Cultivating Connections Recommends:  

Events for Metro Louisville - December 2015

Affirming Connections between Planet, People, Power and Possibilities

Table of Contents - Click to Jump to the Details
Wednesday the 2nd * Louisville Sustainability Forum: Air Pollution and Heart Disease
Thursday the 3rd * No Methane Rally - Environmental Justice for West Louisville
Sunday the 6th & 13th * The Guest House at Hotel Louisville
Monday the 7th * Compassionate Louisville Community Town Hall Meeting
Monday the 7th * Walking with Respect for All: Pope Francis's Wisdom Letter
Sunday the 13th * Potluck Dinner with the Louisville TimeBank
Monday the 14th * Kentuckians for the Commonwealth's Holiday Party and Potluck
Tuesday the 15th * Greater Louisville Sierra Club Winter Potluck
Saturday the 19th * Fungus Among Us at Louisville Nature Center
Saturday the 19th * Winter Eco-Justice Worship "Climate and Community
Monday the 21st * Winter Solstice Sacred Celebration
Monday the 21st * Social Change Book Club: The Art of Stillness by Pico Iyer
Monday the 28th - Wednesday the 30th * PeaceCasters Winter Video-making Camp
Photos and Video from 350 Louisville representing at the Light Up Louisville Parade
Community FORward Radio Fundraiser Happening Now
Earth Elder Thomas Berry at 101 by Drew Dellinger

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Wednesday, December 2, 12:15pm 
Louisville Sustainability Forum
Passionist Earth and Spirit Center
(located behind St Agnes Church at 1920 Newburg Road)

Featured presentation:
* Air Pollution and Heart Disease
Aruni Bhatnagar, Ph.D., Diabetes and Obesity Center
Division of Cardiovascular Medicine, UofL

Accumulating evidence indicates that an increase in particulate air pollution is associated with an increase in heart attacks and deaths. Research has begun in the relatively new field of environmental cardiology -- a field that examines the relationship between air pollution and heart disease.

Dr. Aruni Bhatnagar, a Smith and Lucille Gibson Professor of Medicine at the University of Louisville, has spent more than 25 years studying the impact of toxic substances, tobacco smoke constituents and environmental pollutants on heart disease.

He is a graduate of Kanpur University, India and received his post-doctoral training at the University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston. Dr. Bhatnagar is known for his work on the metabolism of toxic substances in ambient air and tobacco smoke, and how they affect the development of cardiovascular disease and diabetes.

Shorter presentations:
* Coalition for a Sustainable West Louisville   
Martina Kunnecke, Neighborhood, Planning & Preservation
* Energy Project Assessment Districts  (EPAD)
Janet Lively,  Harshaw Trane

Now in its seventh year, the purposes of the Louisville Sustainability Forum are:
1. We hold and promote the intention of sustainability for Louisville.
2. We establish and nourish relationships that strengthen
community and create change.
3. We create a space for discussion that inspires, motivates and deepens
our ability to catalyze social change.

Food & drink:
Feel free to bring a bag lunch. If you'd like to prepare extra food or drink to share with others, that is always welcome!
 

 

Thursday, December 3, 5pm
No Methane Rally - Environmental Justice for West Louisville
Mayor's Office Steps, 527 West Jefferson Street

Some perspective on this important environmental justice issue is offered by KFTC members Ryan Fenwick & Cassia Herron in a Courier-Journal opinion piece.
Read it here.

The rally is immediately followed by a related 6pm Business and Zoning Meeting.
 

  
Sunday December 6th and Sunday December 13 at 5pm
The Guest House
Hosted at Hotel Louisville
120 West Broadway at 2nd Street

The Guest House is an emerging community that celebrates and supports the totality of the human experience. All people and wisdom are welcome.

The Guest House continues their 6-week series, "Exploring Compassion" Sunday, December 6th (featured wisdom teacher Katie Gaughn) and 13th (featured wisdom teacher Vanessa Hurst), 5:00pm at Hotel Louisville (120 West Broadway).

For six weeks we will explore the theme of compassion. From the "brain and compassion" to "compassion and justice." Join us as scientists, artists, activists, wisdom teachers and musicians explore the theme of compassion.
 
The Guest House...

...where all worldviews, from agnostic to atheist to faith-professing, are respected...

