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Barefoot and exuberant — Mick Dodge comes to Bayview

The Barefoot Sensei Mick Dodge teaches the practice of connecting to the body and the earth through the soles of one’s bare feet. - Photo courtesy of the Earth Gym websiteThe Barefoot Sensei Mick Dodge teaches the practice of connecting to the body and the earth through the soles of one’s bare feet.
Photo courtesy of the Earth Gym website

By PATRICIA DUFF
South Whidbey Record Arts & Entertainment, Island Life

Feb 19 2011, 9:11 AM · UPDATED

Lose the shoes and your blues.

So says Mick Dodge, who shows folks how to step out of their shoes and connect to the earth through the bare soles of their feet.

He is known as the Barefoot Sensei, and promotes barefoot-movement practices to help people find what he calls their natural exuberance.

“Tender souls/soles need to step out and start paying attention and stop denying what is around them,” Dodge said.

“We need to ground our mind into the reality of our primal body, that which equals our animal, spirited self.”

In order to do that, Dodge said, one needs to know how to step out into nature and embrace the sensorial joys of the world.

He will talk about “The Earth Gym,” or his Exuberant Animal Rhythmic Training Hall from 6 to 7 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 22 at the Chiropractic Zone at the Sears House in Bayview. The talk is part of Craig Weiner’s series of Transformational Dialogues held the last Tuesday of each month at the clinic.

Dodge walked 1,000 “smiles” across Washington in 2009, from the drenched and verdant Hoh Rain Forest of the Olympics and through the back alleys of small towns and along the railroad ties of the cities.

He’s been without shoes for more than 20 years, and lives mainly outside in various parts of the state using a tent for shelter. During that trek, he was often mistaken for a homeless person, rather than just a person who was walking barefoot through the terrain and living without walls. Police have often tried to move him along, he said.

“I use my exuberance to break down the tension of those who view me as homeless,” Dodge said good-naturedly.

The 60-ish Dodge is decidedly articulate and is the opposite of what he may appear to be to those who might size him up on the spot: a drifting, hippie with no clear purpose. Instead, he is passionate, organized and methodical in his quest to live closely connected to the land.

To those who ask him to teach survival skills, he balks. Survival is not what it’s all about for Dodge. He tells them he’s into passionate living, not simply surviving; he becomes uncomfortable if he can’t hear the wind, because of some unnatural noise such as traffic or airplanes.

“I’m interested in finding the integration point of fitting into the natural world,” he said.

“To build exuberance without walls and electronics, and to sit down and practice using both the inside and the outside to get into the flow.”

There are three kinds of terrains in this life, Dodge said. They include the wasteland — those places where there are walls (buildings), machines (computers and cell phones) and traffic — and where one is trapped from the natural sensory flow of the world.

There are also the open-fenced lands, such as the spaces of Whidbey Island, which Dodge calls the “middle island” — where he currently lives in a tent — central as it is between the Olympic National Park to the west, the Cascade Mountains to the east and the San Juan Islands to the north. Finally, there is the gated wild lands, such as the national parks, for which one is required to pay to get into the most pristine areas of natural land, he says, hinting at the injustice and unnaturalness of being kept out by a gate.

As a former Marine Corps sergeant and longtime martial artist, Dodge said he has learned to take what he has learned inside, and bring it outside. He takes his lead from fellow advocate Frank Forencich, the author of “Exuberant Animal, The Power of Health, Play and Joyful Movement.” The book explores the totality of human health and promotes an integrated approach to living that spans culture, biology, psychology and animal behavior. It talks about ideas for movement and living that are meant to stimulate one’s vitality, creativity and enthusiasm.

Dodge’s Earth Gym follows the principles of using movement within the natural world to truly feel oneself in the world and to release passion and creativity. The fundamental methods of the Earth Gym are gathering, storing and releasing.

“I try to keep it real simple,” Dodge said.

Everyone has two hands, two feet and four soles with which to get a grip on movement and the moment, he said. Body gestures speak louder than words.

In the Earth Gym practices, he teaches people to ground themselves with the largest sensory organ of the body — muscle — through the use of simple tools that include sticks, ropes and stones.

The Earth Gym Training Quest, which he hopes to offer to whole families and not just individuals on Whidbey Island, uses practices that cut a path back to the earth. It is a connection between mind, body, spirit, land, ancestors and tribe, he said.

It has to include everyone, even if the elder members of the tribe must be carried on a stretcher or a pharaoh-like chair to the mountain or the forest. It is for all members of the tribe both young and old, Dodge said.

“It’s about changing your body to change the world. Connecting to that flow; that thing that excites us and inflames our passion. It comes and goes,” he said. “It is a force you cannot own, but it is a force you can channel. It is your chi.”

To learn more about the Earth Gym, click here and here.

The Chiropractic Zone is at 2812 E. Meinhold Road in Langley.

Transformational Dialogues

The Barefoot Sensei: 6 -7 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 22.

This is the third year that the Chiropractic Zone has hosted monthly dialogues with local South Whidbey authors, artists, healing art

practitioners and innovators in the field of transformation.

