Today, I’m featuring two readings and focusing on the festival of Epiphany (or 3 Kings Day) and what is means to find a guiding star.
🚩Get access to extras at the program support page, including links to the readings here: https://www.patreon.com/posts/45863633Featured music on the episode is by Ketsa and is called Gentle Wave. It is a CreativeCommons work. CC)Listen now with the AUDIO PLAYER:
It’s coming.Now you can pre-order my book here:tiny.cc/wildland.
Or, you can help an independent bookshop by shopping here: 🥰
http://tiny.cc/wildINDIE
The DECEMBER 2020 reading is The Great Belonging by Charlotte Donlon. We will meet on January 6 at 7:30pm with Charlotte to discuss it together. Please register here ➡️ https://www.crowdcast.io/e/spark-my-muse—book-2/register
If you missed the book club discussion with author Ed Cyzewski, LIVE Dec 2, 2020 then just click for the replay: https://www.crowdcast.io/e/spark-my-muse—bookpowered by Crowdcast(When you support this work (at Patreon) you ease the financial burden I have when creating this work, but you also unlock many extras from years of episodes. You ALSO get sneak peeks on episodes, projects, and news on my book “The Wild Land Within” published with Broadleaf Books – patreon.com/sparkmymuse)SparkMyMuse.com contains over 365+ audio episodes, an online store, and resources. Roam around the website and enjoy!CONTRIBUTIONS?
Most everything I create can be enjoyed for little or nothing. Some people tell me they get excited to help out when they find something they enjoy. Sound like you?So here, it’s simple: you can pay-what-you’d-like to help. It’s appreciated. Thank you. ❤️• VENMO: venmo.com/lisadelay• PayPal.me/lisacolondelay
Listen to a recent episode:
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Today, I’m featuring reflections from the On Being Midwinter Gathering Event (12/21/20) with Lucas Johnson and Krista Tippett, and excerpts from an article from in Aeon magazine online. It’s by Nicholaos Jones from April 2020 and called “At times of suffering, the greatest gift is accompaniment by another”.
🚩Get access to extras at the program support page, including links to the original article by Jones and the On Being Midwinter Gathering event where you can watch a full replay here: https://www.patreon.com/posts/45527578Featured music on the episode is by the U.S. Marine Band (“Auld Lang Syne”) and frankum (“Vintage Electro Pop Loop”) Both are CreativeCommons work. CC)Listen now with the AUDIO PLAYER:
It’s coming.Now you can pre-order my book here:tiny.cc/wildland.
Or, you can help an independent bookshop by shopping here: 🥰
http://tiny.cc/wildINDIE
The DECEMBER 2020 reading is The Great Belonging by Charlotte Donlon. We will meet on January 6 at 7:30pm with Charlotte to discuss it together. Please register here ➡️ https://www.crowdcast.io/e/spark-my-muse—book-2/register
If you missed the book club discussion with author Ed Cyzewski, LIVE Dec 2, 2020 then just click for the replay: https://www.crowdcast.io/e/spark-my-muse—bookpowered by Crowdcast(When you support this work (at Patreon) you ease the financial burden I have when creating this work, but you also unlock many extras from years of episodes. You ALSO get sneak peeks on episodes, projects, and news on my book “The Wild Land Within” published with Broadleaf Books – patreon.com/sparkmymuse)SparkMyMuse.com contains over 365+ audio episodes, an online store, and resources. Roam around the website and enjoy!CONTRIBUTIONS?
Most everything I create can be enjoyed for little or nothing. Some people tell me they get excited to help out when they find something they enjoy. Sound like you?So here, it’s simple: you can pay-what-you’d-like to help. It’s appreciated. Thank you. ❤️• VENMO: venmo.com/lisadelay• PayPal.me/lisacolondelay
Listen to a recent episode:
• Spark My Muse can thrive when you help in these two ways:
1. Share the program with another person today.
2. Leave a Rating/ Write a Review on iTunes HERE. (https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/id988423690&ls=1)
AND!
Don’t forget to pick a subscribe option that is best for you at (sparkmymuse.com) below:
Managing a wine tasting room is a great job for a writer because, when it’s not too busy, you can become a kind of social scientist: observing people and trying to see why humans do what we do.
