a story of pilgrimage

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Perhaps the best way to describe this city is like Amsterdam’s bitchier sister who is just as hot, but more in the ‘I can kick your ass’ kind of way. Rotterdam has chewed me up and spit me out, yet I still keep coming back for more. With gusts of salty wind, huge skyscrapers, and an impossible grind of cars, trams, and bicycles, she doesn’t give you the time to think. People aren’t strolling canals in circles, but crossing bridges with a direct destination in mind. Here, you work hard and you play hard. Any questions? If so, catch the nearest train back to Amsterdam; maybe someone up there will give you the time of day.

It’s not surprising, then, that I’ve reached the first obstacle of my trip here. Head spinning, my body lies like a rag on the sofa. My brain is fuzzy. The television plays movie after movie, as if on repeat. Maybe it is on repeat. I’m not sure. The flu medicine must be kicking in. Read the rest of this entry »
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on energy and ‘doing’

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Doing is what I came to Knowmads to learn.

Energy is what I’m constantly exploring in myself and the world around me.

After a not so recent walk along the beach in Tel Aviv with a friend and spiritual mentor, Tsi-la, I learned a very beautiful metaphor for approaching each day. It is about energy renewal and the recent feeling of leaving a certain honeymoon period with my new company and school that I’ve spent the last two months getting started up.

Tsi-la says it’s about being an egg.
It’s wrapping yourself in blue, or whatever color you’re feeling, and filling yourself with gold. What does she mean by this? She explained to me that you must start with creating a solid and centered core filled with a gold that holds you strong so that you won’t fall, but also a gold strong enough to push out into the world; keeping in mind that gold must shine through the colorful filter that you wrap around yourself.
I asked her why you need a filter and why must it be colorful? She told me that the filter helps protect all that gold that you’ve filled yourself up with, strong for the day. It allows everything that helps the gold grow stronger, all the positive energy you’re given, and screens out any sign of something viral that may arouse feelings of fear, anger, hurt, resentment, jealousy, guilt, etc. All the lousy things, basically.
After learning this, I also came to the conclusion that the filter can also catch things and keep them stuck– like cheese in a cheese grater. Your filter  should be strong enough to shelve these feelings, and look at them later when you are able to handle them. Even better, perhaps these feelings will melt away after awhile, using a little soap and hot water, the filter might be able to wash these things out once you realize that it’s not worth the battle later.
If I just take one day at a time, stress seems to cross my path much less frequently. There is one thing I’ve recently stopped doing that has reduced about 80% of the negative energy that sucks my day up. That one thing has been making to-do lists. The past few months have kept me so busy doing things that making a list of them just didn’t seem practical anymore. I attached so much negative energy towards these lists that never seemed to end, so I finally just stopped doing them, and man does it feel great!
Instead of to-do lists, I now make have-done lists instead. It was a piece of advice given to me by quite a few people and I like them much more. The things that you have done today rather than a list of things to-do. When it comes to time management, I’ve found To-do lists the most impractical things ever at this point. I always end up disappointed with what I didn’t accomplish that day. I first tried three important things a day, prioritizing my to do lists by size, and numerous other ‘to-do list techniques,’ but in the end I think I’ll stick to these have-done lists. It makes me realize just how much I have accomplished instead of what I haven’t. I think it’s a much better way to end each day.
It reminds me of what my most hospitable host, Gili, wrote to me in my notebook upon my departure from a great visit to Israel that marked the start of a new friendship:
I give thanks for this perfect day.
Today is a day of completion.
Miracles shall follow miracles,
and wonders shall never cease to exist.

to today, everyone!

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Notes on a Pilgrimage: “everything is “alleged” here.”

