Your Letters, Week of 5/31

Underreported Uranium

One brief observation in relation to my Open Mic one week ago (“Disaster Looms,” May 24): My friends and I have noticed a complete blackout of this news on mainstream (corporate) media—the Russian bombing of military targets that blew up warehouses in W Nuke-rain (pardon the dark humor), causing “depleted” uranium weapons to scatter radioactive dust in the local area.

I do not understand why this momentous event would be censored in the U.S. press.

Kudos to the Bohemian and Pacific Sun for promptly publishing this important story as soon as it came to your attention.

Barry Barnett

Santa Rosa

Ugly American

Makes you ask questions…Glen Kuiper gets fired and Donald Trump gets laughter and ratings?

In Europe recently, when I told somebody I was American, people either laughed hard in my face or expressed their deepest sympathies. What they didn’t do was show even a lame amount of respect. What the heck?

Craig J. Corsini

San Rafael

Culture Crush, Week of May 31

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Queer as Folk

Just steps away from the Sonoma County Pride Parade on Saturday, June 3 in downtown Santa Rosa is a matinee show at The Lost Church featuring queer singer-songwriters ready to belt out their truth. Hear Eli Conley, a queer transgender man from the South, sing stories that aren’t always reflected in roots music. Opening the show is Sonoma County local Lauren Arrow, a powerful singer whose life mission is to harness the power of the big sing-along. Doors open at 1pm, show from 1:45–4 pm, including a 20 minute intermission. Tickets are $15 at the show and online at tinyurl.com/EliConleyLaurenArrowJune3.

Petaluma

New Orleans Style

Petaluma’s Big Easy gets an injection of real deal New Orleans authenticity next Wednesday when nationally touring act Bon Bon Vivant delivers their uniquely New Orleans sound to town. As our colleagues at the Monterey Weekly put it, Bon Bon Vivant has an “eclectic, genre-bending style that combines elements of jazz, rock and up-tempo dance, plus haunting female vocals and original lyrics.” This is not to mention such descriptors as “carnival tunes” with a “bit of a Mardi Gras vibe,” all of which promises to be an evening of evocative music. Doors open at 6:30pm, show starts at 7:30pm, Wednesday, June 7 at The Big Easy, 128 American Alley, Petaluma. For more information, bigeasypetaluma.com. $10 suggested donation.

Ross

Drawn Together

Celebrating creativity as a community unifier, “Drawn Together: Celebrating DrawBridge Youth Artists” is an exhibition that features the works of children ages 5-18. Select works are currently being exhibited by local businesses and community organizations throughout the Bay Area. The exhibition concludes with a closing party for the public from 2 to 4 pm, Sunday, June 11 at the Marin Art and Garden Center, 30 Sir Francis Drake Blvd., Ross. This family-friendly event will feature a viewing of the artworks in the center’s studio and gardens, plus family art activities, picnic treats and an auction. Tickets are $25; free for children under 12

Napa Valley

Chardonnay Pinot Classic

Those who are ready for a weekend of indulgence curated by master sommeliers and acclaimed winemakers need look no further than the Napa Valley. The weekend-long third annual Chardonnay Pinot Classic includes iconic wine country experiences, gourmet lunches, luxury dinners and unique tastings. Among other rare selections, it will feature the 2016 Domain Nico Le Paradis, which marks only the the second time this wine has been poured at an event in the U.S. The Chardonnay Pinot Classic begins at 10am, Thursday, June 8, and continues through June 11 at Meritage Resort and Spa, 875 Bordeaux Way, Napa, To learn more or to purchase tickets, visit chardonnayclassic.com.

Brains and Bots: TinkTech tween teaches AI

Artificial Intelligence is a popular topic of conversation of late—one that is simultaneously celebrated and somehow controversial.

In just the past few months, weeks and even days, this decades-old concept of manmade brain power has careened headfirst into household relevance. And, by all indications, AI isn’t a trend that will fade out of popularity any time soon.

So, where does that leave those with non-artificial intelligence, and what measures and steps can be taken to coexist with such advanced forms of technology? Well, it may be best to leave it to the experts to explain. And, in this particular scenario, one such expert is 12-year-old Kaz Keller, who has taken it upon himself to teach a workshop on an AI chat program called ChatGPT.

“[ChatGPT] is a fun thing to teach other people,” Keller said. “It’s also a fun way to connect with my Dad because, well, sometimes he can be bad with tech, like sometimes he doesn’t know how to airplay! He is better at business and marketing.”

Keller has a long history of involvement in the Marin STEAM (science, technology, engineering, arts and mathematics) community. Before launching his ChatGPT workshop, he participated in a Design and Entrepreneurship camp at Marin’s own TinkerTech.

TinkerTech offers technology classes to children in and around Marin County and the greater Bay Area with tech education from passionate industry experts. Alongside lessons in AI, children aged 5 to 15 may attend TinkerTech camps to learn, or refine, their skills in coding, robotics, design, animation and more.

“Coding, robots and AI classes are far and away the most popular classes at TinkerTech,” said founder Claire Comins. “Parents want their children to understand these subjects, as education is empowering. To understand something is to not need to fear it so much.”

Teaching children how to code and what an AI is can empower everyone, Comins said.

“It helps people realize that [AI] was something created by a human and that the computer only does what you tell it to do,” Comins continued.

Keller met Comins at his school’s science fair, where TinkerTech was providing robots for “tinkering activities.” Having recently aged out of his previous summer program, he was eager to expand his horizons.

“Kaz is a very special child,” Comins said. “Very curious and fascinated and capable—he absolutely took on all of the challenges put on by TinkerTech.”

Armed with the knowledge and momentum from having attended TinkerTech’s Design and Entrepreneurship camp, where Keller brushed up on his 3-D modeling and laser-cutting skills, the preteen turned his attention to business.

“I used to set up lemonade stands to make pocket money,” Keller said. “My Dad asked me what else I could do that was not so much work for him!”

Initially, the Keller father-and-son duo thought of teaching Scratch, a high-level education tool to teach the building blocks of coding to children. But during a trip up to Tahoe, Keller watched a video of a man utilizing AI technology to code an app.

“I thought, ‘I want to try this,’” Keller said. “In the description, it said he was using ChatGPT. I found it and I signed up, and it looked really interesting. I used it to write stories as well as code and thought it would be fun to teach people about it and learn new things.”

