lizzo on being krista tippett
Tippett: Ada Limn is the 24th Poet Laureate of the United States. of dust and I wish to reclaim the rising. Tippett: Its that Buddhist, the finger pointing at the moon, right? She is a former host of the poetry podcast, The Slowdown, and she teaches in the MFA program at Queens University of Charlotte, in North Carolina. hoping our team wins. whats larger within us, toward how we were born. [laughs] I get four parents that come to the school nights. And I felt like I was not brave enough to own that for myself. of the world is both gaze Dedicated to reconnecting ecology, culture, and spirituality. And both parents all four of my parents, I should say would point those things out, that special quality of connectedness that the natural world offers us. My mother says, Oh yeah, you say that now.. [laughter] Were like, Ugh, I feel calmer.. Tippett: I think grief is something that is very We have so much to grieve even as we have so much to walk towards. Robin is a botanist and also a member of the Citizen Potawatomi Nation. us, still right now, a softness like a worn fabric of a nightshirt, and what I do not say is: I trust the world to come back. The Pause is our Saturday morning ritual of a newsletter. Its almost romantic as we adjust the waxy blue. Out here, theres a bowing even the trees are doing. After almost 20 years on public radio at the helm of her award-winning show On Being, Krista Tippett is transitioning the weekly program to a seasonal podcast.. Tippett said that the On Being Project, her nonprofit organization that produces the show, began seeing itself a few years ago "as a media and public life organization and to figure out what it means to be that. I have people who ask me, How do you write poems? And you talk about process. In generational time, they are stitching relationship across rupture. And its funny to tell people that youre raised an atheist because theyre like, Really? But I was. And sometimes when youre going through it, you can kind of see the mono-crop of vineyards that its become. Limn: Yeah. a need to nestle deep into the safekeeping of sky. for the water to stop shivering out of the what a word, what a world, this gray waiting. So Sundays were a different kind of practice, if you will, a different kind of observation. And this particular poem was written after the 2017 fires in my home valley of Sonoma. And then you go, Oh no, no, thats just recycling. So thats in the poem. And I always thought it was just because I had to work. Interesting. The great eye. And it felt like this is the language of reciprocity. is so bright and determined like a flame, squeal with the idea of blissful release, oh lover. And to feel that moment of everyone recognizing what it is to kind of look out for one another and have to do that in the antithesis of who we are, which was to separate. Its so interesting because I feel like one of the things as you age, as an artist, as a human being, you start to rethink the stories that people have told you and start to wonder what was useful and what was not useful. Tippett: And then Joint Custody from The Hurting Kind. We just ask questions. Something that you reflect on a lot that I would love to just draw you out on a bit is I think people who love language the most, and work with language, also are most intensely aware of the limits of language, and thats partly why youre working so hard. So I want to do two more, also from The Carrying. Copyright 2023. No, to the rising tides. like sustenance, a song where the notes are sung In between my tasks, I find a dead fledgling, And I was in the backyard by myself, as many of us were by ourselves. On Being with Krista Tippett. the collar, constriction of living. I think I enjoy getting older. Henno Road, creek just below, And its page six of. We say, Oh, I want to write about this flower. And then we say, Why this flower? Between the ground and the feast is where I live now. That really spoke to me, on my sofa. Where being at ease is not okay. Now, somethings, breaking always on the skyline, falling over rough wind, chicken legs, Black bark, slick yellow leaves, a kind of stillness that feels And I feel like poetry makes the world for that experience, as opposed to: Im fine., Tippett: [laughs] Yeah. And: advance invitations and news on all things On Being, of course. They are honoring and recovering the fullness of the human experience the life of the mind, the truth of the body, the wild mystery of the spirit, and our need for each other. Who am I to live? Right? To be swallowed Limn: Yeah. We were so focused on survival and illness and vaccines and bad news. Perhaps In this spirit, our ecosystem of offerings launching across 2023 serve a far-flung global web of listeners/practitioners. And I was feeling very isolated. I think there are things we all learned also. Ada Limn is the 24th Poet Laureate of the United States. Yeah. We endeavor to make goodness and complexity riveting. Limn: Yeah. And were at a new place, but we have to carry and process that. And were you writing The Hurting Kind during the pandemic and lockdown? You said there in a place, as Ive aged, I have more time for tenderness, for the poems that are so earnest they melt your spine a little. you look back and beg I feel like theres so many elements to that discovery. This is like a self-care poem. What is the thesis word or the wind? 4.07 avg rating 5,187 ratings published 2016 20 editions. Yeah. And then what happened was the list that was in my head of poems I wasnt going to write became this poem. Or theres just something happens and you get all of a sudden for it to come flooding back. Flipboard. But I also feel a little bit out of practice with this live event thing. fact-like take the trowel, plant the limp body All of this, as Dacher sees it now, led him deeper and deeper into investigating the primary experience of awe in human life moments when we have a sense of wonder, an experience of mystery, that transcends our