Culture Crush, Week of 3/29

San Geronimo

Holding Cort

The San Geronimo Valley Community Center makes a birthday wish on behalf of its recently retired youth team director, Howie Cort, and invites community members to celebrate her “Birthday Palooza” with her band, Howie’s Persuasion, with the release of their new Aunt June’s Basement. The gig starts at 6pm, Thursday, April 6 at Giaco’s Valley Roadhouse, 625 San Geronimo Valley Dr., San Geronimo. This is the first of several fundraising concerts hosted in partnership with the center and roadhouse—proceeds will benefit the center’s food bank, youth tutoring, childcare and athletic programs, and myriad arts and events. Tickets are $50 and are available at bit.ly/howie23.

Santa Rosa

Dynamic Duo

Montana natives turned Angelenos turned traveling musicians Joselyn & Don find their way to The Lost Church at 8pm, Thursday, April 1, where they will share the bill with local folksters The Musers. The duo perform a mix of modern folk/Americana with additional hues of blues and jazz (their recent release, Seeds & Bones, is currently number five on the Roots Music Report’s Americana Album Chart). The Lost Church is located at 427 Mendocino Ave., Santa Rosa. Tickets are $20 and are available at tinyurl.com/JoselynDonTheMusersApr1.

Petaluma

Whiskey School

Barber Lee Spirits head distiller Mark Barber invites whiskey fans of all persuasions (novice to expert) to an epic info dump that could aptly be titled, “Everything you wanted to know about whiskey but were afraid to ask.” The educational evening and tasting will explore the liquor’s different production methods, ingredients, the secrets to decoding whiskey labels, as well as the various histories of different whiskey styles by country—from Scotland, Ireland and the U.S. to Japan and Canada. Class begins at 7pm, Thursday, April 13 at Barber Lee Spirits, 120 Washington St., Petaluma. Tickets are $40 (and include notes, snacks and water). Visit bit.ly/whiskey-class.

Napa

Little Italy Historic Walking Tour

On Saturday, April 15, local retired judge and native Napan Ray Guadagni conducts a walking tour of Napa’s Little Italy neighborhood, which thrived in the mid-20th century. The two-hour tour begins at 10am, Saturday, April 15, in front of Avow Restaurant, 813 Main St., Napa (which is the site of the former Fagiani’s Cocktail Lounge and Liquor Store and where, incidentally, one of the most infamous murders in Napa history occurred. In fact, Guadagni presided over the 2011 murder trial and wrote the book, The Napa Murder of Anita Fagiani Andrews: A Cold Case That Caught a Serial Killer). Refreshments will be served at the tour’s end. For more information, visit Napacountylandmarks.org.

Best of Marin 2023 Ballot

The Pacific Sun Best of Marin 2023 Readers Poll

There are countless reasons why Marin County is one of the best places on earth to work, play, live, and love. Now it’s time for our wonderful readers to share what makes Marin the best to you in our annual readers poll—the Best of Marin. From March 29 to May 17, 2023, tell us what you love most in Marin by voting for your favorites among a bevy of categories in such sections such as Arts & Culture, Beauty, Health & Wellness, Cannabis, Everyday, Family, Food & Drink, Beer, Wine & Spirits, Home Improvement, Fitness & Recreation, and Romance. Winners will be announced August 2, 2023, in our most popular issue of the year — The Best of Marin 2023!

A few online voting rules:

  • Complete at least 20 votes of the ballot for inclusion in the poll
  • Include your name and a valid email address
  • Ballots are confidential, but you may be called to confirm your vote
  • Multiple ballots from a single IP address or sender may result in a winner’s disqualification
  • Deadline for online ballots is May 17, 2023

Click Here to Get Started

Art in Iran: ‘Breaking Barriers’ exhibit in Sausalito

In Marin County, there is a singular shared culture that brings everyone together: the culture of celebrating art as well as the artists who create it. 

Across the board, the Bay Area is famous for its inclusive and incredibly diverse display of artistic expression, and local galleries are known to showcase exhibitions that represent not only the most local of artists, but pieces with origins spanning across the globe as well.

Starting April 7 through April 23, a new exhibition of Persian art will be showcased at the Sausalito Center for the Arts. This exhibition, entitled “Breaking Barriers: Art in Iran,” will display the art of past and present Persian artists, with works drawn from a wide range of artistic mediums, such as paintings, photography, music and more.