“When I learned Kaz was doing these ChatGPT workshops, I felt really happy for him because he’s doing things he really enjoys,” Comins said. “As long as he’s enjoying it, he will perform above and beyond what we expect of a child of his age. We see this time and again: If a child’s interest is really ignited by something, they will take that project above and beyond what we thought possible.”

Currently, the Kellers estimate they have taught a total of 200 people within just one month of opening the ChatGTP workshop. Future plans include training other children to teach workshops of their own.

“It’s kind of crazy—I didn’t expect to be in a newspaper,” Keller said. “Some of my friends thought it was a scam, but now they are asking to do the workshops, too! That’s why we have started workshops for students who want to teach themselves.”

AI aside, Keller plans to pursue a career in game design and hardware engineering. He also expresses interest in building a hologram projector.

“I think when I grow up I want to … design tech and make things that support it,” he concluded.

The dreams, aspirations and skills of the current generation of children may seem vastly different from those of a decade or half a century ago—but their childlike wonder and astounding ability to learn and retain new information remains fully intact. Though the tools are rapidly developing and changing, children as a whole remain ever-curious and excitable.

“The common factor all the children [at TinkerTech] have is they want to share the skills they’ve learned,” Comins said. “These children, like Kaz, are so excited about what they’re learning that they want to share it, so they go home and share it with their parents.”

If there is one lesson to be learned from Keller, from TinkerTech and from AI itself, it’s this: Knowledge shared is vastly more powerful than knowledge withheld. From the invention of stone tools to the creation of the printing press, from poultices to penicillin, all the way to the smallpox vaccine, and from the ARPANET—the very first version of the internet created in 1969—to the modern smartphone … technological advancements have and will always be a part of the human experience.

“The pandemic accelerated all this computer learning in children, and so what we’re trying to do is tell them how much fun they can have being creative with their computer, like building your own AI, which we have a class on,” Comins said. “We have seven-year-olds coding.”

“Children are curious and like to know how things work,” Comins said. “Technology can open up new avenues for learning, education and creative expression … of course, screen time needs to be balanced. It’s important to play outside, do sports and enjoy nature with friends—all the wonderful things that life in the Bay Area has to offer!”

Programs and people such as TinkerTech, Comins, her instructors and the Kellers are all doing their part to spread education in the face of new and possibly intimidating technology, setting the stage for generations to come to achieve advancements beyond anything currently imaginable.

To learn more about TinkerTech’s local STEAM education opportunities for children, visit tinkertechcamps.com, call 415.290.9964 or send an email to he***@*************ps.com. Visit eventbrite.com/o/sam-keller-father-amp-kaz-keller-son-63950752463 to sign up for Keller’s virtual or in-person ChatGPT workshop.

Free Will Astrology, Week of May 31

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ARIES (March 21-April 19): History tells us that Albert Einstein was a brilliant genius. After his death, the brain of the pioneer physicist was saved and studied for years in the hope of analyzing the secrets of why it produced so many great ideas. Science writer Stephen Jay Gould provided a different perspective. He said, “I am less interested in the weight and convolutions of Einstein’s brain than in the near certainty that people of equal talent have lived and died in cotton fields and sweatshops.” I bring this to your attention, Aries, in the hope it will inspire you to pay closer attention to the unsung and underappreciated elements of your own life—both in yourself and the people around you.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Human life sometimes features sudden reversals of fortune that may seem almost miraculous. A twist in my own destiny is an example. As an adult, I was indigent for 18 years—the most starving artist of all the starving artists I have ever known. Then, in the course of a few months, all the years I had devoted to improving my craft as a writer paid off spectacularly. My horoscope column got widely syndicated, and I began to earn a decent wage. I predict a comparable turn of events for you in the coming months, Taurus—not necessarily in your finances, but in a pivotal area of your life.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): I am weary of gurus who tell us the ego is bad and must be shamed. In my view, we need a strong and healthy ego to fuel our quest for meaning. In that spirit and in accordance with astrological omens, I designate June as Celebrate Your Ego Month for you Geminis. You have a mandate to unabashedly embrace the beauty of your unique self. I hope you will celebrate and flaunt your special gifts. I hope you will honor your distinctive desires as the treasures they are. You are authorized to brag more than usual!

