Tuesday, March 25, 2014

Morning Greeting from the Heart of the Mountain on March 24, 2014



Good Morning, my Relatives. It is a good day. Sent up sweetgrass, cedar and sage smoke and prayers for each of you for good health, happiness and protections. Have a beautiful day/night wherever you are on our beautiful spinning, revolving and constantly changing and renewing Earth Mother. Love and light. 

Sun emerges above the Mountain each day closer to its Summer House. The cyclical movements of the Sun and Moon and the planets and stars over the days, months and seasons show the beautiful intelligence of creation. Have a good day and enjoy the blessings of life and being alive another day. 



Sunday, March 23, 2014

Good Morning from the Heart of the Mountain on March 23, 2014


Good Morning my Relations. It is a good day. The half moon is above and the Morning Star just rose on the south side of the Mountain. I was blessed to be greeted by a beautiful songbird as I went outside to greet the Dawn. The bird was perched at the top of the pinons, and when I whistled back its tune, like my Papi Ethier taught me, it responded with a different tune and waited for me to respond. We talked back and forth with each other with each different tune the bird sent out to me until the cold made me go back inside. A very special morning visit. Have a beautiful day wherever you are, and, don't forget to notice our other relations with whom we share this earth. Sometimes, they will communicate with you, if you take a moment to listen. Love and light, my beloveds. 

           The Morning Star visible above the Mountain in the east, southeast at Dawn.


                 The Half Gibbous Moon above looking towards the south at Dawn.


The Morning Star is bright and visible for just a short time before Dawn, but it is travelling all day between the Moon and the Sun during these early days of Spring.

Friday, March 21, 2014

Heart of the Mountain Alliance

Heart of the Mountain Alliance connects people to protect the exceptional natural beauty, wildlife corridors and habitats, and scenic views of our mountain homes and land.
Grow White Sage for erosion control and prayers.
Grow Sweetgrass in sandy gravel soil irrigated with grey water on north side (needs full sun).
Guidelines for construction advise first, minimize the amount of land leveled or disturbed for building.

http://www.epa.gov/region6/6en/w/sw/sediment.pdf

Chamisa or Rabbitbrush

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ericameria_nauseosa


Morning Prayer

Good Morning, my Beloved Relatives. It is a good day. Sent up sweetgrass, cedar and sage smoke for each of you this morning from the Heart of the Mountain. The Sun rose above the Mountains this morning in its Spring Home on the north slope. Now, watching the Gibbous Moon descend to the west. Sending prayers and good thoughts for you and your loved ones, and, for your enemies and the enemies of our earth, sky and water, as well. May their hearts, minds and spirits be flooded with love and light. May their hurts and wounds be comforted and may they grow in compassion and humanity so they will stop their destructive words and actions. May they be healed and brought back into good relationship with the earth and each other and all people. May these prayers for love and light to grow help bring our world back into balance so all people and all our relations that share our home can live together in peace with justice. Let us make these prayers real by our good loving words and actions. All my Relations. 
The Sun rises above the Mountain on the first Dawn of Spring 2014 in its Spring House.

 Facing the Sun.
The Mountain


The Sun's Winter House is just above the rock outcropping on the south slope of the Mountain.

Facing Southeast
Facing South, the place of gentleness and compassion.

Vista of Arroyo Hondo and Sunlit Hills with the Ortiz, then the Manzano and Sandia Mountains in the distance to the Southwest.

Looking Southwest with our Cerro Tijeras Mountain ridge to the West.

The Waning Gibbous Moon Descending further to the south each day in its monthly cycle.

The constant changes of our Moons' phases remind us that change is constant, but the cycles of growth, fullness, waning and death are ever renewing, ongoing and infinite.

The mountain ridge to the west protects from harsh winds.

Facing West, the place of introspection and looking within.

Looking to the Northwest and, facing the North, the place of wisdom and healing.

Looking to the North and Northeast.


Facing due East, the place of dreams and inspiration.

The Sun, constantly moving, continues to rise.

Blessings for a good day on our beautiful earth for everyone, everywhere.

Saturday, March 15, 2014

Good Day Working on the Mountain

Working on Soil Erosion, Forest Rehabilitation and Wildlife Habitat Restoration on the Mountain
Cold afternoon on the mountain under gathering snow clouds was good to work with my honey on soil erosion control and conservation and wildlife habitat restoration on the mountain today. 

 http://www.lasplacitas.org/lpa_pdfs/bmp_ver2.pdf
Best Practices Erosion Control for New Mexico
This link has descriptions with simple clear diagrams of different ways to slow water flow and repair erosion with stones, logs, dirt and a combination of all three.
Erosion from the leveling of the construction site above the steep sloe has exposed the roots of these pinon trees that help block the oversize building from our view. 