You can even allow your curiosity to navigate some of the deeper questions about the human experience.
One recent observation:
The “poison apple” of the smart phone has changed how we do things alone–eating, drinking, or traveling, in particular.
FACT: People rarely come to taste wine by themselves (at our place).
That may seem obvious. Wine tends to bring people together, right? Maybe I shouldn’t be so surprised that people only rarely come alone.
But it IS strange.
Think about it like this:
Shopping for food or clothes alone isn’t considered weird and people tasting wine are really just shopping for wine.
The only difference perhaps are presumptions, previous experiences, or maybe subterranean social exceptions.
• Feeling low…solo
When people visit the tasting room alone, I can usually sense their social discomfort. They might suddenly offer me a reason why they are alone this time or they might neurotically use their phone to look busy or connected.
The alternative, of course, would be to interact with and absorb the environment they are truly in or look for ways to subvert social fear through some modicum of meaningful interaction: friendliness, conversation, inquisitiveness, for starters. So terrifying is the prospect of looking lonely at a winery, that many solo customers barely experience it at all.
• Confronting fear
This observation got me to thinking of ways I try to numb or avoid these fears or points of discomfort in myself and in my life. What am I missing that I shouldn’t be. The default is to use technology to connect, but at what cost?
When I interviewed Rolf Potts, famed travel-writer and best-selling author, he talked about his own wrestling with the seduction of “not being where he was” by engaging with technology. One of the most memorable things he said was this:
“When you travel alone you are forced to confront your own loneliness and boredom, and interact with your surroundings in ways you can’t [when you’re] with a companion.”
We miss our chances for new experiences with the advent of constant so-called “connectedness”, don’t we?
The habit forms quickly. Only thoughtfulness will heal this malady.
(Here’s the video. He covers that bit around min 2:40.)
Do you question how you use technology and confront what it might be stealing from you?
Encountering our loneliness more deeply could create epiphanic moments of self-discovery and new insights into what we fear and what makes us each unique.
Maybe it’s time to do something alone to test your social fears, deepen your healthy sense of self, and develop a new sense of social, and even spiritual, courage and strength.
Maybe leave your phone is the car for the 30 min you shop, eat out, or exercise. Good things could happen.
If you like what you’ve read, consider getting my in-depth but consice weekly correspondence, starting soon. Learn about it here.
Many of us don’t brave the cold in January and February to see the constellations.
In January, many people throughout the world celebrate the Visitation of the Magi, who followed a bright star to find the Christ Child. This extends the Christmas Season celebration.
Perhaps we could be more mindful of our surroundings, our place in the universe, and other January Epiphanies if we bundled up at least once during January or February, grabbed a blanket and some hot chocolate, coffee, or Irish coffee, and went out for 10-15 minutes of thoughtful star gazing on a clear night.
That is my challenge to you. But, why not make it a group venture, family activity, or a party? Maybe exchange home made presents or goodies, inexpensive but thoughtful gifts, or white elephant surprises, to Magi it up a bit. If you’d like to include related Scripture readings for your time, try Isaiah 60:3 and Matthew 2:1-12.
Below is a fantastic recipe for slow cooker hot chocolate, plus an image of a star map for January and February–for the Northern Hemisphere, (it’s most accurate during 9-10p.m. Eastern Standard Time.) For Southern Hemisphere, click here. Face in the proper direction, and find the star patterns from the map. Show or teach them to your friends, family, children, or youth group.
And please remember: If it’s cold, dress in layers, a hat, gloves, and warm coat.
Please ~ Let me know how it goes, okay?
Hot Chocolate Ingredients
2 cups whipping cream
6 cups milk, (or 4 cups milk and 2 cups half and half)
Stir together the whipping cream, milk, vanilla, and chocolate chips in a slow cooker.
Cover and cook on low for 2 to 2 1/2 hours, stirring occasionally, until mixture is hot and chocolate chips are melted. Stir again before serving. Garnish with whipped cream or other garnish, as desired.
If you try this recipe, use this map, or have a good time star gazing soon, I’d LOVE to hear about it. Who says the holidays are over?
Nah!
(Click here for another January Northern Hemisphere sky map resource)