Sunday, February 14, 2021

Wolfish


One of the books I’m currently reading is Katherine May’s Wintering: The Power of Rest and Retreat in Difficult Times.

The following excerpt is one that speaks deeply to me. Perhaps it will speak similarly to you.

________________________


In the depths of our winters, we are all wolfish. We want in the archaic sense of the word, as if we are lacking something and need to absorb it in order to be whole again. These wants are often astonishingly inaccurate: drugs and alcohol, which poison instead of reintegrate; relationships with people who do not make us feel safe or loved; objects that we do not need, cannot afford, which hang around our necks like albatrosses of debt long after the yearning for them has passed. Underneath this chaos and clutter lies a longing for more elemental things – love, beauty, comfort, a short spell of oblivion once in a while. Everyday life is so often isolated, dreary, and lonely. A little craving is understandable. A little craving might actually be the rallying cry of survival.

In Of Wolves and Men, Barry Lopez examines the mystery of why wolves seem to kill more than they can eat. “Wolves do not get hungry in the way we normally understand hunger,” he says. “Their feeding habits and digestive systems are adapted to a feast-or-famine existence, and to procuring and processing massive amounts of food in a relatively short time. They are more or less always hungry.” Not knowing when they will find their next meal, they must ensure that their cubs and dependents have all they need. Failure to do this could mean starvation at an unspecified future point.

Perhaps the wolf is such an enduring motif of hunger because we see in them a reflection of our own selves in lean times. In winter, those hungers become especially fierce. [Yet] we can learn to respect our wolves. Despite centuries of human effort, they endure.

Katherine May
Excerpted from Wintering: The Power
of Rest and Retreat in Difficult Times

Riverhead Books
pp. 158-159


See also the previous Wild Reed posts:
Michael Greyeyes on Temperance as a Philosophy for Surviving
Brigit Anna McNeill on “Winter’s Way”
Meeting Truth
Winter . . . Within and Beyond (2019)
Winter . . . Within and Beyond (2017)
Intimate Soliloquies
Shards of Summer
The Empty Beach

Image: Photographer unknown.


Skylight

Saturday, February 13, 2021

Quote of the Day


In recent weeks, the impeachment managers assembled voluminous evidence – not least, visual evidence from inside and outside the Capitol building on the day of the violent uprising. Watching images of the mob swarming through the marble halls of the Capitol and baying for vengeance, I was startled to realize how the true nature of the event, the degree of its violence and bloody-mindedness, the calls to capture, even assassinate, leading figures in the U.S. government, was not fully known to the American people in real time. It was sickening to watch men and women lugging Confederate symbols and shouting deranged slogans – “1776!” – pound on the doors of members of Congress, eager for violence. It’s no less sickening to imagine the cynicism required of Ted Cruz, Josh Hawley, Marco Rubio, Rand Paul, Ron Johnson, Lindsey Graham, and so many other Republican senators to dismiss the case as outside the bounds of the Constitution or as an instance of political opportunism.

. . . Mitch McConnell, the Senate Minority Leader, also proved to be in only temporary possession of a spine. After sending moralistic “signals” to reporters and colleagues that he was repelled by Trump’s behavior, he declared himself on Saturday morning ready to forgive and forget. “While a close call, I am persuaded that impeachments are a tool primarily of removal and we therefore lack jurisdiction,” he said in an e-mail to his Republican colleagues, saying that he would vote to acquit. McConnell’s note insured that there would be no last-minute turn against Trump. It was, of course, McConnell who had scheduled the trial to take place after Trump was out of office.

The trial ended in a sour acquittal. A shamed ex-President would inevitably declare victory.

. . . But it is no victory at all. . . . In his closing argument, Rep. Jamie Raskin [the lead impeachment manager for Trump’s trial] quoted a Black Capitol Police officer who, after being called the N-word repeatedly, after his fellow-officers were beaten, abused, bashed with flag poles, and sprayed with bear repellent, asked, “Is this America?”

History will judge Donald Trump severely for his crimes against the United States.

David Remnick
Excerpted from “History Will Find Trump Guilty
The New Yorker
February 13, 2021


Related Off-site Links:
Senate Acquits Trump in Impeachment Trial – Again – Domenico Montanaro (NPR News, February 13, 2021).
Trump Acquitted in Impeachment Trial; 7 GOP Senators Vote With Democrats to Convict – Dareh Gregorian (NBC News, February 13, 2021).
43 Republicans Condemned for “Cowardice” as Senate Votes to Acquit Donald Trump – Jake Johnson (Common Dreams, February 13, 2021).
After Acquitting Trump, McConnell Slams Him for a “Disgraceful Dereliction of Duty” – Sahil Kapur (NBC News, February 13, 2021).
Republicans Are Now the Party of Lawlessness and Disorder – Christopher D. Cook (Common Dreams, February 13, 2021).

