KUSP Files for Bankruptcy

0

KUSP, the community radio station that recently stopped broadcasting, has now filed for bankruptcy.
โ€œItโ€™s really a shame. I wish it could have been different,โ€ Board Secretary Cathie Royer says of the debt-ridden roller coaster ride of the beloved station. โ€œItโ€™s really tough to summarize.โ€
Chapter 7 bankruptcy, the route the board chose, will force the station to liquidate its assets. Perhaps, some board members have suggested, things could have been different if the station had had more timeโ€”or leaders had begun their overhaul and last-ditch fundraising efforts sooner.
Royer says the board plans to post a Frequently Asked Questions page on KUSP.org this week.


CONCRETE IDEA

The city of Santa Cruz is gearing up for a big shebang to celebrate 150 years of our quirky town by the sea.
The festivities, which run from Sept. 1 through Oct. 1, include a public art tour, an exploration of the wharf and a beach party.
The celebration kicks off at 4 p.m. on Sept. 1 with a time capsule sealing at Santa Cruz City Hall. The city managerโ€™s office is looking for ideas to include in the historical vault, which will be opened in 100 years. Submissions are due by Wednesday, Sept. 24. Here is GTโ€™s list of suggestions, which we turned in this week:
-Robert Norseโ€™s teddy bear
-Blueprints of desal plant
-Jill Stein 2016 pin
-Receipt for a Five Guys burger
-Eviction notice for unpaid sky-high rent
-Pamphlet on freeganism
-Pre-legalization nugget from the โ€œmedicinalโ€ pot era
-Micah Posnerโ€™s soft ear hairs
-CD recording of Richelle Noroyan yelling
-Instructions on how to listen to a CD
-Great Morgani costume
-Keys to a drive-it-yourself automobile
-T-shirt that says โ€œThis was supposed to be the future. Where is my jetpack?โ€
-Bag of syringes
-Mike Rotkin
-This issue of GT
Submit your suggestions for the time capsule at www.cityofsantacruz.com/150anniversary. Or leave your ideas in the comments of the online version of this story, and weโ€™ll submit them for you.

Wellstone Center in the Redwoods Offers Unique Fellowships for Writers

0

At the end of Amigo Road in Soquel, near the top of a trail that heads down into the trees, thereโ€™s a little clearing with a bench and a redwood tree.
Itโ€™s part of the Wellstone Center in the Redwoods, and in many ways itโ€™s a perfect symbol of the experience that husband-and-wife Wellstone co-founders Steve Kettmann and Sarah Ringler try to create for writers. Not only because it offers a gorgeous view of the natural world, but also, more importantly, because itโ€™s quiet. Wellstone is a place where silence is revered, a retreat in the truest sense of the word. And the fellowships, resident internships and other opportunities writers get to create and explore their process on the grounds comes with a strong encouragement to digitally detox. While Wellstone has Wi-Fi, and there are certain areas where Internet and cellphones are allowed, there are others where theyโ€™re prohibited.
In another way, that same clearing at the end of Amigo Road also symbolizes just how hard Wellstoneโ€™s push against our cultureโ€™s ever-growing obsession with connectivity can be. Thatโ€™s because the redwood by the bench was planted in honor of Kettmannโ€™s sister, who died of cancer. She visited the Wellstone Center only a couple of times in her life, but the mandatory offline policy didnโ€™t sit well with her.
โ€œShe was an educator. A great, generous person who totally understood what we were up to,โ€ says Kettmann. โ€œBut she came and visited us, and had it in her mind that she wanted to go online to, I donโ€™t know, check in for Southwest Airlines or something. And we told her no, please donโ€™t do that here, and she just couldnโ€™t process the information. It became a little bit of a conflict, and it bothered herโ€”later, she mentioned โ€˜Well, theyโ€™re a little bit pushy about that!โ€™ And my sister almost never said anything like that.โ€
The thing is, his sisterโ€™s view was not unusual; in fact, itโ€™s the societal norm.
โ€œPeople feel like itโ€™s really their entitlement to be connected at any point, without stopping to understand how dangerous that isโ€”that there is no โ€˜no,โ€™ itโ€™s always โ€˜yes,โ€™โ€ he says. โ€œSo it was a pretty jarring lesson for me. We have to keep trying, even though we run into things like that all the time.โ€
The payoff comes when they get to work with writers like Ethel Rohan, the Irish-born, San Francisco-based author who was awarded the Wellstone Centerโ€™s first Plumeri Fellowshipโ€”named for Joe Plumeri, a New York-based philanthropist whose son Christian developed anorexia in his early teenage years, which led to treatment facilities, drug problems, and ultimately Christianโ€™s tragic death before he was 40 years old. Plumeri wrote about the painful loss in his book, The Power of Being Yourself, which was co-authored by Kettmann.
โ€œWe were thinking of [Christian], wanting it all to mean something, to try to turn it into something tangible,โ€ says Kettmann. โ€œTwice a year, we have a Plumeri Fellow who is an established writer pursuing a book project at the intersection of food and health. The idea is it should be fiction or creative nonfiction, not journalism or academic writing. It should have a personal component.โ€
During her month-long fellowship in June, Rohan worked on her first novel, The Weight of Him, which will be published in February by St. Martinโ€™s Press. In announcing the Plumeri Fellowship on her website, Rohan said she was โ€œthrilled and grateful,โ€ and looking forward to the โ€œsolace and inspiration of nature.โ€
Wellstone is now accepting applications for the second Plumeri Fellowship, which are due Aug. 22. The fellowship comes with a $5,000 stipend.
There is alsoย anotherย month-long residency on the property, the WCR Fellowship, for which applications areย due Aug. 20. Itโ€™s awarded four times a year, and provides for a writer to stay in the propertyโ€™s rustic Library House, which epitomizes the digital detox experienceโ€”โ€œno electricity, no running water, really nothing except a nice bed, books and an amazing view,โ€ says Kettmann.
The coupleโ€”who just a few days ago welcomed their second child into the worldโ€”bring a sort of intersection of passions to their work at the Wellstone Center. Kettmann, who was born in San Jose, is a former sports writer for the San Francisco Chronicle and a contributor over the years to everything from the New Republic to the New York Times. He has written or co-written several best-selling books, including the groundbreaking and highly controversial 2005 autobiography by Jose Canseco, Juiced, which was one of the key works in the mid-part of that decade that brought awareness of rampant steroid use in professional sports to the mainstream.
Ringler, who earned her masterโ€™s degree in international relations in Berlin, comes from the world of nonprofits. They had been living in Berlin for 10 years when they discovered their Soquel property on a trip to the Bay Area.
โ€œWe came here and were just so wowed by the place, the location,โ€ says Ringler. โ€œWe felt like we wanted to bring people here and engage their creativity.โ€
While Kettmann has the writing fame, Ringler is in many ways the face of the Wellstone Centerโ€”literally, even, since her face is on the landing page of their website, along with a diary that is part of the very personal connection she considers essential to the Wellstone experience.
โ€œWe donโ€™t have that very often anymore in our world,โ€ she says. โ€œWe feel like we have 100 friends on Facebook, but what we really want is personal connection.โ€
There is also a publishing arm of the Wellstone Center, Wellstone Books, that has already put out an eclectic array of works, like A Book of Walks by San Francisco Giants manager Bruce Bochy, and the โ€œMusic That Changed My Lifeโ€ series.
โ€œWe look to do personal writing thatโ€™s not afraid to inspire,โ€ says Kettmann. โ€œItโ€™s not self-help, itโ€™s not overtly inspirational. But why not do stuff that has positive energy and might make people feel good?โ€
Though their goals are ambitious, and their vision finely tuned, they donโ€™t see the Wellstone Center as their home, exactly.
โ€œWe see ourselves as the custodians of it,โ€ says Kettmann. โ€œThe custodians of quiet.โ€


