Water as Medicine

Dr. Wallace J Nichols, who wrote the Foreword for our upcoming book, OUR BASIN OF RELATIONS, The Art and Science of Living with Water, often refers to water as medicine. He has a way of reaching people with his message on the positive impact of being on, in, under or near clean water. He has reached millions with his book BLUE MIND, and blue marbles as a gratitude reminder of our earth, and us, as primarily water.

It’s maybe obvious, but drinking clean water can not be taken for granted - it’s life sustaining and not limitless. I was medically treated for dehydration twice - a water solution was the remedy. When I came away from stroke convalescence the professionals suggested I drink a glass of water every waking hour. When I had a kidney stone, water was suggested to prevent more stones.

And, water isn’t always treated so well, mostly inadvertently. I have learned a lot about what I can do to help, from the many people crossing my path while working on OUR BASIN OF RELATIONS. I wish you grow an appreciation of clean water from the many points of view in OUR BASIN OF RELATIONS, and enjoy my accompanying water images and words.

Please consider contributing $100 or more to Clean Water Advocates, Inc., a nonprofit 501(c) organization, and receive a limited contributors edition of OUR BASIN OF RELATIONS. The book’s retail value is $40. Your $60 or more contribution will help spread the word and do clean water projects.

Thank you,

Mike Sipe,

Clean Water Advocates, Inc.

60 Wolf Lane

Richmond, VT. 05477

HEELING

The Wonder of Water

We are finally there - Our CLEAN WATER ADVOCATES coffee table book, OUR BASIN OF RELATIONS, The Art and Science of Living with Water, is off to the publisher, Green writers Press, for final layout and design, and production of short run Contributors Edition!

Trevien Stanger, an environmental writer, poet, educator and curator of the book’s many varied interesting water articles, has taken the lead role in producing an Indiegogo campaign https://www.indiegogo.com/projects/our-basin-of-relations-a-potent-coffee-table-book?fbclid=IwAR2jkFABGnNA4rfuO1BtIHW_25w1YcvlYONfW4EXpLSpwVsZekz1MS73lwg#/ to raise funds to produce a long run that will be distributed to the general public - regionally, nationally and even internationally.

Even though OUR BASIN revolves around Lake Champlain and it’s many mountain tributaries ie. our basin of relations, it could be anywhere - your basin of relations.

We expect the retail value of OUR BASIN to be $40. We are asking for contributions starting at $100 to receive a copy of the Contributors Edition. See https://www.indiegogo.com/projects/our-basin-of-relations-a-potent-coffee-table-book?fbclid=IwAR2jkFABGnNA4rfuO1BtIHW_25w1YcvlYONfW4EXpLSpwVsZekz1MS73lwg#/ for a list of all the contributors perks, and to make your contribution today.

Contributions are tax deductible for amounts above the retail value of books received. CLEAN WATER ADVOCATES, INC. is a 501(c) non-profit organization. All contributions will be used for the inspirationally educating book or clean water projects. The officers and employees of CLEAN WATER ADVOCATES, INC. are not paid. All articles and images are in-kind contributions by clean water advocates.

Mike and four of Lake Champlain series images, printed and framed large


FIFTY TWO with YOU - IN the MOMENT

It’s our anniversary - August 25th, 1967 was the original day - Our Lady of Grace, Lafayette Club, Radisson Hotel, followed by Mackinac Island, and family Balsam Lake cabin - first made meal - pizza in a box - an awakening!

Dreams. Dreams fulfilled.

Still dreaming - differently though. Looking more to the present. Love in the now is where it’s at - SMELL THE ROSES says it well (order at www.friesenpress.com/bookstore)

Emmett wakes us at 9am. He helps with the major task of raising the shades. Then… A few drawers open to fill an imaginary food cart - the office chair. Soon that ends. A 750 piece puzzle appears for Bama to help with - the pile of pieces remain. I don’t help with the time sucking task - do you blame me?

