Wednesday, August 26, 2009

Public Art Practice
















Santa Fe claims to be the third largest art market in the U.S., but it is rare to see anyone besides tourists in workshops painting in public. Across America, people rarely see anyone make anything with manufacturing outsourced abroad. So, a few times a week, I do a public art practice where I knit LDK Handknits while walking to different wireless cafes or parks and then paint in public. People come and tell me their stories, children smile as they see a garment grow or a painting created in front of them. The look of joy in their eyes is my reward. Who knows, maybe one of them will be the next Frida Kahlo, George Morisson or Robert Rauschenberg one day.

Friday, July 3, 2009

Paula Persechini-Petitti Embodies Love - Paula Wants Us to Volunteer










Thanks Denis for writing about Paula Persechini-Petitti’s incredible spirit, good work and serious accident that has quieted her inspiring voice for the moment.
Our son Sage and I were blessed to spend much of the last two weeks with Paula in the Black Hills and to hear her stories, laughter and plans for future good work the night before her car accident as she graciously let Sage wash and dry his photo negatives on a clothesline in her sun porch.
All night, Paula talked with an urgency, telling stories that are just now beginning to make sense.
Paula embodies love, generosity and inspires everyone who meets her to be more of who they are meant to be. That night, Paula told us that when she was a teenager waiting in line to dance at Studio 54, an eleven year old boy begged her for help. Paula said she was frightened and chased the child away. Later that night, Paula still in her teens, had second-thoughts. She described how she rushed through the NYC streets searching for the young boy, then to shelters and hospitals, but she never was able to find him. I asked her if she ever regretted it. Paula looked deep into my eyes with those amazing violet-hued orbs of hers, and said, “I never, ever said no to anyone who asked for my help after that night.”
That’s Paula, the biggest heart and the best example of love, generosity and sharing in a world that needs her example so much. That night, Paula spoke nearly non-stop, telling us stories about her childhood, adventures in Cambodia, Africa, Jamaica, Pine Ridge and a helicopter ride into Havasupai Canyon with Russ and Pearl Means. Paula wanted to return to the Havasupai people and bring her diabetes clinics and medical supplies to the Chief and his tribe. She made me and Sage promise to meet her in Navajo and go down to the Canyon floor in a few months. Just before we parted near dawn, Paula said to me, “I want to inspire people to volunteer, especially young people.” She said she tells youth to notice opportunities to help others. “Little things. Start with little things. I tell them, ‘Maybe the grandmother down the street needs help bringing her garbage can to the curb, or someone else needs help weeding their garden.’” Paula is about the big things like bringing medical care, diabetes clinics and education and refugee camps to those in need around the world, but Paula is also about little things that change people’s lives like giving a quiet teenager a journal because Paula just knew the observant girl will be a writer, and planning to buy a young boy a drum and signing lessons since she saw the joy on his face when he sang at the Sun Dance. Send prayers and healing energy to Paula Persechini-Petitti, so she will wake up and get to read that girl’s stories, listen to the young boy’s singing and drumming and get back down to visit the Chief in Havasupai before the end of the year.
Thanks, Mercis, Wopila, Migwetch, Todah Rabah, Gracias to everyone who prays for Paula Persechini-Petitti and helps another in Paula’s honor.
Peace,
Charleen Touchette
www.OneEarthBlog.blogspot.com
www.TouchArt.net
_______________________________________________________________________________________



UKProgressive.co.uk

Lead Story
An Open Letter to President Obama and Congress – Help Bring Paula Home

Posted on 02 July 2009 by Denis Campbell

life-flight
By Denis Campbell

The healthcare debate rages across Capitol Hill with lobbyists fighting against a ‘single payer’ option as if it were the moral equivalent of the anti-Christ. Before you blindly accept any bill, please examine the very real (and ironic) face this debate has taken on for this journalist.

Paula Persichini-Petitti is a woman to whom I once joked, “you would be what would happen if Mother Theresa, Joan Jett and a drug-free Janis Joplin merged.” Paula is one tough, rock and roll loving, hard living, Boston-area born and bred “broahd” with a “haht” (heart) of pure gold. Listening to her thick Boston accent you would start with a first impression that would be one of the absolute biggest mistakes you could ever make.

Paula was born a rebel. She graduated from the nursing program at Blue Hills Regional Institute and became a radiology specialist at a time where technology was evolving and most said she could not do it because she was too young. If you have a death wish or desire physical harm, merely suggest to Paula that she ‘cannot’ do something.

