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WVPE is your gateway to green and sustainable resources in Michiana. Sustainability is meeting the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs. This is accomplished by finding a balance between businesses, the environment, and our society (people, planet, and profit).State, National and International resources on sustainability include:The Environmental Protection AgencyThe Natural StepSustainability Dictionary45 Sustainability Resources You Need to Know Explore ways to support sustainability in the Michiana area through the Green Links Directory.Sept. 17, 2019 from 2-3:30pm"Global Warming: A Hot Topic"Sept. 17, 19, 24, and 26All sessions are from 2-3:30pmGreencroft Goshen Community Center in the Jennings Auditorium1820 Greencroft Blvd.Goshen, IN 46526The event will look at possible solutions and suffering as well as consequences beyond warmer weather. The event will examine what other civilizations have or haven’t done when faced with environmental problems. Plus there will be an exploration of the biggest unknown in the climate system: What will the humans do? Paul Meyer Reimer teaches physics, math and climate change at Goshen College. The events are presented by the Lifelong Learning Institute. The Institute can be reached at: (574) 536-8244lifelonglearning@live.comhttp://life-learn.org/

#NationalPoetryMonth: Verses That Celebrate Life On The Farm

Katherine Du/NPR

Every writer knows the paralyzing terror of the blank page. For poet Tess Taylor, the antidote to fear came through farming.

Taylor is the author of Work & Days, a new volume of poetry inspired by her year spent working on a farm in the Berkshires in western Massachusetts. She was there living alone in a cabin as part of a writer's residency, finishing her first book of verse, and "had nothing to do but write," she says. "The idea of facing the blank page for that much time really scared me."

So Taylor, who grew up in Berkeley, Calif., and had long volunteered at community gardens, turned to the land for solace. She began working one to two days a week at Farm Girl Farm, a small, three-acre outfit that provides food for 80 local families and two restaurants. The work was grounding, literally and figuratively. Days spent laying mulch or planting leeks by hand, row by row, provided time "to get out of my head," she says.

"I got conscious of the fragility of farming," Taylor tells me, and "what it means for people who are making a basic gamble that they will put seeds in the ground and they are going to make food that will be their livelihood and feed us."

"I got very much into the present tense, and into the rhythm of days, in a way that felt ancient and timeless," she says. Poets, she notes, have been writing about life on the farm since at least around 700 B.C., when the ancient Greek poet Hesiod was musing about issues like caring for cows and bees — which, she notes, "is a very present question."

"Food—'cultivation'-- is the most basic part of 'culture,' the art of stability, the art of civilization," she says.

The resulting book is a lyrical meditation on food and farming and what Taylor calls "this fragile and ultimately, necessary relationship we have with the earth."

And in an era when distraction endlessly beckons from tiny screens in the palms of our hands, she says farming can help reconnect us to the world: "This act of being in relationship and awareness of what's feeding you — to the food, to the weather, to time, to your body — these are themselves radical acts."

To celebrate National Poetry Month, we've republished two of Taylor's poems from Work & Days, with our own illustrations. (Want these on your wall? Download "Equinox" and "May Day.") Do you have a favorite poem or verse dealing with food or farming? Tell us below or on Twitter @NPRFood.

/ Poetry by Tess Taylor from "Work & Days"; Illustration by Katherine Du/NPR
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Poetry by Tess Taylor from "Work & Days"; Illustration by Katherine Du/NPR
/ Poetry by Tess Taylor from "Work & Days"; Illustration by Katherine Du/NPR
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Poetry by Tess Taylor from "Work & Days"; Illustration by Katherine Du/NPR

Reprinted from Work & Days, by Tess Taylor. Used by permission of Red Hen Press.

Copyright 2023 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Maria Godoy is a senior science and health editor and correspondent with NPR News. Her reporting can be heard across NPR's news shows and podcasts. She is also one of the hosts of NPR's Life Kit.