Your Letters, May 21

Fixing Forests

I just visited the redwood country and wilderness forests that stretch from the cool coastal range to snow-topped alpine ridges in the interior mountains in Northern California. Hiking through groves of redwoods adorned with bouquets of trillium and along clear rivers ringing with birdsong from tiny hidden warblers, I felt at times like I was in paradise.

But then I’d come upon massive redwood stumps that were cut generations ago still standing. Heading into the famed Headwaters Preserve, the newer growth didn’t hide the past devastation. The fragmented groves of ancient redwoods in the national parks often felt like tree museums. In fact, the Tall Trees Grove on Redwood Creek requires a permit for entry past a locked gate.

Heading into the Smith River, Scott River and Trinity Alps, I was taken by the rugged landscapes and powerful waters but overwhelmed by the miles of burned lands. Some places were recovering with green and wildflowers. Other expanses were spoiled by salvage logging where giant scorched logs were abandoned and massive slash piles left behind.

After seeing all this, I realized the urgency of halting the Fix our Forest Act moving toward passage in Congress. The bill authorizes more logging and less environmental protection in our forests and is key to the log-baby-log mantra coming from The White House.

We need our State Senators Alex Padilla and Adam Schiff to oppose this bill and rally their colleagues to defeat it. If not, they will allow the beauty of our forests to be finally and forever turned into the beasts of industry.

Teri Shore
Sonoma

We appreciate your letters to the editor—send them to le*****@******an.com and le*****@********un.com. Letters may be edited for clarity and space.

Unified Field Theories: Life, the Universe and Anguishing

Like many jacks-of-all-trades, I’ve long yearned for a “unified field theory” of my career. I’m not a Renaissance Man in the conventional sense since the scope of my interests is limited to media, meaning-making and occasionally manipulating both for laughs. Call it a controlled burn with occasional fireworks.

The “UFT” (which, incidentally, is the sound I make when getting out of a chair) is a bit of physics jargon that was the holy grail of gents like Einstein, Schrödinger and probably his damn cat, who had the most to lose (or not lose) in this pursuit. 

The goal was to unify an understanding of everything from gravity to electromagnetism and why traffic slows on the 101 in Novato no matter how many lanes are added. Did they succeed in finding this so-called “theory of everything?” No, but more than a few religions have smugly claimed to have found it millennia ago.

Regardless, the UFT remains a noble if quixotic ambition. And like religion will likely prove to be an answer rather than the answer when and if someone finds it. This is due to a peculiar hiccup in our ability to understand anything as a species. Inasmuch as Einstein posited relativity in terms of space and time, we are likewise conscripted to our own relative perceptions, shaped by our consciousnesses, experiences, and wherever we happen to be and when it is that we’re there. Which is to say, it’s very difficult to perceive objective truth through the lens of our own biases and filters. 

For example, in my youth I was told that my future is so bright, I gotta wear shades—yet, as a consequence I’ve spent much of my life with a dim view of the world. To quote the Huxley-hued line from dance-pop band YACHT’s 2015 hit, I Thought the Future Would Be Cooler, “I thought the brave world would be newer.”

Anyway, does this mean that objective truth doesn’t exist? No, but you’ll never see it, so it’s tantamount to an act of faith to believe that it does. This late night, dorm room-level revelation has made working in news media particularly onerous (how does one fact check “alternative facts?”). 

Like any experiment in unifying forces, my career has had its share of false positives and small explosions—some literal, some figurative. Every detour—from newspapers to novels, podcasts to punchlines—was just another attempt to coax coherence out of chaos. If there’s a throughline, it’s this: I’ve spent my life telling stories in different costumes, hoping one of them might actually fit.

Is it journalism? Is it satire? Is it just me talking to myself with better lighting? Yes.

I haven’t found a theory of everything—but I may have stumbled onto a theory of doing just enough of everything. And relatively speaking, that’s truth enough.

Editor Daedalus Howell is at dhowell.com.

Viva ‘Freddy Chickan,’ Acclaimed Performer Fred Curchack Performs Benefit for Mercury

For half a century, performer, playwright, and professor Fred Curchack has carved a unique and personal path through the world of theater. 

He’s created dozens of original shows, toured internationally, embarked upon spiritual odysseys disguised as theater, and theatrical odysseys disguised as spiritual ones. 

But this month, the shape-shifting artist returns to where much of it began—Mercury Theater in Petaluma, the recently rechristened site that was long the home of the Cinnabar Theater, which evolved into the youth-focused entity continuing under that name). 