Ironically, she now lays with tubes coming out of her body, a respirator helping her breathe and in a coma in a Rapid City, South Dakota hospital. She has spent nearly every summer of the last several years, working with Russell and Pearl Means helping Native Americans of the Lakota Sioux Nation in Pine Ridge Reservation. There she counsels and teaches indigenous families about the twin health threats of alcohol abuse and diabetes in one of the USA’s poorest communities.

Several years ago Paula visited the island of Jamaica and was involved in an automobile accident. She’d been an emergency room nurse and when she saw the dreadful conditions people in that rural hospital (near the Black River) lived under, she returned home to Massachusetts and started BlackRiverProject.org. Most appealed to her saying, “that’s just the way it is Paula, nothing can be done about it.” Remember the old Three Stooges short where someone says “Niagara Falls…” and then “slowly I turn…” Step back please, human freight train coming through.

Her leadership has seen her beg, cajole, plead and threaten just about every doctor, medical school, pharmaceutical and medical supplier in Massachusetts and across the globe to help her bring free medical supplies, used machinery, doctors and nurses to some of the most ravaged 3rd world hell-holes on the face of the planet.

Paula and I grew up two blocks from each other in the southern MA town of Avon. I went to school with her big brother Ricky and, as usual, everyone went their separate ways after graduation. My friend Terri said, “hey you’re a journalist, are you aware of Paula’s project?” That began a series of visits, phone calls, Facebook and Twitter exchanges to develop, research and tell this one woman’s story.

And what a story, everything from threatening Cuban prison guards suspicious of why she was there (providing medical help) by saying she was “Raul Castro’s mistress and there would be hell to pay if he found out she was being held there” (it worked, she was set free)… to being dragged from her hotel room at night, convinced she would be shot and flying in Soviet era helicopters across Laos and Cambodia to meet the ruling generals (think “The Killing Fields”) to demand they provide mosquito netting to protect their citizens against malaria.

This woman’s life is bigger than any Hollywood screenplay. And she shrugs it all off with a laugh that would filled any room. Most of us live fractions of a life. Thoreau, another Massachusetts native said, “I wanted to live deliberately, deep and suck out all the marrow of life, to put to rout all that was not life and not when I had come to die, discover that I had not lived.” Paula lives in a way that most dream of doing.

She was driving in a car that was rear-ended at speed by a pickup travelling at 60 mph. The impact severely jarred her brain stem causing damage to the thalamus, the part of the brain which is the centre for speech, body temp., sight, hearing and smell. While she can today squeeze the ICU doctor’s hand on command, the hope is her brain will form connections around the damage and more or less repair itself. The good people in Rapid City have taken her as far as she can go there and she needs now to be med-flighted to Massachusetts General Hospital where she will be under the care of a top neurosurgeon.

Paula has health insurance and… (you know where this is going before I even type it)… it does not cover life-flights. Speaking to the Life-flight despatch office in Rapid City, South Dakota, the flight is 1,600 air miles in length and will cost $30,000 and that’s just for the flight. Then there is tended ambulance service to and from the airplane at both ends which adds even more not to mention the longer term care she will require to heal.

Buddy Persichini, 78, is Paula’s very proud Dad. He has numerous health issues of his own and Paula has been his rock since her Mom died when she was in high school. Buddy is resigned to taking out a second mortgage on his paid off house to get her home. Were the same to happen to me under the right’s very publicly maligned UK ‘socialised’ NHS medical programme plus my out-of-pocket add-on, I’d already be ‘home’ in the UK in a local hospital with family by my side.

And there, Mr. President and Congress lays the rub. Why should a 78-year old man, who clearly loves his daughter, be forced to bury his fierce New England pride and go deep into debt to bring her home? Why too should Paula now risk losing her home to pay for long-term care when she returns?

This is what needs fixing in the health care system. Not providing the same profit margins for those who can most efficiently lobby but inefficiently leave a broken system essentially intact with some window dressing tweaking around the edges and then everyone calling that “ground breaking change.” For Paula and many like her, I urge you to bring in a public option to bring true competition and transparency into this opaque nightmare of a scenario.

Mr. President, you were quoted two days ago in the New York Times as saying: “What we’ve been doing over the last six months is getting people back into fighting trim. This is a town where there was just a belief that nothing could get done… I’ll use just the workout metaphor, and that is… when you start training again and you’re pushing your body a little bit harder, sometimes it hurts. But if you keep on at it, after a while your body adjusts. And I think that’s what’s happening to politics in Washington.”

