New Mental Health Distress Hotline Launches Nationwide

Over the weekend, the federal government launched a new, easy-to-remember phone number for people seeking mental health support as part of an effort to improve the government’s crisis support services.

The new number, 988, was created following the passage of federal legislation in 2020. The hope is that the new system will prove more memorable than the 10-digit suicide prevention numbers which have been used until now. 

The change comes in response to at least two factors: increasing rates of suicide and mental health crises, and efforts in some parts of the country to split requests for mental health assistance from the conventional emergency service providers, primarily police and fire departments.

According to the Centers for Disease Control, suicide rates increased 30% between 2000 and 2018. In 2020, suicide was the second leading cause of death among Americans aged 10-14 and 25-34.

Between April and June 2021, the National Suicide Prevention Hotline answered 89% of the 66,343 calls it received from Californians. However, calls to the new line may increase significantly as Americans learn about the system and some 911 calls are diverted. 

A December 2021 appropriations report from the Department of Health and Human Services projects that nationwide call volume “is expected to increase to 7.6 million by the end of the first full year of 988 implementation in July 2023, more than a two-fold increase over 2020 volume.”

Of course, the new number is just the start of improving mental health services. It remains to be seen whether California will have the resources to effectively respond to an increase in requests for services.

In Sonoma County, the switch follows another recent change in local responses to mental health services. Following the Black Lives Matters protests in 2020, Santa Rosa, Petaluma and Sonoma County have launched mental health crisis teams who respond to certain 911 calls instead of police.

While it’s in the early stages, the pivot makes a lot of sense, since interaction with police can prove fatal for a person experiencing a mental health crisis. In 2015, a report by the Treatment Advocacy Center found that people with untreated mental illnesses were 16 times more likely to be killed in an encounter with police than a member of the general population.

Santa Rosa Council Raise Moves a Step Closer to November Ballot

The possibility of the Santa Rosa City Council receiving a pay boost passed its first hurdle on Tuesday, July 12, as the body voted 5-2 to draft a resolution calling for a compensation increase to be placed on the November ballot.

The resolution will then go before the city council again for approval.

After much discussion and debate, the council decided on going with the recommendation from a city charter review committee to ask voters to approve raises based on the area median income for a household of three.

The mayor would receive the full amount, or $101,500, and council members would receive two-thirds of that, at $66,990. If enacted, the new pay structure would go into effect on Jan. 1, 2025. 

Currently, the mayor receives $14,400 annually and the council members receive $9,600 annually. 

The Santa Rosa proposal was inspired by Berkeley’s Measure JJ, a ballot item passed in 2020 which ties council members’ compensation to the median income in Alameda County. The measure was approved with support from nearly 65% of Berkeley voters.

A few council members pointed out that such a drastic jump might not go over well with the voting public. Council member John Sawyer noted that people are “shocked” when they learn how little he makes, but added that hearing about a $100,000 salary would be “equally as shocking.” 

“Too rich for my blood,” he said, as one of two council members voting no on the motion to draft the resolution. “I don’t know how one would defend $100,000.” 

Many compromises were considered. Mayor Chris Rogers suggested that council members make 50% of what county supervisors make, which is $161,000. That would give the mayor roughly $80,000 and council members around $53,000.

Council member Dianna MacDonald, who also voted no on the draft resolution, suggested using Sonoma County household income numbers pulled from the “extremely low” to “very low” range, or 50 and 30% of the median income. That would be $53,500 for the mayor in the very low range and $32,100 in the extremely low range, with council members receiving two-thirds of that amount. She saw these options as more “palatable” to the community.

City Attorney Sue Gallagher agreed that the council could use different metrics from the income averages, such as instead of going with the median income of a family of three, the council could do the median for a household of one. Or, the council could use low- to very low-income numbers instead of the median. 

Council member Natalie Rogers voted for the committee’s recommendation. She explained why she thinks the proposed compensation is important. 

“It allows for the council to be diverse; it allows for different people from different walks of life,” Rogers said. 

The current pay makes it hard for people to serve without being penalized in other parts of their life, she added. 

The charter review committee had recommended the raises to “enable a greater diversity of membership,” such as people with young families, those with lower paying occupations and those without an independent means of wealth. 

Among the council members who voted yes on the draft resolution, many said that the charter review committee put in a lot of the legwork to reach the recommendation and that the council should heed their findings. Vice Mayor Eddie Alvarez said the council should listen to the committee and then let the voters decide. 

The draft resolution will return to the council at the next council meeting on July 26.

Axial Tilt brings Grateful Dead tunes to Rohnert Park

Leaning into a lyric that some Grateful Dead fans may find useful during this protracted “unprecedented moment,” “Through this world of trouble we must love one another.”

The line is from “My Sisters and Brothers,” which might be among the lineup performed over  two days as part of Axial Tilt, an all-star Grateful Dead celebration coming to SoMo Village in Rohnert Park this weekend. 

The upcoming event is a reprise of sorts for Axial Tilt—the first took place in 2015 during New Orleans-based Jazz Fest and was timed to celebrate the Grateful Dead’s 50th anniversary as a band. Mounted by impresario Mitch Stein’s Poolside Productions, this iteration of the event is the first to transpire in the Bay Area—birthplace of the Dead. 

