Showing posts with label Danna Kiel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Danna Kiel. Show all posts

Thursday, July 13, 2017

The Franklin Prayers by Danna Kiel


I wrote and released a Book on Amazon that I am overwhelmingly proud of...I AM glad to be a Channel of God’s Good in the world! I LOVE PRAYER!  Prayer Changes Everything...Inside of Me!    #MillionsPray #TheFranklinPrayers
Increase in Me that Wisdom that discovers my truest interest. Strengthen in me the resolution to perform what that wisdom dictates. ~Benjamin Franklin
I found this quote at the bottom of an email.  It packed a punch.  The fact is Prayer Changes Everything...Inside of Us! I knew in my heart of hearts this was more than a quote.  This was indeed a prayer.  I later confirmed it came form a longer prayer: 

“O powerful goodness! Bountiful Father! Merciful Guide! Increase in me that wisdom which discovers my truest interest. Strengthen my resolution to perform what that wisdom dictates. Accept my kind offices to thy other children as the only return in my power for thy continual favours to me. ”  ~Benjamin Franklin

Realizing that 'Wisdom' could be interchanged with anything we might be seeking an expansion of was the AWESOMENESS of the prayer.  I could pray for an expansion of patience, confidence, courage, creativity, Faith, Love ....any attribute of God, any of the 12 Powers of Man, Fruits of the Spirit, even the soft skills needed in the work place.  



So I will do that! I journal my talks with the Eternal Loving Presence of my being so I initially thought to keep them in my tool belt in my own journal. It occurred to me that a global WE could be expanding our tool beltS. So I realized I should be spreading the good news of prayer! 

I composed 40 Prayers for all of us (me included...top of the list)
The Franklin Prayers are Prayers for ALL!
Prayer is what we all agree on. Prayer comes from all religions and no religions. It is the medium of miracles.  Miracles entail shifts in perceptions.  It is these shifts in perception and thought that transform our world. Prayer is a tool of transformation in mind, body and soul !   

Increase in Me that Faith that discovers my truest interest. Strengthen in me the resolution to perform what that Faith  dictates!   #DannaKiel #TheFranklinPrayers 
For more please order your copy of The Franklin Prayers by Danna Kiel from Amazon today! Paperback or Kindle
www.facebook.com/millionspray
Email : TheFranklinPrayers@gmail.com

Danna Kiel is a mother, teacher, speaker, writer and filmmaker living in Los Angeles, CA. She is a student in the UFBL Teacher Training Academy and fervent student of A Course in Miracles. Don't be surprised when she taps you on the shoulder anywere in any situation and asks "Would you like to pray?" Danna loves to pray and counts herself a spiritual hippie on a mission to get millions to pray The Franklin Prayers. Danna Kiel has 1 ah-mazing son, Ali Daniel Kiel Rutledge

Friday, June 21, 2013

The Steve Jobs Commandments by Danna Kiel (me)


Steve Jobs said:
"Your time is limited, so don’t waste it living someone else’s life. Don’t be trapped by dogma — which is living with the results of other people’s thinking. Don’t let the noise of others’ opinions drown out your own inner voice. And most importantly, have the courage to follow your heart and intuition. They somehow already know what you truly want to become. Everything else is secondary." 

Image

And I...
felt the earth move when I read this.  Whatever we find is intended for us to better our walk. When I better my walk I am however charged with bettering the walk of those with whom I come in contact.

Danna 3 at the Big 50

"The Steve Jobs Commandments" is the practical application of Steve Jobs' quote interpolated by me :).  We are all blessed by those in this digital space who use their powers for good.  Daily we have access to great minds, great facts and even some truth.  When we read something as profound as this the question is:

How Do I Get That Rubber to Meet My Road?

So I wrote these 7 commandments as guidelines to help us out.

The Steve Jobs Commandments
by Danna Kiel
I will not waste another minute living someone else's life.
I will not be trapped by Dogma.
I will not live trapped by the results of other people's thinking.
I will not let the noise of others' opinion drown out my own inner voice.
I will courageously follow my heart and my intuition. #everyday
I now live knowing that my heart and my intuition already know the 2 most important things:
  1. Who I AM
  2. What I want to become    
I now live knowing everything else is secondary.


I Am Danna Kiel.
He is Steve Jobs.
We are One.

Saturday, May 25, 2013

Change is Now - One Filmmaker's POV Free Angela... 05/25 by Auteur 26 | Blog Talk Radio

Change is Now - One Filmmaker's POV Free Angela... 05/25 by Auteur 26 | Blog Talk Radio



Today was dream come true.  Everyday is the fulfillment of some dream.  Today's dream was talking to Shola Lynch, Award Winning filmmaker of the 2004 Documentary Chisolm '72: Unbought, Unbossed (a favorite). She delivers the goods once again with the Political Crime Drama channeled through the documentary Free Angela and All Political Prisoners.  Shola Lynch is a light beam of energy even over the phone when talking about her projects.  "We only get one chance to do it.  I had to make a film that in the end I liked and could stand behind. If we don't as the 'makers we could mess it up for everybody", explained Shola. 



