Categories
Creativity Nature

Considering Sue Holloway

For more than 20 years, I have hiked at a nature preserve here in my town. Its criss-crossing trails allow for easy walks around a pond and through the forest, and its 800 acres of open space provide for quiet contemplation, easy escape, and frequent inspiration.

This was the place that inspired my very early nature writing which became my first book Look Up! Musing on the Nature of Mindfulness. And it sparked a re-connection with being out in nature, and a feeling of companionship with it and its creatures that has fed my writing ever since.

It’s fed my spirit, too. It’s where I meditate, where I talk to god. On peaceful, early morning walks, I often find myself in quiet conversation with kindred spirits like Henry David Thoreau, Mary Oliver, and Emily Dickinson.

On a recent walk, I found myself thinking about Sue Holloway. Sue was a woman of the woods and a poet, too. She loved swans and butterflies. And she spent countless hours along the trails at the same nature preserve.

Sue was an adjunct professor in Ecofeminist Writing at Southern Connecticut State University in New Haven, Connecticut. She was a member of the Swan Society and the Orion Grassroots Network.

Sue wrote a “Back to Earth” column for four Connecticut newspapers, and a “Woman with Spirit” column for Woman Magazine. Her editorials, photo features, articles, and poetry appeared in numerous publications, newspapers, and anthologies including Heart Beat of New England: An Anthology of Contemporary Nature Poetry. Sue published several books as well: A Community of Young Poets, Artemis’ Arrow, and Swan in the Grail.

Her writing, as noted by one online biography, “traced themes of human intimacy and subjectivity with the rest of creation. Her intent was to promote affiliation, compassion, tolerance, and peace among people and among humans and creatures.”

Thomas Berry, the renowned visionary thinker who explored humanity’s relationship to the earth and the universe, said of Sue: “It’s such a joy to come across someone who understands…The creatures in the surrounding world are all gracious companions on our great journey.”

She understood that deeply, as shown not only in her teaching and her writing, but in her actions, as well.

When a local conservation group organized a controlled burn of a meadow to thwart invasive weeds, despite the presence of animals, birds, and insects, Sue passionately resigned from its board, terminated her membership, and never looked back.

I was considering Sue Holloway and her enthusiastic stance recently, as I drove into the preserve I have considered sacred space all these years. There, along a pristine arc of the pond, a new gravel path had been bulldozed into place. A quarter mile of stone and boulder stanchions in the shadowy overlook where turtles once laid eggs and herons would land to rest.

As I walked the familiar paths that morning — the words of a scathing protest letter forming in my mind, ideas for a clandestine remediation — I thought about Sue and what she might think about the new walkway. I wondered what she should think about all of the changes in this special place where we both found solace.

What would she think of the increase in visitors who leave behind trash and bags full of dog poop, who hang Christmas decorations in the woods and tuck painted rocks into nooks and crannies, who toss food waste and rotting piles of birdseed along the trail?

What would she think of the infrastructure needed to support the increase in traffic — the fabricated bridges in place of stepping stones and corduroy roads, the bulldozed woods road now 10 feet wide, the loose gravel tossed liberally atop muddy patches, the multitude of trail blazes hammered deep into bark?

How would she feel walking the trails forever changed by the microburst that destroyed the forest canopy, the rocky arid paths, the increase of invasive plants?  The stark evidence of climate change, the insects and tree diseases?

As I walked, I wondered what protest could be loud enough for all of that? What words, what actions, what effort could ever, ever turn the tide?

