Sunday Service Recordings
When available, recordings from virtual (Zoom) and/or hybrid services will be posted here. Please report errors to buufwebmaster@gmail.com.
Date: Sunday, April 9, 2023 "Play as an Approach to Organizational Change"
Jonathan Estes, an adult educator for 30 years and CEO of GamaVida, an EdTech firm. They use simulations, games, and models to inspire mindset change, strategic planning, and personal transformation. Gama Vida's serious games have been delivered in over a dozen countries in South America and Africa which have helped people understand other points of view, explore alternative pathways, and create common ground.
Playback Link (Zoom)
Jonathan Estes, an adult educator for 30 years and CEO of GamaVida, an EdTech firm. They use simulations, games, and models to inspire mindset change, strategic planning, and personal transformation. Gama Vida's serious games have been delivered in over a dozen countries in South America and Africa which have helped people understand other points of view, explore alternative pathways, and create common ground.
Playback Link (Zoom)
Date: Sunday, April 2, 2023 "The Spirituality of 'Zines"
Zines are informal pamphlets typically photocopied by their creators and distributed to small but devoted audiences. Even in the Internet age, zines-on-paper thrive, and fall into different genres: amateur art, music and photography zines, self-published comic books, political broadsides, autobiographical narratives, etc. Boone UU member Craig Fischer discusses how reading (and on rare occasions, making) zines feeds his soul, reassuring him that creativity driven by purpose rather than profit can maybe, just maybe, make the world a better place.
Playback Link (Zoom)
Zines are informal pamphlets typically photocopied by their creators and distributed to small but devoted audiences. Even in the Internet age, zines-on-paper thrive, and fall into different genres: amateur art, music and photography zines, self-published comic books, political broadsides, autobiographical narratives, etc. Boone UU member Craig Fischer discusses how reading (and on rare occasions, making) zines feeds his soul, reassuring him that creativity driven by purpose rather than profit can maybe, just maybe, make the world a better place.
Playback Link (Zoom)
Date: Sunday, March 26, 2023 "A Date with the Glitter Lady"
Yndiana Montes Fogelquist is a graduate student in Appalachian Studies, but she is also the Glitter Lady, a villain created to raise awareness about microplastics in our waters and other environmental issues. Yndiana reveals the Glitter Lady's origins in sustainable development, negative aesthetics, and Venezuelan punk music, and discuss the importance of raising awareness around microplastics.
Playback Link (Zoom)
Yndiana Montes Fogelquist is a graduate student in Appalachian Studies, but she is also the Glitter Lady, a villain created to raise awareness about microplastics in our waters and other environmental issues. Yndiana reveals the Glitter Lady's origins in sustainable development, negative aesthetics, and Venezuelan punk music, and discuss the importance of raising awareness around microplastics.
Playback Link (Zoom)
Date: Sunday, February 5, 2023 "Learning to Love"
Katie Warner details her experience turning trauma into triumph, as she shares her personal story, demonstrating the complex interplay of privilege and hardship that affects many of us. Katie is a mother of two and has worn many hats in the 13.5 years she has lived in Boone. She found our faith tradition in spring of 2006 and signed the book at the Unitarian Church of Charleston later that year. She served on the Boone UU Board for 3 years. " Warning: This recording explores topics that might be challenging for some to hear."
Playback Link (Zoom)
Katie Warner details her experience turning trauma into triumph, as she shares her personal story, demonstrating the complex interplay of privilege and hardship that affects many of us. Katie is a mother of two and has worn many hats in the 13.5 years she has lived in Boone. She found our faith tradition in spring of 2006 and signed the book at the Unitarian Church of Charleston later that year. She served on the Boone UU Board for 3 years. " Warning: This recording explores topics that might be challenging for some to hear."
Playback Link (Zoom)
Date: Sunday, January 29, 2023 "Hunkering Down"
What does it mean to 'hunker down'? Rev. Shakeisha Holton Gray returns to the Boone UU to explore this common idiom, a literal term that has taken on a figurative meaning...or has it?