Please check out my radio show from this morning.  After that do me one more solid...and check out the film at the Santa Monica Laemmle 4 Plex on June 5th by ...

Purchasing Tickets at http://www.tugg.com/events/4233

Synopsis:

Free Angela is a documentary that chronicles the life of young college professor Angela Davis, and how her social activism implicates her in a botched kidnapping attempt that ends with a shootout, four dead, and her name on the FBI's 10 most wanted list. The high stakes crime, political movement, and trial that catapults the 26 year-old newly appointed philosophy professor at the University of California at Los Angeles into a seventies revolutionary political icon. Nearly forty years later, and for the first time, Angela Davis speaks frankly about the actions that branded her as a terrorist and simultaneously spurred a worldwide political movement for her freedom. 






Sunday, April 21, 2013

Fmr County Supervisor Yvonne Braithwaite Burke Supports Eric Garcetti for Mayor

Yvonne Braithwaite Burke says, "he'll make the hard decisions..."

Former County Supervisor Yvonne Braithwaite Burke tells us at Change is Now why she supports Councilman Eric Garcetti for Mayor. She she believes he can make the "tough decisions". "I believe he's got ...it!"


Wednesday, September 26, 2012





These are pictures from Friday Night Bowling to raise awareness about Sickle Cell…I won’t lie it’s also nice to be next to nice (and handsome) people too for a Good Cause…
Pinz Bowling Alley hosted Kiki Sheperd’s 9th Annual  K.I.S Foundation Celebrity Bowling to raise awareness for Sickle Cell
I carry Sickle Cell trait and know that who I marry and/or procreate with matters beyond just the love we will share.  
So I sit next to these nice folks and write this for the 90,000 to 100,000 Americans affected….

And I remember …

                                              Every 1 Matters…

Sickle Cell Disease affects 1 out of every 500 Black or African-American births that happen…
Sickle Cell Disease affects 1 out of every 36,000 Hispanic-American births that happen…
Sickle Cell Disease occurs in 1 in 12 Blacks or African Americans 

So just Remember…


Every 1 Matters…

Sunday, December 4, 2011

Masika Katsuva...Strong Woman


This is Masika Katsuva. In the Congo (DRC) she survived being brutally raped watching her daughters 15 and 13 be brutally raped and witnessed her husband murdered, chopped up and then being force-fed his private parts…

She lived to tell…she opened a farm to give sanctuary to rape victims …170 currently.  They farm, harvest and heal …

I am Masika Katsuva…
Danna

Becoming a hollywood producer...


Day 16,023 of the journey…

I just love her picture.  There is no real reason for it.  I just love her face and her gaze of resolve as she stands around this pole. Yesterday I missed a walk against Global Girl Abuse hosted by my friend Sha Givens founder of I Can Fly International.  This girl’s picture reminds me of the resource I am responsible for protecting.

Today’s lesson…”just do you” or in my case….”just do me” …whichever it is you know what I am saying :) ..

It’s Sunday and I saw a great play last night called Sunday Mourning.  It was a testament to the work of artists trying to rise above some of the art of the current marketplace.  Afterwards I was inspired and looking for my “playwriting muse”.

We all enjoy works of art whether at a playhouse or in a movie theater that have given life to our passing thoughts and ideas.  We wonder “why didn’t I write that?”

The truth is we all share in competencies and capabilities, but we are distinguished by our aspirations and choices. We can write the play too…

Repeat after me…”Just Do Me!”


write, produce and direct
Danna

Wednesday, June 22, 2011

Change is Now - One Filmmakers POV w/Maurice Carney of FOTC 06/25 by Auteur 26 | Blog Talk Radio

Change is Now - One Filmmakers POV w/Maurice Carney of FOTC 06/25 by Auteur 26 | Blog Talk Radio

Congo...the heartbeat of the world...


When opportunities to talk about the Democratic Republic of Congo referred to by most as simply “Congo” arise I am ready to talk. On this page you will see lots of evolving videos that represent the widening arc and spectrum of my voice and my activism bka “Love and Support” of this country and her people as I’ve understood it. The Congo is my home…the one I’ve never visited.

As my understanding has grown to face head on the complexities that texturize her past, present and most importantly her future so my videos grow in message and instruction.

However using words on paper (or on web) feels overwhelming and limiting when I look, read or watch the available literature, news reports and videos available on the Congo. To watch, listen or read these materials is not only daunting when life is already overwhelming as a single mother in the USA with a young son in a tough economy against life’s landscape of trying to be my best self. However the deep hopelessness and irrepressible hopefulness you see resonate with me in a way that words cannot begin to describe.