“I urge each reader to make an informed choice about the destiny of these creatures, for it also defines ourselves.” — Sue Holloway

“In everything do to others as you would have them do to you; for this is the law and the prophets.” — Matthew 7:12 (NOAB)

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Sue Holloway’s book Swan in the Grail can be borrowed from the Blackstone Memorial Library in Branford and found online to purchase. Many of her photographs can be found on the website All Creatures. Here are links to some of her articles:

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Essay and photo ©2025, Jen Payne

Categories
Creativity Poetry

12-still advancing confidently in the direction of my dreams

Thoreau, she tells me,
was tended to by women.
Meals and laundry —
a side of the story I’d missed,
hadn’t even thought to think about;
his cabin in the woods?
his solitude and simplicity?
my dream!
my escape!
my alternate ending!
and who considers practicalities
when we’re having
a transcendental crisis?
I am disheartened
and disappointed
and then…delighted!
The solitude of the woods?
The simplicity of sojourn?
And a community of women
to soothe and support?
Life Goals times one hundred!




P.S. There’s a Walden video game!


Poem ©2025 Jen Payne. Inspired, in part, by Hendry David Thoreau’s Walden. The title of the poem reflects the quote: “I learned this, at least, by my experiment : that if one advances confidently in the direction of his dreams, and endeavors to live the life which he has imagined, he will meet with a success unexpected in common hours.” Photo from Literary America. NaPoWriMo, National Poetry Writing Month. If you like this poem, you can read similar in my books and zines, available from Three Chairs Publishing on my ETSY SHOP. They come autographed, with gratitude and a small gift.

Categories
Community Conservation

The Season for Nonviolence

“64 Days to Live Nonviolence”
SEASON FOR NONVIOLENCE


The Season for Nonviolence marks the 64 days between the anniversaries of the deaths of Mohandas Gandhi on January 30 and Martin Luther King Jr. on April 4. Cesar Chavez‘s birthday also falls within the Season on March 31. The Season for Nonviolence was co-founded by Arun and Sunanda Gandhi and the Leadership Council of The Association for Global New Thought (AGNT) in 1998.

To help you learn to practice nonviolence one step at a time, one choice at a time, one day at a time, the M.K. Gandhi Institute for Nonviolence created a booklet called “64 Days to Live Nonviolence.”

They explain:

Through our daily nonviolent choices and action, our noble and courageous spirits rise to move the world in the direction of peace. Wherever you are in your journey, we hope this booklet will support your growth and encourage you, reminding you that you are part of a worldwide community working for nonviolence and peace.

Will you join me for “64 Days to Live Nonviolence”? I’ll be posting on Random Acts of Writing’s Facebook page starting tomorrow, if you’d like to share your thoughts or you can:

Categories
Community Conservation

Let it begin with me…

There is a stain on my town and it’s hard to ignore.

To get here, you take Exit 54 for Branford, Connecticut / Cedar Street and head south to our charming downtown center. There you’ll find the stately Blackstone Memorial Library and our Main Street flanked by small businesses, an art gallery, and award-winning restaurants. White steepled churches circle the classic New England Town Green, where tables are set out for conversations and ice cream from across the street, and fairs and concerts are regular events. The wide expanse of grass is crisscrossed by brick sidewalks that lead to Town Hall and war monuments honoring soldiers who died to uphold the principles of our country.

But in order to get from Exit 54 to this snapshot of Americana, you have to drive by a monument of a different nature. Its years-long, hate-spewing tribute to Donald Trump includes numerous flags and signs that change as the wind blows — effigies of enemies, the maga slogan du jour, the in-your-face, aggressive rhetoric unfurled for all to see.

I’d call it Hate Speech or Domestic Terrorism. The courts call it “freedom of speech,” but it’s vile. And it’s embarrassing, quite frankly.

Now let me tell you about that stain.

The stain is on me. Because my response to this effigy whenever I drive past it is as full of hate as it is. I regularly give it the middle finger, use foul language, froth up with anger and a visceral desire to cause damage to something or someone.

You know what I mean.

Over the past nine years, we’ve all had that moment when our animal instinct raises the hairs on our backs and makes us want to pounce — verbally, physically, or otherwise.

I have been thinking about that A LOT this week, inspired by my attendance at the 40th Annual Martin Luther King Jr. Breakfast and the presentation by guest speaker Dr. Jeffrey C. Stewart who spoke about nonviolence.