...where all experiences, from mundane to exotic, from painful to joyful, are embraced...

...where all talents, from those newly discovered to those well-developed, are appreciated...

...where all voices, from not-ready-to-speak to shaky to steady, are honored...

...where being human is enough.

At the guest house we weave together the diverse gifts and wisdom of our community, creating the space for the emergence of collective insight and knowledge, which then guides us in our individual journey of being fully human and our collective journey of being a flourishing community, city and planet.
 

Monday, December 7, 6 -7:30pm 
Compassionate Louisville Community Town Hall Meeting 
YMCA Safe Place, 2400 Crittenden Drive, 40217
Parking is behind the building.
Go one block beyond building and turn right on
Reed and right on Bowman and into the parking lot.   


Experience compassion in action!  Each month we invite you on a pilgrimage to discover the city's often hidden compassion gems. Once at the site, we will share the mission of the host organization, celebrate the newest organizations to have adopted a compassion resolution, share how Compassionate Louisville is encouraging compassionate action, and provide a forum for you and others to share their compassionate actions.
 
Everyone is invited! Bring a Friend! No RSVP required.

Support Safe Place's work by bringing donation items! 
Donation item for their program participants:
Warm Gloves for 15 males and 20 female - warmth vs fashion
Socks for men: white and black
Socks for women: choice of colors
Flashlights (extra batteries)

YMCA Safe Place Services:

When youth, teens and young adults in crisis need somewhere to stay, someone to trust or someone to listen, YMCA Safe Place Services of Louisville is here to help - every day, around the clock. With a focus on positive youth development, our cause is to strengthen families by breaking cycles of violence, abuse and turmoil and giving children and families the resources they need for a better future. 

From youth mentoring and family mediation services to street outreach initiatives and trauma-informed care, YMCA Safe Place Services has redefined how our community addresses the needs of youth who are at risk of running away, becoming homeless or engaging with the justice system.

Questions: Contact Mary Sullivan, (502)292-6154 or mary.sullivan@metrounitedway.org
 
Through intention and social innovation, Compassionate Louisville creates 
and celebrates a community and world becoming more and more compassionate.

The mission of the Partnership for a Compassionate Louisville is to 
champion and nurture the growth of compassion.

You Are Helping to Build A
A Compassionate Louisville!



Monday, December, 7,  6:30 to 8:00pm
Walking with Respect for All: Pope Francis' Wisdom Letter
Drepung Gomang Center for Engaging Compassion
411 N. Hubbards Lane, 40207

Why all the interest in Pope Francis' letter to the world?  Why do people of all religious traditions think it is worth examining?
 
Fr. Jim Flynn and Tim Darst bring an informative presentation on Pope Francis' letter to the world about care for Earth and all people.  This presentation, though reflecting on Earth Care from the perspective of a Catholic Christian document, provides a compelling message for people of all faith traditions.   In addition to developing a deeper understanding of  the Pope's encyclical called Laudato Si', participants of Walking with Respect for All will learn how they can take practical steps to care for Creation through energy audits, efficient lighting, reduced water use, careful recycling and more.

Fr. Jim Flynn, a Catholic priest, offers a down-to-earth approach to learning and understanding the teachings of Pope Francis's most recent work while Tim Darst, Executive Director of Kentucky IPL, provides meaningful action ideas for faith communities to become better stewards of the planet.
 

 
Sunday, December 13, 6pm - 8pm
Louisville TimeBank Potluck Dinner
Highlands Community Campus, 1228 E Breckenridge St, 40204

Potlucks are a big part of the TimeBank community. We come together to share food, fun and build community all at the same time. Members get to know each other, and people who are not members can learn a bit about timebanking from chatting with our members at the potluck. Many exchanges get set up at our potlucks too!

We always encourage members to bring guests, and all community members are welcome too!

PLEASE BRING: a dish that serves twelve and your own table service to make clean up easier (if you forget, there is plenty to borrow from the kitchen).  The parking lot is behind the building, with the entrance to the parking off of Barrett Avenue.
 
 
Monday, December 14, 6:30pm - 8pm
Kentuckians for the Commonwealth's
Holiday Party and Potluck
First Unitarian Church, 809 S Fourth Street


We invite you to join KFTC members and allies from Jefferson County and surrounding areas for our annual Holiday Party & Potluck. Bring a friend and a sweet or savory dish to share, or just bring yourself and come celebrate another amazing year. We'll play games, make holiday crafts, dance, celebrate KFTC's work, and look ahead to 2015. There will be an Ugly Sweater Decoration Station so BYOS (bring your own sweater/shirt/sweatshirt to decorate).
 