My heart also stops when reflecting on the atrocities awaiting and daily faced by citizens of the Congo’s Eastern Region. However when looking to who is responsible for what will see in the Film, “Crisis in Congo” and other docs about the subject is to realize that the DAMAGE DONE while irreversible can be shifted to create prospering nation by economic, political, social, cultural and humanitarian will if we who call ourselves human decide it WILL be so.
Join me this Saturday in meeting Maurice Carney Exec Dir and Co-Founder of Friends of the Congo and friends on my show Change is Now-One Filmmaker’s POV at 9am PST on www.blogtalkradio.com/djdannak and learn how by solving the challenges of the Congo we can solve the problems of our great big world.

In French...

Congo ... le battement du cœur du monde ...

Lorsque des occasions de parler de la RDC visés par la plupart comme simplement «Congo» se pose, je suis prêt à parler. Sur cette page, vous verrez beaucoup de l'évolution de vidéos qui représentent l'arc creuse et le spectre de ma voix et mon militantisme BKA "amour et le soutien» de ce pays et son peuple comme je l'ai compris. Le Congo est ma maison ... celui que je n'ai jamais visité.

Comme ma compréhension s'est développée pour faire face à la tête sur les complexités qui texturer son passé, le présent et surtout son avenir afin mes vidéos grandir dans un message et l'instruction.

Cependant en utilisant des mots sur le papier (ou sur le Web) se sent écrasante et en limitant quand je regarde, lire ou regarder la littérature disponible, les bulletins de nouvelles et de vidéos disponibles sur le Congo. Pour regarder, écouter ou lire ces documents n'est pas seulement intimidant quand la vie est déjà écrasante comme une mère célibataire aux USA avec un jeune fils, dans une économie difficile contre paysage de la vie d'essayer d'être mon meilleur de soi. Toutefois, le désespoir et l'espoir profond irrépressible que vous voyez en résonance avec moi d'une manière que les mots ne peuvent pas commencer à décrire.


Mon cœur s'arrête également quand une réflexion sur les atrocités et l'attente quotidienne rencontrées par les citoyens de la région de l'Est par le Congo. Cependant quand on regarde qui est responsable de ce qui va voir dans le film, "Crise au Congo» et d'autres docs sur le sujet est de réaliser que les dommages causés tandis irréversible peut être déplacé à créer nation prospère par l'économique, politique, social, culturel et humanitaire sera, si nous qui nous appelons humaine décider qu'il en sera ainsi.

Rejoignez-moi ce samedi à Maurice Carney réunion Exec Dir et co-fondateur des Amis du Congo et les amis sur mon changement spectacle est maintenant POV-un cinéaste à 9 heures PST sur www.blogtalkradio.com / djdannak et apprendre en résolvant les défis de la du Congo, nous pouvons résoudre les problèmes de notre monde est grand grand.

Tuesday, November 16, 2010

An Open Letter to Generation X...my peoples




Okay....what appears below explains My Conflict Minerals Indie PSA's/Vlog/Live Petition.  This is some of the "why" beyond the call of duty on the matter of the Conflict Minerals, themselves and my DEEP concern for the Congo and her people, God's people, our people....check the video if you haven't and yes I noticed the Yoplait container and the "too much stuff" after the uploads (youtube, facebook and blogger)...

This is an email to a friend and it got so long that I thought would share.  I welcome feedback or comments, but to the Generation X'ers I really want to hear you...

(From Danna to "new friend")
Something that you said was so striking today...it has played back in my head since earlier and I have tried to ignore it only because I feel like it's true... it is a "funky" truth one about which I wonder too often....you said (to paraphrase) "trying to figure out why Generation X is so fucked up"

I will share my ruminations and thoughts on it and I will direct you to a blog I wrote almost 2 years ago that provides a more sensitive insight into the matter from a very personal POV







I am a fifth generation away from Slavery...My Great Great Grandather Mark Kiel (Mark Todd before marrying and being given the name "Kiel" as a wedding present by slavemasters) was the last slave on my father's side....His son Henry Kiel was my great grandfather with whom I (and my twin sister) communed with until we were 10 and he 107, his son Damon Kiel Sr was my Grandfather, a liquor bootlegger in a dry county of Alabama and a landowner who ran his own logging and timber business and My father Damon Kiel Jr who earned a BS in Electronics from Tuskegee Institute before the hybrids between a Trade and a Discipline disappeared from the Catalog...I told people my Dad was an Electircal Engineer... I was in graduating High School before I reflected upon and understood the difference and distinction of one from the other...






I believe we are funked up because we are the products of the failure and successes of design not definition






...I mean that we experienced 1st hand the computer go from a novelty and an experiment ...from DOS to the TRS 80 or the Commodore 64 and programming language (I took a Fortran Class at Skegee) before "programming language" (remember PASCAL) became Windows and Windows became a tool of construction, not the house itself and the internet became the new hammer while smartphones have become some of the nails...






