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		<title>Healing People and the Planet with Swami Ravi Rudra Bharati</title>
		<link>https://www.earthaven.org/earthaven-education/podcast/healing-people-planet-swami-ravi/</link>
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		<pubDate>Sun, 31 Oct 2021 20:31:35 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Dancing Shiva]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Permaculture]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[dancing shiva]]></category>
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					<description><![CDATA[<p>Earthaven Ecovillage Podcast Healing People and the Planet with Swami Ravi Rudra Bharati Broadcast November 1, 2021Featuring: Swami Ravi Rudra Bharati Swami Ravi Rudra Bharati, formerly known as Dr. Rudolph Valentine, has been very committed to the integration of Eastern thought, particularly yoga and tantra, and permaculture, and all that implies, as well as it [&#8230;]</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://www.earthaven.org/earthaven-education/podcast/healing-people-planet-swami-ravi/">Healing People and the Planet with Swami Ravi Rudra Bharati</a> appeared first on <a href="https://www.earthaven.org">Earthaven Ecovillage</a>.</p>
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										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h1>Earthaven Ecovillage Podcast</h1>
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<h1 class="entry-title">Healing People and the Planet with Swami Ravi Rudra Bharati</h1>
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<p><strong>Broadcast November 1, 2021</strong><br />Featuring: Swami Ravi Rudra Bharati</p>
<p><span>Swami Ravi Rudra Bharati, formerly known as Dr. Rudolph Valentine, has been very committed to the integration of Eastern thought, particularly yoga and tantra, and permaculture, and all that implies, as well as it relates to healing.</span></p>
<p><span>Swami Ravi shares his background as a physician and holistic healer of Ayurvedic medicine in clinics in India and the US. During his medical career, he studied tantra, which he began teaching after retiring from medicine. In 2004, he moved to Earthaven, continued teaching, and developed the Dancing Shiva retreat center. </span></p>
<p><span>Most of the conversation explores a holistic view of soil health, plant health, the health of people and the planet, including the implications and challenges for healing the people and Gaia. </span></p>
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<h1 class="entry-title">Healing People and the Planet with Swami Ravi Rudra Bharati</h1>
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<p>We  discovered that Tantra and permaculture were really based on very similar principles. My long-term interest has been in the interface between these two disciplines and all that implies, as well as how that relates to healing. So, yeah, we’re here at Earthaven, where this intersection of different disciplines is what it’s all about.</p>
<p>Hello, everyone. Welcome to the Earthaven Ecovillage Podcast, where we meet people and hear ideas contributing to Earthaven Ecovillage’s Living Laboratory for a Sustainable Human future. I’m Debbie Lienhart, and today I’m excited to talk with one of our Earthaven members and elders, Swami Ravi Rudra Bharati. So, would you like to introduce yourself?</p>
<h3>Introducing Swami Ravi Rudra Bharati</h3>
<p>My name is Swami Ravi Rudra Bharati. And I was formerly known as Dr. Rudolph Ballentine. I’ve been living at Earthaven for 17 years, and I have been very committed to the integration of Eastern thought, particularly yoga and Tantra and permaculture. And in fact, at one point, Patricia Allison and myself offered a nine-week live-in workshop or event on the integration of permaculture and Tantra, and that was very exciting and very fun. We sort of discovered that tantra and permaculture were really based on very similar principles, and that’s what we played off of during that event.</p>
<p>My long-term interest has been in the interface between these two disciplines and all that implies, as well as how that relates to healing, because in my previous incarnation, I was a physician and practiced holistic medicine for 45 years before I retired. So, yeah, we’re here at Earthaven, where this intersection of different disciplines is kind of what it’s all about. And as we work toward a sustainable way of living, we need to weave in all these things that we have learned over the centuries to create something that is truly alive and enlivening as a way of life.</p>
<h3>Swami Ravi’s journey through medicine</h3>
<p>One of the things you bring is that you’ve been a real physician in Western medicine and then had quite a journey through different kinds of medicine. Can you tell us a little bit about that?</p>
<p>I went to medical school at Duke Medical School, not far from here, and received my MD degree. And then I did a residency in psychiatry in New Orleans in Louisiana. Before that, I did a rotating internship where I had an opportunity to use all my skills — delivering babies, doing surgery, and so forth. Then, I did my training in psychiatry. And in the course of that, I became interested in yoga. And at that point, yoga was something really new in the US. This was 1973.</p>
<p>And so the only way you could really find out much about yoga was to go somewhere else to learn it. And so I ended up going to India, and that’s where I met my teacher. And I also was involved in studying Ayurveda because that was a holistic medical system.</p>
<h3>What’s Ayurveda?</h3>
<p>Yeah, that’s the traditional system of medicine in India, which would be comparable to Chinese medicine that comes from the culture of China. So I studied that and lived and worked at an Ayurvedic hospital for some time. And then I became interested in the integration of those things, and my teacher invited me to come back to the US. He was already established in the US, and we created a program of what we call combined therapy, which combined many Western holistic techniques, Ayurveda, yoga, meditation, and so forth. So I did that work for 20 years. And then I set up a clinic in New York City, which I ran for a number of years and then wrote a book to summarize what I had learned about how all these traditions fit together. And that was called “Radical Healing.” And once I had completed the book and could offer it to the world, I retired from medicine and began to devote my time to teaching Tantra, which was something that had been part of my training with my teacher from the beginning.</p>
<h3>Starting to teach tantra</h3>
<p>So I had 20 years of intensive training in tantra and began to teach. I taught at a school called the Body Electric School, which was in California. And then I taught increasingly on my own. And then I came to Earthaven and eventually created this retreat center where we’re sitting today Dancing Shiva, which is part of Earthaven and thereby had access to an environment — both a learning environment, because it’s embedded in Earthaven, but also surrounded by nature and surrounded by beautiful forests, which is the ideal place to teach tantra and the ideal place to help people improve their health. So I’ve had the joy of being here for all these years and continuing to do that.</p>
<p>Tantra is in one sense, you could say it’s advanced yoga, but many of the teachings of yoga come from Tantra, like the idea of Kundalini Shakti and the concept of the chakras, and really a lot of the understanding of breath. But these are what are called in India sister sciences, like yoga and tantra and Ayurveda are all so closely related, but kind of based on the same foundations and therefore really easily integrated. But that is also characteristic of most of the teachings that come out of India, whether it’s philosophy or science or whether it’s medicine or spirituality, they aren’t really so separate as they are in the west.</p>
<p>And that’s because the thinking in the way of dealing with life is much more holistic. They are holistic, meaning that it thinks of it all as a whole rather than separate pieces. And that’s one of our great stumbling blocks in the west is that we fragment everything in the interest of analysis, which is very valuable. But then there’s another thing called synthesis. And if you do all analysis and no synthesis, then you end up feeling scattered.</p>
<h3>Relationship to the holistic aspect of permaculture</h3>
<p>I’m looking on the wall over there, the diagram done by one of the founders of Permaculture, David Holmgren. He has a flower-like diagram with all the different aspects of permaculture. And there are so many. At the very bottom is holistic medicine, the foundation of it all. When we step into permaculture, we step into holistic thinking, which is refreshing.</p>
<h3>A story from the tantra and permaculture workshop taught with Patricia Allison</h3>
<p>There were so many wonderful events. I remember one of the participants was from a very different lifestyle, doing healing work. And somehow he got interested in permaculture. And he came and it was very difficult for him because to pull together all these different ways of thinking was almost painful. And he used to come to my place where I stayed and kind of sob and weep. And like, “I don’t know whether I can do this.” But he did. And I think changed his life in a lot of ways.</p>
<p>Patricia was so broad and her scope of thinking, it all was exciting for her to bring these different things together. And so we just had a lot of fun.</p>
<h3>About building Dancing Shiva at Earthaven Ecovillage</h3>
<p>Now you’re up here and we’re in this beautiful Dancing Shiva place that you’ve built and some other people had started some things. But you’ve done a lot with it. So can you tell us about developing this site?</p>
<p>For many years, I was doing weekend workshops on tantra, especially for men. And it was a life-changing experience for a lot of people because such a different way of thinking about themselves and their bodies and the relationship between sexuality and spirituality, and all of that. And the way that we did the workshops was everybody helped produce the workshop. So when we cooked meals, different people took shifts to help cook and then to clean up and then to empty the compost. And then all the things that make a workshop go.</p>
<p>Everyone was doing it. So we were functioning in a weekend as this little mini community. And at the end, people would always say, Why do we have to leave? Why DO we have to leave? This is the way I would like to live. And so after doing that for six or eight years, I thought, Why do we have to leave? And so maybe we can create a place where we just live that. And so that’s how Dancing Shiva came into being. We wanted to set up a place where you could live the teachings.</p>
<p>And then it occurred to us eventually, of course, that that’s the basic idea of a monastery. Can we live the teachings? And can we all participate in growing the food and cleaning up and cutting down the trees and hauling the firewood and doing all the things that need to be done to make life possible and still remain in that state of mind and in that environment that is conducive to this other way of living. And so that’s what we have been striving to develop here at Dancing Shiva and now are able to enjoy it.</p>
<p>I had the privilege of coming to a recent retreat here. Deep ecology and yoga retreat. It was a very sweet environment to be retreating in.</p>
<p>And so that makes such a difference. I mean, these things like yoga and permaculture, you just can’t teach them in a hotel meeting room. You can try and you can get across some of the concepts, but you can’t feel it. You need to be out in the forest. You need to be in the woods. You need to be in a place where your surroundings are supporting what you’re learning.</p>
<h3>The relationship between soil health, plant health, and the health of people</h3>
<p>I think the punchline, which I will give you first, is that we really aren’t separate. We think of ourselves as separate, and they’re the plants, and they’re the people. And then there’s the food. And these are different issues, but they’re not in a way. Our challenge is to put the pieces back together and try to understand it as a whole functioning system. So we know, for example, that in the body, in the human body, there are somewhere around 200,000 different proteins that need to be synthesized for good health, for really, not just to stay alive, but to have vibrant health.</p>
