll leave you with some autumnal recipes that I've been experimenting with.
Fire cider (from Cali)
Chop finely and then infuse into raw apple cider vinegar: onion, garlic, horseradish, ginger, cayenne/ other fresh peppers. Optional: turmeric, burdock, osha, usnea, sage, etc. Let infuse for 2 months. Take as a heating tonic/ immune stimulant during the cold winter months.
Sauerkraut (from Abbe)
1. Chop/ grate cabbage finely into a large bowl.
2. Massage salt into the cabbage, adding 1 T salt at a time. Add 2 T of salt per head of cabbage. This will release the cabbage juices. Keep massaging it to break down the cell walls, until there seems to be enough liquid released to cover all the solids.
3. You can add anything… onions, garlic, turmeric, various wild roots, etc.
4. Stuff it all into a clean glass jar. Submerge it under its' own juices, with a stone or glass jar to push down the plant matter below the juices. (Some people add water if there's not enough liquid, but I was taught to massage it enough for its own juices to do the job- tastes better like this)
5. Cover with cloth, and let sit for a week.
6. Enjoy!
Honey infusions (from Lucy)
1. Fill glass jar with fresh plant material of your choice. Thus far this season, I have made honey infusions (each separate) with rose, bee balm, tulsi, and mint.
2. Fill over the plant material with honey.
3. Use chopstick to press out all the air bubbles.
4. Let sit for as long as you wish. You can start indulging on your honey infusion within 2 weeks.
5. Enjoy the deliciousness.
"Might as well make the medicine delicious," said Meredith. "I like my medicine strong," said Cali. "Let my lessons be gentle yet powerful," said Efan and I, as we prayed to each other and the Sky, Universe, and all that was listening, watching heart-shaped clouds rolling through the sky, with our bellies empty, preparing for Vision Quest.