Curchack has performed more than 60 of his works in the space and, in his words, it is an “artistic and in some ways spiritual home.”

Mercury Theater will host Resurrection of Freddy Chickan, a fever-dream retrospective stitched from nine of Curchack’s most outrageous and revelatory works. Expect music, shadow-play, movement, puppets, video projections—and a voice that the New York Times once said proves that his “imagination knows no limitations.” Proceeds benefit the theater company.

“I made a list… there were 62 of them that I presented [there],” says Curchack, listing solo work, duos, ensemble collaborations, and at least one opera. His daughter, performer and filmmaker, Alia Beeton, grew up there. His wife, actor Laura Jorgensen has performed there “endlessly.” The place, he says, is “very much family.”

And yet, Resurrection of Freddy Chickan is no sentimental scrapbook. Nor is it merely a survey of his greatest hits (though fan favorite elements will abound). Instead It’s a lucid descent into the subterranean terrain of the psyche, bolstered by comedic timing and landing audiences, gratified, into new ways of understanding themselves and each other. “They’re all very crazy, neurotic, unconscious kind of journeys,” he says. “I’d be an idiot if I proclaimed they were some sort of spiritual truth… but they represent my own very limited human attempt to make that kind of journey for myself.”

Curchack is a theater artist in the sacred sense—he’s waiting for Grotowski, not Guffman. The new solo show, he explains, is both a creative liberation and a logistical necessity. “The solo is an amazing compromise,” he says. “You get to work your ass off all day long if you feel like it—and you don’t have to beg for other people’s time.”

But make no mistake: for Curchack, solo doesn’t mean solitary. His aim is to bring the audience with him—downward, inward, and back again. “There’s this thing about a shaman descending into the underworld and bringing back something of value from the subconscious for the community and for healing,” he says. “All of that resonates with me.”

That resonance may register as humor. Or shock. Or maybe, if the conditions are right, something closer to bliss. “The world is in a state of deep suffering,” he says. “But it’s always been the case…With theater, when you touch those deepest levels of your deepest anguish, your deepest suffering—if you can uncover what that is—you may find yourself a kind of luminosity or transcendence or even bliss or delight.”

This is the tightrope Curchack walks: equal parts ecstatic, elegiac, and deeply entertaining. “I hope they’re funny,” he says of his shows, “but they also represent profound suffering… Theater can be fun. And part of it is that when you touch those deepest levels… something redemptive can happen.”

His body of work—which blends psychology, politics, mysticism, and multimedia—has drawn comparisons to a bevy of theater innovators, but Curchack ultimately defies categorization. He seeks to align with artists who engage with performance as spiritual pursuit. But he’s also aware that, in a “world of celebrity,” such pursuits can seem antiquated or overly earnest.

So he smuggles them in under the guise of spectacle, and the result is work that’s as trippy as it is trenchant—and so damn entertaining. “My wish is that it irritates people on some level—which ends up being useful to them ultimately,” he says with a sage laugh.

Resurrection of Freddy Chickan is a return—but it’s also a revival in the truest sense. It’s Curchack, once again, inviting us to suspend disbelief, descend together, and emerge with something strange and maybe even luminous. That he’s doing it in a place so woven into his personal history only deepens the spell.

“I’m so happy to be able to make a contribution,” he says. And if it raises a few shekels for Mercury Theater? Even better.”

‘Resurrection Of Freddy Chickan’ plays Fridays and Saturdays, May 23, 24, 30, and 31 at 8 pm. For tickets, please visit www.mercurytheater.org or call 707.658.9019. Tickets are $25 for general admission and $15 for students. Proceeds benefit Mercury Theater, which is located at 3333 Petaluma Boulevard North in Petaluma.

Note: This production contains depictions of and references to rape, abortion, suicide, decapitation, obscenity, profanity, insanity, racism, sexism, classism, fascism, and extreme irony.

Sondheim’s ‘Company’ open for Biz at Spreckels

The opening night performance of the Spreckels Theatre Company production of Stephen Sondheim’s Company, now running in Rohnert Park through May 18,  was my first experience with the classic musical comedy. 

Company follows Bobby (Andrew J. Smith), an affable, mid-thirties Everyman, as he seeks love, personified here by brassy Marta (sensational vocals by Evvy Carlstrom), gentle Kathy (wistful Bethany Cox), and blunt April (Katie Rain, with gorgeous voice and killer comic timing).