For more information on the Wellstone Center and the deadline for fellowship applications, go to wellstoneredwoods.org.

Preview: Mike Schermer to Play Kuumbwa

0

In 1989, Mike Schermer was working a job he hated as a housekeeper at UCSC and playing blues guitar on the side. One day on his lunch break he got a call from Bay Area bluesman Andy Santana about a potential gig that night. Schermer would miss the gig if he went back to campus, soโ€”in what would become a defining momentโ€”he ditched work and played the gig. He and Santana then formed a blues group called the Soul Drivers, and Schermer never worked another day job again.
โ€œWe were pretty much immediately working five or six nights a week,โ€ Schermer says. โ€œI was making $50 or $60 a night and I was paying $200 a month for rent. It didnโ€™t get much better than that.โ€
Now widely known as Mighty Mike, Schermer has become a celebrated blues sideman. Heโ€™s performed with an all-star roster of blues heavyweights, including Bonnie Raitt, Elvin Bishop, and Charlie Musselwhite, and heโ€™s lead guitarist for swamp-boogie pianist and singer Marcia Ball.
Schermer has wholeheartedly embraced the role of sideman. He leads his own band, the Mighty Mike Schermer Band, and he writes his own material, but he thoroughly enjoys playing other peopleโ€™s music.
โ€œI think every frontperson should be a sideperson at one time in their career, just to see what itโ€™s like,โ€ he says. โ€œAnd vice versa. Iโ€™ve worked with a lot of sidemen that complain about this and complain about that, and they have no idea how hard it is to be a frontperson … It would be a good experience for every drummer and bass player to experience that in their life.โ€
Originally from Los Alamos, New Mexico, Schermer experimented with different styles of music while a student at UCSC. His musical trajectory was forever altered, however, when he saw blues legend Albert Collins perform at Kresge Town Hall.
โ€œIt changed everything for me,โ€ he says. โ€œFrom that first note he hit, I knew what I wanted to do.โ€
Collins still provides considerable influence and inspiration, even after all these years. Schermer describes his life before and after seeing the legendary artist as one door closing behind him and another opening.
Talking with him is a quick study in blues appreciation. He delights in explaining how all American music has its roots in the blues; that the blues is one of the original improvisational styles; that there are countless sub-genres within the genre; and that its chordal confines enable vast creative expression.
โ€œItโ€™s pretty much three chords with a few substitutions here and thereโ€”twelve bars with a few variations there,โ€ he says. โ€œBut by boxing it in, it opens it up. Thereโ€™s a lot more you can do inside of that.โ€
An energetic and passionate performer who has a reputation for playing his ass off every night, Schermer now calls Austin, Texas home. He moved there at the invitation of Ball to be her guitarist. He describes Santa Cruz as a hard place to leave, but the move has been great for his career. He doesnโ€™t, however, advise moving there as a guitarist looking for work.
โ€œItโ€™s just not a town that you move to as a guitar player unless you already have a gig,โ€ he says. โ€œThe guy serving your pizza can probably play circles around you.โ€
On Thursday, Schermer celebrates his 50th birthday with a performance at the Kuumbwa. Heโ€™s bringing his ace band and enlisting the help of local collaborators, including Tammi Brown, Lara Price, and members of the Soul Drivers. The evening promises to be a musical trip down memory lane for longtime fans, as well as a showcase of Schermerโ€™s extraordinary talents and love of being on-stage.
โ€œI try to put the thoughts away when I perform,โ€ he says. โ€œItโ€™s really just about having a good time … Letโ€™s forget about everything and just have fun from the first note to the last note. We can solve the worldโ€™s problems later.โ€


