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How to Avoid Job-Search Scams

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With so many people on the job hunt in the current recession, there are unfortunately others who want to take advantage of the situation. For example, the FDIC has issued a warning about a rise in scams involving unauthorized money transfers from hacked online bank accounts to what it calls "money mules," which are people hired through work-at-home scams to help cyber criminals overseas launder money. But it's not just people working at home--scams are rampant everywhere--and they are targeting those looking for jobs. Avoid getting tangled up in job-search scams.…keep reading

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[Poetry Chaikhana] Ivan M. Granger - City Fox

Here's your Daily Poem from the Poetry Chaikhana --

 

City Fox

By Ivan M. Granger
(1969 - )

 

          true native
his land has grown
strange about him

          lean with life
on silent steps
through twilight
he glides

          glanced
by chance
or by patience
perhaps

he stops
in the alley
way

waiting
for you
          to pass

 


/ Photo by US Fish and Wildlife Service /

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Thought for the Day:

Every empty cup is filled.

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Here's your Daily Music selection --


Deva Premal

Mantras for Precarious Times

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Hi Omss -

It's a rainy day here in Colorado, green spring leaves darken beneath gray clouds. A time for quiet, for inturning, and for shadowy memories.

When I was a teenager, something about the world around me began to feel alien, unnatural, even threatening. And these feelings mixed with the normal teenage angst to create an explosive and desperate spiritual instinct. I came to the grim conclusion that the world has as its primary purpose making us unknown to ourselves, that it steals something fundamental from us in order to create conformity and a shared, but bland reality. Everything began to feel false, artificial; I wanted to know what was true and real.

I became reclusive. I was determined to not be hemmed in by the common assumptions of how the world works, what is real, and what is spirit. I turned inward. I sought solitary places. I sought nature. I sought quiet.

While this period forged my spiritual will, it was also a difficult time. I was depressed, isolated, and lost. But, amidst that struggle, hard, hidden parts of myself began to open. As I learned to trust my own spiritual unfolding, I became less severe in my judgment of the world around me. I slowly lost the need to hold myself in stern separation. I began to recognize myself in others. I discovered in myself a growing compassion, not only for people, but for the world. I came down from the mountain. Ever since, I've been learning what it means to really inhabit the world, and share it, and hopefully nudge the boundaries of those common assumptions.

These ruminations reminded me of this poem...


I view the fox in this poem is the Real Self, our inherent, free, divine nature.

The "strange" land that has grown about him, the city of the title, is the construction of thoughts, projections, concepts, and artificial divisions imagined by the busy mind. It is the human world of convention and consensus.

Yet, even in this unwelcoming environment, the fox, the Self, remains. He is the "true native," present before the mind's constructions. He belongs right where he is. He knows all that has grown about him is transitory, that it cannot endure.

In this city, genuine sustenance is often limited, so the fox is lean. From the viewpoint of the city dweller, the restless mind, the Self seems to hardly have any substance at all. Yet its very leanness is the proof of its authenticity, its uncompromised, untamed life. Through its leanness, life radiates fiercely!

The Self is silent, and known in silence. Without a sound it moves through the artificial world, true to its essential nature.

It is active in the realm of twilight, the stalking ground between the conscious world of daylight and the unconscious world of nighttime. If you wish to catch sight of this one, you must keep watch in twilight, at the meeting point between the two worlds.

If by chance, or through determined, patient spiritual practice, we catch a glimpse of the Self, the hidden fox stops in plain sight, revealing himself in his full, living, wild glory. Actually, it is not so much the Self that stops; it is we ourselves who stop, the ego, the false self. The sight of such essential life, the realization that it has been secretly sharing the same world with us all along, brings us to a complete halt.

The fox is spied in an alleyway. This alley is the path ignored in the world of the city; it is there, but forgotten, overgrown, avoided, and this is where the fox dwells and hunts. We have finally learned to look into the hidden places we'd trained ourselves not to see.

Once seen, the Self waits. It waits for us to "pass," to drop the ego sense of self as no longer useful. It waits for us to recognize that we are not ourselves at all but That. We find we are the fox, the real Self, and none other.

Now that's an encounter worth some strange turns down unknown alleyways...


Have a truly beautiful day today!

Ivan

 

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Ivan M. Granger's original poetry, stories and commentaries are Copyright © 2002 - 2011 by Ivan M. Granger.
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How to Teach Young Children to Practice Good Oral Hygiene

eHow of the Day

Teaching children proper dental hygiene is an important part of their development into healthy adults. Brushing, flossing and rinsing help prevent dental cavities and disease as well as tooth loss. Parents should teach good dental health by both demonstration and example; the family that brushes together smiles together.…keep reading

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Poets.org: New Poets Forum Video, Audio Discussions, Whitman Award Winner & More

Academy of American Poets

May 2011

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Your financial support allows the Academy of American Poets to deliver the high-quality programs—such as National Poetry Month, the Poetry Audio Archive, and the award-winning website, Poets.org—that millions of poets, students, teachers, librarians, and poetry lovers of all ages from across the country have come to depend upon each year.



New on Poets.org

New Poets Forum Video: Sincerely Ironic Panel
Backchat: Audio Discussions with Marie Howe & Dorianne Laux
First Books: Elana Bell Receives the Walt Whitman Award
The Self in Poetry: New Rachel Zucker Audio Feature
Behind the Mask: Explaining Thomas Hardy


New Poets Forum Video: Sincerely Ironic Panel

"One thing we're always doing is grappling with the problem of language's ability to represent experience, language's ability to represent the self," says Mark Wunderlich on a panel with fellow poets Jericho Brown, Tina Chang, Olena Kalytiak Davis, and Meghan O'Rourke. View this clip from the 2010 Poets Forum, presented by the Academy of American Poets—featuring a lively discussion about the traditions of irony and sincerity in American poetry.

The 2011 Poets Forum will be held October 20-22 in New York City. Participants include the Academy's Chancellors, Gabrielle Calvocoressi, Matthew Dickman, and others.

On the web at: www.poets.org/poetsforum


Backchat: Audio Discussions with Marie Howe & Dorianne Laux

Recorded behind the scenes at the Aldeburgh Poetry Festival in Suffolk, England, this interview with Marie Howe explores her relationship to joy—and loss—in her poetry. Then listen to Dorianne Laux give a close reading of Ruth Stone's poem, "Curtains," by which "you can tell, just from this one poem, how great a poet she must be."

On the web at: www.poets.org/mhowe & www.poets.org/dlaux


First Books: Elana Bell Receives the Walt Whitman Award

The Academy of American Poets is pleased to announce that Elana Bell has been selected as the recipient of the 2011 Walt Whitman Award for her book-length collection of poems, Eyes, Stones, chosen by poet Fanny Howe from more than 1,000 entries. The book will be published in the spring of 2011 by Louisiana State University Press. Look for Curses and Wishes, the newly published poetry collection by Carl Adamschick, recipient of the 2010 Walt Whitman Award, now in stores.

On the web at: www.poets.org/ebell


The Self in Poetry: New Rachel Zucker Audio Feature

"The poem is all self. All. And the poem is made necessary when the self suddenly becomes visible and unavoidable." Rachel Zucker discusses objectivity, authority, and whether the self can ever be separated from the poem.

On the web at: www.poets.org/zucker


Behind the Mask: Explaining Thomas Hardy

"It is that under which best lives corrode." Andrew Norman considers the connections between Thomas Hardy's poetry and events in his personal life—including his first wife's mental illness—as evidenced in the poet's Moments of Vision and other works.

On the web at: www.poets.org/thard


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