Playback Link (Zoom)
What does it mean to 'hunker down'? Rev. Shakeisha Holton Gray returns to the Boone UU to explore this common idiom, a literal term that has taken on a figurative meaning...or has it?
Playback Link (Zoom)
Date: Sunday, January 22, 2023 "Climate Change: The Big Picture"
David Harman is an unexpected mix of businessman, environmentalist, and self-taught science journalist. He has been co-author with Dr. Harvard Ayers of Arctic Gardens - Voices from an Abundant Land (2010), a non-fiction book and Train Wreck Earth (2017), a scientific novel. His environmental activism includes helping to establish environmental non-profits and is currently on the boards of Blue Ridge Conservancy and the Watauga County Community Foundation.
Playback Link (Zoom)
David Harman is an unexpected mix of businessman, environmentalist, and self-taught science journalist. He has been co-author with Dr. Harvard Ayers of Arctic Gardens - Voices from an Abundant Land (2010), a non-fiction book and Train Wreck Earth (2017), a scientific novel. His environmental activism includes helping to establish environmental non-profits and is currently on the boards of Blue Ridge Conservancy and the Watauga County Community Foundation.
Playback Link (Zoom)
Date: Sunday, January 15, 2023 “Omnibus: Sacred Stories”
There are stories that change us, that remind us that the world might be bigger than we think. This Sunday, we will listen to the "good medicine" of others' sacred, transformative stories, letting them plant themselves like seeds in our fertile soil. Talk by several Boone UU members
Playback Link (Zoom)
There are stories that change us, that remind us that the world might be bigger than we think. This Sunday, we will listen to the "good medicine" of others' sacred, transformative stories, letting them plant themselves like seeds in our fertile soil. Talk by several Boone UU members
Playback Link (Zoom)
Date: Sunday, January 8, 2023 "Trust in a Time of Distrust"
We trust each other and our institutions in many ways unseen. But our trust can be and is often betrayed. How do we deal with that? As importantly, what must we do to build people and institutions that are truly worthy of trust? Talk by Bill McClane.
Playback Link (Zoom)
We trust each other and our institutions in many ways unseen. But our trust can be and is often betrayed. How do we deal with that? As importantly, what must we do to build people and institutions that are truly worthy of trust? Talk by Bill McClane.
Playback Link (Zoom)
Date: Sunday, December 11, 2022 "Digital Jesus: An Experiment in Religious Artificial Intelligence"
Dr. Reed and his research team decided it would be interesting to see what A.I. would do if they asked it to imitate Jesus. Then they went further and taught it the sayings of Jesus in multiple English translations. Dr. Reed will share what they learned from this experiment about artificial intelligence and about Jesus.
Playback Link (Zoom)
Dr. Reed and his research team decided it would be interesting to see what A.I. would do if they asked it to imitate Jesus. Then they went further and taught it the sayings of Jesus in multiple English translations. Dr. Reed will share what they learned from this experiment about artificial intelligence and about Jesus.
Playback Link (Zoom)
Date: Sunday, November 20, 2022 "My Journey to Buddhism"
Linda Hayward talks about her first encounter with Buddhism, some 20+ years ago, via beautiful traditional Tibetan paintings. Sometime after this fortuitous encounter, she explored other Buddhist traditions, finally returning to Tibetan Buddhism, which is where she resides today. Her Buddhist studies are ongoing; some say the Buddha delivered 84,000 teachings, so she jokes that she still has a lot of work to do!
Playback Link (Zoom)
Linda Hayward talks about her first encounter with Buddhism, some 20+ years ago, via beautiful traditional Tibetan paintings. Sometime after this fortuitous encounter, she explored other Buddhist traditions, finally returning to Tibetan Buddhism, which is where she resides today. Her Buddhist studies are ongoing; some say the Buddha delivered 84,000 teachings, so she jokes that she still has a lot of work to do!