UPDATES: An Escape, Not an Exoneration for Donald Trump – Peter Baker (The New York Times via The Irish Times, February 14, 2021).
Now Is the Time to Really Prosecute the Case Against Trump – By Pivoting to Real Democratic Reform – Jeffrey C. Isaac (Common Dreams, February 14, 2021).
Who Were the Republican Senators Afraid of When They Acquitted Their Own Attempted Murderer? – Juan Cole (Informed Comment, February 14, 2021).
Impeachment Isn’t the Final Word on Capitol Riot for Trump – Colleen Long (AP News, February 14, 2021).
Support Grows for Riot Inquiry After “Heartbreaking” Verdict – Hope Yen (AP News, February 14, 2021).
Nancy Pelosi Announces Plans for 9/11-style Commission to Examine Capitol Riot – Joanna Walters (The Guardian, February 15, 2021).
Lawsuit Accuses Trump, Giuliani and Others of Conspiring to Incite Capitol Riot – Aaron Katersky (ABC News, February 16, 2021).
There’s a “Smoking Gun” Connecting Trump to Capitol Insurrection: An Interview with Greg Palast – Scott Harris (Between the Lines, February 17, 2021).
“No Evidence” of Election Fraud in Battleground States, Statistical Analysis Finds As Trump Continues False Claims – Alison Durkee (Forbes, February 19, 2021).
Law Enforcement Officials Lay Out Evidence Capitol Riot Was “Coordinated” Attack – John Bowden (MSN News, February 23, 2021).

See also the previous Wild Reed posts:
Dan Rather on America’s “Moment of Reckoning”
Acknowledging Where We Are
The Republican Party in a Nutshell
Quote of the Day – January 7, 2021
Insurrection at the United States Capitol
Donald Trump’s Open and Shameless Criminality
Trump’s Legacy
Marianne Williamson on America’s “Cults of Madness”
“The Republican Party Has Now Made It Official: They Are a Cult”
“Fascism Is Upon Us”
Cornel West: Quote of the Day – December 3, 2020
Progressive Perspectives on the 2020 U.S. Election Results
Republicans Don’t Care About Demorcacy
Trump’s Playbook

Image: Rep. Jamie Raskin tears up while talking with fellow impeachment managers and staff after the Senate voted to acquit former President Donald Trump at his second Senate impeachment trial – Washington, DC, February 13, 2021.


Friday, February 12, 2021

An Electrifying Spectrum of Emotions


Remembering Absence With Out Love,
Carl Anderson’s debut album


The Wild Reed’s celebration of singer and actor Carl Anderson continues!

It’s actually a month-long celebration, as February is the month of both Carl’s birth (in 1945) and death (in 2004, at age 58).

This evening’s installment of The Wild Reed’s celebration of Carl focuses on his debut album, Absence With Out Love, which was released in 1982 on the Epic label.

I recently acquired a mint-condition LP copy of Absence With Out Love through Discogs, a wonderful website for new, used and rare LPs and CDs. My copy of Absence With Out Love (often simply referred to as AWOL) contains a 8x10 black and white photograph of Carl and Epic’s press release for the album. I share this press release tonight with added images and links, along with three songs from the album – “Buttercup,” “AWOL,” and “Going Out Again.” Enjoy!

_________________________


With his Epic debut LP, AWOL (Absence With Out Love), Carl Anderson explodes on a musical scene in definite need of a sensational vocalist.

From the moment he stole the screen as Judas in the musical film, Jesus Christ Superstar [right], his place among the stars was inevitable. Now with the release of his first album, loyal fans and music audiences are in for another electrifying experience.

“The album goes beyond my expectations for my first LP,” says Anderson, whose vocal contributions on the Superstar soundtrack earned him his first gold record. With cuts written by Stevie Wonder [left] and Teena Marie, among others, this is another sure-fire winner.

What was it like working with such accomplished songwriters and performers? “Stevie’s tune ‘Buttercup,’ was a great challenge to sing. In one measure I had to stretch from the lowest part of my register to the very highest. It’s a great song, a real Stevie Wonder tune,” Anderson explains.





On hand in the studio, Teena Marie [right] not only arranged [the album’s opening title track] but sang background vocals on the song.

“Her presence went above and beyond the call of duty,” Anderson says. “‘AWOL’ is a riveting song, a real visual piece. I can’t wait to sing it before a live audience.”






Working before club and concert audiences both nationally and internationally has earned the Lynchburg, Virginia native a loyal following of fans who hook into that special dose of Anderson personality and magnetism. It was that quality that Anderson wanted to come across on the album.