“The Grateful Dead and their fans are the embodiment of ‘community,’” says Stein of the band’s enduring legacy in the Bay Area and beyond. “Regarding the musicality inherent in any Grateful Dead show and, in our Deadheads’ lingo—and reference to a lyric from [the song] ‘The Music Never Stopped’—the music really does play the band with the Grateful Dead.” 

The two-day musical event consists of one acoustic set and two electric sets, culminating in five hours of live Grateful Dead music, with nary a song repeated either night. The band is comprised of names long-associated in the extended Grateful Dead family, including guitarist Stu Allen (Phil Lesh & Friends, Stu Allen & Mars Hotel), guitarist Rob Eaton (Dark Star Orchestra), vocalist Lisa Mackey (Dark Star Orchestra), bassist Stephen Ramirez (CRYPTICAL, Zen Tricksters), drummer Jay Lane (RatDog, Wolf Brothers, Primus) and percussionist Wally Ingram (Bob Weir + Phil Lesh Duo). Stein, himself a veteran keyboardist for CRYPTICAL and Gatorators, will also perform.

As for the band the aforementioned musicians are celebrating, Stein attributes the Grateful Dead’s enduring legacy to a variety of factors.

“I can’t think of another collection of musicians—let alone one that performed more than 2,300 concerts over 50 years, and who continue to perform in various configurations to this day—whose symbiotic relationship with their fans is as much of the experience as the notes being played,” says Stein. He also attributes the fact that the original Grateful Dead allowed, if not encouraged, their fans to record their live concerts and share the copies of the material, which spread their music “farther and wider than anything the record company could have done.” 

Going “viral” in an analogue age was no mean feat pre-Internet. These days, however, notions of virality come fraught with Covid considerations. Stein and his collaborators are prepared. 

“This is not a political issue for us,” says Stein, who is steadfastly clear-eyed about the pandemic. “Covid is still very much around, and while those of us involved with Axial Tilt are thrilled to be able to get back to doing what we love to do—and are specifically doing it outdoors—we can only do so with the peace of mind that comes from knowing that every single person in attendance is as protected as they can be.”

Proof of vaccination (including at least a single booster) is required, and masks are not mandated but are encouraged.

Axial Tilt commences 5:30pm, July 23 and 24, SOMO Village Redwood Grove, 1100 Valley House Drive, Rohnert Park. For more information and tickets, visit dhowl.com/axialtilt.

Water Concerns in Marin City

Following up on the article “Don’t Drink the Water,” residents concerned by the quality of drinking water in our Marin City community may want to take a deeper dive into the current state of drinking water regulations under our federal Safe Drinking Water Act. The law, enacted in 1974, currently regulates just a small fraction of the contaminants we find in our environment. The challenge is to rapidly expand the list of pollutants for which the federal Environmental Protection Agency establishes Maximum Contaminant Levels (MCLs). In the absence of such action, members of our community are left unaware and unprotected.

Seeking a way forward through other federal environmental laws, an environmental public interest group for which I serve as co-counsel attempted an innovative strategy by employing the federal hazardous waste law to halt the delivery by the City of Vacaville of drinking water contaminated with hexavalent chromium (the toxic waste at the center of the movie Erin Brockovich). Hexavalent chromium is inexcusably not regulated under the federal drinking water law. Our federal courts struck down this effort, leaving residents in continued peril.

The goal in our community, and for too many others across the nation, is to heighten awareness of the everyday threat of drinking water that poses a danger to health and to press our federal and state governments to establish and impose drinking water standards that reflect the significant number of pollutants in our environment, ensuring every tap in every home delivers water that is safe and secure.

David Weinsoff

Fairfax

Strategists Need to Rethink Policy

A number of nuclear strategy experts have agreed that the only sensible response to China’s alarming new buildup of nuclear weapons is for the U.S. itself to build more and better weapons. 

The apparent purpose of this buildup on our part is first to ensure that our deterrent is ironclad, and second it is argued as the only viable way to force the Chinese (and perhaps even the Russians, eventually) to the arms control table. After all, it worked before, when President Ronald Reagan outspent the Russians and helped end the first cold war.

There are three factors suggesting that this supposedly thoughtful establishment policy is performatively contradictory and growing more so.

First, there is the dark paradox of having the weapons at the ready on hair-trigger precisely so that they will never be used. It is already a kind of miracle that we have been able to make it through decades of nuclear confrontation without making a fatal mistake (though the catalog of known near-misses is profoundly sobering).

Second, nuclear winter. Carefully designed computer models predict that it would only take about a hundred detonations over large cities to raise tons of soot into the upper atmosphere sufficient to cause a global freeze that would destroy most agriculture for a decade.

And third, opportunity costs. Together, the three superpowers are planning trillions in spending to upgrade their arsenals both in terms of quantity and “quality” when the world is crying out for funds for a variety of issues, from Covid to climate.

If nuclear weapons could resolve the present tensions over Taiwan and in Ukraine, someone would presumably already have used them. 

The nuclear nations are stuck in a system which has no exit, no good outcome—unless they realize their common interest in change. But someone must make the first move that initiates a possible virtuous circle. Why not the U.S.?