“The premise of this show is to bring a spotlight to Iran to counteract the horrifying imagery that we see as a result of the government,” explained Shiva Pakdel, a Marin local and the curator of the “Art in Iran” exhibit. “The exhibit will have around 240 pieces of art in the gallery—it is a very large display of art and will include everything from textiles to Persian rugs to ceramics and photographs, modern art, old art, objects and all kinds of things.”

Pakdel, who grew up in southern Iran, moved to the United States in 1976 to attend Tulsa University, where she studied and earned her degree in commercial art. Though both of her parents were physicians, the arts were an integral part of her childhood, and the focus of her household was often centered on pursuits such as literature, art, photography and poetry. 

Following the wake of the Iranian Revolution, Pakdel (who had just recently graduated) and a group of her friends moved together to the Bay Area, where they rented a place, became roommates and settled into a new life.

“The day after graduating university, four or five of my roommates traveled to California in a caravan of cars and moved out to the Bay Area,” said Pakdel. “The reason for this is because it became a settlement for the Persians who left, and we all had family and friends. My generation was sort of displaced after the revolution in 1979.” 

In the Bay Area, Pakdel made a new home for herself in what she described as “a magical, wholesome, inclusive and awesome area,” where she settled down, worked in marketing for 30 years and recently celebrated her 40th wedding anniversary. But, in all this time, her passion for the arts and the lingering knowledge of the misrepresentation of Persian people and culture remained on her mind.

“After I came to California and even after all these years, I still had it in the back of my head and suffered because there was never a positive conversation about Iran—it was all negative, negative, negative, and the art and culture ended up marginalized through the dark image of Iran,” explained Pakdel. “Iran went through a darkness; the conversation wasn’t there, and most of us who are here in the United States longed for the ability to introduce the positive sides of our culture and of the country.”

In 2016, Pakdel made the leap and left her job in marketing in order to devote her focus to the arts and artistic pursuits. And, when a friend working for a Napa winery offered her the space to put up a show in the winery’s new tasting room in Sausalito, she jumped at the opportunity. In the span of four and a half years, she ended up hosting 40 art shows of local Bay Area artists at the Sausalito location. Alongside this ongoing project, she also had another large-scale exhibition of Persian art on display at the Dominican University of California.

“I feel like this change in career paths was a rebirth, because you usually don’t get two chances at two different careers,” said Pakdel. “I feel so grateful that I got this opportunity to be all-in with art. I want to give kudos to Sausalito Center for Arts, since they opened their doors to us—I’m just so grateful to them for letting us Persians share our art and have these conversations. I’m just grateful since this is a tricky subject.”

Pakdel’s own artistic creations will be on display at the “Breaking Barriers: Art in Iran” exhibit alongside pieces from Shahla Bebe, Amir Salamat, Yazdan Saadi, Simin Massoudi, Farnaz Zabetian, Darius Nehdaran, Jaleh Etemad, Sadegh Miri Photography, Babak Daleki, Azita Panahpour, Yari Ostovany, Haleh Douraghy, Mamad Housain Zolgaghari, Keyvan Mahjoor, Nasrollah Kasraian and Bahram Dabiri.

“I have four artists from Marin County and one from Sonoma County, and the rest are from the rest of the Bay Area, Concord and San Jose and so on,” said Pakdel. “But keep in mind that I’m running this show on two tracks—one of modern Iran and today’s Iranian artists, and then there’s the historical track. This is really a collective effort, and I’m grateful to all of the artists who have shared their work and to the cause.”

Alongside visual art, the “Breaking Barriers: Art in Iran” exhibit will host a special event on Sunday, April 16 from 4 to 6pm to explore the music of Persia. This program features Amir Etemadzadeh and a team who, together, will take the audience on a musical journey through Iran in an effort to highlight the ethnic diversity of the country. Different musical instruments and types of music will be performed to help reflect various regions and their respective cultures.

The opening night celebration for “Breaking Barriers: Art in Iran” is set to take place on April 7 and will feature authentic Persian cuisine, live Persian music and Azari Vineyards wine. Opening night is currently sold out, and no further tickets are available for purchase.