I’m more interested in our (my) Sunday routine of CBD infused honey and lemon in chamomile tea and Sunday Morning Show on CBS - watching while taking a spin on the stationary bike. A good feel show and a little aerobic high.

The hike - Early afternoon Patty and I saunter through three of the four loops of trails on our seventeen acres. I love the natural beauty, developing walnut trees, wild flowers and saunter together on perfect day. An especially long walk this special day, probably because we stopped to pick wild flowers for our table, in celebration.

Saunter is a good word for our walk - me letting my light headiness run and Patty with perspective affect from Alzheimer's. - like a hike, for us, on a more rugged path in the Green Mountains. I love it!

Wild flowers from a walk in our park

Later - We enjoyed our traditional diner of Caesar Salad, steak and fish, with Michael, Jessica, Avi, Emmett, and Olive. Chaotic - Patty and Emmett spun the romaine dry, as it mysteriously shrunk to less than needed, Marsett (Home care person) made gluten croutons that I included in the salad, expecting only gluten free experience for Avi - Avi was appreciative that I bought gluten free french bread, though. Olive cries for milk from mom. Too little food for the seven of us, so hot dogs came out to “Hara hachi bu”. I wouldn’t trade the time for a quit five-star meal with Patty, alone, at my favorite place, Nick’s Fish Market.

A toast to our anniversary - What anniversary?

I had learned earlier in the day that mentioning that it was our anniversary touched a cord with Patty, summoning a kiss or happy anniversary, with a moment of memory - long term of course. I used the strategy a number of times during the day - a successful connecting strategy, at least for the moment.

A perfect day. Connecting. Loving, imperfectly.

Fifty two years. Inn at Shelburne Farms


A Digital Deal - The best way to view Richard's trilogy of self-revealing poems

Three books - I CONFESS, COURAGE AT THREE AM, AND SMELL THE ROSES, contain nearly 150 self-revealing poems by my brother Richard. The poems, drafted between age 80 and death at age 85, are telling of the impact on Richard as a world renown sexually abused advocate, and being the fourth child of the Walter and Betty Sipe family.

I am honored to finish SMELL THE ROSES, in Richard’s absence, adding more Sipe family insight (I am the 8th of 10 children in the Walter and Betty Sipe family) and, more importantly, commentary about the value of the courage to care which Richard exemplified so well. I learn from Richard. We both - believers in the Love Priorities.

Richard noticed my horizon photography and asked me to supply twenty four horizon images for the book. He encouraged me to reflect, as in a memoir, with my captions. He trusted me to finish his trilogy. I am his relief pitcher for the book, and I think he knew it was needed.

Eulogies by Richard’s son Walter, Thomas Doyle, Jeff Anderson, and Reverend Homily by Edward Lambros reprinted in SMELL THE ROSES, clearly express Richard’s courage to care!

It is nice to have hard cover books for the personal library (I have over 100 photo art books) but the best way to buy Richard’s trilogy of books is digitally. I say this partially because the best resolution of my images is with the digital format. Other advantages are: cost is only $3 a book, you can change the font size, mobility, accessibility, immediate delivery, even book marking. order at www.frisenpress.com.

In any case I believe Richard is a model for self-realizing and Reaching the Sky.

Richard Reach the Sky

PARENTING

Parenting, in a broad view, is loving the vulnerable. It goes beyond children fathering or mothering. It is passionately learning, honorably serving, meaningfully mentoring, adventurously exploring, really relating , joyfully playing, proudly protecting, charitably contributing, and trustingly transferring - all in each, our unique way. Respectably parenting embodies, like little else, all the activities of SCG (Self-Realizing, Connecting, Giving).

I once thought success was having a large family - ten children, like my parents. What was I thinking - the cost, suffering, self abuse! I did eventually learn, though, that “it is in the giving that we receive”. And, caring for others, particularly the young and vulnerable, is a big deal in life.