Mighty Mike Schermer will perform at 7 p.m. on Thursday, Aug. 19 at Kuumbwa Jazz, 320-2 Cedar St., Santa Cruz. $18/adv, $23/door. 427-2227.

Soberanes Fire Relief Benefit, UCSC Produce, Killer Gluten-Free Brownie

Some things look as good as they taste.
Like the wares of the UCSC Farm & Garden Produce Cart, which offers a small and intimate salon of fresh harvest twice a week, filling in between the two larger farmers markets for those Westside dwellers who have to have it fresh. Every Tuesday and Friday, noon to 6 p.m. during the summer and early fall, apprentices from the universityโ€™s flourishing Agroecology program pick, box up and set out the latest examples of delicious fruit, herbs, veggies, and flowers from the campusโ€™ hilltop farm. I canโ€™t resist stopping by, along with many neighbors, university staff and students, to see whatโ€™s trending in our extremely local organics.
Last week the tables under the shaded canvas awning were attractively stocked with strawberriesโ€”the kind that exude a sweet tangy perfumeโ€”torpedo red onions, fat yellow potatoes, slightly smaller new red potatoes, green beans, ribbed and curved suku cucumbers, old-fashioned zinnias, and lovely mixed baby greens. I especially like their pungent mixed mizunas, cresses, and arugulas which create a peppery dinner salad. Add fresh basil and youโ€™re right in the middle of summer. Corner of High and Bay streets, noon-6 p.m. Tuesday and Friday.

Earthbound Fire Relief

While weโ€™re talking about fresh and local, I invite you to join me at an especially choice event coming up on Aug. 20: If Words Could Put the Fire Out: A Soberanes Fire Relief Benefit. Terrific and timely, this Saturday afternoon event offers a chance to spend time with Pulitzer Prize-winner Jane Smiley, poet Ellen Bass, and writer/artist Patrice Vecchione, while savoring some delicious finger foods and wine. Who wouldnโ€™t like two hours of the spoken word, appetizers and wine? The proceeds from the $40 tickets will go to the Community Foundation of Monterey Countyโ€™s Soberanes Fire Fund. Youโ€™ve been smelling the smoke, hearing about a devastating loss of crops, vineyards, animals, forests, homesโ€”now you can help out. 4-6 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 20 at the celebrated Earthbound Farm Stand, 7250 Carmel Valley Road in Carmel Valley. For tickets, go to ifwordscouldputthefireout.eventbrite.com.

Wine of the Week

One of those incredible bargains in the key of light, minerally white wine is the Vinho Verde by Gazela. I discovered it at New Leaf several months ago for a mere $5.99. And, like any intelligent vinophile, I gambled that for $5.99 it could be merely decent and still a bargain. But lo and behold, this lovely creatureโ€”so light in color as to be practically clearโ€”proved to be a zesty, non-threatening partner to seafood, chicken, wheat chex (just seeing if youโ€™re paying attention), Cheetos, Brie, and green olives. Even now that the price has soared to a dollar moreโ€”itโ€™s the deal of the decade at $6.99. I am hopelessly enamored and buy it by the half-case. A young, refreshing tipple, this Portuguese doppelganger of Austriaโ€™s Grรผner Veltliner weighs in at a breathtakingly low 9 percent alcohol. Thatโ€™s breakfast wine, folks!

On the Gluten-free Front:

Weโ€™re loving the lightly cheese-inflected baked crackers from Miltonโ€™s. Yes the โ€œCheddar cheeseโ€ crackers are light, crunchy, utterly satisfying, and brilliantly gluten-free. Three bucks plus change. Everywhere. I also adore the barely legal gluten-free brownie from Companion Bakeshop. Feather-light yet decadent, adorned with walnuts, barely sweet, tender as a babyโ€™s you-know-what, this is the enlightened brownie of our region. And as we all know, there are many great brownies in our region. For those liberated from gluten, these are your brownies of choice. $3.85 and worth every centavo.

