Your Letters, 4/19

Law Flaws

House Speaker Kevin McCarthy says the Trump indictment has “irreparably harmed” the country. What on earth is he talking about?

Prosecution of misdemeanor or felony crime is harmful, illegal, unconstitutional, wrong? The answer to his befuddling statement is found in a message on a popular T-shirt: “Trust God. Not government.”

McCarthy is trafficking in the popular libertarian philosophy, which is also the evangelical church argument, that government is evil and that the fundamentalist church and its anti-civic bedfellows, patriotic libertarian Republicans, are the only forces for good on earth.

The problem with this is that our patriotic ancestors in 1776 were not fighting against government and law; they were fighting against “king’s government” and “king’s law.” And those bad laws of King George III are listed in painful detail in the Declaration of Independence. Our ancestors wanted “people’s government” and “people’s law.”

When laws are made by the people, they are blessed by God, and people have respect for them. McCarthy is trying to use our ignorance of history to return the nation to British-style autocratic government in the form of Donald Trump, himself, or a new Republican leader in 2024. I get it. And now you get it too.

Kimball Shinkoskey

Marin County

A Reply

In response to Craig Corsini’s letter, “Happy Easter,” April 12-18, 2023:

Anyone whose hangover felt worse than getting whipped with a Roman flagellum, having eight- inch spikes hammered through both wrists and ankles, then hanging on a crossbeam to slowly suffocate should lay off the sterno and enroll in a 12- step program. With some diligence and proper guidance, so doing might just help him expunge his obviously virulent resentment against Christians. Live and let live.

Michael Lyon

Marin County

Space Case: Culture Crush 4/19

Petaluma

Galaxy Far, Far Away

North Bay Cabaret’s 5th annual May The Fourth Be With You A Star Wars Burlesque & Variety Show describes itself as: “A long time ago, in a galaXXXy far, far away …,” featuring a world-class lineup of Star Wars-themed burlesque, drag, pole dancing, puppets, circus, sketch comedy, and live music. Dress in costume for the Costume Contest and a “futuristic photo booth.” After the show, enjoy an “intergalactic DJ dance party” and interactive lightsaber games. Food and cosmic cocktails will be available. Doors open at 7 pm, and the show begins at 8 pm, Thursday, May 4 at the Mystic Theatre, 23 Petaluma Blvd N., Petaluma. This is a 21+ event, and ID is required. Ticket options are from $29-$200 and are available online at northbayevents.com and at venue.

Cotati

Chanteuse

SonoMusette: An Intimate Evening of French Songs, featuring Parisian singer Mimi Pirard, transports one to mid-1900s Paris through the evocative songs of Edith Piaf, Jacques Brel and other iconic performers of the era. Backed by Robert Lunceford on accordion, Jan Martinelli on piano and bass, Isaac Vandeveer on guitar and bass, and Kendrick Freeman on drums, singer Pirard makes one pine for a vie en rose, beginning at 7pm, Saturday, May 6 at The New Cotati Cabaret at Ner Shalom, 85 Plaza St., Cotati. Learn more about the band at sonomusette.com and purchase tickets at bit.ly/sonomusette-ncc.

Muir Beach

Plot Twist

Get both the kundalini and ink flowing with a Yoga & Writing Daylong Retreat, led by writer and mindfulness meditation teacher Albert Flynn DeSilver and yoga teacher Saraswati Clere. The event is open to published writers and those new to their writing practices alike. The optional yoga sessions will include nature-inspired, gentle grounding postures and inward practices that include pranayama and meditation. The retreat runs from 9am to 5pm, Sunday, May 7 at Green Gulch Zen Center & Gardens, 1601 Shoreline Hwy., Muir Beach. Tickets are $145-$260 and can be obtained at bit.ly/yoga-write. Namaste!

Petaluma

Smart 4/20

Melanie Abrams and Larry Smith are local authors of The Joy of Cannabis, 75 Ways to Amplify Your Life through Cannabis. At a free, cannabis themed event on 4/20, the authors will present their book and answer questions like can cannabis help with my anxiety? Pain? Sleep? Will it help reconnect me with my partner or my parents? How do I navigate a dispensary? The authors will talk about the science and magic of cannabis from 5 to 8pm, Thursday, April 20 at VIBE Gallery, 1 Petaluma Blvd. N., Petaluma. RSVP at in**@*****************ma.com to reserve a seat.

Mangia, Mangia!

