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DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200326
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200403
DTSTAMP:20260426T104725
CREATED:20200326T223536Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250718T021706Z
UID:640-1585180800-1585871999@openroadpdx.com
SUMMARY:peace\, love & happiness humor issue 3/26 - 4/1
DESCRIPTION:THE OPEN ROAD \npeace\, love & happiness newsletter \nMarch 26\, 2020 \nThe Humor Issue \n  \nNever criticize someone until you have walked a mile in their shoes. \nThat way\, when you criticize them\, you’ll be a mile away\, and you’ll have their shoes. \n  \nWhat do Alexander the Great and Winnie the Pooh have in common? \nSame middle name. \n  \nWhat did the mayonnaise say when the refrigerator door was opened? \nClose the door\, I’m dressing. \n  \nAnd God said to John\, “Come forth and you shall be granted eternal life.” \nBut John came fifth and won a toaster. \n  \nI want to die peacefully in my sleep\, like my grandfather did. \nNot screaming in terror like the passengers in his car. \n  \nTwo cows are grazing in a field. One cow says to the other\, “You ever worry about that mad cow disease?” \nThe other cow says\, “Why would I care? I’m a helicopter.” \n  \nI told my physical therapist that I broke my arm in two places. \nHe told me to stop going to those places. \n  \nI was wondering why the ball was getting bigger. \nThen it hit me. \n  \nTwo windmills are standing in a wind farm. One asks\, “What’s your favorite kind of music?” \nThe other says\, “I’m a big metal fan.” \n  \nIs it ignorance or apathy that’s destroying the world today? \nI don’t know and I don’t really care. \n  \nThey all laughed when I said I wanted to be a comedian. \nWell\, they’re not laughing now! \n—stolen from the Internet by Johnny \n  \nClams never give any money to charity… \nthey’re shellfish. \n  \nMoth goes to a podiatrist. He tells the podiatrist\, “I got depressed after I lost my job. Started drinkin’. My wife left me. My kids hate me. My life feels empty and meaningless…” \nThe podiatrist interrupted him. “I think maybe you want to see a psychiatrist. Why did you come to me?” \n“The light was on.” \n  \nHow many Zen Buddhists does it take to screw in a lightbulb? \nTwo. One to screw it in. One not to screw it in. \n  \nHow many surrealists does it take to screw in a lightbulb? \nBlue giraffe in a red bathtub. \n  \nA favorite from my childhood… \nKnock\, knock. \nWho’s there? \nDwayne. \nDwayne who? \nDwayne the bathtub\, I’m dwowning. \n  \nAnd perhaps the greatest joke of all time… \nGuess what? \nChicken butt. \n—Johnny Stallings \n  \nThree sisters were growing old together\, and one evening the oldest was just stepping into the bath when when she called out\, “Was I just stepping into the bath\, or stepping out of the bath?” The middle sister started up the stairs to help\, but paused halfway and said aloud\, “Was I going up the stairs\, or down the stairs?” The youngest sister\, in the kitchen below\, said to herself\, “I hope I never get so forgetful–knock on wood…Someone’s at the door–I’ll get it!” \n—Kim Stafford \n* \nA priest\, a Rabbi and a minister walk into a bar.  \n“What is this\,” says the bartender\, “some kind of joke?” \n  \nSo…a guy goes to his doctor. After the exam the doc says\, “Well\, I’d like to send you to a specialist\, I think your hearing may be going.”  \n“No\,” the guy says\, “my hearing is fine\, but you know\, Doc\, now that you mention it\, I think my wife may be having trouble with her hearing\, but she won’t have it checked. What should I do?” \n“Well\,” says the Doc\, “why don’t you figure out a way to test her hearing at home?” \nSo the guy goes home that night. He opens the front door and he can see\, through the living room\, his wife at the kitchen sink with her back toward him. \n“Honey\,” he calls out\, “What’s for dinner?” \nNo answer. \nSo he walks into the living room\, and calls again\, “Honey\, what’s for dinner?” \nNo answer. \nSo he walks into the kitchen\, puts his hands on her shoulders and asks into her ear\, “Honey\, what’s for dinner?” \nShe turns her face up to his and says\, “For the third time\, chicken.” \n—Ken Margolis \n* \nQ:   Why couldn’t the teddy bear have any dessert? \nA:   Because he was already stuffed !                  \nlove & giggles\,       \n—“Grandpa Bill” Faricy \n* \nWhy didn’t the invisible man take the job?  \nBecause he just couldn’t see himself doing it. \n  \nWhy didn’t the chicken cross the road?   \nBecause he was sick and tired of always having his motivations questioned. \n  \nWhy did the chicken the road?   \nBecause his father was a brutal alcoholic.   \n  \nWhat did the buffalo say to his son when he left home?   \nBison \n  \nWhat’s black and white and green…black and white and green….black and white and green?  \n Two zebras fighting over a pickle.  \n—Will Hornyak \n* \nThanks to Deborah Buchanan for recommending Charlie Chaplin. Here’s a link to The Rink: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8eelQxCpLa4 \nMy dad once said to me: “John\, if anyone says you’re a wit\, they’d be half right.” \nSo much for now. \n  \nMay all people be happy! \n  \n–Johnny
URL:https://openroadpdx.com/event/peace-love-happiness-humor-issue-3-26-4-1/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200326
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200327
DTSTAMP:20260426T104725
CREATED:20200324T190352Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250718T022423Z
UID:623-1585180800-1585267199@openroadpdx.com
SUMMARY:peace\, love & happiness newsletter  3/19 - 3/25
DESCRIPTION:THE OPEN ROAD \npeace\, love & happiness \nSpring Equinox \nMarch 19\, 2020 \nDear Friends of The Open Road \nToday I’m inaugurating a weekly peace\, love & happiness newsletter. There will be an online version and a print version for people who are living in prison. It’s an experiment. I predict that it will be somewhat unpredictable. Hopefully\, it will nurture culture and community at a time when gathering together is not encouraged. \nLast night Prabu let me know about the Metropolitan Opera’s new “Nightly Opera Stream” program. You can learn more about it at the Open Road website (openroadpdx.org)\, or directly from the Met’s website at metopera.org. It’s just the kind of thing we need right now. And here’s a link to an article on “All the virtual concerts\, plays\, museums and other culture you can enjoy from home”: \n https://www.cnn.com/style/article/what-to-do-at-home-streaming-art-museums-concerts-coronavirus-trnd/index.html. \nLately\, I’ve been reading things by Alan Watts\, and listening to audio recordings that were made of his talks. Many of his talks have been transcribed\, edited and published since his death in 1973. When I was young\, I didn’t take him seriously—maybe because he wasn’t from India or Japan. I was a snob! These days I really enjoy his wit\, knowledge and insight into questions of philosophy\, religion and psychology\, East and West. Here’s a quote: \nWhat I am really saying is that you \ndon’t need to do anything\, \nbecause if you see yourself in the correct way\, \nyou are all as much extraordinary phenomena \nof nature as trees\, clouds\, the patterns \nin running water\, the flickering of fire\, \nthe arrangement of the stars\, \nand the form of a galaxy. You are all just like that\, \nand there is nothing wrong with you at all. \n(opening quote by Alan Watts\, from his book Still the Mind: An Introduction to Meditation\, edited by Mark Watts and Marc Allen) \nHere are a couple good prayers: \nSerenity Prayer \nGrant me the serenity  \nto accept the things I cannot change\, \nthe courage to change the things I can\, \nand the wisdom to know the difference. \nMetta Prayer \nMay all beings be happy. \nMay we be peaceful and at ease. \nMay we be well in body and mind. \nMay we live in love. \nWell that’s it for me for this issue. \nNow I’d like to tag Kim and Katie and Deborah. In future issues I want to include things from you\, the readers\, so send me your poems and ruminations\, et cetera. \n—Johnny Stallings \n* \nDear Johnny\, \nYour mention of the spring equinox reminded me of this poem of spring rain\, a long time favorite of mine\, a lover of rain and mystery and evocative words. The poem is by Yang Wan-li from the Sung Dynasty in China (his lifespan: 1127 to 1279 AD).  \nNight Rain at Kuang-k’ou \nThe river is clear and calm; \na fast rain falls in the gorge. \nAt midnight the cold\, splashing sound begins\, \nlike thousands of pearls spilling into a glass plate\, \neach drop penetrating the bone. \nIn my dream I scratch my head and get up to listen. \nI listen and listen\, until the dawn. \nAll my life I have heard rain\, \nand I am an old man; \nbut now for the first time I understand \nthe sound of spring rain  \non the river at night. \n Yang Wan-li\, from Heaven My Blanket\, Earth My Pillow \n—Deborah Buchanan \n* \nEAGLE POEM \nTo pray you open your whole self \nTo sky\, to earth\, to sun\, to moon \nTo one whole voice that is you. \nAnd know there is more \nThat you can’t see\, can’t hear; \nCan’t know except in moments \nSteadily growing\, and in languages \nThat aren’t always sound but other \nCircles of motion. \nLike eagle that Sunday morning \nOver  Salt River. Circled in blue sky \nIn wind\, swept our hearts clean \nWith sacred wings. \nWe see you\, see ourselves and know \nThat we must take the utmost care \nAnd kindness in all things. \nBreathe in\, knowing we are made of \nAll this\, and breathe\, knowing \nWe are truly blessed because we \nWere born\, and die soon within a \nTrue circle of motion\, \nLike eagle rounding out the morning \nInside us. \nWe pray that it will be done \nIn beauty. \nIn beauty. \nJoy Harjo\, our National Poet Laureate  \n“Eagle Poem” from In Mad Love and War.  \nSpring Equinox is one my favorite and most cosmic times of year to be joyful about just being alive on Planet Earth. As pink Azaleas\, yellow Forsythia\, and luscious \nMagnolia blossoms fill the air\, may we find kindness and equanimity this Spring day.  \nLove and peace\, dear friends. \n—Katie Radditz \nWe’ll conclude with a couple poems that Kim Stafford\, Oregon’s Poet Laureate\, sent for us to include in our first peace\, love & happiness newsletter: \n* \nFoolish Young Flowering Tree  \nIt’s winter—dark days\, still too cold \nfor bird or blossom—dull sky\,  \nand all our hearts in shadow.  \nBut there—at a ragged cleft \ndarkened by cedars of gloom \na flash of light cries out—  \nthe incandescent wisp of wild \nplum—far too early to be \nso happy\, so naive\, a child  \nrefusing to obey the rules of grief.   \n        \nTrees in the Wind  \nEven the sturdy spruce is teaching: \nyou are rooted and strong\, yet you give. \nSome call it dancing\, this strength.  \nAnd the wind has a far place to be\, is \npure volition\, whimsical\, yet it hugs \nthe planet in a life-sustaining grip.  \nSome call it happiness\, this shimmer \nof feeling that runs over bone\, along tendon— \nin the sense of hap: what happens to us.  \nSo we are all chameleon\, capricious \noutside\, but sturdy inside\, where\, \nhelplessly\, we are who we are.  \nWhen I was young\, a Danish girl asked me \nwhat the old song means: There are changes \nin the ocean\, and changes in the sea\,  \nthere are changes in my true love\, \nbut no changes in me. \n—Kim Stafford   
URL:https://openroadpdx.com/event/peace-love-happiness-newsletter/
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://openroadpdx.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/IMG_4429-scaled.jpeg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20200315T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20200315T190000
DTSTAMP:20260426T104725
CREATED:20200219T014408Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200315T205606Z
UID:495-1584291600-1584298800@openroadpdx.com
SUMMARY:Monica Faricy and Friends: EVENT CANCELED
DESCRIPTION:Canceled due to public health concerns. \nHopefully\, this event will be re-scheduled. \nFeaturing: \nGLITTERFOX \nMORGAN FARICY \nC.J. JOHNSON \n“FOOD FOR THOUGHT” FUNDRAISER \nSnacks for 8th grade Science class Lane Middle School \nDONATION: $5-$10
URL:https://openroadpdx.com/event/monica-faricy-and-friends/
LOCATION:Mississippi Pizza\, 3552 N. Mississippi Ave.\, Portland\, OR
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://openroadpdx.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/02/unnamed-14.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20200311T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20200311T200000
DTSTAMP:20260426T104725
CREATED:20200226T220703Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200226T220703Z
UID:543-1583953200-1583956800@openroadpdx.com
SUMMARY:Reading by Oregon Poet Laureate Kim Stafford at Milwaukie Public Library
DESCRIPTION:This is a featured event of the Milwaukie Poetry Series.