How (and Why) to Start a Food Exchange

2

A couple of weeks ago, I spent an evening quartering 13 pounds of organic Meyer lemons, dipping them into kosher salt and squishing them into a dozen half-pint Mason jars. I had never preserved lemons before, but Iโ€™d cooked with them often and fallen in love with their sunny acidity and the way they seem to boost any flavor. I was pretty sure I could do it without messing it up.
I probably wouldnโ€™t have attempted it if it hadnโ€™t been for my Food Exchange. Every other month for the last year, my group meets to give tasty things weโ€™ve made to the 11 other households participating. Itโ€™s not a potluckโ€”instead, youโ€™re given an armload of treats to enjoy at home. Iโ€™ve walked away with lasagnas, simple syrups, soups, pickled everything, bottles of homemade wine, donuts, bagels, pasta sauce, flavored honey, family recipes and inspired first attempts.
Not all of us are great chefs, but we all use the opportunity to showcase something special, and I look forward to seeing what everyone will bring. Being a member of a food swap has inspired me to cook more and try recipes that Iโ€™ve been putting offโ€”challah a few months ago, now the preserved lemons. Not to mention the wonderful people Iโ€™ve met and the yummy things theyโ€™ve given me to eat.
My friend Mariah Sage started the group a few years ago as a way to engender community, motivate herself to cook more and move toward a more self-sufficient lifestyleโ€”goals that have been deliciously met through methods I fully endorse.


STAYCATION

As much as I cherish the hidden gems of Santa Cruz, sometimes itโ€™s fun to pretend youโ€™re on vacation and play tourist in your own town. Happy hour at Stagnaro Bros at the end of the wharf hit that spot a few weeks ago. I sat happy as a clam, chili-lime prawn taco in one hand and a $3 Santa Cruz Aleworks kolsch in the other, rotating occasionally to enjoy as much of the 180-degree ocean views as possible. No travel arrangements necessary. 59 Municipal Wharf, Santa Cruz. Open 11 a.m. daily.

First Estate-grown Chardonnay From Hunter Hill

The new release of Hunter Hill Vineyard & Wineryโ€™s estate-grown Chardonnay 2014 is a special achievement for winery owners Christine and Vann Slatter.
โ€œWe are proud to present our first estate-grown Santa Cruz Mountains Chardonnay,โ€ they say. Other Chardonnays produced by the winery have been made from fruit harvested elsewhere, and they are thrilled to now be tilling the soil around their very own Chardonnay grapes.
Aging in stainless steel has resulted in a bright and vibrant wine with zesty nuances. Green apple, Meyer lemon, pineapple, and a touch of caramel add an abundance of flavorโ€”and it pairs well with many foods, especially seafood, chicken and soft cheeses. This unoaked wine ($35) is just lovely by itself, too. Think of coming home from work and opening up a superb wine like this Chardonnay. Only 50 cases were produced, so I wouldnโ€™t hesitate in getting some.
Looking out over the property on a recent visit, I admire all the work it has taken the Slatters over the years to make this โ€œGarden of Eden.โ€ But the whole estate is now up for sale as the couple is moving on to other things. It includes nearly six acres of vineyard land with ponds, a barbecue area, a garden, chicken coops (eggs and fresh produce are sold at the winery), a house and pool; plus wine-tasting room, vineyard tractors and more. Check the website for additional info.
In the meantime, until the winery is sold, the Slatters are still enjoying producing their award-winning wines and running the tasting room.
Hunter Hill Vineyard & Winery, 7099 Glen Haven Road, Soquel, 465-9294. hunterhillwines.com. Tasting room hours are 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday and Sunday.


Twisted Rootsโ€™ Third Annual Fundraiser for MEarth

Sip award-winning wines and savor small bites to support MEarth, an environmental education nonprofit with roots in Carmel. Twisted Roots in Carmel Valley will hold its third annual fundraiser with Chef Brandon Miller of Mundaka in Carmel doing a paella cooking demonstrationโ€”and offering attendees tastes of paella. The event is 5:30-7 p.m. on Aug. 25 and tickets are $50 per person. Reservations required. Visit twistedrootsvineyard.com for more info.