CANCER (June 21-July 22): One study reveals that British people own a significant amount of clothing they never wear. Other research suggests that the average American woman has over 100 items of clothing but considers just 10% of them to be “wearable.” If your relationship to your wardrobe is similar, Cancerian, it’s a favorable time to cull unused, unliked and unsuitable stuff. You would also benefit from a comparable approach to other areas of your life. Get rid of possessions, influences and ideas that take up space but serve no important purpose and are no longer aligned with who you really are.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): In July 1969, Leo astronaut Neil Armstrong was the first human to walk on the moon. But he almost missed his chance. Years earlier, his original application to become part of NASA’s space exploration team arrived a week past the deadline. But Armstrong’s buddy, Dick Day, who worked at NASA, sneaked it into the pile of applications that had come in time. I foresee the possibility of you receiving comparable assistance, Leo. Tell your friends and allies to be alert for ways they might be able to help you with either straightforward or surreptitious moves.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Great shearwaters are birds that travel a lot, covering 13,000 miles every year. From January to March, they breed in the South Atlantic Ocean, about halfway between Africa and South America. Around May, they fly west for a while and then head north, many of them as far as Canada and Greenland. When August comes, they head east to Europe, and later they migrate south along the coast of Africa to return to their breeding grounds. I am tempted to make this globetrotting bird your spirit creature for the next 12 months. You may be more inclined than ever before to go on journeys, and I expect you will be well rewarded for them. At the very least, I hope you will enjoy mind-opening voyages in your imagination.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): One of the central myths of Western culture is the Holy Grail. For over 800 years, storytellers have spun legends about the search for a precious chalice with magical qualities, including the power to heal and offer eternal youth. Sober scholars are more likely to say that the Holy Grail isn’t an actual physical object hidden away in a cave or catacomb, but a symbol of a spiritual awakening or an enlightening epiphany. For the purposes of your horoscope, I’m going to focus on the latter interpretation. I suspect you are gearing up for an encounter with a Holy Grail. Be alert! The revelations and insights and breakthroughs could come when you least expect them.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): June is Dare to Diminish Your Pain Month for you Scorpios. I hope you will aggressively pursue measures to alleviate discomfort and suffering. To address the physical variety, how about acupuncture or massage? Or supplements like boswellia, turmeric, devil’s claw root, white willow bark and omega-3 fatty acids? Other ideas: sunshine, heating pad, warm baths with Epsom salts, restorative sleep and exercise that simulates natural endorphins. Please be equally dynamic in treating your emotional and spiritual pain, dear Scorpio. Spend as much money as you can afford on skillful healers. Solicit the help of empathetic friends. Pray and meditate. Seek out in activities that make you laugh.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): A hungry humpback whale can hold more than 15,000 gallons of water in its mouth at once—enough to fill 400 bathtubs. In a funny way, their ability reminds me of you right now. You, too, have a huge capacity for whatever you feel like absorbing and engaging with. But I suggest you choose carefully what you want to absorb and engage with. Be open and receptive to only the most high-quality stuff that will enrich your life and provide a lot of fun. Don’t get filled up with trivia and nonsense and dross.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Funny story: A renowned Hollywood movie mogul was overheard at a dinner party regaling an aspiring actor with a long monologue about his achievements. The actor couldn’t get in a word edgewise. Finally, the mogul paused and said, “Well, enough about me. What do you think of me?” If I had been in the actor’s place, I might have said, “You, sir, are an insufferable, grandiose and boring narcissist who pathologically overestimates your own importance and has zero emotional intelligence.” The only downside to speaking my mind like that would be that the mogul might ruin my hopes of having a career in the movie business. In the coming weeks, Capricorn, I hope you will consistently find a middle ground between telling the brazen truth to those who need to hear it and protecting your precious goals and well-being.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): When faced with important decisions, most of us benefit from calling on all forms of intelligence. Simply consulting our analytical mind is not sufficient. Nor is checking in with only our deep feelings. Even drawing from our spunky intuition alone is not adequate. We are most likely to get practical clarity if we access the guidance of our analytical mind, gut feelings and sparkly intuition. This is always true, but it’s extra relevant now. You need to get the full blessing of the synergistic blend. PS: Ask your body to give you a few hints, too!

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Has your intuition been nudging you to revise and refine your sense of home? Have you been reorganizing the domestic vibes and bolstering your stability? I hope so. That’s what the cosmic rhythms are inviting you to do. If you have indeed responded to the call, congratulations. Buy yourself a nice homecoming present. But if you have resisted the flow of life’s guidance, please take corrective measures. Maybe start by reorganizing the décor and furniture. Clean up festering messes. Say sweet things to your housemates and family members. Manage issues that may be restricting your love of home.

Tam Valley’s Shana Morrison

Shana Morrison has lived in Marin County for half of her life and has performed with her band, Caledonia, at various local events and venues since 1995. I reached out to her as a fan of her music and was extra thrilled that she agreed to the following interview. 

What do you do? 

I’m an instructor at Internal Fire Pilates in Mill Valley. I’ve been enjoying the benefits of pilates for 23 years, teaching for almost 20. I also sing with my band, Caledonia, mostly on the weekends these days.

Where do you live? 

Tam Valley. 

How long have you lived in Marin? 

On and off for 25 years.

Where can we find you when you’re not at work?

My favorite coffee shop is The Lighthouse in Sausalito (RIP Dipsea). For dinner, India Palace in Mill Valley. I love seeing movies at the Rafael Film Center, especially during the Mill Valley Film Festival, when you can see filmmakers discuss their craft. 

If you had to convince someone how awesome Marin was, where would you take them?

Rancho Nicasio in the summer, Sweetwater Music Hall in the winter. A stroll along Blackie’s Pasture, stopping off for a sip and snack at Sam’s in Tiburon. And, West African dance class at Stapleton School of the Performing Arts in San Anselmo.  

What is one thing Marin is missing?

A jazz supper club.

What’s one bit of advice you’d share with your fellow Marinites?

Get outside in the sun whenever you can. Fresh air and Vitamin D are so crucial to our overall health. 

If you could invite anyone to a special dinner, who would they be?

My grandparents. I have a lot to catch them up on, and maybe they could give me a few pointers too.  

What is some advice you wish you knew 20 years ago?

Live for today, because tomorrow is not guaranteed.

What is something that in 20 years from now will seem cringeworthy?

Replacing human interaction with virtual relationships.

Big question. What is one thing you’d do to change the world?

No more career politicians.  

Morrison continues her family’s musical tradition (some may know the work of her father,Van) at Rancho Nicasio on Friday, June 2—tickets are going fast. Keep up with her at @shanamorrisonband on Instagram for more music and good times.

Nish Nadaraja was on the founding team at Yelp, serves on the San Anselmo Arts Commission and attempts to play pickleball at Fairfax’s Cañon Club.

Rob Brezsny’s ‘Astrology Is Real: Revelations from My Life as a Horoscope Columnist’

Rob Brezsny’s “Free Will Astrology” columns, reflections and meditations fill thousands and thousands of pages.

His forthcoming opus, Astrology Is Real: Revelations from My Life as a Horoscope Columnist, covers 598 pages; his subsequent novel Lucky Storms adds enough (752 pages) that it will be split in two.

Given the density and divinity woven into his insights, 70,000 words in columns alone every year delivers a lot.

But the soul of all that can be distilled down to one word: love.

Brezsny-style love.

Delirious, absurd, passionate, irrational, observational, strategic and sustainable love. Love for the finch at his birdfeeder, the eelgrass by the shore, the guy who stole his bike.

He describes it as “a chronic form of ecstatic awareness.”

Not long after introducing me to the phrase, he shared a piece he wrote in 2022 to help illustrate the habit, adding that the notes “are kinda beyond the parameters we’re working with, but you may enjoy it for your own purposes.”

Sign me up. And for Brezsny’s relatively recent newsletter.

Here appears that passage, in part:

In order to understand anyone or anything, you have to love it. I don’t mean romantic passion from it, or express any version of love that is tinged with expectation or sentimentality …

To open yourself up with love to an iris or redwood tree or hermit crab is to assert that you find it worthy enough to bestow blessings upon; and furthermore, that you find it worthy of communicating with …

You’re proving you’re receptive to its specific intelligence speaking through its special language—not your own intelligence and language.