“I knew I had to work with a singer’s producer,” Anderson explains, This led him to his collaboration with writer/producer Richard Rudolph, who had successfully produced Minnie Ripperton and Teena Marie albums, among others. Rudolph was able to tap into the wide range of styles and sensitivities of Anderson’s live material, and the result is a dynamic combination. Ranging from the sensitive ballad, “Going Out Again,” to the pulsating, funkiness of “AWOL,” Anderson captures a spectrum of emotions.





At last this veteran of both stage and screen has been able to harness his powers of performing to the recording studio. The result is an artist who has truly come into his own, and an album well worth collecting.

Epic Records’ media release
1982

_______________________



Unfortunately, Absence With Out Love wasn’t the “sure-fire winner” that Epic had predicted. Indeed, it failed to chart. Still, regardless of its level of commercial success, the album remains a great showcase for Carl’s talents. It’s thus well-worth checking out.

In 2009, both Absence With Out Love and Carl’s second album, On & On (1984), were released on a single CD.

Currently, only used copies of this 2-album CD are available online. (For a review of this release, see the previous Wild Reed post, Carl Anderson: “Pure Quality”.)

Used copies of Absence With Out Love in LP format are available at Discogs, here.



NEXT: “Fare Thee Well, My Nightingale”


The Wild Reed's February 2020 Celebration of Carl Anderson:
Carl Anderson: On and On
Carl Anderson and The Black Pearl
Carl Anderson in The Color Purple
Carl Anderson: “Let the Music Play!”

The Wild Reed's February 2019 Celebration of Carl Anderson:
Remembering and Celebrating Carl Anderson
Carl Anderson: “Pure Quality”
Carl Anderson's Judas in Jesus Christ Superstar: “The Gold Standard”
Carl Anderson's Judas: “A Two-Dimensional Popular Villain Turned Into a Complex Human Being”
Carl Anderson: “Artist and Vocalist Extraordinaire”
Playbill Remembers Carl
Remembering the Life of Carl Anderson: “There Was So Much Love”


For more of Carl at The Wild Reed, see:
Carl Anderson: “Like a Song in the Night”
Carl Anderson: “One of the Most Enjoyable Male Vocalists of His Era”
With Love Inside
Carl Anderson
Acts of Love . . . Carl's and Mine
Introducing . . . the Carl Anderson Appreciation Group
Forbidden Lover
Revisiting a Groovy Jesus (and a Dysfunctional Theology)

Related Off-site Links:
A Profile of Carl Anderson – Part I: A Broadway Legend with Lynchburg Roots – Holly Phelps (LynchburgMuseum.org, May 12, 2015)
A Profile of Carl Anderson – Part II: The Legend Lives On – Holly Phelps (LynchburgMuseum.org,June 10, 2015)
Carl Anderson – Jazz Legend: The Official Website
Carl Anderson Memorial Page
Carl Anderson at AllMusic.com – Ron Wynn (AllMusic.com)
Carl Anderson Biography – Chris Rizik (Soul Tracks)


Wednesday, February 10, 2021

Dan Rather on America’s “Moment of Reckoning”


I am shaken, and I like to think I don’t shake easily.

I am moved to a deep and profound sadness, and I don’t like to think I am prone to melancholy.

But I am also emboldened and determined that what we saw today, the overwhelming evidence presented by the House Managers in the impeachment trial of Donald Trump, shall not, must not, be a portent for where this country goes. Rather it must be a wake-up call to centuries of injustice and false grievances that a would-be despot, bolstered by no shortage of confederates, weaponized and catapulted into an assault on American democracy. As I write these words I still cannot quite believe what really happened. Nevertheless, there can be no denying the reality.

January 6 was a coordinated attack. It was built atop a foundation of lies doled out with precision over days and weeks. From a different perspective, you might say this was months, years, and even generations in the making. Will it be the last gasps of a discredited white supremacy and the other forces of intolerance that weaken our nation? Will we be able to successfully fight off the lies and propaganda? Or will this be part another major strike of the sledgehammer that’s fracturing our democratic experiment?

I firmly believe that the vast majority of American citizens will see this clearly for what it is. But our voices are on the sidelines for now, other than the pressure of conscience we can bring to bear on the 100 senators who will stand in judgement. That these same women and men were also in the crosshairs of the murderous mob and that the trial is taking place at the scene of the crime, makes the events transpiring today on Capitol Hill even more surreal.

. . . Some might argue that this is a rush to judgement, that the president’s counsel has a right to present their case. That is indeed true. But you would have to be willfully ignorant, or cynical to the point of malevolence, to not see and hear with clarity the evidence as it stands.