Meet Cucina sa’s Donna Seymour

My wife and I spend way too much time at Cucina sa. And now that Donna Seymour just told me about their new happy hour (Tuesday-Friday, 3-5pm), we’ll be at her San Anselmo institution of a restaurant even more. The following is an interview with Seymour:

What do you do?

Live and work in this great community of San Anselmo. I have owned and run Cucina sa for the last 25 years.

Where do you live?

My husband, Jim, and I moved to Sleepy Hollow nine years ago, shared by our collective four kids who come and go, as well as our three cats and two dogs.

How long have you lived in Marin? A quarter of a century!

Where can we find you when not at work?

Hiking the trails in Sleepy Hollow with my two labs, Roscoe and Amos; going to my new wonderful gym, FitLab in Fairfax; and shopping at Anthropologie for new dresses for work.

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

On a hike from Pantoll down the Matt Davis trail to Stinson Beach, then lunch at any one of several cool outdoor places—Hook Fish in Mill Valley, or Gravity Tavern or Cucina sa on the parklet.

What is one thing Marin is missing?

I’d love some good Chinese food. A dumpling place or real dim sum.

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

Appreciate the beauty of this special place that we get to live in, and show kindness. Talk to your neighbors, participate in town events, get to know one another.

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

Any dinner is always more special with dear friends, and of course my awesome husband. Nothing is better than sharing a meal and conversation with those you care about.

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

Try to slow down, work a little less, enjoy your time, at every stage in life. And don’t worry what others think of you—it’s a huge waste of time and energy.

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

How we are all so tied to our phones. Getting sucked into social media. Put it down and go outside!

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

Make all universities free to all students. Period. Everyone deserves the time and space to explore and learn.

Keep up with Seymour at @cucina_sa on Instagram, or better yet, stop in for happy hour!

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.

Free Will Astrology, April 19

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ARIES (March 21-April 19): In English, the phrase “growing pains” refers to stresses that emerge during times of rapid ripening or vigorous development. Although they might feel uncomfortable, they are often signs that the ongoing transformations are invigorating. Any project that doesn’t have at least some growing pains may lack ambition. If we hope to transcend our previous limits and become a more complete expression of our destiny, we must stretch ourselves in ways that inconvenience our old selves. I’m expecting growing pains to be one of your key motifs in the coming weeks, dear Aries. It’s important that you don’t try to repress the discomfort. On the other hand, it’s also crucial not to obsess over them. Keep a clear vision of what these sacrifices will make possible for you.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Satirical Taurus author Karl Kraus defined “sentimental irony” as “a dog that bays at the moon while pissing on graves.” Please avoid that decadent emotion in the coming weeks, Taurus. You will also be wise to reject any other useless or counterproductive feelings that rise up within you or hurtle toward you from other people, like “clever cruelty” or “noble self-pity” or “sweet revenge.” In fact, I hope you will be rigorous about what moods you feed and what influences you allow into your sphere. You have a right and a duty to be highly discerning about shaping both your inner and outer environments. Renewal time is imminent.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): In his poem “October Fullness,” Pablo Neruda says, “Our own wounds heal with weeping, / Our own wounds heal with singing.” I agree. I believe that weeping and singing are two effective ways to recover from emotional pain and distress. The more weeping and singing we do, the better. I especially recommend these therapeutic actions to you now, Gemini. You are in a phase when you can accomplish far more curative and restorative transformations than usual.

CANCER (June 21-July 22): After careful analysis of the astrological omens and a deep-diving meditation, I have concluded that the coming weeks will be a favorable time for you to indulge in an unprecedented binge of convivial revelry and pleasure. My advice is to engage in as much feasting and carousing as you can without completely ignoring your responsibilities. I know this may sound extreme, but I am inviting you to have more fun than you have ever had—even more fun than you imagine you deserve. (You do deserve it, though.) I hope you will break all your previous records for frequency and intensity of laughter.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): In 1886, Vincent van Gogh bought a pair of worn-out shoes at a Paris flea market. When he got home, he realized they didn’t fit. Rather than discard them, he made them the centerpiece of one of his paintings. Eventually, they became famous. In 2009, a renowned gallery in Cologne, Germany, built an entire exhibit around the scruffy brown leather shoes. In the course of their celebrated career, six major philosophers and art historians have written about them as if they were potent symbols worthy of profound consideration. I propose that we regard their history as an inspirational metaphor for you in the coming weeks. What humble influence might be ready for evocative consideration and inspirational use?

