Posts Tagged ‘Mountain Spirit’

MSI Needs Your Support…

20/07/2010

SUMMER 2010 FUNDRAISING APPEAL
Mountain Spirit Institute needs your support!

WHO WE ARE

Mountain Spirit Institute, www.mtnspirit.org, is a 501-(c)-3 non-profit organization dedicated to helping people better connect to themselves, each other and the natural world with a greater sense of joy and peace.

Richard Louv in his book “Last Child in the Woods” coined the term ‘nature deficit disorder’, which describes people’s lack of contact with the natural world, and the drastic results of what happens to individuals and society when this happens. MSI not only addresses this issue but instills a sense of place, compassion, and responsibility impelling our participants to take action towards a more holistic and sustainable lifestyle.

WHERE WE’VE BEEN

  • Learning about other cultures, Peru

    We have been in existence for over 11 years, offering a variety of programs, including the Kearsarge Wilderness Experience, a Peruvian/USA Folklore music exchange and tour, regular educational programs to Peru, The Art of Living shamanic studies program, a film series and author lectures plus other exspiritiential* education programs that support our mission.  (*This is a term coined by MSI to summarize our mission).

  • We give back to the local community by hosting the Sunapee SunFest and continue to offer the Sunapee High School/Outward Bound MSI Scholarship Program.
  • Our website and popular blog have a worldwide audience sharing global ideas about community, holistic lifestyles and sustainability.
  • Getting the word out

    100% financial giving by our directors to MSI as well as gifts in kind, and volunteer hours. The founder’s belief in the mission is illustrated by his loan of over $24,000 over ten years for start-up costs.  We earned our official non-profit status in 2005, but in some ways we are still a start-up.   We have conducted many successful programs over the years, and made a significant and positive impact on people’s lives in the region and beyond. Our programs have paid for themselves, showing strong administrative leadership. We’ve existed without major outside funding from individuals or grants.  In order to move on to the next stage, we are seeking donations to not only fulfill our mission but to be a sustainable organization.

NOW AND LOOKING FORWARD

Our Board of Directors has held two retreats to assess our place in the world, and to determine where our energy should be directed this year.   The MSI Board is committed to continuing its mission by creating new energy and relationships, not only within the organization, but with all who are coming in contact with us – participants, facilitators and donors alike. We are paying attention to aligning our work in a practical way for the betterment of our world.   These goals and programs are the epitome of our mission and we would be honored to continue our work with your help. Just a few of our upcoming programs are:


H.A.W.K program: Healing, Adventure, Wilderness and Kamping: a healing bereavement wilderness experience to provide a sense of community, contact and communication for teens and adults who have lost a loved one. More info here.


Snatam Kaur Fundraising Concert: featuring an artist whose ethics and message align with ours.  We will be introducing Snatam Kaur’s music to the Upper Valley/Lake Sunapee regional audience (www.snatamkaur.com) when she performs at the Lebanon Opera House on September 1st 2010.  Snatam’s internationally acclaimed music has been presented at yoga and personal development retreat centers throughout the world, and is the epitome of heartspace music. Learn more here. More info here.

Peru 2011: An important program, (our first was conducted in 1998), has the fundamental mission of expanding Americans’ view of the world through experiencing the compassion of the Peruvian people, and the stunning spiritual landscape of the Andes. Giving back and service are important aspects of this program. More info here.


Kearsarge Wilderness Experience and Solo: These programs serve to directly help participants realign their internal compasses in today’s busy lifestyle by finding vital time to connect with nature, with themselves and thereby be of better benefit to the world around them. More info on KWE here, and on Solo, here.

AN OPPORTUNITY TO FINANICIALLY CONTRIBUTE TO MSI’S MISSION AND GOALS

Specifically, we are seeking funds to build a solid foundation to increase our capacity to deliver more programs, and to be a truly sustainable organization. We realize these are difficult times and that there are many competing organizations seeking your support. Check out our website and blog, talk to a Board member or a former participant.   Learn more about the difference that Mountain Spirit Institute makes in the lives of individuals and communities. Your tax deductible contribution will enable us to continue to make that difference.

We need to raise $5,000.00 by AUG 15th in order to continue to offer the cultural and exspiritiential programs that distinguish us from other adventure-travel or outdoor organizations.  All those able to attend/participate in Mountain Spirit Institute events and programs will be grateful for any contribution you feel you can make, whether it is $25, $50, $100, $200 or more, toward our unmet needs.