We saw Hip Hop be born....we saw the age of music video be born...we had a magic bullet in our homes at our fingertips that we could teach ourselves the things that some were imagining, then teaching themselves and then learning in a home environment...with  no classroom or teaching  standards to filter the "Wild Sound" and now where the race and those running in it had become a cogent group with a certain set in 1st, a specific group in 2nd and another group in 3rd it was now a marathon without end for which all the runners were all over the place and some even running at their own pace...but all still running






We watched and experienced much in the raw footage stage before it was digitized and its effects rendered and then all edited into a final cut...we regularly used prototypes before they were tweaked for the marketplace....the manufacturers didn't know they were prototypes until they knew what the final products were and began to sell those to us, as well






As a result a lot of us became seers and prophets and could therefore see through the marketing and beyond...we became commentators but not doers or craftsmen because for a brief time there was currency for our thoughts (and way more than a penny) ...






we watched the busy signal dissolve into call waiting, three way calling, call blocking we even saw little white answering machines disappear into voicemail services...I believe we saw too much evolve too fast and all the while we were getting through college and grad school and professional school over an everchanging landscape of pure change itself...we had nothing to dig into or plant solid feet upon....the teachers, the lawyers and the doctors faired well because the way did business never changed much ...more toys and improved delivery systems but their content was relatively rock solid...



Somewhere in it "Deming Management" was being hailed as an important business and operations management model ...there was the idea that science and math could solve all of our problems and things like passion and commitment fell way to the way side like the two solid rocket boosters on the Shuttle (we saw Shuttles, hell...we saw a new frontier into space being televised as it had when Man walked on the moon...the shuttle take-offs and landing were our "walk on the moon" or at least as close as we were going to come)....we saw everything go from bigger to smaller to bigger again and faster but not always stronger but a lot better ..overall

The world become modern in front of our eyes and under our noses.


we saw cocaine become crack...



We saw all of this between about 1964 - 1985 and then a steady pattern of growth began to emerge but I don't think the word got all the way out until about 1994 or so and by then we were starting to get married and make babies and trying to ensure they did not come out funked up only for them to turn out better and worse than we did...most of us have turned out to be jacks/janes of all trade masters of little to none who are blooming LATE because there is finally a road for our rubber to actually meet...



We saw our only solid rock ....our identity... disintegrate...and now we are all putting our own pieces back together.... (with that new hammer and those new nails)

Tuesday, October 26, 2010

Why We Love The President !!!!

P020510PS-0231 

This image defies words. It is a reminder of why I committed to President Barack H. Obama's campaign  before he ran for President, before there was indeed a CAMPAIGN and why I was indeed of Soldier of Love NOT politics to have become involved in the first place.  We are almost halfway through what I hope is a first term and my love and commitment for our fearless and courageous leader has not waned ! Baby, I got my President's Back!...

When I look at a photograph like this it is truly the HOPE of our next generation I see...honestly, I believe God is pleased about this one...will you look at that baby's eyes !!!

Monday, October 18, 2010

Stealing Back 1993.... Sandwiched between Maya Angelou and Toni Morrison

 Stealing time...1993 to be exact...I am as usual beefing with time because as I cut, paste and type I am working to meet a midnight deadline...for an "Incomplete" class...as I assembled the necessary artifacts of literary pieces for a script I've written for my class I stumbled across the dates of two of the most waking and rousing texts of modern time and modern literature...there is no argument that my favorite President of all time, President Barack H. Obama, has authored 2 of the most definitive speeches of our time with his speech to the DNC in 2004 or my fave the "Yes We Can" speech after a loss in the Connecticut Primaries...others will argue that his speech on Race that summer in the wake of the Jeremiah Wright controversey was his best...the debate may never end...but let's talk about LOVE...Maya Angelou and Toni Morrison

I am hear to say that many American History moments happen before our eyes...as long as our eyes remain open and in 1993 a year full of changes and constants these two mothers of words took a stab at using words to capture messages for the world to hear and abide in and live by.  In taking a stab January 20, 1993 (Inaugural Poem-Maya Angelou) and then another stab December 7, 1993 (Lecture to the Swiss Academy for her Nobel Prize - Toni Morrison) these 2 women pierced the heart and soul of the woman I've become today...

On the Pulse of the Morning

Inaugural Poem

A Rock, A River, A Tree
Hosts to species long since departed,
Marked the mastodon.
 

