Mudpies & Butterflies » los angeles https://lifelearnersla.com Learning Alongside Your Kids in Los Angeles Tue, 13 Oct 2015 15:30:11 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=3.9.2 Let’s Play Ball – LA Dodger’s Style https://lifelearnersla.com/2011/10/lets-play-ball-la-dodgers-style/ https://lifelearnersla.com/2011/10/lets-play-ball-la-dodgers-style/#comments Sun, 16 Oct 2011 04:53:21 +0000 https://lifelearnersla.com/index.html%3fp=9024.html Rain or Shine (actually a bit of both) our tour of the LA Dodgers stadium and Dodger history was a blast. For many of us parents, it conjured stories for our eager kids about first baseball experiences. Mine was in a rickety Cricket stadium in NC, where Cal Ripken got his start with the AA [...]]]> Rain or Shine (actually a bit of both) our tour of the LA Dodgers stadium and Dodger history was a blast.  For many of us parents, it conjured stories for our eager kids about first baseball experiences.  Mine was in a IMG_7738rickety Cricket stadium in NC, where Cal Ripken got his start with the AA Orioles.  The part that thrilled me as a child, was that you could throw your peanut shells 30 feet below on the dirt under the wooden bleachers.  This IMG_7632memory transcended into a spontaneous round of,- “Take me out to the ballgame.,.buy me some Peanuts and Cracker Jack!”    Thus endearing another generation to the game of Baseball.  Thanks again to our coordinator “Special K” for a great fieldtrip.IMG_7642IMG_7656IMG_7650IMG_7675IMG_7661IMG_7701IMG_7716IMG_7694IMG_7718IMG_7770IMG_7721IMG_7773IMG_7760IMG_7725IMG_7751IMG_7744

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We Share the Same Ocean https://lifelearnersla.com/2011/08/we-share-the-same-ocean/ https://lifelearnersla.com/2011/08/we-share-the-same-ocean/#comments Mon, 22 Aug 2011 18:03:26 +0000 https://lifelearnersla.com/index.html%3fp=7963.html On Friday morning August 19, 2011, my daughters and I felt like we were on the set of an Epic movie. The scene – 500 years ago – the first contact between Native tribes and Pacific Islanders who had voyaged over 6,000 nautical miles. But it wasn’t a movie! Four months earlier, six boats of [...]]]> On Friday morning August 19, 2011, my daughters and I felt like we were on the set of an Epic movie.  The scene – 500 years ago – the first contact between Native tribes and Pacific Islanders who had voyaged over wwelcomw6,000 nautical miles.  But it wasn’t a movie!  Four months earlier, six boats of Ancient Polynesian design had set sail from New Zealand carrying crews from eleven islands and were now anchoring in Paradise Cove, Malibu to the anticipation of a sincere assembly of people.  The group included a formidable council of Chumash Indians awaiting to embrace their fellow indigenous brothers and sisters.

IMG_6401The modern story of these Pacific Voyagers unfolds from the shoulders of Dieter Paulmann, the founder of Okeanos – Foundation for the Sea, who wished to bring awareness to the growing imbalance of our Ocean’s Ecosystems.  Dieter found the Ancient Polynesian’s Vaka boats could hold open a portal where thousands, maybe millions of people can connect.   “Vaka of Hope” is the name of the film Dieter is producing to document the voyage – The Vaka can be a sustainable way of life.

IMG_6420Another branch of Dieter’s vision is the ambitious Vaka Motu grassroots project affording remote islander communities the skills and plans to build their own seafaring boats in order to foster personal and communal empowerment, cultural respect and economic upsurge.    By building and sailing a modern version of the ancient canoes, people can renew their commitment to Oceans which sustained their ancestors and whose preservation will be the greatest legacy left to their IMG_6579descendents.  As the matriarch of my family, I have placed my children within this powerful circle of renewal.

Six of these Vakas, courageously crossed the Pacific ocean manned with crews from Aotearoa (New Zealand), Cook Islands, Fiji, Samoa, and Tahiti, Kiribati, Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands, Tonga, Hawaii (USA), and Vanuatu.  The purpose can be found on the backs of each sailor…“Te Mana o Te Moana” meaning “Spirit of the Sea.” Explained further on the  website, “Voyaging on our Vaka, we are continuing to revive our ancient Polynesian cultural traditions while exercising respectful stewardship of our ocean.shore

At each landfall of the journey, locals have received the crew members with festive ceremonies.   IMG_6462In Malibu, representatives of the Chumash opened the ceremony with song, chants, gifts and blessings.   Crowds gathered near the two Chumash plank canoes (Tomols) as one man in furs and feathers draped each rower in plumes of burning sage and chants of purification.  Before the voyagers even touch land,  five Chumash, including the maker of one of the Tomols rowed out to greet the Vaka voyagers.IMG_6465

Once all the crew members had landed and greeted each other with hugs and a Maori Hongi (where foreheads and minds touch)  a circle of people organically formed where a more formal ceremony of welcoming and honoring began.  Chumash spokespersons invoked the spirits of many animals that hold a sacredHonoring place in their lives: dolphins, hummingbirds, whales and more.   One elder emotionally compared her feelings of sighting the Vakas on the horizon as to how her heart feels when she sights her brother whales.  I teared up many times with raw emotion to be a witness & participant in the completion of such a circle.

IMG_6582Next, a Moari spokesperson from the voyage stepped forth and called upon recently passed elders whose spirits now live in the Ocean.  And how the Vakas Two-cultureshad not just brought them thousands of miles to this shore, but connected us all to the past of our ancestors and future generations.  After introducing the captains of each Vaka and their crew, the Pacific Voyagers shared a powerful Maori dance/chant to honor members of the Chumash tribes and other SoCal residents, like my daughters and myself who will further the intent with more connection.

IMG_6604We had to go before the ceremony was over.  And with a sleeping four year old on my shoulder, I stooped down to thank one of the New Zealand Vaka crew sitting in the sand.  With another wave of tears in my eyes I said, “Thank you for what you have done for my family.”

The words seem simple now, but in that moment he and I were connected in mutual gratitude for something that was far greater than each of us individually.  We all have the power to connect to others and in unison – Heal Our Oceans, and in turn – Heal Our World.

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