Well sir, it’s time to end the training and start the marathon. It’s time Congress to put some real political capital and action behind those words on everything from this issue to Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell. You came into office promising change we could believe in and this is important not just to the nation, but to every one of us who sees a true Mother Theresa in need. Please consider it for all the irony-filled Paula’s out there, not just the ones who tell the best story at your town hall meeting and help bring her home without bankrupting her or her Dad in the process.

My own deep regret is that during my most recent visit to the USA in May, I cancelled our scheduled meeting because of my time considerations. I now have to live with that. I promised to come back and see her in the fall. Now I must pray she will be home, solvent, conscious and well enough to recognise me.

(Please contribute to “The Fund for Paula Persichini-Pettiti” by following the tipjoy micro-finance/contribution link and sending money to the e-mail address: info@bringpaulahome.org, at the website: BringPaulaHome.org or via Twitter @BringPaulaHome. The family and her friends are moving very quickly to establish all accounts to life-flight transport her home and provide for her long term care needs.)
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Denis Campbell is publisher and editor of UKProgressive. He is an investigative journalist and businessman whose instincts lead to breaking political and business stories on everything from: election machine voting fraud, political party misdeeds and the scandal ridden Mind Body Spirit business that fleeces many of its followers. His work has appeared in many international news publications across all media platforms including: The BBC, The Huffington Post, Western Mail, The Guardian and PokerNews.com. He writes from very cool 600-acre farm high above the cliffs along Wales' historic Glamorgan Heritage coast.
Email this author All posts by Denis Campbell
Comments

1.
Noah G. Hoffman July 2nd, 2009 at 1:21 pm

Thank you for this beautifully written piece on our friend, Paula.
Her spirit is so mission driven that even in her hour of personal survival, she continues to bring people together and make things happen.
I am so lucky to have known her though we just became acquainted not terribly long ago. I have posted this piece on FB.
Thanks Denis,
Noah G. Hoffman
2.
Judy Oshansky July 2nd, 2009 at 2:40 pm

Thank you, Denis. Paula has always been modest about her accomplishments. It is nice to finally get the word out about all she has done for so many others. She has touched thousands of lives with the projects she has started. It’s time to do all we can to help her now. This was a wonderful article, and I hope it is read by millions. Something must be done in the healthcare system so that people aren’t forced to deal with the agony of financial hardship on top of the stress, anxiety and heartache that comes from someone being seriously ill. Thank you for helping get the word out.
3.
cheryl duprey July 2nd, 2009 at 4:41 pm

Denis,
Thanks much for posting this significant news article, regarding your seriously injured, yet amazingly courageous friend,Paula’s, ongoing, difficult medical and health insurance issues to the forefront.

Paula has dedicated her life to helping others;and now, her painful battle to recover; and fight to secure vital coverage for a Life-Flight;will hopefully inspire others, to petition our President and Congress, for vital U.S. health care reform SOON.
4.
Harold "Butch" Frick July 3rd, 2009 at 1:58 pm

I am saddend by anyones pain and by your story. I must point out however that International Insurance including evacuation is readily available, provides evacuation coverage for limits from $25,000 to as high as $500,000 and can be purchased either individually or as a group policy. Just google international coverage including evacuation and you will be surprized how many sites exist. This part of health care is not broken. We simply need to be informed before traveling abroad. Paula sounds like a wonderful person and I wish the best for her and her family.
5.
Denis Campbell July 3rd, 2009 at 2:08 pm

Thanks for all of your comments and please do note “Butch” that although we have, as a nation, treated the Native American community poorly and separated them from their lands, Paula is trying to get from the US state of South Dakota to the US state of Massachusetts so that type of cover would not apply. As the writer, I am located in the UK which could have caused the confusion.

Best,
_____________________
License

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 2.0 UK: England & Wales License.

