Monday, January 30, 2012

spreading the seeds of change...

“how wonderful it is that nobody need wait a single moment before starting to improve the world.” ... anne frank

ever heard of freekibble? or freekibblekat? maybe you’ve earned ‘kibble karma’ by answering the trivia questions on these sites…. if not, it’s about time i introduced you to mimi ausland, whose website i came across a few months ago...

at 7 years old, too young to volunteer at her local humane society shelter, she was determined to help animals and started mailing spare change to the shelter... at 9 years old she was finally accepted as a hands on volunteer... 

at 11 years of age she was inspired while playing an internet game called freerice, which donates several grains of rice to feed the poor for every correct answer to a trivia question - she decided something similar could be done with kibble for shelter animals and freekibble & freekibblekat were born...


her volunteer work and freekibble idea led to mimi being named 2008 aspca kid of the year... mimi and her 3-legged friend maty were also the inspiration for mimi's mother, brooke smith, to write a book "mimi and maty to the rescue"...


currently, at 15 years of age, mimi is the humane society of central oregon’s goodwill ambassador... she and maty visit schools and community centres to talk about animal safety (and show off how clever maty is!)...  you can read her blog here...

another inspirational young womon i discovered recently is carylanne joubert - i read about this young animal activist on the howling for justice blog... carylanne is 15 years old, with a love of writing and wolves...  combining both passions, she is now a published author of two books - 'cry of the wolf', & 'mingan'...



"I wrote Cry of the Wolf to teach the truth and dispel the unfounded fears about wolves by telling their story through the eyes of Mingan, a wolf pup who not only learns about wolf life but also witnesses firsthand the effects of Man’s encroachment." 


 



"Mingan (ages 3 and up) teaches lessons about wolves for younger audiences to destroy the image of the Big Bad Wolf."




about the author (from the amazon website)...

"Born in Rhode Island in 1996, Carylanne Joubert has been focused on working to help wildlife since the age of four. Her first influences, Steve Irwin and Jack Hanna, instilled in her a love of animals and a desire to learn more about each one and what can be done to help them in the wild. Her father having served in the US Army, Carylanne has lived in many states before settling in Central Florida. Home-schooled her entire school career, she is now completing her high-school education through Florida Virtual School. Carylanne being a gifted student has excelled in her studies and is 2 grades ahead of her peers. She decided to use her talents in writing to tell the story of the Yellowstone Wolves through the eyes of Mingan, a wolf pup. After completing a project for the science fair about the wolves and their struggle Carylanne became passionate to do more to help. She is dedicated to working to help all animals and intends to continue to write her tales to tell the stories of many of our wildlife who are in endangered or otherwise need protection. She intends to pursue a degree in Ecology and Evolutionary Biology with a minor in Foreign Languages. A portion of all her proceeds will go to organizations such as Wolf Mountain Sanctuary." ... interested in supporting carylanne and the organizations she believes in? you can purchase the books here...


while on the subject of books, i must mention ruby roth... ruby is a young (20s-something?) artist, designer and writer...  vegan since 2003, she was inspired to write a picturebook while teaching art in an after-school program where the kids were interested and inquisitive about her vegan lifestyle...

that's why we don't eat animals "takes a candid, compassionate look at the plight of animals on factory farms, using gorgeous artwork and lively text to introduce vegetarianism and veganism to early readers." you can read more here... (i can't wait to check it out - i requested it for the library some months ago - it's being catalogued and processed now so should hit the shelves very soon!!)


i was pleased to read that she has another picturebook due for publication in april this year...

vegan is love - which "introduces young readers to veganism as lifestyle of compassion and action. Ruby Roth illustrates how our daily choices ripple out locally and globally, conveying what children can do today to protect animals, the environment, and people across the world. From the food we eat to the clothing we buy, from the use of animals in entertainment to the benefits of organic farming, Roth explores the many opportunities we have each day to act with kindness."


while doing some research, i stumbled on an interview with ruby at 'bitch media' and was impressed with her reply to the question "For you, what is the relationship between feminism and animal rights?"

her response: "They go hand-in-hand, both being vehicles of cultural critique and ultimately self-determination. If you call yourself a feminist but you eat animals, there is a good chance you have not yet examined the sexual politics of eating meat, let alone how we allow our well-being, our health, and our physical body to be determined by the interests of certain food and chemical industry leaders. Also, you may not yet truly know how animals suffer impossible atrocities without rights, just as slaves and Holocaust victims did. As liberal as I was, I would have arrived at veganism sooner, by the way, if the American Studies program at UC Santa Cruz (a mecca for vegans and Women’s Studies) had included food as a subject we turned our race-class-gender-sexuality-lenses onto, right alongside history, culture, labor, music, politics, etc. It is incredibly hypocritical to be an activist for freedom or civil rights or equity or equality if you eat animals today."

i'm heartened by such inspirational, intelligent, articulate, determined, committed, young womyn - perhaps there is hope for a compassionate world yet!!!

