December 2008

Features

Soul in the City
By Summer Bowen
In the so-called “conscious community,” alarm bells are plentiful: BPA-laden baby bottles are poisoning your toddler! Soy foods are slashing your sperm count! Your old yoga mat will leach PVC into the landfill for all eternity! It’s enough to make you want to swap your fair trade coffee for Kahlúa (continue reading...)
Magical Mystery Tour
By Dani Katz
Shamanism, schmamanism. These days, it seems like you can’t throw a rune without it bouncing off the turban-wrapped skull of some bead-draped, hemp-swaddled seeker billing himself a shaman. Indeed, if my life is any evidence, these past few years have witnessed somewhat of an urban shamanic revival, as I’ve worked (continue reading...)
What the Heck is Enlightenment, Anyway?
ConversationsInterview By Jessica Kraft
Andrew Cohen defies any kind of cliché about spiritual teachers. A self-described “vocal critic of the extreme individualism characterizing much of contemporary spirituality,” Cohen’s “Evolutionary Enlightenment” teachings pose that spiritual evolution happens not by transcending but rather by passionately engaging with the modern world. He practices what he preaches as (continue reading...)
2008 Eco Holiday Gift Guide
SPECIAL ADVERTISING SECTION
Ready to start holiday shopping? This year, before heading out to the mall — and the big crowds, check out our 2008 Eco Holiday Gift Guide! (continue reading...)
Small Change Changes the World
On Our Radar
If the turbulent economy has you ready to stuff your mattress with your savings, here’s how to get a better return for your money — while helping to alleviate global poverty to boot. MicroPlace (microplace.com), an eBay-owned business, connects the working poor to would-be lenders, allowing you to invest as (continue reading...)
Saving Salvia
On Our Radar
In a traditional Mazatec vision quest ceremony, before eating the psychoactive herb Salvia Divinorum — Latin for “sage of the seers” — a shaman gives you a series of instructions. First, he explains, the spirit of Salvia Divinorum is a female entity who imparts wisdom and healing visions. You should (continue reading...)
Eco-creative tips for wrapping up gift season
On Our RadarBy Ginny Figlar
’Tis the season for living rooms around the country to be covered in a sea of crumpled paper and tossed-aside bows. Yup, wrapping paper from holiday gifts is largely to blame for a 25 percent spike in waste generation between Thanksgiving and New Year’s Day, according to the EPA. (And (continue reading...)
What Counts?
On Our RadarCompiled by Jenny Rough
80%: Americans who feel the economy is a significant source of stress. 1 out of 3: Americans who are worried about losing their jobs. 53%: Americans who are worried they will have to work longer due to dwindling retirement savings. 60%: People who report feelings of (continue reading...)
Earth Angels
Urban EssentialsBy Andrea Manitsas
Slip your little darling into the Angel Sweater from Oeuf Be Good, and she’ll instantly be cute enough to forgive any devilish behavior. Fashioned from 100 percent Fair Trade Alpaca wool, each purchase comes complete with the warm and fuzzy feeling of knowing you’re supporting and sustaining the livelihood and (continue reading...)
Good Day Sunshine
Healthy LivingBy Kristy Lund
December 21st is Winter Solstice — the first day of winter and the shortest day of the year. Celebrated by cultures across the globe for more than 6,000 years, it signifies the return of light and with it, life. At age 23, having just returned home from a (continue reading...)
Defining yoga, one style at a time
Healthy Living :: YogapediaBy Julia Steinberger
Origins: Reading the news, chatting at the water cooler or even taking a walk downtown can leave many of us feeling angry, shocked and sad about the suffering in the world. If you’re ready to channel that energy into positive action, the most powerful transformation must begin from within. That’s (continue reading...)
Chicken Soup for the Heart
Healthy Living :: Body Talk
Chicken legs — a soup staple in certain cultures — may be packed with proteins that help ease high blood pressure, according to new research from the Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry. Working with rats, scientists found that collagen sourced from chicken legs had effects similar to ACE inhibitors (continue reading...)
At Piccino, Small is Beautiful
Healthy Living :: TastebudsBy Jeanne Storck
When Piccino, a sliver of a café, opened two years ago on a quiet corner in Dogpatch, the sleepy streets of this industrial neighborhood got a much-needed jolt. The Italian espresso machines hummed to life and suddenly local artists and business workers had the perfect pocket-sized place to stop for (continue reading...)
Drawn to Peace
Tune InBy Shell Fischer
Do you remember a time, back in your childhood, when you would plunk down with a large box of crayons and spend the next several hours happily engrossed in a coloring book? Perhaps you remember singing along, blissfully unaware of everything but the new swatches of color coming alive on (continue reading...)
The Present of Presence
Prophet MotiveBy Daniel Pinchbeck
Most people have not yet fully processed the magnitude of the economic crisis that will continue to deepen in the next years. Our lives may depend upon working through the causes and logical consequences of this disaster, which can be blamed on the greed and ineptitude of our ruling elite. (continue reading...)
2012
Art & SoulBy Eric Larson
Just as the early November election result ushered in a long-awaited springtime of the spirit, The Mystery of 2012 landed on my desk, its black dust jacket and heavy lettering reminding me (lest I get too heady with hope) that according to ancient Mayan prophecy, the world is still on (continue reading...)
Reviews
Art & Soul
Karl Rove did not crawl out from under a rock; he crawled out from under (the tutelage of) Lee Atwater. A political operative so unscrupulous his friends refer to him as a “wolf,” “a killer” and… (continue reading...)



Regulars
More Eggplants, Less Facebook
From the Editor
In the city, busy is a religion. We sacrifice mornings at the altar of Starbucks, Crackberry our way through the daily commute, mindlessly digest entire workweeks in a slurry of bite-sized iCal appointments. Conference call at 10, lunch meeting at 1; Rush to yoga; Dinner, dishes; Walk the dog, kiss (continue reading...)
A Shot in the Arm
To the Editor
I had a strong reaction to the opinions you ran on whether to get flu shots (“A Picture of Health,” Nov. ’08). As a person with no health insurance or sick leave, a day (or three) off sick is a day without pay, pure and simple — so I get (continue reading...)
Zen and the Art of Family Maintenance
Life, the Universe and EverythingBy Michael A. Stusser
When things are good, when I’ve had enough sleep, sex and solitude (and not necessarily in that order) I try to be a Zen Parent — calm, tranquil, at peace and prepared to maximize my moments with the little ones. During these enlightened times, I’ll notice the beauty of my (continue reading...)