<p>The human genome only contains 25,000 genes, and one gene oversees the production of one protein. So how on earth are we supposed to get all the other things that we need? It turns out that our tissues of our body are actually teeming with microbes. Bacteria have probably, now I’m not remembering the figures, but hundreds of thousands of genes among them, because there are many different varieties of bacteria. And then in our tissues, also are fungi, and they have even more diversity and more genetic material, up into the billions of different genes. And then they are parasites, which we are always trying to identifyo s we can take strong antimicrobials to kill because we shouldn’t have parasites in the body. But actually, we should have what we call parasites. They’re not really parasites. They’re actually allies. They are manufacturing some of these 200,000 things we need that the body can’t manufacture, and so are the bacteria, and so are the fungi. So our bodies are actually very similar to the soil.</p>
<p>So where do we get these microbes? Well, they used to be everywhere, but we permeated the planet with antimicrobials and pesticides and chemicals that will kill microbes. And we’re always obsessed. There are advertisements on television about how you should use this detergent for your wash, because otherwise, bacteria might be on your clothes. You can’t put clothes on your children with bacteria on them.</p>
<p>Well, actually, there are bacteria all over the surface of our bodies and inside of our bodies. And we need a wide variety of them. In the scientific community now, and that part of the scientific community that’s studying this issue. They have developed this term of postbiotics, not prebiotics or probiotics, but postbiotics, meaning the substances that the microbes produce in our bodies that supply those other 175,000 substances that we need for good health. So the postbiotics are really where the important information is and the important functions are. So in order for these microbes in our bodies to produce those things that we need, we need several things. We need them (the microbes) and one of the best places you can get them is from the soil. So if you go out into the garden and you grow your food, you’re not just growing the food that has all this richness, but you’re inhaling the microbes that your body needs to be able to produce the things you want from that excellent food. So this is where the boundaries blur. Like, where does this organism of life stop? And where is some different thing happening? Because actually, they’re bleeding into each other because we need the food from the soil.</p>
<p>But we also need the microbes from the soil. If the soil has been poisoned with pesticides and is using chemical fertilizer, we won’t get that from the soil, and neither will the plants. So the plants will be lacking in trace minerals, for example. But they’ll be lacking in other substances as well that microbes are producing.</p>
<h3>Plants and mycorrhizae</h3>
<p>In fact, the roots of the plants secrete a sugary sweet substance that feeds the microbes so that the microbes can then feed the plants now. So where does the plant stop and the mycorrhizae start? It’s all one system. So all these microbes living in our body that need to produce all these wonderful things, they also need raw materials to produce them from. And that has to come from the plants. So what we’re eating should contain a wide variety of different plants, substances and different kinds of molecules that different plants produce.</p>
<h3>Problems with loss of diversity</h3>
<p>When we have a diet, like in the United States, where there are, like, six or eight plants that most of our food supplies are made from, then that impoverished source of nutrition can’t really support the work that all those microbes living in your body and your own cells are trying to do. So there’s such a loss of diversity. This is just how the world expresses the issues that… We have trouble with diversity, we can’t accept people that don’t look like us. Well, the same thing. We’re destroying the diversity in the soil.</p>
<p>We’re destroying the diversity in the food crops. We’re destroying the diversity of microbes in our bodies with antibiotics that kill microbes. So if you take antibiotics for sore throat or for whatever, you’re killing off a huge number of those microbes that live in your body. And then when you dump Roundup on your soil, you’re killing all the microbes in the soil. So the plants rely on the microbes in the rhizosphere of the plant. That’s the area around the root. There are these fungi that are called mycorrhizae.</p>
<p>And without the mycorrhizae, the plants can’t absorb the nutrients that are in the soil. So you’re cutting them off from their food supply. It takes 2 grams of roundup to destroy all the mycorrhizae on an acre of land, and we’re spraying on, I forget how many billions of pounds a year on the soils in the United States. So when we disrupt, we actually fragment nature and cut the pieces apart from each other where they can’t join and function together. Then we are creating dis-ease. There is a disease on the planet.</p>
<p>And there’s a disease in our bodies because we aren’t getting what we need. So we have in our kind of mania and our fear of microbes, we have been really destroying our health. And so what we need is to begin to have more respect for the integrality of nature. This is an integrated system that is beyond our current understanding. A little by little, we’re learning more and more and more, but we’re still so far from grasping both the wide scope of it and the intricacy of each detail and how everything is interlinked with everything else.</p>
<p>So instead, we split it apart in pieces. Well, that part, meaning those microbes, are to be feared. So we have to destroy them. Well, now this is a bizarre kind of thinking and a very disturbing and destructive way of thinking. This is what leads to wars. And so it’s the same mentality and we use that terminology. It’s the war against cancer. The war against the viruses. It’s the war against the bacteria. We’re at war. And so the war always tends to destroy both the people that you’re trying to kill and yourselves.</p>
<p>And so the war mentality is not where it’s at. It’s a misstep like Oops, that was the wrong way to go, let’s step back and see. Well, how can we approach this? Not as a war, but as a kind of marveling at the collaboration of all aspects of nature to create this planet. It’s so incredible and beautiful and magnificent and brilliant. And can we just be in awe of that and grateful for that? And then we can become healthy?</p>
<h3>The relationship between human health and planetary health</h3>
<p>In one session I gave once near Atlanta, everybody’s talking about global warming back now, people backed off and they said climate change. But still everyone’s thinking global warming. Gaia, which is the planet earth, has a fever. She has a fever because we are really hacking away at her. And we’re doing so many things that are destructive to her that she’s falling ill and has a fever. This is one angle to think about it from, which is quite valid, I believe, if we want her to be well. And here’s the whole key to this. She is us. I mean, we’re part of her. It’s not really us over here and Gaia over there. Gaia includes us. We’re part of that network of living things. And that living organism, Gaia includes us. And so by making her sick, we’re getting sick because we’re part of her. Yes, it’s all one challenge. And to think you can address climate change without addressing what are you doing to the fields of the agricultural lands of the whole planet? When you’re dumping poisons on the land and you’re killing off the microbes?</p>
<p>And how does that affect what goes into the air and the levels of carbon dioxide. Plants take carbon dioxide and make oxygen. But when you spray herbicides on the land, it kills the plants. So the plants can’t convert the carbon dioxide into oxygen. And then we say, oh, we have rising levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. Well, could that be that you’re killing the plants that used to convert the carbon dioxide into oxygen and water? Maybe that’s such an obvious point, but that doesn’t seem to get into the discussion.</p>
<p>Part of our fragmentation, our fragmenting tendency is that we look at every issue as an isolated issue, and we don’t see how all the issues are interconnected. “That’s just too much. Can’t deal with that.” That cripples us in our attempts to really do something productive and constructive for our health and for the planet’s health. And the two are the same.</p>
<p>So when we talk about nature now, people are talking about forest bathing, like using connection with the forest as a healing process. Well, yeah, it really does work but we are making the forest sick. So we have to heal nature before nature can heal us with the efficiency that it could because we are damaging it. So it’s a self destruction thing because the whole thing is us. And yet we’re destroying it. And we think that that makes sense, but it really doesn’t.</p>
<p>So we have to kill the viruses. Well, guess what? Viruses are not alive. Scientists have been saying that for a long, long time. They’re not living creatures. There’s no life in a virus. You can crystallize it and put it in a jar and come back in 100 years and it’s still there. Viruses are not living entities and so we have the idea that the viruses come in. Now, I don’t know who came up with this way of thinking, but the viruses come in and they sort of take over the cell and make it produce more of itself because it can’t reproduce because it’s not alive. Well, how can a non-living thing try to take over your cells? I mean, what would that mean? How could it have the intention? But we project onto the viruses, these monsters, and they have ill will toward us, and they want to destroy us. But they’re not even living things. They’re just a chemical compound.</p>
<p>So this is a bizarre kind of human tendency. And the technical term for it, of course, is paranoia. There are these little things out there. They’re trying to kill me. Well, I don’t see. Oh, they’re out there. I know they are. And they’re trying to… That’s called paranoia.</p>
<p>So our paranoid tendencies have led us to destroy a lot of nature. There’s a fear of nature. There’s a book called “The Problem of Civilization” by Derek Jensen. And he says that we, particularly people in North America, we have a fear of wild nature, like the dark forest. There’s evil things that go on there, and it swallows you up, kills you. And so we have been dedicating ourselves since we landed on the shores of Massachusetts or wherever it was, Plymouth Rock and so forth to conquer nature.</p>
<p>Well, what does it mean to conquer nature? We are part of it. So we’ve really destroyed a lot of the integrity of the life forms on the continent and out of fear and projecting that fear. So fear is not the answer. And war is not the answer. That’s a bumper sticker that the Quakers will offer you if you want one. War is not the answer. War has never been the answer to anything. So, yes, we need to step out of that paranoid position, that paranoid place, into more of a sense of awe and respect and cherishing the richness of the nature that we are and that we inhabit. And we are because we are the one big system that’s called nature.</p>
<h3>Programs at Dancing Shiva</h3>
<p>We have a website, <a href="https://dancingshivatantra.com" target="_blank" rel="noopener">dancingshivatantra.com</a>. You can find all the information there. You can also email us at d&#97;&#110;&#99;&#105;&#110;&#103;sh&#105;vata&#110;&#116;&#114;aco&#109;&#64;gm&#97;&#105;l.&#99;&#111;m. We are offering all kinds of programs on the interface between deep ecology, permaculture, yoga, meditation, and tantra. And we have programs at all kinds of levels. We have entry level programs. We have an advanced program, a three-year program for training teachers to teach this. And we’re in our third three-year iteration of that.</p>
<p>We are here to work along with our other neighborhoods at Earthaven to try to offer the world a sustainable future and see if people will become as fascinated by that possibility as we are. We also have some online offerings and we’re organizing more.</p>
<p>This podcast is produced by Earthaven Ecovillage’s School of Integrated Living in Western North Carolina.</p>
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<div class=\"et_post_meta_wrapper\">\n