Once strategists disenthrall themselves of the supposed necessities of deterrence, a new picture of a shared self-interest in moving beyond the nuclear age may come into focus. 

—Winslow Myers

Winslow Myers is author of ‘Living Beyond War: A Citizen’s Guide.’

July 13 Weekly Astrology

ARIES (March 21-April 19): With a fanciful flourish, Aries poet Seamus Heaney wrote, “I ate the day/Deliberately, that its tang/Might quicken me all into verb, pure verb.” I’d love for you to be a pure verb for a while, Aries. Doing so would put you in robust rapport with astrological rhythms. As a pure verb, you’ll never be static. Flowing and transformation will be your specialties. A steady stream of fresh inspiration and new meanings will come your way. You already have an abundance of raw potential for living like a verb—more than all the other signs of the zodiac. And in the coming weeks, your aptitude for that fluidic state will be even stronger than usual.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): According to Arthurian myth, the Holy Grail is a cup that confers magical powers. Among them are eternal youth, miraculous healing, the restoration of hope, the resurrection of the dead, and an unending supply of healthy and delicious food and drink. Did the Grail ever exist as a material object? Some believe so. After 34 years of research, historian David Adkins thinks he’s close to finding it. He says it’s buried beneath an old house in Burton-on-Trent, a town in central England. I propose we make this tantalizing prospect your metaphor of power during the coming weeks. Why? I suspect there’s a chance you will discover a treasure or precious source of vitality. It may be partially hidden in plain sight or barely disguised in a mundane setting.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): I’m pleased to authorize you to be extra vast and extensive in the coming weeks. Like Gemini poet Walt Whitman, you should never apologize and always be proud of the fact that you contain multitudes. Your multivalent, wide-ranging outlook will be an asset, not a liability. We should all thank you for being a grand compendium of different selves. Your versatility and elasticity will enhance the well-being of all of us whose lives you touch.

CANCER (June 21-July 22): Your memory is SUBSTANTIAL. Your sensitivity is MONUMENTAL. Your urge to nurture is DEEP. Your complexity is EPIC. Your feelings are BOTTOMLESS. Your imagination is PRODIGIOUS. Because of all these aptitudes and capacities, you are TOO MUCH for some people. Not everyone can handle your intricate and sometimes puzzling BEAUTY. But there are enough folks out there who do appreciate and thrive on your gifts. In the coming weeks and months, make it your quest to focus your urge to merge on them.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): I love these lines by Leo poet Conrad Aiken: “Remember (when time comes) how chaos died to shape the shining leaf.” I hope this lyrical thought will help you understand the transformation you’re going through. The time has come for some of your chaos to expire—and in doing so, generate your personal equivalent of shining leaves. Can you imagine what the process would look and feel like? How might it unfold? Your homework is to ponder these wonders.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): A British woman named Andie Holman calls herself the Scar Queen. She says, “Tight scar tissue creates pain, impacts mobility, affects your posture and usually looks bad.” Her specialty is to diminish the limiting effects of scars, restoring flexibility and decreasing aches. Of course, she works with actual physical wounds, not the psychological kind. I wish I could refer you to healers who would help you with the latter, Virgo. Do you know any? If not, seek one out. The good news is that you now have more personal power than usual to recover from your old traumas and diminish your scars. I urge you to make such work a priority in the coming weeks.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Ancient Roman philosopher Seneca wrote, “Luck is what happens when preparation meets opportunity.” But a Spanish proverb suggests a different element may be necessary: “Good luck comes by elbowing.” (Elbowing refers to the gesture you use as you push your way through a crowd, nudging people away from the path you want to take.) A Danish proverb says that preparation and elbowing aren’t enough: “Luck will carry someone across the brook if they are not too lazy to leap.” Modern author Wendy Walker has the last word: “Fortune adores audacity.” I hope I’ve inspired you to be alert to the possibility that extra luck is now available to you. And I hope I’ve convinced you to be audacious, energetic, well-prepared and willing to engage in elbowing. Take maximum advantage of this opportunity.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Many Scorpios imagine sex to be a magnificent devotion, a quintessential mode of worship, an unparalleled celebration of sacred earthiness. I endorse and admire this perspective. If our culture had more of it, the art and entertainment industries would offer far less of the demeaning, superficial versions of sexuality that are so rampant. Here’s another thing I love about Scorpios: So many of you grasp the value of sublimating lust into other fun and constructive accomplishments. You’re skilled at channeling your high-powered libido into practical actions that may have no apparent erotic element. The coming weeks will be an excellent time for you to do a lot of that.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): A Sagittarius reader named Jenny-Sue asked, “What are actions I could take to make my life more magical?” I’m glad she asked. The coming weeks will be a favorable time to raise your delight and enchantment levels, to bask in the blessed glories of alluring mysteries and uncanny synchronicities. Here are a few tips: 1. Learn the moon’s phases and keep track of them. 2. Acquire a new sacred treasure and keep it under your pillow or in your bed. 3. Before sleep, ask your deep mind to provide you with dreams that help generate creative answers to a specific question. 4. Go on walks at night or at dawn. 5. Compose a wild or funny prayer and shout it aloud it as you run through a field. 6. Sing a soulful song to yourself as you gaze into a mirror.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Being able to receive love doesn’t come easy for some Capricorns. You may also not be adept at making yourself fully available for gifts and blessings. But you can learn these things. You can practice. With enough mindful attention, you might eventually become skilled at the art of getting a lot of what you need and knowing what to do with it. And I believe the coming weeks will be a marvelous time to increase your mastery.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): “If I don’t practice one day, I know it; two days, the critics know it; three days, the public knows it.” This quote is variously attributed to violinist Jascha Heifetz, trumpeter Louis Armstrong and violinist Isaac Stern. It’s a fundamental principle for everyone who wants to get skilled at any task, not just for musicians. To become a master of what you love to do, you must work on it with extreme regularity. This is always true, of course. But according to my astrological analysis, it will be even more intensely true and desirable for you during the coming months. Life is inviting you to raise your expertise to a higher level. I hope you’ll respond!