My brother Richard exemplified parenting the vulnerable, being a renown advocate for the sexually abused by catholic clergy. I won’t be surprised if his legacy includes credit for playing a meaningful role in redirecting the Catholic Institution in a more healthy direction.

His passing will be one year August 8th. I am honored to participate in his final book of self-revealing poems - SMELL THE ROSES, available now, at www.friesenpress.com, coincident with the one year commemoration.

Parenting

Single Pond

SMELL THE ROSES is now available at FriesenPress bookstore - www.friesenpress.com

I am pleased to announce that SMELL THE ROSES, my brother Richard’s (AWR SIPE died August 8th, 2018) third and final book of poems is available at FriesenPress.com. His other two books of life revealing poems are I CONFESS and COURAGE AT THREE AM.

I am proud to be the continuing author of SMELL THE ROSES, adding my take on the book’s main theme of life, love, and mortality.

If you are so inclined, the best way to order the book(s) is directly with the publisher, FriesenPress - www.friesenpress.com.

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Share the Love!

Smell the Roses - coming soon

I am pleased to announce that Smell the Roses, feel the soil / reach the sky, the third book of my brother Richard’s life revealing poems, (I Confess and Courage at Three Am are the other two) is soon to be released by Friesen Press - the publisher of book one and book two of Richard’s touching trilogy. Go to coming soon on the following link https://books.friesenpress.com/store/title/119734000075337354 to get a preview.

The book reveals a bit of me as well - twenty four horizon images with accompanying words encouraged by Richard to “think like a memoir.”

A special part of the book is personal tributes to Richard’s life of caring, by people who experienced his love.

The book is about caring. The book is about love and the hope for more love.

Richard - a life well lived.


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The book will be available at Amazon, FriesePress, and, for friends and family, from me (at the best price).

Please share, since it won’t be on New York Times Best Seller’s list. Spotlight - like the academy award winning movie titled such, identifying Richard as the primary resource advancing the cause for abused children by a powerful institution gone wrong. Dealing with the truth is healing.

9 Activities of Daily Loving - pretty much gone

Alzheimer’s steals the recent past , then all past becomes questionable. There is no future, only the present, and that with a fair amount of confusion. I now realize that my mantra of Love in the moment has little meaning without a connection to the past and hope to the future.

The barely recognizable figures at water’s edge on Popham Beach, Maine, a foggy morning in June, reminds me of how it might be to have no past - nothing behind, while at water’s edge, thinking about the tide’s rise -overwhelming - as it will evidently be, not too long beyond the present.

Popham Beach PhaseOne IQ 180 80mm 1/50 sec f14 ISO 35

Eating, Bathing, Dressing, Toileting, Transferring, and maintaining Continence are well know activities of daily living - all eventually taken over by Alzheimer’s. Maybe first to go…. and equally, or more importantly, are the loss of all 9 activities of daily loving - Learning, Serving, Mentoring, Exploring, Relating, Playing, Protecting, contributing, and Transferring!

A Sense of Wonder

I spent time in Maine recently - three nights in Rockport at a photo workshop - A Sense of Wonder - and three nights with Patty, the kids and grandkids at Popham beach.

The workshop was great - my first taste of shooting the stars. Popham beach with the family was too short - what a wonderful place. I’m going back some day.

You can view a few of the week’s images at www.mesipe.com under new images to consider for printing.

Pollen Palate PhaseOne IQ 180 1/50 sec f11 ISO 35

I was not enamored with Pollen Palate at first. After a lot of play with it, I fell in love with it. Sometimes the more I play with an image the more I get attached. I’ve heard you can’t judge your own work because you’re too close! Time together gets you thinking - once mediocre, becomes great. Well, what the hell, as long as it turns me on.


Fifty Years to Stardom

It was fifty years ago this summer that my dad gave this young army lieutenant $100 to buy my first camera at the PX in Baden Baden, Germany. I was serving my Quartermaster Corp tour of duty in Worms, about an hour north east. It was the start of my passion for photography - actually, I had a twinge of the passion growing up watching Love that Bob, a tv sitcom about the fun life of Bob Comings, studio photographer with a large format camera… often photographing glamorous models.