Events are always from 6 to 7 p.m. on the last Tuesday of the month, and help to support local nonprofits.

All events are by suggested donation of $10-$15, but no one will be turned away for lack of funds. Talks take place at the Chiropractic Zone, at the Sears House in Bayview, unless otherwise noted. The events are audio recorded and are available for listening; here.

Proceeds from February’s event will go to Langley Community Garden to help pay for the construction of a hot house.

South Whidbey Record Arts & Entertainment, Island Life Patricia Duff can be reached at pduff@southwhidbeyrecord.com or (360) 221-5300.
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SingPeace! songweavers came together for a transformatiional, (nearly) all-night, 2011 February full moon song-crafting event at the home and "museum" of artist, Jerry Wennstrom and the beautiful and multi-talented, Marilyn Strong. Since a picture is worth at least a thousand words, a video of the setting and work that we were surrounded by will go some distance to illustrate even more vividly the richly symbolic, archetypal and thoroughly amazing environment we came together in

There's no way to convey the magnitude of this work on a computer screen. We're fortunate that a feature film of Jerry's life and art is in the making. My intention, here, is to honor Jerry and Marilyn for their generosity of spirit and genuine hospitality. We sang and played together in this place and did such deep and meaningful work, here, that I imagine none of us will soon forget the experience.

Most rewarding for me, personally, is the confirmation of the power of music to engender peace and healing, for nowhere was this more evident than in the company of the beautiful souls who came together to share their heart's desire for "peace in our lifetime." through song. My hope for the future is in our co-collaborative efforts to encourage others to participate in SingPeace!

Please enjoy the web links below to a youtube series of three videos entitled: In the Hands of Alchemy: the Life and Art of Jerry Wennstrom.

In the Hands of Alchemy: the Art and Life of Jerry Wennstrom:
1/1 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HG0Wil3YKK0&NR=1
1/2 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P8Hn_Bv9mwc&feature=related
1/3 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vk_DyxFFT_k&NR=1

Peace & blessings,

pushkara

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The Path of the SingPeace! Pilgrimage

SingPeace! Earth Pilgrimage for Peace & Global Harmony was inspired by  a singing dream that focused two essential elements in my life: music, specifically, singing, and the quest for inner and outer peace. The image of a pilgrimage came up, but one that would take place in a gypsy wagon, a "peace train."

I went online to find a course in my region: "How to Build a Gypsy Wagon." Calling up one of the Founders of Port Townsend School of Woodworking, Jim Tolpin, I told him of my intention. He offered to come to Whidbey Island to present his talk and slide show about his 30-year love affair with building gypsy wagons. I planned to introduce the concept of crafting a culture of peace through sharing song to my community. I invited singer/songweaver Laurence Cole, a master of what I was calling singing 'n mingling participatory singing, to lead songs at the event.

The introductory program for SingPeace! took place in March 2009. In May, I took the course where I had the opportunity to design the wagon. I drew the plans and details of the interior, after which we lofted it and laid it out on cardboard so I could get a sense of the space. On the first day of the class, Jim had offered: "Steve can build it." Steve Habersetzer was co-teaching the course with Jim. So, I hung out with Steve that week, and subsequently commissioned him to manage the project and build the wagon.

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The intensive collaborative process of construction and decor followed, beginning in July 2009. Our singing troupe inaugurated SingPeace! when the wagon was displayed in November at the Port Townsend Woodworker's Show. Our Whidbey Island "homecoming" took place in March 2010, with a 2-day event at Yoga Lodge, where our singer-song leaders, Laurence Cole, Rob Tobias and Sara Tone, were also joined by EarthGym's Barefoot Bard, Mick Dodge.

SingPeace! support for protection and conservation of land and species, stewardship of and learning from the Earth has become a central theme of the gypsy wagon journey."The Garden" as a function of the pilgrimage has generated plans for a "Peace Garden," "Forgiveness Forest Garden," "Garden of Tranquility," and a "Secret Garden." So, as we travel from community to community we will support efforts already underway and encourage new garden planting aimed at healing communities.

Most recently, SingPeace! has become sponsor for Rasur Foundation International's BePeace Course, the first in the Northwest region. Feel Peace, Speak Peace, Teach Peace, via combined methods of HeartMath, for "coherence," and Compassionate Communication for "connection" have  significantly improved students' academic scores while maturing their social skills.  With the gypsy wagon as a staging area, SingPeace! is the celebratory component of this collaborative journey, with its singing 'n mingling, storytelling, puppetry, EarthGym and exuberant play activities.

SingPeace! is launching a North American tour. We have invitations from every corner of the U.S. and locations in Canada. The physical realities of gathering a troupe and caravan, attracting a truck and driver to haul the wagon, enlisting community participation in all aspects of crafting their "piece of the peace," all are among our present challenges. We are establishing an online presence, finding our place within the movement already under way and encouraging greater cohesion at the grassroots and policy levels to realize our goal: "Peace in our lifetime."

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