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): In May 2021, Jessica and Ben Laws got married on their dairy farm. The ceremony unfolded smoothly, but an unforeseen event interrupted the reception party. A friend who had been monitoring their herd came to tell the happy couple that their pregnant cow had gone into labor and was experiencing difficulties. Jessica ran to the barn and plunged into active assistance, still clad in her lovely floor-length bridal gown and silver tiara. The dress got muddy and trashed, but the birth was successful. The new bride had no regrets. I propose making her your role model for now. Put practicality over idealism. Opt for raw and gritty necessities instead of neat formalities. Serve what’s soulful, even if it’s messy.

Trivia

QUESTIONS:

1 California’s longest highway has what route number?

2 What animal was named “eight feet” in Greek and Latin?

3 What is the Inuit word for house?

4 What popular appetizer was invented in 1964 at the Anchor Bar in a city of upstate New York, after which it was named?

5 What two chemical elements comprise 99% of the air we breathe?

6  We’re looking for four countries whose names begin with M: Two are located in the southeast of Africa, as well as two island nations that lie off the southeast coast of Africa.

7 This original singer has over 45 million YouTube subscribers and over 100 million Instagram followers. She has won multiple Grammys and one Academy Award and some Billboard Music awards, and was one of the youngest entertainers to ever top the Billboard Hot 100 chart. Who is she?

8 Name the two major league baseball players who’ve been on the All-Star team roster the most: One played mostly for Milwaukee/Atlanta Braves and was on the All Star Roster 21 seasons from 1954 to 1976, and the other played mostly for the New York/San Francisco Giants, and made the team 20 times from 1948 through 1973.

9 What company involved in the beverage business is named for Captain Ahab’s first mate?

10 What movie characters sing, “Heigh ho, heigh ho, it’s off to work we go,” in what 1938 movie?

BONUS QUESTION: France’s biggest holiday, Bastille Day, is celebrated on July 14 of every year, in memory of what events?

Want more live trivia? You’re invited to our next Trivia Cafe team contest at the Sweetwater Music Hall in Mill Valley on Sunday, July 24 at 5pm, hosted by Howard Rachelson.  Free admission, with a food menu and full bar available. Contact ho*****@********fe.com.

ANSWERS:

1 Route 101

2 Octopus: Octo=eight + pous=foot

3 Igloo or iglu

4 Buffalo wings

5 78% nitrogen, 21.5% oxygen

6 Mozambique and Malawi on the mainland, and the islands of Madagascar (shown in photo) and Mauritius in the Indian Ocean

7 Billie Eilish

8 Hank Aaron, Willie Mays

9 Starbucks—he was a shipmate in the novel Moby Dick.

10 Seven Dwarfs, in the movie Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs

BONUS ANSWER: The holiday commemorates the storming of the Bastille prison on July 14, 1789 by the common people, which began the French Revolution and ended the “ancien régime.”

Bastille Day: American Reflections on Liberty

I was running on the beach like my life depended on it, and that’s because it did. 

The urge to take off my shoes and run wind sprints beside the ocean on a cold April afternoon, carefully leaping over broken clam shells lest I tear my foot open, had suddenly possessed me at the start of Covid. I christened my new creation “free running,” for I was still free to run, and I was running in order to feel free. 

There was panic in those first few weeks in 2020, which you likely recall all too well. I was alone on an island—Newport, RI, to be precise—fueled by the quixotic desire to live in a colonial New England town after a decade in New York. But no sooner had I arrived than the pandemic struck, everything shut  down and there was talk of home confinement.

I doom-thought a prison for myself of worst-case-scenarios without end, and the autonomous act of free running helped me think clearly during the unfolding of what’s been euphemistically called our new normal.

The two sides of the cavernous abyss dividing Americans have one thing in common: Both believe their freedoms are eroding. It was inevitable, since the rallying cry of the French Revolution—liberty, equality and fraternity—is based on cognitive dissonance, or two concepts that contradict each other. Eliphas Levi, father of the 19th-century French occult revival, wrote in 1852, “Liberty, Equality, Fraternity! Three truths which, in coming together, form a triple lie, for they destroy one another.” Liberty creates inequality, Levi explains, while equality’s leveling process prevents liberty. And attempting to establish them together produces “an interminable struggle that makes fraternity impossible.” 

