-
By AnonymTerry Tempest Williams
This is my living faith, an active faith, a faith of verbs: to question, explore, experiment, experience, walk, run, dance, play, eat, love, learn, dare, taste, touch, smell, listen, speak, write, read, draw, provoke, emote, scream, sin, repent, cry, kneel, pray, bow, rise, stand, look, laugh, cajole, create, confront, confound, walk back, walk forward, circle, hide, and seek.
00 -
By AnonymTerry Tempest Williams
This is the sorcery of literature. We are healed by our stories.
00 -
By AnonymTerry Tempest Williams
Thomas Berry calls the Ecozoic Era, a time when we recognize the imperative of caring for the planet as a means of compassionate survival. We do not know what the outcome is going to be, but we have an opportunity to make these kinds of creative and imaginative leaps of thought and actions both locally and globally. This is completely antithetical to the direction George W. Bush is leading this nation. I do trust that the open space of democracy is ultimately the open space of our hearts and that we can follow our own leadership that carries a long-term view way beyond "four more years.
00 -
By AnonymTerry Tempest Williams
To be whole. To be complete. Wildness reminds us what it means to be human, what we are connected to rather than what we are separate from.
00 -
By AnonymTerry Tempest Williams
Today, I feel stronger, learning to live within the natural cycles of a day and to not expect too much of myself. As women, we hold the moon in our bellies. It is too much to ask to operate on full-moon energy three hundred and sixty-five days a year. I am in a crescent phase.
00 -
By AnonymTerry Tempest Williams
To engage in civil disobedience is to feel the abundance of courage, the gratitude for a democracy that still invites us to speak from our hearts, to act from our conscience and have faith in the consequences of moral action. Abundance is a form of consciousness.
00 -
By AnonymTerry Tempest Williams
To hold silence and to be silenced are two very different experiences. And so another theme emerges, that of light and shadow. When we share our voice, who benefits? When we withhold, who benefits? And what are the consequences and costs of both?
00 -
By AnonymTerry Tempest Williams
To me, we are in the midst of such broad-scale destruction, both psychically and physically, that the only thing that can threaten the grip, loosen the hold, of economism, I believe, is a discussion of the sacred born out of our regard and compassion and intelligence for the earth and the creatures on the earth.
00 -
By AnonymTerry Tempest Williams
To me, writing is about how we see. The writers I want to read teach me how to see-see the world differently. In my writing there is no separation between how I observe the world and how I write the world. We write through our eyes. We write through our body. We write out of what we know.
00 -
By AnonymTerry Tempest Williams
To slow down is to be taken into the soul of things.
00 -
By AnonymTerry Tempest Williams
To withhold words is power. But to share our words with others, openly and honestly, is also power.
00 -
By AnonymTerry Tempest Williams
To write requires an ego, a belief that what you say matters. Writing also requires an aching curiosity leading you to discover, uncover, what is gnawing at your bones.
00 -
By AnonymTerry Tempest Williams
Watching the spontaneous acts of kindness, compassion, and generosity, courage, and bravery in the aftermath of the Boston marathon bombings was so deeply moving. It is in our nature to want to help, to serve, to be part of something larger than ourselves. We have a desire to connect with others. We want to make a difference in the world. I would call this a spiritual longing to be whole, interrelated, interconnected.
00 -
By AnonymTerry Tempest Williams
Water is nothing if not ingemination, an encore to the tenacity of life.
00 -
By AnonymTerry Tempest Williams
We are aching to come together and I think it has little to do with liberal or conservative discourse. I think it has to do with increasing disconnection with what is real and soul-serving.
00 -
By AnonymTerry Tempest Williams
We are animal. We are Earth. We are water. We are a community of human beings living on this planet together. And we forget that. We become disconnected, we lose our center point of gravity, that stillness that allows us to listen to life on a deeper level and to meet each other in a fully authentic and present way.
00 -
By AnonymTerry Tempest Williams
We are contemporary citizens living in a technological world. Swimming in crosscultural waters can be dangerous, and if you are honest you can't stay there very long. Sooner or later you have to look at your own reflection and decide what to do with yourself. We are urban people. We make periodic pilgrimages to the country. . . . If we align ourselves with the spirit of place we will find humility fused with joy. The land holds stories.
00 -
By AnonymTerry Tempest Williams
We are taught not to trust our own experiences. Great Salt Lake teaches me experience is all we have.
00 -
By AnonymTerry Tempest Williams
We are wearing coats of trust. When one tells a story this is what happens.
00 -
By AnonymTerry Tempest Williams
We can try to kill all that is native, string it up by its hind legs for all to see, but spirit howls and wildness endures.
00 -
By AnonymTerry Tempest Williams
We find our voice, we lose our voice, we retrieve it, honor it, and hopefully, learn how to share it with others and stand in the center of our power. Translation is a theme. Fear and courage are a theme.
00 -
By AnonymTerry Tempest Williams
We forget the nature of true power. The power within is abundance. The power without is greed.
00 -
By AnonymTerry Tempest Williams
We have to speak out now on behalf of our community and on behalf of the land and say they're the same thing and say No, we are not rolling over and No, this is not a corporate enterprise. This is democracy in the fullest sense and we must have regard and reverence and those are the cornerstones of a just society.
00 -
By AnonymTerry Tempest Williams
Well, we are Americans. I've always believed that you work with where you are - I am a Mormon woman who was raised on the edge of the Great Salt Lake in the American West in the United States of America. But, by the same token, much of my life has been spent resisting traditional forms of democracy, resisting traditional forms of orthodoxy, be it the United States government or the Mormon Church.