I have seen my country brought low before. I have reported on the injustices and inequalities that have weakened our national purpose since its inception. I witnessed cowardice and complicity. But never before have I seen all of these undercurrents so focused in a single event.

We have clarity. We have proof. We need accountability. And we need a justice that will ring forth for the generations that follow. We cannot speak of unifying this nation without reckoning with all that is tearing it apart.

Dan Rather
Excerpted from “A Moment of Reckoning
Steady
February 10, 2021


NEXT: David Remnick: Quote of the Day – 2/13/21



Related Off-site Links:
Trump Trial Video Shows Vast Scope and Danger of Capitol Riot – Lisa Mascaro, Eric Tucker, Mary Clare Jalonick and Jill Colvin (AP News, February 10, 2021).
Trump “Left Everyone in Capitol for Dead” – Trevor Potter (BBC News, February 10, 2021).
With New Video Footage, Managers Show How Close Rioters Got to Pence and Lawmakers – Barbara Sprunt and Ryan Lucas (NPR News, February 10, 2021).
When No Line is Too Far to Cross – John Pavlovitz (JohnPavlovitz.com, February 10, 2021).
Trump Campaign Paid Millions to Organizers of Rally That Led to Capitol Rampage – Sharon Zhang (TruthOut, February 10, 2021).
Dramatic Video of Capitol Attack and Trump’s Incitement Kicks Off Impeachment Trial in SenateDemocracy Now! (February 10, 2021).
“This Cannot Be the Future of America”: Rep. Jamie Raskin Gives Moving Account of Capitol AttackDemocracy Now! (February 10, 2021).
There is No Defense, Only Complicity – David Frum (The Atlantic, February 10, 2021).
The People Who Are Really on Trial Are the 50 Republican Senators Judging Trump’s Guilt – Heather Cox Richardson (BillMoyers.com, February 10, 2021).
What Does a “Good” Republican Look Like? – Jonathan V. Last (The Bulwark, February 10, 2021).
Republicans Unswayed by Evidence Trump “Incited” Mob Against U.S. Capitol – Igor Bobic and Matt Fuller (Yahoo! News, February 10, 2021).
Why Republicans Won’t Convict Trump – David Faris (The Week, February 9, 2021).
Trump’s Lawyers Throw Trump’s Supporters Under the Bus – Heather Cox Richardson (BillMoyers.com, February 9, 2021).
“Show the Video to Someone You Know”: Watch Democrats’ Must-See Exhibit A at Trump TrialCommon Dreams (February 9, 2021).
Impeachment Trial Must Result in Trump Lifetime Ban to Protect Our Democracy – Trevor Potter (Common Dreams, February 9, 2021).

UPDATE: The Department of Justice Has Released Its Clearest Evidence Yet Tying Jan. 6 Militants to Trump – Sharon Zhang (TruthOut, February 11, 2021).

See also the previous Wild Reed posts:
The Republican Party in a Nutshell
Quote of the Day – January 7, 2021
Insurrection at the United States Capitol
Donald Trump’s Open and Shameless Criminality
Trump’s Legacy
Who Half of Us Are
About Those Militias
Heather Cox Richardson on the Unravelling of President Trump
Rep. Ilhan Omar Responds to President Trump’s Authoritarian Threats
Marianne Williamson on America’s “Cults of Madness”
“The Republican Party Has Now Made It Official: They Are a Cult”
“We Have an Emergency On Our Hands”: Marianne Williamson On the “Freefall” of American Democracy
“Fascism Is Upon Us”
President Trump, “We Hold You Responsible”
In Charlottesville, the Face of Terrorism In the U.S.
Trump’s America: Normalized White Supremacy and a Rising Tide of Racist Violence
On International Human Rights Day, Saying “No” to Donald Trump and His Fascist Agenda
Progressive Perspectives on the Election of Donald Trump as President
Progressive Perspectives on the 2016 U.S. Presidential Election
Trump’s Playbook
Progressive Perspectives on the Rise of Donald Trump

Images: Photographers unknown.


Tuesday, February 09, 2021

High-Rise in Afternoon Light


See also the previous Wild Reed posts:
Winter Light
Late Autumn Light
Photo of the Day – October 14, 2014
Photo of the Day – September 1, 2012
Photo of the Day – December 20, 2010
Photo of the Day – May 8, 2010


Image: “High-Rise in Afternoon Light” by Michael J. Bayly.

This high-rise is Seward Tower East, also known as Bor-Son Towers. It’s an apartment complex in the Seward neighborhood of south Minneapolis. I drive by it on my way to and from work and can see it from the back window of my nearby attic apartment. I’ve long appreciated its clean, modernist architectural style. Built in 1968-69, Seward Tower East is 21 storeys high and has 640 units of moderate-income, privately financed housing. It is the twin of the nearby Seward Tower West. These two buildings are the tallest in the Seward neighborhood of the Longfellow Community in Minneapolis.