  
 
Tuesday, December 15, 6pm
Greater Louisville Sierra Club Winter Potluck
Locust Grove, 561 Blankenbaker Lane

The Greater Louisville Sierra Club will host their traditional Winter Solstice Celebration on Tuesday, December 15, 6:00 p.m. at historic Locust Grove, 561 Blankenbaker Lane, Louisville, KY (for directions see www.locust-grove.org).

It is a potluck event but we will provide drinks and a main meat dish.  Please join us for a casual dinner and engaging fellowship as we celebrate the successes of 2015, wrap up a challenging and productive year, and welcome special guests.

We'll return to the Clifton Center for our monthly program on Tuesday, January 19.

Greater Louisville Sierra Club's programs are always
free and open to the public.

Please join us.


 
Saturday, December 19, 10:30am - 12:30pm
Fungus Among Us: A Nature's Works and Quirks Program
Louisville Nature Center, 3745 Illinois Ave, 40213

Join Naturalist Kerry Jones and learn about the fascinating world of
mushrooms and fungi. Did you know that some are carnivorous?
There will be an indoor presentation followed by a hike (3/4 mile).

Suggested for folks 12 and older!

Louisville Nature Center members and volunteers free
Non-members, $4 per person; families of four or more, $15
Limited to 25 participants

Louisville Nature Center
502-458-1328
502-458-0232 fax

 
  

Saturday, December 19, 5pm
Winter Eco-Justice Worship "Climate and Community"
(followed by optional community potluck)
Crescent Hill Presbyterian Church, 142 Crescent Ave, back building

We will gather during dusk on this winter solstice weekend, reflecting together on what it means to be community in a time of climate change. Who are we called to be, and become, personally and with other people and with all the world around? Who is our neighbor, and what is required of us?

We will sing, stretch, share stories, lament, and celebrate together. Rebecca will share reflections from her trip to the Paris COP 21 United Nations conference, Mary will share about regional and Kentucky environmental justice issues, and Jamil will reflect on local issues. Chris and Brad will help us worship through music, and those who wish will craft community art throughout the service.
.

   
Monday, December 21st, 7pm - 8:30pm
Winter Solstice Sacred Celebration
Unity of Louisville, 757 South Brook Street, Main Sanctuary

Join us for this evening of reflection, story, and ceremony celebrating the longest of nights and our collective journey into the dark silence of winter.

Sharing the evening with us are members of the emerging spiritual community known as The Guest House.  We welcome their presence and participation!

This years celebration will be held in the church sanctuary (rather than the activities center) which is fully accessible by the College Street entrance. 


 
Monday, December 21st 6pm
The Social Change Book Club presents
The Art of Stillness: Adventures in Going Nowhere by Pico Iyer
Heine Bros. Coffee, 119 Chenoweth Lane, St Matthews
 
The Art of Stillness considers the unexpected adventure of staying put and reveals a counter intuitive truth: The more ways we have to connect, the more we seem desperate to unplug.
 
In our madly accelerating world, our lives are crowded, chaotic and noisy. There's never been a greater need to slow down, tune out and give ourselves permission to be still. Pico Iyer, a lifelong traveler who has journeyed from Easter Island to Ethiopia, Cuba to Kathmandu, thinks that sitting quietly in a room might be the ultimate adventure.

In The Art of Stillness - a TED Books release - Iyer investigate the lives of people who have made a life seeking stillness: from Matthieu Ricard, a Frenchman with a PhD in molecular biology who left a promising scientific career to become a Tibetan monk, to revered singer-songwriter Leonard Cohen, who traded the pleasures of the senses for several years of living the near-silent life of meditation as a Zen monk.

The Social Change Book Club is now in its ninth year of monthly meetings. It is open to everyone who is interested in understanding, participating, leading, or supporting social change. Each month we select a book and get together to discuss. Selections rotate among three themes: social changes, how we work with others to make change happen, and the inner qualities needed to bring change into the world.