Digging, moving rocks and cutting down and moving dead trees is a good workout, too. Barry does the chain sawing of dead trees and we move the logs together. I use the shovel to dig out the arroyos and put the dirt back on the roots of the trees and make dams with tree trunks and rocks to make terraces to retain the earth and water near the trees and shrubs so they will grow healthier in this drought.

 It is heartbreaking when the earth you love is treated so poorly by people whose ugly house the size of a shopping mall in your view. I usually just share photos of the beauty of these views, but in the last few years the construction to the north and up the mountain has been devastating.
The roots on this tree are badly exposed from the erosion. We will build a rock wall on the east and west sides and fill it with topsoil and silt gathered in the arroyos. It should help this tree to grow and hopefully fill out horizontally.


  There is lots of damage done to our north boundary on the mountain slope from a huge 7,000 plus square foot house a new neighbor built above us with a retention pond right to our property line. They leveled the top of the ridge, cutting down lots of big 100 year old pinon trees and a big healthy Ponderosa Pine, which was holding the roots of their ridge and are very rare and hard to grow on our south side of the mountain, and it changed the drainage down the steep slope so lots of trees died.


 We are trying to repair the drainage and cover the exposed roots and try to save the remaining ones and plant new ones to repair the damage.It is sad to see the earth treated with such disrespect. But there are things we can do to heal the scars and help the earth there get healthier.

Here is a helpful diagram of ways to slow down water flow downhill in steep areas.
http://www.drylandsolutions.com/includes/image_resize.php/1.jpg?width=350&image=%2Fresources%2F1.jpg




This link has information on how to get free technical assistance for repairing soil erosion at conservation technical assistance Conservation Technical Assistance

Have a beautiful day wherever you are on our loving earth. 

Friday, March 14, 2014

Give-Away of It Stops with Me Book Cases in Celebration of its 10th Anniversary First Awardees

First 5 Recipients of a case of It Stops with Me Books

Here are the first 5 who I will send a gift of 28 of my books with thanks for their good work for women and families. There are still 7 spots left. So write me with how this can help you in your good work.
Thank you,
Charleen Touchette


# 1- April

  • Kareen Lewis a skilled quiltmaker wrote, "I would share them with the tribes in Michigan so they could use them in their social service programs."

  • # 2- May


  • Donna Ennis wrote, "I would share them with the families at American Indian Community Housing Organization in Duluth. I am donating all of my Native American books to this organization so that they can have a library."



# 3- June


ChiMiigwetch

Juanita Blackhawk
Iluminadas Performing Arts
Wellness in the Woods
"Iluminadas Performing Arts is a catalyst for creative expression of social change artists and the active engagement of community.
The world is sustained by three things: By Truth, By Justice, By Peace. Change has come to America - how can we as individual citizens work towards a better future?"


# 4- July



Juanita G Corbine EspinosaJuanita Espinosa has worked for decades since the 1980s for Native Artists, Women and Families in Minnesota and across the nation curating exhibitions that have supported countless Indian Artists.  

# 5- August

Mississippi Water Walker Sharon Day wrote,

"Charleen
We would be so happy to even have half a case of books.  We have a 14 units of residential housing for Indigenous People with Disabilities including HIV.  We provide case management services to another 50 people and have 200 youth come through our youth programs. The youth programs are geared to teen advocacy on pregnancy prevention, HIV prevention, and smoking prevention and cessation.  We also work with another set of youth on organic growing of medicines and food, and gathering wild rice, maple syrup, and willow, labrador tea (we call it swamp tea), cedar, and heirloom seeds.  If you send a few books, we'd certainly make them available to our program participants, and share some readings with our teen pregnancy prevention program, Ikidowin.  When I read your book, I immediately gave it to someone who was suffering from so many of the same symptoms in hopes that it would help her.  Migwetch for your consideration. I enjoy reading your posts every day and seeing where the moon is by your mountain."  
Sharon M. Day
Executive Director
Indigenous Peoples Task Force
1335 E. 23rd St.
Minneapolis, MN  55404









The 10th Anniversary of my award-winning banned book is this April 2014. In celebration, we are giving away a case of 28 books each month to individuals or groups that work for women and children. Tell me how you can use a box of It Stops with Me books to help your good work. I will select twelve to send a box of books to within the year. All the best, Charleen Touchette 

There are 7 cases of 28 books each left for the Give-Away. Send your request soon. Books ship out one case a month from April 2014 to March 2015.