That doesn’t mean we can’t celebrate Bastille Day with wine, cheese and bread from our local Franco-American bakery. And as we stare into our empty glass, at the ruddy sediment left behind by a well-aged Burgundy, we can ponder the notion of liberty, whose etymology comes to us from Old French via Latin, and is based on the word “liber,” meaning free, and what it means at the present moment in the course of human events. 

If you feel like your phone is a tool rather than a tyrannical taskmaster, and that your elected officials are working on your behalf; if you look forward to having a social credit score or a microchip implanted into your arm—or your brain—and are excited about the possibilities offered by the metaverse, then congratulations; you are a model citizen of the new normal. You sleep better at night imagining a facial recognition and GPS tracking system, because if they can do it in Australia, then why not here. Then there’s China’s zero-Covid policy—which it recently announced will continue for at least five years—that saw 25 million Shanghai residents reduced to near starvation in their high-rise apartment-prisons, while circling drones told them to stop being selfish by wanting to be free. Toss in cancel culture—the modern West’s latest way to incinerate blasphemers—and The New Normal will soon know everything you say and do, as well as everything you’ve said and done before. For the few who still refer to themselves—albeit with growing self-conscious irony—as “free spirits,” life in the United States in 2022 is not something that guarantees you liberty, but instead something to be liberated from.

Last year, in a cover story entitled “The Great Escape,” I wrote about how to liberate yourself from 2021 through the time-tested paths of art, nature, spirit and time travel. 2022 has everything last year had, plus war, inflation, food shortage and monkeypox. A shocking new Gallup Poll revealed that the world is more unhappy and stressed out than ever before, and yet no one seems to be able to see the prison they’ve constructed for themselves, probably because it’s disguised as a phone. 

Shortly after the poll came out, the guy who invented the mobile phone said, “Put it down and get a life.” Perhaps he knows that we’re supposed to be spirit beings having an earthly experience, not earthly beings having a digital experience. 

“Man is born free,” said Rousseau in the days leading up to the French Revolution, “yet is everywhere in chains.”

* * *

Liberation is the goal of many of the world’s spiritual paths—Buddhism and Hinduism, notably—but what exactly are we trying to liberate? For starters, we might say we are trying to liberate untapped potentialities within ourselves, while also trying to liberate ourselves from ourselves—that is, from all our faults, including illusions about ourselves and the world. This is the paradox known to ascetics, who practice self-discipline as a means to liberation from the mind-chains that imprison us in dungeons of our own making. The Roman orator Cicero said that the highest power one can achieve is mastery over oneself.

India in the time of the Vedas and Upanishads (beginning circa 1,500 BC) was arguably the most metaphysically advanced civilization the world has ever known, and its doctrines were largely based on reaching a level of knowledge in which the physical world was seen as “maya,” which is typically translated as illusion. The Bhagavad Gita explicates the difference between what in the human experience is supreme and immutable—namely the world of spirit—and what is fleeting, impermanent and ultimately illusory. 

Two millennia later, in the fifth century AD, India went through a winter period. The temples of the mysteries were overrun with weeds, forcing spirit-seekers to search for divine knowledge through direct experience. Tantra emerged as a path suitable for an age of dissolution, and the temple in which knowledge was to be found was nothing less than the body itself, viewed throughout the ancient world as a microcosm of the universe, and hiding within it innumerable secrets. 

Yoga revealed to the adept that consciousness resides not in the tissues of the brain, but in a subtle electro-magnetic field running through and around the body, or what we call an aura. Kundalini, the primordial life energy, was likened to a dual-polarized serpent that lies sleeping in the abdomen, capable of releasing hidden creative, sexual and metaphysical powers. Ultimately, however, the Tantric adept seeks the liberation that comes from a neutral attitude towards every conflict and antithesis, including wealth and poverty, success and failure, hope and fear. 

Most of us cannot completely sever ties with the world we find ourselves in, one based entirely on money, technology and politics, which does not recognize the existence of the individual soul, nor anything that doesn’t serve the needs of the collective. Which is why, in addition to liberation within ourselves, there is the perennial need to liberate ourselves from others, since hell, as Jean-Paul Sartre aptly put it, “is other people.” It’s easy to place a “zero fucks given” bumper sticker on your car, but quite another to reach the state where you can say these words attributed to The Awakened One in one of the oldest Buddhist texts: “I have overcome the bramble of opinions, I have gained mastery over myself, I have followed the path, I possess the knowledge and I have no one else as my guide.” 

* * *

The forces presently ascendant in this year 2022 are dangerously regressive. The individual—without understanding what they are doing, which is why it’s so insidious—is all but commanded to abdicate qualitative personal distinctions and assume their place as a soulless atomized servant of the greater social dis-organization. In extreme though increasingly common cases, the individual personality disintegrates to the point where it begins to “identify” with cats and other furry creatures, because why be limited by 140 genders to choose from, when there are 2 million animal species? In an age of chaos and crisis, the need to bind oneself to a transcendent principle reasserts itself, but announcing to your friends and family that you now identify as a dog transcends the human condition not by rising to a higher level of consciousness, but by descending to a lower form of being. Thinking that’s crazy, but allowing yourself to gradually become a cyborg is no different. Robots don’t have souls, and there are no messiahs in the metaverse. Just smiling demons urging you to never leave. 

