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  • Carnatic Music: Ramnad Krishnan

    Ramnad Krishnan was a important carnatic vocalist of the 20th century. He was a great exponent of sankya (relaxed music) school.

    Born on 14th September 1918 at Alleppey in Kerala in a family of musicians. His training was under Ramnad Sankara Sivam. His raga singing gave a revelation of the emotional and the intellectual content of the raga . His unique pallavi renditions in rare and uncommon structures, still haunt the minds of not only the rasikas but even his colleagues.

    Ramnad Krishnan was also a great teacher. He served at the faculty of the Govt. College of Carnatic Music at Madras for a few years. He was also a visiting Professor at the Weslyn University, USA for some time where he was reverential called “the musicians’ musician.

    I was first exposed to Carnatic Music as a teenager when I stumbled across an Explorer Series Recording at the local public library. This particular record was; Music of South India: Songs of the Carnatic Tradition. At the time I had been practicing some Raja, Hatha, and Bhakti Yoga and had expanded my practice to listening to music, mostly Ravi Shankar.
    Having the chance to listen to Ramnad Krishnan moved my Yoga practice, my heart, mind and soul to a much deeper level. I had no idea why at the time and…still don’t, and I don’t need to know why. It simply is.

  • Mythic Imagination Institute – Mythic Passages, the Magazine of Imagination

    Imagination is the root of empathy, innovation, problem solving, art, and science. Our way toward imagination cultivates the ground from which it springs: the observation and understanding of nature and human nature. This understanding exists universally in myths, folktales, sacred stories, and wisdom stories. It exists within the structure of story itself. It speaks through the images within the stories.

    Mythic Imagination Institute – Mythic Passages, the Magazine of Imagination

  • MusicMonday: Jain – Makeba

  • Seguy Art Deco Designs 40

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  • Is there a right to sleep outside?: Vox article

    “Five years ago, a federal court issued a crucial ruling. People experiencing homelessness, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals said, can’t be punished for sleeping outside on public property if there are no adequate alternatives available.”

    “The government cannot criminalize indigent, homeless people for sleeping outdoors, on public property, on the false premise they had a choice in the matter,” the court declared.”

    https://www.vox.com/23748522/tent-encampments-martin-boise-homelessness-housing

  • From the Photo Archive: Flowers at Saint-Gaudens National Historical Park

    Link to the park NPS website

  • MusicMonday: Ximena Sariñana – Frágil feat. Samantha Barrón ..

  • Japanese Textile Designs 53

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  • Groundwater: A Battleground for Corporate Greed


    Corporate farms are bleeding our aquifers dry. In places like Arizona and California, these massive operations guzzle groundwater without regulation.  This unsustainable practice harms local residents, smaller farmers, and the environment.


    Unlike individuals and small farms, corporations have the funds to drill ever-deeper wells, chasing retreating groundwater. Their unchecked extraction leads to dry wells in nearby communities, forcing people to buy bottled water or go thirsty.


    Corporate farms prioritize profits, often growing water-thirsty crops unsuitable for arid environments. While fields of almonds or alfalfa may be lucrative, they deplete precious aquifers with alarming speed.
    We need policies that prioritize the long-term health of our groundwater. Regulations must address unsustainable extraction, particularly by large corporations. We need to champion water-wise crops and support farmers dedicated to conservation.
    The water crisis is real. It’s time we hold powerful interests accountable and demand a future where water isn’t solely a commodity for the highest bidder.

  • Redefining Health as a Multidimensional Experience

    When someone asks, “How are you?”, the common response, “OK, not bad,” often implies that health is merely the absence of disease. But if we pause to truly reflect on that question, the concept of health reveals a far greater complexity and richness.  The sources challenge this limited perspective, urging us to understand health as a complex, multidimensional latent construct, much like personality or happiness, encompassing a broad array of observable phenomena.

    More Than Just the Absence of Suffering

    Traditionally, health is often defined by the absence of suffering, such as physical pain, anxiety, or depression. However, this view is incomplete. The sources remind us that people can experience wellness even with terminal disease or chronic pain. True health can also be conceptualized by the presence of certain positive qualities, including pleasure, happiness, joy, energy, and enthusiasm. This suggests that even when physical ailments are present, other dimensions of well-being can flourish.

    What Your Body and Mind Can Do

    A second crucial dimension of health is functional ability versus impairment. This isn’t just about whether your body is working; it encompasses a multitude of aspects.

    The significance of an impairment can vary greatly depending on the individual, highlighting that health is not a one-size-fits-all concept. For example, cognitive impairment in three-dimensional space would be far more disabling for a brain surgeon or architect than for a writer. This dimension also includes an individual’s flexibility and adaptability to changing conditions as well as their ability to give and receive. It’s entirely possible to imagine highly functioning individuals who are still unhealthy in other ways, just as people with significant functional impairment can be very healthy in other aspects.

    Finding Inner Peace and Meaning

    The third, and perhaps most profound, domain of health is a subjective sense of inner peace or coherence in life. This involves a global sense of predictability (even when control is low) of one’s internal and external environment, coupled with an optimism that things will work out as best as is reasonable. This domain resonates with concepts such as:
    *   Hardiness
    *   Resilience
    *   Learned optimism
    *   A sense of meaning and purpose in life

    All these concepts speak to an individual’s broad subjective perspective on life, which is a powerful indicator of overall health and well-being

    The Holistic View of Healing

    By embracing this multidimensional understanding, the role of a healer expands significantly. It moves beyond merely detecting and eradicating a specific disease state to encompass the entire quality of life. This broader perspective recognizes that health is about the richness of human experience, urging us to consider all facets of a person when asking, “How are you?”. This holistic approach is crucial, especially given that spiritual well-being, an often overlooked dimension, is increasingly linked to positive health outcomes.


    Imagine health not as a single, clear road, but as a vast, intricate garden. The traditional view only focuses on the absence of weeds (disease). But a truly healthy garden thrives not just by lacking weeds, but by having vibrant, blossoming flowers (pleasure, joy), strong, deep roots (functional ability), and a harmonious, flourishing ecosystem (coherence, meaning). A skilled gardener, like a holistic healer, doesn’t just pull weeds; they nurture the soil, prune the plants, ensure proper light and water, and understand the interconnectedness of every part to cultivate a truly thriving, beautiful space.