My passion for photography grows and yet it took fifty years to take my first images of the stars.

Barrett’s Cove 2, Canon 5D Mark IV 45mm T/S 10 sec f2.8 ISO 6400



Barrett’s Cove 1, Canon 5D Mark IV 45mm T/S 10 sec f2.8 ISO 6400

I owe the notice of loving looking up to my brother Richard, recognizing before I did, that a lot of my favorite images included the horizon as a dominant center of interest.

I am honored that Richard invited me to show sky images for his third book of poems - Smell the Roses, feel the soil/ reach the sky. I will never forget his prodding me to dig deeper and reflect like in a memoir with my image captions. My image reflecting is honed with the process begot by Smell the Roses.. I am excited to see the book in print about the time of Richard’s year mark of passing and my 73 birthday - August 8th - Watch for it’s release - it will be available from Amazon, FriesenPress and me.

The stars have not been an attraction for me - the lighting (lack thereof) has been a turnoff, and late at night, in out of the way places, have been a factor. But oh, what a sight to capture. Because of the required long exposure the camera captures the stars better than our eyes can see - it blows my mind. I am light-years from capturing the image to print large that I envision. I will be working toward an image to print with help from night photography experts Jim Nicholson and Shannon Kalahan.

Looking up - I love it!

Enjoying What Is

The other night I couldn’t find the remote for the TV. Not uncommon - I usually find it within 30 minutes or so - sometimes in places I would never expect. This time was different - I would never find the darn channel changer. The TV was locked on tennis…. maybe for ever more. I went to bed frustrated, angry. I said to myself - let it go, let it go. Tomorrow is another day.

Some how, some way, the morning after was bright - the remote retrieval was no big deal. I went to Xfinity and they gave me a new one…. free, and with a smile. Later in the day we found the old remote, on the field road. Patty found it, saying, what is this? I suspect it fell out of her sweater. I am learning, slowly, to go with the flow.

I am frustrated, not able to work the land when I want to - not just Patty - weather too. Let it go. Let it go. Go with the flow - enjoy what is. I talk to myself as I make incremental progress with living my mantra.

‘Enjoying what is’ says the same as my mantra - love in the moment. Interestingly, saying ‘enjoy what is’ helps me better get it. In other words, being with love, in the moment, means doing my love priorities in the ever changing context of uncontrollable life events.

Anyway, I see the importance of ordering my priorities while enjoying what is, in the here and now.

Richmond Summer Sunrise Canon EOS 1Ds Mark III 1/10 sec f18 ISO 100

ALERT FRIENDS AND FAMILY - Now is the time to visit us at Purple Lark Farm, Walnut Woods, Bilder Photo Studio, or whatever else you want to call us at our Richmond Vermont homestead. We’ve made room for visitors and wish for them. Uncontrollable life events, Alzheimer’s, are more likely than not to result in the loss of total earthly connection to at least one of us, before you know it!




Spring Reflection

On my journey home from a welcome three day Kripalu respite of nature, healthy food, body massage and yoga, my mind is calm enough to catch this gem of an image, after not seeing it’s potential, just three days earlier, on my way to ‘Bountyville’ - my busy mind, cluttered with stuff on my to-do list, missing the moment.

Spring Reflection PhaseOne IQ 180 80mm 1/80 sec f11 ISO 35

I experience stress when I am into a thing that I am getting done on my to-do list and Patty’s Alzheimer’s interrupts. I am learning, the hard way, that loving in the moment - sometimes, means dropping doing a to-do list doing to experience the feeling of the moment. And, with Patty, I fear there are precious few.

When I am able to calm my busy mind and love in the moment, by being there for Patty, stress turns to feeling of connection, gratitude, compassion, love.

When wind and waves wane I see more clearly.