Hosted by Howard Mason

 
  
Monday, December 28 - Wednesday, December 30 9am-3:30pm
PeaceCasters Winter Video-making Camp
Central Church, 318 West Kentucky Street, 40203

Youth 12 - 17 are invited to join us for this 3-day camp where we will create our own news program featuring short videos about youth and peacemakers in our community who are helping to create a better world. This camp is for those interested in both video and peacemaking. Participants must be ready and willing to interact in small groups. Plan on bringing a friend or two to explore your role as citizen journalists and ""making media that matters".

Fee $35 - Scholarships Offered.
Hosted by Peace Education Program
Contact: Mark Steiner at mark@peaceeducationprogram.org or 502-589-6583


Click to watch this short video

.


350 Louisville took the lead on representing the climate movement
and the call to a transition to clean energy at this
year's Light Up Louisville Parade.

You can see a video (linked below) and photos here!

Paris in our Hearts - Climate in Our Hands:  350 Louisville at Light Up Louisville
Paris in our Hearts - Climate in Our Hands: 350 Louisville at Light Up Louisville




From a letter by Victory Strange in support of FORward Radio

Hello, friends near and far!  In the spirit of fostering peace, love, and understanding (and couldn't this world use a lot more of that?!?), I'm brazenly inserting myself into your inbox to ask you to help us launch a community radio station here in Louisville. 

WFMP/FORward Radio will provide a platform for local voices.  Just think - instead of shoutfests, you can listen to civil and enlightening discussions of issues, lots of great local music that you won't hear anywhere else, coverage of the many exciting things happening in Louisville that are somehow never mentioned in the mainstream media, shows about Louisville's vibrant arts scene, shows that will make you laugh, shows that will make you think, shows that may even bring a tear to your eyes ... the possibilities are endless!  
 
I'm part of a group that's been working for about three years to make the station a reality.  We've applied for and received our authorization to build the station from the Federal Communications Commission and are nearing our deadline of mid-April, 2016 to get on the air.  We've got a studio in place, we're training people to produce programs, and we're working very hard to raise the funds we need to get on the air - hence this Indiegogo crowd-funding appeal.

Feel free to check out our website, www.forward-radio.net, and if you're in Louisville, we'd love for you to come visit the studio.  It's located at the First Unitarian Church in downtown Louisville (at Fourth and York - across from the main library).  Just get in touch with us first (via the website or send me an e-mail), as we're not in the studio around the clock.
 
Your contribution is fully tax-deductible - and every little bit helps!  We only need $20 from 500 people to meet our goal for this current fundraiser -- and get on the air!  If we're successful in raising at least $4,000, we'll receive a matching grant from the Unitarian Church, which means the impact of your donation will be doubled.  So please - click on the link below to visit our crowdfunding site  http://igg.me/at/wfmp/x/11778714
 
Thank you!  -  Victoria (Tory) Strange





 
THOMAS BERRY 101  by Drew Dellinger
  
In honor of the 101st birthday of ecological and cosmological writer, thinker, and teacher, Thomas Berry (1914-2009), here's a brief overview of some of his ideas. There is much to explore in his works, such as The Dream of the Earth (1988), The Great Work (1999), or The Sacred Universe (2009), on Twitter at @EssentialBerry, and on the web at ThomasBerry.org, but here are six insights from Berry to get you started: Thomas Berry 101, for Tom's 101st birthday.


  1. THE DEVASTATION OF THE PLANET
 
For decades Thomas Berry was a tireless teacher and prophetic voice addressing the ecological crisis, the mass extinction of species, and the future consequences of our unrelenting and often irreversible destruction of Earth's biosphere. The Big News on the planet, as Berry saw it, was that humans were terminating the Cenozoic Period, unraveling the last 65 million years of Earth's evolutionary flourishing. "We are working with what is perhaps the most precious reality in the universe--the Earth--and we are spoiling it," he said.
 
When Berry spoke about the grandeur of the Earth, and the significance of what was being lost, you felt it in your soul. At Prescott College in 1992, he brought listeners to tears as he described the industrial assault on the planet and nearly whispered in his wavering voice, "Earth is precious. Species are precious... Reverence will be total or it will not be at all."
 
"The twentieth century has created a serious problem for the twenty-first century," Thomas said. "The next ten generations are going to pay endlessly for what previous generations have done to the water supply, to the soils, to the seeds that grow the food."
 
