
Everyday Creation
This show has to do with different kinds of creation: human, divine, and a third kind that connects the two. Our human creativity is easy to talk about because clearly we're prolific creators. We make music, we write, we cook; we establish businesses, we design gardens, we invent things. The list goes on and on. Another kind of creation is divine. We feel its presence when, for example, we contemplate birth, death, our life purpose, or have a quiet realization that there's something bigger than us. The third kind is perhaps a little more difficult to grasp and yet, with a little practice, it's easy to put into action. This is the personal power each of us has to direct our thoughts, words and actions every day toward what we want in our life and world, rather than what we don't want.
This sounds heavier than it is. For me, this show is an acknowledgment that while we're all here to learn and grow and do our best, there's still plenty of opportunity to relax, laugh, love, and enjoy this playground we call life. So my hope is that you'll get some enjoyment and illumination out of these episodes. Here you'll find interviews with delightfully creative individuals; short stories about some who have passed away; and essays about personal power.
I'm Kate Jones, host and creator of Everyday Creation. Thank you for following my show.
Everyday Creation
Appreciating the Herd on a Day of Giving Thanks
A food and wine extravaganza in Michigan becomes so much more when every friend matters, and everyone's story counts.
Learn more in this short episode inspired by Jackie Stevenson's book, "Someday We'll Live Like Horses: Authentic Presence in Leadership and Life."
This is Kate Jones. Thank you for listening to Everyday Creation, available on YouTube and in podcast directories including Apple, Audible, iHeart and Spotify.
Kate:
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Hello, and welcome to Everyday Creation,
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a show about purpose,
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awe, and good vibrations.
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I'm Kate Jones here with a story from
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a recent road trip.
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First, though, a little background.
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Since 2017,
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except for a pandemic break,
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my husband and I have driven from our
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home in Ohio
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to Michigan's lower peninsula
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for what I like to call our annual
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"food and wine extravaganza."
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That's an accurate, though limited description
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because it doesn't capture our entire experience up
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north.
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Much more than food and wine,
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these events are really about the fellowship
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of individuals
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who are directly or indirectly connected
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to long-ago cooking classes.
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These reunion-like gatherings
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are filled with warmth, kindness, and conviviality,
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and even though my husband and I generally
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don't see these people more than once a
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year, we're very fond of them.
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In 2023
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I had a realization about that,
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prompted by a book I had brought along
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on the trip.
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The title is "Someday We'll Live Like Horses,"
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by Jackie Stevenson,
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and here's a pertinent line from it:
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"Herds are inclusive,
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everyone belongs,
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everyone is essential,
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everyone
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matters."
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Our gatherings have that inclusive quality,
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an acknowledgment
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that everyone counts,
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everyone's important.
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When members of our herd are missing,
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we feel their absence
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acutely.
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Luckily this year,
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five members of the herd we hadn't seen
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for too long were back.
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Because of that, our gathering had a special
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sweetness to it, tempered only by the fact
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that four others couldn't make it this time.
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And so we're looking ahead to 2025
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when, the hope is, we'll have a joyous
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celebration
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with a complete herd.
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Thank you for listening to Everyday Creation.
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Please share this episode with members
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of your herd.