Monday, January 23, 2012

novel ideas…

books… i've always found them to be a sensory pleasure, a sensual experience - the touch, the smell, the caress of the pages as you lose yourself in another life, another time, another world – but I’d never thought of them as tools for sculpting… after coming across a number of references and various graphics on different sites, i couldn’t resist following the trail to a more comprehensive article on a specific series of sculptures - 10  all up, anonymously left at various libraries and literary venues around edinburgh throughout 2011... here are 4 of those wonderful creations…

the scottish storytelling centre found a dragon nesting in a window with a note "once upon a time there was a book and in the book was a nest and in the nest was an egg and in the egg was a dragon and in the dragon was a story"

a gramophone and a coffin, sculpted from a copy of ian rankin’s "exit music" ... this one found at the national library of scotland with the note "A gift in support of libraries, books, words, ideas….. (& against their exit)"

this one includes a teabag filled with cut out letters, on the tag of which are the words “by leaves we live”. the cup on the top has a swirl of words which read ” nothing beats a nice cup of tea (or coffee) and a really good BOOK”, and on the ‘tray’ next to the cupcake it says “except maybe a cake as well”... left on a signing table at the edinburgh book festival with the note " ‘A gift’ This is for you in support of libraries, books, words, ideas…… & festivals xx

a tree, a ‘poetree’ with a paper egg lined with gold and a scatter of words which, when put together, make “a trace of wings” by edwin morgan... left anonymously at the scottish poetry library... the note for this one read "we know that a library is so much more than a building full of books… a book is so much more than pages full of words.… this is for you in support of libraries, books, words, ideas….. a gesture (poetic maybe?)"

they are amazingly delicate and intricate creations, but ohh the mystery and intrigue of it all... if your curiosity is piqued you can view all 10 and read their stories in this article "mysterious paper sculptures"...


while on the topic of books, i must recommend my last read...

turn of mind by alice laplante - no relation to lynda... the author has written non-fiction before, but this is her first novel, and what a stunner it is...

told from the perspective of jennifer white, a once-brilliant surgeon now suffering from alzheimer's and the prime suspect in a murder mystery... we learn the details of the crime through fragmentary conversations between jennifer and various people — some of them living and some dead...

it was a new style of writing for me and i was totally mesmerised - i couldn't put it down... it'll be a hard act to follow though...


while on the topic of writing...

do you have a story just waiting to be written? not just any story, but one that relates to the human-animal relationship? if so perhaps this is 'right up your alley'...

voiceless will be awarding a prize to recognise the best australian short fiction and non-fiction that "has at its heart the place of animals in the world we have made", and writers of fiction and nonfiction are invited to reflect on the ethical relationship between humans and animals.

"there is a rich world literature which takes animals - their feelings, wishes and desires - seriously." ... j.m. coetzee...

submissions should be between 5,000 and 10,000 words and should focus on animals produced for food or found in the australian landscape.

the winner chosen by the judging panel will receive $15,000, while the public will vote for the people’s choice to receive $5,000. all writers published in the collection will receive $500.

if you think your writing fits the brief, you can read more on the guidelines, and how to enter here... but don't procrastinate, entries close march 16...


while not on the topic of singing or music...

i can't end this post without acknowledging the death of the wonderful etta james, an extraordinarily talented singer... her life story is worth exploring in more detail - but she deserves a post of her own... so for now i'll leave you with some of her music...

  

Monday, January 16, 2012

a quick share...

i came across this youtube video via the youth page of the uk evolve campaigns website (and heartening it is to discover sites where young people are informed, passionate, and sharing their vegan philosophy with others) -  it's a compilation of cartoons by vegan cartoonist dan piraro and i thought i'd share...




and a friend sent me this video... a 'snow-boarding' crow having a ball on a roof slope ...



hmmm, forethought and enjoyment - another sentient creature exhibiting intelligence and emotion...

Monday, January 9, 2012

meet fudge...



fudge is my new feline 'house' guest... she's 18 years old, deaf, and a real sweetie... as you can see she's not averse to walking all over the furniture - her new surroundings haven't fazed her at all...



of course there have been the mandatory hissing and mewling sessions with my boy shadow, but that's all settled down now and they seem to have a healthy disrespect for each other... they can actually walk passed each other without the paws getting raised or 'words' said to each other now... they were pretty good actually, it only took a couple of days for them to 'sort themselves out'... they're still at the giving-each-other-a-wide-berth stage, but they can be in the same room within eye contact without hackles being raised now!

life and living arrangements haven't always gone as planned these last few years for various reasons, but change is again on the horizon...

having been notified of a rent increase 'due to improvements made' to my friend's bed-sit - they were putting the rent up $40 per week after 'repairing' his floor where dry-rot had resulted in a hole that needed fixing immediately - hmmm, definitely maintenance, not improvements, and something that should have been fixed before he even moved in 6 months ago - and huh, the 'repair' entailed a 'bandaid' silicone type fill that certainly won't last long - improvements, yeah, sure - rip off, more like it!!!! now that would have taken his rent up to $320 per week for a 'bed-sit' - a tiny, tiny space - so we sat down and discussed our respective predicaments - personal and financial - and our options, and decided sharing a house would be cheaper for both of us, so rather than pay an exhorbitant rent hike, now was the opportune time for brann and fudge to move into my flat and help pay the rent here, giving us a chance over the next few months to get enough money together for bond and rent on something larger yet cheaper than what we both currently outlay...



we have both found solo living is becoming increasingly expensive these days - and, for me, being a part time worker reliant on the private rental market certainly has its drawbacks - and chances are my rent will increase too at the end of my lease in 6 months... to stay in the area close to my chronically ill mother is important, but living in st kilda and surrounds means high rent, so two incomes means greater choice - and of course, the cost of living just keeps going up and up, from groceries to utilities, with electricity set to rise yet again... 

added to that is the dog-shaped hole in my heart which couldn't be repaired while renting a one-bedroom flat - a terribly depressing prospect - it's been 10 months since my beautiful old girl allie's life journey ended and my need for canine companionship is growing daily - i desperately need a dog in my life!!!! loneliness plays a part too, so a close friend's companionship will be nice as well - especially as we have always shared a similar sense of humour, cynicism and skepticism - and we both work in libraries so both understand where the other is coming from when we need to have a good gripe about 'the workplace'...

it will be a bit of a squeeze in my small flat for 2 adults and 2 cats, but the end result will be worth it... a house - a larger space that will allow us the ability to live a bit more cheaply and to offer a forever home to a rescued dog in the near future...