This gives the living thing—iris, redwood or crab—a great gift.

I’m not being metaphorical or poetic here. I’m not using fairy tale logic. My meaning is literal…

The gift you receive is double: You’re able to get out of yourself, able to transcend your narrow interests and intelligence sufficiently, to learn how to understand the iris or redwood or crab in its native tongue.

Welcome to Santa Cruz

Conversations for this piece with the now Marin-based Brezsny traversed all sorts of places—readers of his column, which appears in 90-plus publications in North America and Italy, France, Japan and the Netherlands—know the far-flung flight pattern. I was most interested in unlocking that awareness.

But first, his tale had to travel to Santa Cruz.

His arrival on these shores came partly inspired by a scribble on a bathroom stall at a Roy Rogers restaurant in North Carolina: “I got Santa Cruzified and Californicated and it felt like paradise,” it read. “You know you’ll never become the artist you were meant to be until you come live in Santa Cruz.”

The would-be oracle listened. By 1978, he was rotating between a sleeping bag in San Lorenzo Park and a room with a shared bathroom in the original St. George Hotel. To supplement his food stamp diet, he would sit through an hour of service and sermon at a local church to enjoy lentil soup and a peanut butter and jelly sandwich.

The theft of his bicycle—which he views as a blessing—sent him to the pages of Good Times (a sister paper of the Pacific Sun and Bohemian). There, amid other classified ads, he saw the newspaper was looking for a new astrologer.

His first column appeared on Jan. 26, 1978, and has returned every week since. The related tale occupies a chapter called “Accidental Bonanza” in Astrology Is Real.

“I considered newspaper horoscopes to be an abomination,” he offers. “Without exception, they were poorly written and dull. They encourage people to be superstitious and often made the spurious implication that astrology preaches predetermination and annuls free will.”

Along the way, Brezsny studied poetry at UC Santa Cruz; worked as a restaurant janitor; wrote “Dark Ages,” a song recorded by Jefferson Starship; anchored three popular rock bands (Kamikaze Angel Slander, Tao Chemical and World Entertainment War); and ran for Santa Cruz City Council.

As part of his council campaign, he published a Little Yellow Book, a wink to Chairman Mao Tse-tung’s Little Red Book.

“Thomas Jefferson and I constitute a DREAM TICKET because we are an extraordinarily balanced team,” he writes in Little Yellow Book. “He’s from the south, I’m from the west. He’s an Aries, I’m a Moon Child. He’s an aristocratic populist, I’m a poor artist. He’s a law-abiding, law-creating agnostic, I’m an outlaw saint. He’s a celebrity spirit, I’m a little known human. He’s had five children by a woman he kept as a slave, I’ve had no children by women who are fully my equal.”

His magic thinking clicked with locals. His campaign was so successful he took out an ad in the Santa Cruz Sun asking residents to reconsider voting for him (i.e., Please don’t!) because his platform was performance, not politics.

Meanwhile, though he was born in Borger, Texas; spent his childhood in Michigan and Ohio; lived as a teenager in New Jersey; and has called Marin marshlands home for three decades, Brezsny came to understand how he’s constructed on a molecular level.

“I’m made of Santa Cruz,” he says. “I’m Santa Cruz taken to the world at large.”

Where There’s a Will

Like “Free Will Astrology” and Brezsny himself, Astrology Is Real checks many thought boxes while answering its underlying question: “Yes! Astrology is real—though not in the same sense that the Golden Gate Bridge is real; astrology is real in the way that an Emily Dickinson poem is real.”

“It’s a blend of a memoir, oracles for readers and essays about the art of astrology and mythopoetic intelligence,” Brezsny explains. “The eclectic tone ranges from pop to literary; from lyrical to philosophical; from searing critiques of hyper-rational, machine-style thinking to a celebration of the scientific method and soulful thinking.”

Like his previous book, Pronoia Is the Antidote for Paranoia: How the Whole World Is Conspiring to Shower You with Blessings, it doesn’t require linear learning. Jumping in at page 105 for an avalanche of inspiring quotes (“Sentiment without action is the ruin of the soul”) or page 483 for sign-specific reflections (“SCORPIO: What was the pain or suffering that healed you the most?”) is not only doable but encouraged.

Brezsny describes his books as workshops for his chronic-ecstatic awareness. The “chronic” part synergizes with the prolific pace he writes: This awareness he keeps is a practice, not an accomplishment; a verb, not a noun; an ongoing trip rather than a destination.

And he’s inviting everyone along for a ride on the zodiac, as evidenced in the following interview.

Mark C. Anderson: Way back when, last time I visited you in Marin—on a blue moon right before the end of the ’00s—you told me the next project would be a book on mastering a “chronic form of ecstatic awareness.” Does that hold?

ROB BREZSNY: In some ways, all my books are about that. The books serve as my laboratory to cultivate, refine and deepen that awareness, to make it work in new and ever-fresh ways.

For me to live in ecstatic awareness, for the prayer to work, I have to keep reinventing it. That’s the paradox, the great uproarious up-flow of creative power.

MA: You mention “altered states” as key.

RB: The key to chronic ecstatic awareness is to continually cultivate altered states. I don’t think we need psychedelics for that, though I’m all in favor of that technology for those who find it helpful.

For me, the playful work of getting into altered states is not just an either-or thing. It’s not a matter of either being in routine, mundane consciousness or else tripping one’s brains out. There are a trillion in-between altered states.

We can create altered states from moment to moment with our beginner’s mind unfurled—being willing to play with and love whatever’s in front of us. The fun trick is to be in a state of full-body readiness in which we are surpriseable and receptive to the possibility of being delighted, influenced, educated.

Pure perception is our ever-available entry into altered states. If we open our eyes, open our ears and become fully welcoming to what’s in front of us, we’re going to be changed. Every moment brings something we’ve never experienced before.

An example right now would be how your question germinated in me a stream of revelations and ideas.

[Meditation practitioner and molecular biologist] Jon Kabat-Zinn said, “Mindfulness is wise and affectionate attention.”

Borrowing from the Hindu school of Lila, I’m very much immersed in the understanding that life is the divine play of God and Goddess. We are participants in a sublime, mysterious art project.

