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Summer Solstice in a Transformative Time

Never in my life have I felt more uncertain of the future of our shared humanity. The intensity of the unpredictability is at once unsettling and releasing. 

Most of the world is, or has been in some sort of shut down. Seemingly simple things – like giving my friends a hug – are no longer a given. And there is a beauty in the fact that we are all experiencing the effects of Corona. Maybe this united experience can begin to break down the sense of otherness that we sometimes feel. ‘This thing is happening on the other side of the world. That thing is happening but id doesn’t really effect me’, in these times the validity of these ideas falls away because we are ALL experiencing the isolation, uncertainty, fear and grief of living in a time with COVID-19. 

I feel the universe saying more loudly now than ever before, ‘you are all one people, one humanity’. And my heart is full to see the world wide protests in support of Black Lives Matter that are echoing this message. 

Perhaps we can all listen. Listen to the universe, listen to the resurgent movement(s) for equality, listen to our own experience and our own emotions and listen with a new openness to each being we interact with. We are all here sharing this earth, sharing the experience of the present and sharing our humanity. 

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Saturday 06.20.20
Posted by Rebecca K
 

Life Cycles in the Pandemic

Many minds around the globe are occupied at the moment with thoughts of COVID-19 and its repercussions. The Corona Pandemic is reaching us all and reminding us of our shared humanity. We’re all on this planet, we’re all susceptible, and we are all connected. While we are connected we are each in the arch of our own life cycle, Mother Earth is also reminding us that cycles continue with or with out a pandemic. Spring is here in Germany, the crocuses, daffodils, hyacinths and tulips showing their colors. This visual reminder of the new life of spring – from the ground, from the trees, from the bushes – is helping me in this complex and novel time. All is change, that is life. Now we are changing from winter to spring and we are changing to a life of freedom of movement as we’ve known it for 100+ years to restricted physical interactions for the foreseeable future. What will be the next change? 

Photo by Lyndee Uhrich on Unsplash

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Friday 03.20.20
Posted by Rebecca K
 

Perspectives for a New Decade

Happy new year & happy new decade! I’m delighted to be stepping into the twenties. It feels like a new chapter. Perhaps this portrait from today, with my stretched shadow across the frosted grass, will help me remember that the multitude of perspectives, if noticed with curiosity, can change how we see and how we live. 

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Thursday 01.02.20
Posted by Rebecca K
 

Wonderful winter solstice

On this winter solstice, for those in the Northern Hemisphere, may you enjoy the beauty of your inner light on this longest night of the year.

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Saturday 12.21.19
Posted by Rebecca K
 

Beautiful Decay

I treasure the discovery of moments of beautiful decay. Berlin is full of examples of things that seem to have been forgotten or looked past for decades and the signs from the past patiently wait to be noticed. How did this pile of bike parts become a heap coated with rust on the sidewalk? What can we tell from the side of the building that shows where the former rooms from the adjacent building once were? How many times has this wooden front door swung open to allow someone in or out? If a picture can tell a thousand words, what can the beautiful decay tell us? 

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Thursday 12.19.19
Posted by Rebecca K
 

Bright Thanksgiving Weather

Growing up in California, I didn’t notice the weather on Thanksgiving, most likely because it was probably sunny every year. Only when I moved to New York and started to feel the onset of winter in November did I take notice the weather on the fourth Thursday of November. For many years in a row I enjoyed a quiet Manhattan in the morning of the holiday while walking through the quiet city on a bright, crisp, cold and sunny day. There was somethings special about those mornings of light that made the day feel special.

This morning I woke up to the same, sunshine. It was especially remarkable because Berlin has been under a blanket of clouds for days on end. Today, American Thanksgiving day, the fourth Thursday of November, the sun lifted the blanket to kiss us with its warmth. I’m thankful its sunshine and the ever changing weather.

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Thursday 11.28.19
Posted by Rebecca K
 

Power of Water: fountain

Most of us know how powerful water can be. Its ability to transform a multitude of materials is spectacular. For me, the power of water is also meditative. I crave a place where I can interact with water. With each place I’ve called home, I’ve found a place where I can be with water and enjoy its ever changing form. I often return to this simple fountain to entice my sense of sight, smell, sound and touch.  

Friday 10.04.19
Posted by Rebecca K
 

Fresh Start on the Fall Equinox

The Fall Equinox, which lies mid-way between the summer and winter solstices, marks the day where the day and night are equal. This idea of two balanced sides of a single day is comforting and grounding.  

This day also marks the middle of the autumn, a season of change and preparation for the winter ahead. I’m grateful to live in a place where seasons are present and palpable. I grew up in California where there wasn’t a noticeable change in seasons. Yes, it rained a bit more in the winter, and we had snow in the Sierra which allowed for snow sports, however, I didn’t experience the sharp changes in temperature, color and mood that went along with each season until I moved to New York. New York taught me that winters kept folks indoors, a tough lesson to learn in my first year. Spring brought bursting bulbs and a bounce in peoples steps, including mine. Summer often felt like hanging out on a sagging dog’s tongue, warm, moist, lazy. Fall was perhaps the most startling of all for me because I could not have imagined the extraordinarily vivid colors produced by the foliage. I still remember being glued to the car window trying to absorb the variety of color on the hillsides during trips out of the city. 

This fall brings a change for Tinge. A new website, a new identity and a new blog. The logo of Tinge has a touch of texture, can you spot it? This texture will not remain static, it will change and continue to renew itself. What will it be next? I’m not sure, we will see. However, the new Tinge begins today, on the Fall Equinox to bring balance to its fresh start. 

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Monday 09.23.19
Posted by Rebecca K
 

Berlin Tempelhof

I participated in a guided tour of the buildings at Berlin Tempelhof. The massive arced main building was created for many purposes: arrivals, departures, hanger space for planes, restaurants and services, etc. The original plan was to create spectator seating on the roof that could accommodate thousands of people to watch the airfield.

Perhaps my favorite part of the tour was hearing the stories of how people interacted with the buildings. Who conceptualized and built the structures, who used them and why, the memories of the ‘Raisin Bombers’ heard from the people in our tour, the top secret listening rooms with in the buildings, all of these made the walls seem to come alive.

It felt wonderful to be in the Arrivals Hall again and remember a snowy December evening when I arrived there shortly before the airport was finally decommissioned. I was awe struck by the high ceilings and the consistent palate of browns and tans. It was so completely different from any other airport that I had ever experienced.

I feel lucky to have witnessed Tempelhof as a functioning airport and now as a multifaceted gem in the middle of Berlin.

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Thursday 09.19.19
Posted by Rebecca K
 
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