Bobby has help from five couples: Jeff Coté (in a very funny turn) and Allie Nordby; a sincerely sweet Noah Vondralee-Sternhill and Maeve Smith; Malcom March and zany Tina Traboulsi; Alex Delzell and Maddi Scarborough; and Sean O’Brien and Shannon Rider. They all grapple, very lightly, with such issues as divorce, passive aggression, and regrets with getting married in the first place. 

It’s clear the brilliant lyricist developed his talent considerably since this simple tale of a hapless bachelor seeking love and meaning with the help of five overzealous and seriously codependent couples premiered in 1970. Issues of marriage, fidelity, and losing one’s identity in a relationship may have been groundbreaking material fifty years ago, but they all seem rather pedestrian in today’s unprecedented times.

This is truly a show for actors and the cast, co-directed by Sheri Lee Miller and James Pelican, fairs well; with the women cast members (especially Allie Nordby as a gamely physical Sarah) more successful at creating memorable characters than their male counterparts. I attribute this to the writing, because the whole story seems to be Bobby’s female-centric fever-dream. The  focus is on how he’s admired and desired by all the wives, so much so that they serenade him in an odd love scene, “Poor Baby.” The husbands envy Bobby’s freedom, and each couple seems so deeply invested in him that it makes you wonder what else they do with their lives.

Sondheim’s genius lies in his lyrics and musical composition, showcased hilariously in “Getting Married Today” which features astonishing vocal work from Maddi Scarborough and wonderfully unhinged physical comedy from Maeve Smith. Musical direction by Lucas Sherman and his orchestra is sharp and skillful

If you’re a Sondheim die-hard, this might be the show for you. If not, you’re still in for some lively performances by some of the North Bay’s finest musical theatre performers.

‘Company’ runs through May 18 in the Codding Theater at the Spreckels Performing Arts Center, 5409 Snyder Lane, Rohnert Park. Fri-Sat, 7:30pm; Sun, 2pm. $16 – $42. 707.588.3400. spreckelsonline.com.

Summer concerts and movies at the Green Music Center

Published in cooperation between Green Music Center and the North Bay Bohemian

The Green Music Center at Sonoma State University is thrilled to present its new lineup of summer entertainment for 2025, with experiences for music lovers, families and everyone in between. From the exhilarating 4th of July Fireworks Spectacular to the enchanting sounds of Pink Martini featuring China Forbes (Aug 21), this season’s events offer a perfect blend of timeless classics and modern favorites. 

Kicking off the season with a bang, the 4th of July Fireworks Spectacular features the Santa Rosa Symphony and the Transcendence Theatre Company, culminating in the largest fireworks display in Sonoma County. Grammy-winning Rhiannon Giddens returns to her roots in her much-anticipated Old-Time Revue, joined by fellow Carolina Chocolate Drops collaborator Justin Robinson (July 18). Funk and soul legends Tower of Power continue their five-decade legacy (Aug 8), followed by the beloved “little orchestra,” Pink Martini, as it celebrates its 30th anniversary tour (Aug 21). Adding a comedic twist, “Weird Al” Yankovic’s Bigger & Weirder 2025 Tour promises rollicking parodies, iconic hits and never-before-performed fan favorites (Aug 27). Finally, rounding out the season are family-friendly Movies at the Green, featuring beloved titles and offering fun for all ages.

To purchase tickets to Summer at the Green 2025 visit gmc.sonoma.edu or call 707.664.4246. 


Summer at the Green 2025
Weill Hall + Lawn

4th of July Fireworks Spectacular
Santa Rosa Symphony
Troy Quinn, conductor
Transcendence Theatre Company
Friday, July 4, at 7:30 p.m.
Tickets $46-$76

The biggest fireworks display in Sonoma County returns with a bang. Join us for a family-friendly celebration featuring Sonoma County’s own Transcendence Theatre Company and the Santa Rosa Symphony in an evening of show tunes and patriotic classics, followed by a spectacular post-concert fireworks show. Bring the whole family—lawn tickets for kids 12 and under are half price! Families, make sure to arrive early and check out our Kids Zone from 4:30 p.m. –7 p.m., complete with carnival games and bounce houses, plus food, music and more.!      

Indoor and outdoor seating options are available. Indoor guests will be given time to relocate outside prior to the start of the fireworks display.