In Shadow is a 15-minute animated short made in 2017 by Lubomir Arsov that has amassed over five million views on YouTube. The film is told entirely through visuals, and grotesquely caricatures modern life as a nihilistic techno-consumerist hellscape—or everything we built over the past two centuries in order to be “free.” When the imagery becomes so dreary it’s almost nauseating, one character suddenly seeks escape, and the visuals shift from dystopian to metaphysical. The sick world of mankind’s creation is transcended, and the soaring soul finds its way back to the primordial cosmic world-tree and the womb of creation. 

I had the honor of interviewing the filmmaker two years ago, and asked about his inspiration for the film. 

“I wished to express the idea that we live in a limited state of awareness, disconnected from the dark causality that energizes our world,” Arsov told me, “and to suggest through evocative imagery that despite the anguish, deception and darkness, we have a choice to break through and claim the sovereignty of our souls. If we don’t evolve our sense-making capacity and reach a level of sound judgment, we inevitably fall prey to the power of manufactured narratives, which leave us stranded in a desert of materialistic meaninglessness. To navigate this trap effectively, we must awaken to the parts of our inner world that prevent us from seeing clearly, and reform them to a higher order.” 

* * *

The first impulse that grabbed me when Covid struck, besides free running, was to ruthlessly prune my possessions, and I’ve worked at it consistently the past two years. I know everything I own and where it’s located, and all the mementos and photos and manuscripts have all been organized. The computer, likewise, has only the music that really means something to me, since anything else at present just strikes me as noise. 

My bookcase, likewise, has been pruned down to only what I need to read right now. If I ever feel like reading Hamlet again someday, I’m sure I’ll be able to find a copy. Needless to say, the organizing of physical possessions, the refining of movies and music down to only what I rate a 10 out of 10, brings about a feeling of liberation from the mediocre and inconsequential. The sense of dominion over as much of life as possible breeds potency, the feeling of cold inner flame that can break forth at any moment in a simple act of spontaneity. 

I call these micro-liberations: sudden whims, caprices and idiosyncratic expressions of free will, spontaneous play and creativity. Buddhists are some of the most actively liberation-seeking people on the planet, and monks can spend hours methodically raking a rock garden no one else will ever see. A fool will not understand the point of it, but the very definition of a fool is someone who doesn’t know what they don’t know. 

The meaning of life cannot be found within life, but only that which is prior and superior to life, in the part of life that is more than life. The escape ladder leading to liberation is vertical, and has nothing to do with American society in 2022. Free your soul, and the rest of you will follow. 

Culture Crush—Environment Art in Marin, Bastille Day in Larkspur, and More

Larkspur

Bastille Day Celebration 

Vive la France! Join the celebrations at Left Bank Brasserie this Thursday through Sunday, in the spirit of Bastille Day. The celebratory vibes will be in full swing with rustic, authentic French additions to the restaurant’s lunch, dinner and beverage menus, plus festive bleu, blanc and rouge decorations. There will be live music, a stilt walker, a mime, a magician, and staff ensembles and costumes. Francophiles seeking food, Champagne and an all-around entertaining time need look no further. Bastille Day is hosted at Left Bank Brasserie, 507 Magnolia Ave., Larkspur. Visit www.leftbank.com for more information. 

Santa Rosa

Wreckless Strangers on Tour 

The Krush 95.9 Backyard Concerts are in full swing. This Thursday, see Wreckless Strangers and check out their new album, When the Sun and a Blue Star Collide, produced by Grammy Award-winner Colin Linden, who has produced such names as Bruce Cockburn, Alison Krauss and Bob Dylan. The first single, “Sun State,” is currently making waves on AAA and Americana Radio and stars blues legend Charlie Musselwhite on harmonica. The band features Amber Morris (premier vocal coach noted for her work with members of Journey and Mr. Big) on vocals; David Noble (Poor Man’s Whiskey, Pardon the Interruption) on lead guitar and vocals; Joshua Zucker (The Jones Gang, Rowan Brothers) on bass; Austin de Lone (Nick Lowe, Elvis Costello, The Fabulous Thunderbirds) on keys; Mick Hellman (The Go to Hell Man Band) on drums and vocals; and Rob Anderson (repeat world champion cyclist) on guitar. Wreckless Strangers is playing Thursday, July 14 at 3565 Standish Ave., Santa Rosa. Doors at 5:30pm; music starts at 6pm. Free. 

