Job’s Tears from the Na Pali Coast of Kauai

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Into a chasm of twisted trees the trail went,
young flowers floating on green stems beside it.

Awoke from the dark of shadow cast flight,
Into the open, sea stretched to the depths of sight.

In the distance a beach so many times passed,
While I thirst for dreams of bluff covered in grass

Barefoot of mine kept moving, eyes lingered for a while,
Caught in webs of wonder like an awestruck child.

Gaze returned to feet set in motion,
In the distance, pulsating crash of ocean

Soon again revealed to whales if they looked,
To find me thinking that I was wrapped up in a book.

Drank in the view for a moment or two,
then dipped to the river where the Job’s Tears grew.

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NaPali4This is a poem written just now and some photos from the sacred expanses of the Na Pali Coast of Kauai. I have now visited this coast on several different occasions, and have often on these journeys gathered the seed-beads of the Job’s Tear plants that grow near some of the creeks and rivers.

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I have been threading these beads on waxed linen to make Buddhist malas and Sufi tasbeehs as well as on stretchy synthetic line to make bracelets. Some of these are currently available thru the 1st of March, 2014 on my crowdfunding campaign to raise money for the Sustainable Cup Challenge Do School Fellowship which I was accepted to and just began here in Brooklyn.

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– Joseph Stodgel, 2-24-14

My Deep Thanks to Daphne

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a first sight in NYC

I hoisted my heavy pack, climbed off the bus and took my first steps onto the pavements of New York City where I would soon begin a ten-week fellowship program with the DO School. After taking some pictures and a short video explaining briefly my setting and location, I glanced across the street to see a sign with the name Dafni on it. Immediately I was reminded of a pressing desire to write a bit about my faithful chariot, a 1990 Honda Civic wagon named Daphne.

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one of the most awesome rides ever made

Last summer I gathered the money to buy Daphne and give her a couple of new tires. In the months since then I have traveled more than 10,000 miles with her, over many a mountain pass and from New Mexico to California and back twice. We celebrated her 200,000th mile in Oakland, just before she lost compression in one of her cylinders and began a chugging in her engine that continues today. Other smaller issues presented themselves as well and were fixed in turn, namely her brakes, starter and distributor.

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on the road with Daphne

It seems that many held the thought that Daphne wasn’t going to make it back to New Mexico this time around to deliver me safely for my impending departure to New York City. I questioned taking my painting rug or massage table, lest I end up putting my possessions on a greyhound or amtrak, but in the end somehow knew that she would make it. Somehow… epically… she made it to Santa Fe. A day later her back right wheel was locked up – she was going nowhere for sometime. Here and now I give her great thanks and a deep bow for all of her oil-burning hard work, and look forward to putting in the hours this summer to get her on the road once more.

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Eco Brick Instructions and T-shirt Designs in the Works

Eco Brick Instructions 2014 sThis is one of the drawings that I have made for the new eco-brick instructions that I am developing for all sorts of applications from business cards and stickers to social media and blogging. Below is the tentative t-shirt design which is available as one of the perks on my ongoing Crowdfunding Campaign to raise money for the Sustainable Cup Challenge DO School Fellowship in NYC. I intend to develop at least a couple more designs and give people the option to pick from a few.

new eco brick instruction shirts 2 bw sIf you would like to learn more about eco-bricks then check out the good work of Pura Vida Atitlan, Hug It Forward, and Ecobricks.org and read further below an excerpt from my Schumacher College MSc dissertation. Here is a bit of writing that I published about a year ago: “Behold, the humble eco-brick – a plastic bottle stuffed with all things non-biodegradable. Whilst the so-called revolutionaries burn tires, break things and produce massive mountains of smoking trash, hard-at-work others stuff the dread and wastage of the industrial machine into little bottles and build places of council and learning with them. This revolution is not fought with burning molotov cocktails poised for destruction, but plastic bottles eating trash in an act of simple implosion that brings together the disintegrated synthetics and threads of an unraveling global supply chain.What do you put forth into the world?”

EcoBrickIt Outlinebw s“A better method of containing the non-biodegradable waste stream is available, and to be found in the simple plastic bottle of which there is no end in sight. They are designed to be containment vessels, so it probably best that we use them as such.[1] This idea brings us to the eco-brick and the work of Pura Vida Atitlan of Guatemala and the other organizations and individuals worldwide who are stuffing their plastic waste streams into bottle bricks, preventing it all from wrecking pollution on their homes and utilizing the otherwise nocicycled† materials as beneficial building components. Certain groups have even gone to the extent of turning the trash of entire landfills into schools they couldn’t otherwise afford.[2]

My first encounter with the act of filling plastic bottles with trash took place many years ago on a backpacking trip in the Sangre De Christo mountain range outside of my hometown of Santa Fe, New Mexico. As we agreed with and were following Leave No Trace principles and practice to the best of our abilities, we were collecting all of our trash produced in a black sack that swelled to a substantial size. Wanting to save on space and do something around the fire, my friend John Armstrong began to stuff the whole lot of the trash into a one-liter sports drink bottle that we had. Instead of walking out with a substantially sized black trash sack full of trash, we walked out with a hardened bottle compressed to the brim.