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Gliding away from the routine for rendezvous with fun riddles? I approve! Delivering your gorgeous self into the vicinity of a possibly righteous temptation? OK. But go slowly, please. Size up the situation with your gut intuition and long-range vision as well as your itchy fervor. In general, I am pleased with your willingness to slip outside your comfortable enclaves and play freely in the frontier zones. It makes me happy to see you experimenting with aha and what-if and maybe baby. I hope you summon the chutzpah to find and reveal veiled parts of your authentic self.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): The German word Sehnsucht refers to when we have a profound, poignant yearning for something, but we quite don’t know what that something is. I suspect you may soon be in the grip of your personal Sehnsucht. But I also believe you are close to identifying an experience that will quench the seemingly impossible longing. You will either discover a novel source of deep gratification, or you will be able to transform an existing gratification to accommodate your Sehnsucht. Sounds like spectacular fun to me. Clear some space in your schedule to welcome it.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Most of us have at some time in the past been mean and cruel to people we loved. We acted unconsciously or unintentionally, perhaps, but the bottom line is that we caused pain. The coming weeks will be a favorable time for you to atone for any such hurts you have dispensed. I encourage you to be creative as you offer healing and correction for any mistakes you’ve made with important allies. I’m not necessarily suggesting you try to resume your bond with ex-lovers and former friends. The goal is to purge your iffy karma and graduate from the past. Perform whatever magic you have at your disposal to transform suffering with love.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): The blues singer-songwriter B. B. King wasn’t always known by that name. He was born Riley B. King. In his twenties, when he began working at a Memphis radio station, he acquired the nickname “Beales Street Blues Boy.” Later, that was shortened to “Blues Boy,” and eventually to “B. B.” In the spirit of B. B. King’s evolution and in accordance with astrological omens, I invite you to identify areas of your life with cumbersome or unnecessary complexities that might benefit from simplification.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Proboscis monkeys live in Borneo and nowhere else on Earth. Their diet consists largely of fruits and leaves from trees that grow only on Borneo and nowhere else. I propose we make them your anti-role model in the coming months. In my astrological opinion, you need to diversify your sources of nourishment, both the literal and metaphorical varieties. You will also be wise to draw influences from a wide variety of humans and experiences. I further suggest that you expand your financial life so you have multiple sources of income and diversified investments.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): It’s challenging to track down the sources of quotes on the Internet. Today, for instance, I found these words attributed to the ancient Greek philosopher Plato: “I enjoy the simple things in life, like recklessly spending my cash and being a disappointment to my family.” That can’t be right. I’m sure Plato didn’t actually say such things. Elsewhere, I came upon a review of George Orwell’s book, Animal Farm, that was supposedly penned by pop star Taylor Swift: “Not a very good instructional guide on farming. Would not recommend to first-time farmers.” Again, I’m sure that wasn’t written by Swift. I bring this up, Aquarius, because one of your crucial tasks these days is to be dogged and discerning as you track down the true origins of things. Not just Internet quotes, but everything else, as well—including rumors, theories and evidence. Go to the source, the roots, the foundations.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): In accordance with astrological omens, I’m turning over this horoscope to Piscean teacher Esther Hicks. Here are affirmations she advises you to embody: “I’m going to be happy. I’m going to skip and dance. I will be glad. I will smile a lot. I will be easy. I will count my blessings. I will look for reasons to feel good. I will dig up positive things from the past. I will look for positive things where I am right now. I will look for positive things in the future. It is my natural state to be a happy person. It’s natural for me to love and laugh. I am a happy person!”

Deviled Eggs, Blooming Art, Tall Ships, and Jazz Flicks

Petaluma

Devilishly Egg-citing

They say the devil is in the details—now he’s also in the eggs, thanks to the 2nd Annual Great Petaluma Deviled Egg Competition, hosted by Petaluma’s Barber Cellars and Barber Lee Spirits. The competition begins at 11am, Sunday, April 23, and will feature a panoply of deviled egg offerings in a range of categories, from amateur to professional levels. The public is invited to enjoy the eggs-travagant creations, and those interested in competing can sign up online at bit.ly/barber-eggs. The $25 registration fee, as well as all egg sale proceeds and a portion of drink and bottle sales, will be donated to Petaluma People Services Center, which is dedicated to the social and economic health of the Petaluma community, by providing programs that strengthen the dignity and self-sufficiency of the individual. For more information, contact in**@***********rs.com.

