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too much information is a problem children gathering hosted at problem library. |
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Join us for TOO MUCH INFORMATION NUMBER SIX!Saturday November 22"Perception as Participation" |
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An ode to place, to participation, to relationship.Being here, now is about attuning ourselves to the possibility and expansiveness that reveals itself when, like other life pursuits we seek to lose ourselves in, we see San Francisco as “something bigger than ourselves”. by tapping into this awareness, we develop new relationships with each other, the land, and our shared history, and we start to see this place as a home, as something we take care for, that we nurture and nourish. When we take time to perceive the world around us, we participate in its continued existence, and recognize that "we ourselves are characters within a huge story that is visibly unfolding all around us, participants within the vast imagination, or Dreaming, of the world" join us for a day of dreaming, moving, sensing, and being here now. |
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“Each place its own psyche. Each sky its own blue.” —David Abram |
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| "Perception as Participation", is taken from the book The Spell of the Sensuous by David Abram. it's a very good book - you should read it. | ||
So what is too much information any way?? |
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Too Much Information (TMI) is a bi-annual event that brings together Bay Area creatives from all stages of life and artistic development to learn from and share with each other. TMI honors creative spirits at all stages by highlighting the reality that we are all becoming. TMI is a space where everyone who enters is a student and a teacher.
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TMI believes that in a time of bountiful information, we need new local (physical) spaces where collaborations and connections can be seeded and nurtured. This must be built through common vision and life purpose. TMI is a chance to share from the heart and find allies. TMI trusts that the way to create new knowledge, develop wisdom, and expand our potential is through inter-generational relationships built on mutual support, encouragement, and daring. This behavior is a practice we need to relearn on a cultural level. TMI is an arena for that practice. Learn more about past TMI's: |
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