
Posted on by NaturalisticPaganism
The Boy Who Didn’t Believe in Autumn The peak of hurricane season comes on September 10, statistically speaking, but the season officially runs until the first of November. Hurricane formation is driven by warm water in the mid-Atlantic and the…
Read MoreCategory: A Pedagogy of Gaia, Bart Everson, Seasonal, seasonal
Posted on by NaturalisticPaganism
What can we learn, and how can we teach, from the cycles of the Earth — both the cycles within us, and the cycles in which we find ourselves? The Dog Days of Summer Do you know that time in…
Read MoreCategory: A Pedagogy of Gaia, Bart Everson, Seasonal
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What can we learn, and how can we teach, from the cycles of the Earth — both the cycles within us, and the cycles in which we find ourselves? This essay was first published at Celebration of Gaia. For Glenys…
Read MoreCategory: A Pedagogy of Gaia, Bart Everson, nature, seasonal, wonder
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In anticipation of May Day on May 1st and our new semi-seasonal theme, Practice, Bart Everson discusses the connection between spiritual and political desire. Two May Days? International Workers Day is celebrated on the first of May all around the…
Read MoreCategory: A Pedagogy of Gaia, Bart Everson Tags: anarchism, Beltane, International Worker's Day, liberation, May Day, Paganism, politics. activism, religion, spirituality, spring
Posted on by NaturalisticPaganism
How do we cultivate a “spring in the self,” a season of renewal and rebirth within. Spring and the equinox are experienced differently at different places. The body is, of course, the ultimate localization. All our dreams start here. Let’s aim to change the world, starting with ourselves.
Read MoreCategory: A Pedagogy of Gaia, Bart Everson Tags: balance, body, Carnival, equinoxes, excess, Lent, localization, noetic fertility, purification, seasons, spring, spring equinox
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