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Last Updated: 11/17/2009

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Status: Single
City: Olympia
State: Washington
Country: US
Signup Date: 8/16/2005

Blog Archive
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Tuesday, June 23, 2009 
Monday, May 04, 2009 


http://forestpolicyresearch.org/2009/05/03/poetry-...

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You like poems? Here's some words about trees....

Friday, March 06, 2009 


http://forestpolicyresearch.org/2009/03/04/vermont...

I wrote something I'd like to share with you...

Sunday, January 11, 2009 
Saturday, July 19, 2008 

Category: Music

Hello, It's been a while since I sent you a poem but the plan is to send poems more often from now on! The lack of poems sent is because I just finished grad school and I'm doing a job search / fundraising campaign. Know any charismatic advisers willing to give me direction in my job search? Or if you'd like to donate to help keep all my forest defending projects alive: click on the donate button (upper left-hand corner of my photo-poem website.)

 

You can download an audio recording of the poem if you click on the photo of the photo-poem site. As always you can view the photo portion of the poem at: http://www.peacefromtrees.org Now here's the poem!

Ten of 28

A figment? What is that? How is it that? A figment? Imagination is so formative in its beginning, yet our awareness, our figment, it's not fluid, but quick, ever-changing, shifting. There's a needing breathing unplanning born to being… It's unfigured and unmet. Like Kangaroo hops so high it climbs up trees in remotest of remotest of remaining wild left on earth. 

And this discipline towards truth as physical reality grounds us in cause, grounds us in effect. Keeps us from falling as fast as our imaginations; keeps us steady growing climbing with each breathing living truth in seed grows of its inner-watered sense of who we are as forever, of who you are as even more real and grounded as our physical world?

All that's physical melts to is thought's illusion. It melts to essence of its energetic, distilled to its truth… Simultaneous we must also maintain a home, maintain a family, friends, lovers… A path as purposeful as Kangaroos in trees as butterflies bigger than hands, as wild not fearful, but curious. As pleased to be introduced: pleased to be on a path that remembers home!

Poem and photos by DeaneTR © 2008
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This series of 28 photo-poems are inspired by writings related to forests around the world. The poem above is inspired by the condensed news article below. If you'd like to learn more about forest issues from around the world on a regular basis subscribe to my newsletter/weblog which is called: "Earth's Tree News" earthtreenews-subscribe@lists.riseup.net or online at http://olyecology.livejournal.com
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What if together with our friends, family and acquaintances, we could probe the root causes of the biggest threats to our planet? What if we were able to grasp something of the common origins of these threats and then identify powerful entry points to interrupt them? And more than that, what if we could then feel we are shifting the destructive underlying patterns towards health? Now, that's power. Our Power. --Frances Moore Lappe's "Getting a Grip"
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An astonishing mist-shrouded "lost world" of previously unknown and rare animals and plants high in the mountain rainforests of New Guinea has been uncovered by an international team of scientists. Among the new species of birds, frogs, butterflies and palms discovered in the expedition through this pristine environment, untouched by man, was the spectacular Berlepsch's six-wired bird of paradise. The area, about 300,000 hectares, lies on the upper slopes of the Foja Mountains, in the easternmost and least explored province of western New Guinea, which is part of Indonesia. The scientists are the first outsiders to see it. They could only reach the remote mountainous area by helicopter, which they described as akin to finding a "Garden of Eden". In a jungle camp site, surrounded by giant flowers and unknown plants, the researchers watched rare bowerbirds perform elaborate courtship rituals. And we have only scratched the surface of what is there." Entomologists among the scientists identified more than 150 different species of butterfly, including four completely new species and several new sub-species, some of which are related to the common English "cabbage white" butterfly. Other butterflies observed included the rare giant birdwing, which is the world's largest butterfly, with a wingspan that stretches up to seven inches. Scientists also found more than 20 new species of frogs, four new butterflies, five new species of palm and many other plants yet to be classified, including what may be the world's largest rhododendron flower. Botanists on the team said many plants were completely unlike anything they had encountered before. Tree kangaroos, which are endangered elsewhere in New Guinea, were numerous and the team found one species entirely new to the island. The golden-mantled tree kangaroo is considered the most beautiful but also the rarest of the jungle-dwelling marsupials. There were also other marsupials, such as wallabies and mammals that have been hunted almost to extinction elsewhere. And a rare spiny anteater, the long beaked echidna, about which little is known, allowed itself to be picked up by hand. Dr Beehler said: "What was amazing was the lack of wariness of all the animals. In the wild, all species tend to be shy of humans, but that is learnt behaviour because they have encountered mankind. In Foja they did not appear to mind our presence at all. The discoveries by the team from Conservation International and the Indonesian Institute of Sciences will enhance the island's reputation as one of the most biodiverse on earth. The mountainous terrain has caused hundreds of distinct species to evolve, often specific to small areas. The Foja Mountains, which reach heights of 2,200 metres, have not been colonised by local tribes, which live closer to sea level. Game is abundant close to villages, so there is little incentive for hunters to penetrate up the slopes. A further 750,000 hectares of ancient forest is also only lightly visited. One previous scientific trip has been made to the uplands - the evolutionary biologist and ornithologist Professor Jared Diamond visited 25 years ago - but last year's mission was the first full scientific expedition. http://www.independent.co.uk/environment
/scientists-hail-discovery-of-hundreds-of-
new-species-in-remote-new-guinea-465841.html