URL:https://openroadpdx.com/event/reading-by-oregon-poet-laureate-kim-stafford-at-milwaukie-public-library/
LOCATION:Milwaukie Public Library\, 10660 SE 21st Ave.\, Milwaukie\, Oregon
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://openroadpdx.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/10/unnamed-4.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20200308T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20200308T170000
DTSTAMP:20260426T104725
CREATED:20191024T032709Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200225T025043Z
UID:356-1583679600-1583686800@openroadpdx.com
SUMMARY:What's Going On Here? Inquiring Into Our Human Life on Earth
DESCRIPTION:Prabu and Johnny–sometimes joined by Charles Erickson–have been meeting on Sundays at Taborspace to talk about the kinds of things that coffee shop philosophers talk about. We recently studied the PBS series The Power of Myth\, in which Joseph Campbell was interviewed in 1988 by Bill Moyers. \nWhat’s Going On Here? went on vacation to Mexico for most of December and January. We had a great workshop with Kim Stafford called “Writing and Talking the Art of Living” in Guanajuato\, from December 28th through January 1st. \nWe have resumed our weekly dialogue-and-study group in the Library at Taborspace. We meet on Sundays from 3 to 5 pm. \nCurrently we are using Shakespeare’s work as a jumping-off-point for discussions that range wide and dive deep. Having spent some time with Romeo & Juliet\, we are moving on to Measure for Measure\, starting on February 16th. You are invited! You can also use the contact form on this website if you want to know more\, or have any questions. \nJohnny  2/11/2020
URL:https://openroadpdx.com/event/whats-going-on-here-an-inquiry-into-our-human-life-on-earth/
LOCATION:Library at Taborspace\, 5441 SE Belmont\, Portland\, Oregon
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20200305T193000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20200305T210000
DTSTAMP:20260426T104725
CREATED:20200129T213121Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200304T173956Z
UID:455-1583436600-1583442000@openroadpdx.com
SUMMARY:Literary Arts Presents EVERYBODY READS - Tommy Orange\, author of There There
DESCRIPTION:There There by Tommy Orange is Multnomah County Library’s current selection for the Everybody Reads program. You can get a free copy of the book from your local branch of the library. Literary Arts is bringing Tommy Orange to Portland for a reading at the Schnitzer Concert Hall on March 5th.
URL:https://openroadpdx.com/event/literary-arts-presents-everybody-reads-tommy-orange-author-of-there-there/
LOCATION:Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall\, 1037 SW Broadway\, Portland\, Oregon
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20200229T103000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20200229T173000
DTSTAMP:20260426T104725
CREATED:20200124T163809Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200211T204002Z
UID:446-1582972200-1582997400@openroadpdx.com
SUMMARY:Winter Group Exhibition at Froelick Gallery Runs Through February 29th
DESCRIPTION:Jake Scharbach is one of the featured artists at Froelick’s Winter Group Exhibition. Other artists include Ronna Neuenschwander\, Barry Pelzner and Rick Bartow. \nThe gallery is open from 10:30-5:30\, Tuesday through Saturday. The show closes on February 29th. Make plans to see it before then!