<h1 class=\"entry-title\">Healing People and the Planet with Swami Ravi Rudra Bharati<\/h1>\n<\/div>\n

<div class=\"entry-content\"><\/div>"}}]}]},{"type":"row","props":{"layout":"1-2,1-2"},"children":[{"type":"column","props":{"image_position":"center-center","media_overlay_gradient":"","width_medium":"1-2"},"children":[{"type":"text","props":{"margin":"default","column_breakpoint":"m","content":"

<p><strong>Broadcast November 1, 2021<\/strong><br \/>Featuring: Swami Ravi Rudra Bharati<\/p>\n

<p><span>Swami Ravi Rudra Bharati, formerly known as Dr. Rudolph Valentine, has been very committed to the integration of Eastern thought, particularly yoga and tantra, and permaculture, and all that implies, as well as it relates to healing.<\/span><\/p>\n

<p><span>Swami Ravi shares his background as a physician and holistic healer of Ayurvedic medicine in clinics in India and the US. During his medical career, he studied tantra, which he began teaching after retiring from medicine. In 2004, he moved to Earthaven, continued teaching, and developed the Dancing Shiva retreat center.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n

<p><span>Most of the conversation explores a holistic view of soil health, plant health, the health of people and the planet, including the implications and challenges for healing the people and Gaia. <\/span><\/p>"}}]},{"type":"column","props":{"image_position":"center-center","media_overlay_gradient":"","width_medium":"1-2"},"children":[{"type":"image","props":{"margin":"default","image_svg_color":"emphasis","image":"wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/10\/swami-ravi.jpg","image_alt":"Swami Ravi Rudra Bharati"}}]}]}]},{"type":"section","props":{"style":"muted","width":"default","vertical_align":"middle","title_position":"top-left","title_rotation":"left","title_breakpoint":"xl","image_position":"center-center"},"children":[{"type":"row","children":[{"type":"column","props":{"image_position":"center-center","media_overlay_gradient":""},"children":[{"type":"text","props":{"margin":"default","column_breakpoint":"m","content":"

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<div class=\"et_post_meta_wrapper\">\n

<h1 class=\"entry-title\">Healing People and the Planet with Swami Ravi Rudra Bharati<\/h1>\n

<h1 class=\"entry-title\">TRANSCRIPT<\/h1>\n<\/div>"}},{"type":"text","props":{"margin":"default","column_breakpoint":"m","content":"

<p>We\u00a0 discovered that Tantra and permaculture were really based on very similar principles. My long-term interest has been in the interface between these two disciplines and all that implies, as well as how that relates to healing. So, yeah, we\u2019re here at Earthaven, where this intersection of different disciplines is what it\u2019s all about.<\/p>\n

<p>Hello, everyone. Welcome to the Earthaven Ecovillage Podcast, where we meet people and hear ideas contributing to Earthaven Ecovillage\u2019s Living Laboratory for a Sustainable Human future. I\u2019m Debbie Lienhart, and today I\u2019m excited to talk with one of our Earthaven members and elders, Swami Ravi Rudra Bharati. So, would you like to introduce yourself?<\/p>\n

<h3>Introducing Swami Ravi Rudra Bharati<\/h3>\n

<p>My name is Swami Ravi Rudra Bharati. And I was formerly known as Dr. Rudolph Ballentine. I\u2019ve been living at Earthaven for 17 years, and I have been very committed to the integration of Eastern thought, particularly yoga and Tantra and permaculture. And in fact, at one point, Patricia Allison and myself offered a nine-week live-in workshop or event on the integration of permaculture and Tantra, and that was very exciting and very fun. We sort of discovered that tantra and permaculture were really based on very similar principles, and that\u2019s what we played off of during that event.<\/p>\n

<p>My long-term interest has been in the interface between these two disciplines and all that implies, as well as how that relates to healing, because in my previous incarnation, I was a physician and practiced holistic medicine for 45 years before I retired. So, yeah, we\u2019re here at Earthaven, where this intersection of different disciplines is kind of what it\u2019s all about. And as we work toward a sustainable way of living, we need to weave in all these things that we have learned over the centuries to create something that is truly alive and enlivening as a way of life.<\/p>\n

<h3>Swami Ravi\u2019s journey through medicine<\/h3>\n

<p>One of the things you bring is that you\u2019ve been a real physician in Western medicine and then had quite a journey through different kinds of medicine. Can you tell us a little bit about that?<\/p>\n