The dinosaur, who left dry tokens


Of their sojourn here
On our planet floor,
Any broad alarm of their hastening doom
Is lost in the gloom of dust and ages.
But today, the Rock cries out to us, clearly, forcefully,
Come, you may stand upon my
Back and face your distant destiny,
But seek no haven in my shadow.
I will give you no more hiding place down here.
You, created only a little lower than
The angels, have crouched too long in
The bruising darkness,
Have lain too long
Face down in ignorance.
Your mouths spilling words
Armed for slaughter.
The Rock cries out today, you may stand on me,
But do not hide your face.
Across the wall of the world,
A River sings a beautiful song,
Come rest here by my side.
Each of you a bordered country,
Delicate and strangely made proud,
Yet thrusting perpetually under siege.
Your armed struggles for profit
Have left collars of waste upon
My shore, currents of debris upon my breast.
Yet, today I call you to my riverside,
If you will study war no more. Come,
Clad in peace and I will sing the songs
The Creator gave to me when I and the
Tree and the stone were one.
Before cynicism was a bloody sear across your
Brow and when you yet knew you still
Knew nothing.
The River sings and sings on.
There is a true yearning to respond to
The singing River and the wise Rock.
So say the Asian, the Hispanic, the Jew
The African and Native American, the Sioux,
The Catholic, the Muslim, the French, the Greek
The Irish, the Rabbi, the Priest, the Sheikh,
The Gay, the Straight, the Preacher,
The privileged, the homeless, the Teacher.
They hear. They all hear
The speaking of the Tree.
Today, the first and last of every Tree
Speaks to humankind. Come to me, here beside the River.
Plant yourself beside me, here beside the River.
Each of you, descendant of some passed
On traveller, has been paid for.
You, who gave me my first name, you
Pawnee, Apache and Seneca, you
Cherokee Nation, who rested with me, then
Forced on bloody feet, left me to the employment of
Other seekers--desperate for gain,
Starving for gold.
You, the Turk, the Swede, the German, the Scot ...
You the Ashanti, the Yoruba, the Kru, bought
Sold, stolen, arriving on a nightmare
Praying for a dream.
Here, root yourselves beside me.
I am the Tree planted by the River,
Which will not be moved.
I, the Rock, I the River, I the Tree
I am yours--your Passages have been paid.
Lift up your faces, you have a piercing need
For this bright morning dawning for you.
History, despite its wrenching pain,
Cannot be unlived, and if faced
With courage, need not be lived again.
Lift up your eyes upon
The day breaking for you.
Give birth again
To the dream.
Women, children, men,
Take it into the palms of your hands.
Mold it into the shape of your most
Private need. Sculpt it into
The image of your most public self.
Lift up your hearts
Each new hour holds new chances
For new beginnings.
Do not be wedded forever
To fear, yoked eternally
To brutishness.
The horizon leans forward,
Offering you space to place new steps of change.
Here, on the pulse of this fine day
You may have the courage
To look up and out upon me, the
Rock, the River, the Tree, your country.
No less to Midas than the mendicant.
No less to you now than the mastodon then.
Here on the pulse of this new day
You may have the grace to look up and out
And into your sister's eyes, into
Your brother's face, your country
And say simply
Very simply
With hope
Good morning.

I graduated Tuskegee University in May of 1993 ...I was and am forever sandwiched between what these two women had to say that year....I rhetorically understood and appreciated what my two idols had to say that year but some 17 years late...I get it...I mean I really get it...

Nobel Lecture


Nobel Lecture December 7, 1993
 
In order to hear the sound you need RealPlayer.
"Once upon a time there was an old woman. Blind but wise." Or was it an old man? A guru, perhaps. Or a griot soothing restless children. I have heard this story, or one exactly like it, in the lore of several cultures.

"Once upon a time there was an old woman. Blind. Wise."

In the version I know the woman is the daughter of slaves, black, American, and lives alone in a small house outside of town. Her reputation for wisdom is without peer and without question. Among her people she is both the law and its transgression. The honor she is paid and the awe in which she is held reach beyond her neighborhood to places far away; to the city where the intelligence of rural prophets is the source of much amusement.

One day the woman is visited by some young people who seem to be bent on disproving her clairvoyance and showing her up for the fraud they believe she is. Their plan is simple: they enter her house and ask the one question the answer to which rides solely on her difference from them, a difference they regard as a profound disability: her blindness. They stand before her, and one of them says, "Old woman, I hold in my hand a bird. Tell me whether it is living or dead."

She does not answer, and the question is repeated. "Is the bird I am holding living or dead?"

Still she doesn't answer. She is blind and cannot see her visitors, let alone what is in their hands. She does not know their color, gender or homeland. She only knows their motive.

The old woman's silence is so long, the young people have trouble holding their laughter.

Finally she speaks and her voice is soft but stern. "I don't know", she says. "I don't know whether the bird you are holding is dead or alive, but what I do know is that it is in your hands. It is in your hands."

Her answer can be taken to mean: if it is dead, you have either found it that way or you have killed it. If it is alive, you can still kill it. Whether it is to stay alive, it is your decision. Whatever the case, it is your responsibility.

For parading their power and her helplessness, the young visitors are reprimanded, told they are responsible not only for the act of mockery but also for the small bundle of life sacrificed to achieve its aims. The blind woman shifts attention away from assertions of power to the instrument through which that power is exercised.