Supported in part by Crumbl Cookies, Exchange Bank and ProSource Wholesale


Rhiannon Giddens and the Old-Time Revue
with special guest Hannah Myree
Friday, July 18, at 7:30 p.m.
Tickets $42-$112

Rhiannon Giddens & The Old-Time Revue is Giddens’ much anticipated return to her North Carolina roots and the old time music tradition that launched her career. 2x Grammy, MacArthur “Genius” and Pulitzer Prize-winner Giddens has pulled together a remarkable band that represents an incredible array of talent and American musical traditions as a way to celebrate her new album What Did the Blackbird Say to the Crow, a fiddle-and-banjo record made with her old Carolina Chocolate Drop collaborator Justin Robinson. Joining Giddens and Robinson on stage will be celebrated multi-instrumentalist Dirk Powell, longtime bassist Jason Sypher, guitarist Amelia Powell and bones player and rapper Demeanor.

Supported in part by Balletto Vineyards


Tower of Power
Friday, August 8 at 7:30 p.m.
Tickets $41-$111

For 57 years, Tower of Power has delivered the best in funk and soul music. “We were a soul band called The Motowns,” recalls Emilio Castillo. “Rocco was the bass player, I was there, and my brother was the drummer. I met ‘Doc’ Kupka back in 1968 and gave him an audition. He came in the band, and we eventually changed our name to the Tower of Power.” The reason for the band name change was that they had a specific goal in mind. The band has long since surpassed Castillo’s modest aspirations, traveling the world, enjoying hit singles on their own and backing legendary artists. In the process they’ve defined an “Oakland soul” sound as instantly recognizable as those from Castillo’s hometown, Detroit, as well as inspirations like Memphis and Philadelphia. 

The future of Tower of Power is set out to be vigorous and dynamic and will prove to be just that for fans around the world starved for the band’s groove just the way Tower of Power likes it.

Supported in part by Poppy Ban, and Sally Tomatoes


Pink Martini featuring China Forbes
30th Anniversary Tour
Thursday, Aug. 21, at 7:30 p.m.
Tickets $46-$121

Featuring a dozen musicians, with songs in 25 languages, Pink Martini performs its multilingual repertoire on concert stages on six continents. After making its European debut at the Cannes Film Festival in 1997 and its orchestral debut with the Oregon Symphony in 1998, the band has gone on to play with more than 50 orchestras around the world, including multiple engagements with the Los Angeles Philharmonic at the Hollywood Bowl, the Boston Pops, the National Symphony at the Kennedy Center, the San Francisco Symphony and the BBC Concert Orchestra at Royal Albert Hall in London. Pink Martini has released 11 studio albums on its own independent label Heinz Records (named after pianist ThomasLauderdale’s dog), selling over 3 million albums worldwide. 

Supported in part by Clover Sonoma, Oliver’s Markets, ProSource Wholesale, Redwood Credit Union, Sonoma-Cutrer and Willow Creek Wealth Management


“Weird Al” Yankovic:
Bigger & Weirder 2025 Tour
with special guest Puddles Pity Party
Wednesday, Aug. 27, at 7:30 p.m.
Tickets $46-$121

Weird Al brings his legendary full-production multimedia comedy rock show back to the concert stage with the Bigger & Weirder 2025 Tour, playing his iconic hits as well as some never-performed-live-before fan favorites. Al’s long-time band is joined by four additional players to create a super-sized concert experience.

“Weird Al” Yankovic is the biggest-selling comedy recording artist in history. A 5-time Grammy Award winner, he is best known for his parodies of the biggest musical artists over the last 4 decades. His many hits include “Amish Paradise,” “Eat It,” “Like a Surgeon,” “Smells Like Nirvana,” “Word Crimes,” and the platinum-selling “White & Nerdy.” His last album, Mandatory Fun, is the only comedy album in history to debut at No. 1 on the Billboard Top 200. Weird Al’s live shows have entertained audiences across the globe for generations. In 2022, Yankovic produced and co-wrote the Emmy-winning biopic Weird: The Al Yankovic Story, starring Daniel Radcliffe in the title role.

Supported in part by Sally Tomatoes and the Sonoma State University Alumni Association


Movies at the Green
Supported in part by The Press Democrat and Sonoma State University Involvement.
Lawn tickets only $6 per person, 12 and under free.

ShrekSaturday, July 12, at 5 p.m.
Moana & Moana 2 Saturday, July 26, at 5 p.m. & 7 p.m.
Sonic the Hedgehog 3Saturday, Aug. 23, at 5 p.m.
WickedSaturday, Sept. 13, at 5 p.m.
A Minecraft MovieSaturday, Sept. 20, at 5 p.m.


