Wednesday, September 21, 2011

Releasing the Second Edition of Words and Violence

It's like watching your baby go from infancy to a toddler by finding her "legs" in order to walk. Words and Violence in its second edition is certainly up and walking! It was the most popular feature this past year at Voices Education Project and with the contributors now in the project and those lined up, it will become even more valuable.

My goal this year is to find antidotes to bullying. It's not enough to just point out where we are going wrong, but to give people a way to do it better. This year's entry "Talking Circle" is the beginning and highlights a way to use words and circles in healing the human spirit. It is the message of Chief Seattle in practice-- that we are all brothers and that the earth is an interconnected web of life.

Others writers and journalists have contributed this year including an exciting new writer who blogs about being a single dad in modern culture. I am a fan of Dan Pearce and his blog Single Dad Laughing. Dan's work now appears at Voices Education Project: Dan Pearce Memoirs of A Bullied Kid

When I was in Chicago and Gary this summer, I was interviewed by Larry Nimmer about Voices Education Project and hopefully Voices will find its way into the documentary he is filming. Voices' Words and Violence and Larry's documentary are both works-in-progress. Contributors are welcome to submit work for consideration. And if you don't know how to write your experience, no worries. That's what editors are for. (That would be me.) So if you just get the story on paper, we can work with it. And that is what Voices is all about-- changing the world one story at a time.

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Award Winning Author Featured

BARBARA'S WORK IN "LOOKING BACK"
I was a sixties kid and for the youth of the sixties, turmoil, disillusionment, and revolution were everyday 'business as usual'. Like a radio perpetually on low volume, fear and death dronned on in the background. The superpowers threatened to extinguish all life on the planet, the Vietnam War was escalating and peers were being escorted home under American Flag blankets. The civil rights and equal rights movements were testing human civility, and faster than one could recover from one shock another real life hero would fall to yet another assassin. Despair was commonplace. Contrast that with a man on the moon... we could conquer space travel but couldn't make nukes or war obsolete! It was a time when youth needed hope because hope was scarce. When it was finally resurrected, it came in the form of idealism and a philosophy of brotherly and universal love. Perfect principles; imperfect execution.

For others who contributed to "Looking Back," the history is different for each because the "times" were different as well as the perspective of the individuals. The stories of human societal evolution are enlightening, heartwarming, poignant and spellbinding. They put a human face on the past.

When I was in high school and even college, history classes were stale and boring featuring memorization and regurgitation of dates that coincided with events that had no human face, certainly no magic, and no life!

Anthologies are great fun and stores are rich remembrances. History books chronicle; stories are little narrative slices of living. History comes alive through story. I often think of my grandmother and her story, her life-- the history she lived. In her lifetime she saw humankind evolve from horse and buggy to man on the moon.

When I think about it, my own life is no less rich and the living no less inspiring. It is, after all, a slice of human consciousness from its place in human evolution. "From here to eternity" as it were-- from earth to the stars, from personal space to cyberspace, from a small local footprint to the world reduced to the size of a notebook and sitting on your lap!

For an excerpt from Looking Back... Scroll down to "When I Am a Grownup I Will Do Something"