Earth to Poetry Quotes
Earth to Poetry: A 30-Days, 30-Poems Earth, Self, and Other Care Challenge: Masters in Fine Living Series
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L.L. Barkat6 ratings, 4.17 average rating, 1 review
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Earth to Poetry Quotes
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“Earth care, as it turns out, is really about self-care and other-care. What we design today impacts how we live tomorrow. For better or for worse, it impacts far into upcoming generations.”
― Earth to Poetry: A 30-Days, 30-Poems Earth, Self, and Other Care Challenge
― Earth to Poetry: A 30-Days, 30-Poems Earth, Self, and Other Care Challenge
“I don’t want to talk to us about what we can’t do. I want to talk to us about what we can do. And what we can do, if we are going to do it with some level of aplomb and commitment, needs to stem from love...”
― Earth to Poetry: A 30-Days, 30-Poems Earth, Self, and Other Care Challenge
― Earth to Poetry: A 30-Days, 30-Poems Earth, Self, and Other Care Challenge
“Whenever we face challenges, we have the privilege of framing them in words—words that express our hopes, our losses, our dreams; words that transform our personal vision or the world's. These words can become a source of sustenance and discovery, for the sometimes long work of bringing to birth necessary change.”
― Earth to Poetry: A 30-Days, 30-Poems Earth, Self, and Other Care Challenge
― Earth to Poetry: A 30-Days, 30-Poems Earth, Self, and Other Care Challenge
“Love certainly draws us on, making learning feel more like discovery and making work feel worth it, even when that work doesn’t exactly feel like play.”
― Earth to Poetry: A 30-Days, 30-Poems Earth, Self, and Other Care Challenge
― Earth to Poetry: A 30-Days, 30-Poems Earth, Self, and Other Care Challenge
“When we begin a deeper journey into earth care, sometimes we are struck by the breadth of ruin, even ugliness, that it is our challenge to recover and redeem.
While it is very necessary to acknowledge the true problems that call on our creative solutions, a continual focus on the difficulties can damage our own souls over time. Putting into place a daily or weekly practice of 'looking for the lovely thing,' can help sustain us and keep us creative—for, it is in a spirit of gratitude, hope and creativity that we can maintain our energy and continue to craft better and better solutions together.”
― Earth to Poetry: A 30-Days, 30-Poems Earth, Self, and Other Care Challenge
While it is very necessary to acknowledge the true problems that call on our creative solutions, a continual focus on the difficulties can damage our own souls over time. Putting into place a daily or weekly practice of 'looking for the lovely thing,' can help sustain us and keep us creative—for, it is in a spirit of gratitude, hope and creativity that we can maintain our energy and continue to craft better and better solutions together.”
― Earth to Poetry: A 30-Days, 30-Poems Earth, Self, and Other Care Challenge
“What is retained within something, even when it is removed from its ordinary setting or becomes broken?”
― Earth to Poetry: A 30-Days, 30-Poems Earth, Self, and Other Care Challenge
― Earth to Poetry: A 30-Days, 30-Poems Earth, Self, and Other Care Challenge
“Why don’t people 'look up'? In other words, why do they almost blindly do things that are counter to their well-being or survival?”
― Earth to Poetry: A 30-Days, 30-Poems Earth, Self, and Other Care Challenge
― Earth to Poetry: A 30-Days, 30-Poems Earth, Self, and Other Care Challenge
“Images of both distance and closeness, smallness and vastness, exist in 'North on the Illahee Ferry.' Every life is sustained by both.”
― Earth to Poetry: A 30-Days, 30-Poems Earth, Self, and Other Care Challenge
― Earth to Poetry: A 30-Days, 30-Poems Earth, Self, and Other Care Challenge
“Writer Lorraine Hansberry has said, 'There is always some- thing left to love.'
Similarly, there is always something left for which we can feel gratitude—something to love about our days, despite our occasional brushes with doubt or despair.”
― Earth to Poetry: A 30-Days, 30-Poems Earth, Self, and Other Care Challenge
Similarly, there is always something left for which we can feel gratitude—something to love about our days, despite our occasional brushes with doubt or despair.”
― Earth to Poetry: A 30-Days, 30-Poems Earth, Self, and Other Care Challenge