<p>I went to medical school at Duke Medical School, not far from here, and received my MD degree. And then I did a residency in psychiatry in New Orleans in Louisiana. Before that, I did a rotating internship where I had an opportunity to use all my skills \u2014 delivering babies, doing surgery, and so forth. Then, I did my training in psychiatry. And in the course of that, I became interested in yoga. And at that point, yoga was something really new in the US. This was 1973.<\/p>\n

<p>And so the only way you could really find out much about yoga was to go somewhere else to learn it. And so I ended up going to India, and that\u2019s where I met my teacher. And I also was involved in studying Ayurveda because that was a holistic medical system.<\/p>\n

<h3>What\u2019s Ayurveda?<\/h3>\n

<p>Yeah, that\u2019s the traditional system of medicine in India, which would be comparable to Chinese medicine that comes from the culture of China. So I studied that and lived and worked at an Ayurvedic hospital for some time. And then I became interested in the integration of those things, and my teacher invited me to come back to the US. He was already established in the US, and we created a program of what we call combined therapy, which combined many Western holistic techniques, Ayurveda, yoga, meditation, and so forth. So I did that work for 20 years. And then I set up a clinic in New York City, which I ran for a number of years and then wrote a book to summarize what I had learned about how all these traditions fit together. And that was called \u201cRadical Healing.\u201d And once I had completed the book and could offer it to the world, I retired from medicine and began to devote my time to teaching Tantra, which was something that had been part of my training with my teacher from the beginning.<\/p>\n

<h3>Starting to teach tantra<\/h3>\n

<p>So I had 20 years of intensive training in tantra and began to teach. I taught at a school called the Body Electric School, which was in California. And then I taught increasingly on my own. And then I came to Earthaven and eventually created this retreat center where we\u2019re sitting today Dancing Shiva, which is part of Earthaven and thereby had access to an environment \u2014 both a learning environment, because it\u2019s embedded in Earthaven, but also surrounded by nature and surrounded by beautiful forests, which is the ideal place to teach tantra and the ideal place to help people improve their health. So I\u2019ve had the joy of being here for all these years and continuing to do that.<\/p>\n

<p>Tantra is in one sense, you could say it\u2019s advanced yoga, but many of the teachings of yoga come from Tantra, like the idea of Kundalini Shakti and the concept of the chakras, and really a lot of the understanding of breath. But these are what are called in India sister sciences, like yoga and tantra and Ayurveda are all so closely related, but kind of based on the same foundations and therefore really easily integrated. But that is also characteristic of most of the teachings that come out of India, whether it\u2019s philosophy or science or whether it\u2019s medicine or spirituality, they aren\u2019t really so separate as they are in the west.<\/p>\n

<p>And that\u2019s because the thinking in the way of dealing with life is much more holistic. They are holistic, meaning that it thinks of it all as a whole rather than separate pieces. And that\u2019s one of our great stumbling blocks in the west is that we fragment everything in the interest of analysis, which is very valuable. But then there\u2019s another thing called synthesis. And if you do all analysis and no synthesis, then you end up feeling scattered.<\/p>\n

<h3>Relationship to the holistic aspect of permaculture<\/h3>\n

<p>I\u2019m looking on the wall over there, the diagram done by one of the founders of Permaculture, David Holmgren. He has a flower-like diagram with all the different aspects of permaculture. And there are so many. At the very bottom is holistic medicine, the foundation of it all. When we step into permaculture, we step into holistic thinking, which is refreshing.<\/p>\n

<h3>A story from the tantra and permaculture workshop taught with Patricia Allison<\/h3>\n

<p>There were so many wonderful events. I remember one of the participants was from a very different lifestyle, doing healing work. And somehow he got interested in permaculture. And he came and it was very difficult for him because to pull together all these different ways of thinking was almost painful. And he used to come to my place where I stayed and kind of sob and weep. And like, \u201cI don\u2019t know whether I can do this.\u201d But he did. And I think changed his life in a lot of ways.<\/p>\n

<p>Patricia was so broad and her scope of thinking, it all was exciting for her to bring these different things together. And so we just had a lot of fun.<\/p>\n

<h3>About building Dancing Shiva at Earthaven Ecovillage<\/h3>\n

<p>Now you\u2019re up here and we\u2019re in this beautiful Dancing Shiva place that you\u2019ve built and some other people had started some things. But you\u2019ve done a lot with it. So can you tell us about developing this site?<\/p>\n

<p>For many years, I was doing weekend workshops on tantra, especially for men. And it was a life-changing experience for a lot of people because such a different way of thinking about themselves and their bodies and the relationship between sexuality and spirituality, and all of that. And the way that we did the workshops was everybody helped produce the workshop. So when we cooked meals, different people took shifts to help cook and then to clean up and then to empty the compost. And then all the things that make a workshop go.<\/p>\n

<p>Everyone was doing it. So we were functioning in a weekend as this little mini community. And at the end, people would always say, Why do we have to leave? Why DO we have to leave? This is the way I would like to live. And so after doing that for six or eight years, I thought, Why do we have to leave? And so maybe we can create a place where we just live that. And so that\u2019s how Dancing Shiva came into being. We wanted to set up a place where you could live the teachings.<\/p>\n

<p>And then it occurred to us eventually, of course, that that\u2019s the basic idea of a monastery. Can we live the teachings? And can we all participate in growing the food and cleaning up and cutting down the trees and hauling the firewood and doing all the things that need to be done to make life possible and still remain in that state of mind and in that environment that is conducive to this other way of living. And so that\u2019s what we have been striving to develop here at Dancing Shiva and now are able to enjoy it.<\/p>\n

<p>I had the privilege of coming to a recent retreat here. Deep ecology and yoga retreat. It was a very sweet environment to be retreating in.<\/p>\n

<p>And so that makes such a difference. I mean, these things like yoga and permaculture, you just can\u2019t teach them in a hotel meeting room. You can try and you can get across some of the concepts, but you can\u2019t feel it. You need to be out in the forest. You need to be in the woods. You need to be in a place where your surroundings are supporting what you\u2019re learning.<\/p>\n

<h3>The relationship between soil health, plant health, and the health of people<\/h3>\n

<p>I think the punchline, which I will give you first, is that we really aren\u2019t separate. We think of ourselves as separate, and they\u2019re the plants, and they\u2019re the people. And then there\u2019s the food. And these are different issues, but they\u2019re not in a way. Our challenge is to put the pieces back together and try to understand it as a whole functioning system. So we know, for example, that in the body, in the human body, there are somewhere around 200,000 different proteins that need to be synthesized for good health, for really, not just to stay alive, but to have vibrant health.<\/p>\n

<p>The human genome only contains 25,000 genes, and one gene oversees the production of one protein. So how on earth are we supposed to get all the other things that we need? It turns out that our tissues of our body are actually teeming with microbes. Bacteria have probably, now I\u2019m not remembering the figures, but hundreds of thousands of genes among them, because there are many different varieties of bacteria. And then in our tissues, also are fungi, and they have even more diversity and more genetic material, up into the billions of different genes. And then they are parasites, which we are always trying to identifyo s we can take strong antimicrobials to kill because we shouldn\u2019t have parasites in the body. But actually, we should have what we call parasites. They\u2019re not really parasites. They\u2019re actually allies. They are manufacturing some of these 200,000 things we need that the body can\u2019t manufacture, and so are the bacteria, and so are the fungi. So our bodies are actually very similar to the soil.<\/p>\n

<p>So where do we get these microbes? Well, they used to be everywhere, but we permeated the planet with antimicrobials and pesticides and chemicals that will kill microbes. And we\u2019re always obsessed. There are advertisements on television about how you should use this detergent for your wash, because otherwise, bacteria might be on your clothes. You can\u2019t put clothes on your children with bacteria on them.<\/p>\n

<p>Well, actually, there are bacteria all over the surface of our bodies and inside of our bodies. And we need a wide variety of them. In the scientific community now, and that part of the scientific community that\u2019s studying this issue. They have developed this term of postbiotics, not prebiotics or probiotics, but postbiotics, meaning the substances that the microbes produce in our bodies that supply those other 175,000 substances that we need for good health. So the postbiotics are really where the important information is and the important functions are. So in order for these microbes in our bodies to produce those things that we need, we need several things. We need them (the microbes) and one of the best places you can get them is from the soil. So if you go out into the garden and you grow your food, you\u2019re not just growing the food that has all this richness, but you\u2019re inhaling the microbes that your body needs to be able to produce the things you want from that excellent food. So this is where the boundaries blur. Like, where does this organism of life stop? And where is some different thing happening? Because actually, they\u2019re bleeding into each other because we need the food from the soil.<\/p>\n