For more images of Seward Tower East at The Wild Reed, click here and here.


Monday, February 08, 2021

Remembering an Artist and Vocalist Extraordinaire


As was the case last year and the year before, February this year at The Wild Reed is dedicated to singer and actor Carl Anderson, who was born on February 27, 1945 and died on February 23, 2004 at age 58.

As I’ve noted previously, I sometimes like to think that in a parallel universe Carl has the superstar status which in this universe was inexplicably denied him. This despite the fact that he possessed a vocal range, elasticity, and sensuality that matched, and often bettered, those of his contemporaries Freddie Jackson, El Debarge, Jeffrey Osborne, John Whitehead, Al Jarreau, and Luther Vandross.

As the Funky Town Grooves website notes, “Carl Anderson was a singer with great range, clarity of diction . . . [and] that rare ability to sing flawlessly from a technical standpoint [while] still communicating character and emotion.”

He was, in short, an artist and vocalist extraordinaire!


I dare say that for most people, Carl Anderson is best known for playing Judas Iscariot in the 1973 film adaptation (above and left) and numerous stage productions of Andrew Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice’s rock opera, Jesus Christ Superstar. (For more about Carl’s groundbreaking portrayal of Judas, click here, here, and here.)

Jesus Christ Superstar, then, seems a good place to start with this year’s Wild Reed celebration of Carl, and I do so this evening by sharing an excerpt from Ken Anderson’s appreciation of Norman Jewison’s 1973 film adaptation of the rock opera in which he says the following of Carl.

In listening to three decades’ worth of covers, revivals, and re-recordings, I still find [Jewison’s] version of Jesus Christ Superstar to be the best sung of the lot. . . . [T]he arrangements, orchestrations, and vocal performances are just top notch. This is especially true of the late Carl Anderson, whose powerfully clear and expressive voice can still give me goosebumps.

Every singer in [the] role [of Judas] has had to live up to Anderson’s standard, and in my opinion, not a single one comes close. His Judas was more than just a great voice, he was a passionate actor as well. . . . [Anderson’s] show-stopping rendition of the propulsive title song is one of cinema’s great musical moments. And who can resist the envisioning of an angel’s wings as the fringe on a Vegas-era Elvis jumpsuit?


Who indeed!?






NEXT: An Electrifying Spectrum of Emotions


The Wild Reed's February 2020 Celebration of Carl Anderson:
Carl Anderson: On and On
Carl Anderson and The Black Pearl
Carl Anderson in The Color Purple
Carl Anderson: “Let the Music Play!”

The Wild Reed's February 2019 Celebration of Carl Anderson:
Remembering and Celebrating Carl Anderson
Carl Anderson: “Pure Quality”
Carl Anderson's Judas in Jesus Christ Superstar: “The Gold Standard”
Carl Anderson's Judas: “A Two-Dimensional Popular Villain Turned Into a Complex Human Being”
Carl Anderson: “Artist and Vocalist Extraordinaire”
Playbill Remembers Carl
Remembering the Life of Carl Anderson: “There Was So Much Love”


For more of Carl at The Wild Reed, see:
Carl Anderson: “Like a Song in the Night”
Carl Anderson: “One of the Most Enjoyable Male Vocalists of His Era”
With Love Inside
Carl Anderson
Acts of Love . . . Carl's and Mine
Introducing . . . the Carl Anderson Appreciation Group
Forbidden Lover
Revisiting a Groovy Jesus (and a Dysfunctional Theology)

Related Off-site Links:
A Profile of Carl Anderson – Part I: A Broadway Legend with Lynchburg Roots – Holly Phelps (LynchburgMuseum.org, May 12, 2015)
A Profile of Carl Anderson – Part II: The Legend Lives On – Holly Phelps (LynchburgMuseum.org,June 10, 2015)
Carl Anderson – Jazz Legend: The Official Website
Carl Anderson Memorial Page
Carl Anderson at AllMusic.com – Ron Wynn (AllMusic.com)
Carl Anderson Biography – Chris Rizik (Soul Tracks)


Sunday, February 07, 2021

The Republican Party in a Nutshell

Under the leadership of Donald Trump, the GOP had lost the House, Senate and White House, watched idly as hundreds of thousands of people died in a pandemic that could have been contained with a bare modicum of competence, and watched again as a sitting president exhorted an angry mob to smash their way into the seat of congress so they could kill the leadership of same. This incredible totality of disgrace and infamy, in the end, was not enough to inspire a final break from the author of all this misery.

