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Original Content at https://www.opednews.com/articles/A-Path-of-Peace-Encircles-by-Meryl-Ann-Butler-Celebration_Horses_Labyrinth_Peace-150430-683.html (Note: You can view every article as one long page if you sign up as an Advocate Member, or higher). |
April 30, 2015
A Path of Peace Encircles the Globe on World Labyrinth Day
By Meryl Ann Butler
Saturday, May 2, 2015 marks the seventh annual World Labyrinth Day. An opportunity to connect with others throughout the world through time zone related activities, it is sponsored by the Labyrinth Society, an international organization of labyrinth enthusiasts. TLS invites people around the globe to share in a symbolic walk to encircle the planet with peace.
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(This article is part of a series on labyrinths. Additional information, especially about the history of labyrinths, is available in many of the previous articles listed below. Author, Meryl Ann Butler, is a founding member of The Labyrinth Society and has been building labyrinths since 1992.)
Saturday, May 2, 2015 marks the seventh annual World Labyrinth Day (WLD). The global event is sponsored by the Labyrinth Society (TLS), an international organization of labyrinth enthusiasts. TLS invites people around the world to share in a symbolic walk designed to encircle the world with peace. Individuals or groups can participate by holding private walks or public events on a labyrinth.
Labyrinths have been experiencing a public revival in schools, hospitals, libraries and places of worship, as well as in private spaces.
Labyrinths may be temporary or permanent, round or square, indoor or outdoor, and may be made of a wide variety of materials from canvas or carpet to rocks, sand, paving stones or masking tape. Many are wheelchair accessible. And labyrinths have even been built for horses!
Labyrinths are walked for many reasons, including to enhance relaxation, to create ceremony, as prayerful/meditative movement, and to promote wellbeing, and their paths of comfort have found their way into hospiceprograms as well.
TLS says that walking a labyrinth is thought to enhance right brain activity, and uses include: problem solving, conflict resolution, walking meditations and modern day pilgrimages. The American Cancer Society states that labyrinths "may be helpful as a complementary method to decrease stress and create a state of relaxation."
Labyrinths and mazes have essential differences.
A maze offers several paths to choose from, and making one's way through a maze therefore engages logic and analytical processes, and is focused on achieving a particular outcome. Mazes often have walls designed to obscure the view of the correct path.
A labyrinth has only one path. Therefore, there is no need for walls or hedges to obscure the view, and most labyrinths, unlike mazes, are flat, or relatively so. Walking the labyrinth is not done to achieve a goal, but in order to experience the journey. Most people report experiencing a feeling of peace, joy, or wellbeing as a result of walking the labyrinth's unicursal path.
Two of the primary labyrinth patterns include Chartres and Classical styles.
"As mindfulness and meditation have gone mainstream, people around the world have been turning to labyrinths as a spiritual exercise or for stress relief," says WLD coordinator, Lars Howlett. He noted on Thursday that at least "one hundred World Labyrinth Day walks for peace are now planned according to our online survey. We're now counting at least 30 US States and 12 countries."
WLD walk, labyrinth at Stillpoint at Beckside, Bellingham, WA. Constructed by Myra Ryneheart.
(Image by Stillpoint at Beckside) Details DMCA
Howlett notes that informal statistics indicate that over 5,000 people from more than 44 states and 23 countries participated in WLD 2014. TLS encourages participants to be counted by taking a WLD Participation survey.
"While many use labyrinths for personal reflection, WLD is an opportunity to 'Walk as One at 1' in the afternoon (local time) in solidarity with others around the world to promote peace. It's heartwarming to think of hundreds of people walking in Australia, Poland, Scotland, and Colombia, among other countries where participants organized local events last year," notes Howlett. He added that the first person to register an event for 2015 was from Zambia.
Grace Cathedral in San Francisco is offering a WLD labyrinth walk on their outdoor labyirnth. It will be facilitated by Rev. Dr. Lauren Artress, author of Walking a Sacred Path: Rediscovering the Labyrinth as a Spiritual Practice, along with the Labyrinth Guild at Grace Cathedral.