Playback Link (Zoom)
Date: Sunday, November 13, 2022 "Embodied Social Justice: Connecting Science & Buddhism to Promote Belonging"
By bringing together spiritual wisdom from Buddhism and modern scientific discoveries in interpersonal neurobiology, we can more deeply understand who we are as human beings, what interconnection means, and how to cultivate it for a more inclusive and just world. Dr. Laura Gambrel is a long-time mindfulness practitioner & instructor. She recently transitioned out of a career in academia into private practice with a focus on couples therapy.
Playback Link (Zoom)
By bringing together spiritual wisdom from Buddhism and modern scientific discoveries in interpersonal neurobiology, we can more deeply understand who we are as human beings, what interconnection means, and how to cultivate it for a more inclusive and just world. Dr. Laura Gambrel is a long-time mindfulness practitioner & instructor. She recently transitioned out of a career in academia into private practice with a focus on couples therapy.
Playback Link (Zoom)
Date: Sunday, October 30, 2022 "Being Mortal (Spoiler Alert: None of Us Are Getting Out of This Alive)"
Reverend Shakeisha Holton Gray of the Piedmont Unitarian Universalist Church discusses what we should consider when making end-of-life decisions. Her talk will combine the observations of Dr. Atul Gawande, author and Good Death advocate Caitlin Doughty, and Rev. Gray’s own experiences as a certified end-of-life care coordinator and former hospital chaplain during Covid.
Playback Link (Zoom)
Reverend Shakeisha Holton Gray of the Piedmont Unitarian Universalist Church discusses what we should consider when making end-of-life decisions. Her talk will combine the observations of Dr. Atul Gawande, author and Good Death advocate Caitlin Doughty, and Rev. Gray’s own experiences as a certified end-of-life care coordinator and former hospital chaplain during Covid.
Playback Link (Zoom)
Date: Sunday, October 23, 2022 "H.P. Lovecraft and His Discontents"
Craig Fischer looks at the life and work of Howard Phillips Lovecraft. Perhaps the most horrible aspect of Lovecraft’s fiction is its rabid racism, misogyny, and anti-Semitism. Since Lovecraft’s death, some fans have “whitewashed” Lovecraft’s xenophobia. Recently, however, writers from diverse backgrounds have played in Lovecraft’s fictional universe even while crafting stories that challenge and debunk his inhuman beliefs. We’ll celebrate this triumph of creativity over hatred in our service today.
Playback Link (Zoom)
Craig Fischer looks at the life and work of Howard Phillips Lovecraft. Perhaps the most horrible aspect of Lovecraft’s fiction is its rabid racism, misogyny, and anti-Semitism. Since Lovecraft’s death, some fans have “whitewashed” Lovecraft’s xenophobia. Recently, however, writers from diverse backgrounds have played in Lovecraft’s fictional universe even while crafting stories that challenge and debunk his inhuman beliefs. We’ll celebrate this triumph of creativity over hatred in our service today.
Playback Link (Zoom)
Date: Sunday, October 2, 2022 "Creation Care: Taking Care of Our Planet and All That Exist Within It"
There is a growing movement within the Christian tradition to take care of our planet and all the species and elements that exist within it, a form of discipleship more commonly now called Creation Care. Human beings use stories to convey our lives to others and to make sense of the world around us and our place within it. Rev. Anna Shine will explore the two creation narratives that exist within the tradition of Christianity, delving into the book called Genesis. Rev. Anna Shine (St. Luke's Episcopal, Boone) is a board member of the Creation Care Alliance of Western North Carolina (CCAWNC) and a graduate of Elon, Harvard Divinity School, and the Virginia Theological Seminary.
Playback Link (Zoom)
There is a growing movement within the Christian tradition to take care of our planet and all the species and elements that exist within it, a form of discipleship more commonly now called Creation Care. Human beings use stories to convey our lives to others and to make sense of the world around us and our place within it. Rev. Anna Shine will explore the two creation narratives that exist within the tradition of Christianity, delving into the book called Genesis. Rev. Anna Shine (St. Luke's Episcopal, Boone) is a board member of the Creation Care Alliance of Western North Carolina (CCAWNC) and a graduate of Elon, Harvard Divinity School, and the Virginia Theological Seminary.