I will share the stories from the first 5 Give Away Recipients in my next blog.

http://www.amazon.com/It-Stops-Me-Memoir-Canuck/dp/0974654507/ref=sr_1_7?ie=UTF8&qid=1394640013&sr=8-7&keywords=touchette




Thursday, March 13, 2014

Morning Blessings

Was blessed to see the Morning Star this morning over the mountains at Dawn. Burning sweetgrass, cedar and sage, and some lavender to increase love and compassion, for all of you, everywhere. Prayers for good health and happiness for you and yours. Please remember to thank the earth for our home and everything we need to live, the sky for the air we breathe and bless, thank, honor and respect the water. Think energy, frequency and vibration and feel how you are a light being connected intrinsically to the love and light of the universe. Love you all, no exceptions.
Each day the Sun rises more to the northeast on its journey from to its Summer Home.
Photo by Charleen Touchette on March 13, 2013

Wednesday, March 12, 2014

Knitting/Walking Meditation on Santa Fe, Me and Miss O'Keeffe

From 2009
First day of October brings brisk winds and biting cold that makes colors of sky and mountains bright and crisp. Pass morning workers as city of Santa Fe wakes up on morning meditation knitting and walking across town. Pause to knit in front of Museum of Fine Arts, a reminder that artists in Santa Fe are living, breathing creatures not all hidden behind adobe walls sequestered in private studios. Visitors from California offer to snap a photo of artist knitting with dog. Turns out the charming, intelligent tourist was born in New Mexico, but raised in California and her great, great uncle was archaeologist Adolph Bandelier, namesake of Bandelier Monument and infamously banned by the Pueblos. The ladies were on their way to see the Georgia O'Keeffe Museum and we conversed about how irritated Georgia would be about the irony of a museum of her art in Santa Fe, which ignored and denigrated her paintings when she first lived here. She vowed she would never let the Santa Fe Museum of Fine Arts buy her art after the snub. Now, they have a few in their collection, but they paid dearly for them and their bad choice.
Walk continues while sun warms up city streets until I arrive at Miriam’s Well where bright fall flowers are an array of colors in the sharp morning shadows and light. Miriam, who is elated that the current U.S. President has arrived in her native Denmark, greets me with a smile and the second batch of Chunky Baby Alpaca to continue knitting Sage’s LDK Cable Line Blanket.
Taj and I bid her goodbye and retrace our steps across town while I knit while I walk until we reach Saveur for a lunch meeting with Jacques about TouchArt Books publishing plans and marketing strategy, then return home to the studio for an afternoon of painting.
I think about choices artists and women make, and am grateful. Remember Miss O’Keeffe was famous and paintings collected for millions, but she died alone in her nineties at her gated estate on Old Santa Fe Trail after being tricked by Juan Hamilton into signing away rights to much of her art thinking she was signing a marriage contract to her decades younger assistant who bedecked the mansion with flowers for a sham wedding.
Art-making is a constant in my life, but it is woven into a rich tapestry of joy, laughter and sharing stories and food with husband, grown children and many diverse and interesting friends. Painting is at the center of all my work and life in Santa Fe, but it may take my death for the New Mexico Museum of Fine Arts to hang my paintings on its adobe walls. Figure I share that with Miss O’Keeffe, but thankfully, I won’t share her lonely end.
Photos and Text by Charleen Touchette 2009

Working Outside - Good for the Body and the Heart

Fun morning working outside on the mountain clearing the drainage ditches on the dirt road. Good workout and wonderful being in the sunshine, hearing the songbirds and the flapping of the ravens soaring across the sky overhead. The earth is so beautiful and being in good relationship with her is very nourishing and healing. Digging and raking gets me in good shape without going to the gym. My husband calls me his French Canadian back hoe, hehe.
I find it sad that some people think they are better than others and so-called civilized because they hire others to do physical work while looking down on them. If they were really intelligent, they would know that the joy and good health that comes from physical work and creating something with your own hands and heart are priceless.
It could save these deluded folks lots of money in gym memberships, doctor bills and protect their bodies from the ill effects of pharmaceutical mood-alterers if they would just realize that what is missing from their lives is a close loving relationship with the earth and a right relationship with work and others.
It is clear that being rich does not make people happy, yet they are too foolish to see the truth.
Turn walking the dog into an opportunity to connect with the earth and sky, and the birds, animals, plants, trees and other beings with whom we share our home. Watch how the trees and plants reach to the sun and thrive with new growth after a rain or snow storm. Think about caring for them as you walk, clearing a well to gather water at their roots, or prune dead wood to make room for new growth, or gather dry seed pods and spread around and sow them as you walk. You will be amazed how your small acts of kindness result in a healthier ecosystem. And, please do this everywhere, not just on land you happen to own. We all belong to the earth. But, only we can form a deep loving relationship with the earth by our actions and loving thoughts.
Try doing something creative or productive today, even for an hour or two. Walk outside and notice the earth and sky in all directions, and see that you are an intrinsic part of a constantly changing, vibrating, alive universe. Think energy, frequency and vibration, and connect your own to the high frequency of the cosmos.
Dirt roads are shaped with a crown in the middle so water drains off to the drainage ditches on either side.