“The most important part of this show is that it offers a place to begin the conversation of Iran and Iranians,” concluded Pakdel. “We want people to look at the beauty of the country and understand the movement of the women in Iran and how it comes from a place of culture and history and art that’s been suppressed by the government. So, we want to put a spotlight on Iran and embrace the movement that is happening. And, by now, it really is a global movement.”

The Sausalito Center for the Arts is located at 750 Bridgeway and its hours of operation run from 11am to 5pm Thursday through Sunday. The center is closed Monday through Wednesday. For more information, visit the website at sausalitocenterforthearts.org or send an email to in**@***********************ts.org.

Epicurean Epicness: Restaurateur David Ruiz

David Ruiz is the owner of Stillwater in Fairfax, Junior in San Francisco and Souvenir, a new natural wine and vinyl store in San Anselmo. The following is an interview with Ruiz:

What do you do?

I’m a business owner—restaurants and bars—and a bottle shop…

Where do you live?

Gerstle Park, San Rafael.

How long have you lived in Marin? Since October 2018.

Where can we find you when not at work?

Surfing in Bolinas when I’m lucky with some free time. I like to pop around and check out new places and new bars—seems like there’s always something new happening, especially when you don’t make it out as much. Other than that, I love to spend time at home with my wife, Margaret, and two-year-old son, Dillon.

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

Bolinas for surfing or just a beach day. I love the Fairfax Theater and of course Stillwater I hear is pretty good (LOL). Big fan of the Marshall Store, hiking Mt. Tam, everything West. Oliver’s Pizza in San Rafael; it’s tucked away above Vin Antico—our partner at the bottle shop helped set the bar up and create the cocktails.

What is one thing Marin is missing?

So much. Where to begin…… later night food, and just evening activities generally… I think the street closures and concerts in San Anselmo have been great. Outdoor dining has added a bit more flavor, but how about less hair salons and antique shops? The new wave is here, and it’s changing for the better every day.

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

Treat Marin as pieces of a puzzle—each area has good and bad—so create your own adventure! Every area has its cool identity and things to offer, so it can be fun to approach it that way.

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

I’d invite my wife (because we rarely get to go out), plus all my coworkers and friends past and present from all the bars and restaurants I’ve been fortunate enough to work in; some serious legends at that table!

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

Save your money, travel more, take risks.

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

All reality TV, selfies, things of that nature.

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

Less cars, more bikes, more parks, more open space, more nature, more ocean.

Follow Stillwater (@alittlerestaurant) and Souvenir (@souvenirbottleshop) on Instagram.

NOTE: This summer, Souvenir will move down the block to a larger space that will include a wine bar.

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.

Matrimony Melodies: Jane Austen’s musical in Ross

Fans of Jane Austen’s Pride & Prejudice have had a plethora of adaptations of the 19th-century novel from which to choose, from the trio of Lauren Gunderson and Margot Melcon theatrical extensions of the story to the recent gay-themed film Fire Island, which transported reasonable facsimiles of Austen’s characters from Hertfordshire, England to the gay mecca off of Long Island, NY.

There are at least three musical adaptations as well, including one with Marin County roots. Pride & Prejudice, The Musical, with music and lyrics by long-time Marin County resident Rita Abrams, makes its North Bay debut in Ross. The Phoebe Moyer-directed Ross Valley Players production runs through April 16.

Josie Brown’s book of the show sticks pretty faithfully to the Austen original. The Bennet house is all aflutter as Mrs. Bennet (Jill Wagoner) sets about finding suitable (read that “rich”) husbands for her five daughters. Visiting squire Charles Bingley (Justin Hernandez) has his eyes on eldest Bennet daughter Jane (Amy Dietz), while his companion, Fitzwilliam Darcy (Evan Held), finds himself put off by and then strangely attracted to second-eldest daughter Elizabeth (Lily Jackson).

An unwelcome proposal by a distant cousin (Charles Evans) and youngest sibling Lydia’s (Alexandra Fry) running off with a gentleman of questionable character (Heren Patel) further complicates things for the Bennets, but all will, of course, work out in the end.

Director Moyer has a solid ensemble at work here, starting with Geoffrey Colton as the Bennet patriarch and Wagoner as his wife. Both bring gravitas and humor to their characters. Hernandez, Held, Dietz and Jackson are well cast and possess fine singing voices.