Silence and Noise on the Brain

โ€œI lose track of physical time,โ€ says artist Emily Tayman of her experience in an isolation tank in Santa Barbara. โ€œMore than once Iโ€™ve completely lost the sense that I am in my body. I am in a conscious dream state … There are no sounds to distract you from getting to this space; you are in your own complete world.โ€
From headphones that block out a wide range of external noise to silent rooms and retreats to a new isolation tank center, Equilibrium, opening in Seabright on Sept. 1, people are taking extreme measures to experience silence. Though itโ€™s hard to find and is sometimes uncomfortable, it has proven medical benefits, too.
In 2013, an article published in the journal Brain Structure & Function revealed the positive, regenerative effects that silence had on the brains of rats. Initially intended to be a study of how rats react to music and different sounds, the silent segmentsโ€”which were used as a control between each sampleโ€”produced the most profound responses from the subjects. During these episodes of silence, the hippocampus region of the brain (the part of the brain associated with memory, learning and emotion) saw a greater development in cell production. ย 
The research also concluded that subjects experienced more relaxation in silence before and after the calming music than while it was playing.
โ€œWe saw that silence is really helping the new generated cells to differentiate into neurons, and integrate into the system,โ€ says Imke Kirste, a regenerative biologist at Duke University.
The research on silence builds on what weโ€™ve long known about its inverse: Epidemiologists conducting the 1960 study that coined the term โ€œnoise pollutionโ€ discovered a relation between high blood pressure and overexposure to noise. They suggested that exposure to chronic harsh sound increased the potential for sleep loss, tinnitus and heart disease.
So then, is silence simply the absence of noise? Imagine going to the most remote place you can think of: even there, you will still encounter sound of some kindโ€”and even if you were to find a place where nearly everything is inaudible, is it possible to turn off the music or sounds created in your head?
โ€œThere isnโ€™t really such a thing as silence,โ€ says Robert Zatorre, a sound neurologist. โ€œIn the absence of sound, the brain often tends to produce internal representations of sound.โ€
More and more research shows that even when we find a silent space, our brain begins to fabricate sound from memory. In our most quiet moments, our brain switches from a state of gathering and stimulation to one of processing and reflection. ย 
โ€œFreedom from noise and goal-directed tasks, it appears, unites the quiet without and within, allowing our conscious workspace to do its thing, to weave ourselves into the world, to discover where we fit in. Thatโ€™s the power of silence,โ€ writes Daniel A. Gross in a 2014 Nautilus article โ€œThis is Your Brain on Silence.โ€
Therefore, if we spend the majority of our day distracted and focussed on a chronic rush of sound, we do not allow for our brain to develop and interpret our experiences. We do not give ourselves time for the brain to fit itself into the world.
โ€œI do believe that sensory deprivation is the closest gateway to complete silence of mind and external stimuli that I have gotten,โ€ says Tayman of the isolation tank. โ€œItโ€™s revitalizing, cleansing, and gives a sense of euphoria. I find myself much more sensitive to music after a float, it becomes enhanced and each note and beat is recognized. This may be from the deprivation of the senses, giving them a time and space to completely relaxโ€”heightening your senses by cutting them off for a given moment of time.โ€


For more information on Equilibrium Float, set to open on Sept. 1 at 543 Seabright Ave., Santa Cruz, visit equilibriumfloat.com.

Leo Wears a Lionโ€™s Skin

Each of the 12 Labors (zodiacal signs and Gates) of Hercules is a story about the soul and the personality. Each sign describes a different relationship between the two. In Cancer, the personality (โ€œdark light of matterโ€) awaited the light of the Soul. In Leo, the Soul appears and must learn to overcome the strong personality (wild lion laying devastation to the land).
Leo is the fifth gate, labor and task for Hercules. He is to overcome the Nemean Lion (personality). The people are afraid. Hercules is courageous, strong and braveโ€”Leo qualities. There are two lions in the story. One is the kingly lion, Hercules himelf (the Soul). The other is the animal lion (the personality). The animal lion (uncontrolled personality) is โ€œdestroying the countrysideโ€ (life of the human).
And so Hercules goes on his way, passing through the fifth gate, alone and unafraid. Eventually he hears the โ€œLionโ€™s roar in all the land, especially in the evening air.โ€ He comes upon a cave, and upon entering it faces the fierce lion whose breath is fiery hot. Hercules grasps the lion by the throat, until all the lionโ€™s roars of hate subside. And Hercules overcomes the lion with his great courage, strength and act of will.
And the great Teacher, looking on, said to Hercules, โ€œThe lion is dead, Hercules, but lions and serpents must be slain again and again. You have done well. Rest now. For gate six (Virgo) opens soon.โ€ In labor six, Hercules steps upon the shores of a great sea where no men can be found. Only a queen and her temple of virgins. Hercules wears a lionโ€™s skin. It informs the Teachers he is ready for testing and training. The Sun enters Virgo Monday.