Wednesday, June 10, 2009

Morning Mist and Rain on Mountain
















101st One Earth Blog from Charleen Touchette
June 10, 2009
Mist, clouds and rain transform the mountains at dawn in Northern New Mexico. A gentle female rain drenches the thirsty earth, makes the pinon and ponderosa trees vibrant and softens the soil for new seeds and plants to sprout and thrive. Grateful for the beauty and life-sustaining gifts of earth and sky.
________________
One Earth Tip of the Day
Our indigenous ancestors tended and cultivated the land to create a cultivated forest by encouraging useful plants and weeding less desirable ones as they moved. They also created swales and moved earth and rocks to direct water to useful plants and trees and slow the erosion of soil into arroyos and down steep slopes and mountain sides.
We can do the same at home and on our hikes on the land. Just use your hands to clear out wells around young trees and plants you want to encourage to catch water and line with rocks. You can also use your feet to create swales to direct water to useful plants and slow the water flow down arroyos so it nourishes nearby plants and prevents soil erosion. You can also move rocks in the arroyos to build small obstructions to slow the flow of water during storms.
Little changes can help plants grow and slow down soil erosion down the mountains. The little changes I've done over 15 years of hiking up and down our mountain have made our land greener and our trees bigger than our neighbors. Little changes, but the difference is now visible on google.earth.
Love the earth like your mother. Listen and watch earth and sky and learn how little changes in the way we walk on the earth can make big changes to help heal our home.
_______________________
Another One Earth Tip of the Day
After an early summer rain is a perfect time to plant seeds, transplant seedlings and gently sculpt wet earth into dips and swales to direct water to plants and trees and slow down erosion of topsoil. Ever see children and puppies enjoy playing in the mud after a rain? Dig your hands into the wet earth to remember and recover the childhood joy of splashing in summer rain puddles and squishing wet mud between fingers and toes.
One Earth. Think About It.
__________________
By Charleen Touchette
TouchArt ltd
www.OneEarthBlog.blogspot.com

Saturday, June 6, 2009

Call Back the Bees

Call Back the Bees
Photos, Art and Writing by Charleen Touchette 2009

























"Calling the Bees" art by Charleen Touchette 2009

































Photos of Bees by Charleen Touchette 2009

http://current.com/items/88844280_bee_queen_births
Disappearing Bees on Current TV
"Where have all the bees gone? Hives all over the UK are emptying of bees. One theory is that mobile phone signals are affecting their ability to find their way home. Einstein said that 4 years after the bees die, humans will die. This pod investigates this phenomenon and Einstein's prediction. "
Actually, there is no proof that Einstein actually said the often erroneously attributed quotation about bees, but even if he didn't say it, it is true that human life depends upon the survival of bees that pollinate important plants in the food cycle.
See the pod at this link at Current.TV -
http://current.com/items/76404222_disappearing-bees.htm?xid=76?_________________________________

Bees at TouchArt ltd in the mountains in Santa Fe, New Mexico in June 2009.
Scientists think there's a new virus or parasite causing collapsed hive syndrome.

Some think cell phone towers emissions may be the cause.
Others blame the unnatural conditions corporate farming inflicts on bees when they are transported hundreds of miles to pollinate commercial fields.

Whatever the cause, the death of the bees is alarming.
Bees disappearing is like the canary in the mine dying.
We need to pay attention.
We share ONE EARTH. Think About It.
What if each day, each person did ONE thing to heal the earth?
What if each day, each person stopped doing ONE thing that hurts the earth?
ONE x Billions - do the math.
Consume less, Recycle, Regift, Reuse, Conserve.
Or more simply, try one step at a time to lighten your footprint on the earth.

We reduced our water use by 75% last year by implementing many little changes.
Every little change helps heal the air, water and earth.
by Charleen Touchette - TouchArt ltd in Santa Fe, New Mexico

Sunday, May 24, 2009

Members - The Gandhi-King Community

Members - The Gandhi-King Community

http://gandhiking.ning.com/profile/LeslynWong

May 25, 2009
From Charleen Touchette
New Mexico Coordinator Realizing the Dream

_Santa Fe, New Mexico -

_ ---Leslyn Wong who does such good work at Realizing the Dream Inc sent this link to The Ghandi-King Community.

Please consider joining this group dedicated to "Continuing a tradition of nonviolent transformation inspired by the ideas of Mohandas K. Gandhi and Martin Luther King, Jr.

True peace is not merely the absence of tension, it is the presence of justice. " Dr. Martin Luther Jr

"Intolerance is itself a form of violence and an obstacle to the growth of a true democratic spirit." Mohandas K. Ghandi

"Peace, is not only the goal, it is also the way." Martin Luther King III in a Jun2 1007 speech to Israeli Knesset.

"If there is to be peace in the world,There must be peace in the nations.
If there is to be peace in the nations,There must be peace in the cities.
If there is to be peace in the cities,There must be peace between neighbors.
If there is to be peace between neighbors,There must be peace in the home.
If there is to be peace in the home,There must be peace in the heart."
Lao-Tse - 6th century bce

The words of Dr. King Jr., Ghandi , Lao-Tse and Martin Luther King III echo the teachings of indigenous elders throughout the Americas.