Abrams’ clever and affecting songs are a welcome addition, though a couple felt tonally out of place, as did some odd choreography. The costume and lighting designs (by Adriana Gutierrez and Frank Sarubbi) brought a great sense of time and place to the show.

With a running time of close to three hours, the show lost steam as the evening progressed. “Staged” set changes added time to an already lengthy show, and the audience, at first receptive, soon grew weary of the process. The show also lurched into first gear whenever the character of Mr. Collins appeared.

Despite these issues, there’s a lot of good work being done here. Austen-philes would do well to consider a trip to Ross to quench their Bennet thirst.

‘Pride & Prejudice, The Musical’ runs Thurs–Sun through April 16 at the Barn Theatre in the Marin Art and Garden Center, 30 Sir Francis Drake Blvd., Ross. Thurs, 7:30pm; Fri & Sat, 8pm; Sun, 2pm. $15-$35. 415.383.1100. Masking required. rossvalleyplayers.com.

Free Will Astrology, March 27

ARIES (March 21-April 19): Sometimes, I give you suggestions that may, if you carry them out, jostle your routines and fluster your allies. But after trying out the new approaches for a short time, you may chicken out and revert to old habits. That’s understandable! It can be difficult to change your life. Here’s an example. What if I encourage you to cancel your appointments and wander out into the wilderness to discuss your dreams with the birds? And what if, during your adventure, you are flooded with exhilarating yearnings for freedom? And then you decide to divest yourself of desires that other people want you to have and instead revive and give boosts to desires that you want yourself to have? Will you actually follow through with brave practical actions that transform your relationship with your deepest longings?

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): You have done all you can for now to resolve and expunge stale, messy karma—some of which was left over from the old days and old ways. There may come a time in the future when you will have more cleansing to do, but you have now earned the right to be as free from your past and as free from your conditioning as you have ever been. APRIL FOOL! I lied. In fact, you still need to spend a bit more time resolving and expunging stale, messy karma. But you’re almost done!

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Businessperson Robert Bigelow hopes to eventually begin renting luxurious rooms in space. For $1.7 million per night, travelers will enjoy accommodations he provides on his orbiting hotel, 200 miles above the Earth’s surface. Are you interested? I bet more Geminis will be signing up for this exotic trip than any other sign. You’re likely to be the journeyers most excited by the prospect of sailing along at 17,000 miles per hour and witnessing 16 sunsets and sunrises every 24 hours. APRIL FOOL! In fact, you Geminis are quite capable of getting the extreme variety you crave and need right here on the planet’s surface. And during the coming weeks, you will be even more skilled than usual at doing just that.

CANCER (June 21-July 22): The coming weeks will be a favorable time for you to become the overlord of your own fiefdom, or seize control of a new territory and declare yourself chieftain, or overthrow the local hierarchy and install yourself as the sovereign ruler of all you survey. APRIL FOOL! I was metaphorically exaggerating a bit—but just a bit. I do in fact believe now is an excellent phase to increase your clout, boost your influence and express your leadership. Be as kind you can be, of course, but also be rousingly mighty and fervent.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): In his poem, “The Something,” Charles Simic writes, “Here come my night thoughts on crutches, returning from studying the heavens. What they thought about stayed the same. Stayed immense and incomprehensible.” According to my analysis of the astrological omens, you Leos will have much the same experience in the coming weeks. So there’s no use in even hoping or trying to expand your vision. APRIL FOOL! I lied. The truth is, you will not have Simic’s experience. Just the opposite. When your night thoughts return from studying the heavens, they will be full of exuberant, inspiring energy. (And what exactly are “night thoughts”? They are bright insights you discover in the darkness.)