ARIES: You may struggle mentally to maintain equilibrium between desires and what is actually possible. Itโ€™s good to study the subject of sacrificeโ€”the first law of the Soul. At the center of sacrifice is Love. A paradox. Love and sacrifice both come from the heart. Weโ€™re on Earth because we sacrificed to be here. You may feel that youโ€™ve become a fiery warrior. Spiritual warriors always win.
TAURUS: You assess all relationships in terms of value. You must also assess what you value and the values you offer others. Often you sense that there is more you can give. Always you begin with intentions for goodwill, which creates right relations. You offer the goodness of yourself in relationships. You know love isnโ€™t a feeling.
GEMINI: Tend to all things great, small and necessary in daily life. Observe all habits, agendas, and how you serve your world. We evolve step-by-step, beginning by tending to our physical, then emotional, then mental bodies. Then we progress to the Soul. Each day, brood, as a Soul, upon the service for the coming day. Emotions are then calmed. The full moon shines on you.
CANCER: You reassess goals and aspirations for the next two months. Earth (soil, trees, plants) is very important for your well-being. Make sure youโ€™re out and about in the Sun and natureโ€”the most balanced kingdom. Its radiations strengthen your heart and mind, and refocus your enthusiasm (โ€œfilled with Godโ€), allowing calm practicality to emerge. Where is your garden and are the devas your companions? ย 
LEO: Ponder upon how you want to be seen, known and recognized in the world. Consider your identity as one that is helping to build the new culture and civilization. Leos are to nurture the new era at its foundational stages because Leos are leaders. Begin to share with everyone your thoughts, ideas, resources and discoveries. Cultivate all creative gifts. Leoโ€™s talents must move from self to the community called humanity.
VIRGO: Youโ€™re coming into a new self-identity. It is filled with thoughts of goodness. Itโ€™s important to tend to the home. Its value is now and in the future. A certain set of teachings holds possibilities for greater love and wisdom. This study allows you to enter into the life stream of humanity through understanding of the mysteries. Uranus asks if youโ€™re studying astrology seriously yet?
LIBRA: Itโ€™s a spiritual practice, especially in Leo, to realize that you are valuable. Is this consideration difficult? If so make lists of all of your gifts, abilities, talents, kindnesses, good deeds, thoughts, ideas, plans, and givings. There you find value. Place the lists on your wall, reading them each day. This knowledge balances you. Itโ€™s the beginning of your self-identity as a Goodwill server for humanity.
SCORPIO: Things, stars, people, sometimes go into hidingโ€”especially you. Or you find someone else hiding away and make their acquaintance. Thereโ€™s actually someone in your life who is very valuable to you. Theyโ€™re knowledgeable and have the skills needed for your next creative stages. They are concerned with humanityโ€™s future. Call forth all your resources, using them to help others. Then you begin to come out of hiding.
SAGITTARIUS: Life becomes subtler, slightly different, feelings of compassion awaken. Tend to debts and then give (tithe) to charity. Example of giving to those in need: St. Judeโ€™s Hospital; Doctors Without Borders; UNESCO; American Red Cross, Heifer Project. These are difficult financial times. The spiritual law is that what we give is returned tenfold. When we give to others our life is cared for. You need care.
CAPRICORN: Things seem transformative at times, restricted at other times. Then joy comes from the garden through the door. Along with these โ€œmoodsโ€ a new identity is occurring. This identity is new to yourself. The river of life is gliding you downstream into new territories. Each day you help bring forth the new culture and civilization. What interests you about this? What do you think is your part?
AQUARIUS: You see the need for nourishment of self and others. One source of nourishment is financial security in terms of home and land. Visualize a home on vast amounts of land. Include a workspace for the arts, cottages, gardens, trees, ponds, communal kitchen. See friends and loved ones close by. Work daily on this through visualization. Draw and paint it. Talk about it. These are the first anchorings of your dream.
PISCES: A return to previous, perhaps put-aside creative work allows you to reaffirm its importance in your life. Thereโ€™s a renewed fire in the mind, calling you to two things: Laughter with a sense of play, much missed in your life since childhood. And a new level of creative work reflecting who you are now and who you are becoming. All parts of you yearn for a close spiritual community. It will appear in its right timing. In paradise.