The GOP civil war is over for now, and Trump remains the core power within the Republican Party. QAnon devotee Marjorie Taylor Greene and her ilk are the new face of the party. . . . There is an old saying: If there are 11 people seated at a dinner table with a fascist, and none of them are denouncing the fascist, there are 12 fascists at that table.

That is the Republican Party in a nutshell.

There is no cooperating with this mayhem. There is no trying to get along, offering concessions, or searching for bipartisanship.

. . . The Republican Party today is about one thing: Using democracy to destroy democracy, and all in the name of their thwarted autocratic leader. They don’t want to make deals. They want to take, and take, and that is all.

You don’t make deals with that if you are the Democrats. You defeat it, using the majorities millions of voters and grassroots activists labored to provide you. You pass legislation by hook or by crook that improves people’s lives whether they want it or not. FDR’s Tennessee Valley Authority program is instructive: You win, make things better for people, and wait for the light bulb moment to arrive.

Today’s GOP is a beast. You don’t negotiate with rabid dogs. You’re a damn fool if you try.



Related Off-site Links:
Extremists Like Marjorie Taylor Greene Are the Real Face of the New Republican Party – Lloyd Green (The Guardian, February 6, 2021).
The False Equivalence Between the Democratic Left and the Republican Right Is Absurd – Jeffrey C. Isaac (Common Dreams, February 3, 2021).
Democracy or the White Supremacist Mob: Which Side Is the Republican Party On? – Richard Wolffe (The Guardian, February 3, 2021).
Is Far-Right QAnon Conspiracy Theorist Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene the New Face of the GOP?Democracy Now! (February 1, 2021).
Growing Number of Republicans Decide to Walk Away From the GOP – Steve Benen (MSNBC News, February 1, 2021).
The Republican Party Is a Fascist Cult – Noah Colbert (NU Political Review, January 11, 2021).

UPDATE: The Republican Party Must Be Purged Like the Nazis and Fascists – Thom Hartmann (Common Dreams, April 13, 2021).

See also the previous Wild Reed posts:
Acknowledging Where We Are
Marianne Williamson on America’s “Cults of Madness”
“The Republican Party Has Now Made It Official: They Are a Cult”
“Fascism Is Upon Us”
Cornel West: Quote of the Day – December 3, 2020
Progressive Perspectives on the 2020 U.S. Election Results
Republicans Don’t Care About Demorcacy
Trump’s Playbook

Image: Kristen Solberg.


Monday, February 01, 2021

Imbolc: Celebrating the Freshness of New Beginnings


Today is Imbolc, the ancient Gaelic festival marking the return of spring. To this day, people continue to celebrate Imbolc and its emphasis on the seasonal changes in the northern hemisphere at this time of year; a time of growing light and emerging new life. People also recognize and celebrate how Imbolc's promise of new beginnings is experienced in their lives.

Traditionally held on February 1, Imbolc occurs about halfway between the winter solstice and the spring equinox. It was widely observed throughout Ireland, Scotland and the Isle of Man, and is one of the four Gaelic seasonal festivals – along with Beltane, Lughnasadh and Samhain.

Notes Wikipedia:

It is believed that Imbolc was originally a pagan festival associated with the goddess Brigid, and that it was Christianized as a festival of Saint Brigid, who is thought to be a Christianization of the goddess. . . . Brigid was evoked to protect homes and livestock. Special feasts were held, holy wells were visited, and it was a time of weather divination, and the old tradition of watching to see if serpents or badgers came from their winter dens may be a forerunner of the North American Groundhog Day. Imbolc was also believed to be when the Cailleach – the divine hag of Gaelic tradition – gathers her firewood for the rest of the winter. Legend has it that if she wishes to make the winter last a good while longer, she will make sure the weather on Imbolc is bright and sunny, so she can gather plenty of firewood. Therefore, people would be relieved if Imbolc is a day of foul weather, as it means the Cailleach is asleep and winter is almost over. Although many of its customs died out in the 20th century, Imbolc is still observed and in some places it has been revived as a cultural event. Since the latter twentieth century, Celtic neopagans and Wiccans have observed Imbolc as a religious holiday.


Speaking of neopagans and Wiccans, Starhawk, in her classic book The Spiral Dance, offers the following about the significance of Imbolc.

This is the feast of the waxing light. What was born at the Solstice begins to manifest, and we who were midwives to the infant year now see the Child Sun grow strong as the days grow visibly longer. This is the time of individuation: within the measures of the spiral, we each light our own light, and become uniquely ourselves. It is the time of initiation, of beginning, when seeds that will later sprout and grow begin to stir from their dark sleep. [Let us] meet to share the light of inspiration, which will grow with the growing light.


