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Archive for Amy Lenzo

The Heart of Bristlecone Pines

09/02/17 Amy Lenzo

Over the last year and a half I have had the pleasure of corresponding with writer, photographer and nature-lover David Malinsky. David has a particular love for Great Basin Bristlecone Pines, which he calls “Old Friend in High Places”.

Here is a single sequence from one of his communications… a glimpse into the beauty David experiences in his exploration of these majestic tree-beings. If you are interested in joining the conversation and sharing your feedback and responses, contact David to join his listserve.

Daring to take a path towards what may be unknowable can be among the most noble pursuits of the human spirit. Known targets bring tangible opportunities for achievement, but also limitations; even a well-aimed arrow is forced to halt its arc, having reached a bullseye. Allow the arrow to be what it is, a tool for a particular purpose, but after your fingers release the bowstring do not let the confines of the arc define you. It was what you did, but only a small piece of who you are.

Without narrowing the focus on the bullseye, there can be so much to see, much that will be missed if our sights are too confined. You do not have to reduce all of this to a single place; there is room in your consciousness for all of it, if you allow it in.

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Categories : Amy Lenzo
Tags : bristlecone pines, David Malinsky, photography, poetic writing

Some Good News (for a Change!)

03/27/16 Amy Lenzo

Two media communications coming out of the first part of 2016 are making my heart sing!

The most recent was Leonardo DiCaprio’s Oscars “Best Actor” acceptance speech for his role in The Revenant. In it he spoke out forcefully about the critical threat of Climate Change, giving specifics about the collective response he sees needed to address it and a special shout out for First Nations peoples whose “voices have been drown out by the politics of greed”. It brought a smile to this man’s face as well:

Leonardo-Acceptance

The other was Al Gore’s latest TED Talk on the Case for Optimism on Climate Change, where he talks first about the continuing seriousness and ongoing effects of climate change, and then moves on to share some of the changes we ARE making and how those changes are impacting what is now possible, and what our future can hold. A hugely inspiring talk from this courageous and visionary Nobel Laureate:

Categories : Amy Lenzo
Tags : Al Gore, climate change, First Nations People, good news, Leonardo DiCaprio, Oscars, politics, TED Talk

Losing Contact With Nature

02/07/16 Amy Lenzo

One woman’s opinion, by Amy Lenzo

MonbiotArticle

On reading an article by George Monbiot in the UK Guardian called If Children Lose Contact With Nature They Won’t Fight For It … I agree wholeheartedly with Monbiot’s title, but my hackles rise at the (to me) lazy & inaccurate argument that follows, “blaming” the entire problem at the door of youth’s on-screen engagement.

The truth is that while large-scale social conditions have indeed changed our children’s freedoms and access to the natural world (there’s a lot more happening here than the rise of the internet, folks), I believe that those little screens also hold some part of the way back for many of us (and our children).

cactusI grew up as an introvert in the Arizona desert, where nature was a bit prickly to say the least, and my own passion for the natural world was born in books. Today’s “books” have multi-media to draw children in to the mystery and magic of the natural world, and are even more effective.

Of course we want to encourage children to get out on the land and have direct engagement with the natural world.

Of course a personal relationship with nature is a hugely powerful motivational source for conservation and environmental activism (we protect what we know and love), and a source of balance and wholeness for all of us.

We are all of the land, and belong to it, whether we know it or not. From my perspective, it’s far more effective to convey this message creatively in the many ways we now have to connect and communicate with each other – and imbue our own online engagement with nature-connection (e.g. don’t disconnect from our bodies when we’re online, remember we are talking with actual human beings with their feet on the ground within a specific environment, use sense-based language and photography to stay connected to the natural world, etc.) – than it is to bemoan reality.

 

Categories : Amy Lenzo
Tags : George Monbiot, Guardian, nature, relationship, technology

Sacred Space Online

07/27/14 Amy Lenzo

I have a long held passion for creating a different – more heart-full and earth-connected – way to be together online. That passion has recently led me to find partners and launch a wonderful endeavor we’ve called Earth +Digital Wisdom where we can explore our belief that the digital realm – like all of life – is sacred, and explore what that means in practice.

Here’s a video that Firehawk Hulin (one of my partners in Earth +Digital Wisdom) and I created to describe what we are up to and why:

As part of this Grand Adventure, we have designed a simple series of four free online Elemental Ceremonies that we are offering free, as our gift to Life.

The next two are scheduled for Saturday August 2nd (Air) and Saturday August 23rd (Earth); from 10am – noon Pacific Time so our friends across all US and European time zones can be there. You are formally invited and most welcome; I think you will really be touched and surprised to find an experience of true ceremonial space online.

Here’s an invitation with more details, or you can register now for: AIR (August 2) | EARTH (August 23).

air-earth

Categories : Amy Lenzo
Tags : ceremony, digital realm, earth-connected, heartful, online, online events, sacred, sacred space

Moved by Mountains

11/08/13 Amy Lenzo

I’m excited to have recently discovered Tom Reed, a wilderness photographer whose deeply thoughtful creative journey has led him to create two beautiful books on the spiritual epiphany of mountain views.

I’ve reviewed both books in Gatherings (The Granite Avatars of Patagonia and Moved by a Mountain: Inspiration from an Alpine View in Alaska), but I want to share his TedX talk (from Homer, Alaska) on “Natural Beauty and Aesthetic Arrest” here:

Categories : Amy Lenzo
Tags : aesthetics, art, natural beauty, photography, TedX, Tom Reed
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