Sausalito

Tall Ships

The term “tall ship” might seem self-explanatory, but as with anything, there are a near infinite amount of nuances to appreciate. Consider that Tall Ships are traditionally-rigged sailing vessels, you know, like topsail schooners, brigantines, brigs and barques. Interest piqued? If so, visit the third wave of “Call of the Sea” Tall Ships Celebration, which commences at 11am, Saturday, April 29 at the Bay Model Visitors Center, 2100 Bridgeway, Sausalito. The itinerary includes “interactive Sailing Science Center activities,” tours courtesy of Matthew Turner and music by the Waterfront Pickers. Food and beverages, as well as logo wear, available for purchase on-site. The event is a fundraiser for scholarships which provide life changing on the water experiences to underserved youth. For tickets and more information, visit bit.ly/tall-ships-3.

Larkspur

Jazz Week at The Lark

Continuing its run as the most dynamic single-screen theater in Northern California, Larkspur’s The Lark offers a weeklong music-themed programming event that includes several exceptional documentary films about the lives and times of myriad jazz greats, a livestream event from SFJAZZ featuring legendary vocalist Dee Dee Bridgewater and pianist Bill Charlip, and performances by local high school jazz ensembles. Jazz Week culminates with the Live from the Met in HD broadcast of a new jazz opera, Champion, by jazz trumpeter and composer Terrence Blanchard. The week begins at 7:30pm, Sunday, April 23 with Music Pictures: New Orleans. Tickets for individual films and streaming events are $8 to $12, and passes for the week are $60 to $75. To purchase tickets and for more information, visit bit.ly/lark-jazz-week.

Calistoga

Winter’s Bloom

With the riot flower power coloring local hillsides, you’d think they’d call it a flora borealis.

Calistoga’s Sofie Contemporary Arts has a less pretentious name: “Winter’s Bloom,” which is an exhibit of sumptuously colored works by Bill Russell and Kerry Vander Meer, on view through May 29. “This show is exuberant and feels like a long exhale after a couple crazy years and a very long, cold winter,” observed Jan Sofie, the gallery’s director and recipient of the Bohemian’s award for “Best Art Gallery in Napa County” for the third consecutive year. “If you’re definitely ready to feel like you actually live in California again, you’ll be glad you joined us!” The gallery is open from noon to 6pm, Thursday through Sunday, at 1407 Lincoln Ave., Calistoga. For more information, visit sofiegallery.com.

You’re a Porn Star, Sir

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A rebuke of The Donald

You’re a porno star, sir, yes you, Donald. Pay attention please, since you’re in court charged with paying money to Stormy Daniels to prevent her from blabbing about the sex you had together in a hotel room at Lake Tahoe around the same time that your wife, Melania, gave birth.

You might have been and should and ought to have been charged with other offenses no less pornographic, such as making obscene amounts of money in the New York City real estate biz and in gambling and entertainment in Atlantic City. That’s to say nothing about the immoral, unethical and slanderous remarks you’ve made for years, pandering to the prurient interests of the American public, boasting about the size of your privates. And while you’re not the first pornographic president to tarnish the White House—hey, Donald, you turned it into a whore house—you have been the most vulgar of the vulgar.

And now you’re exploiting the trial as part of your election campaign, a perversion of the democratic process. I hope the judge sentences you to sex education classes—it’s not too late to redeem yourself, Donald. So give it up for the founding fathers and the founding mothers and the citizens who have fought for human rights and civil rights and who have not been cowed by your crimes and misdemeanors, which would make a whole book in and of themselves, and an X-rated movie, too, which would surely make you obscene amounts of cash.

Jonah Raskin is a poet, scholar, novelist and esteemed alumnus of the ‘North Bay Bohemian’ and ‘Pacific Sun.’

Your Letters, 4/12

Coast Boast

Ever wondered why the wild Sonoma coastline doesn’t resemble the Jersey Shore, with arcades, hotels, amusement parks, boasting hundreds of rides and attractions?

Fifty-one years ago, Californians decided their coastline needed to be protected and organized coastal activists statewide to create a coastal protection initiative for the 1972 statewide ballot. In 30 days, they gathered 480,000 signatures. Big business fought hard against the measure, but Californians had seen enough developmental threats to the coast. When Proposition 20 won, voters forever changed how California judges shoreline development.

Unfortunately, our pristine coastline is once again at risk. At a recent Board of Supervisors meeting, Supervisor Lynda Hopkins advocated for eliminating parcel protections that have been in place for more than 40 years.

Crucial site specific policies are more protective than the usual permit process and are more critical than ever in the face of constantly increasing pressure from developers looking to cash in from Sonoma County’s treasured coastline.

