Visiting a New Mexico hippie haunt
Lama Foundation Winter 2006 |
Morningstar East (1969) |
Wendelin Scott, Yoga Source, Santa Fe |
Incredible yoga teacher, Wendelin Scott, was able to key into our group of newbies and experienced practitioners in a way that made the least experienced feel comfortable and at home in various asanas. She’s co-director of Yoga Source in Santa Fe and a devoted student of Advaita Vedanta. She holds a Masters in Eastern Classics and Sanskrit from St. John’s College … I’m hoping many of these folks will come up to join us for the Telluride Mushroom Festival this year.
SPEAKING OF SHROOMFEST … We’re offering a special discount price for a full
weekend pass to the Telluride Mushroom Festival for locals (anyone reading the Watch) – good until the end of January.
Just $125 -- $50 off the full price … For more info, call me at 327-4767.
ELECTRO MAGNETIC FIELDS… The issue of “smart meters” continues to confound
many of us. I don’t appear to have any personal effects from all the invisible
waves and rays piercing my home walls. And yet it’s becoming increasingly hard
to ignore how strongly they affect certain sensitives. And information keeps
coming in that they may have unknown long-term effects on many of us …
Smart Meter demonstration in California |
The
recent article in Scientific American
(January issue) on animal behavior, “The Compass Within” speaks at length about
the magnetic sense in animals that scientists are just now zeroing in on, and
how it works. As the article begins, “Franz Anton Mesmer’s 18th-century
belief in ‘animal magnetism’ – the notion that breathing creatures harbor
magnetic fluids in their bodies – had long been relegated to the annals of
charlatanism.” But recent research has documented that dozens of species of
animals exhibit a magnetic sense. Maybe even humans. But scientists aren’t
exactly sure how it works … Magnetism is, as neurobiologist Steven M. Reppert
suggests, “the one sense that we know the least about.” Various mechanisms have
been suggested and tested, but results are still not conclusive … Thorsten
Ritz, a biophysicist at the University of California at Irvine, does note that
“radio waves induce electric fields that could disrupt biological processes in
unpredictable ways.” While he was speaking to animal orientation in long
migratory flights, the concept of EMFs affecting animals (and humans) in ways
we don’t understand seems to be becoming more accepted. Clearly, we need more
and better research to understand how our increasingly electrified world is
affecting us, not just technologically but physiologically too.
A solar Glory |
THE GLORY
… My teacher, Dolores LaChapelle, was always fascinated by the solar phenomenon
called a “glory” – a circular rainbow of light seen in alpine regions, often
surrounding one’s shadow form on nearby clouds. First reported by a French
scientific expedition to Ecuador
in 1748, the exact mechanism of this rare but fantastical light show has been
explained in many ways. But H. Moysés Nussenzveig’s article about it in the
same issue of Scientific American is
worth reading … Turns out, it’s not nearly as simple as has often been
explained. Three effects are involved. However, geometric-optic axial back
scattering has only a small part to play, edge rays aren’t all that big a
contributor, but Mie resonances arising from the tunneling of light seem to be
the main effectuator.
THE TALKING GOURD
Vocation
Seminary for me
was R.C. boot camp
Basic training
for church, not state
Our mission to tithe
& save, not tax
& kill. Now elected
to local office
I serve the people’s will
The statutes my bible
Compassion my skill
Blindfolded
at the altar of balance
Genuflecting
still