Of course, growing into our true and unique selves is often a slow but steady process, a journey of ever-expanding awakenings towards wholeness. We can become impatient with such a journey, especially in our present day society which often stresses speed, convenience, and instant gratification. I close then with some sage words from Mark Nepo’s The Book of Awakening that address this impatience and the invitation it offers.

_________________________


Follow anything in its act of being – a snowflake falling, ice melting, a loved one waking – and we are ushered into the ongoing moment of the beginning, the quiet instant from which each breath starts. What makes this moment so crucial is that it continually releases the freshness of living. The key to finding this moment and all is freshness, again and again, is in slowing down.

Often, when we are inconvenienced, we are being asked to slow down. When we are delayed in our travel or waiting for a check in a restaurant, we are being asked to open up and look around. When we find ourselves stalled in our very serious and ambitious plans, we are often being asked to re-find the beginning of time. Unfortunately, we are all so high-paced, running so fast to where we want to be, that many of us are forced to slow down through illness and breakage. In this, we are such funny creatures. If we could see ourselves from far enough away, we would seem like a colony of insects running into things repeatedly: thousands of little determined beings butting into obstacles, shaking our little heads and bodies, and running into things again.

Like the Earth that carries us, the ground of our being moves so slowly we take it for granted. But if you should feel stalled, numb, or exhausted from the trials of your life, simply slow your thoughts to the pace of cracks widening, slow your heart to the pace of the earth soaking up rain, and wait for the freshness of the beginning to greet you.




Related Off-site Links:
Imbolc: The Gaelic Festival ExplainedOghamArt.com (January 31, 2020).
The Magical Energy of the Great Celtic Festival of Imbolc – Colette O’Neill (Bealtaine Cottage, January 24, 2021).
Brigid and Darlughdach: Celtic Saint Loved Her Female Soulmate – Kittredge Cherry (QSpirit, February 1, 2021).

See also the previous Wild Reed posts:
Sufism: A Call to Awaken
Don’t Go Back to Sleep
Farewell Winter
Welcoming the Return of Spring
Spring: “Truly the Season for Joy and Hope”
In the Footsteps of Spring: Introduction | Part I | II | III | IV | V

Images of Adnan with candle: Michael J. Bayly.
Image 2: Michael J. Bayly.
Book cover design: Jim Warner.
Book cover photography: Paul Trummer.


Sunday, January 31, 2021

Celebrating Vanessa

Yesterday was the birthday of an actor I greatly admire. . . . Yes, Vanessa Redgrave turned 84.

To (belatedly) mark the occasion I share the following excerpt from Vanessa: The Life of Vanessa Redgrave by Dan Callahan.

There are times when, watching Vanessa at her best, it is possible to think that there has never been an actor as extravagantly gifted and expressive as she is, not even Marlon Brando. Like Brando, Redgrave is led by instinct. Her failures, like his, are in Mount Everest areas where most actors wouldn’t even be able to breathe, let alone create. . . . “If there existed something like a dream in which a recipe was concocted to create an ideal actress, that dream would end with an entrance by Vanessa Redgrave,” said Tennessee Williams.

Asked by Charlie Rose in 1995 if she was satisfied as an actress, she said, “Oh, no, because any achievement you may make at any given time, or may know you have made, immediately you arrive at a new state or field. You then perceive whole other fields that you couldn’t perceive until you’d arrived at that particular state.” Redgrave has brought audiences up to fields and vistas that had never before been seen. “I’m lucky,” she said. “When there’s a difficult mountain to climb, I sometimes get chosen to make the climb. Growing up with Shakespeare, as I had to do, you lived with the challenge of what drama can mean as a social experience for people, how important it can be.” Meryl Streep, often called our greatest actress, disagrees with that assessment. She thinks that designation belongs to Redgrave and has referred to Redgrave’s work as “the pinnacle.”

– Dan Callahan
Excerpted from Vanessa: The Life of Vanessa Redgrave
Pegasus Books, 2014



Related Off-site Link:
Icon of the Week: Vanessa Redgrave, Stellar Actress and Courageous Activist – Nick Levine (BBC America, January 26, 2021).

See also the previous Wild Reed posts:
Vanessa Redgrave: “Just Being Alive, Staying Human, I Think That’s Infinitely Precious”
Vanessa Redgrave: “Almost a Kind of Jungian Actress”
Vanessa Redgrave: “She Has Greatness”
Letting Them Sit By Me
Vanessa Redgrave: Speaking Out
Happy Birthday, Vanessa! (2017)

Images: Photographers unknown.


Thursday, January 28, 2021

In This Time Marked By Grief


Actor Chadwick Boseman died of colon cancer five months ago today.

On the 28th day of every month since his passing, I’ve honored Chad in some way at The Wild Reed. I continue this honoring today by sharing an excerpt from Joshua Barajas’s September 9, 2020 NewsHour story, “What Chadwick Boseman’s Death Means In a Year Marked By Grief.”