CHOOSE YOUR EXPERIENCE 

WEILL HALL
Sit inside for the most intimate concert-going experience. The back wall will be open for the summer.

TERRACED TABLE SEATING
Sit outside at a table for four and enjoy the views. Ideal for enjoying the music while dining with friends.

WEILL LAWN
Soak in the sounds of summer on the Weill Lawn. With views of the stage amplified by a large video screen, the lawn offers the feel of a summer festival. Bring your own blanket or lawn chair.


About the Green Music Center

The Green Music Center is the performing arts center at Sonoma State University, a regionally serving public university committed to educational access and excellence. As a cornerstone of Sonoma State University’s commitment to the arts, the Green Music Center is a place to witness artistic inspiration through year-round programming, serving as home to the Sonoma State University Department of Music, the Santa Rosa Symphony and Sonoma Bach.

The mission of the Green Music Center is to present the most compelling artists of our time, to investigate ideas and to provide access to diverse artistic experiences that educate, connect and inspire Sonoma State University and neighboring North Bay communities.

Built to bring together artists, students, families, music-lovers and more, the Green Music Center at Sonoma State University is a gathering place for the diverse communities in Sonoma County to explore and enjoy the things that move and inspire. The center includes the 1,400-seat Weill Hall, with a rear wall that opens to lawn seating for a unique summertime experience, and the intimate 240-seat Schroeder Hall. 


About the Green Music Center

Nestled in the foothills of Northern California’s esteemed Wine Country, the Green Music Center (GMC) at Sonoma State University is a focal point for arts in the region. It is comprised of the spectacular 1,400-seat Weill Hall, an acoustically exceptional venue with a modular rear wall that opens to terraced lawn seating, providing picturesque views of the surrounding countryside, and the 240-seat Schroeder Hall, a cathedral-like recital hall designed specifically to accentuate instruments, organ and voice in a small, intimate setting. The Green Music Center presents year-round programming of top classical, contemporary, jazz and world music artists and is home to the Santa Rosa Symphony. 


green music center logo

View a complete listing of the Green Music Center’s upcoming events at gmc.sonoma.edu.
Weill Hall | Schroeder Hall
Green Music Center | Sonoma State University
1801 East Cotati Ave, Rohnert Park, CA 94928

Drink Among Giants, Redwood Empire Whiskey

While Elliott Sneen has worked in the wine and spirits industry for many years, he seems to enjoy beer quite a bit. 

Who could blame him for craving a nice, refreshing pilsner after a long day tasting barrel-aged bourbon at Redwood Empire? It feels like our local favorite whiskey brand has been around forever, but it actually only launched in 2019, under the Purple Brands umbrella, founded by Derek Benham in 2001. 

When Benham decided to break ground on the new distillery in 2014, he chose the tiny pocket town of Graton, recognizing the ideal humidity and climate in the area for steady whiskey aging. It could be said that way more people know where Graton is because of Redwood Empire. 

Sneen is behind the branding and awareness efforts for the company. And it’s pretty clear he does a good job, with all the acclaim the brand has received. Keep those ears open for news on the grand opening of the new Redwood Empire location on Mare Island, with tastings, tours and more in the works.

Amber Turpin: What is your job?

Elliott Sneen: Senior brand manager at Redwood Empire Whiskey.

How did you get into this work?

After attending Sonoma State University, I fell into the wine industry right away back in 2012. From there, I never left. I’m currently working at Purple Brands, focused on spirits more so than wine—with the majority of my day-to-day focused on Redwood Empire Whiskey.

Did you ever have an “aha” moment with a certain beverage? If so, tell us about it.

I had the luxury of living in Germany when I was 19 for a full year. Spoiled rotten with some of the best lagers and rieslings on the planet. Enjoying this early “legal” year of drinking helped me understand how food and alcohol can complement one another so well.

What is your favorite thing to drink at home?

Out of sheer laziness, I typically go for a neat pour of spirits. Typically whiskey.

Where do you like to go out for a drink?

I get a kick out of the original Russian River Brewery in Santa Rosa. You have a full range of hyperlocal die-hards combined with tourists from all over the world.

If you were stuck on a desert island, what would you want to be drinking (besides fresh water)?