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If I could give one theme to my life, Pilgrimage would be it. I see it as a broad way to view life as one long learning journey. I see it as a slow accretion of details; of knowledge and experience. I believe that by going slow, being present in each moment,  lies the key to going “fast,” if you will. By taking the time to reflect and discover more of who you are and what you want to get out of this lifetime, dreams can be realized.
My dream is to live that sort of “life on pilgrimage” approach; to view each moment as bringing with it a new possibility.
Easter Sunday in Jerusalem brought with a new possibility, but not the possibility I has hoped for, exactly. It was a disappointing experience, to say the least. Perhaps I didn’t prepare enough for what I expected would be one of the most moving days to visit such a sacred site. Did I attempt to give it enough meaning for myself? To be honest, I really couldn’t find a way to make it “special”. Besides, I think to myself, what is “special” supposed to mean, anyways?
Perhaps, there were just too many shiny objects in the way for me to see what was really there. I was completely blown away by the amount of commercialism I found. Entering the Church of the Holy Sepulcre, people fought past each other mercilessly in an attempt to rub personal amulets against a rock where Jesus was “allegedly” crucified on.
It was a huge church; constructed around a rock. Enamored with expensive gold objects and artifacts telling the story of a simple man who loved the world so much, he made the ultimate sacrifice of letting go. Observing the masses of mourning pilgrims, a feeling comes over me. A tingle that slides down my spine bone. It’s the same sort of tingly goose-bumpy feeling that I got upon entering the grounds of the Vatican City. As my mother describes it:
“it’s the sort of feeling you get when you know you’ve come “home”, to a place that has been touched.”

Touched by what, though? What’s wrong with just having a rock in the middle of a room? What’s wrong with letting that be “enough?” What does “home” actually look like, anyways? Would Jesus have created this sacred space in the same way humanity has attempted to? Someone, or many people, have said:
“there is just enough religion in this world to create hate, but not quite enough to create love.”

Perhaps that’s true. The whole experience has left me feeling off balance, jaded, and questioning everything I ever thought travel, life, and belief was supposed to mean. In Jerusalem, international territory, finding co-existing means police barricades, weapons around every corner, and vendors hawking goods and services in your face; I can’t help but feel that there has to be more.
Within the narrow confines of the old city, women in hajibs wander between bare-shouldered babes from the Western world as old orthodox men ogle past to wail their wishes to the wall. Colorful scarves, tapestries, and t-shirts billow in the wind, from the light entering the labyrinth of the old city. Something seems eerily ersatz with the scene. Read the rest of this entry »
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Notes on a pilgrimage: Palestine