In Berry's view, to understand the destruction of the planet, and how to build a viable future, one had to understand the cultural story of Western society, and the power of worldview and cosmology.


  2. COSMOLOGY
 
Tom Berry's favorite word was cosmology, and he was laser-focused on the significance of worldview, story, cultural narrative, and religious orientation in understanding the deep roots of the ecological crisis.
 
As early as 1978 Berry articulated the eco-social crisis of modern Western culture by saying, "It's all a question of story. We are in trouble just now because we do not have a good story. We are in between stories. The old story, the account of how the world came to be and how we fit into it, is no longer effective. Yet we have not learned the new story."
 
In Tom's view, the cosmos story and the Earth story constitute our new revelation of the divine. "It's enormously important for us to know the story of the universe, and it's the only way in which we're going to know who we are." "To tell the story of anything," he remarked, "you have to tell the story of everything."
 
For Berry, it was imperative that modern culture reinvent its cosmology, honor Indigenous wisdom, and ecofeminist wisdom, and transform the mechanistic, materialistic modern worldview that, with its anthropocentrism and radical split between humans and nature, is destroying the garden planet of the known universe.
 
Twenty-eight years after writing the essay, "The New Story," when I interviewed him in 2006, Berry was still grappling with the significance of cosmology and worldview. "It's not easy to describe what cosmology is," he told me. "It's neither religion nor is it science. It's a mode of knowing."
 
"The only thing that will save the twenty-first century is cosmology," he said as we had lunch in North Carolina on a December day. "The only thing that will save anything is cosmology."


  3. EVERY BEING IS A MODE OF THE EARTH / UNIVERSE
 
To inhabit Thomas Berry's cosmological vision is to see the whole unfolding symphony of species as a unified bio-spiritual expression of the Earth and universe itself, blossoming into self-awareness and celebration through manifold forms. When the eyeball evolves, the Earth is seeing itself. When Jimi Hendrix, Mozart, and Nina Simone reach the heights of artistic genius, the planet is performing. This is a subtle but powerful perceptual shift from seeing the 'parts' to seeing the organic wholeness. Every phenomenon on the Earth is a manifestation of the Earth. The cascading panoply of forms in the universe is a single, seamless display of cosmic creativity. The Earth flies, swims, and loves when Earthlings do; the galaxies write sonnets in the hearts of poets.


  4. HUMANS ARE THE EARTH / UNIVERSE REFLECTING ON AND CELEBRATING ITSELF
 
This cosmological context can renew our sense of the human and our role in the whole unfolding. Thomas Berry defines the human as, "that being in whom the universe reflects on and celebrates itself, and its numinous origin, in a special mode of conscious self-awareness."
 
Our job is celebration, not war, consuming, or drudgery, but to activate the capacities of the creativity-filled universe in human form.


  5. THE UNIVERSE STORY CREATES A CONTEXT FOR EDUCATION
 
When Thomas Berry spoke at Prescott College in Arizona in 1992, he challenged universities to overcome the split between the sciences and the humanities by unifying their curriculum within the overarching context of the universe story. College "should be a place that celebrates the universe," he said, "that celebrates the deep mystery of things, in a meaningful way."
 
Presaging the current interest in "Big History," Berry stated, "Human history has to be put into Earth history, has to be put into universe history, into a cosmology."
 
In a 1991 dialogue, published as Befriending the Earth, Berry states, "What is education? Education is knowing the story of the universe, how it began, how it came to be as it is, and the human role in the story. There is nothing else. We need to know the story, the universe story, in all its resonances, in all its meanings. The universe story is the divine story, the human story, the story of the trees, the story of the rivers, of the stars, the planets, everything. It is as simple as a kindergarten tale, yet as complex as all cosmology and all knowledge and all history.... It gives a new context for education."


  6. THE UNIVERSE IS A COMMUNION OF SUBJECTS & EVERY BEING HAS RIGHTS
 
Thomas Berry often taught that, "Ecology is functioning cosmology." Living responsibly in a connected, breathing cosmos requires that we recognize the sacred rights of every being, and embody reverence and respect as much as possible in our society. In this way, cosmology becomes the context and foundation for our work towards ecological healing and social and economic justice. "Every being has rights," Berry taught, because fundamentally, "
the universe is a communion of subjects, not a collection of objects."

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