Speculation on what (other than its own frail body) that bird-in-the-hand might signify has always been attractive to me, but especially so now thinking, as I have been, about the work I do that has brought me to this company. So I choose to read the bird as language and the woman as a practiced writer. She is worried about how the language she dreams in, given to her at birth, is handled, put into service, even withheld from her for certain nefarious purposes. Being a writer she thinks of language partly as a system, partly as a living thing over which one has control, but mostly as agency - as an act with consequences. So the question the children put to her: "Is it living or dead?" is not unreal because she thinks of language as susceptible to death, erasure; certainly imperiled and salvageable only by an effort of the will. She believes that if the bird in the hands of her visitors is dead the custodians are responsible for the corpse. For her a dead language is not only one no longer spoken or written, it is unyielding language content to admire its own paralysis. Like statist language, censored and censoring. Ruthless in its policing duties, it has no desire or purpose other than maintaining the free range of its own narcotic narcissism, its own exclusivity and dominance. However moribund, it is not without effect for it actively thwarts the intellect, stalls conscience, suppresses human potential. Unreceptive to interrogation, it cannot form or tolerate new ideas, shape other thoughts, tell another story, fill baffling silences. Official language smitheryed to sanction ignorance and preserve privilege is a suit of armor polished to shocking glitter, a husk from which the knight departed long ago. Yet there it is: dumb, predatory, sentimental. Exciting reverence in schoolchildren, providing shelter for despots, summoning false memories of stability, harmony among the public.

She is convinced that when language dies, out of carelessness, disuse, indifference and absence of esteem, or killed by fiat, not only she herself, but all users and makers are accountable for its demise. In her country children have bitten their tongues off and use bullets instead to iterate the voice of speechlessness, of disabled and disabling language, of language adults have abandoned altogether as a device for grappling with meaning, providing guidance, or expressing love. But she knows tongue-suicide is not only the choice of children. It is common among the infantile heads of state and power merchants whose evacuated language leaves them with no access to what is left of their human instincts for they speak only to those who obey, or in order to force obedience.

The systematic looting of language can be recognized by the tendency of its users to forgo its nuanced, complex, mid-wifery properties for menace and subjugation. Oppressive language does more than represent violence; it is violence; does more than represent the limits of knowledge; it limits knowledge. Whether it is obscuring state language or the faux-language of mindless media; whether it is the proud but calcified language of the academy or the commodity driven language of science; whether it is the malign language of law-without-ethics, or language designed for the estrangement of minorities, hiding its racist plunder in its literary cheek - it must be rejected, altered and exposed. It is the language that drinks blood, laps vulnerabilities, tucks its fascist boots under crinolines of respectability and patriotism as it moves relentlessly toward the bottom line and the bottomed-out mind. Sexist language, racist language, theistic language - all are typical of the policing languages of mastery, and cannot, do not permit new knowledge or encourage the mutual exchange of ideas.

The old woman is keenly aware that no intellectual mercenary, nor insatiable dictator, no paid-for politician or demagogue; no counterfeit journalist would be persuaded by her thoughts. There is and will be rousing language to keep citizens armed and arming; slaughtered and slaughtering in the malls, courthouses, post offices, playgrounds, bedrooms and boulevards; stirring, memorializing language to mask the pity and waste of needless death. There will be more diplomatic language to countenance rape, torture, assassination. There is and will be more seductive, mutant language designed to throttle women, to pack their throats like paté-producing geese with their own unsayable, transgressive words; there will be more of the language of surveillance disguised as research; of politics and history calculated to render the suffering of millions mute; language glamorized to thrill the dissatisfied and bereft into assaulting their neighbors; arrogant pseudo-empirical language crafted to lock creative people into cages of inferiority and hopelessness.

Underneath the eloquence, the glamor, the scholarly associations, however stirring or seductive, the heart of such language is languishing, or perhaps not beating at all - if the bird is already dead.

She has thought about what could have been the intellectual history of any discipline if it had not insisted upon, or been forced into, the waste of time and life that rationalizations for and representations of dominance required - lethal discourses of exclusion blocking access to cognition for both the excluder and the excluded.

The conventional wisdom of the Tower of Babel story is that the collapse was a misfortune. That it was the distraction, or the weight of many languages that precipitated the tower's failed architecture. That one monolithic language would have expedited the building and heaven would have been reached. Whose heaven, she wonders? And what kind? Perhaps the achievement of Paradise was premature, a little hasty if no one could take the time to understand other languages, other views, other narratives period. Had they, the heaven they imagined might have been found at their feet. Complicated, demanding, yes, but a view of heaven as life; not heaven as post-life.