 

Wednesday, April 30, 2008 

Current mood:  artistic
Just loaded two new live acoustic recordings into the mini-disc, no signal processing involved, just my voice into the mic!

Also loaded to my profile are 4 tracks I recorded with an awesome guitar player named chris (works at Artisan's in Oly)

Have a listen, maybe you'll want to record with us?

The process is that we record live real room sound into a mini-disc through a stereo mic.

To process the signal we're using a focus-rite class A pre-amp compressor into an Eventide Ultra-Harmonizer and adding some solid state Echoplex looper to the signal, then feeding it into the room via a pair of Mackie SRM350s and a Mackie 1501 sub-woofer that's pumped up with a DBX sub-harmonic synth...

Still trying to get everything perfectly positioned so the vocals come through louder.

Also the poems I read in the recordings are part of a collection of a 1,000 poems that I have stored on my phone. I randomly choose a poem and then try to read it aloud without screwing up....

So if you got a sound that might fit into this scheme... I'd love to record with you!

I can bring my gear to you or you can come to me!

Let me know....

Deane--
Tuesday, March 25, 2008 

Category: Art and Photography
Photobucket

Renew instead of steal, not in road’s building, in road’s removing. Return to true wealth living, breathing, revery, regrowing, everflowing-fountainous-green; meet your needs with blooms instead of massacre-slaughter-turn-around instead and roll in a dance with real life’s ecologic wheel of unending wealth.



Last villages of those who are most without? Villages where no road can reach. Their home’s wealth is to our wealth as extinguishable raw source of certain consumption.

And as land’s assurance for a long-good life for all that lives, that’s what we dispose of, what we consume so fast, so much that it’s as though we’re a race to digest what’s most rare?

Root-sourced-seed-pierced yearning of our own truth before it’s barely even known. An opposite of metal serpent eating mountain returning carving roads, hauling on roads, serpent of enterprise, of more ’modern’ desires.

Roads of our stumped-crossed webs grow nearer and nearer to the last village, the most rare…

Which side is poorest? What does each side lose? Can you see the tops of every tree still? Can you see an earth brown instead of green? Are you clutching, clinging, scratching holding off a false sense of far off poverty? Return to true wealth living, breathing, revery, regrowing, everflowing-fountainous-green!

