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Phoebe Sinclair Writes

Phoebe Sinclair Writes

Category Archives: Green Life

Looking Back On Fall

08 Thursday Nov 2012

Posted by Phoebe (she / hers) in Green Life, With Friends

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

maine, travel, trees, winter

Soup’s on the stove. Cat is in his basket. Sade’s on the player. And outside the window of my home office: snow, snow.

Amazing that, three days ago I was admiring the subtle tones of autumn in the mountains of Maine.

Headed up the trail

The brush

Water was flowing, but I bet now it’s ice.

Fall waterfalls

Reeds wait

A friend said: Is that snow on the mountain over there? And I denied it, claiming sky.

Rock outcropping

But it’s true the plants were packing up, headed towards the season of sleep that drives us wakeful ones indoors.

Caro washes dishes

Tea, no whiskey

Hungry hippos
When the season turns over, it shouldn’t be a surprise, but so it often is.

34, Meet 120

21 Tuesday Aug 2012

Posted by Phoebe (she / hers) in Green Life

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

arnold-arboretum, trees, writing

Today, taking a break from writing, I wandered the Arnold Arboretum. Now, I’ve long known about the metal identification tags attached to most of the trees, imparting information about the species, Latin names, all that. However, this afternoon I discovered the key to reading those labels and lo, behold! Suddenly I have access to a whole new way to experience the collection.

Thirty-four years, meet one-hundred and twenty years.

Among the beeches

Retreating to Earthdance

31 Tuesday Jul 2012

Posted by Phoebe (she / hers) in Green Life, Learnin', Writing Life

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

dancing, goals, travel, trees, writing

Moss at the river side

My favorite kind of learning is the sort that sneaks up on you. You think you’re going to discover one thing and, because you’re receptive, the Universe seizes the opportunity to hand you another. And another. Sometimes the Universe really likes to cram it in.

This summer I’ve taken temporary leave from my job as a Community Liaison (writer, organizer, webmaster, photographer, event planner, project manager, etc.) to complete a novel for young readers. The novel and I have been courting each other since 2006. We dance around the idea of being “done,” and what better place to wiggle our toes than in a space devoted to the form?

Earthdance is many things –learning center, community space for dancers and others who practice contact improvisation, garden/orchard, peaceful oasis-in-the-woods– and retreat for art-types and peace-makers looking to temporarily escape the distractions of everyday life.

Hoping to finally discover the conclusion to my novel, I arrived fully prepared to spend my days whittling away at hundreds of pages of notes containing two separate drafts, and seven years of revisions suggested by myself and members of my Boston-based writer’s critique group.

Earthdance’s lessons were easy-to-miss, so I’m glad I arrived with the intention to listen, to sit quietly, and to treat myself with kindness.

I learned how to share space with a spider . . .

Spider on a pillow

And a butterfly (admittedly, living with the butterfly was easier!)

The butterfly comments

I learned what it feels like to wander into a garden and come out with fixings for lunch, fresh from the soil.

Teeny carrot

I discovered the impact of choosing to begin and end each day with gratitude (more specifically, sleeping in a wonderfully wood-scented dormitory bearing that name.)

The dorm, gratitude

I learned sometimes it’s necessary to move your body in order to move your mind.

Shira swings

David in the woods

I learned, to dissuade a deer from munching the garden, running outside and clapping your hands works just fine.

The deer revealed

I learned that, although we serve different communities, the vision, staff, and mission of Earthdance is ever similar to what I’ve grown to enjoy and deeply respect back at work in Cambridge.

Kitchen moment at Earthdance

I learned to trust that, if I sit quietly enough, watching the woods for creativity’s approach, it may arrive peacefully, timidly, joyfully on delicate feet.

Window on the orchard

Or it may not.

Hard to catch that squirrel

And both are okay.

Thank you, Earthdance. ‘Til we meet again . . .

{This Moment} Last Days of the Retreat

27 Friday Jul 2012

Posted by Phoebe (she / hers) in Green Life

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this-moment

{this moment} – A Friday ritual (joining Soulemama.) A single photo – no words – capturing a moment from the week.

Lunch with the sun

90 Degree Ramble

21 Thursday Jun 2012

Posted by Phoebe (she / hers) in Green Life

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

color, jamaica-plain

On Thursdays, I work at home. Most weeks, I stay “Boston-side,” instead of making the trek over to Cambridge, where I work the other four days.  This means, I take my laptop over to the Boston Public Library or, if I really don’t feel like leaving the neighborhood, to sit (somewhat guiltily) for hours at Ula Cafe.

Today was hot, hot, hot, but everyone seemed to be out-of-doors, regardless. My pilgrimage to and fro led me to some gorgeous sights.

