January 2024

 

Corridor of Wonder

  
Writing Workshops and Retreats

&
Worth Mentioning

Dear friends, 

 

From our home to the valley, it’s about nine miles along the river until we get to a cross road where we finally get cell service. We’ve named this stretch, and any service-less zone like it, a Corridor of Wonder. All one can do when questions arise between passengers is wonder, discuss, and try to figure things out based on what the collective has read, watched, or been told.

 

There is time to ponder, guess and say, I don’t know. The rush to blurt out answers, so inherent to our modern personalities, is a stranger here. In the inexactness of our knowledge, there is acceptance that we don’t have the information right now and we might forget to seek it out later because something else has taken precedence or we’ve simply forgotten. The river teaches us to stay in the flow.

 

At some point, we silently agree to set queries aside for more important things like sighting the herd of elk in a grove of red alders, catching a glimpse of the lone Texas longhorn standing in the meadow, or spotting the pair of eagles who patiently watch for fish while perched on a bough over the rushing river.

 

This time of year, the land is saturated and water is on the move headed out to the bay and then the ocean. Waterfalls, creeks, and rivulets dash to the river in what can feel like a stampede of energy. During the cold snap, many of these waterways froze up into crystal-like ice sculptures!

 

There is also time to imagine all that we can’t see like beaver, nutria, black bear, cougar, and of course, my favorite, Sasquatch.

 

The Corridor of Wonder is a liminal space of awe. In these corridors we strengthen our skills of conversation, listening, observation, and imagination. It never gets old. The space is constantly changing in color, texture, light, and movement. And we are different with each journey.

 

Where are your Corridors of Wonder? If steep mountains, long stretches of desert, or vast expanses of ocean haven’t created one for you then why not create your own? Turn off your phone for the same stretch of travel everyday and be open to what happens. I bet you’ll discover something wonderful and awe inspiring about where you live.

2024 Workshops

 

Literature Course in

Epic Poetry

with

San Diego Writers, Ink

Live Zoom: 1st Thursday of Every Month

January through September

Iliad, Odyssey, and Beowulf

 
Class Feb. 1st at 6PM PST
 

Writing Course: 

Remembering Our Place in the

Sacred Circle of Life 
with OMEC 

2/20/24 to 3/26/24

every Tuesday

6 Live Zoom Classes 

 
Live Zoom Sessions
 

Writing Course: Nature Writing:

The True Muse 

  with

U.C.S.D. Extended Studies

3/25/24 to 5/04/24 

6-Weeks

 Online: Asynchronous Course 

 
Registration Open
 

American Literature:

Stories of Immigration

  with

U.C.S.D. Extended Studies

Summer 2024

6-Weeks

 Online: Asynchronous Course 

 
Learn More

Retreats

 

 Hoh River Valley & Rainforest Retreat:

Immerse in the Healing Power of Nature  

Olympic Peninsula, WA, USA

Dates: June 17-22 or
September 9-14

☀️

 
Discount Available

Nature Inspired Writing Community

 We gather on Zoom two times per month for an 1-hour call. Each gathering has a guiding

topic to explore and write about. Come enjoy a supportive and kind container to write together.

Drop in and see if it's right for you.

February Dates

2/7 and 2/28

from 4 to 5 PM (PST)

More Information

or Request Zoom link by emailing christinamburress@gmail.com

Worth Mentioning

 

  • I can recommend Yale School of the Environment's Forum on Religion and Ecology which was co-created by Mary Evelyn Tucker and John Grim. Read their mission here and explore their events, news, resources, publications and much more. I'm honored to have one of my courses listed under Online classes.

     

  • It is the 50th Anniversary of the Endangered Species Act. The Center for Biological Diversity produced a video on the history of this important Act.

     

  • The Chilling Art of Nicole Dextras who works across diverse mediums, blending textile arts, natural materials, performance, photography, and film, to create ephemeral installations and social interventions. She utilizes plants in summer and ice in winter, and her outdoor installations are often left to decompose or melt as a reminder of our own ephemerality and the indisputable power of nature. Orion Magazine

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