Thich Nhat Hanh was coming to the Omega House in upstate New York. It was the late 1990’s and I hadn’t a spare penny to even consider the journey. A... read more →
Henryk Skolimowski Edited by Paul Kieniewicz Philosopher and ecologist Henryk Skolimowski died in his hometown of Warsaw, Poland April 6, 2018. Henryk inspired generations of ecologists and conservationists. He was... read more →
(The nature of this blog is presented in the spirit of 19th Century writers who published their work in monthly instalments.) FRAGMENTS BROKEN WHOLE By Amber Poole-Kieniewicz We buried... read more →
By Paul Kieniewicz Amber and I have been here for almost two years. Polish politics is opaque, something we scarcely understand. We can barely name the chief actors in the... read more →
Man’s soul is a complicated thing and it takes sometimes half a lifetime to get somewhere in one’s psychological development. You know it is by no means always a matter... read more →
Language is a living organism which means language can vanish, become extinct like any other living organism. Native American Indians have struggled for generations to keep their customs, their stories... read more →
If you had only one hour to live, what would you do? Would you not arrange what is necessary outwardly, your affairs, your will, and so on? Would you not... read more →
The only thing that really matters now is whether man can climb up to a higher moral level, to a higher plane of consciousness, in order to be equal to... read more →
Laws of Nature ---- Or Habits? The Science Delusion – Freeing the spirit of enquiry Rupert Sheldrake Coronet, 2012, 392 p. Review by Paul Kieniewicz Rupert Sheldrake must... read more →
When I moved to Scotland in 2006 one of the first people I met was the wife of the local Anglican minister in Aberdeen. Soon after this first meeting, she... read more →