<p>But we also need the microbes from the soil. If the soil has been poisoned with pesticides and is using chemical fertilizer, we won\u2019t get that from the soil, and neither will the plants. So the plants will be lacking in trace minerals, for example. But they\u2019ll be lacking in other substances as well that microbes are producing.<\/p>\n

<h3>Plants and mycorrhizae<\/h3>\n

<p>In fact, the roots of the plants secrete a sugary sweet substance that feeds the microbes so that the microbes can then feed the plants now. So where does the plant stop and the mycorrhizae start? It\u2019s all one system. So all these microbes living in our body that need to produce all these wonderful things, they also need raw materials to produce them from. And that has to come from the plants. So what we\u2019re eating should contain a wide variety of different plants, substances and different kinds of molecules that different plants produce.<\/p>\n

<h3>Problems with loss of diversity<\/h3>\n

<p>When we have a diet, like in the United States, where there are, like, six or eight plants that most of our food supplies are made from, then that impoverished source of nutrition can\u2019t really support the work that all those microbes living in your body and your own cells are trying to do. So there\u2019s such a loss of diversity. This is just how the world expresses the issues that\u2026 We have trouble with diversity, we can\u2019t accept people that don\u2019t look like us. Well, the same thing. We\u2019re destroying the diversity in the soil.<\/p>\n

<p>We\u2019re destroying the diversity in the food crops. We\u2019re destroying the diversity of microbes in our bodies with antibiotics that kill microbes. So if you take antibiotics for sore throat or for whatever, you\u2019re killing off a huge number of those microbes that live in your body. And then when you dump Roundup on your soil, you\u2019re killing all the microbes in the soil. So the plants rely on the microbes in the rhizosphere of the plant. That\u2019s the area around the root. There are these fungi that are called mycorrhizae.<\/p>\n

<p>And without the mycorrhizae, the plants can\u2019t absorb the nutrients that are in the soil. So you\u2019re cutting them off from their food supply. It takes 2 grams of roundup to destroy all the mycorrhizae on an acre of land, and we\u2019re spraying on, I forget how many billions of pounds a year on the soils in the United States. So when we disrupt, we actually fragment nature and cut the pieces apart from each other where they can\u2019t join and function together. Then we are creating dis-ease. There is a disease on the planet.<\/p>\n

<p>And there\u2019s a disease in our bodies because we aren\u2019t getting what we need. So we have in our kind of mania and our fear of microbes, we have been really destroying our health. And so what we need is to begin to have more respect for the integrality of nature. This is an integrated system that is beyond our current understanding. A little by little, we\u2019re learning more and more and more, but we\u2019re still so far from grasping both the wide scope of it and the intricacy of each detail and how everything is interlinked with everything else.<\/p>\n

<p>So instead, we split it apart in pieces. Well, that part, meaning those microbes, are to be feared. So we have to destroy them. Well, now this is a bizarre kind of thinking and a very disturbing and destructive way of thinking. This is what leads to wars. And so it\u2019s the same mentality and we use that terminology. It\u2019s the war against cancer. The war against the viruses. It\u2019s the war against the bacteria. We\u2019re at war. And so the war always tends to destroy both the people that you\u2019re trying to kill and yourselves.<\/p>\n

<p>And so the war mentality is not where it\u2019s at. It\u2019s a misstep like Oops, that was the wrong way to go, let\u2019s step back and see. Well, how can we approach this? Not as a war, but as a kind of marveling at the collaboration of all aspects of nature to create this planet. It\u2019s so incredible and beautiful and magnificent and brilliant. And can we just be in awe of that and grateful for that? And then we can become healthy?<\/p>\n

<h3>The relationship between human health and planetary health<\/h3>\n

<p>In one session I gave once near Atlanta, everybody\u2019s talking about global warming back now, people backed off and they said climate change. But still everyone\u2019s thinking global warming. Gaia, which is the planet earth, has a fever. She has a fever because we are really hacking away at her. And we\u2019re doing so many things that are destructive to her that she\u2019s falling ill and has a fever. This is one angle to think about it from, which is quite valid, I believe, if we want her to be well. And here\u2019s the whole key to this. She is us. I mean, we\u2019re part of her. It\u2019s not really us over here and Gaia over there. Gaia includes us. We\u2019re part of that network of living things. And that living organism, Gaia includes us. And so by making her sick, we\u2019re getting sick because we\u2019re part of her. Yes, it\u2019s all one challenge. And to think you can address climate change without addressing what are you doing to the fields of the agricultural lands of the whole planet? When you\u2019re dumping poisons on the land and you\u2019re killing off the microbes?<\/p>\n

<p>And how does that affect what goes into the air and the levels of carbon dioxide. Plants take carbon dioxide and make oxygen. But when you spray herbicides on the land, it kills the plants. So the plants can\u2019t convert the carbon dioxide into oxygen. And then we say, oh, we have rising levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. Well, could that be that you\u2019re killing the plants that used to convert the carbon dioxide into oxygen and water? Maybe that\u2019s such an obvious point, but that doesn\u2019t seem to get into the discussion.<\/p>\n

<p>Part of our fragmentation, our fragmenting tendency is that we look at every issue as an isolated issue, and we don\u2019t see how all the issues are interconnected. \u201cThat\u2019s just too much. Can\u2019t deal with that.\u201d That cripples us in our attempts to really do something productive and constructive for our health and for the planet\u2019s health. And the two are the same.<\/p>\n

<p>So when we talk about nature now, people are talking about forest bathing, like using connection with the forest as a healing process. Well, yeah, it really does work but we are making the forest sick. So we have to heal nature before nature can heal us with the efficiency that it could because we are damaging it. So it\u2019s a self destruction thing because the whole thing is us. And yet we\u2019re destroying it. And we think that that makes sense, but it really doesn\u2019t.<\/p>\n

<p>So we have to kill the viruses. Well, guess what? Viruses are not alive. Scientists have been saying that for a long, long time. They\u2019re not living creatures. There\u2019s no life in a virus. You can crystallize it and put it in a jar and come back in 100 years and it\u2019s still there. Viruses are not living entities and so we have the idea that the viruses come in. Now, I don\u2019t know who came up with this way of thinking, but the viruses come in and they sort of take over the cell and make it produce more of itself because it can\u2019t reproduce because it\u2019s not alive. Well, how can a non-living thing try to take over your cells? I mean, what would that mean? How could it have the intention? But we project onto the viruses, these monsters, and they have ill will toward us, and they want to destroy us. But they\u2019re not even living things. They\u2019re just a chemical compound.<\/p>\n

<p>So this is a bizarre kind of human tendency. And the technical term for it, of course, is paranoia. There are these little things out there. They\u2019re trying to kill me. Well, I don\u2019t see. Oh, they\u2019re out there. I know they are. And they\u2019re trying to\u2026 That\u2019s called paranoia.<\/p>\n

<p>So our paranoid tendencies have led us to destroy a lot of nature. There\u2019s a fear of nature. There\u2019s a book called \u201cThe Problem of Civilization\u201d by Derek Jensen. And he says that we, particularly people in North America, we have a fear of wild nature, like the dark forest. There\u2019s evil things that go on there, and it swallows you up, kills you. And so we have been dedicating ourselves since we landed on the shores of Massachusetts or wherever it was, Plymouth Rock and so forth to conquer nature.<\/p>\n

<p>Well, what does it mean to conquer nature? We are part of it. So we\u2019ve really destroyed a lot of the integrity of the life forms on the continent and out of fear and projecting that fear. So fear is not the answer. And war is not the answer. That\u2019s a bumper sticker that the Quakers will offer you if you want one. War is not the answer. War has never been the answer to anything. So, yes, we need to step out of that paranoid position, that paranoid place, into more of a sense of awe and respect and cherishing the richness of the nature that we are and that we inhabit. And we are because we are the one big system that\u2019s called nature.<\/p>\n

