The Spring 2019 Issue, CHANGE & THE CHANGELESS is now available on newsstands and online! FO
The Spring 2019 Issue, CHANGE & THE CHANGELESS is now available on newsstands and online! FOCUS | From the Editor“Tell me, what it is you plan to do with your one wild and precious life?” The beloved poet Mary Oliver posed this question in the poem “The Summer Day.” It became a call to attention for countless appreciative readers long before her death earlier this year. What is the wild and what makes it precious? Our Summer 2019 issue, on the theme of “The Wild,” commemorates the extraordinary life and spirit of Oliver. It is an enduring honor to us that for years she contributed poetry to these pages.“The root of the word wild, which comes from the Old English and Germanic languages, is self-determining,” writes Eleanor O’Hanlon in her interview with Staffan Widstrand, widely recognized as one of the world’s most influential wildlife photographers (his photograph is our cover) and a founder of “Rewilding Europe,” an innovative conservation project: “Our relationship with the natural world has always been, and must again become part of our identity,” Widstrand says here. The articles in this issue explore in various ways how this can be so. From a revealing visit to the Amazon Rainforest to dwelling in a tower in the wilderness in the Great Salt Marsh of the northeastern United States, from a mindful trip to the movies to composer Laurence Rosenthal’s revelatory trip on LSD, in stories from ancient times to the present, this issue reveals that attention is the key to understanding and preserving our wild nature within and without.“Attention is the beginning of devotion,” wrote Mary Oliver, who understood that we cannot save what we do not love. In this issue the poet Lisa Starr, a close friend who was with Oliver in her final days, describes Oliver finding a snapping turtle in the city and releasing it in a pond, later writing: “Because nothing is important except that the great and cruel mystery of the world, of which this is a part, not be denied.”The work of “rewilding” nature, including our own nature, involves letting go, allowing ourselves to glimpse our part in a greater whole. May this issue serve that aim.—Tracy CochranCover Description: A female Tibetan Macacque, Macaca thibetana. She is red in her face to signal to the males that she is in oestrus. When you see a primate up close, it is easy to tell that we are not that far apart. Tangjiahe Nature Reserve, Sichuan, China. Photograph by Staffan Widstrand. To subscribe or preview our spring issue, click here. -- source link
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