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After a long night in Tel Aviv, the White City, I found myself in the back of an Israeli police car. Within two hours of my departure from the airport. With two other Americans and a Portuguese South African girl, who was wearing a miniskirt shorter than my bandana. We ran out of gas. Jet-lagged, I am still amused as we push the car across three lanes of speeding traffic at two in the morning. The girl in the short skirt and heels longer than my forearm? Not as much. After spending two hours at the airport checkpoint trying to pick me up, the three of them were definitely not when the the flashing lights appeared. This only heralded more glorified authority figures. This was something they had become very accustomed to.
Driving a car owned by a Palestinian Israeli with expired plates and no insurance didn’t make the matter any better. For my friends, working as teachers for the “other side” means developing an elaborate lie at every checkpoint. When they are in Israel, their complete lives are a lie. Luckily, the short skirt is a long enough veil to cover our story as we get towed off the freeway and are brought gas- free of charge. We are happy the police helped us “Western” tourists out. We breathe easy and decide that, by four a.m., going out is no longer worth it. Speeding off, we pass without problem past a checkpoint entering Ramallah. I now feel part of a secret. I can feel the big elephant in the room, but it’s dark and I am speechless. Seeing parts of it only make it harder to give words to it’s enormous presence.
It’s an eerie experience that I can finally say I’ve come to “know.” Whatever that actually means. After the brief stay is said and done, I ask, where can I find my truth in it all? I feel baffled and brainwashed by this situation. After leaving Jerusalem on Friday to go back to where my friend Curtis is in the West Bank, I find myself breathing better and experiencing a hospitality that I will not easily forget. The people are kind, the police don’t intimidate, and I feel like I’ve left the situation knowing a lot less than I did before. After writing all of this, I feel I’ve processed something. I’m content with the confusion, the complexity of the situation. I know nothing, actually.
Having dinner with Curtis, his friend Kaitlin from Reno, and her Palestinian-American boyfriend, I feel like I could live here for another forty years and still not completely understand  everything that is happening here. This is just a taste and I’ve savored as much as I can for now, but this is a seven-course French dining experience, and I’ve only tried the appetizer. Hearing the verbal portraits of persecution and experiences from the Palestinian, I am numb. Recalling bits and pieces from his memory of the uprising, running from bullets, and throwing stones at strangers entering his sacred land finds me frozen. Sleeping until late in the morning, I sweat out a fever and awake from a horrible nightmare. Little did I know, that I would soon be entering a new dream, a glimpse into another world.
This one, much more real, however. I get a call from the American girl I had dinner with the previous night. She invites me to paint Palestinian children’s faces at a nearby refugee camp she volunteers at. In the taxi on the way there, I ask her why she does this:
“It’s a way to make at least a little instant change. To make a place a little better than before. It’s a place where the children know they can’t leave, but can’t fathom why. They simply want to go to the beach, but the beach is impossible. The beach is in Tel Aviv. Tel Aviv is a world away.”
IMG_1975
Each week, she goes there to the delight of dozens of children whose biggest requests are a very patriotic flag of Palestine, but also rainbows, flowers, and kitten faces. We had a great afternoon together and I became an expert at painting a Palestinian flag and learning the colors in Arabic. The situation is complex at best. It’s complicated to most from the outside.
Passing through the barren border today, I lost my coins in the metal detector that lacked baskets, showing my ID to a windowed soldier. Catching the next bus to Jerusalem, without coins, I was paid for by the Palestinian gentleman in front of me who helped me through the degrading border crossing. After leaving the scene? I can only determine that healing the situation requires justice and dignity; rightfully served to each “side.”  A “no one is right, no one is wrong” approach must be taken. As I leave Jerusalem, I say a silent prayer at sunset and board the bus towards Tel Aviv, the New York City of the Middle East. Nightfall curves along the mountain pass as the lights of the city signal my arrival.
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boarding for Jerusalem

*travels{abroad}, Israel, palestine, {abroad}art 1 Comment »
Central Bus Station, Tel Aviv
12.4.2010
The stones are screaming blood, she said. I am haunted by the words of my Israeli friend Tsila as I sit here writing in my notebook and watching the bus stop swell. Our conversation this morning, as she drove me to the station, sits heavily at my heels. The bench- a relief for my dream-like state of mind. There was a red light leaving her street. I ask her: “how can I find meaning within it all?”
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Knowmadic Notes, from the field

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To conclude our week at the IDEC, we had a very busy last day facilitating three workshops that built on each other to create we deemed a ‘Knowmadic Dance Around the Fire”. After enjoying the conference and all the new people we met, we felt the best gift we could give back to the experience was a sort of conclusion space, a Knowmadic environment we could share with others to reflect on our time at the conference sharing tools and lessons learned while continuing to explore what we could do to continue bring the Knowmads to Israel again. We looked at the dance around the fire as something happening in a sort of playground. We realized that for a Knowmad, home is on the inside, and the world is our playground!

Presenting Knowmads to the groups, we expressed a felt need in a conflicted place for a new type of school based on socially innovative entrepreneurial behavior. Looking at it as a creation developed from achallenge that exists in the world rather than as a reaction to a problem of the Industrial age. Using the Start-up wheel as a tool to bring into the space combined with tools and experiences brought from participants, we developed three different workshops based on the following three forms:

1. Harvesting; ideas, thoughts, feelings, experiences from individuals from the IDEC and the world as a whole.

2. Prototyping/Modeling; using three different groups based on three different ideas, we brainstormed what sort of experience a Knowmadic bus touring around Israel would look like. We explored the value a semester of teachers and students could provide, and finally what a Knowmads ‘crash course’ would do over the summer break.

The results? Stay tuned once I return back from the field after analyzing the data with our team. As for now, I’m off to enjoy my last day in Tel Aviv.

This is brock, signing off from my notes from the field. Looking forward to bringing my new dance moves back to my tribe!