Russian River’s STS Pils would be a good steady pour. A beer might fill me up also, assuming food might be lacking out on the island. Plus I’d be able to daydream of getting back home with that beer’s reference to our local airport.Redwood Empire Whiskey, 617 Second St., Suite C, Petaluma. 707.824.5338. redwoodempirewhiskey.com

Culture Crush, 5/14

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Mill Valley

Band, Interrupted

Blending New Wave nostalgia with prog-pop punch, Pardon The Interruption (PTI) returns to Sweetwater Music Hall for a high-energy set guaranteed to get Mill Valley moving. Led by guitarist and vocalist David Noble—whose credits range from Wreckless Strangers to Nina Hagen—PTI draws from funk, ska, jam and vintage rock to deliver a sound that’s both retro-chic and totally its own. The band features a killer lineup of NorCal session talent including bassist Rob Fordyce, drummer Rob Hooper and sax maven Jamison Smeltz. Opening the night is soulful ska powerhouse the Jethro Jeremiah Band, whose frontman has shared stages with Ray Charles, Ziggy Marley and Michael Franti. It’s a rare double bill that pairs groove with grit and will keep one dancing until the lights come up. 

Thursday, 8pm, June 5, Sweetwater Music Hall, 19 Corte Madera Ave., Mill Valley. Tickets $30. sweetwatermusichall.com

Sonoma

Burning Questions

Two of Northern California’s most compelling literary voices converge at Artefact Design & Salvage for a timely discussion on fire, landscape, and the emotional aftershocks of climate change. Sonoma County author Manjula Martin celebrates the paperback release of The Last Fire Season: A Personal and Pyronatural History, a vivid memoir of the 2020 Walbridge Fire and its ecological and psychological aftermath. Joining her is Lauren Markham, author of Immemorial and The Far Away Brothers, whose work explores loss, borders, and belonging in an era of environmental upheaval. The evening includes short readings, a conversation, audience Q&A, wine, and the chance to browse Artefact’s eclectic home design showroom.

Friday, 6pm, May 16, Artefact Design & Salvage, 20490 Broadway, Sonoma. Tickets $20. lastfireseasonsonoma.eventbrite.com

Sonoma

AfriCali Flavors Come to Sonoma

Culinary producer, food writer, and Jikoni founder Kiano Moju visits the Sonoma Valley Library to celebrate the release of her debut cookbook AfriCali—a vibrant fusion of African flavors and California food culture. Moju, whose heritage is Kenyan and Nigerian, rose to prominence as a creative force at BuzzFeed’s Tasty before founding her own culinary studio and launching the Jikoni Recipe Archive, which documents African and diasporic food traditions. Her demo and talk will highlight how to build bold flavors using everyday grocery staples, while drawing connections between global foodways and local kitchens.

Saturday, 2pm, May 17, Sonoma Valley Regional Library, 755 W Napa St., Sonoma. Free, registration encouraged. events.sonomalibrary.org/kiano-moju

Novato

Grave Matters

The Novato Historical Guild resumes its popular Pioneer Park Cemetery tours this month, with longtime docent Sharon Azevedo guiding visitors through the town’s early burial ground. The 90-minute walking tour begins at 9 am and explores local lore, pioneer history, and notable names etched into the headstones. Upcoming tour dates include May 17, June 21, July 26, August 16, and September 20. A $10 on-site donation is appreciated. Advance registration is requested at novatohistory.org (click “events,” then “calendar”). 

Tours are sponsored by the Novato Historical Guild and the Novato History Museum, located at 815 DeLong Ave. The museum is open Wednesday, Thursday, and Saturday from 12 to 4pm.

Transience and Oneness, Sessei Meg Levie of Green Gulch Zen Center

The road that took me to the Green Dragon Temple was as convoluted and as linear as the pilgrim’s path.

It wound down into a long but narrow property, fenced with mature eucalyptus trees. After a few more uncertain forks I ended up, eventually and inevitably, at the edge of a campus of some 20-odd buildings suited to farming, hosting and Zen monasticism.

Some of the buildings in that redwood stand were traditional Japanese. Some were Western. The most charming of them were a blended mix of the two, including the zendo or meditation hall, where the Buddha of infinite wisdom sits under rustic barn timbers in endless twilit repose.

I had arrived at the famous Green Gulch Farm Zen Center in Marin. It is the third of the three locations of the San Francisco Zen Center to be established. First was the San Francisco Zen Center’s City Center, founded by Shunryu Suzuki Roshi himself (author of Zen Mind, Beginner’s Mind) amid the endless urban bustle. Then came Tassajara, which mounted its famous bread ovens in the remote pinnacles of the Ventana wilderness.