Playback Link (Zoom)
Date: Sunday, September 18, 2022 "Documentary Storytelling: The Privilege and Ethics of Telling Other People's Stories"
Dr. Beth Davison is a professor of sociology, co-director of Appalachian State University's Documentary Film Services and director of Appalachian’s Interdisciplinary Studies program. Her documentary projects have been screened internationally, in film festivals and shown on PBS stations. These include The Denim Dynasty, Eva & Moe, Dulatown, Saving the Big-Eared Bats, DocuAppalachia and A History of Moses H. Cone Estate.
Playback Link (Zoom)
Dr. Beth Davison is a professor of sociology, co-director of Appalachian State University's Documentary Film Services and director of Appalachian’s Interdisciplinary Studies program. Her documentary projects have been screened internationally, in film festivals and shown on PBS stations. These include The Denim Dynasty, Eva & Moe, Dulatown, Saving the Big-Eared Bats, DocuAppalachia and A History of Moses H. Cone Estate.
Playback Link (Zoom)
Date: Sunday, August 28, 2022 "Life Changes"
Cinda Holsombach-Ebner recently turned 50; in her grandmother’s day, 50 was considered “old”. These milestone birthdays can still feel like a BIG jolt. In this talk, Cinda looks at both the culture and science around life stages and how we can draw from wisdom, both ancient and modern, to move through them a bit more gracefully. Finally, Cinda makes the case for the UU’s 1st, 3rd, and 7th principles - celebrating the worth and dignity of every person, encouraging spiritual growth, and the interconnectedness of all living things - and that no matter what life stage we are in, the UU has an important role to play in promoting spirituality to progress through life stages with positivity.
Playback Link (Zoom)
Cinda Holsombach-Ebner recently turned 50; in her grandmother’s day, 50 was considered “old”. These milestone birthdays can still feel like a BIG jolt. In this talk, Cinda looks at both the culture and science around life stages and how we can draw from wisdom, both ancient and modern, to move through them a bit more gracefully. Finally, Cinda makes the case for the UU’s 1st, 3rd, and 7th principles - celebrating the worth and dignity of every person, encouraging spiritual growth, and the interconnectedness of all living things - and that no matter what life stage we are in, the UU has an important role to play in promoting spirituality to progress through life stages with positivity.
Playback Link (Zoom)
Date: Sunday, August 21, 2022 "Creating Hope in the Time of Climate Change"
With UU Minister Sally Beth Shore. These days, climate change weighs heavily on many of our minds, the pandemic continues in its third year, social fissures are deepening, and the economy isn’t doing so well. Some proclaim there is no hope. But at its best, religion offers light in darkness, an antidote for hopelessness. The threats we face from climate change and elsewhere may seem daunting, but Unitarian Universalism has responded constructively to threats of doom before. Can we offer hope in these times, and if so, how?
Playback Link (Zoom)
With UU Minister Sally Beth Shore. These days, climate change weighs heavily on many of our minds, the pandemic continues in its third year, social fissures are deepening, and the economy isn’t doing so well. Some proclaim there is no hope. But at its best, religion offers light in darkness, an antidote for hopelessness. The threats we face from climate change and elsewhere may seem daunting, but Unitarian Universalism has responded constructively to threats of doom before. Can we offer hope in these times, and if so, how?
Playback Link (Zoom)
Date: Sunday, August 14, 2022 "The Story of The Playhouse: Creating a Compassionate Community Space"
The High Country’s only children’s museum, The Children’s Playhouse, was started 20 years ago with $5,000, a six-month lease from the Boone UU, and a dream of supporting families. In 2002, BUUF member and Playhouse co-founder Kathy Parham had two children under 5, had spent a decade in grad school without completing her Ph.D., and was feeling a little stuck. Come hear the story of the founding of The Children’s Playhouse, how it changed Kathy’s life, and the lessons it offers anyone interested in building something new. It is a story of transformation, shared experience, and spinning connections in all directions to create community.