Rob Brezsny’s Astrology Aug 17โ€”19

0

 
ARIES (March 21-April 19): Can you imagine feeling at home in the world no matter where you are? If you eventually master this art, outer circumstances wonโ€™t distort your relationship with yourself. No matter how crazy or chaotic the people around you might be, you will remain rooted in your unshakable sense of purpose; you will respond to any given situation in ways that make you both calm and alert, amused and curious, compassionate for the suffering of others and determined to do whatโ€™s best for you. If you think these are goals worth seeking, you can make dramatic progress toward them in the coming weeks.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): As I tried to meditate on your horoscope, my next-door neighbor was wielding a weed-whacker to trim her lawn, and the voices in my head were shouting extra loud. So I decided to drive down to the marsh to get some high-quality silence. When I arrived at the trailhead, I found an older man in ragged clothes leaning against the fence. Nearby was a grocery cart full of what I assumed were all his earthly belongings. โ€œDoing nothing is a very difficult art,โ€ he croaked as I slipped by him, โ€œbecause youโ€™re never really sure when you are done.โ€ I immediately recognized that his wisdom might be useful to you. You are, after all, in the last few days of your recharging process. Itโ€™s still a good idea for you to lie low and be extra calm and vegetate luxuriously. But when should you rise up and leap into action again? Hereโ€™s my guess: Get one more dose of intense stillness and silence.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): My readers have a range of approaches for working with the counsel I offer. Some study the horoscopes for both their sun signs and rising signs, then create do-it-yourself blends of the two. Others prefer to wait until the week is over before consulting what Iโ€™ve written. They donโ€™t want my oracles to influence their future behavior, but enjoy evaluating their recent past in light of my analysis. Then there are the folks who read all 12 of my horoscopes. They refuse to be hemmed in by just one forecast, and want to be free to explore multiple options. I encourage you to try experiments like these in the coming days. The moment is ripe to cultivate more of your own unique strategies for using and interpreting the information you absorbโ€”both from me and from everyone else you listen to.
CANCER (June 21-July 22): Have you been drinking a lot of liquids? Are you spending extra time soaking in hot baths and swimming in bodies of water that rejuvenate you? Have you been opening your soul to raw truths that dissolve your fixations and to beauty that makes you cry and to love that moves you to sing? I hope youโ€™re reverently attending to these fluidic needs. I hope youโ€™re giving your deepest yearnings free play and your freshest emotions lots of room to unfold. Smart, well-lubricated intimacy is a luxurious necessity, my dear. Stay very, very wet.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): In my opinion, you need to bask in the glorious fury of at least one brainstormโ€”preferably multiple brainstorms over the course of the next two weeks. What can you do to ensure that happens? How might you generate a flood of new ideas about how to live your life and understand the nature of reality? Here are some suggestions: Read books about creativity. Hang around with original thinkers and sly provocateurs. Insert yourself into situations that will strip you of your boring certainties. And take this vow: โ€œI hereby unleash the primal power of my liberated imagination.โ€
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): When you were a child, did you play with imaginary friends? During your adolescence, did you nurture a fantasy relationship with a pretend boyfriend or girlfriend? Since you reached adulthood, have you ever enjoyed consorting with muses or guardian angels or ancestral spirits? If you answered yes to any of those questions, you are in a good position to take full advantage of the subtle opportunities and cryptic invitations that are coming your way. Unexpected sources are poised to provide unlikely inspirations in unprecedented ways.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): When you were born, you already carried the seeds of gifts you would someday be able to provideโ€”specific influences or teachings or blessings that only you, of all the people who have ever lived, could offer the world. How are you doing in your quest to fulfill this potential? Hereโ€™s what I suspect: Your seeds have been ripening slowly and surely. But in the coming months, they could ripen at a more rapid pace. Whether they actually do or not may depend on your willingness to take on more responsibilitiesโ€”interesting responsibilities, to be sureโ€”but bigger than youโ€™re used to.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): I suspect that you will soon be culminating a labor of love youโ€™ve been nurturing and refining for many moons. How should you celebrate? Maybe with some champagne and caviar? If youโ€™d like to include bubbly in your revels, a good choice might be 2004 Belle Epoque Rosรฉ. Its floral aroma and crisp mouthfeel rouse a sense of jubilation as they synergize the flavors of blood orange, pomegranate and strawberry. As for caviar, consider the smooth, aromatic and elegant roe of the albino beluga sturgeon from the unpolluted areas of the Caspian Sea near Iran. But before I finish this oracle, let me also add that a better way to honor your accomplishment might be to take the money youโ€™d spend on champagne and caviar and instead use it as seed money for your next big project.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Some species of weeds become even more robust and entrenched as they develop resistances to the pesticides that are designed to eradicate them. This is one example of how fighting a problem can make the problem worseโ€”especially if you attack too furiously or use the wrong weapons. I invite you to consider the possibility that this might be a useful metaphor for you to contemplate in the coming weeks. Your desire to solve a knotty dilemma or shed a bad influence is admirable. Just make sure you choose a strategy that actually works.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Your assignment, if you choose to accept it, is to compose an essay on at least one of the following themes: 1. โ€œHow I Fed and Fed My Demons Until They Gorged Themselves to Death.โ€ 2. โ€œHow I Exploited My Nightmares in Ways That Made Me Smarter and Cuter.โ€ 3. โ€œHow I Quietly and Heroically Transformed a Sticky Problem into a Sleek Opportunity.โ€ 4. โ€œHow I Helped Myself by Helping Other People.โ€ For extra credit, Capricornโ€”and to earn the right to trade an unholy duty for a holy oneโ€”write about all four subjects.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): I suspect that in the coming months you will be drawn to wandering through the frontiers and exploring the unknown. Experimentation will come naturally. Places and situations you have previously considered to be off-limits may be downright comfortable. In fact, itโ€™s possible that you will have to escape your safety zones in order to fully be yourself. Got all that? Now here’s the kicker. In the coming weeks, everything I just described will be especially apropos for your closest relationships. Are you interested in redefining and reconfiguring the ways that togetherness works for you?
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): If youโ€™re playing the card game known as bridge, youโ€™re lucky if you are dealt a hand that has no cards of a particular suit. This enables you, right from the beginning, to capture tricks using the trump suit. In other words, the lack of a certain resource gives you a distinct advantage. Letโ€™s apply this metaphor to your immediate future, Pisces. Iโ€™m guessing that you will benefit from what may seem to be an inadequacy or deficit. An absence will be a useful asset.
Homework: Whatโ€™s the situation in your life where itโ€™s hardest for you to be loving? Practice being a master of compassion there in the coming week.
 

Opinion August 10, 2016

EDITOR’S NOTE

Underneath the bright sun and surf that spills across our postcards and Insta pics is another Santa Cruz. Itโ€™s a shadowy world of addiction that, for most locals, only sees the light when thereโ€™s a story every few years about Santa Cruz Countyโ€™s endless heroin problem, or a meth lab busted in the mountains. But for some, that darker world is the reality of everyday life. While most of us would agree that the cycle of addiction is never more tragic than when young people are trapped in it, we often have so little understanding of what keeps them there that the idea of making the problem any better seems hopeless.
Thatโ€™s why Tess Sweetโ€™s Cleaner Daze projectโ€”and Anne-Marie Harrisonโ€™s cover story about it this weekโ€”is so important. More than ever, it seems like storytelling is whatโ€™s helping us better understand many of the issues that would normally overwhelm us; think of how much the average personโ€™s understanding of the American criminal justice system has grown by leaps and bounds in the last few years thanks to podcasts like Serial and Undisclosed, documentaries like Making a Murderer and even fictional shows like Orange is the New Black and The Night Of.
Sweetโ€™s web dramedy hopes to have a similar effect on the understanding of addiction among young people, and to achieve that goal she and her creative partners have drawn on stories from right here in Santa Cruz County. In this issue, Sweet and the stars of the showโ€”most of whom have had struggles with addiction themselvesโ€”take the first step toward fostering that increased empathy by opening up about their own experiences.
STEVE PALOPOLI | EDITOR-IN-CHIEF


LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

Read the latest letters to the editor here.