At the core of the action is relationship and interplay. The intimate back-and-forth constantly reinvents and reinvigorates and reveals. As we improvise and transform, responding to each other’s improvisations, we have the blissful power to be each other’s muses.

Elizabeth Gilbert said, “You need to learn how to select your thoughts just the same way you select your clothes every day. This is a power you can cultivate.”

I choose to be inclined toward coalescing altered states of awareness that override and outwit my habit mind.

MA: And that receptivity is important, as you point out in a chapter from Pronoia, even when you encounter, say, white supremacists.

RB: My habit mind tends toward progressive political ideas. That’s fine. If my habit mind happens to be conditioned by something noble and beautiful, I approve.

But I remind myself not to be continually enraged about the toxic culture that evangelical Christians create and its danger to human life. I can’t live with grace if I’m pumped up with overwhelming indignation, for one thing.

And though the wrath might motivate me to take action on behalf of social justice, which is a good thing, too much anger can be draining and demoralizing.

Talking with my therapist, I came to a useful realization: The right-wing bigots and haters are acting out of primal terror. They are scared to death of the beautiful new world that’s coming. I saw and felt this in a visceral way because I was willing to momentarily set aside my fury, my habit mind, so as to behold their naked depths.

This realization doesn’t make me any less fervent about neutralizing the bigots’ toxic effects. But it enables me to relax into a more visionary and strategic understanding of what I’m up against.

I admire the Buddhist practice of adopting detachment from turmoil and angst. It’s healthy for me to cultivate a serene, poised center of gravity in the midst of chaos.

But the objectivity I strive for in my detachment is very warm and wet. It’s imbued with love and empathy. That’s the only way I can truly understand anyone or anything.

MA: One of my favorite thoughts from you goes like this: “True meaningfulness doesn’t exist unless it’s in relationship to someone or something,” which you echo later (“My happiness is meaningless unless I’m working on the happiness of others.”) Can you expand on that?

RB: The planet Uranus in our charts indicates where our greatest gifts overlap with our greatest genius. [More on page 275 in the book.]

[From Astrology Is Real: “I believe [Uranus] signifies the talents and superpowers we harbor that would be most beneficial to others. If we fully develop these potentials, they will express our unique genius and be useful to our fellow humans.”]

As theologian Frederick Buechner writes: “God calls you to the place where your deep gladness and the world’s deep hunger meet.”

MA: Another of my favorite thoughts of yours: “I believe the imagination is the most important asset we all possess.” Please riff.

RB: Imagination can be an energy drain, a fear-inducing curse if used lazily.

But if used well, it’s how we create everything beautiful in our lives. It’s the origin of all manifest.

See my piece on page 139 in Astrology Is Real, titled “You Are a Prophet.”

[“It’s downright self-destructive to keep infecting our imaginations with pictures of loss and failure, doom and gloom, fear and loathing. The far more sensible and practical approach is to expect blessings.”]

MA: You often return to the importance of dream work.

RB: One of the great places to go exploring the depths is dreams.

They are full of puns, unexpected events and playful twists and jokes.

They surprise.

That’s a good statement about the nature of playing in the depths: You have to be improvisatory, ready for anything …

Stars are still there in the sky when the sun is up; we just can’t see them because the sun is so bright and loud.

Likewise, stories just keep flowing ever-on from our depths, though they may be less visible when daytime awareness comes, and our ego awareness is so bright.

Some of those endless stories are dull, shaggy dog stories or the activities of our habit minds processing nonsense. But some are evocative and interesting and potentially useful or inspirational.

Just as dreams come in all genres, our ever-flowing stories are of all genres. Our stories offer us a nonstop array of altered states.

MA: What did you say in the ad discouraging people from voting for you for Santa Cruz City Council?

RB: I was honest. I wanted to disabuse potential voters of the notion that I was a straightforward, no-nonsense candidate.

I assured them poetry and performance art would be a key part of my repertoire as a city councilmember—just as they had been during the campaign.

I told them I would consult my dreams and use astrology and divination as I pondered what positions I should take.

In other words, I would act like myself.

More at freewillastrology.com and instagram.com/robbrezsny.

Marin County continues Stinson Beach sea level rise outreach process

Marin County has pulled out all the stops to help Stinson Beach residents and tourists envision the expected impacts of sea level rise.

In late April, as part of their latest public outreach effort, the Marin County Community Development Agency (CDA) published a 62-page report prepared by consultants from Environmental Science Associates. It serves as a localized update to a countywide report on sea level rise published in 2016.

In May, they published a video featuring renderings of future floods and then hosted a Zoom town hall followed by an in-person virtual reality experience at a local library branch.

Of course, residents of the low-lying community may have not needed all the tech-powered previews after their experience this winter.

“Stinson Beach felt the brunt of the January atmospheric rivers and storm surges; some properties sustained thousands of dollars in damage and the public beach was closed for three weeks to vehicles,” a May 8 county press release noted.

The report and an accompanying May 18 meeting were both concerned with the risks associated with higher tides, coastal storm floods and groundwater levels according to the latest climate science. Neither the report nor the meeting addressed what can and should be done about it.

Jack Liebster, a recently retired CDA planning manager who spent his career focused on protecting California’s coast, put it this way in a statement: “We need to know what the future might look like in order for us to plan for adaptations. We’ve been diligent and straightforward with the scientific realities as we look at all the ‘what ifs.’ At the May 18 meeting, it’s mostly going to be a summary of the new report and answer the question, ‘What if we do nothing?’”

The brief answer to Liebster’s question is that many of the buildings in the West Marin community, flanked by Bolinas Bay and Bolinas Lagoon—and bisected by Easkoot Creek—will be at increased risk in the coming decades.

By 2050, with 1.6 feet of sea level rise, over 450 buildings would be at risk of damage during a 100-year flood. That amount of sea level rise would also lead to a 33% reduction in the size of the beach during the summer, along with a 40% reduction in the size of the area’s wildlife-rich marsh habitat. The impacts are projected to worsen with the passing decades, with 6.6 feet of sea level rise expected by 2100.

Septic systems and underground utility lines, as well as some local roads and buildings, are already at risk of flooding.

During a question and answer session at the end of the May 18 online forum, some residents were ready to talk about possible solutions—but staff and consultants deftly wiggled out of any solid answers for the time being.