The beauty of the California coast is an economic engine that drives a thriving tourist industry. We ask the board to maintain the current coastal protections, knowing that the voters want to keep our coast protected for the benefit of residents and tourists alike.

Padi Selwyn

Sebastopol

Happy Easter

OK, the myth is that Jesus died for our sins, or somebody’s sins. But the truth is that he dies Friday and he comes back on Sunday before brunch. So, what really happened is he gave up not even a whole weekend for our sins. What is the big deal here? I’ve had longer hangovers than that.

Craig Corsini

Marin County

Painted Hills: Winter showers bring ‘super bloom’

As the onslaught of this year’s winter rains begin to subside, many botanists are saying this year could be the year of a super bloom, an event where regions receive greater than average numbers of wildflowers, particularly in the desert.

While the southern part of the state might be inundated with wildflowers in normally dry and dead deserts, this does not mean that the North Bay will be without some brightly lit hillsides and marvelous views.

California State Parks, at parks.ca.gov, has recommended Bay Area residents visit Mount Tamalpais, China Camp, Trione-Annadel and Sugarloaf state parks. There, residents will see some striking views of California poppies, Henderson’s shooting stars, blue dicks, trilliums, buttercups, calendula and countless more of the nearly 400 wildflower species in the region.

Naturalists and rangers at Marin County Parks recommend visiting Mount Burdell in Novato, and Ring Mountain, where one can see truly rare wildflowers in May, such as the Tiburon Mariposa Lily, only found at Ring Mountain Park.

Caitlin Cornwall, senior project manager for the Sonoma Ecology Center, recommended walking around Lake Suttonfield right outside of Glen Ellen.

“I went there last weekend,” Cornwall said, “and saw lupines, blue dicks, buttercups, popcorn flower, fiddle neck, hound’s-tongue and poppies.”

Cornwall also recommends visiting Jack London State Historic Park and North Sonoma Mountain Regional Park.

In Napa, city park ranger Erin Perna recommends driving out to Westwood hills to see large blooms of common fiddle neck flowers.

“It’s an orangey yellow wildflower that was growing in some pretty large areas that I haven’t seen grow in that magnitude,” said Perna. “So I wouldn’t be surprised if that ends up being its own sort of super bloom.”

While many flowers are already out, enjoying the small bits of sunlight between the storms, this does not mean that wildflowers will be plentiful this year. As Cornwall explained, since the North Bay has had so much precipitation over the course of the entire winter, it has given many faster growing grasses and invasive species the chance to crowd out native early blooming wildflowers, and just hide them from sight.

According to Cornwall, “the best years for wildflowers [in the North Bay] are years where we get almost no rain until late, like February, but of course those are bad years for water.”

However, with every species needing particular environments to thrive, residents will likely see many flowers blossom across the North Bay, though potentially just later in the spring season.

As Shannon Burke, interpretive naturalist for Marin County Parks, said, “The early blooming species have been a bit late this year, presumably due to colder temperatures, but where they are blooming, things like milk maids and warriors plume have been carpeting woodland areas.”

Burke went on to say, “The leaves that are pushing out right now of later blooming species are prolific, so it looks like once things warm up, we should get a fantastic bloom in April and May.”

This surge of plant growth, Burke pointed out, means that many animals across the North Bay and the state will be well fed this winter.

“The abundance of leaves feeds everything from rodents to rabbits to deer, as well as insects, including a great number of caterpillars—which are a crucial food source for songbird nestlings. And of course the carpets of wildflowers will support important pollinators like native bees, moths and beetles,” said Burke.

As the rains begin to ease and the wildflowers bloom, this also means a large number of tourists will likely drive from all over the state and country to Southern California to see the Mojave Desert light up with a potential super bloom.

With the presence of a greater number of people, the danger to damaging the wildflower blooms is even greater.

These desert super blooms are so rare and fragile that if one were to step on one area of wildflowers, that area could become devoid of flowers for years, seeing as the desert soils, when a bloom occurs, are much less resilient to trampling feet.

This does not mean, however, that people should be less considerate of the local blooms here in the Bay Area. Wildflowers in the grasslands of the Bay Area often grow in vernal pools where groundwater rises closer to the soil. In such a place as a vernal pool, especially like the ones created by recent rains in the desert, there is a greater vulnerability to trampling.

As Hannah Kang put it in Bay Nature in 2019, “Severe compaction, as might happen by a person running or jumping, or by lots of people walking over the same route, breaks up vast underground networks that move nutrients around. The social trails made by people attempting to get glamor shots in flowers can end up creating plant islands isolated from the bigger underground network.”