Last came Green Gulch, the happy medium, which descends from the Green Dragon Temple to the sea in a graceful series of terraces broken by stands of cypress. There, sunburnt organic farmers chant for the relief of all beings as they cultivate their green valley.

In many respects, Green Gulch remains unchanged from the time of its establishment and early heyday in the mid-’70s. Then again, it is poised for a transformation: The gradual generational turnover of its senior leadership and monastics became precipitous with the recent opening of Enso Village—the Zen-inspired retirement village in Healdsburg. There are now numerous opportunities for internal advancement and the recruitment of young blood. 

It was to participate in this Renaissance reawakening of Green Gulch that Sessei Meg Levie returned to take up the position of “head of practice.”

As we sat together in the restless shade of a stand of bamboo, Sessei openly pondered the new potential of the center to serve the wider community and the world with a quiet excitement. I found her to be a fine embodiment of her own peaceful doctrine. Sessei is a Dharma name meaning “embracing life.”

Cincinnatus Hibbard: What message or answer does Zen Buddhism have for us in these times of change and turmoil?

Sessei Meg Levie: There is a lot of uncertainty in the world right now, and there is a lot of suffering. Zen offers a path of settling down and opening up to a bigger view—of whom we really are beyond our limited, individual stories, and to the deep interconnectedness of life. Understanding that no one really is “other” naturally leads to greater empathy and kindness, and less fear.

When you realize also that everything in life changes and there’s nothing permanent to hold on to, including ourselves, it creates the possibility of being fully in this moment, right now, in all its beauty and aliveness, even in the midst of difficulty.

I appreciate that you develop this awareness in zazen sitting meditation. But again, your center emphasizes hard farm work. How do you access it in your working life?

Work practice has a long tradition in Zen. It’s about bringing awareness to what you are doing in each moment and remembering your intention. If what you care about is serving others and cultivating clarity in your own mind and heart, then whatever you are doing becomes Zen practice.

Learn more at linktr.ee/GreenGulchZen.

Your Letters, May 14

Un-Happys

With regard to the Happys, I suggest a more fitting band name: the Vandals. Their so-called “marketing efforts” are amateurish and unprofessional, if not pathetic. They post their inept, graffiti-like signs on public, private, county, and state property. This is not only a nuisance, but clearly illegal. Please don’t encourage them.

Howard Kurtz
San Rafael

Ode to Evil Elon

With joy we are delirious

’Cause life for Elon turned serious

Between a rock and a Tesla he’ s stuck

With his Edsel, a Cybertruck

Let’s all hope it is soon gone

Along with Musk, DOGE and King Don

Bob Canning
Petaluma

Cover Lover

Just a quick note to say how much I enjoy the work of your cover designer Gustavo Belman. He consistently does such interesting work—some should be framed and put in a gallery. His covers remind me of the graphics-heavy rock posters of yore.

Micah D. Mercer
North Bay

We appreciate your letters to the editor—send them to le*****@******an.com and le*****@********un.com. Letters may be edited for clarity and space.

Saving Science, SoCo Scientists Sound the Funding Alarm

We were just kids in Sonoma County when we first felt the urgency—from summers filled with thickened smoke and anxious harvests during record-breaking heat. As scientists, we’re trying to do something about it, but the funding that makes our work possible is being destroyed. 

Scientists are the reason we have defeated deadly diseases, landed on the moon and led global innovation. With devastating budget cuts to crucial funding sources like the National Science Foundation (NSF) and the National Institutes of Health (NIH), we are abandoning science and we are abandoning our future. From agricultural advancements that secure our food supply to groundbreaking medical discoveries, federal funding is critical to our long-term wellbeing.

Proposed cuts to the federal agencies that fund scientific research threaten to compromise America’s longstanding role as a research powerhouse This identity is rooted in its robust research enterprise, especially in states like California. As the fourth largest economy in the world, California’s success is powered in large part by its investment in science and technology, which fuels economic growth, contributes to national security, attracts global talent and trains the next generation of researchers. 

NIH funding contributed almost $14 billion and NSF funding over $1 billion to California’s economy. Additionally, for every dollar spent on research, more than double that is returned to the economy. Slashing funding for agencies, like NSF, that make up just over 1% of the federal budget won’t reduce the deficit or lower everyday costs, but will undermine past investments and stall vital research.