You may contribute financially to our annual fund, by sending a tax deductable donation by mail to:

Mountain Spirit Institute
P.O. Box 626, Sunapee, NH 03782
or, to make a donation using PayPal, click here.

Thank you to all our past and present supporters of MSI. See a list of them here.

On behalf of Mountain Spirit Institute’s board of directors, thank you for considering donating to Mountain Spirit Institute.

D.R. Richards, Founder
Mountain Spirit Institute

“Your Food Supply” Blog Series

18/07/2010

Coming soon: New series of blog posts  will open your eyes.
Keep an eye out for a new series of video and text posts starting here in a few days. We think you’ll like it.
We’ve just traveled across the U.S.A,  listening to an Omnivore’s Dilemma by Micheal Pollan. It was experiential education at its best, and a sobering experience.

What’s more it led to some great footage and interviews here in Durango, CO with local farmers and restaurateurs.
Stay tuned for this informative series of blog posts on your food supply.

We Are What We Eat

30/06/2010


What’s for Dinner?

Excerpt from the excellent Sept’09 Issue of  Orion Magazine.
By Jennifer Sahn

Midwife/Middle School Teacher, TX

Bartender, goes to sleep @ 8AM

What’s For Dinner? Mark Menjivar wants to know. His curiosity about the eating habits of his fellow humans fueled a photography project that speaks volumes the twenty-first century hunter-gatherer. In home after home, he performed that age-old ritual of opening wide the refrigerator door , hoping to find something good, something that beckons. Be he wasn’t looking for something to eat; he wanted to document this semi-private domestic space to capture  in time the contents of the refrigerator as a testament to how we live and what we live on. It was, as one of his subjects suggested, like asking someone to pose nude.

“Each fridge is photographed “as is,” says Menjivar, No funny business is at play here, and it’s all on display….
To read the full article: check online with Orion Magazine to purchase the September’09 back issue.

To see more of Mark’s study of Americans on display via the fridge, see more fridge images on his website.
Thanks for Mark Menjivar for letting us reproduce his two images here on MSI’s blog.

The Invitation

27/06/2010

I have read this to many a program participant around camp in the mountains, and thought I’d share it here.

Hitchhiking in Labrador

The Invitation, By Oriah

It doesn’t interest me
what you do for a living.
I want to know
what you ache for
and if you dare to dream
of meeting your heart’s longing.

It doesn’t interest me
how old you are.
I want to know
if you will risk
looking like a fool
for love
for your dream
for the adventure of being alive. (more…)

Snatam Kaur and Guru Ganesha Singh

21/06/2010

‘In Snatam’s voice there is purity, clarity and love' - Ram Dass

Mountain Spirit Institute is delighted to announce a benefit concert featuring Snatam Kaur with Guruganesha Singh. The Sacred Chant Concert will be at Lebanon Opera House, Lebanon NH on 1st September 2010. Tickets on sale now at
http://www.lebanonoperahouse.org/event.php?id=777

Snatam Kaur is one of the most popular New Age artists of our time, selling over 75,000 albums a year. An international favorite with fans across the globe, including North America, Europe, Asia, South America and the South Pacific, Snatam Kaur performs at over 100 venues each year, from the Bahamas to Singapore.

Snatam Kaur, whose father was a manager for the Grateful Dead, has an amazing ability to transform traditional chants into a contemporary sound that appeals to the modern ear yet awakens an ancient yearning in the soul. Ram Dass, celebrated author of Be Here Now, says that “in Snatam’s voice…there is purity, clarity, and love.”

Snatam’s CDs Prem, Shanti, LIVE In Concert and Liberation’s Door are setting the industry standard for excellence in New Age sacred music. Snatam Kaur embodies the Sikh message of strength through inner serenity. She brings music, yoga and meditation to the communities she visits, as well as to hospices, juvenile detention centers, and schools she visits along the way.

Companies Doing Good

18/06/2010

Ragged Mountain Equipment Leads the Way in Giving for the Environment

Donating for the Environment

Ragged Mountain Equipment in Intervale, NH is doing good work. When I was climbing in the North Conway area, Rob Nadler and Cort Hansen were just starting the store in a small space behind the Intervale post office. They made their own chalk bags, ice axe leashes and a few polypro pullovers. Since then, they’ve grown the business to one of the best outdoor and retail outlets in the nation. They might not be the biggest, but in my opinion, one of the best. There’s always a good feeling when you go into their store.