With concern growing for these wildflower blooms and humans’ impact on them, along with some towns being overcrowded in previous super blooms in Southern California, places such as Lake Elsinore and Anza-Borrego State Park are beginning to prepare for the waves of super bloom visitors. The town of Lake Elsinore, for one, is dissuading visitors from coming to their small town. Anza-Borrego State Park is preparing for the onslaught.

“Our staff, they’re very prepared [across the state] for this influx of visitors,” said Jorge Moreno, information officer for the Southern District of California State Parks.

The first known use of the term “super bloom” (sometimes spelled superbloom) was in the 1990s in Death Valley. Alan Van Valkenburg, a park ranger in Death Valley, said in a National Park press release in 2016 that he had “kept hearing the old timers talk about super blooms as a near mythical thing—the ultimate possibility of what a desert wildflower bloom could be.” Since this press release, the growth of the term “super bloom” has been used to describe larger than average wildflower blooms, often in deserts.

However, in ecological terms, botanist and UC Riverside professor Richard Minnich has said repeatedly throughout the years, the term means nothing. As Minnich said in 2019, “It’s all in the eye of the beholder.”

Perhaps, then, instead of taking the long drive to admire the colors of the Mojave Desert this spring, the residents of the Bay Area could stay at home, enjoying the marvels that linger under trees and grasses of the local wilderness, taking in the beauty of nature this area has to offer.

Free Will Astrology, Week of 4/12

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ARIES (March 21-April 19): I hope that in the coming weeks, you will keep your mind bubbling with zesty mysteries. I hope you’ll exult in the thrill of riddles that are beyond your current power to solve. If you cultivate an appreciation of uncanny uncertainties, life will soon begin bringing you uncanny certainties. Do you understand the connection between open-hearted curiosity and fertile rewards? Don’t merely tolerate the enigmas you are immersed in—love them!

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): An old sadness is ripening into practical wisdom. A confusing loss is about to yield a clear revelation you can use to improve your life. In mysterious ways, a broken heart you suffered in the past may become a wild card that inspires you to deepen and expand your love. Wow and hallelujah, Taurus! I’m amazed at the turnarounds that are in the works for you. Sometime in the coming weeks, what wounded you once upon a time will lead to a vibrant healing. Wonderful surprise!

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): What is the true and proper symbol for your sign, Gemini? Twins standing shoulder to shoulder as they gaze out on the world with curiosity? Or two lovers embracing each other with mischievous adoration in their eyes? Both scenarios can accurately represent your energy, depending on your mood and the phase you’re in. In the coming weeks, I advise you to draw on the potency of both. You will be wise to coordinate the different sides of your personality in pursuit of a goal that interests them all. And you will also place yourself in harmonious alignment with cosmic rhythms as you harness your passionate urge to merge in a good cause.

CANCER (June 21-July 22): Some scientists speculate that more people suffer from allergies than ever before because civilization has over-sanitized the world. The fetish for scouring away germs and dirt means that our immune systems don’t get enough practice in fending off interlopers. In a sense, they are “bored” because they have too little to do. That’s why they fight stuff that’s not a threat, like tree pollen and animal dander. Hence, we develop allergies to harmless substances. I hope you will apply this lesson as a metaphor in the coming weeks, fellow Cancerian. Be sure the psychological component of your immune system isn’t warding off the wrong people and things. It’s healthy for you to be protective, but not hyper-over-protective in ways that shut out useful influences.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): One night in 1989, Leo evolutionary biologist Margie Profet went to sleep and had a dream that revealed to her new information about the nature of menstruation. The dream scene was a cartoon of a woman’s reproductive system. It showed little triangles being carried away by the shed menstrual blood. Eureka! As Profet lay in bed in the dark, she intuited a theory that no scientist had ever guessed: that the sloughed-off uterine lining had the key function of eliminating pathogens, represented by the triangles. In subsequent years, she did research to test her idea, supported by studies with electron microscopes. Now her theory is regarded as fact. I predict that many of you Leos will soon receive comparable benefits. Practical guidance will be available in your dreams and twilight awareness and altered states. Pay close attention!

