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Trebbe Johnson's
Newsletter
April 2010
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Dear Questers, Friends, and
Seekers of the Beloved,
On each
Bali From Within
journey our connections with
the Balinese people deepen,
and more opportunities to
penetrate behind the surface
of that fascinating culture
open up. It always amazes me
that Bali has managed to
maintain its religious,
cultural, and artistic
traditions
(all of which are
intertwined), even though it
is the only Hindu island
among the 17,500 that
compose the Indonesian
archipelago, and even though
it was a Dutch colony for a
hundred years. Anyone who
loves travel as a way to
discover clues for living a
wiser, more connected, more
meaningful life (as I
certainly do) finds
inspiration in this
beautiful, richly textured,
intriguing place.
To those who are receiving
this newsletter for the
first time... welcome! Here
you'll find
profiles of extraordinary
people, news
of upcoming
Vision Arrow
events, updates on the
non-profit organization
Radical Joy for Hard Times
that I founded in 2009,
reflections, and stories of
transformation that occur
when we accept, in small,
bold, startling ways the
invitations that the world
is always sending us.
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MONSTERS, QUIET, BREAKFAST
ON THE STREET: NEW YEAR
IN BALI
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

New Year, or Nyepi,
in Bali is an event that
lasts several days, and we
were able to participate in
all the festivities. A day
or two before the actual
event, members of every
village on the island dress
up in their temple clothes
and, taking along their
local gamelan orchestra and
the small statues or masks
that are sacred to that
particular village, head to
the sea for a symbolic
cleansing ceremony and
blessing.
Later in the afternoon,
everyone gathers in the
center of the village for a
grand procession to chase
the demons out of town. The
demons are called
ogoh-ogoh, and they
represented by large,
skillfully and imaginatively
constructed statues of
papier maché or sponge
that local people work on
for weeks in advance. With
children leading the
procession, women following
with offerings on their
heads, young men hefting the
ogoh-ogoh on litters
made of thick bamboo, and
the clamor of drums and
gongs, the procession winds
through the village making
as much noise as possible to
scare off the monsters.
The following day, this year
March 16, is Nyepi itself, a
day of silence (even the
international airport shuts
down), so the demons will
think that the island is
deserted. The members of our
small group spent the day
much as the Balinese do:
quietly, not going outside
the compound of our small
hotel, keeping the
electricity off, reflecting.
Towards evening we got
together and had a long
talking council to discuss
the previous year--what we
were happy about, what we
might have done better, and
what we had learned to
prepare us for the year
ahead.
The following day people
visit relatives, eat, and
celebrate. Some of the
mountain towns of northern
Bali, like Munduk, where we
spent the holiday, have a
tradition all their own. We
met our guide, Nyoman
"Mangkok" Sutaruya, at 3:00
AM and walked into the
village, where families were
cooking food in simple ovens
made of piled bricks with a
few sticks of wood shoved
into them and a pot balanced
on top. Since lighting fires
is not allowed on Nyepi,
this custom of cooking on
the street is a way of
gradually introducing fire
back into the house. We ate
breakfast with Mangkok's
family as techno music
blared from a boombox
nearby, frogs sang in the
rice paddies, small boys set
off fireworks, elderly women
squatted beside their
braziers to roast chicken,
and people greeted each
other jubilantly.
We had such a wonderful time
that
Bali From Within
2011 will once again be
timed to correspond with
Nyepi. Mark your
calendars: March 29-April
10! |
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TAKSU: DIVINE CHARISMA
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
In Bali, everyone is born
with a guna, a gift
of some kind. What makes
this gift come alive in a
way that exceeds even the
best that a talented woman
or man can do is taksu,
the divine spark that must
enter the person and ignite
that gift, make it dance
like fire. Balinese
musicians, dancers, and
actors are especially
conscious of their taksu,
for they need it to enchant
both the gods and the humans
who make up their audiences.
