{"id":620,"date":"2018-07-11T16:24:51","date_gmt":"2018-07-11T23:24:51","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.aligncenter.org\/?p=620"},"modified":"2019-12-26T21:58:59","modified_gmt":"2019-12-27T04:58:59","slug":"newsletter-32","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.aligncenter.org\/newsletter-32\/","title":{"rendered":"Align Center Newsletter #32"},"content":{"rendered":"\n\"align<\/img>Gilbert Island, Broken Islands, Canada – photo by the author<\/span>\n

Align Center is back after a little holiday break kayak camping on the west coast. In this issue we talk organizations combating illegal fishing, the plastic straw debate, a dying language in Peru, and a love letter to Mexico from a late, great personality. Listen in to a new investigative podcast on a new age spiritual leader, and read what a media professor learned after giving a speech to the influential and super-wealthy. Then we have a new kind of oats, five things I’m digging this week, and thoughts on comparisons.<\/p>\n

\u25e6 selected words<\/h1>\n

Patrolling The Dark Seas<\/a><\/h2>\n

In the vast waters outside national jurisdictions, a “dark fleet” of vessels switch off their tracking systems to avoid detection to fish illegally \u2014 500 such vessels from Japan alone. In partnership with the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), the non-profit Global Fishing Watch has collected low light imaging data to launch a real-time map to stamp out illegal fishing.
The Guardian (3min read)<\/a><\/em><\/p>\n

Plastic Straws Aren’t the Problem<\/a><\/h2>\n

You are! Just kidding, though you’re not innocent. Though the recent movement is important for awareness, Australian scientists have estimated that all the plastic straws in the ocean account for just .03% of the 8 million metric tons of plastics entering oceans in a year. With all the interest in the Great Pacific Garbage Patch, one wouldn’t know that 46% of all the plastics in the patch are from a single product: fishing nets. And this is where change starts \u2014 with the you, the consumer.
Bloomberg (3min read)<\/a><\/em><\/p>\n

An Endangered Language in Peru, Broadcasting to the World Cup<\/a><\/h2>\n

In the nation’s first World Cup appearance since 1982, Peru went on to win their first match in forty years of the competition. And in all three games, Luis Soto broadcast the play-by-play in his native language, Quechua. An oral tradition written in Spanish transliteration that’s tied to the land, water, flowers and fauna, Quechua words can differ among regions. Soto’s first challenge was finding the term for “soccer ball”, settling on “qara q’ompo”, meaning leather ball. And when the ball is kicked high into the stands, it’s said the ball is in “hanaq pacha”, or a world above. And when the team plays well, Soto conjures images of collective work like putting a roof on a neighbor’s house.
The New York Times (6min read)<\/a><\/em><\/p>\n

Psychedelics Are Going Mainstream, Because the Mainstream Needs Them<\/a><\/h2>\n

We in the West are an increasingly spiritually impoverished society, suffering from isolation and yearning for community. Though conditions have never been better, as is the message in Hans Rosling’s book, Factfulness, we are more anxious, depressed, lonely and addicted than ever. This could be why we are at the cusp of a psychedelic renaissance not seen since the fifties, where social stigmas are changing and scientific research into alternative therapies is intensifying.
Vice.com (8min read)<\/a><\/em><\/p>\n

Anthony Bourdain on Mexico<\/a><\/h2>\n

A man who inspired us, educated so many, and did it all with a flare and honesty rare in celebrity personalities has always fought for the underappreciated working class. This was his love letter to Mexico and an indictment on the American treatment of Mexicans and their culture. From a late, great writer who will be sorely missed.
Anthony Bourdain on Tumblr (5min read)<\/a><\/em><\/p>\n

\u25e6 listen in<\/h1>\n

The Gateway with Teal Swan, Spiritual Healer or Suicide Catalyst<\/a><\/h2>\n

Surrounded by mountains in Costa Rica’s Central Valley lies the Philia Center, home of controversial spiritual leader Teal Swan. Her traumatic story starts when she was just five, abused and forced to participate in cult rituals for 13 years. Now Swan runs a thriving business targeting suicidal people through social media, recruiting some into taking and selling a course called the “Certified Practitioner of the Completion Process (CPCP) Training” for $2600US.
The woo gets turned on high when Swan claims she has access to the Akashic Records, meaning she can download all information, events and emotions to have ever happened, past, present or future. Her followers believe in blind faith, while others accuse her of starting a cult and practicing dangerous therapies. Gizmodo’s first investigative podcast, in the same vain as Serial.
Gizmodo’s The Gateway (6 part podcast ~40min each)<\/a> also on iTunes<\/a> and Spotify<\/a><\/em><\/p>\n

\u25e6 eat well<\/h1>\n

Pulled Oats, Finland’s Hottest Meat Substitute<\/a><\/h2>\n

I was in Holland last month visiting a good friend, a holistic nutritionist, who’d received a food package from a friend. She quickly whipped up a nourishing bowl of vegan goodies, with the star being this meat-substitute called pulled oats, with a chewy texture reminiscent of soy curls (I’m thinking of you, Portland). Get ready for the oat invasion from the Nordics.
Saveur<\/a><\/em><\/p>\n

\u25e6 read slow<\/h1>\n

Survival of the Richest<\/a><\/h2>\n

Media and cultural theorist Douglas Rushkoff coined the terms viral media, digital native and social currency, so he knows a thing or two about technology. A recent paid talk to five hedge fund managers gave him a realization that these super-wealthy men did not think they could affect the future, they were only interested in how they could use technology to make money and escape from the impending doom of “The Event”. A fascinating, well-written read from the current Professor at Queens College in New York.
Douglas Rushkoff of Team Human on Medium (10min read)<\/a><\/em><\/p>\n

\u25e6 current read<\/h1>\n

The Miracle Morning for Entrepreneurs: Elevate Your SELF to Elevate Your BUSINESS<\/a><\/h2>\n

There’s something about books with bold flashy lettering and self-help lingo that keeps me far away. But once in a while there is gold in these books, even ones that create their own acronyms. With the original “Miracle Morning: The Not-So-Obvious Secret Guaranteed to Transform Your Life… (Before 8AM)”, Hal Elrod has distilled the best practices from many self-improvement sources into a daily morning ritual. I was looking for structure and more momentum for my day, and I’ve found it with this easily digestible book.
The Miracle Morning for Entrepreneurs: Elevate Your SELF to Elevate Your BUSINESS by Hal Elrod (242p book)<\/a><\/em><\/p>\n

\u25e6 dig this<\/h1>\n

What I’m digging lately:<\/p>\n