King was a well-known proponent of nonviolence. Here are some of his thoughts on the matter:

“We adopt the means of nonviolence because our end is a community at peace with itself. We will try to persuade with our words, but if our words fail, we will try to persuade with our acts.”

“Here is the true meaning and value of compassion and nonviolence, when it helps us to see the enemy’s point of view, to hear his questions, to know his assessment of ourselves. For from his view we may indeed see the basic weaknesses of our own condition, and if we are mature, we may learn and grow and profit from the wisdom of the brothers who are called the opposition.”

“Nonviolence is absolute commitment to the way of love. Love is not emotional bash; it is not empty sentimentalism. It is the active outpouring of one’s whole being into the being of another.”

“I am convinced that even violent temperaments can be channeled through nonviolent discipline, if they can act constructively and express through an effective channel their very legitimate anger.”

Ah — there! How do WE learn to “act constructively and express through an effective channel” our “very legitimate anger”?

I think a lot of us are asking ourselves that lately. How can I express my anger about what is happening around me, but act constructively to make change?

I am not well-versed on the concept of nonviolence. I know Henry David Thoreau wrote about it in Civil Disobedience. I’ve read some of Krishnamurti’s writings on the topic, and I’ve heard of Mahatma Gandhi, Pope Francis, and Cesar Chavez. In the online exhibition “Women Champion Peace & Justice through Nonviolence,” you can learn about Lydia Maria Child, Dorothy Day, Dorothy Thompson, and other women leaders of nonviolent action.

According to the Martin Luther King, Jr. Research & Education Institute, King’s idea of nonviolence had six key principles:

First, one can resist evil without resorting to violence. Second, nonviolence seeks to win the “friendship and understanding” of the opponent, not to humiliate him. Third, evil itself, not the people committing evil acts, should be opposed. Fourth, those committed to nonviolence must be willing to suffer without retaliation as suffering itself can be redemptive. Fifth, nonviolent resistance avoids “external physical violence” and “internal violence of spirit” as well: “The nonviolent resister not only refuses to shoot his opponent but he also refuses to hate him.” The resister should be motivated by love in the sense of the Greek word agape, which means “understanding,” or “redeeming good will for all men.” The sixth principle is that the nonviolent resister must have a “deep faith in the future,” stemming from the conviction that “The universe is on the side of justice.”

If nonviolence is a way to lose this “internal violence of spirit” and find my way back to a “deep faith in the future,” …count me in!

Count me in because, to be honest, it has only been my considerations of nonviolence this week that started to make me feel like our story here isn’t finished, that despite all of the loud noise and chaos since the election, we can find a way to the other side of this…together.

❤️ With Love, Jen Payne


“64 Days to Live Nonviolence”
SEASON FOR NONVIOLENCE


The Season for Nonviolence marks the 64 days between the anniversaries of the deaths of Mohandas Gandhi on January 30 and Martin Luther King Jr. on April 4. Cesar Chavez‘s birthday also falls within the Season on March 31. The Season for Nonviolence was co-founded by Arun and Sunanda Gandhi and the Leadership Council of The Association for Global New Thought (AGNT) in 1998.

To help you learn to practice nonviolence one step at a time, one choice at a time, one day at a time, the M.K. Gandhi Institute for Nonviolence created a booklet called “64 Days to Live Nonviolence”

They explain:

Through our daily nonviolent choices and action, our noble and courageous spirits rise to move the world in the direction of peace. Wherever you are in your journey, we hope this booklet will support your growth and encourage you, reminding you that you are part of a worldwide community working for nonviolence and peace.



With thanks to The Borgen Project and the Booth Family Center for Special Collections at Georgetown University.

CLICK HERE to read more about King and Nonviolence.


Categories
Creativity

Great Cape Escape – Day 6

“I have a room all to myself; it is nature.” — Henry David Thoreau


Retracing my steps at Nauset Beach…
Lunch at Coast Guard Beach
Nauset Light
Newcomb Hollow Beach

Driving the loop at Province Lands
A final sunset at Herring Cove