In line with their values, there now contributing .50 cents from every sale of a Ragged Mountain made product over $25.00 retail cost  to the Upper Saco Valley Land Trust (USVLT).

USVLT’s mission is to protect the cultural and scenic values of the Upper Saco River Valley by preserving land for farming, forestry, recreation and education.  Founded in 2000, USVLT has helped preserve nearly 4,000 acres of open space here in the area.  The same program is being used by some of the restaurants and B&B’s in the valley.

Says Cort, “I think we are the only retail/manufacturer doing this at this time.  I think it is a great program to raise the awareness of local land conservation issues. ”  He adds, “The customer has the choice at the register to opt out and save $.50.  Very few have done so.”

Every garment has a hang tag explaining their mission.  Says Cort, “We are in the process of expanding hang tags to all our existing inventory which is a major task I can inform you.  New styles come through with the tags already on them.”

They’re up to more good. Adds Cort, “We also enrolled the Mount Washington Valley Ski Touring Foundation in the program as well.  All ski trail passes sold here at the Touring Center include a $.50 contribution the USVLT.  We are the only XC ski touring center participating in this program currently.  I think this is vital to making all nordic skiers aware that almost 100% of the valley XC trails use private land which is not protected from development or alternative uses.”
Climber Henry Barber approached Ragged Mountain late last fall about their participating in this this program.

If you’d like to donate and help owners Rob and Cort with this worthwhile project, contact Cort at cort(at)raggedmountain.com

Thanks to Our Supporters

09/06/2010

MSI Contributors

Mountain Spirit Institute thanks all donors past and present, in part, by creating a webpage on our site dedicated to all who have donated time, financial support, gifts in kind, and talent to furthering the mission of Mountain Spirit Institute.

To all of you who have contributed to our organization, we, the board members, and on behalf of our program participants past, present and future, to whom your donations benefit, we thank you with deepest gratitude.

In Spirit of the Mountains!
Thank you
Dexter R. Richards, Founder,
Executive Director

If you, or someone you know, would like to make a tax deductible donation to MSI, you can do so on our support page.

Inspiration, Alaskan Style

09/06/2010

This is a slideshow featuring pictures from the Alaska Range, found on the Facebook page from the good folks of Talkeetna Air Taxi. Click on the image to go to there.

Shots from Alaska

Cell Phones Take a Toll

27/05/2010

Are these frying your head?

Buried deep within a long anticipated study about cell phones is evidence indicating a strong link between mobile phone use and brain cancer. Living on Earth host Steve Curwood talks with Dr. Elizabeth Cardis, director of the Interphone study, about the findings.

A scientific controversy that affects just about all of us has come to the fore.  The question: how safe are cell phones?

A major study that was supposed to answer that question is open to question itself. The so-called Interphone Study, started a decade ago, when scientists in 13 nations set out to learn if there was a link between cell phone use and brain cancer. At last, the findings of this eagerly anticipated study have been released, and researchers found that…well…here are some of the headlines reporting the results:

“Mobile Phone Study Finds No Solid Link to Brain Tumors”- The Guardian, UK.
“Heavy Use of Cell Phones may increase Tumor Risk.” Globe and Mail, Canada.
“Mobile Phones are Safe” Die Welt, Germany.
So if you’re confused, you’re not alone. Consider these contradictory findings: High cell phone usage was linked to a doubling of the risk of deadly brain cancers called gliomas. Read more.. or to listen to MP3 of this interview.

Editor’s Note: I childhood friend of mine is now in hospice care, with a brain tumor. For many years, he has only had a cell phone, and no land line. The doctors said off the record, they were sure it was from his cell phone use, as were many others they have seen doing brain surgery.

MSI Adds Flickr

20/05/2010

MSI Images on Flickr

Mountain Spirit’s Images on Flickr
You’ll be seeing  images posted not only on Facebook, but on our Flickr site as well. We’ll have images from the Alps, Peru, New Zealand, the USA, and from subjects covered on our blog at WordPress.

Our images will cover not only programs and events but world issues such as sustainability and holistic living.