It's Not All Sunshine

I spent three rainy, wonderful, days at Kripalu Health and Yoga center in Lenox Mass. My objective - capture a little spring sprout. A long-term objective is to capture a little of each season and put together a seminar with daughter Bridget on ‘Seeing through YOUR lens’, or something like that. - It would make a great Kripalu workshop, or for that matter, a good workshop to be offered in the Champlain Valley.

I am big on, what I call, image reflecting - my version of nature mindfulness - meditation - reflecting on whatever comes to mind, prompted by a focused image capture. Also, (attest this blog) I am big on living my Love Priorities. A workshop to connect with others, while playing out passions, would be great.

I would not create this workshop without Bridget’s leadership. She offers creativity, nature mindfulness and life coaching insight. The balance offered by the two of us - yin and yang, if you will, will be interesting, fun, and a great life experience.

Nature teaches us a bunch about balance. Initially, I was disappointed with no sun at Kripalu. But thank God for the rain. After spending time in the rain, I felt much gratitude for the moisture and saw spring sprout, more so than I would have with sun glare. Sun and rain are Spring’s elixir. One without the other is like us without our daily dose of water - no water no life.

I bumped into a trail runner, also at Kripalu for a respite. She was exhilarated running in the rain, as I was shooting in the rain. I asked if she was cold, running bare armed. She said she loved it - it feels so good. I usually make a habit of staying inside in the rain. It’s a mistake - I think the rain connecting with body is like a sapling absorbing needed moisture. I love it! I embrace it!

Monk’s Pond PhaseOne IQ180 80mm 1/3 sec f12 ISO 35

I’ve posted a number of Kripalu surrounds images on www.mesipe.com under New Prints. Please visit. Kripalu is a great experience. People there are prepared to connect.


Walnut Woods

I’m realistic - I know I won’t see Walnut Woods to maturity. But, it stretches my imagination, visualization and desire to plant a seed for future generation’s enjoyment - I love it - the miracle of living, growing, nature.

I see 100+ beautiful, big, nut bearing trees, mostly in the north east corner of Purple Lark Farm - Seventeen acres of precious land, not wasted on us.

Walnut Woods Sony RX 100VI 9mm 1/500 f5 ISO 125

I guess I planted more than a seed - I’m anxious to see the walnuts - it takes eight years before bearing fruit. I planted a eight year old Honey Crisp Apple tree for the same reason … and I have tasted the fruit already - I love it. It is never too late to visualize a fruitful future. Like our 11 month old granddaughter, Olive - growth is so visible, and exciting to watch, at the start.

Plant a tree, while you can - it may out-live you, but just image.

Winter - From Fall to Spring

Purple Lark Farm - our newly named place of farming activity - experienced two major, picture worthy, snow dumps this Winter…. not really Winter…. The first came late Fall and the second early Spring. I got my planned, image capturing, dose of Winter snow birch bend - enough already. Winter stretches too long, beautiful as it is, in the Green Mountain state. I am now ready to capture Spring sprouting at Kirpalu in Stockbridge, MA. I love it - thank you family, for making it possible..

Winter Ash PhaseOne IQ 180 80mm 1/200 sec f11 ISO 35 2 image stitched

"Follow the trend-lines, not the headlines"

Bill Clinton is given credit for saying: “follow the trend-lines, not the headlines”. It’s a great line - one to keep in mind for sanity sake. I watch a lot of news and never hear about what war we are not having. The nature of the news, these days especially, is to opine on the bad, ugly, sensational.

I read Richard Rohr’s Daily Meditation for a little daily dose of sanity. It is good Big Picture stuff, for me. Today it spoke to me on violence - how one can feel hopeless, if you abstract the headlines. Look at the trend-lines on violence:

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Some still fall, most remain tall. Life is good. Love it all.

Who am I trying to convince - me for sure - it’s a cure.