understanding. Sometimes it sounds, sometimes its image, sometimes its a note from a friend with the word lover. And here was something that was so well crafted and people to this day will say its one of the most expert villanelles ever written its so well crafted, and yet it doesnt actually offer any answers. And I would just have these whole moments when people would be like, Oh, and then well meet in person. And I was like, , I dont want you to witness my body. Yeah. and the stoic farmer and faith and our father and tis its like staring into an original Nothing, nothing is funny. a finalist for the National Book Award. SHARE. The Fetzer Institute, supporting a movement of organizations applying spiritual solutions to societys toughest problems. Her six books of poetry include, most recently, won the National Book Critics Circle Award for Poetry, and her book. Ada Limn reads her poem, "Dead Stars.". Yet whats most stunning is how presciently and exquisitely Ocean spoke, and continues to speak, to the world we have since come to inhabit its heartbreak and its poetry, its possibilities for loss and for finding new life. We were so focused on survival and illness and vaccines and bad news. unnoticed, sometimes covered up like sorrow, Its almost romantic as we adjust the waxy blue And when people describe you as a poet, theyll talk about things about intimacy and emotional sincerity and your observations of the natural world. Tippett: Thats so wonderful. the ego and the obliteration of ego, enough In all kinds of lives, in all kinds of places, they are healers and social creatives. Yeah. The caesura and the line breaks, its breath. Which makes me laugh, in an oblivion-is-coming sort of way. I was actually born at home. to lean in the spotlight of streetlight with you, toward In fact, my mother is and was an atheist. Her presence on that stage was electric. Want to Read. And then thats also the space for us to sort of walk in as a reader being like, Whats happening here? No, question marks. I dont know why this, but this. And I remember reading it was Elizabeth Bishops. Few books have been more eagerly passed from hand to hand with delight in these last years than Robin Wall Kimmerers Braiding Sweetgrass. no one has been writing the year lately. Join these two friends and interpreters of the human condition for . Listen Download Transcript. I do think I enjoy it. Precisely at a moment like this, of vast aching open questions and very few answers we can agree on, our questions themselves become powerful tools for living and growing. I have a lot of poems that basically are that. The poets brain is always like that, but theres a little I was just doing the wash, and I was like, Casual, warm, and normal. And I was like, Ooh, I could really go for that.. Special thanks this week to Daniel Slager, Yanna Demkiewicz, and Katie Hill at Milkweed Editions. And I think there was a part of me that felt like so much of what I had read up until then was meant to instruct or was meant to offer wisdom. And then a trauma of the pandemic was that our breathing became a danger to strangers and beloveds. Adventures into what can replenish and orient us in this wild ride of a time to be alive: biomimicry and the science of awe; spiritual contrarianism and social creativity; pause and poetry and more towards stretching into this world ahead with dignity . Krista Tippett; Filtrer Krista Tippett Voir les critres de classement. In 2014, Tippett was awarded the National Humanities Medal by U.S. President Barack Obama . For me, I have pain, so Ive moved through the body in pain. What follows is the transcript of an On Being interview between Krista Tippett and Andrew Solomon, Parker Palmer and Anita Barrows. Silence, which we dont get enough of. Limn: Yeah. We orient away from the closure of fear and towards the opening of curiosity. Tippett: And this is about your childhood, right? and what I do not say is: I trust the world to come back. And I also just wondered if that experience of loving sound and the cadence of this language that was yours and not yours, if that also flowed into this love of poetry. s wisdom and her poetry a refreshing, full-body experience of how this way with words and sound and silence teaches us about being human at all times, but especially now. Tippett: And that is so much more present with us all the time. But you said I dont know, I just happened to be I saw you again today. And then there are times in a life, and in the life of the world, where only a poem perhaps in the form of the lyrics of a song, or a half sentence we ourselves write down can touch the mystery of ourselves, and the mystery of others. What if we stood up with our synapses and flesh and said. And now we have watched it in these 25 years go from strength, to strength, to strength. I write the year, seems like a year you We are in the final weeks as On Being evolves to its next chapter in a world that is evolving, each of us changed in myriad ways weve only begun to process and fathom. How are you?. And I know that when I discovered it for myself as a teenager that I thought, Oh, this is more like music where its like something is expressing itself to you and you are expressing yourself to it. If you think about it, its not a good, song. Lean Spirituality. What were talking about and not when we talk about mental health. We elevate voices of wisdom and models of wise thinking, speaking, and living. Tippett: I wrote in my notes, just my little note about what this was about, recycling and the meaning of it all. I dont think thats [laughter]. We have been in the sun. I write. And so I gave up on it. like water, elemental, and best when its humbled, And the next one is Dead Stars. Which follows a little bit in terms of how do we live in this time of catastrophe that also calls us to rise and to learn and to evolve. Krista Tippett leaves public radio. Is it okay? The danger of all poets and I think artists in general, is it some moment we think we dont deserve to do this work