Playback Link (Zoom)
The High Country’s only children’s museum, The Children’s Playhouse, was started 20 years ago with $5,000, a six-month lease from the Boone UU, and a dream of supporting families. In 2002, BUUF member and Playhouse co-founder Kathy Parham had two children under 5, had spent a decade in grad school without completing her Ph.D., and was feeling a little stuck. Come hear the story of the founding of The Children’s Playhouse, how it changed Kathy’s life, and the lessons it offers anyone interested in building something new. It is a story of transformation, shared experience, and spinning connections in all directions to create community.
Playback Link (Zoom)
Date: Sunday, July 24, 2022 "When Montezuma met Cortés: How the Aztec shaped Spanish Catholicism"
Why is Latin American Catholicism seemingly more rich and sensual than other expressions of the faith? How did the Day of the Dead, veneration of the Lady of Guadalupe, and other practices of Mexican Catholicism arise? Dr. Laura Ammon (associate professor of religion at App State and previous speaker at Boone UU) will highlight the roles that the Afterlife and the veneration of Mary, relics, and the Saints played in the emergence of Mexican Catholicism following conquest. Your view of Día de los Muertos skulls may be different after this.
Playback Link (Zoom)
Why is Latin American Catholicism seemingly more rich and sensual than other expressions of the faith? How did the Day of the Dead, veneration of the Lady of Guadalupe, and other practices of Mexican Catholicism arise? Dr. Laura Ammon (associate professor of religion at App State and previous speaker at Boone UU) will highlight the roles that the Afterlife and the veneration of Mary, relics, and the Saints played in the emergence of Mexican Catholicism following conquest. Your view of Día de los Muertos skulls may be different after this.
Playback Link (Zoom)
Date: Sunday, July 3, 2022 "Shattering Stigma about Mental Illness and Addiction"
As a mental health professional of 30 years, a person with PTSD, and one who loves several people with addiction and other mental illnesses, Mary McKinney is passionate about shattering stigmas. Stigma kills people. Knowing that honest storytelling is a powerful tool against stigma, Mary shares her own journey for wellness and support for her loved ones.
Playback Link (Zoom)
As a mental health professional of 30 years, a person with PTSD, and one who loves several people with addiction and other mental illnesses, Mary McKinney is passionate about shattering stigmas. Stigma kills people. Knowing that honest storytelling is a powerful tool against stigma, Mary shares her own journey for wellness and support for her loved ones.
Playback Link (Zoom)
Date: Sunday, May 29, 2022 "Graduations and Other Milestones"
Our annual celebration of those members of community who are graduating from a milestone grade in school (pre-school, Kindergarten, eighth grade, high school, college) or who have recently experienced a meaningful transition in their lives.
Not recorded
Our annual celebration of those members of community who are graduating from a milestone grade in school (pre-school, Kindergarten, eighth grade, high school, college) or who have recently experienced a meaningful transition in their lives.
Not recorded
Date: Sunday, May 22, 2022 "Immigration from a Faith & Social Justice Perspective"
Immigration is a hot topic and a rather controversial one. However, as recently as 2020, 74% of Americans supported a plan to allow a pathway to citizenship for undocumented immigrants who are already in the country. Perhaps even more interesting, research demonstrates that the religiously unaffiliated in the US are more accepting of immigrants. Why then does anti-immigrant sentiment persist in a country built by immigrants on a foundation of religious beliefs? Presentation and discussion with Sarah Donovan, Co-Chair of the Immigrant Justice Coalition and Senior Lecturer of Social Work at Appalachian State.