© 2008 by DeaneTR,

----------------
This series of 28 photo-poems are inspired by recent writings related to forests around the world. The poem above is inspired by the condensed news article below.
If you’d like to learn more about forest issues from around the world on a regular basis subscribe to my newsletter / weblog which is called: "Earth’s Tree News" and can be viewed on the web at http://www. livejournal. com/users/olyecology or via email by sending a blank message to earthtreenews-subscribe@lists.riseup.net
----------------

A study has revealed the extent to which poorer countries are trampled by the huge environmental footprints of the rich. Meanwhile, the effect of poor on rich nations, such as Britain, is less than a third of the impact that the rich have on the poor. Because the global environment does not respect political borders, the impact of ecological damage wrought by one country can be felt across the world. To illustrate that point, an American team has attempted to determine which nations are driving ecological damage and which are paying the price. The study, led by former University of California, Berkeley, research fellow Thara Srinivasan, assessed the impacts of agricultural intensification and expansion, deforestation, overfishing, loss of mangrove swamps and forests, ozone depletion and climate change from 1961 to 2000. When all these impacts are added up, the portion of the footprint of high-income nations that is falling on the low-income countries is comparable to or greater than the financial debt recognised for low income countries, which has a net present value of 1.8 trillion in 2005 international dollars (International dollars are US dollars adjusted to account for the different purchasing power of different currencies.) "The ecological debt could more than offset the financial debt of low-income nations," she says.
http://www. telegraph. co. uk/earth/main. jhtml?view=DETAILS&grid=&xml=/earth/2008/01/21/earich121. xml

Before 1500 A.D., there were approximately 6 million indigenous people living in the Brazilian Amazon. But as the forests disappeared, so too did the people. In the early 1900s, there were less than 250,000 indigenous people living in the Amazon. Originally, 6 million square miles of tropical rainforest existed worldwide. But as a result of deforestation, only 2.6 million square miles remain. Nearly 90 percent of the 1.2 billion people living in extreme poverty worldwide depend on forests for their livelihoods. Fifty-seven percent of the world’s forests, including most tropical forests, are located in developing countries.A typical four square mile patch of rainforest contains as many as 1,500 flowering plants, 750 species of trees, 400 species of birds and 150 species of butterflies. Rainforests provide many important products for people: timber, coffee, cocoa and many medicinal products, including those used in the treatment of cancer. Seventy percent of the plants identified by the U.S. National Cancer Institute as useful in the treatment of cancer are found only in rainforests. More than 2,000 tropical forest plants have been identified by scientists as having anti-cancer properties. Less than one percent of the tropical rainforest species have been analyzed for their medicinal value Rainforests are threatened by unsustainable agricultural, ranching, mining and logging practices.
http://woip. blogspot. com/2008/02/rainforest-is-essential-in-fight-of. html

They say that one sign of intelligence is the ability to recognize patterns. I’m gonna lay out a pattern here and let’s see if we can recognize it in less than 6,000 years. When you think of the hills and plains of Iraq, do you normally think of cedar forests so thick the sunlight never touches the ground? That’s how it was before. The first written myth of this culture is that of Gilgamesh deforesting that area to make cities. Plato complained that deforestation was drying up springs and destroying the water quality in Greece. The forests of North Africa went down to make the Phoencian and Egyptian navies. We can go north and ask, Where are the lions who were in Greece? Where are the indigenous of Europe? They’ve been massacred, or assimilated—in any case, genocide was perpetrated against them by definition because they’re no longer there.
~Derrick Jensen http://hecatedemetersdatter. blogspot. com/2008/02/actions-speak-louder-than-words-by. html

The present paper documents the influential role played by selective moral disengagement for social practices that cause widespread human harm and degrade the environment. Disengagement of moral self-sanctions enables people to pursue detrimental practices freed from the restraint of self-censure. This is achieved by investing ecologically harmful practices with worthy purposes through social, national, and economic justifications; enlisting exonerative comparisons that render the practices righteous; use of sanitising and convoluting language that disguises what is being done; reducing accountability by displacement and diffusion of responsibility; ignoring, minimising, and disputing harmful effects; and dehumanising and blaming the victims and derogating the messengers of ecologically bad news. These psychosocial mechanisms operate at both the individual and social systems levels. Keywords: consumptive lifestyles; collective efficacy; environmental ethics; moral agency; moral disengagement; population growth; psychosocial change; self-efficacy; token gestures. Reference to this paper should be made as follows: Bandura, A. (2007) ’Impeding ecological sustainability through selective moral disengagement’, Int. J. Innovation and Sustainable Development, Vol. 2, No. 1, pp. 8–35.
http://growthmadness. org/2008/02/18/impeding-ecological-sustainability-through-selective-moral-
disengagement/

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