Marin

Reflections on Climate Change 

Join the Marin Art and Garden Center for Confluence: Reflections on Our Shifting Environment. In this climate-focused exhibition, artist Laura Corallo-Titus presents multi-media paintings addressing how the historic expectations of landscape painting have been hijacked by a more chaotic and disrupted visual conclusion. Cindy Stokes’ installation and wall sculpture urge one to contemplate the now ever-present threat of wildfire while acknowledging our dependence on and enjoyment of fire’s domesticated form. Arminée Chahbazian creates large multi-media imagery on paper to explore how recent environmental shifts modulate our desires for nature’s beauty and drama, leading to a sense of displacement. The thread tying these artists’ work together is an intentional examination of humankind’s evolving perceptions about our responsibility to care for the planet. Confluence: Reflections on our Shifting Environment is at Marin Art and Garden Center, 30 Sir Francis Drake Blvd, Ross. The opening reception is Sunday, July 24, 1pm-3pm. Free. Registration required. www.maringarden.org 

Sebastopol

Jerry’s Middle Finger 

Step out this Saturday for a night of rocking rock and roll at Hopmonk Tavern in Sebastopol with Jerry’s Middle Finger (JMF).  It’s generally undisputed that JMF delivers the best Jerry Garcia Band tribute experience in the world. Conceived in 2015 by a group of professional musicians passionate about Jerry Garcia and the Grateful Dead, JMF has graced Los Angeles speakeasies and beachside dive bars for the last seven years, honing their signature sound and getting the party started. JMF has played all along the West Coast, packing legendary venues like Sweetwater Music Hall, Terrapin Crossroads and Pappy & Harriet’s—dazzling new fans on the scene and pulling even the most discerning Jerry fanatics out of their seats for the first time in decades. Come rock out this Saturday night! JMF plays at Hopmonk Tavern, 230 Petaluma Ave., Sebastopol. Doors 8pm; show starts at 9pm. Tickets $30. www.hopmonk.com 

—Jane Vick

SRJC Digital Filmmaking Grad Wins $50,000 to Produce Feature Film

On June 10, filmmaker and Santa Rosa Junior College graduate Miles Levin pitched his film, Under the Lights, to AT&T’s Untold Stories judges at the Tribeca Film Festival, and in a sweeping of fan votes, was awarded $50,000. 

Untold Stories is an inclusive film program in collaboration with the Tribeca Festival, that awards $1 million, mentorship and distribution support to help systemically underrepresented 

filmmakers produce films.   

Levin’s idea was selected from the year’s submissions as one of the five finalists. It landed the Fan Award of $40,000 during a live voting process, along with $10,000 from Untold Stories to further the film’s reach and production opportunity.

Under the Lights tells the story of Sam, a 17-year-old boy with epilepsy who, desperately seeking to feel normal, attends his high school prom, even though he knows the lights will trigger a seizure. 

Levin, who both wrote and directed the film, lives with epilepsy. He is one of 60 million people in the world who live with this condition. Levin sits on the board of the The Cameron Boyce Foundation and the Epilepsy Foundation of Northern California. His work as a filmmaker is inspired by his goal of raising awareness around epilepsy and creating more inclusivity in contemporary society for those living with the disorder. 

Levin came to the Santa Rosa Junior College (SRJC) in 2013 and began taking digital filmmaking classes with instructor Brian Antonson. 

“Miles stood out almost immediately as someone who was very passionate about filmmaking, very into the technology and the mechanics of storytelling,” said Antonson. “All of his projects he worked on with high levels of enthusiasm. He had already made a feature film when he was in high school. He was very ambitious.”  

While at SRJC, Levin took almost every production class offered and became Antonson’s PAL—Peer Assistance and Leadership, the equivalent of a teacher’s assistant at SRJC—for a term. 

“Miles was constantly pushing himself to make more films, to make them better and better. In retrospect, you can see him building up these skills which got him to the point where he is today.  Filmmaking is so incredibly difficult—it requires an understanding and a mastery of so many different art forms, and it requires the participation of big groups of people (cast and crew) and resources (both financial and technical). To be successful, one needs to put in this kind of long-term investment of your time and focused attention,” said Antonson.

Not only is filmmaking extremely rigorous, it’s also generally inhospitable to those living with a disability. Levin has spent the last 10 years curating sets that accommodate his disability and don’t compromise his filmmaking. 

But it wasn’t always easy to be an advocate for epilepsy. Levin, like many who live with the condition, spent the first part of his life endeavoring to feel normal. The highly-stigmatized nature of epilepsy made him fearful of sharing his story and facing negative consequences. 

“Epilepsy very much stole my childhood. I didn’t get to be a kid,” Levin writes in his 2022 Untold Stories pitch. “So I wasn’t sure if I wanted to come out in front of the internet with my story, and maybe have it limit my adulthood.” 

Then, Levin was approached by a 15-year-old boy with epilepsy, who told him he had never made a friend before. It was a shocking wake up call for Levin. 

“I became a filmmaker at 15 because I believed in the power of movies to put a person in another person’s shoes and that that act builds a better world. It took me 10 years of making movies to realize that in putting my feelings first, and hiding my story, I was ignoring the reason I became a filmmaker in the first place,” Levin said.  

Under the Lights, the short film was released in 2020, starring Pearce Joza and Alyssa Jirrels and running 11 minutes and 27 seconds. Almost immediately, it became a symbol of hope and representation to the epileptic community. 

International fan art was sent daily to Levin and his crew; people living with epilepsy used the film to come out; and one organization sent Under the Lights prom kits to kids who were unable to attend. Levin also received significant video responses from those with epilepsy, thanking him for his work and sharing how much the short film had changed their lives. 