I grew this chamisa hedge just by scattering the pruned tops of chamisa with dried seeds along the roadside on our hikes over the years. It has helped to stop the erosion from the road from continuing down the hill to our neighbors' land.

I have been working for some time to redig the ditch on the left after other neighbors' construction to the northeast covered it up and the road washed out below. 

 The ditch on the left carries rainwater from the hill above to keep it from the road. I cleared the ditch on the right and raked the earth back up onto the road and will be reforming the slant down to the right to drain the water off the road and have filled up the dips in the roadway caused by the water. On a curve and incline like this the entire roadway is tilted towards the main drainage ditch.
The view of the Mountain makes doing the roadwork a work of love and joy.

Thursday, March 6, 2014

Waxing Moon Descends

Waxing Moon Descends behind Mountain Ridge to the West.
Burned some sweetgrass, cedar and sage.
Sent out prayers for each of you, and
our earth, air and water. 


ThrowbackThursday# Women's Power is Real

thowbackthursday# february 2007oneearthblog3#

"Is She Alive" by Charleen Touchette


http://charleentouchettesblog.blogspot.com/search?updated-min=2007-01-01T00:00:00-08:00&updated-max=2008-01-01T00:00:00-08:00&max-results=4

February 17th : My 53rd birthday was delightful spent surrounded by family. Birthdays make you assess. This year I will get the work and word directly to people across the world through the net following Spiderwoman as a guide. Exclusion, marginalization and stigmatization are tools to neutralize, deny and make invisible, and as a voice in the diaspora of Franco-American literature and art, I stand with Jack Kerouac, David Plante and Rhea Cote to say that we are here and we will tell our own stories. Our collective stories were carried by the Memeres and Peperes, and our connection to our Indian identities are tied to the persistence of the mothers, les mamans, who told us to remember we are Indian. The persistence of the mothers who taught us to honor the earth as our mother and consider the effects of our choices on the relatives and the next generations. Heal the Earth and Honor the Women. Seem like innocent words. Who would argue against the earth and women? But look at what Western culture does to the earth, women, families and children. Speaking truth about what our overconsumption of energy and stuff has done to the earth makes me suspect. Speaking truth about Women's Power makes me a very dangerous woman. If woman knew how powerful we are, we'd stop consuming to fill the hole in our souls, and demand clean air and water and safe healthy food, shelter, education and health care for everyone. We'd reclaim our bodies, spread our legs as women who belong to ourselves, rejoice in our ability to give life, and close our legs to anyone who violates our sisters, our children or our mother earth. 

Tuesday, March 4, 2014

"Think...Energy, Frequency and Vibration"

www.CharleenTouchette.com

"If you want to find the secrets of the universe, think in terms of energy, frequency and vibration." Nikola Tesla

Artist Charleen Touchette taps into the creative nexus of the ever-changing present moment grounded in a direct relationship to the sacred landscape of earth and sky and careful observation of light energy over multiple dimensions of space and time. Touchette bends and refracts light using multiple media and techniques to create luminous living imagery that vibrates with energy.



"No Borders" by Charleen Touchette

Monday, March 3, 2014

Fun at the Oscar Gala at Santa Fe University of Art and Design with Chris Eyre



Hosted by Film School Director Chris Eyre

More on the event by  IN FILM at JackalopeMagazine.com
http://jackalopemagazine.com/2014/02/27/shoot-stars/


Barry Paisner and Charleen Touchette on SFUAD's "A Night to Remember" set replica




Amber-Dawn Bear Robe, Dawn Hoffman, Lara Evans, Liesette Paisner
Lovely evening at the Film School at the Santa Fe University of Art and Design at their 2014 Oscar Gala last night. Thanks to Chris Eyre-Film School Director for the invite. Art Historians Amber-Dawn Bear Robe and Lara Evans donned 20s style glamour to toast the Oscars with Santa Fe Independent Film Festival's Festival Director Liesette Paisner and SFIFF's Event Director Dawn Hoffman. I even got to get some photos with my sweetie and the swinging crescent moon.



https://www.facebook.com/SFUADMOV