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): If there will ever come a time when you will find a gold bullion bar on the ground while strolling around town, it will be soon. Similarly, if you are destined to buy a winning $10 million lottery ticket or inherit a diamond mine in Botswana, that blessing will arrive soon. APRIL FOOL! I was exaggerating a bit. The truth is, I suspect you are now extra likely to attract new resources and benefits, though not on the scale of gold bullion, lottery winnings and diamond mines.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Do you have a muse, Libra? In my opinion, all of us need and deserve at least one muse, even if we’re not creative artists. A muse can be a spirit or hero or ally who inspires us, no matter what work and play we do. A muse may call our attention to important truths we are ignoring or point us in the direction of exciting future possibilities. According to my astrological analysis, you are now due for a muse upgrade. If you don’t have one, get one—or even more. If you already have a relationship with a muse, ask more from it. Nurture it. Take it to the next level.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Dear Valued Employee: Our records show you haven’t used any vacation time over the past 100 years. As you may know, workers get three weeks of paid leave per year or else receive pay in lieu of time off. One added week is granted for every five years of service. So please, sometime soon, either take 9,400 days off work or notify our office, and your next paycheck will reflect payment of $8,277,432, including pay and interest for the past 1,200 months. APRIL FOOL! Everything I just said was an exaggeration. But there is a grain of truth in it. The coming weeks should bring you a nice surprise or two concerning your job.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Sagittarian poet and artist William Blake (1757–1827) was a hard-working visionary prophet with an extravagant imagination. His contemporaries considered him a freaky eccentric, though today we regard him as a genius. I invite you to enjoy your own personal version of a Blake-like phase in the coming weeks. It’s a perfect time to dynamically explore your idiosyncratic inclinations and creative potentials. Be bold, even brazen, as you celebrate what makes you unique. BUT WAIT! Although everything I just said is true, I must add a caveat: You don’t necessarily need to be a freaky eccentric to honor your deepest, most authentic truths and longings.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Some of my friends disapprove of cosmetic surgery. I remind them that many cultures throughout history have engaged in body modification. In parts of Africa and Borneo, for example, people stretch their ears. Some Balinese people get their teeth filed. Women of the Indigenous Kyan people in Thailand elongate their necks using brass coils. Anyway, Capricorn, this is my way of letting you know that the coming weeks would be a favorable time to change your body. APRIL FOOL! It’s not my place to advise you about whether and how to reshape your body. Instead, my job is to encourage you to deepen and refine how your mind understands and treats your body. And now is an excellent time to do that.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): I invite you to make a big change. I believe it’s crucial if you hope to place yourself in maximum alignment with current cosmic rhythms. Here’s my idea: Start calling yourself by the name “Genius.” You could even use it instead of the first name you have used all these years. Tell everyone that from now on, they should address you as “Genius.” APRIL FOOL! I don’t really think you should make the switch to Genius. But I do believe you will be extra smart and ultra-wise in the coming weeks, so it wouldn’t be totally outrageous to refer to yourself as “Genius.”

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Your body comprises 30 trillion human cells and 39 trillion microbial cells, including the bacteria that live within you. And in my astrological estimation, those 69 trillion life forms are vibrating in sweet harmony with all the money in the world. Amazing! Because of this remarkable alignment, you now have the potential to get richer quicker. Good economic luck is swirling in your vicinity. Brilliant financial intuitions are likely to well up in you. The Money God is far more amenable than usual to your prayers. APRIL FOOL! I was exaggerating a bit. But I do believe you now have extra ability to prime your cash flow.

John Courage Trio in Healdsburg

 

Elephant in the Room

177 Healdsburg Ave., Healdsburg. Elephantintheroompub.com.

Voted Damn Best Hair in Sonoma County—John Courage Trio, with special guest, 8pm, Friday, April 7. $10.

The Flamingo Resort

2777 4th St., Santa Rosa. vintagespacesr.com.

jackLNDN is a multi-instrumentalist, singer, writer and producer, known for electronic music (and aversion to vowels). 9pm, Friday, March 31.

21+. $15-$20.

Green Music Center

1801 East Cotati Ave., Rohnert Park. gmc.sonoma.edu.

Yo-Yo Ma and Kathryn Stott (famed cellist and pianist, respectively) will thrash and trash everyone from Mendelssohn to Piazzola at 3pm, Sunday, April 2. Tickets $65–$175.

Hopmonk Tavern Sebastopol

230 Petaluma Ave., Sebastopol. Hopmonk.com.

Pete Floyd (a Pink Floyd tribute) wishes you were here. 8pm, Friday, March 31. $20.

The Lost Church

427 Mendocino Ave., Santa Rosa. thelostchurch.org.

Folksters Joselyn & Don and The Musers join forces and launch Folktopia. 7:30pm, Saturday, Apri 1. $20.