The grief Barajas is referring to is, of course, the grief caused by the coronavirus pandemic, a pandemic that is still very much with us, even as the roll-out of vaccines continues to slowly pick up steam.

Because the pandemic is still with us, the grief – both individual and collective – is also still with us. Barajas' article is thus just as relevant in these early days of 2021 as it was five months ago, back in 2020. Indeed, it could be retitled, “What Chadwick Boseman’s Death Means In This Time Marked By Grief.”

__________________________


A boy freezes as a TV reporter delivers the news that someone important to him has died. Wearing his “Black Panther” costume, the boy drops his action figure of King T’Challa.


“Daddy! Daddy! My h-hero is gone!” he cries in his father’s arms.

The boy is the center of a comic by artist Courtney Lovett, who at first didn’t believe the news that actor Chadwick Boseman had died. After seeing the late-night alerts on social media, she went to bed thinking it could have been a dream. But the next morning, the headlines hadn’t budged. Lovett said she doesn’t normally get emotional after a celebrity’s death. But this was no normal year.

The overlapping crises of 2020 have been acutely felt by Black people in the U.S. The novel coronavirus has worsened pre-existing disparities, both in health and financial security, and claimed a disproportionate number of Black lives. Police violence against Black people has not let up, touching off outpourings of anguish and months of nationwide protests.

Since COVID-19 began infecting and killing Americans, our rituals for grieving have changed. Not everyone can attend funerals of loved ones. Time spent reminiscing and honoring the dead has to be spent farther apart or over video chat. The process of grieving itself can be more isolating now.

At risk of understatement, Boseman’s death was shocking – the reactions on social media were swift in their immediate disbelief and despair. The official statement from the actor’s family revealed that he had been living with a colon cancer diagnosis for the past four years. The actor who had spent his career embodying towering Black figures in history – Jackie Robinson, James Brown, Thurgood Marshall – hadn’t been vocal about his diagnosis.

“It’s a lot to take on at one time,” said Monnica Williams, a clinical psychologist and associate professor at University of Ottawa’s School of Psychology.

“Every Black person I know is exhausted just from life right now,” she said.

Lovett, heartbroken, began to see the pictures posted by parents of children memorializing Boseman – a figure who had embodied Black lives in America and Africa. There were many Wakanda salutes, many makeshift memorials for Black Panther with superhero toys paying their respects.


With those images in mind, Lovett created a 10-panel comic that not only paid tribute to the 43-year-old actor, whose work and storytelling she admired, but to also leave a message of hope for the children who looked up to Boseman or his most famous character, King T’Challa, as an idol.

In Lovett’s comic, a black panther appears to the boy, who’s in bed grieving. The panther comforts the boy and then leads him to Boseman who delivers a message from the afterlife: The child, too, is a king.


Lovett said she wanted to end her comic by telling children that, “You are so great. You can still do these things, even though you feel that your hero is gone, we still have heroes here. You are a hero.”

[. . .] Lovett said she received comments and direct messages from people thanking her for her comic. Several said it helped them to grieve. Lovett said some parents told her they hesitated in telling their children about Boseman’s death, fearing that such news would make them feel defeated. But Lovett’s comic provided a doorway to a conversation around the loss of their hero.

Lovett said the outpouring after Boseman’s death felt like a “collective release.” Grieving for Boseman and his family was, in a way, also grieving for everything that has happened this year.

Joshua Barajas
Excerpted from “What Chadwick Boseman’s Death Means
In a Year Marked By Grief

The NewsHour
September 9, 2020




NEXT: A Bittersweet Accolade



See also the previous Wild Reed posts:
Marianne Williamson: In the Midst of This “Heartbreaking” Pandemic, It’s Okay to Be Heartbroken
Christmas 2020: A Time of Loss and Grief, Gratitude and Hope
Grief and Gratitude
Hope and Beauty in the Midst of the Global Coronavirus Pandemic
“You’re All Kings and Queens”
Remembering Chadwick Boseman
Honoring An Icon
Chadwick Boseman’s Timeless Message to Young Voters: “You Can Turn Our Nation Around”
Chadwick Boseman’s Final Film Role: “A Reed Instrument for Every Painful Emotion”
Celebrating a Special Day
Boseman on Wilson
Chadwick Boseman and That “Heavenly Light”
The Important Cultural Moment That Is Black Panther
Celebrating Black Panther – Then and Now
“Avengers Assemble!”
Jason Johnson on Stan Lee's Revolutionary Legacy
Another First for Black Panther
“Something Special,” Indeed!
Queer Black Panther

Opening image: Billy Thao.