Safety First
Re: โ€œThe Nature of Medicineโ€ (GT, 8/3): I like the article, it was very clear and interesting. I do think you downplayed the dangers of kratom though. By itself it isnโ€™t dangerous besides that it gives some people jaundice. People are combining it with other substances to aid their withdrawal symptoms and dying. Iโ€™m a big fan of herbalism, but people seem to get this idea that natural remedies are all safe. People seem to forget that some plants are poisonous, and some are addictive or habit forming. In southeast Asia they often cut down the kratom trees because especially the elderly there become addicted. They develop hepatic faces and it doesnโ€™t seem to be viewed positively there.
Jonny Bliss
New York

Self Aware
Transgendered peopleโ€™s push for legal protection to use the public bathroom of their choice has brought to my attention that, unbeknownst to me, they have been sharing public bathrooms with me for my entire life without incident, and I should have been terrified the entire time. Similarly, with former House Speaker Dennis Hastert admitting that he sexually abused boys while he was their wrestling coach, and former Penn State football coach Jerry Sandusky having been convicted of serially molesting dozens of children, it is clear that anyone who participates in athletics, especially coaches, must be barred from all public bathrooms. Athletes can simply plan accordingly and use their private bathrooms at home. Finally, given that 80 to 90 percent of sexual assault survivors know their assailants, all private bathrooms in family homes must be outlawed, as everyone who uses them knows each other.
Nigel Self
Santa Cruz

It Takes Two
We appreciated Lisa Jensenโ€™s trenchant and amusing movie review of Absolutely Fabulous in the July 20 issueโ€”except for one sentence, in which Jensen burdens the mother of the six Fantastic offspring with full responsibility for bringing them into the world. While she may have done the heavy lifting, that achievement would presumably have required a collaboratorโ€”perhaps even Mr. Fantastic.
Sarah Rabkin and Charles Atkinson
Soquel

Title Page
Has anyone yet pointed out that the term is โ€œmaestraโ€ when the conductor is a woman? Itโ€™s Italian, and they can be fussy.
Otherwise, nice story on the incomparable Ms. Alsop and the Festival.
Jane Walton
Santa Cruz
Perdonami, scusami tanto. โ€” Editor


PHOTO CONTEST WINNER

Submit to ph****@*******es.sc. Include information (location, etc.) and your name. Photos may be cropped. Preferably, photos should be 4 inches by 4 inches and minimum 250dpi.


GOOD IDEA

The juicer at the downtown New Leaf juice bar never seems to stop running. The byproduct of its amazing fresh juices is a composterรขโ‚ฌโ„ขs dream: fresh organic pulp from a variety of vegetables and fruits. Store staff say that if somebodyรขโ‚ฌโ€a farmer or mad gardener, perhaps?รขโ‚ฌโ€would like to come pick up the huge supply of pulp, head down to New Leaf and have a chat with the folks at the juice bar.


GOOD WORK

Soif hosted the fourth annual Waiters Race last Sunday, to recognize local servers and raise funds for Second Harvest Food Bank. Waiters sped through an obstacle course with a tray, pouring and carrying water, picking up a dropped napkin, avoiding collisions, and doing what they do while judges scored their prowess. Kiantiรขโ‚ฌโ„ขs took first place; Soif second; Assembly third.


QUOTE OF THE WEEK

รขโ‚ฌล“Whether you think you can or you think you canรขโ‚ฌโ„ขt, youรขโ‚ฌโ„ขre right.รขโ‚ฌย

-Henry Ford

KUSP Files for Bankruptcy

KUSP
This week in briefs, a troubled radio station nears its end, and the city takes time capsule ideas

Wellstone Center in the Redwoods Offers Unique Fellowships for Writers

Wellstone Center in the Redwoos
Month-long opportunities aim to inspire with natural beauty and the permission to unplug

Preview: Mike Schermer to Play Kuumbwa

Mike Schermer
Blues guitarist and UCSC alum โ€˜Mightyโ€™ Mike Schermer returns to Santa Cruz for a scorching birthday blowout

Soberanes Fire Relief Benefit, UCSC Produce, Killer Gluten-Free Brownie

UCSC farmstand strawberries
UCSC Farm & Garden produce pops off, while foodies organize wildfire fundraiser

How (and Why) to Start a Food Exchange

blueberry hand pies for a Food Exchange
How food swaps up everyoneโ€™s culinary game and nurture community

First Estate-grown Chardonnay From Hunter Hill

hunter hill winery glass
Hunter Hill Vineyard & Winery announces first estate-grown bottle, plus its plans to sell

Silence and Noise on the Brain

The quest for silence and its benefits in an increasingly noisy world

Leo Wears a Lionโ€™s Skin

Esoteric Astrology as news for week of Aug. 17, 2016

Rob Brezsny’s Astrology Aug 17โ€”19

Free Will astrology for the week of August 17, 2016

Opinion August 10, 2016

Plus Letters to the Editor
17,623FansLike
8,845FollowersFollow