Pope Francis’ Prayer for Our Earth

Embodied Prayer in Nature for Old and Young

Blessings this day!
Our embodied collective/prayer meditation this week is an invitation to walking meditation.  Thich Nhat Hanh, a Buddhist monk has explained this very well in his book, Peace Is Every Step.
 
Once he spoke of this practice when he was so upset with a world situation that he spent the entire night in walking meditation.
Explanation and Suggestions:
*Walk out doors on your patio, balcony, yard, or area in your neighborhood.
*To involve younger children invite them to pick up stones before the walk and place one stone on the earth as a prayer with each SLOW step.
*Children might create a path that they can come back to and walk SLOWLY each day
*Walking meditation is slower than normal walking, take each step with a breath.
*Be aware of foot contact to earth and make each step.
*Walk as if you are kissing the Earth with your foot. We have damaged Sister Mother Earth and one another and now is the time to take care of all.
*From time to time stop to see a beautiful tree, or ant or bee.
*Begin with a 5 or 10 minute walk and increase as you can.
*Pope Francis has invited everyone to prayer on Wednesday, March 25 at noon. If you can do walking meditation at noon in solidarity with our world, or choose a time that works for you and your household.
Let us walk in sacred solidarity as a collective meditation/prayer for all workers serving us, for all refugees and those suffering economically, and the sick and emotionally fragile and all the most vulnerable as we care for all within Our Common Home. 

Shifting Climates

Tune in on our website, or on any podcast app including StitcherSpotifyiTunes, and Google Podcasts. For an episode description, scroll down to the bottom of the page.
Until next week!

The Shifting Climates team
Sarah, Harrison, and Michaela

This episode will take you to the Southwest corner of Navajo Nation where we dig into the
connection between colonialism and climate change. Meet several people who are using community agriculture to reclaim cultural traditions while also addressing issues of food insecurity and diabetes on the reservation. Learn about the injustices Navajos experience in the healthcare system, and hear from one woman in particular about the effects of uranium exposure on her health. Radiation and lack of nutritious food are just two examples of how settler-colonialism is still at work today.
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