<h3>Programs at Dancing Shiva<\/h3>\n

<p>We have a website, <a href=\"https:\/\/dancingshivatantra.com\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">dancingshivatantra.com<\/a>. You can find all the information there. You can also email us at dan&#99;i&#110;gs&#104;ivat&#97;&#110;&#116;&#114;&#97;&#99;&#111;m&#64;&#103;&#109;&#97;&#105;&#108;.&#99;o&#109;. We are offering all kinds of programs on the interface between deep ecology, permaculture, yoga, meditation, and tantra. And we have programs at all kinds of levels. We have entry level programs. We have an advanced program, a three-year program for training teachers to teach this. And we\u2019re in our third three-year iteration of that.<\/p>\n

<p>We are here to work along with our other neighborhoods at Earthaven to try to offer the world a sustainable future and see if people will become as fascinated by that possibility as we are. We also have some online offerings and we\u2019re organizing more.<\/p>\n

<p>This podcast is produced by Earthaven Ecovillage\u2019s School of Integrated Living in Western North Carolina.<\/p>"}}]}]}]},{"type":"section","props":{"style":"primary","width":"large","vertical_align":"middle","title_position":"top-left","title_rotation":"left","title_breakpoint":"xl","image_position":"center-center"},"children":[{"type":"row","children":[{"type":"column","props":{"image_position":"center-center","media_overlay_gradient":"","width_medium":"2-3"},"children":[{"type":"headline","props":{"title_element":"h1","content":"Earthaven Ecovillage Podcast"}},{"type":"text","props":{"margin":"default","column_breakpoint":"m","content":"

