Last month, after calling myself the Queen of Stuck, I read, “If you’re stuck, clean your house.”
For a week, my days started by noticing A Messy Area…and cleaning it. Wowsers—I felt so much better. I also found gems in the piles.
This morning, after two weeks of resting on old laurels (not cleaning), I again got the message to clean up.
I gave twenty minutes to it, and I feel better again.
And now I have three nourishing and inspiring pieces to share:
President Kennedy’s extraordinary June 10, 1963 Speech at American University. Here are excerpts from the speech:
1. World peace is the most important topic on earth–something on which ignorance abounds and the truth is too rarely heard. Education is needed.
2. Anyone who despairs of war and desires peace has a responsibility to contribute. This can begin by looking inward and examining our own attitudes toward peace, the Cold War, the “other,” as well as peace and justice in our own society.
3. True peace is not a Pax Americana imposed on the world by weapons of war. True peace makes life better for everyone. Everyone’s security concerns must be taken into account.
4. Peace is a process, a way of solving problems. World peace, like community peace, does not require that we all love each other, but that we agree to live together in mutual tolerance, submitting our disputes to a just arbiter. World peace does not require a revolution in human nature, but an evolution in human institutions. The UN is a critical venue for fostering peace. It needs to be strengthened as a democratic forum.
5. While the eventual goal is a complete end to war and complete general disarmament, focusing solely on this goal only invites discouragement. It is critical to grasp what can be done now, that can give momentum to the peace process and provide people with hope. What can we do today?
6. No people, nation or system is so evil that they are without value. Our attitude is as important as theirs. Our most basic common link is that we all inhabit this small planet; we all breathe the same air; we all cherish our children’s future; and we are all mortal. Reject enemy images. Seek to understand. Take the trouble to learn what the other side is actually saying. Find common interests.
7. In the nuclear age, peace is a necessity. It is critical that we conduct ourselves in a way that encourages the other side to want to cooperate with us and avoids confrontations in which either side’s only options are humiliating defeat or the use of nuclear weapons.
Partners in survival–Not Enemies. Win/Win–Not Win/Lose.
8. There is no simple key, no grand solution. Peace is the result of many acts. Everyone has something to contribute.
9. Peace and justice are connected. “Peace is the order that flows from social justice.” Attend to justice and peace in our own communities.
10. The pursuit of peace is not as dramatic as the pursuit of war; and calls for peace often fall on deaf ears, but we must persist. In the final analysis, peace is a human right–the right to live out our lives without the threat of annihilation, the right to a sustainable world for ourselves, our children, and future generations. No one will give us our human rights. We must organize and work to achieve them. Find allies and build solidarity.
Here’s a petition to resurrect President Kenndy’s Foreign Policy of Peace.
REGENERATING FORESTS TO CLEAN UP PLANETARY MESSES
Alistair Alexander’s newsletter about reclaimed systems recently features “12 things I learned in Bialowiesa, Europe’s most ancient forest.” Alexander explains that we need Tree-Time…not TikTok time. “And if we absolutely have to measure success, instead of gross domestic product, maybe we can obsess over our numbers of wild bison and wolves and fungi varieties.”
CALMING BEHAVIOR IN CHILDREN WITH AUTISM & ADD
As school starts up again, please share pediatrician Dr. Toril Jelter’s free, EMR-reducing protocol far and wide! Calming Behavior in Children with Autism and ADD
Thanks, Katie. Yeah "Tree-Time"! As a poet, for a while i have appreciated the following JFK quote: "If more politicians knew poetry, and more poets knew politics, I am convinced the world would be a little better place in which to live."