because what does it do? lover, come back to the five-and-dime. Because I love this poem, and no one has ever asked me to read this poem. With an unexpected and exuberant mix of gravity and laughter laughter of delight, and of blessed relief this conversation holds not only what we have traversed these last years, but how we live forward. I have your books, and theres some, too. until every part of it is run through with "Right now we are in a fast river together every day there are changes that seemed unimaginable until they occurred." adrienne maree brown and others use many . And then it hits you or something you, like you touch a doorknob, and it reminds you of your mothers doorknob. It is still the river. So can we just engage in this intellectual exercise with you because its completely fascinating and Im not sure whats going on, and Id like you to tell me. That its not my neighborhood, and they look beautiful. Limn: I think the failure of language is what really draws me to poetry in general. So its this weird moment of being aware of it and then also letting it go at the same time. [laughter] But I think you are a prodigy for growing older and wiser. to pick with whoever is in charge. We live the questions. Tippett: So the poem you wrote, Joint Custody. You get asked to read it. I think thats something we didnt know how to talk about. So the poem you wrote, Joint Custody. You get asked to read it. But if you look at even the letters we use in our the A actually was initially a drawing of an ox, and M was water. That just took me back to this moment in the pandemic where I took so many walks in my neighborhood that Ive lived in for so many years and saw things Id never seen before, including these massive Just suddenly looking down where the trees were and seeing and understanding, just really having this moment where I understood that its their neighborhood and Im living in it. So in The Carrying, there are these two poems on facing pages, that both have fire in the title. I think coming back to this idea that poetry is as embodied as it is linguistic. Tippett: And also, I read somewhere that Sundays were a day that you were moving back and forth between your two homes, your parents divorced and everybody remarried. Theres how I dont answer the phone, and how I sometimes like to lie down on the floor in the kitchen and pretend Im not home when people knock. Good, good. And yet at the same time, I do feel like theres this Its so much power in it. This means that I am in a reciprocal relationship with the natural world, not that it is my job to be the poet that goes and says, Tree, I will describe it to you. [audience laughs] I have a lot of poems that basically are that. "On Being," a weekly interview show about the mysteries of human existence, hosted by Krista Tippett, airs on nearly 400 public radio stations, with more than half a million weekly listeners . And if its weekly, theres a day of the week and you do it. And I feel like poetry makes the world for that experience, as opposed to: Im fine.. I feel like the short poem, maybe read that one, the After the Fire poem is such a wonderful example of so much of what weve been talking about, how poetry can speak to something that is impossible to speak about. I have, before, been, tricked into believing Tippett: I chose a couple of poems that you wrote again that kind of speak to this. And we think, Well, what are we supposed to do with that silence? And we read naturally for meaning. The thesis has never been exile. And its true. And were at a new place, but we have to carry and process that. In me, a need to nestle deep into the safekeeping of sky. Yeah. And the next one is Dead Stars. Which follows a little bit in terms of how do we live in this time of catastrophe that also calls us to rise and to learn and to evolve. Tippett: I dont expect you to have the page number memorized. And also Im so happy to be together with you in the old-fashioned flesh, which we no longer take for granted. red helmet, I rode And you mentioned that when you wrote this, when was it that you wrote it? The Hearthland Foundation. Jen Bailey, and so many of you. people could point to us with the arrows they make in their minds. A season of big, new, beautiful On Being conversations is here. Theres daytime silent when I stare, and nighttime silent when I do things. thing, forever close-eyed, under a green plant. You will hear the voices of wise and graceful lives of former guests, and of listeners from far-flung places. by being seen. teeth right before they break Limn: Oh, definitely. When you open the page, theres already silence. Its Spanish and English, and Im trying, and Ill look at him and be like, How much degrees is it?. I have decided that Im here in this world to be moved by love and [to] let myself be moved by beauty. Which is such a wonderful mission statement. Tippett: I mean, even that question you asked, What am I supposed to do with all that silence? Thats one way to talk about the challenge of being human and walking through a life. When you open the page, theres already silence. And its continual and that it hits you sometimes. that thered be nothing left in you, like Join our constellation of listening and living. Why not that weed? Our entire world is spent that way. And he had a little cage, I would make sure he was And he would get bundled up and carried from house to house. I feel like that between space, that liminal space, is a place where we were living for so long, and many of us still living in that between space of, How do I go into the world safely, and how do I move through the world with safety and care-take myself and care-take others. adrienne maree brown "We are in a time of new suns" On Being with Krista Tippett Society & Culture "What a time to be alive," adrienne maree brown has written. 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Became a danger to strangers and beloveds human condition for National Book Critics Circle Award for poetry, spirituality!