The Phoenix Theater

201 Washington St., Petaluma. thephoenixtheater.com.

Cartilage, Iron Front, Wroht, Hexen House, Postnasal Drainage. All ages, of course.

8pm, Friday, March 31. $10.

Peri’s Tavern

29 Broadway, Fairfax. peristavern.com.

Get wrecked and/or strange with the Wreckless Strangers when they play this beloved West Marin enclave. 9pm, Friday, April 7. $10-$13.

—Daedalus Howell

Send your gigs to dh*****@*****ys.com.

Woke Choke

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Time to study civics again

By Kimball Shinkoskey

Our people need to wake all the way up before we can claim to be woke.

Being woke to national socialism that tries to impose an end to racism and sexism, or being woke to fascism that wants to enforce the same parental rights for everyone isn’t very politically enlightened at all.

America today is like America during the pandemic, only just a little less rattled. Then, education was put on hold, criminal justice was put on hold, social life was put on hold. Today we are back to “normal,” but that normal is our pre-pandemic habit of backsliding into ignorance, lawlessness and social isolation.

A few generations ago, kids actually learned something in school, society prevented and punished crime, and young people got married and had kids. Not so much anymore.

Given our lack of real wokeness, our recent public health crisis was just the first of others to come. Our educational pandemic is only in its early stages.

Our justice pandemic is digging deeper roots yet. Our social pandemic is looking more and more like China’s. Our overall political pandemic is just heating up. The framers of our Constitution had the key. We need to study the history of our own laws before we can be truly woke. We need civics in a big way.

Kimball Shinkoskey is a North Bay native, author and longtime state government worker who frequently speaks to the need for citizen participation, a renewed democracy and constitutional limits on absolute power.

Dreaming Worlds: The Expanse of Inner Life

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“I feel strangely awake,” Cleopatra says as she readies the poisonous snake that will take her life, “as if living had been just a dream—somebody else’s dream.” The poignant scene comes at the end of the 1963 cinematic masterpiece starring Elizabeth Taylor, and harkens to the famous Latin quotation, “Vita somnium breve est,” or life is but a short dream. 

The deeper we journey into the inner world of the soul, the more unreal the physical world starts to seem, ruled as it is by the law of impermanence. In hypnagogic states—which can be achieved by lying down in the afternoon and entering that twilight zone between wakefulness and sleep, when visions seem to dislodge from some inner wellspring and float into our minds like soap bubbles—we find that there is a hidden realm ever creating the soul’s reality while eliminating everything external and extraneous.

In the ancient symbol of the cross—formed by two intersecting lines, one infinite and the other changing—we see that this deepest part of ourselves belongs to the vertical line of Being, and intuit that this self must have descended into earthly incarnation to live out a dream in the realm of Becoming before reawakening and returning to the light from whence it came.

In an Italian esoteric text from a century ago, an anonymous initiate speaks of his first experience of entering a state in which he felt “whole, sufficient unto myself, independent of any person or circumstance, eternal, inhabitant of my own universe,” and “awake in that immense peace in which all beings were dreaming and sleeping.” 

Gone was everything in life that was “muddled and confused in the disquiet of desires,” and his sense of self felt purified, released into pure intelligence “to behold in a timeless world the infinite marvel of all things.” This deepest self was experienced as “something absolutely impersonal living in me,” a “supreme beauty” that could be summoned at will when the mind is untroubled and still. 

“It is the dream of a god,” writes the initiate, “and I am the dream and the dreamer.”

Cleopata’s earthly life as an embodied ego was torn between romantic passions and clashing empires, all of which went the way of sand and dust. But before the writhing asp—fitting symbol of the primordial serpent of the life force—sunk its fangs into her body to release her soul, she was able to waken from her earthly dream and snatch a glimpse of the true empire of light, where the queen of the Nile would go after closing her eyes and crossing the wide river. 

Your Letters, March 27

Reparations Reply

A one-time payment of $5 million to each eligible Black resident is among recommendations unanimously accepted by San Francisco’s Board of Supervisors as part of a draft plan by a panel proposing reparations.

I am a 415 native, but even by San Francisco standards, this is beyond stupid. I look forward to giving a “thumbs down” to this pathetic gesture. Yes, a gesture. What about Asian Americans, women or Hispanics, as well as the myriad of other groups in San Francisco? It appears that the city is going to have a shortfall this coming fiscal year. So, how is the city actually going to make this gesture (payout)?