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<p>The post <a href="https://www.earthaven.org/earthaven-education/podcast/healing-people-planet-swami-ravi/">Healing People and the Planet with Swami Ravi Rudra Bharati</a> appeared first on <a href="https://www.earthaven.org">Earthaven Ecovillage</a>.</p>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Earthaven Admin Team]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sun, 23 Sep 2012 00:42:45 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Dancing Shiva]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Social Events]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Spirit and Culture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[ceremony]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[dancing shiva]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Norm Self]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Rudy Ballentine]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[tantric]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.earthaven.org/?p=3699</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>&#160; Earthaven members Rudy Ballantine and Norm Self, and resident Banyan Fierer renamed their neighborhood Dancing Shiva to align with their intention to participate in the ongoing creation of pleasure, joy and fulfillment. They named the neighborhood after Shiva, the dancing deity who brings forth manifest creation in Tantric mythology.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://www.earthaven.org/spirit-and-culture/naming-ceremony/">Naming Ceremony</a> appeared first on <a href="https://www.earthaven.org">Earthaven Ecovillage</a>.</p>
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img decoding="async" id="c_img_1019110_1345293571401" class="alignleft" src="http://media.jbanetwork.com/image/cache/1/0/1/9/1/1/0_w165_s1.jpg" width="150" height="200" border="0" /></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Earthaven members Rudy Ballantine and Norm Self, and resident Banyan Fierer renamed their neighborhood <i><b>Dancing Shiva</b></i> to align with their intention to participate in the ongoing creation of pleasure, joy and fulfillment. They named the neighborhood after Shiva, the dancing deity who brings forth manifest creation in Tantric mythology.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://www.earthaven.org/spirit-and-culture/naming-ceremony/">Naming Ceremony</a> appeared first on <a href="https://www.earthaven.org">Earthaven Ecovillage</a>.</p>
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		<title>Loving Acres&#8217; New Vision</title>
		<link>https://www.earthaven.org/neighborhoods/loving-acres-new-vision/</link>
					<comments>https://www.earthaven.org/neighborhoods/loving-acres-new-vision/#respond</comments>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Earthaven Admin Team]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sun, 01 Jul 2012 01:08:39 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Dancing Shiva]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Natural Building]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Neighborhoods]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Permaculture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[ashram]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[dancing shiva]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[homeopathy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Loving Acres]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Norm Self]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Rudy Ballentine]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[tantra]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.earthaven.org/?p=3708</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>by Banyan Freier Note to Reader: This neighborhood is referred to on the website as Dancing Shiva. The Loving Acres neighborhood began in the late 1990s with six folks who started the project and then decided to move closer to the center of Earthaven activity and build at Village Terraces neighborhood instead. Almost ten years [&#8230;]</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://www.earthaven.org/neighborhoods/loving-acres-new-vision/">Loving Acres&#8217; New Vision</a> appeared first on <a href="https://www.earthaven.org">Earthaven Ecovillage</a>.</p>
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><i>by Banyan Freier</i></p>
<p><i>Note to Reader: This neighborhood is referred to on the website as Dancing Shiva.</i><img decoding="async" id="c_img_c_img_920860_1339124322917_1339526547433" class="alignright" src="http://media.jbanetwork.com/image/cache/9/2/0/8/6/0_w409_s1.jpg" width="188" height="250" border="0" /></p>
<p>The Loving Acres neighborhood began in the late 1990s with six folks who started the project and then decided to move closer to the center of Earthaven activity and build at Village Terraces neighborhood instead.</p>
<p>Almost ten years later, Rudy Ballentine, holistic physician and Tantra teacher, decided to ground his vision of a neighborhood. He wanted a place where his own passions—Tantra, permaculture, holistic health and queer identity—could converge. Loving Acres became the place.</p>
<p>There were many challenges at the start, but in 2010, building of a neighborhood common house began. Much of the wood was milled directly from the site and most of the labor came from the Earthaven community and its neighbors. The building was completed in January 2012.</p>
<table border="1" width="259" align="left">
<tbody>
<tr>
<td><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" id="c_img_c_img_c_img_927330_1339526531885_1339526562604_1339526998235" class="alignleft" src="http://media.jbanetwork.com/image/cache/9/2/7/3/3/0_w409_s1.jpg" width="250" height="154" border="1" /></td>
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<td><i>Rudy Ballentine, Norm Self &amp; Banyan Freier</i></td>
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</table>
<p>In the meantime, friends, colleagues and students began to arrive. Norm Self, who has stepped up to a variety of creative and important roles, relocated from San Francisco. I arrived from Washington State offering my skills, from carpentry to yoga, to the neighborhood and community.</p>
<p>In 2011, Rudy purchased a nearby, unfinished house whose owner had moved. That building, which will serve<img loading="lazy" decoding="async" id="c_img_920858_1339527014770" class="alignright" src="http://media.jbanetwork.com/image/cache/9/2/0/8/5/8_w409_s1.jpg" width="184" height="246" border="0" /> as an ashram and guest housing, is almost complete. The site also hosts a small “shed” that is being refurbished as a homeopathy consultation “hut” and dispensary.</p>
<p>The future of Loving Acres looks bright. How to build a neighborhood that hosts something of a queer ashram is the visioning work at hand, and a new name is likely to be born for the project.</p>
<p>Although Loving Acres is not on the regular Earthaven tour, folks who’d like to visit can connect by request through the Earthaven website. Namaste, y’all!</p>
<p><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" id="c_img_927332_1339526574591" class="alignleft" src="http://media.jbanetwork.com/image/cache/9/2/7/3/3/2_w409_s1.jpg" width="119" height="132" border="0" /></p>
<p><i> </i><i>Banyan Freier moved to Earthaven from Vashon Island, WA almost a year ago and is apprenticing in Holistic Medicine with Dr. Rudy Ballentine. &#8220;B&#8221; is a certified yoga instructor and last year taught the Forest Children&#8217;s Collective yoga class, has begun to see homeopathy patients at Earthaven, and teaches Embodied Voice lessons.</i></p>
<p>The post <a href="https://www.earthaven.org/neighborhoods/loving-acres-new-vision/">Loving Acres&#8217; New Vision</a> appeared first on <a href="https://www.earthaven.org">Earthaven Ecovillage</a>.</p>
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		<title>Village News</title>
		<link>https://www.earthaven.org/earthaven-education/in-person-events/village-news/</link>
					<comments>https://www.earthaven.org/earthaven-education/in-person-events/village-news/#respond</comments>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Debbie]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 02 Feb 2012 21:40:41 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Conscious Relating]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Dancing Shiva]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ecological Design]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[In-Person Events]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Brian Love]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Dominic Barter]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Friedwald]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Matthew Fox]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[restorative circles]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Rudy Ballentine]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[spirituality]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.earthaven.org/?p=3731</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>Earthaven Hosts Two Notable Luminaries Matthew Fox visited Earthaven October 17, when he filmed interviews with some of our elders and young people for an upcoming video about “Youth, Elders, and Spirituality.” While visiting, he held a discussion with the community. Matthew Fox is an internationally known author, speaker and visionary who has inspired many [&#8230;]</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://www.earthaven.org/earthaven-education/in-person-events/village-news/">Village News</a> appeared first on <a href="https://www.earthaven.org">Earthaven Ecovillage</a>.</p>
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><b><i>Earthaven Hosts Two Notable Luminaries</i></b></p>
<p><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" id="c_img_c_img_515284_1326145970224_1326145980308" class="alignleft" src="http://media.jbanetwork.com/image/cache/5/1/5/2/8/4_w409_s1.jpg" width="150" height="200" border="0" /></p>
<p><b>Matthew Fox</b> visited Earthaven October 17, when he filmed interviews with some of our elders and young people for an upcoming video about “Youth, Elders, and Spirituality.” While visiting, he held a discussion with the community. Matthew Fox is an internationally known author, speaker and visionary who has inspired many Earthaven people. <a title="matthewfox.org" href="http://www.matthewfox.org/" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Matthew Fox Website</a>.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><b>Dominic Barter</b> visited Earthaven on November 25 and led a presentation about Restorative Circles, a process he <img loading="lazy" decoding="async" id="c_img_515292_1326221980573" class="alignright" src="http://media.jbanetwork.com/image/cache/5/1/5/2/9/2_w409_s1.jpg" width="175" height="181" border="0" />developed in the favelas of Rio de Janeiro, where he has lived for the last twenty years. A Restorative Circle is a community process for bringing together the three parties to a conflict—those who acted, those directly affected, and the wider community. The process ends &#8220;when all have been heard and understood, and actions have been found that bring mutual benefit.&#8221; <a title="Restorative Circles" href="http://www.restorativecircles.org/" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Restorative Circles Website</a>.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><b><i>Earthaven Builders Complete Projects</i></b></p>
<p><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" id="c_img_c_img_c_img_515938_1326209080426_1326209091393_1326324386602" class="alignleft" src="http://media.jbanetwork.com/image/cache/5/1/5/9/3/8_w409_s1.jpg" width="175" height="133" border="0" /></p>
<p>ArtiSun Construction, led by Brian Love, finished the Friedwald residence. According to Henderson County building inspectors, this house is the first entirely off-grid, certified residence in their jurisdiction.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><a title="Round Mountain Builders" href="http://www.roundmountainbuilders.com/" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Round Mountain Builders</a>, led by Mihaly<img loading="lazy" decoding="async" id="c_img_c_img_517826_1326324360263_1326324366854" class="alignright" src="http://media.jbanetwork.com/image/cache/5/1/7/8/2/6_w409_s1.jpg" width="175" height="120" border="0" /> Bartalos, completed Rudy Ballentine&#8217;s house in the Middle Rosy Branch neighborhood of Earthaven. This and the ArtiSun project both feature Earthaven lumber, and innovative techniques devised by our member-builders. They also employed many Earthaven residents and neighbors.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://www.earthaven.org/earthaven-education/in-person-events/village-news/">Village News</a> appeared first on <a href="https://www.earthaven.org">Earthaven Ecovillage</a>.</p>
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		<title>Found by a Home</title>
		<link>https://www.earthaven.org/neighborhoods/dancing-shiva/found-by-a-home/</link>
					<comments>https://www.earthaven.org/neighborhoods/dancing-shiva/found-by-a-home/#respond</comments>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Earthaven Admin Team]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 01 Sep 2011 20:34:31 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Dancing Shiva]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Members]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[copperhead]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[elder]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[hawk]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Norm Self]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Rudy Ballentine]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[tantra]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[terraces]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.earthaven.org/?p=3856</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>by Norm Self I didn’t come looking for a new home. Yet suddenly last summer, I discovered that Earthaven had found me. My first visit was the summer before, and my purpose was to spend time with my beloved and esteemed Tantra teacher, Rudy Ballentine. I wanted to dig deeper into the joys and mysteries [&#8230;]</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://www.earthaven.org/neighborhoods/dancing-shiva/found-by-a-home/">Found by a Home</a> appeared first on <a href="https://www.earthaven.org">Earthaven Ecovillage</a>.</p>