The film has received multiple awards and selections, including Best Humanitarian Short from Sedona Film Festival in 2021; Best Alternative Film, Nominated Best Short Film and Best Director from the New Hope Festival in 2020; and Best Short at SCAD Savannah Film Festival. 

This is perhaps the first film of its kind, representing the epileptic community in contemporary media. 

“The journey of his protagonist is one that lots of people are identifying with,” said Antonson. “And the epilepsy community is getting behind Miles’ film in a big way. So, in a way, Miles is on a mission, trying to affect real change and help other people with epilepsy.” 

The purpose of this film, along with affecting change in the lives of those with epilepsy, is to highlight the value of an often unheard perspective. 

Films like Under the Lights and directors like Miles Levin invite reality into the film sphere, using cinema as a tool for information, inclusivity and acceptance, as opposed to a vehicle conveying hyper-perfectionism. 

This film is an invitation to traditionally non-disabled people to deepen their knowledge and empathy. It’s an invitation to those with epilepsy to be the main character, the protagonist. It’s an invitation to anyone struggling with a disability, physically, mentally or emotionally, to know that they are not alone. 

Levin’s directing is paving the way for those with disabilities to make their mark on a world that is long overdue to hear their voices in contemporary media. Levin’s belief is that a widely-accessible film about epilepsy could do more to end the stigma than any campaign in history. Under the Lights is the beginning. 

“I want to make the things that I’ve been through worthwhile. And that’s my path,” said Levin. Watch ‘Under the Lights,’ the short and learn more about the feature film at www.underthelightsfilm.com.

New Mental Health Distress Hotline Launches Nationwide

Phone - Kelli McClintock/Unsplash
Over the weekend, the federal government launched a new, easy-to-remember phone number for people seeking mental health support as part of an effort to improve the government’s crisis support services. The new number, 988, was created following the passage of federal legislation in 2020. The hope is that the new system will prove more memorable than the 10-digit suicide prevention...

Santa Rosa Council Raise Moves a Step Closer to November Ballot

Santa Rosa City Hall - Katy St. Clair/Bay City News
The possibility of the Santa Rosa City Council receiving a pay boost passed its first hurdle on Tuesday, July 12, as the body voted 5-2 to draft a resolution calling for a compensation increase to be placed on the November ballot. The resolution will then go before the city council again for approval. After much discussion and debate, the council decided...

Axial Tilt brings Grateful Dead tunes to Rohnert Park

Axial Tilt
Leaning into a lyric that some Grateful Dead fans may find useful during this protracted “unprecedented moment,” “Through this world of trouble we must love one another." The line is from “My Sisters and Brothers,” which might be among the lineup performed over  two days as part of Axial Tilt, an all-star Grateful Dead celebration coming to SoMo Village in...

Water Concerns in Marin City

Following up on the article “Don’t Drink the Water,” residents concerned by the quality of drinking water in our Marin City community may want to take a deeper dive into the current state of drinking water regulations under our federal Safe Drinking Water Act. The law, enacted in 1974, currently regulates just a small fraction of the contaminants we...

Strategists Need to Rethink Policy

A number of nuclear strategy experts have agreed that the only sensible response to China’s alarming new buildup of nuclear weapons is for the U.S. itself to build more and better weapons.  The apparent purpose of this buildup on our part is first to ensure that our deterrent is ironclad, and second it is argued as the only viable way...

July 13 Weekly Astrology

ARIES (March 21-April 19): With a fanciful flourish, Aries poet Seamus Heaney wrote, “I ate the day/Deliberately, that its tang/Might quicken me all into verb, pure verb.” I'd love for you to be a pure verb for a while, Aries. Doing so would put you in robust rapport with astrological rhythms. As a pure verb, you'll never be static....

Trivia

QUESTIONS: 1 California’s longest highway has what route number? 2 What animal was named “eight feet” in Greek and Latin? 3 What is the Inuit word for house? 4 What popular appetizer was invented in 1964 at the Anchor Bar in a city of upstate New York, after which it was named? 5 What two chemical elements comprise 99% of the air we breathe? 6 ...

Bastille Day: American Reflections on Liberty

I was running on the beach like my life depended on it, and that’s because it did.  The urge to take off my shoes and run wind sprints beside the ocean on a cold April afternoon, carefully leaping over broken clam shells lest I tear my foot open, had suddenly possessed me at the start of Covid. I christened my...

Culture Crush—Environment Art in Marin, Bastille Day in Larkspur, and More

Larkspur Bastille Day Celebration  Vive la France! Join the celebrations at Left Bank Brasserie this Thursday through Sunday, in the spirit of Bastille Day. The celebratory vibes will be in full swing with rustic, authentic French additions to the restaurant's lunch, dinner and beverage menus, plus festive bleu, blanc and rouge decorations. There will be live music, a stilt walker, a...

SRJC Digital Filmmaking Grad Wins $50,000 to Produce Feature Film

On June 10, filmmaker and Santa Rosa Junior College graduate Miles Levin pitched his film, Under the Lights, to AT&T’s Untold Stories judges at the Tribeca Film Festival, and in a sweeping of fan votes, was awarded $50,000.  Untold Stories is an inclusive film program in collaboration with the Tribeca Festival, that awards $1 million, mentorship and distribution support to...
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