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): You don’t know what is invisible to you. The truths that are out of your reach may as well be hiding. The secret agendas you are not aware of are indeed secret. That’s the not-so-good news, Virgo. The excellent news is that you now have the power to uncover the rest of the story, at least some of it. You will be able to penetrate below the surface and find buried riches. You will dig up missing information whose absence has prevented you from understanding what has been transpiring. There may be a surprise or two ahead, but they will ultimately be agents of healing.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Visionary philosopher Buckminster Fuller referred to pollution as a potential resource we have not yet figured out how to harvest. A company called Algae Systems does exactly that. It uses wastewater to grow algae that scrub carbon dioxide from the atmosphere and yield carbon-negative biofuels. Can we invoke this approach as a metaphor that’s useful to you? Let’s dream up examples. Suppose you’re a creative artist. You could be inspired by your difficult emotions to compose a great song, story, painting or dance. Or if you’re a lover who is in pain, you could harness your suffering to free yourself of a bad old habit or ensure that an unpleasant history doesn’t repeat itself. Your homework, Libra, is to figure out how to take advantage of a “pollutant” or two in your world.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Soon you will graduate from your bumpy lessons and enter a smoother, silkier phase. You will find refuge from the naysayers as you create a liberated new power spot for yourself. In anticipation of this welcome transition, I offer this motivational exhortation from poet Gwendolyn Brooks: “Say to them, say to the down-keepers, the sun-slappers, the self-soilers, the harmony-hushers, ‘Even if you are not ready for day, it cannot always be night.'” I believe you are finished with your worthwhile but ponderous struggles, Scorpio. Get ready for an excursion toward luminous grace.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): I periodically seek the counsel of a Sagittarian psychic. She’s half-feral and sometimes speaks in riddles. She tells me she occasionally converses by phone with a person she calls “the ex-prime minister of Narnia.” I confided in her that lately it has been a challenge for me to keep up with you Sagittarians because you have been expanding beyond the reach of my concepts. She gave me a pronouncement that felt vaguely helpful, though it was also a bit over my head: “The Archer may be quite luxuriously curious and furiously hilarious; studiously lascivious and victoriously delirious; salubriously industrious but never lugubriously laborious.” Here’s how I interpret that: Right now, pretty much anything is possible if you embrace unpredictability.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): “I’m not insane,” says Capricorn actor Jared Leto. “I’m voluntarily indifferent to conventional rationality.” That attitude might serve you well in the coming weeks. You could wield it to break open opportunities that were previously closed due to excess caution. I suspect you’re beginning a fun phase of self-discovery when you will learn a lot about yourself. As you do, I hope you will experiment with being at least somewhat indifferent to conventional rationality. Be willing to be surprised. Be receptive to changing your mind about yourself.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): People of all genders feel urges to embellish their native beauty with cosmetic enhancements. I myself haven’t done so, but I cheer on those who use their flesh for artistic experiments. At the same time, I am also a big fan of us loving ourselves exactly as we are. And I’m hoping that in the coming weeks, you will emphasize the latter over the former. I urge you to indulge in an intense period of maximum self-appreciation. Tell yourself daily how gorgeous and brilliant you are. Tell others, too! Cultivate a glowing pride in the gifts you offer the world. If anyone complains, tell them you’re doing the homework your astrologer gave you.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): I encourage you to amplify the message you have been trying to deliver. If there has been any shyness or timidity in your demeanor, purge it. If you have been less than forthright in speaking the whole truth and nothing but the truth, boost your clarity and frankness. Is there anything you could do to help your audience be more receptive? Any tenderness you could express to stimulate their willingness and ability to see you truly?

Cannabis Creatives

The North Bay’s undeniable culture

Tucked deep in the rolling green hills of California’s North Bay, there lies an often unspoken, but most always assumed, connection between cannabis culture and artistic expression.

It’s true—Marin, Napa and Sonoma may not celebrate their love of this particular psychoactive plant as openly, overtly and obviously as their sister city just across the Golden Gate Bridge. But that doesn’t mean that the cultural undercurrent of cannabis is any less strong in the North Bay’s stream of creativity. It’s not as though a bridge (and a little water under it) is enough to keep an entire countercultural movement of art and activism at bay.

With the highest of holidays (4/20) right around the corner, it’s time to acknowledge just how influential the North Bay is and has been as a hub of culture, art, creativity and cannabis. After all, it was a group of high school students from San Rafael who created the term 4/20 to begin with, sparking a nationally-celebrated holiday with its epicenter right in the heart of Marin.

“Cannabis is part of the reality of the North Bay,” said Jonah Raskin, local writer, author and resident cannabis expert. “The North Bay is food, wine and marijuana, and it’s as much a part of the culture of Northern California as grapes are. It just isn’t as visible since it’s still a taboo subject to a great deal of people.”