Plastic Bottle BrickRediscovering this lost art of upcycling and considering it’s potential in building projects came to me just days before I departed to South Africa to conduct my dissertation research. I was excited to say the least at having found a simple solution to the question of what to do with “the rest of the stuff”. I was back in the area of Schumacher College and picked up the most recent copy of Resurgence where I quickly found an article by the environmentalist Nicola Peel whom I met last year at the College. I read of her work helping to clean up villages by spreading the simple wisdom of Pura Vida Atitlan, who have overseen and encouraged the creation of thousands upon thousands of plastic bottle bricks stuffed with all sorts of plastic trash to make walls, garden partitions, schools, and health centres for much cheaper than otherwise and of great benefit in the beautification of surrounding areas. [3] On PVA’s site I was awe-struck and inspired to find shot after shot of upcycled buildings going up and all of the smiling and stoked faces of the local people involved. I recognized quite quickly that this was the direction that I wanted to take the work in South Africa, and was deeply gladdened to have such an example to work from. It is home-made upcycling par excellence.” *

† [“We can use the word nocicycling to refer to any and all forms of waste management which cause harm (the prefix noci- comes from the Latin nocere meaning ‘to harm’). Unfortunately, most all forms of modern and industrial waste management, including most recycling practices, are in one way or another harmful to human beings and other species.”*]


[1]     Plastic bottles are the responsible elder siblings of the plastics family with arms big enough to hug and contain the rest of their unruly siblings.

[2]     HUSK Cambodia, http://www.huskcambodia.org/

[3]     Pura Vida Atitlan, http://puravidaatitlan.org/

* Extracted from pages 10 and 16-17 of Joseph Stodgel’s Schumacher College MSc Dissertation entitled Trash to Treasure: Making Rehabilitation a Celebration and Cultivating the Authentic Wholeness of Upcycling.

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Heart Wave Dorje Video and Description

This is a small video of a large Heart Wave Dorje from the beautiful hills of Colombia just North of Bogota. I have always been attracted to the dorje symbol and object from the time that I encountered it in use amongst Tibetan Buddhists. I started making my particular takes on them in early 2009 when I was living on the island of Oahu and going to school at the University of Hawaii in Manoa Valley, and the inspiration had come some months earlier when I was hiking on the Na Pali Coast of Kauai.

As I looked up into the twilight sky above the stretching ocean horizon where the sun had just set, I focused my eyes on several stars that had started to appear as the light drained from the sky. As I loosened my fixed gaze I saw a movement descend vertically between the stars and spin them into two separate sets. This created the essential form of the dorje before me. Then I noticed another movement that seemed the response of the spinning chambers; a horizontal, inward whirlpool force that seen from a distance created two heart-like shapes that met in the central spinning.

Once I had the time and wire at my fingertips, I began to make basically what I had created in my vision that day. The polarized hearts looked like lightbulb coils and it brought me great joy to make them. Since that first one I have probably only made about seven or eight others, but am looking forward to bending several more (smaller than the one in the video) as part of my Crowdfunding Campaign, currently live on Indiegogo.com

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Charting the Life of a 5×5 Painting

Here are a few pictures from charting the trajectory of a 5×5 painting that I made in this last month for the Crowdfunding Campaign to raise money for my DO School Fellowship program in New York City.

First, I begin these pieces with the definition of a center line and a central circle made with a round object of some sort (don’t want a compass poking holes in my canvases). From there, I basically do the geometry from what looks appealing to my eye rather than using a mess of straight lines and rulers which tend to muck the pieces up and as well give them an “I made this with a ruler” kind of look.  I have tended towards making the straight lines a little more lively with just allowing myself to do the best that I can.

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Two triangles balanced on top of each other. A central octagon, and then the details of the outer layers of the cuboctahedron. Next, I reinforce and bolster the lines with permanent marker (a pile of which I have managed to accumulate in the last years) some of which remains through and through the later layers of paint that are applied to the piece. Ah yes – the application of color comes flooding into a part of the piece. In this case the sky takes on a rich blue, interspersed with left empty lines radiating from the star tetrahedron. IMG_0795 hc s

The background takes form with the contrast of cloud and sky, and the details of light rays and poofy shadows interspersed in the waves of water vapor. This piece defied my satisfaction for some time, sitting under a lamp and reminding me every time that I looked over that the conversation had just begun and that we had more to talk about. Eventually, I started to outline the cuboctahedron, creating sort of a magnetic tremor spreading from the geometry. IMG_1101 hc sAt some point the piece was done, or done enough, and I put it down for some time to enjoy its company. This all reminds me of Buckminster Fuller – how he said something to the extent of how beauty and aesthetics were what compelled him to know if what he had did was good. He said that if he arrived at something lacking in beauty, he knew that he had done something wrong / incorrect in his calculations and such.

Check out all the paintings in the series on the Crowfund the Fellowship: Paintings page.

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