Lakotah elder Black Elk said "The first peace, which is the most important, is that which comes within the souls of people when they realize their relationship, their oneness with the universe and all its powers, and when they realize that at the center of the universe dwells the Great Spirit, and that this center is really everywhere, it is within each of us."

Work for justice. It is the path to peace.

Friday, May 22, 2009

New Review of It Stops with Me by Charleen Touchette






Posted on Marjorie Simmins - Memoirs and More


Memoir Journal: I
MSVU Memoir Journal


by Marjorie Simmins


18 May 2009
"The latest: It Stops with Me: Memoirs of a Canuck Girl, by Charleen Touchette. Finally, some solid writing. Touchette is also a gifted visual artist and includes black and white and colour prints of her paintings in the book. As well, she is a curator, an educator, an activist and freelance writer. She has numerous book titles to her name, many with feminist perspectives, others that explore issues of cultural, religious and historical identities.
I don’t think Touchette and I would be best friends; this woman takes her politics very seriously and for all that she says she loves to laugh and enjoy life, her childhood was so bleak, violent and confusing, that it takes very bit of her sane self to keep the tortured self from imposing permanent depressions and mental and physical dysfunctions of all sorts.
That said, I have huge admiration for someone who has done as much as this woman has done, and succeeded in so many areas. I also admire someone who, as a young adult, chose a resoundingly sane and loving man with whom to share her life and make a family. If anyone could be forgiven for having chosen an unkind life partner, it would be Touchette. And yet she bypassed entirely the common pattern of abused children growing up to choose abusive partners. Now that’s a person who somehow protected her absolute core of sanity - against all odds.
It was a lovely and at the same disturbing read. My only criticism is the odd coyness about revealing the extent of her father’s sexual abuse. She builds up the tension in this regard again and again - in the art work and in the prose - but never flat-out says that she was raped, although this is intimated.
Likewise, she often repeats that the time was not right to tell her parents about the abuse (that would be tell her mother and confront her father) and the reader is left to guess that she never did tell them directly, but did show the art work around the country and beyond, and of course publish the memoir.
Again, you feel as the the entire book is building towards a showdown with the father - and yet this never occurs. Mind you, I don’t blame her for avoiding/putting off a showdown. The father remains a right prick throughout her life, for all that his violent ways tone down with age. It’s just that the story feels strangely climax-less - especially for a book that builds towards a climax almost from the first page.
All of which makes me sad. It seems that no matter how successful Touchette is, how brilliantly she has created and maintained a happy and healthy family life of her own, her fear of her father still dictates major decisions in her life. There are too many points I end up guessing about. Did she decide the pain of confrontation was not worth whatever good and liberating feelings she might receive back? Did the love she had for her mother get in the way of confronting the father? Was her mother’s role in the abuse (pretending it didn’t happen, looking the other way, blaming Touchette for the violence her father metes out to her) far too upsetting to explore in a meaningful way?
In the end consideration, I am not sure how I feel about the book."


___________________________


Posted May 21, 2009 by TouchArt Books


It Stops with Me by Charleen Touchette was banned at her hometown library in 2005. Touchette's Memoir of a Canuck Girl was on the ALA (American Library Association) 2006 Banned Book List. Bard College President Leon Botstein advocated for the book ban of It Stops with Me writing in December 2005, "it does not deserve First Amendment Protection." The ALA, PEN, USA, PEN American Center and the R.I. ACLU disagreed and launched a letter-writing campaign in support of It Stops with Me and against censorship and the book ban and It Stops with Me was reinstated to circulation at the Woonsocket Harris Public Library.


See also -














__________________________


It Stops with Me Subject of Franco-American Literature Scholars


_____________________________


See -


"Presence Visible et Invisible de La Langue Francaise Dans La Litterature Franco-Americaine Contemporaine" by Peggy Pacini - Universite de la Sorbonne Paris IV










Sunday, May 10, 2009

Mother's Day Painting for Everyone



Mother's Day Painting for Everyone





Every year, I give a painting to everyone to use in their good work for mothers and families.

"Mothers Call Home the Bees" by Charleen Touchette 2009

One year, a Birth Center in Atlanta, Georgia put my painting of Nursing Mothers on a mug they gave to new mothers to encourage breastfeeding and increased breasfeeding in their community by 50 %.

Hope you will use 2009's Mother's Day painting "Mothers Call Home the Bees" for mothers and families in your community.

One Earth. Think About It.

Wish all mothers and their families a day and year full of light, love and laughter.

Peace,



Charleen Touchette



http://www.touchart.net/



http://www.oneearthblog.blogspot.com/