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><i>by Norm Self</i></p>
<p><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" id="c_img_341628_1314107066890" class="alignleft" src="http://media.jbanetwork.com/image/cache/3/4/1/6/2/8_w410_s1.jpg" width="175" height="300" border="0" />I didn’t come looking for a new home. Yet suddenly last summer, I discovered that Earthaven had found <i>me.</i> My first visit was the summer before, and my purpose was to spend time with my beloved and esteemed Tantra teacher, Rudy Ballentine. I wanted to dig deeper into the joys and mysteries of a Tantric life-stream.</p>
<p>Another kind of digging showed up that surprised and pleased me. We spent two weeks literally digging in the earth! We were digging out root systems of bushes and saplings that interfere with tilling the garden terraces. It was challenging, sometimes backbreaking, and exhausting.</p>
<p>When I was a redneck sharecropper kid in Alabama doing work similar to this, I was “hatin’ life”—pursuing every daydream and fantasy to get me away from all this. Why, here in my mid-seventies, doing similar kinds of manual labor, was I so in love with life?</p>
<p>Some really important lessons are seeping into my soul, as this land makes its imprint on me, and as I c<img decoding="async" id="1314735507039" class="alignright" src="http://media.jbanetwork.com/image/cache/3/5/0/1/3/0_w408_s1.jpg" border="0" />ome to love and be loved by this community. I am pleased to discover that even as an elder there’s still some good, hard work left in me. And I am pleased that many of the gifts and resources I have accumulated are valuable in this community. I love the exchange of energy among us—from the youngest child to the most mature elder.</p>
<p>So I didn’t <i>leave</i> San Francisco. I love that city and all my connections there. Rather, I <i>came</i> to Earthaven, where I have been “found” by <i>place</i> and a <i>community</i> that captivated and took me in. Last summer, on a hot afternoon as I worked out on a terrace, a beautiful brown hawk swooped down and landed not ten feet away, did a little dance and swished away. Looking down in a swale, I spotted a copperhead lazing under a plank. It was a moment when earth, sky, creatures of all species were saying <i>“Welcome Home!”</i></p>
<p><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" id="c_img_341978_1314119300885" class="alignleft" src="http://media.jbanetwork.com/image/cache/3/4/1/9/7/8_w408_s1.jpg" width="150" height="158" border="0" />Norm Self retired from the ordained ministry of the United Methodist Church in 1998. He came to Earthaven from in May 2010 intending to spend the summer, and has been a Provisional Member since May 2011.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://www.earthaven.org/neighborhoods/dancing-shiva/found-by-a-home/">Found by a Home</a> appeared first on <a href="https://www.earthaven.org">Earthaven Ecovillage</a>.</p>
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		<title>News from the Village</title>
		<link>https://www.earthaven.org/people-care/village-life/news-from-the-village/</link>
					<comments>https://www.earthaven.org/people-care/village-life/news-from-the-village/#respond</comments>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Debbie]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sat, 15 Jan 2011 18:26:30 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Village Life]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[baby]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[bizarre bazaar]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[council hall]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Kaitlin]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Max]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[priestess]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Rudy Ballentine]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.earthaven.org/?p=3947</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>&#160; Max Vermeulen McLeod was born November 5th at 11:55 am to Earthaven members Mana and Johnny McLeod. Max is the fourth baby born at Earthaven. &#160; Welcome Max! Earthaven member Lee Warren, was married to Matthew Walker in a private ceremony on November 5th. Many of us celebrated at the White Owl Cafe the [&#8230;]</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://www.earthaven.org/people-care/village-life/news-from-the-village/">News from the Village</a> appeared first on <a href="https://www.earthaven.org">Earthaven Ecovillage</a>.</p>
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>&nbsp;</p>
<table border="4" width="100%" cellpadding="5">
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<td width="35%"><b><img decoding="async" id="1294772067038" src="http://media.jbanetwork.com/image/cache/1/4/7/8/4/4_w395_s1.jpg" border="0" /></b></td>
<td width="65%"><b>Max </b>Vermeulen McLeod was born November 5th at 11:55 am to Earthaven members Mana and Johnny McLeod. Max is the fourth baby born at Earthaven.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><b>Welcome Max!</b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td width="35%"><img decoding="async" id="1294772058252" src="http://media.jbanetwork.com/image/cache/1/4/7/8/2/7_w395_s1.jpg" border="0" /></td>
<td width="65%">Earthaven member <b>Lee Warren</b>, was married to Matthew Walker in a private ceremony on November 5th. Many of us celebrated at the White Owl Cafe the next day.</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td width="35%"><img decoding="async" id="1294772051210" src="http://media.jbanetwork.com/image/cache/1/4/7/8/4/3_w395_s1.jpg" border="0" /></td>
<td width="65%">Congratulations to <b>Rudy Ballentine</b> who celebrated the release of his new book, <a title="Kali Rising" href="http://www.kalirising.org/" target="_blank" rel="noopener"><b>“Kali Rising”</b></a> with an Indian dinner and reading at the Council Hall on November 20<sup>th</sup>.</td>
</tr>
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<td width="35%"><img decoding="async" id="1294773150109" src="http://media.jbanetwork.com/image/cache/1/4/7/8/5/7_w395_s1.jpg" border="0" /></td>
<td width="65%">Residents and neighbors gathered in the Council Hall December 4<sup>th</sup> for the annual <b>Bizarre Bazaar</b>, a time to sell and trade handicrafts as well as share an afternoon of good cheer.</td>
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<td width="35%"><img decoding="async" id="1294773157076" src="http://media.jbanetwork.com/image/cache/1/4/7/8/2/6_w395_s1.jpg" border="0" /></td>
<td width="65%"><b>Kaitlin Lindsay Hetzner</b> was ordained as a Dianic Priestess on December 11 by her mentor and teacher Ruth Barret. In a women-only ceremony she became a Priestess of the Seasons and Cycles of Her Spiral. A celebration for all followed.</td>
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<tr>
<td width="35%"><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" id="1294771914319" src="http://media.jbanetwork.com/image/cache/1/4/7/8/4/2_w395_s1.jpg" width="179" height="124" border="0" /></td>
<td width="65%"><a title="Round Mountain Builders at Earthaven Ecovillage" href="http://www.roundmountainbuilders.com/" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Round Mountain Builders</a>, led by <b>Mihaly Bartalos</b>, completed the renovation of a cabin in Bat Cave. The year-long project used wood from Earthaven clearings and employed several Earthaven members, residents, and neighbors.</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://www.earthaven.org/people-care/village-life/news-from-the-village/">News from the Village</a> appeared first on <a href="https://www.earthaven.org">Earthaven Ecovillage</a>.</p>
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		<title>News Notes &#8211; July 2010</title>
		<link>https://www.earthaven.org/people-care/village-life/news-notes/</link>
					<comments>https://www.earthaven.org/people-care/village-life/news-notes/#respond</comments>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Debbie]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 01 Jul 2010 20:17:12 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Village Life]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[council hall]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[potlatch]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[potluck]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Rudy Ballentine]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[tanya carwyn]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Taylor stove]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Village Arts Building]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.earthaven.org/?p=3986</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>Greetings from Earthaven Ecovillage! We&#8217;re enjoying the hot, hot days of summer, with tomatoes and basil from our gardens and swimming in the creek!           Now you can read about Earthaven daily life in the Earthaven blog, featuring anecdotes and photos from Earthaven residents. Recent articles report on the Salvation Alley [&#8230;]</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://www.earthaven.org/people-care/village-life/news-notes/">News Notes &#8211; July 2010</a> appeared first on <a href="https://www.earthaven.org">Earthaven Ecovillage</a>.</p>
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div>Greetings from Earthaven Ecovillage! We&#8217;re enjoying the hot, hot days of summer, with tomatoes and basil from our gardens and swimming in the creek!</div>
<div></div>
<div>          Now you can read about Earthaven daily life in the <a title="Earthaven blog website" href="http://earthaven.org/blog" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Earthaven blog</a>, featuring anecdotes and photos from Earthaven residents. Recent articles report on the Salvation Alley cleanup, garlic harvesting, and preventing birds from striking windows.</div>
<div></div>
<div><strong><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" class="size-full wp-image-4130 alignleft" src="https://www.earthaven.org/wp-content/uploads/2010/07/tanyalifted.png" alt="" width="254" height="192" />Tanya Carwyn</strong> became a full member on June 13. Since our Spring newsletter, <strong>Kaitlin Hetzner</strong>, <strong>Jonathan Swiftcreek</strong>, <strong>eli Swiftcreek</strong>, and <strong>Karen Taylor</strong> have all become Provisional Members. You can read the second installment of Jonathan&#8217;s journal about being incoming member in this newsletter.</div>
<div>
<p><em>Left: Tanya being lifted to the song: &#8220;Tanya, you are beautiful. Tanya, you are strong. So wonderful to be with, we&#8217;ll help you carry on. Tanya, hear our loving song.&#8221;</em></p>
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<div>In construction news: The <strong>Council Hall addition</strong>, featuring a small kitchen, bathroom, and hookup of the Taylor water stove is complete! Many thanks and kudos to <strong>Todd</strong>, <strong>Darren</strong>, <strong>Brian</strong>, <strong>Greg</strong>, <strong>Paul</strong>, <strong>Geoff</strong>, and all the folks who carried it through! <strong>Rudy Ballentine</strong> and friends started building his home in the <strong>Loving Acres</strong> neighborhood and the Natural Building School apprentices have started the rubble foundation for the circular starwell in the new <strong>Village Arts Building</strong>.</div>
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<div><strong>          Kimchi Rylander</strong> and <strong>Suchi Lathrop</strong> have been participating in <strong>Transition Asheville</strong> &#8211; a group co-creating a sustainable Asheville beyond Peak Oil.</div>
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<div><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" class="size-full wp-image-4131 alignright" src="https://www.earthaven.org/wp-content/uploads/2010/07/kimchipotlatch.png" alt="" width="289" height="225" />           Kimchi organized a Potluck Potlatch about sharing resources on July 7. A potlatch is a way for people to pass on things they no longer need, similar to a white elephant exchange except the gifts are intended to be useful rather than humorous. The Potluck Potlatch was also attended by Earthaven members <strong>Suchi</strong>, <strong>Debbie Lienhart</strong>, <strong>Goodheart Brown</strong>, and <strong>Chiwa</strong>.</div>
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<p><em>Right: Kimchi explaining how the potlatch works.</em></p>
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<div>Culture&#8217;s Edge and Earthaven Ecovillage are hosting a gathering on August 14 &amp; 15 for people who are eager to use their heads, hearts, and hands to build community resiliency. See the articles about the Transition Town movement and about the gathering in this newsletter.</div>
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<div>          In Earthaven business news: <strong>The Southeast Wise Women</strong> are preparing for the sixth <a title="SEWHC website" href="http://www.sewisewomen.com/womens_herbal_conference/index.php" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Southeast Women&#8217;s Herbal Conference</a> at Lake Eden October 1-3, <strong>Steve Torma</strong>renamed his teaching and consulting business <a title="The REAL Center website" href="http://www.therealcenter.org/" target="_blank" rel="noopener">The REAL Center</a>, and <strong>Mihaly Bartalos</strong> and crew completed an extensive <a title="Appalachian-style deck rails" href="http://martha-lee.org/Mihaly/rails_hatalsky.htm" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Appalachian-style railing project</a> with mountain laurel.</div>
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<div>          The Earthaven office is seeking the donation of a used laptop that will be our new &#8220;networking computer hub&#8221; and offer villagers a place to surf the Internet. If you know of anyone who might like to support a growing ecovillage with an extra laptop, please ask them to consider donating it to Earthaven Ecovillage!</div>
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<p>The post <a href="https://www.earthaven.org/people-care/village-life/news-notes/">News Notes &#8211; July 2010</a> appeared first on <a href="https://www.earthaven.org">Earthaven Ecovillage</a>.</p>
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