Since people around the world walk their labyrinths at 1:00 pm local time, this creates a rolling wave of energy that encircles the globe.
The TLS website offers a page with information about WLD events to participate in. Additional information is available on the Labyrinth Society Facebook page. Or, you can participate in this wave of energy by using an online, virtual labyrinth or by letting your fingers do the walking on a printed paper labyrinth. To enhance brain integration, l use mirror images of three-circuit labyrinths, as shown below. You can download the printable pdf , "Fingerwalking Dual Labyrinths Pattern and Instructions," here.
Cordelia Rose is a yoga teacher and labyrinth builder and creatrix of Whitewater Mesa Labyrinths, "on a beautiful mesa in southwest New Mexico at the west entrance to the Gila Wilderness."
Meryl Ann Butler: Thanks for visiting with us, Cordelia. When did you get involved with labyrinths, and what inspired you?
Cordelia Rose: Inspired by a length of labyrinth ribbon designed by Laura Foster Nicholson, I started building Syzygy, my first labyrinth, in 2001. I now have five labyrinths and the plan of a maze.
MAB: Can you share with us a little about about some of your WLD events?
CR: Last year part of my WLD celebration was to ride my little horse, Stretch, bareback in my Troy Ride equine labyrinth.
This is a mirrored classic labyrinth designed by Jeff Saward in which to ride many horses without meeting on the same path. It is eighty-six feet in diameter with a thirty-foot diameter center circle. Each side has seven circuits. I made it out of horse manure, which my horses did not recognize as labyrinth paths to be carefully followed, so I added some white rocks and horseshoes.
Some World Labyrinth Days are warm and sunny, some are dark and cold, in previous years on sunny days we have danced the maypole in my classical labyrinth.
On chilly days we wrap up warm [for southwest New Mexico], walk faster than usual, and "Huddle as One" in the center. This is a medieval labyrinth designed by my brother Ben Nicholson. It was eleven circuits but I took out the middle one so that my big horse could fit inside the center circle.
MAB: What can you tell us about your "shuffle" labyrinth?
CR: It is a 40-foot diameter circle of dug and raked clay dirt in which you can draw your own labyrinth, dream catcher or whatever you please by shuffling your feet. I use it to try out labyrinth designs I carry in my head.
When I have a group of people following me, they shuffle their feet and usually look at the ground so they do not step out of line or step on the feet of the person in front of them. When they get to the middle in a huddle, they look outwards and see what they have created! Then the last person in leads out. Then you can "erase" it with a baseball mound rake or get your horse to roll in it!
MAB: What are you planning for WLD this year?
CR: We have celebrated WLD every year at Whitewater Mesa Labyrinths, but this year I shall be away from home so will celebrate with my daughter on a road trip in Scotland.
MAB: Enjoy your trip, and thanks for visiting with us, Cordelia!
CR: Thank you!
A Labyrinth Scrapbook
The author and friends created a three-circuit labyrinth in the sand on the Chesapeake Bay for World Labyrinth Day, 2014, using a diagram and measuring strings.
This 2014 labyrinth blessing event at a private home in Bellingham, WA, was facilitated by Myra Ryneheart (in foreground, holding Koshi chimes) of The Laughing Flower Labyrinth Co.
In 2014 George Onderdelinden and Maja van Houting built this double labyrinth in Nistelrode, the Netherlands, at Centrum Maia, a centre for spiritual education. They are offering a labyrinth walk on WLD, and they also hold Full Moon labyrinth walks.
Kathy Ruyts experiences a meditative moment in a Genesa crystal in the center of a labyrinth made from canvas strips and solar lamps by Ansula Press during the TLS Gathering in 2009, in Oregon.
Elizabeth (BJ) Mosher is a labyrinth facilitator, lecturer and ambassador. Her brother Tim Giarrosso made this wool labyrinth for her birthday some years ago, and she uses it at events for workshops and hands on training (photo by the Watertown Daily Times, used with permission.)