FALLEN

CFP Board Emeritus

I retired practicing as a CFP, March 31st, 2013 - hard to believe it’s been six years. About the time I feel really, ‘out of it’, as a planner, the financial planning industry contacts me about being a founding member of their recently trademarked, CFP Board Emeritus program. This is a great idea - maintaining contact with good-standing, retired CFP’s who have practiced as a CFP for twenty five years or longer. They have rules and fees - it is good though - I can’t practice as a CFP - not having maintained my CPE - and I haven’t. They provide volunteer opportunities and welcome industry promotion, while keeping you informed about changes in the industry.

Their invitation prompts me to reread ADVOCATE PLANNING; To Do What You Love To Do, to see how well I promote CFPs. I do a good job of promoting CFPs - the industry would be proud of me. More importantly, I surprise myself with the staying power of the wisdom of my observations and ideas - A focus on prioritizing passion activities is the future of planning. I feel bad I am not able to practice what I preach - I don’t advocate plan for others, any longer. I do however advocate plan for myself. After using the process for a number of years I know it is good.

This blog is a reflection of me living my Love Priorities. I am much better prioritizing my passion priorities doing the process I profess - I am delighted.

I invite you to reread the first and last chapter of ADVOCATE PLANNING - it is a free download on my website www.MikeSipe.com or www.MySCGpriorities.com. I know… it is tongue in cheek to think you read the book - read the first and last chapters anyway - it is a quick read… and if you want more details you will read the chapters in between.



I focus on my, now, SCG priorities - family and fine-art photography are the lion’s share. Even though I am willingly medical homebound, 2019 includes an active involvement in a CARERS group, learning more about photography, and image making, photo and print making workshops, finishing up two books - Smell the Roses and Our Basin of Relations, involvement with growing CBD - the family farm venture - and whatever else turns me on - no time to feel sorry for myself - engulfed in my love priorities. Thank God for my family and a little advocate planning.





VASE

THE BIG PICTURE

Since I began to focus more on my photography, upon retirement from life-wealth planning in 2013, I express my desire, passion, as capturing my ‘image of a life time’ - one that can be printed BIG, displayed on walls, and hold the attention of on-lookers. I am happy to announce I have reached a point of possibility.

The Studio, with Epson 44” p9000 printer is in place. I have now printed my first, BIG, canvas print - ready for exhibit, as part of the September 2019 book release - OUR BASIN OF RELATIONS, the art and science of living with water.

Red Sail Yellow Marker

I can’t say I have captured, printed and displayed, my image of a life time - how can I - I am active - shooting, image reflecting, and playing with new processing ideas - I hope I will forever, but know I won’t be. When I can no longer capture and display beauty, a lovely time will be over, and I will choose my image of a life time, and hopefully connect with you. In the meantime, visit me at www.MikeSipe.com or in person, at the Studio Farm.

Adapting

Tenants Harbor Adapting, PhaseOne IQ 180 240mm 1/20 sec f25 ISO 100 multiple images

I captured this image of Tenants Harbor, Maine, from our family vacation rental, sunset, early Fall 2018. It captured me - I have been reflecting on the image for months, and tweaking to my delight. I think I’m done - for now.

I call the image Adapting - Tenants Harbor adapting to change: nine feet of water rise and fall twice a day, seasons, light, temperature, fishing conditions, fishing quotas, fish - varying cycles of abundance and depletion - the world’s first CSF (community supported fishery) just a few miles down the road in Port Clyde - survival for the small guy… Are the sailboats taking over, like in Rockland and Camden?

My center of interest, with Adapting, is the island jetties, and white, harbor watch, compound on the breakwater island - the evening sun making the compound a light house, for the moment - at least from my view. Can you image the views from the compound at sunrise, looking out over the vast Atlantic, and the sunset harbor watch?

I reflect on my adapting - my changing life in Vermont with Patty, family, ventures - I quote Glen Libby of Port Clyde, author of CAUGHT, time. place. fish. “what-ever will be will be and everything is as it should be.