00 -
By AnonymTerry Tempest Williams
We're animals, I think we forget that. I think there is an ancient archetypal memory that still exists within us. If we deny that, what is the cost? So I do think it's what binds us as human beings.
00 -
By AnonymTerry Tempest Williams
We're human, this is our world, and I think we learn that that which is most personal is most general. And so, in a sense, we disappear into this larger world.
00 -
By AnonymTerry Tempest Williams
We usually recognize a beginning. Endings are more difficult to detect. Most often, they are realized only after reflection. Silence. We are seldom conscious when silence begins—it is only afterward that we realize what we have been a part of. In the night journeys of Canada geese, it is the silence that propels them. Thomas Merton writes, “Silence is the strength of our interior life.… If we fill our lives with silence, then we will live in hope.
00 -
By AnonymTerry Tempest Williams
We write out of our humanity by writing through our direct experience. That which is most personal is most general, which becomes both our insight and protection as a writers. This is our authority as women, as human beings.
00 -
By AnonymTerry Tempest Williams
Whatever artistry may occur within the manuscript, the magic happens for me in the last draft. Whatever I have been resistant to say must finally be said. In the end, I see where my pencil has been leading me.
00 -
By AnonymTerry Tempest Williams
What every woman knows is that we are remade each time we make love, each time we give birth; each time we feel the blood making its way through our body into our cupped hands, we remember it is our destiny to make change.
00 -
By AnonymTerry Tempest Williams
What I fear and desire most in this world is passion. I fear it because it promises to be spontaneous, out of my control, unnamed, beyond my reasonable self. I desire it because passion has color, like the landscape before me. It is not pale. It is not neutral. It reveals the backside of the heart.
00 -
By AnonymTerry Tempest Williams
What I mean by "An Unspoken Hunger." It's a hunger that cannot be quelled by material things. It's a hunger that cannot be quelled by the constant denial.
00 -
By AnonymTerry Tempest Williams
What is evolution if not creative adaptation and the progression of our own souls?
00 -
By AnonymTerry Tempest Williams
What is private belongs to me alone. What is personal belongs to all of us through the shared experience of being human.
00 -
By AnonymTerry Tempest Williams
What is real to me is the power of our awareness when we are focused on something beyond ourselves. It is a shaft of light shining in a dark corner. Our ability to shift our perceptions and seek creative alternatives to the conondrums of modernity is in direct proportion to our empathy. Can we imagine, witness, and ultimately feel the suffering of another?
00 -
By AnonymTerry Tempest Williams
When Emily Dickinson writes, “Hope is the thing with feathers that perches in the soul,” she reminds us, as the birds do, of the liberation and pragmatism of belief.
00 -
By AnonymTerry Tempest Williams
When I look in the mirror, I see a woman with secrets. When we don’t listen to our intuition, we abandon our souls. And we abandon our souls because we are afraid if we don’t, others will abandon us.
00 -
By AnonymTerry Tempest Williams
When I'm standing in the middle of the salt flats, where you swear that the pupils of your eyes have turned white because of the searing heat that is rising from the desert, I think of my childhood, I think of my mother, my father, my grandparents; I think of the history that we hold there and it is beautiful to me. But it is both a blessing and a burden to be rooted in place. It's recognizing the pattern of things, almost feeling a place before you even see it. In Southern Utah, on the Colorado plateau where canyon walls rise upward like praying hands, that is a holy place to me.
00 -
By AnonymTerry Tempest Williams
When I said, "I am my mother, but I'm not," I was saying my path would be my own.
00 -
By AnonymTerry Tempest Williams
When one woman doesn't speak, other women get hurt.
00 -
By AnonymTerry Tempest Williams
When Pico [Iyer] talks about home being a place of isolation, I think he's right. But it's the paradox. I think that's why I so love Great Salt Lake. Every day when I look out at that lake, I think, "Ah, paradox" - a body of water than no one can drink. It's the liquid lie of the desert. But I think we have those paradoxes within us and certainly the whole idea of home is windswept with paradox.
00 -
By AnonymTerry Tempest Williams
When silence is a choice, it is an unnerving presence. When silence is imposed, it is censorship.
00 -
By AnonymTerry Tempest Williams
When we really need to work hard to make sure that these ideas about constructive social change culturally, ecologically and politically, come to pass. And that's only going to happen if people support the leadership, because the same power structures are still in place, and it's not in their best interests to change.
00 -
By AnonymTerry Tempest Williams
When you are with a landscape or a human being where there is no need to speak, but simply to listen, to perceive, to feel.
00 -
By AnonymTerry Tempest Williams
Wherever we are, we can call for and create these kinds of settings for authentic dialogue. This is the seedbed of social change. In a voiced community, we all flourish. But it's not easy. Revolutionary patience and persistence is required. It can be messy, it is unpredictable, and change, especially structural change takes time - time and leadership and the will of an engaged community. What is needed? In a word, courage.
00 -
By AnonymTerry Tempest Williams
Who wants to be a goddess when we can be human? Perfection is a flaw disguised as control.
00 -
By AnonymTerry Tempest Williams
Women piece together their lives from the scraps left over for them.
00 -
By AnonymTerry Tempest Williams
Words empower us, move us beyond our suffering, and set us free.
00 -
By AnonymTerry Tempest Williams
But harboring regrets is making love to the past, and there is no movement here.
00 -
By AnonymTerry Tempest Williams
Can you be inside and outside at the same time? I think this is where I live. I think this is where most women live. I know this is where writers live. Inside to write. Outside to glean.
00