URL:https://openroadpdx.com/event/winter-group-exhibition-at-froelick-gallery/
LOCATION:Froelick Gallery\, 714 NW Davis\, Portland\, OR
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20200229T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20200229T110000
DTSTAMP:20260426T104725
CREATED:20200226T203548Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200226T203548Z
UID:526-1582970400-1582974000@openroadpdx.com
SUMMARY:National Memorial for Peace and Justice
DESCRIPTION:The National Memorial for Peace and Justice  is a powerful art project based in Alabama that includes histories of lynching across the United States  –  please pass this news on to your friends. Next week OPB will present a story about the Memorial and what will follow next in the installation of the Art Project.\n\nOn Saturday\, Feb. 29\, at 10 a.m.\, a ceremony will be held in Coos Bay to commemorate the one documented lynching of a black man in Oregon.  Fellow friends and artists Gina Wilson and Susan Webb will attend the collection of soil from the killing site that will be sent to the National Museum for Peace and Justice Center  in Alabama.  We won’t all be able to travel to Coos Bay\, but we could take time out to acknowlege the harm done and the healing that could happen for all those whose land and lives were taken. You might want to stop -get connected\, touch the Earth –  Saturday in honoring this history and the power of ART to bring awareness\, to open hearts\, and to transform.\n\nNext week OPB will present a story about the Memorial and what will follow next in the installation of the Art Project.\n\nWith compassion for all beings\, shining the light\,\n Katie Radditz\,  of The Open Road\n\n\nhttps://www.oregonlive.com/history/2020/02/a-1902-lynching-in-coos-bay-is-being-commemorated-to-highlight-black-suffering-spark-racial-reconciliation.html\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nA notorious 1902 lynching in Coos Bay is being memorialized to highlight racial injustice\, spark reconciliation – oregonlive.com\nThe violence that’s now being memorialized erupted 118 years ago after a miner’s wife\, a white woman\, accused a black man of raping her near South Marshfield’s Seventh Street Bridge.\nwww.oregonlive.com\n\n\n\n\n\nhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_National_Memorial_for_Peace_and_Justice \n  \nhttps://www.nytimes.com/2018/04/25/us/lynching-memorial-alabama.html \nhttps://museumandmemorial.eji.org \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nHome | Museum and Memorial\nLocated on the site of a former warehouse where black people were enslaved in Montgomery\, Alabama\, this narrative museum uses interactive media\, sculpture\, videography and exhibits to immerse visitors in the sights and sounds of the domestic slave trade\, racial terrorism\, the Jim Crow South\, and the world’s largest prison system.\nmuseumandmemorial.eji.org
URL:https://openroadpdx.com/event/national-memorial-for-peace-and-justice/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20200215T193000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20200215T210000
DTSTAMP:20260426T104725
CREATED:20200129T233545Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200129T234720Z
UID:465-1581795000-1581800400@openroadpdx.com
SUMMARY:Concert Mosaic
DESCRIPTION:New music by Northwest Women Composers Elizabeth Blachly-Dyson\, Lisa Ann Marsh\, Lisa Neher\, Stacey Philipps\, Christina Rusnak\, Dawn Sonntag and Linda Woody. Performed by Delgani String Quartet. \nFeaturing poetry by Deborah Buchanan. \nArtwork by Ellen Blazich\, Karen Drain\, Cindy Geffel\, Paulette Insall\, Susan Johnson\, Ildiko Kalapacs and Teresa Sala. \nTickets from Brown Paper Tickets: https://concertmosaic.brownpapertickets.com
URL:https://openroadpdx.com/event/concert-mosaic/
LOCATION:Lincoln Recital Hall 75\, 1620 SW Park Ave.\, Portland\, Oregon
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20191228
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200102
DTSTAMP:20260426T104725
CREATED:20191002T001330Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191029T180217Z
UID:273-1577491200-1577923199@openroadpdx.com
SUMMARY:Writing & Talking the Art of Living
DESCRIPTION:A retreat with Kim Stafford and Johnny Stallings in Guanajuato\, Mexico. \nA gathering to experience how the words we speak and hear\, and the words we write and read take us deeper. \nTo learn more\, or to register for this adventure\, contact Johnny. \n 
URL:https://openroadpdx.com/event/writing-talking-the-art-of-living/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20191101T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20191101T190000
DTSTAMP:20260426T104725
CREATED:20191025T042508Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191030T214436Z
UID:365-1572631200-1572634800@openroadpdx.com
SUMMARY:Día de Muertos
DESCRIPTION:Kim Stafford and Efraim Diaz-Horna will read poems in English & Spanish\, along with music\, food and Aztec dancing.
URL:https://openroadpdx.com/event/dia-de-los-muertos/
LOCATION:Portland Mercado\, 7238 SE Foster\, Portland\, Oregon
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://openroadpdx.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/10/IMG_1013.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20191008T190000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20191008T190000
DTSTAMP:20260426T104725
CREATED:20190930T223317Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191003T065511Z
UID:217-1570561200-1570561200@openroadpdx.com
SUMMARY:Song of Myself
DESCRIPTION:For the 200th anniversary of Walt Whitman’s birth\, Johnny Stallings will perform Song of Myself at Smith Hall\, Lewis & Clark College. The performance will be followed by a dialogue with Kim Stafford\, Rachel Cole & Johnny.
URL:https://openroadpdx.com/event/song-of-myself/
LOCATION:Smith Hall\, Lewis & Clark College
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://openroadpdx.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/09/IMG_0031-2-2.jpg
END:VEVENT
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