Given that cannabis was not legal for medical use in California until 1996 and did not become recreationally legal until 2016, this taboo makes sense. But, as many Bay Area locals are aware, legality did not stop the beatniks, the hippies or creative individuals (such as Raskin) from partaking in some pot alongside their passion projects.

“I would roll a ton of joints and smoke them and be mildly stoned throughout the day,” said Raskin. “It helped me to be stoned and write. I finished the book, it was published, and I wrote a bunch of books stoned afterwards.”

“While living in Northern California, I wanted to continue writing, and the things I could see around me were wine and marijuana,” continued Raskin. “I felt more at home in the cannabis world than the wine and grapes world. For one thing, the cannabis world was partially hidden, and grapes and wine were out in the open.”

Raskin moved from the East Coast to Sonoma County in 1976 and, like many notable cannabis-consuming creatives, lived in the North Bay for many years. He built a prolific portfolio of provocative pieces of prose, lectured in English at Sonoma State University and became a well-known contributor to many publications, including High Times and the Bohemian, to name only a couple.

“So, I knew that I could write while I was stoned, and what I wrote was published and I got paid for it, so that seemed to be proof that marijuana was an encouragement to creativity,” he noted.

Alongside Raskin are countless other cannabis-consuming creatives who were either born, raised, schooled, lived and/or died in the North Bay. To separate these individuals’ art from their enjoyment of cannabis is nigh-on-impossible and, frankly, brings to mind the age-old question: What came first, the chicken or the egg? Or, in this case, the toking or the artistic talent? Imagination or smoke inhalation?

World-famous author Jack Kerouac lived in Mill Valley and was at the forefront of the Beat Movement of the mid-1900s. Maya Angelou, activist, poet and pot-user, also lived in the North Bay for a time and called Sonoma County her home. Fleetwood Mac recorded the Rumours album in Sausalito. Alan Watts, Peter Coyote and (perhaps the most iconic cannabis-consuming artist from California) Jerry Garcia of the Grateful Dead all lived in and smoked weed in the North Bay.

These accomplished artists were all pro-cannabis in a time where the stigma against the plant was significantly stronger than it currently is. Nowadays, anyone over the age of 21 can have weed delivered to their doorstep in a process as simple as getting a pizza delivered. Not only is cannabis infinitely more accessible; it’s also (near-infinitely) more potent.

“I remember once going into a dispensary in Santa Rosa—I forget which one—and I was talking to some of the budtenders to help decide what kind of product to choose for myself,” said Raskin. “One of the bud tenders described one of the marijuana strains as making you feel like an 800-pound gorilla is sitting on you. I asked who would want that, and he said there were customers who did.”

With cannabis only growing stronger, more accessible and less stigmatized with every passing day, and with the deeply ingrained counterculture movement that has not-so-secretly pervaded the North Bay for the past 70 years, it’s safe to say the creative use of cannabis is here to stay.

Much like the careful cultivation of wine grapes, which are bred, grown and fermented just so to create the world-famous wines of Napa, cannabis cultivation is an art form of its own. Strains of cannabis are carefully selected, bred, grown, trimmed, cured and sold in just as meticulous a fashion as any varietals in a wine bottle. And, given the cultural history of cannabis in the North Bay, it’s apparent there’s room for both wine and weed in the field of artisanal cultivation.

“Mike Benziger is a local farmer who thinks of himself as an artist because of his garden of cannabis,” explained Raskin. “He is a prime example of the marijuana grower as an artist. He grows his marijuana right next to the Jack London State Historic Park—oh, and as an aside, Jack London also smoked and loved hashish. Artists have been using cannabis for a very long time and, in my opinion, will continue to do so.”

All this goes to say, though the artists of the North Bay may not always advertise their love of cannabis with Rastafari colors and plumes of smoke, that doesn’t mean the culture is any less prevalent than it is in other parts of the Bay Area, such as Oakland, San Francisco and Santa Cruz. And, whether the artist is world-famous, understated, up-and-coming, underrated, historically significant or part of the new wave of creatives, it’s fair to presume that a fair few of them have indulged in a little bit of cannabis-induced imagination and inspiration in their process of artistic creation.

Your Letters, 4/19

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Cannabis Creatives

The North Bay’s undeniable culture Tucked deep in the rolling green hills of California’s North Bay, there lies an often unspoken, but most always assumed, connection between cannabis culture and artistic expression. It’s true—Marin, Napa and Sonoma may not celebrate their love of this particular psychoactive plant as openly, overtly and obviously as their sister city just across the Golden Gate...
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