As Rucina Ballinger, an
American-born dancer who has
lived in Bali since 1974 and
is married to a Balinese man
(she is also our guide in
Ubud, the artistic hub of
Bali), writes in her book,
Balinese Dance, Drama and
Music:
"Taksu... has little to do
with technical precision, as
there are performers who are
perfect in their execution
but lack that extra
something, while there are
those less killed who are
able to bind their audience
to them. Taksu can be passed
down from a parent to a
child or from a teacher to a
pupil. A performer can have
taksu at one performance and
the following night fall
flat. A mask can possess
taksu and assist the actor
in making it come alive. An
entire gamelan orchestra can
possess taksu regardless of
who plays in it."
Within every family temple
there is a shrine to the
taksu, and the family
makes offerings to it each
day. You can't take your
taksu for granted.
On my
Facebook page the other
day, I wrote about taksu
and asked when others feel
their divine charisma flame.
Here are two wonderful
responses:
From Kate Forsyth
(Maryland): "When passion
fills me to capacity and
overflows with something
beyond love, beyond the
physical, beyond symbols, it
roars forth like the river I
hear now outside my window
and takes over and I'm so
gone, gone, gone..."
From Maria Celaya (Spain):
"Every day I find a new
experience, or thing I see,
hear, acknowledge some way
that fills my Taksu flame
for life."
How do you take care of
your taksu?
Photo by James Samanen
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RADICAL
JOY FOR HARD TIMES NEWS
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Excitement is building for
our
Global Earth Exchange on
June 19! Among the "wounded
places" where people will be
holding gatherings are a
West Virginia mountain
destroyed by strip mining
and mountaintop removal; a
clearcut forest in Oregon; a
decommissioned nuclear power
plant on Long Island, New
York; a river in Vermont,
where a Micmac elder will
join a ritual dancer in
leading a ceremony; and a
mountain in Germany that in
pre-Christian times was
considered the home of the
Earth Mother and during the
Cold War housed U.S. spy
technology.
The Global Earth Exchange is
also attracting supporters.
Nipun Mehta, who
pioneered the idea of the
Gift Economy, where people
give to others out of joy
and compassion without
expectation of reward or
compensation, and whose work
has been written up in
numerous publications, wrote
me: "What a great project
you're doing! We're going to
send out links to your site
to about 10 thousand folks
subscribed to our social
media channels."
Glenn Albrecht was
profiled in a recent article
in the New York Times
Magazine for his coining
of the word solastalgia
to mean "the pain
experienced when there is
recognition that the place
where one resides and that
one loves is under immediate
assault." He will
participate in the Global
Earth Exchange in Hunter
Valley, southeastern
Australia, where coal mining
is causing pollution,
extreme noise, and constant
bright lights.
Our goal is to have 100
Earth Exchanges taking place
all over the world on June
19.
You can join the network and
call attention to a wounded
place you love! See our
website for details. You
will receive a free T-shirt,
Radical Joy for Hard Times
flag, and other support and,
most important, you will
become part of a pioneering
new environmental activism
based on community,
compassion, and creativity.
Creating a sustainable,
thriving future on Earth
depends on opening our
hearts to the natural world
in its brokenness as well as
its splendor.
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AN HONOR FROM
PARABOLA
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Last week I was honored to
be invited by the
editor-in-chief of
Parabola Magazine,
Jeff Zaleski, to be on their
board of Consulting Editors.
I discovered Parabola,
"The Magazine of Myth and
Tradition," in the fall of
1984, and I couldn't believe
that such a marvelous
magazine had been in
existence for eleven years
without my having known
about it. After my first
vision quest in 1988, my
first "concrete and specific
act" to bring my vision to
my people was to contact
Parabola about an
article idea. This was a
terrifying prospect--I
didn't believe I was worthy
of writing for such an
esteemed publication. That
article was published in
1989 in the issue on "The
Mountain" (each of the
quarterly issues has a
theme), and the founder and
then editor, D.M. Dooling,
invited me to have lunch
with her. Since then I have
published many articles in
the magazine, and it
continues to be not only my
favorite magazine, but an
endlessly fresh source of
wisdom, great myths
beautifully told, and
inspiration. I am truly
honored to be a Consulting
Editor.