I suspect that the city will have to go to the state and request funds to do this. How is Gov. Gavin Newsom going to look declining this grotesque reparation? Will Sonoma County gleefully chip in to make San Francisco feel better? Will California?

Gary Sciford

Santa Rosa

Send your letters to the editor to editor@pacificsun or ed****@*****ys.com.

Culture Crush, Week of 3/29

San Geronimo Holding Cort The San Geronimo Valley Community Center makes a birthday wish on behalf of its recently retired youth team director, Howie Cort, and invites community members to celebrate her “Birthday Palooza” with her band, Howie's Persuasion, with the release of their new Aunt June’s Basement. The gig starts at 6pm, Thursday, April 6 at Giaco's Valley Roadhouse, 625...

Best of Marin 2023 Ballot

best of marin 2023 logo
The Pacific Sun Best of Marin 2023 Readers Poll There are countless reasons why Marin County is one of the best places on earth to work, play, live, and love. Now it's time for our wonderful readers to share what makes Marin the best to you in our annual readers poll—the Best of Marin. From March 29 to May 17,...

Art in Iran: ‘Breaking Barriers’ exhibit in Sausalito

In Marin County, there is a singular shared culture that brings everyone together: the culture of celebrating art as well as the artists who create it.  Across the board, the Bay Area is famous for its inclusive and incredibly diverse display of artistic expression, and local galleries are known to showcase exhibitions that represent not only the most local of...

Epicurean Epicness: Restaurateur David Ruiz

David Ruiz is the owner of Stillwater in Fairfax, Junior in San Francisco and Souvenir, a new natural wine and vinyl store in San Anselmo. The following is an interview with Ruiz: What do you do? I’m a business owner—restaurants and bars—and a bottle shop… Where do you live? Gerstle Park, San Rafael. How long have you lived in Marin? Since October 2018. Where...

Matrimony Melodies: Jane Austen’s musical in Ross

Fans of Jane Austen’s Pride & Prejudice have had a plethora of adaptations of the 19th-century novel from which to choose, from the trio of Lauren Gunderson and Margot Melcon theatrical extensions of the story to the recent gay-themed film Fire Island, which transported reasonable facsimiles of Austen’s characters from Hertfordshire, England to the gay mecca off of Long...

Free Will Astrology, March 27

ARIES (March 21-April 19): Sometimes, I give you suggestions that may, if you carry them out, jostle your routines and fluster your allies. But after trying out the new approaches for a short time, you may chicken out and revert to old habits. That’s understandable! It can be difficult to change your life. Here’s an example. What if I...

John Courage Trio in Healdsburg

  Elephant in the Room 177 Healdsburg Ave., Healdsburg. Elephantintheroompub.com. Voted Damn Best Hair in Sonoma County—John Courage Trio, with special guest, 8pm, Friday, April 7. $10. The Flamingo Resort 2777 4th St., Santa Rosa. vintagespacesr.com. jackLNDN is a multi-instrumentalist, singer, writer and producer, known for electronic music (and aversion to vowels). 9pm, Friday, March 31. 21+. $15-$20. Green Music Center 1801 East Cotati Ave., Rohnert Park. gmc.sonoma.edu. Yo-Yo...

Woke Choke

Time to study civics again By Kimball Shinkoskey Our people need to wake all the way up before we can claim to be woke. Being woke to national socialism that tries to impose an end to racism and sexism, or being woke to fascism that wants to enforce the same parental rights for everyone isn’t very politically enlightened at all. America today is...

Dreaming Worlds: The Expanse of Inner Life

“I feel strangely awake,” Cleopatra says as she readies the poisonous snake that will take her life, “as if living had been just a dream—somebody else’s dream.” The poignant scene comes at the end of the 1963 cinematic masterpiece starring Elizabeth Taylor, and harkens to the famous Latin quotation, “Vita somnium breve est,” or life is but a short...

Your Letters, March 27

Reparations Reply A one-time payment of $5 million to each eligible Black resident is among recommendations unanimously accepted by San Francisco’s Board of Supervisors as part of a draft plan by a panel proposing reparations. I am a 415 native, but even by San Francisco standards, this is beyond stupid. I look forward to giving a “thumbs down” to this pathetic...
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