“We haven’t formalized a list yet of priorities, but that will be an outcome in our adaptation plan roadmap, which will prioritize what actions are needed first,” one staffer said when asked which mitigation projects will be prioritized.

Questions about managed retreat and what homeowners will have to pay for were similarly pushed to future meetings.

According to the May 8 statement, “CDA staff will work with its consultant team over the next year to identify and analyze feasible adaptation strategies and pathways, carry out stakeholder engagement, and identify possible funding sources for adaptation.”

Find more information, look up the Stinson Adaptation and Resilience Collaboration (ARC) online.

‘Shakespeare in Love’ at Novato Theater Company

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Bill in Bliss

Shakespeare is hard. Shakespearean adaptations which use the Elizabethan language without the helpful context of the plot are arguably harder. Novato Theater Company faces that challenge with the last play of their season, Shakespeare in Love. The show runs in Novato through June 11.

For those who haven’t seen the Oscar-winning movie, the plot is simple. William Shakespeare (a very funny Michael Girts) is trying to write a newly commissioned work titled Romeo and Ethel, the Pirate’s Daughter. He meets and falls in love with the rich Viola de Lesseps (Rachel Kaiulani Kennealy), who is pretending to be a boy to be able to be an actor. Along the way to love and loss are mistaken identity, a vendetta, an unpaid debt, silly hats, sword fights, brothels, shipwrecks, the queen of England and a dog. Well, it’s a simple plot for Shakespeare.

NTC has shrewdly paired new director Nic Moore with seasoned director Gillian Eichenberger. Co-directors are often a good way to introduce new talent to the responsibilities, stress and expectations of directing.

The directors have done an excellent job of casting actors that more closely represent the world outside their theater’s doors and more closely resemble the cosmopolitan citizens of Elizabethan England, more so than what is normally seen on local stages.

They are also to be commended for giving young actors much-needed access to veteran actors, resulting in Adonis Reyes and Grisha Driscoll’s nuanced, engaging performances and Alexa Heftye’s adorable Wabash.

Dual directors can, as this production does, result in an uneven play. Some performances are very strong. Kim Bromley’s Nurse is consistently funny. Michael B. Harris’ Marlowe is a well-thought-out take on a familiar character, and Arup Chakrabarti’s Ned Allen manages to balance the arrogance and artistry of the character with grace.

But others, like Michele Sanner Vargas’ lower-status Queen Elizabeth, don’t quite work. This isn’t for a lack of talent. All the choices are bold, show commitment to the characters and could have worked, given more attention.

This lack of attention appears in all aspects of the production. The minimalist set by Michael Walraven is well executed, but no one seemed to realize Elizabethan dresses weren’t meant to sit on six inch steps. Similarly, the costumes by Jody Branham are gorgeously authentic, except for when they aren’t, such as certain fake boot cuffs.

Overall, this is a funny, feel-good two-hours of on-stage traffic. It’s only a pity that there weren’t clearer traffic signals.

’Shakespeare in Love’ runs through June 11 at the Novato Theater Company, 5420 Nave Dr., Ste. C, Novato. Fri & Sat, 7:30pm; Sun, 2pm. $15–$27. 415.883.4498. Masking is strongly recommended. novatotheatercompany.org.

Hot Summer Guide

Summer is fast approaching, and with the turn of the season comes the promise of longer (and hotter) days here in the North Bay.

Luckily, Marin County has a million ways to beat the heat. From entertainment to nature, fairs and festivals, and all the ice cream in between, it’s time to start filling up that summertime agenda with fun, festivities and all-around merriment.

Marin Shakespeare Company’s Summer Shows

Nothing says summer quite like soaking up some Shakespeare under the open sky. Under the watchful eye of the Marin Shakespeare Company’s new artistic director, Jon Tracy, two plays are in the works. For Hamlet fans, shows begin as early as June 16 and run to July 16. Those who prefer a lighter tale may tune in from Aug. 4 to Sept. 3 for Twelfth Night, directed by Bridgette Loriaux.

The Marin Shakespeare Company’s summer shows will take place at the Forest Meadows Amphitheater, located at 890 Belle Ave. in San Rafael. For more information or to buy tickets, visit the website at marinshakespeare.org.

Valley Summer Music Series

Barry “The Fish” Melton Band is the first act to make a splash as part of this year’s Valley Summer Music Series presented by the San Geronimo Valley Community Center.

The Fish dives in at 5 pm, Sunday, June 4, at Giaco’s Valley Roadhouse, 625 San Geronimo Valley Drive, San Geronimo. Tickets are $25. Events run through September. For more information visit bit.ly/sgvms23.

Mountain Play

Mountain Play is again taking advantage of the summer months to present yet another great outdoor theater adventure with its rendition of Into the Woods. This production will play from May 21 to June 18. For more information or to purchase tickets, go to mountainplay.org.

Marin County Fair: ‘Electrifying!’

The Marin County Fair returns in its full glory for the first time since 2019 with the 2023 theme: “Electrifying!” Attendees will not only partake in all the fan-favorite fair fares, but will also help in celebrating sources of clean, renewable energy.

The Marin County Fair will open daily from 11am to 11pm and will span from June 30 to July 4. The fair is located at the Marin County Fairgrounds at 10 Ave. of the Flags in San Rafael. For more information or to pre-purchase tickets, visit the website at fair.marincounty.org/2023.

Gem Faire

The Gem Faire is coming back to town this summer—this stone-centric celebration will take place the weekend of July 21 to 23 and will be open from noon to 6pm July 21, 10am to 6pm July 22 and 10am to 5pm July 23. The Gem Fair is located at the Marin Veterans Memorial Auditorium, 10 Ave. of the Flags, San Rafael. See gemfaire.com/venue/marin-centerexhibit-hall for more information.

Jazz & Blues by the Bay

If the desired vibes this summer include listening to some smooth jazz and blues by the water, drink in hand and a song in heart, then Jazz & Blues by the Bay is the way to go. The 2023 lineup will include well over a dozen different performers, from June 2 to Sept. 15. To learn more, view the performance lineup or reserve a table, visit sausalito.gov/departments/parks-and-recreation/events/jazz-and-blues-by-the-bay.