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travel&life, soul&spirit

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Ray Charles calls it “soulfulness,” the Buddhists “mindfulness,” and the Sufi Mystics call it the “eyes of the heart.” Whatever you call it, it’s the ability to respond from our most deepest place, it’s listening to your heart and following your passion. This is where I see a very intense connection between traveling around the world no matter where you are. A state of being that is always “on the road.”
I think it’s important to spend at least one hour alone with yourself every day. At least that’s what I’ve found is needed for myself. I feel it helps a person develop that different set of eyes. I look at it as a life-long process that can help a person better lead themselves. These are the eyes that come from your inner-self. These are the eyes of the heart. Much like those two very different sets of eyes, you find that while traveling  there is the process of change happening within you often sparked by the outer environment of changing cultures, landscapes, foods, everything. Travel, visualizing yourself out of familiar surroundings, out of your comfort zone, is a great way to begin to develop that second set of eyes.
“The secret to successful meditation is visualization. The secret of visualization is to know: More important than seeing with your eyes is seeing with your heart.”
-Lazaris
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Initial Impressions: IDEC 2010 {the big DANCE!]

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At Knowmads, we’ll take dancing over talking any day. During the opening ceremony of the IDEC conference, a balanced blend of tribal dancing and discussion opened not just the event, but also my eyes and heart to the value that democratic education can add to our world.

Asking the question ‘if education is in the hands of only a few, who will be the wave breaker that will bring the necessary change needed for the 21st century?’ It’s far easier to fight for your principles than to live by them. The change does not start with you, it starts with me. Read that sentence as a personal statement, and I believe we have something here. What I believe we have here is a commitment to personal responsibility, leadership, and awareness that is necessary to dance your way into a movement. However, as individuals we can only serve the system. The advantage to democratic education is that there exists an alternative path, a path that we can navigate for both ourselves and together.

Entering this new century, it’s clear the systems we once knew are changing. Taking the so-called economic crisis as an example, it’s clear that these systems are collapsing as we know them when the emphasis is placed on hierarchy instead of being built from the bottom up, starting with YOU, or depending on how you look at it, ME. Traditional education is a perfect reflection of modern society as we’ve come to know and dislike it.

Three themes can be seen to mark this momentous milestone in the world as we know it:

1. Socio-economic change

In other words, limited resources become unlimited. The individual becomes infinite in knowledge and capability to lead their own life and recognizes that change=me. (I am) What limits us is money and when we develop the necessary tools to combine our own unique capabilities and differences in order to fully contribute who we are to the world, we are able to unify, create change, and also materialize the necessary wealth to achieve whatever we choose to bring into the world.

2. Alternative vs. Mainstream/Institutional

Essentially, it’s not about non-conformity, rather re-conformity. No one is right and no one is wrong. Through working with existing establishments and meeting somewhere in the middle everyone is left satisfied with the desired change needed to overcome obstacles and challenges we face together on this planet. However, connecting with like-minded people to work with and develop these things has never been easier thanks to…

3. The Internet.

The bottom line? Every individual on this planet is unique and has something to offer that no one else can. Through connecting, collaborating, and creating, we are left with something just a little better than before.

Stay tuned as we keep dancing here in Tel Aviv. The beat goes on!

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Easter in the Holy Land

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Hello World!

I am alive and well here in Israel. Too much to tell, and not enough sleep. So, I will make this a quick grab bag entry.

Top 3 Highlights of my trip so far?

1. finding myself in the back of an Israeli police car the first evening

2. painting cute Palestinian kids’ faces at a refugee camp on the west bank

3. spending time with a personal friend and mentor, Tsi-la, here in Tel-Aviv

What else is floating around in my brain at the moment?

Seth Godin came to Knowmads! (this is Seth’s blog, in case you’re not familiar) his writing, including ‘tribes’ can be found on bookshelves across the globe…

My friend Naomi posted a great blog on Tribal Wisdom!

Finally, I leave you with a video that she also made that reflects on our first seven weeks together. A lot to reflect on here. Can’t wait to share more in the coming days as the International Democratic Education Conference kicks off!

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