She would not want to leave her young visitors with the impression that language should be forced to stay alive merely to be. The vitality of language lies in its ability to limn the actual, imagined and possible lives of its speakers, readers, writers. Although its poise is sometimes in displacing experience it is not a substitute for it. It arcs toward the place where meaning may lie. When a President of the United States thought about the graveyard his country had become, and said, "The world will little note nor long remember what we say here. But it will never forget what they did here," his simple words are exhilarating in their life-sustaining properties because they refused to encapsulate the reality of 600, 000 dead men in a cataclysmic race war. Refusing to monumentalize, disdaining the "final word", the precise "summing up", acknowledging their "poor power to add or detract", his words signal deference to the uncapturability of the life it mourns. It is the deference that moves her, that recognition that language can never live up to life once and for all. Nor should it. Language can never "pin down" slavery, genocide, war. Nor should it yearn for the arrogance to be able to do so. Its force, its felicity is in its reach toward the ineffable.

Be it grand or slender, burrowing, blasting, or refusing to sanctify; whether it laughs out loud or is a cry without an alphabet, the choice word, the chosen silence, unmolested language surges toward knowledge, not its destruction. But who does not know of literature banned because it is interrogative; discredited because it is critical; erased because alternate? And how many are outraged by the thought of a self-ravaged tongue?

Word-work is sublime, she thinks, because it is generative; it makes meaning that secures our difference, our human difference - the way in which we are like no other life.

We die. That may be the meaning of life. But we do language. That may be the measure of our lives.

"Once upon a time, ..." visitors ask an old woman a question. Who are they, these children? What did they make of that encounter? What did they hear in those final words: "The bird is in your hands"? A sentence that gestures towards possibility or one that drops a latch? Perhaps what the children heard was "It's not my problem. I am old, female, black, blind. What wisdom I have now is in knowing I cannot help you. The future of language is yours."

They stand there. Suppose nothing was in their hands? Suppose the visit was only a ruse, a trick to get to be spoken to, taken seriously as they have not been before? A chance to interrupt, to violate the adult world, its miasma of discourse about them, for them, but never to them? Urgent questions are at stake, including the one they have asked: "Is the bird we hold living or dead?" Perhaps the question meant: "Could someone tell us what is life? What is death?" No trick at all; no silliness. A straightforward question worthy of the attention of a wise one. An old one. And if the old and wise who have lived life and faced death cannot describe either, who can?

But she does not; she keeps her secret; her good opinion of herself; her gnomic pronouncements; her art without commitment. She keeps her distance, enforces it and retreats into the singularity of isolation, in sophisticated, privileged space.

Nothing, no word follows her declaration of transfer. That silence is deep, deeper than the meaning available in the words she has spoken. It shivers, this silence, and the children, annoyed, fill it with language invented on the spot.

"Is there no speech," they ask her, "no words you can give us that helps us break through your dossier of failures? Through the education you have just given us that is no education at all because we are paying close attention to what you have done as well as to what you have said? To the barrier you have erected between generosity and wisdom?

"We have no bird in our hands, living or dead. We have only you and our important question. Is the nothing in our hands something you could not bear to contemplate, to even guess? Don't you remember being young when language was magic without meaning? When what you could say, could not mean? When the invisible was what imagination strove to see? When questions and demands for answers burned so brightly you trembled with fury at not knowing?

"Do we have to begin consciousness with a battle heroines and heroes like you have already fought and lost leaving us with nothing in our hands except what you have imagined is there? Your answer is artful, but its artfulness embarrasses us and ought to embarrass you. Your answer is indecent in its self-congratulation. A made-for-television script that makes no sense if there is nothing in our hands.

"Why didn't you reach out, touch us with your soft fingers, delay the sound bite, the lesson, until you knew who we were? Did you so despise our trick, our modus operandi you could not see that we were baffled about how to get your attention? We are young. Unripe. We have heard all our short lives that we have to be responsible. What could that possibly mean in the catastrophe this world has become; where, as a poet said, "nothing needs to be exposed since it is already barefaced." Our inheritance is an affront. You want us to have your old, blank eyes and see only cruelty and mediocrity. Do you think we are stupid enough to perjure ourselves again and again with the fiction of nationhood? How dare you talk to us of duty when we stand waist deep in the toxin of your past?

"You trivialize us and trivialize the bird that is not in our hands. Is there no context for our lives? No song, no literature, no poem full of vitamins, no history connected to experience that you can pass along to help us start strong? You are an adult. The old one, the wise one. Stop thinking about saving your face. Think of our lives and tell us your particularized world. Make up a story. Narrative is radical, creating us at the very moment it is being created. We will not blame you if your reach exceeds your grasp; if love so ignites your words they go down in flames and nothing is left but their scald. Or if, with the reticence of a surgeon's hands, your words suture only the places where blood might flow. We know you can never do it properly - once and for all. Passion is never enough; neither is skill. But try. For our sake and yours forget your name in the street; tell us what the world has been to you in the dark places and in the light. Don't tell us what to believe, what to fear. Show us belief s wide skirt and the stitch that unravels fear's caul. You, old woman, blessed with blindness, can speak the language that tells us what only language can: how to see without pictures. Language alone protects us from the scariness of things with no names. Language alone is meditation.