Terrapin Crossroads Sunday Daydream Festival

This one-day festival in San Rafael promises the works: a fun run, music, food and more! Terrapin Crossroads Sunday Daydream Festival is set for July 9. Visit sundaydaydream.com for more information.

Fairfax Festival (& Ecofest)

The 44th annual Fairfax Festival (& Ecofest) is a two-day-long celebration that includes music, a flea market, arts and crafts, wine and beer, a 10am Saturday parade and a Friday night movie on a baseball field. The Fairfax Festival will take place June 10 and 11. Visit fairfaxfestival.com to learn more.

Green Gulch Farms Summer Solstice Retreat

For a more mindful start to the summer months, consider this unique retreat opportunity at Green Gulch Farms. Unplug and explore various ways to reconnect with nature and oneself through meditation at the Summer Solstice Retreat, which will take place on June 23. To learn more about the event, visit sfzc.org/locations/green-gulch-farm.

San Rafael Bead & Design Show

Bead enthusiasts rejoice for this summer’s schedule, including the San Rafael Bead & Design Show. This means attendees can peruse displays, consider collectibles and connect with the 125-plus other bead lovers from the lineup of show members. This event will run from June 9 through 11 in San Rafael’s Embassy Suites. For more information, visit the website at beadagio.com.

Novato Art, Wine & Music Fest

The Novato Art, Wine & Music Fest is back with its usual promise of festive cheer, art galore, food and wine to spare, and, of course, free admission. This festival is set to take place on June 10 and 11 and will run from 11am to 7pm Saturday and 11am to 6pm Sunday. To learn more about the event, visit novatochamber.com/2023-art-wine-music.

Rancho Compasión Film Night

Rancho Compasión is a non-profit dedicated to the cause of providing both sanctuary and care to farm animals in need. This summer, the organization is hosting a Future of Food Film Night on Aug. 5 with Miyoko Schinner. Visit the website at ranchocompasion.org to learn more.

Rancho Nicasio’s BBQs on Lawn Music Series

Rancho Nicasio’s BBQs on Lawn Music Series will begin on May 28 and run through September. Guests can gather ’round, eat some BBQ, kick back and relish merry musical entertainment outdoors. To learn more about the Rancho Nicasio music series, go to ranchonicasio.com.

Summer Concerts in the Garden

Get your garden on this July when the Marin Art & Garden Center’s “Summer Concerts in the Garden” series returns from 5 to 7pm, every Thursday. Guests are encouraged to pack a picnic, throw down a blanket and kick it in their low-backed chairs for an evening of topnotch music. The series begins July 6 with Steve Lucky and the Rhumba Bums. Beer, wine, non-alcoholic drinks and snacks are available for purchase, and a KidZone will keep kiddos busy with activities. Tickets are $20. The performance is at the Gazebo Lawn at the center, 30 Sir Francis Drake Blvd., Ross. More info at maringarden.org/events.

Real Astrology, Week of May 24

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ARIES (March 21-April 19): My reading of the astrological omens inspires me to make a series of paradoxical predictions for you. Here are five scenarios I foresee as being quite possible in the coming weeks. 1. An epic journey to a sanctuary close to home. 2. A boundary that doesn’t keep people apart but brings them closer. 3. A rambunctious intervention that calms you down and helps you feel more at peace. 4. A complex process that leads to simple clarity. 5. A visit to the past that empowers you to redesign the future.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Do you want a seed to fulfill its destiny? You must bury it in the ground. There, if it’s able to draw on water and the proper nutrients, it will break open and sprout. Its life as a seed will be over. The plant it eventually grows into will look nothing like its source. We take this process for granted, but it’s always a miracle. Now let’s invoke this story as a metaphor for what you are hopefully on the verge of, Taurus. I invite you to do all that’s helpful and necessary to ensure your seed germinates!

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Your meandering trek through the Unpromised Land wasn’t as demoralizing as you feared. The skirmish with the metaphorical dragon was a bit disruptive, but hey, you are still breathing and walking around—and even seem to have been energized by the weird thrill of the adventure. The only other possible downside was the new dent in your sweet dream. But I suspect that in the long run, that imperfection will inspire you to work even harder on behalf of your sweet dream—and this will be a blessing. Here’s another perk: The ordeal you endured effectively cleaned out stale old karma, freeing up space for a slew of fresh help and resources.

CANCER (June 21-July 22): Testing time is ahead, but don’t get your nerves in an uproar with fantasy-spawned stress. For the most part, your challenges and trials will be interesting, not unsettling. There will be few if any trick questions. There will be straightforward prods to stretch your capacities and expand your understanding. Bonus! I bet you’ll get the brilliant impulse to shed the ball and chain you’ve been absent-mindedly carrying around with you.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Biologist Edward O. Wilson said that the most social animals are ants, termites and honeybees. He used the following criteria to define that description: “altruism, instincts devoted to social life, and the tightness of the bonds that turn colonies into virtual superorganisms.” I’m going to advocate that you regard ants, termites and honeybees as teachers and role models for you. The coming weeks will be a great time to boost your skill at socializing and networking. You will be wise to ruminate about how you could improve your life by enhancing your ability to cooperate with others. And remember to boost your altruism!

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Jack Sarfatti is an authentic but maverick physicist born under the sign of Virgo. He suggests that if we make ourselves receptive and alert, we may get help from our future selves. They are trying to communicate good ideas to us back through time. Alas, most of us don’t believe such a thing is feasible, so we aren’t attuned to the potential help. I will encourage you to transcend any natural skepticism you might have about Sarfatti’s theory. As a fun experiment, imagine that the Future You has an important transmission for you—maybe several transmissions. For best results, formulate three specific questions to pose to the Future You.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): I have five points for your consideration. 1. You are alive in your mysterious, endlessly interesting life, and you are imbued with the fantastically potent power of awareness. How could you not feel thrilled? 2. You’re on a planet that’s always surprising, and you’re in an era when so many things are changing that you can’t help being fascinated. How could you not feel thrilled? 3. You have some intriguing project to look forward to, or some challenging but engaging work you’re doing, or some mind-bending riddle you’re trying to solve. How could you not feel thrilled? 4. You’re playing the most enigmatic game in the universe, also known as your destiny on Earth, and you love ruminating on questions about what it all means. How could you not feel thrilled? 5. You never know what’s going to happen next. You’re like a hero in an epic movie that is endlessly entertaining. How could you not feel thrilled?