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TAKSU IN ACTION
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Speaking of taksu
(see second story above), if
you want to see it in
action, watch this video of
Hiromi, a young Japanese
jazz pianist who plays as if
her piano is her lover. She
bounces up and down, reaches
into the piano to mute the
keys with one hand while
continuing to play with the
other. She whispers, she
closes her eyes, she breaks
into a grin.
In the interview, with NPR
All Things Considered
host Guy Raz, she plays one
of her own compositions,
"Choux a la Crême," a piece
she wrote about eating a
cream puff. She explains how
the idea came to her: "Well,
I was just walking down the
street in France, and I was
looking for a bakery. And
when you're aiming for
something that you love,
your happiness level just
goes up every minute. And
when I find a bakery, it
steps up again, you know.
Then, when I find the cream
puff itself, I'm so happy.
And when I have it, I'm
fulfilled with happiness.
And when it's gone, I'm sad.
It's quite an adventure."
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UPCOMING EVENTS
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My book,
The World Is a Waiting Lover,
with a foreword by Thomas
Moore, author of
Care of the Soul, is
available from
Amazon.com or from your
favorite bookstore.
UPCOMING PROGRAMS
Upside of the Downturn
The telephone "round table"
discussion of our
relationship with money is
back for its fifth
incarnation. If it seems
impossible to you that an
exploration of the thorny,
troubling subject of money
be a warm, searching, even
fun exploration... think
again.
Upside of the Downturn
does not provide advice
about money; it invites you
to explore your own
relationship with money as a
dynamic with a long history,
deeply embedded attitudes,
and vast possibilities for
change. We already have one
person signed up for the new
round, so email me if you
would like to participate.
Cost: $95
Program is full. Watch for
the next round of Upside of
the Downturn.
Path of the Lover Workshops
This popular workshop, based
on my book about love and
desire and how we can bring
it more consciously into our
lives, shows you how the
many different paths of love
in your life are really all
connected--and part of the
dynamic inner force called
the Beloved.
You will:
-
Connect with the
archetypal Beloved in
you, that knows how to
say YES to what you love
-
Discover how your past
loves (including those
that didn't work out)
were essential in
opening you up to a
bigger capacity to love
-
Learn to recognize the
inner voice of the
"loyal soldier" that
wants to hold you back
from following your
heart
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See how
-
fascination and
allurement have led you
all onto important paths
This year the workshop will
be offered in five
locations:
April 30-May 2: Cincinnati
(contact
Tom Rubens)
May 7-9: Gainesville,
Florida (contact
Martin Goldberg)
July 30-August 2: Seattle
(contact
Ruth Dow Rogers)
November 12-14:
Schloss Glarisegg, Lake
Constance, Switzerland (contact
Silvia Figel)
November 19-21:
Eschwege Institute,
Eschwege, Germany
Endless Mountains Vision
Quest
This four-day program, held
in a secluded 400-acre
nature preserve, is
specially designed for those
who seek a meaningful rite
of passage in a beautiful,
yet accessible place. You
explore many of the same
processes and practices as
in the longer vision quest,
but with a focus on reading
Nature's lessons and
discovering how they apply
to your own path in life.
For the twenty-four-hour
solo you may choose from
among diverse ecological
niches: glacial pond,
meadow, wetlands, stream, or
forest. Minimal backpacking.
$605
What Now?
The time comes when everyone
who has quested for a vision
or in some other way worked
to bring a vision into the
world needs to re-explore
what happened and how the
insights of that experience
relate to your current life.
During this week-long
retreat, held in old-growth
Joyce Kilmer Memorial Forest
in North Carolina, you'll
explore what about your
original vision still has
heart and meaning... clarify
where you are right now and
what you are called to
contribute to your community
and your planet... and
discover how you can reshape
your vision to feed your own
joy and the world's hunger
for meaningful change. There
will be a one-day solo in
the ancient forest. &1,050
For a complete list of
programs offered by Vision
Arrow, see our
website.
Call 570 727 4272 or
email
Trebbe if you have questions
or would like to talk about
any of these programs.
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