"Tell us what it is to be a woman so that we may know what it is to be a man. What moves at the margin. What it is to have no home in this place. To be set adrift from the one you knew. What it is to live at the edge of towns that cannot bear your company.

"Tell us about ships turned away from shorelines at Easter, placenta in a field. Tell us about a wagonload of slaves, how they sang so softly their breath was indistinguishable from the falling snow. How they knew from the hunch of the nearest shoulder that the next stop would be their last. How, with hands prayered in their sex, they thought of heat, then sun. Lifting their faces as though is was there for the taking. Turning as though there for the taking. They stop at an inn. The driver and his mate go in with the lamp leaving them humming in the dark. The horse's void steams into the snow beneath its hooves and its hiss and melt are the envy of the freezing slaves.

"The inn door opens: a girl and a boy step away from its light. They climb into the wagon bed. The boy will have a gun in three years, but now he carries a lamp and a jug of warm cider. They pass it from mouth to mouth. The girl offers bread, pieces of meat and something more: a glance into the eyes of the one she serves. One helping for each man, two for each woman. And a look. They look back. The next stop will be their last. But not this one. This one is warmed."

It's quiet again when the children finish speaking, until the woman breaks into the silence.

"Finally", she says, "I trust you now. I trust you with the bird that is not in your hands because you have truly caught it. Look. How lovely it is, this thing we have done - together."
From Nobel Lectures, Literature 1991-1995, Editor Sture Allén, World Scientific Publishing Co., Singapore, 1997

Copyright © The Nobel Foundation 1993
TO CITE THIS PAGE:
MLA style: "Toni Morrison - Nobel Lecture". Nobelprize.org. 19 Oct 2010 http://nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/literature/laureates/1993/morrison-lecture.html

Thursday, July 1, 2010

My OWN Show


Family, I have been doing a lot of "doing", "running" and "thinking". I am mastering film-making in my 40's. I have admittedly been in the "game" a minute and am clamping down to package all the skills into a something that is efficient, effective and most of all productive. In fact the goal is to produce High Quality content.

I am currently working on an MFA in Screenwriting. I am continuing to network and build an artistic community of not only fellowship and communion, but of quality and efficient (there's that word again) production. We are building a TEAM !

I am waiting on an edit now and while there are just elements out of my control that have slowed the process, I am pushing to get back on track and finished with this one and move on the next.

I am in constant count of my blessings. My son is healthy, the lights and other needed utilities are on and the key turns in the door. We are not hungry...ever. Many daily negotiate these things and I don't forget that.

I am however standing on God's word for more...I desire through prayer and supplication to build and sustain a career as a filmmaker. Everyday I do something teeny tiny or colossal toward my goal. Fear, worry and anxiety creep in...but in those moments I realize the fear, worry and anxiety are not only NOT my friends, but they are spirits of darkness and Paul had something to say to the folks at Ephesus about it...

Eph 6:10-17 (NIV) ...Be strong in the Lord and in his mighty power. Put on the full armour of God so that you can take your stand against the devil's schemes. For our struggle is not against flesh and blood, but against the rulers, against the authorities, against the powers of this dark world and against the spiritual forces of evil in the heavenly realms. Therefore put on the full armour of God, so that when the day of evil comes, you may be able to stand your ground, and after you have done everything, to stand. Stand firm then, with the belt of truth buckled round your waist, with the breastplate of righteousness in place, and with your feet fitted with the readiness that comes from the gospel of peace. In addition to all this, take up the shield of faith, with which you can extinguish all the flaming arrows of the evil one. Take the helmet of salvation and the sword of the Spirit, which is the word of God.

It is with this full armour that I fiercely protect my family and the dreams that God has given to me that he is bringing to pass. My journey is my journey and I am on the path of success...I also strive to be obedient: the greatest demonstration of our Faith...

I write here what I am trying to keep short and simply say to my team...my friends that are family and the family God bore me into - Be encouraged, as well as, Be of good courage - Deuteronomy 31:6 he tells his chosen people

"Be strong and courageous. Do not be afraid or terrified because of them, for the LORD your God goes with you; he will never leave you nor forsake you."

I therefore continue "doing", "running" and "thinking", as well as, "writing", "producing" and "directing" ...for these are the things I am called to do. My Dad called me this week and shared that he saw James Cameron (Titanic and Avatar) on a 60 Minutes interview. He said some things that were special so I posted on FB this status....

My Dad has begun in recent years to encourage my journey...he called me this morning to tell me he saw James Cameron interview on 60 minutes who says no matter how small your film..."You are a filmmaker" and to say..."that's what Danna is...'you are a filmmaker' " it meant the world to me (he also said he voted for my 'Ofrah' ...video :-)


As you guys know I auditioned for Oprah and need your support so vote for my audition...like Hezekiah says "I need you to survive"



God's Best
Danna