This approximately 25-foot diameter private labyrinth in the Charlottesville area of Virginia was made from over 550 repurposed bricks. A dusting of snow gives it a magical appearance. (Contact owners Nicolas and Elizabeth at (434) 979-7029, 10 am to 8 pm, to schedule a time when you may visit.)
Research studies conducted in a variety of settings consistently have shown that walking a labyrinth reduces stress. In fact, over the past few years, this has been the most commonly reported finding related to the so-called "labyrinth effect,' according to John W. Rhodes, Ph.D. President of the Labyrinth Society and former Chair of The Labyrinth Society Research Committee.
Meryl Ann Butler is an artist, author, educator and OpedNews Managing Editor who has been actively engaged in utilizing the arts as stepping-stones toward joy-filled wellbeing since she was a hippie. She began writing for OpEdNews in Feb, 2004. She became a Senior Editor in August 2012 and Managing Editor in January, 2013. In June, 2015, the combined views on her articles, diaries and quick link contributions topped one million. She was particularly happy that her article about Bree Newsome removing the Confederate flag was the one that put her past the million mark.
Her art in a wide variety of media can be seen on her YouTube video, "Visionary Artist Meryl Ann Butler on Creativity and Joy" at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UcGs2r_66QE
A NYC native, her response to 9-11 was to pen an invitation to healing through creativity, entitled, "90-Minute Quilts: 15+ Projects You Can Stitch in an Afternoon" (Krause 2006), which is a bestseller in the craft field. The sequel, MORE 90-Minute Quilts: 20+ Quick and Easy Projects With Triangles and Squares was released in April, 2011. Her popular video, How to Stitch a Quilt in 90 Minutes with Meryl Ann Butler can be seen at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PrShGOQaJQ8
She has been active in a number of international, arts-related projects as a citizen diplomat, and was arts advisor to Baltimore's CIUSSR (Center for Improving US-Soviet Relations), 1987-89. She made two trips to the former USSR in 1987 and 1988 to speak to artists, craftpeople and fashion designers on the topic of utilizing the arts as a tool for global wellbeing. She created the historical "First US-Soviet Children's Peace Quilt Exchange Project" in 1987-88, which was the first time a reciprocal quilt was given to the US from the former USSR.
Her artwork is in collections across the globe.
Meryl Ann is a founding member of The Labyrinth Society and has been building labyrinths since 1992. She publishes an annual article about the topic on OpEdNews on World Labyrinth Day, the first Saturday in May.
OpEdNews Senior Editor Joan Brunwasser interviewed Meryl Ann in "Beyond Surviving: How to Thrive in Challenging Times" at https://www.opednews.com/articles/Beyond-Surviving--How-to-by-Joan-Brunwasser-Anxiety_Appreciation_Coronavirus_Creativity-200318-988.html
Find out more about Meryl Ann's artistic life in "OEN Managing Ed, Meryl Ann Butler, Featured on the Other Side of the Byline" at https://www.opednews.com/Quicklink/OEN-Managing-Ed-Meryl-Ann-in-Life_Arts-Artistic_Artists_Quilt-170917-615.html
On Feb 11, 2017, Senior Editor Joan Brunwasser interviewed Meryl Ann in Pink Power: Sister March, Norfolk, VA at http://www.opednews.com/articles/Pink-Power-Sister-March--by-Joan-Brunwasser-Pussy-Hats-170212-681.html
"Creativity and Healing: The Work of Meryl Ann Butler" by Burl Hall is at
http://www.opednews.com/articles/Creativity-and-Healing--T-by-Burl-Hall-130414-18.html
Burl and Merry Hall interviewed Meryl Ann on their BlogTalk radio show, "Envision This," at http://www.blogtalkradio.com/envision-this/2013/04/11/meryl-ann-butler-art-as-a-medicine-for-the-soul
Archived articles www.opednews.com/author/author1820.html
Older archived articles, from before May 2005 are here.