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): “Trust those that you have helped to help you in their turn,” advises Scorpio author Neil Gaiman. Let’s make that one of your mantras for the coming weeks. In my astrological understanding, you are due to cash in on favors you have bestowed on others. The generosity you have expressed should be streaming back your way in abundance. Be bold about welcoming the bounty. In fact, I hope you will nudge and prompt people, if necessary, to reward you for your past support and blessings.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): So many of us are starved to be listened to with full attention. So many of us yearn to be seen and heard and felt by people who are skilled at receptive empathy. How many of us? I’d say the figure is about 99.9%. That’s the bad news, Sagittarius. The good news is that in the coming weeks, you will have an exceptional ability to win the attention of good listeners. To boost the potential healing effects of this opportunity, here’s what I recommend: Refine and deepen your own listening skills. Express them with panache.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Because you’re a Capricorn, earthiness is probably one of your strengths. It’s your birthright to be practical and sensible and well-grounded. Now and then, however, your earthiness devolves into muddiness. You get too sober and earnest. You’re bogged down in excess pragmatism. I suspect you may be susceptible to such a state these days. What to do? It may help if you add elements of air and fire to your constitution, just to balance things out. Give yourself a secret nickname with a fiery feel, like Blaze, or a crispy briskness, like Breezy. What else could you do to rouse fresh, glowing vigor, Breezy Blaze—even a touch of wildness?

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): I love to use metaphors in my writing, but I hate to mix unrelated metaphors. I thrive on referring to poetry, sometimes even surrealist poetry, but I try to avoid sounding like a lunatic. However, at this juncture in your hero’s journey, Aquarius, I frankly feel that the most effective way to communicate with you is to offer you mixed metaphors and surrealist poetry that border on sounding lunatic. Why? Because you seem primed to wander around on the edges of reality. I’m guessing you’ll respond best to a message that’s aligned with your unruly mood. So here goes: Get ready to surf the spiritual undertow all the way to the teeming wilderness on the other side of the cracked mirror. Ignore the provocative wasteland on your left and the intriguing chaos on your right. Stay focused on the stars in your eyes and devote yourself to wild joy.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): “The gift of patience opens when our body, heart, and mind slow enough to move in unison.” So says Piscean poet Mark Nepo. I feel confident you are about to glide into such a grand harmony, dear Pisces. Through a blend of grace and your relaxed efforts to be true to your deepest desires, your body, heart and mind will synchronize and synergize. Patience will be just one of the gifts you will receive. Others include: a clear vision of your most beautiful future; a lucid understanding of what will be most meaningful to you in the next three years; and a profound sense of feeling at home in the world wherever you go.

Your Letters, Week of 5/31

Underreported Uranium One brief observation in relation to my Open Mic one week ago (“Disaster Looms,” May 24): My friends and I have noticed a complete blackout of this news on mainstream (corporate) media—the Russian bombing of military targets that blew up warehouses in W Nuke-rain (pardon the dark humor), causing “depleted” uranium weapons to scatter radioactive dust in the...

Culture Crush, Week of May 31

Queer as Folk Just steps away from the Sonoma County Pride Parade on Saturday, June 3 in downtown Santa Rosa is a matinee show at The Lost Church featuring queer singer-songwriters ready to belt out their truth. Hear Eli Conley, a queer transgender man from the South, sing stories that aren’t always reflected in roots music. Opening the show is...

Brains and Bots: TinkTech tween teaches AI

Artificial Intelligence is a popular topic of conversation of late—one that is simultaneously celebrated and somehow controversial. In just the past few months, weeks and even days, this decades-old concept of manmade brain power has careened headfirst into household relevance. And, by all indications, AI isn’t a trend that will fade out of popularity any time soon. So, where does that...

Free Will Astrology, Week of May 31

ARIES (March 21-April 19): History tells us that Albert Einstein was a brilliant genius. After his death, the brain of the pioneer physicist was saved and studied for years in the hope of analyzing the secrets of why it produced so many great ideas. Science writer Stephen Jay Gould provided a different perspective. He said, "I am less interested...

Tam Valley’s Shana Morrison

Shana Morrison has lived in Marin County for half of her life and has performed with her band, Caledonia, at various local events and venues since 1995. I reached out to her as a fan of her music and was extra thrilled that she agreed to the following interview.  What do you do?  I’m an instructor at Internal Fire Pilates in...

Rob Brezsny’s ‘Astrology Is Real: Revelations from My Life as a Horoscope Columnist’

Rob Brezsny’s “Free Will Astrology” columns, reflections and meditations fill thousands and thousands of pages. His forthcoming opus, Astrology Is Real: Revelations from My Life as a Horoscope Columnist, covers 598 pages; his subsequent novel Lucky Storms adds enough (752 pages) that it will be split in two. Given the density and divinity woven into his insights, 70,000 words in columns...

Marin County continues Stinson Beach sea level rise outreach process

Marin County has pulled out all the stops to help Stinson Beach residents and tourists envision the expected impacts of sea level rise. In late April, as part of their latest public outreach effort, the Marin County Community Development Agency (CDA) published a 62-page report prepared by consultants from Environmental Science Associates. It serves as a localized update to a...

‘Shakespeare in Love’ at Novato Theater Company

Bill in Bliss Shakespeare is hard. Shakespearean adaptations which use the Elizabethan language without the helpful context of the plot are arguably harder. Novato Theater Company faces that challenge with the last play of their season, Shakespeare in Love. The show runs in Novato through June 11. For those who haven’t seen the Oscar-winning movie, the plot is simple. William Shakespeare...

Hot Summer Guide

Summer is fast approaching, and with the turn of the season comes the promise of longer (and hotter) days here in the North Bay. Luckily, Marin County has a million ways to beat the heat. From entertainment to nature, fairs and festivals, and all the ice cream in between, it’s time to start filling up that summertime agenda with fun,...

Real Astrology, Week of May 24

ARIES (March 21-April 19): My reading of the astrological omens inspires me to make a series of paradoxical predictions for you. Here are five scenarios I foresee as being quite possible in the coming weeks. 1. An epic journey to a sanctuary close to home. 2. A boundary that doesn’t keep people apart but brings them closer. 3. A...
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