The new administration intends to cut NSF’s budget by two thirds and has already cut nearly half of its federal employees, terminated over 1,000 funded grants, and most recently instructed staff to halt payments on existing awards and pause new ones altogether. NSF is not alone in this fight. 

Agencies like the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the National Institute of Standards and Technology, and the Department of Energy are also under fire for supporting climate science, clean energy, and so-called “woke” research in the social and behavioral sciences. 

Most Americans unknowingly rely on federal science funding in their daily lives. A recent poll found 90% of people use weather forecasts, job market reports, food safety warnings and other information rooted in federal science funding, but only 10% are concerned with the cuts. NSF funds cybersecurity, K-12 education, veteran resources, developed the American Sign Language, built the foundation of Artificial Intelligence, facilitated groundbreaking medical treatments and so much more. When funding is cut, everyday people who rely on this federally funded information will be without. Professors cancel research programs. Community partnerships dissolve. The work stops. The next climate solution, the next medical breakthrough, might never be found.

The fight over federal science funding isn’t solely about politics. It’s about whether people like us—from rural towns, families of color and public schools—will ever get the chance to dream big. Federal support for science built the opportunities that changed our lives. Now, those lifelines are being destroyed.

We both came from humble beginnings growing up in Sonoma County public schools. One of us began at Santa Rosa Junior College as a first-generation student, supported by a Pell Grant. A fascination with fungi, and their role as nature-based solutions to climate change, led to a doctorate funded by NSF’s Graduate Research Fellowship, and next an NSF-supported postdoctoral fellowship. This public investment makes it possible today for her to teach climate resilience to students and to help them see themselves as part of the climate solution.

Despite this impressive trajectory, the fear that the fellowship, a source of income, will be the next one cancelled, not because the science isn’t sound but because the scientist in question is from an underrepresented identity in STEM which is being attacked. The other began at CSU Monterey Bay, drawn to the ocean with little idea of the pathways available to her. It was  NSF-funded undergraduate research experiences and programs like Environmental Biology for Pacific Islanders that lit the way forward for her to pursue a career in conservation. Federally funded programs offered us a future in research, but with current funding cuts, it’s become difficult for emerging scientists like us to continue down the path we’ve invested so much in. What made the difference in both of our successes wasn’t luck, but public investment: Scholarship, mentorship and research funds all made possible by federal support. 

Our stories show what’s possible when science is funded and accessible. That support is vital now more than ever, as communities like ours, mostly Latinx and working class, live with the daily realities of climate change. In Sonoma County, droughts, wildfires and extreme heat aren’t distant threats–they’re reshaping our air, water, economy and health. And yet, places like ours are too often left out of conversations about climate solutions. Even within California, media coverage favors wealthier regions while devastating fires like the 2017 Tubbs Fire are forgotten.

Science should be accessible to everyone, but proposed cuts to research funding threaten to shut out entire communities. This is not just about lost discoveries. It is about lost jobs, stalled education and missed breakthroughs in health, climate and technology. NSF prepares the next generation by bringing STEM into early learning and training teachers to engage students in every corner of the country. It equips K–12 schools, community colleges and workforce programs to meet the needs of industries desperate for skilled workers. When we limit who gets to participate in science, we lose the perspectives that drive real innovation. Kids from rural towns, working class families and communities of color bring essential lived knowledge to the table. Without support, their voices and their solutions risk being left out entirely.

It’s clear that federally funded science programs work. While we may not have had many examples for careers in science when we grew up in Geyserville, today we hope to serve as role models for young people with dreams just like ours. Science should be a visible, viable path forward. The programs that fuel curiosity and power American innovation urgently need support. Let’s not allow politics to erase these options for the next generation of scientists and changemakers. Instead invest in our communities and our futures. We urge you, as readers and fellow people from Sonoma County, to use your power and speak for those without voices; reach out to our representatives at any level of government and advocate for the access to knowledge. Science is rooted in our local areas, driven by human wonder, and with your help it has the power to change the world.

Your Letters, May 21

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summer concerts and movies at the green music center, summer events at the green music center
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Your Letters, May 14

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Saving Science, SoCo Scientists Sound the Funding Alarm

We were just kids in Sonoma County when we first felt the urgency—from summers filled with thickened smoke and anxious harvests during record-breaking heat. As scientists, we’re trying to do something about it, but the funding that makes our work possible is being destroyed.  Scientists are the reason we have defeated deadly diseases, landed on the moon and led global...
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