Some of us obviously love the heat.

Spiky flower

IMG_6472

Yellow and red flowers

Purple flower and raspberries

Some of us hide out.

Snails under the leaves

Living in the City, Reading about the Country

18 Monday Jun 2012

Posted by Phoebe (she / hers) in Boston Moments, Green Life, Jersey Moments

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

arnold-arboretum, jersey, maine

It does not escape me that, living in one of this country’s oldest cities, I spend a lot of time considering the country.

The vine twists

Upon finishing the second issue of Taproot magazine, steeped in the values of living simply, slowly, heart-full, back-to-the-earth, I thought: this is me, this is not me.

I believe in sitting out on the porch, shucking corn. I believe in long walks through green places. In white flashes of deer tails, rabbit tails, and rusty, shaggy foxtail.

Mutant mini corn

I also, believe in escaping the bumper-to-bumper to hit up the ice cream counter. Barely comprehending my luck that this planet holds things cold and milky, vanilla with peanut butter swirls.

I’m a child of the suburbs. Beachtown creaky, my younger years held splinters from Jersey Shore boardwalks, screams from the top of the crickety, wooden ‘coaster. Paper tickets from ski-ball and wack-a-mole games that I traded for spider rings whose cheap plastic pinched my fingers.

IMG_1907

The city has me, the country attracts me.  In between, I both rue and appreciate the Christmas-light palaces of the ‘burbs.

It’s my lot, I think, to refuse claiming -or being claimed- by one, the other, or the third.  I’d rather find value in them all.

{This Moment} Fresh from Debra’s Garden

15 Friday Jun 2012

Posted by Phoebe (she / hers) in Green Life

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

this-moment

{this moment} – A Friday ritual (joining Soulemama.) A single photo – no words – capturing a moment from the week.

Fresh strawberries

It Warms Up

12 Tuesday Jun 2012

Posted by Phoebe (she / hers) in Bike Life, Boston Moments, Green Life

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Tags

arts, bike-love, cambridge, dancing, events

It warms up and we start moving.

Young women hoop

Bikes Not Bombs Green Roots Festival

Dance partners

Dance for the World Community

JP Spring Roll

JP Spring Roll Bike Ride

Camping in Vermont

06 Wednesday Jun 2012

Posted by Phoebe (she / hers) in Green Life, With Friends

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

travel

I think was a teenager when I first started noticing that, if I emphatically announce that I WILL NOT DO something, there’s about an 80% chance I’ll end up doing it . . . .  and (I hate to admit) possibly liking it.

In college, I started using the phrase “pride before the fall,” with impressive frequency as I watched this occur in the lives of myself and my friends . . . with impressive frequency.

This, I believe, explains my sudden plaid explosion at eighteen, and in my twenties, an inaugural pair of Dr. Martens.  And to bring us to the present, between 2011 and 2012, I’ve gone camping in Vermont twice.

In case you wondered, I don’t camp.

Tending the fire

Salad

Y pets the cow

Recumbent trike

On the rocks

Marshmallow

Resting post hike

A friend

And, if you catch me at it, be certain I don’t like it.

Boston Food Swap – A Review

28 Monday May 2012

Posted by Phoebe (she / hers) in Green Life

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

events, food-n-cookin, giving

I’ve been to clothing swaps, to potlucks, and food festivals. I’ve Freecycled, sold or given items away on Craigslist. I provided and received services from a time bank. I’ve mended and paid professional tailors to repair my clothing. I participate in a gift circle. I’ve volunteered for nine consecutive years at the same charity event because the gig includes all-you-can-eat pie.

It makes perfect, practical sense, right, that a person like me who trusts and enjoys and flits around in “alternative economies,” would fall in line with a food swap? Which begs the question: why the heck did it take me so long!?

Some theories:

  • I’m lazy. (Okay, that’s not fair.)
  • I don’t like to cook. (Mostly true.)
  • I’m not that good a cook. (Also mostly true.)
  • I have too many things going on in my life at once. (Dingdingding!)
  • It’s not about me. (Hmm . . . )

Suffice it to say that, when I walked through the door at Space with A Soul and sighted my very first Boston Food Swap, I knew I’d met my match.  Three very efficient organizers, a room full of the cutest and most elegant handmade food packaging, serious-looking cooks sampling well-turned out baked goods, roasted nuts, kimchi, jellies and jams, fruit compote, chocolate covered strawberries, chai tea, flaky meat-filled things, rice pudding . . . whoa!  Intimidating.

After I saw the spread, I was a little concerned no one would want my bread (ignore that rhyme.)  But then four people did.  Phew.

Checking out the goodies

Basket o yum

Sighted: one of my little breads in this basket!

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