Playback Link (Zoom)
Immigration is a hot topic and a rather controversial one. However, as recently as 2020, 74% of Americans supported a plan to allow a pathway to citizenship for undocumented immigrants who are already in the country. Perhaps even more interesting, research demonstrates that the religiously unaffiliated in the US are more accepting of immigrants. Why then does anti-immigrant sentiment persist in a country built by immigrants on a foundation of religious beliefs? Presentation and discussion with Sarah Donovan, Co-Chair of the Immigrant Justice Coalition and Senior Lecturer of Social Work at Appalachian State.
Playback Link (Zoom)
Date: Sunday, May 15, 2022 "New Urbanism for Connected Communities"
Our towns are not built with us in mind. Over the course of the past century, American cities have transitioned from being designed for people to being designed for cars. Underneath the many unfortunate circumstances that car-centric cities create, there is an even greater impact on our quality of life. This will not be an introduction to more problems to bemoan, but a gathering of strength, and a recognition that in the right environment, our best selves come shining through. Presented by Amelia Shore.
Not recorded
Our towns are not built with us in mind. Over the course of the past century, American cities have transitioned from being designed for people to being designed for cars. Underneath the many unfortunate circumstances that car-centric cities create, there is an even greater impact on our quality of life. This will not be an introduction to more problems to bemoan, but a gathering of strength, and a recognition that in the right environment, our best selves come shining through. Presented by Amelia Shore.
Not recorded
Date: Sunday, May 8, 2022 "Journey of the Pilgrim"
Trek Reef completed a journey along the Appalachian Trail in 2016 to deepen his connection to the "more-than-human world". Now he is on a pilgrimage to renew & better integrate that connection into his life & to share it with others for the sake of our Earth. He grew up in a mixed religious household & discovered Unitarian Universalism at 13. In 2013, he was ordained as a rabbi. He is now in discernment about joining the Unitarian Universalist ministry.
Playback Link (Zoom)
Trek Reef completed a journey along the Appalachian Trail in 2016 to deepen his connection to the "more-than-human world". Now he is on a pilgrimage to renew & better integrate that connection into his life & to share it with others for the sake of our Earth. He grew up in a mixed religious household & discovered Unitarian Universalism at 13. In 2013, he was ordained as a rabbi. He is now in discernment about joining the Unitarian Universalist ministry.
Playback Link (Zoom)
Date: Sunday, May 1, 2022 "We Celebrate the Web of Life"
Join with us in celebrating spring, May Day, and our return to in-person services at the fellowship. Linda Larson and Bill Pelto will lead us in a festive service of music (we will sing hymns together!), readings, and ritual, highlighting our joyous connections to each other and the earth.
Not recorded
Join with us in celebrating spring, May Day, and our return to in-person services at the fellowship. Linda Larson and Bill Pelto will lead us in a festive service of music (we will sing hymns together!), readings, and ritual, highlighting our joyous connections to each other and the earth.
Not recorded
Date: Sunday April 24, 2022 "Trans Talk From a Teen"
An informational Ted-Talk-like presentation from Mac, a young transgender boy living here in Boone. He will be talking about his transition, his past, legal obstacles & more.
Playback Link (Zoom): View recording on demand (registration required) due to age of presenter
An informational Ted-Talk-like presentation from Mac, a young transgender boy living here in Boone. He will be talking about his transition, his past, legal obstacles & more.
Playback Link (Zoom): View recording on demand (registration required) due to age of presenter
Date: Sunday, April 17, 2022
"The Promise of Renewal Through the Beloved Community": Dr. Edward Simmons, author of "Values, Truth, & Spiritual Danger: Progressive Christianity & the Age of Trump," discusses renewal of the Golden Rule's message through the Beloved Community in forming an inclusive & environmentally sustainable form of society. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. addressed the role of unconditional love in the struggle for the Beloved Community.
Playback Link (Zoom)
"The Promise of Renewal Through the Beloved Community": Dr. Edward Simmons, author of "Values, Truth, & Spiritual Danger: Progressive Christianity & the Age of Trump," discusses renewal of the Golden Rule's message through the Beloved Community in forming an inclusive & environmentally sustainable form of society. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. addressed the role of unconditional love in the struggle for the Beloved Community.
Playback Link (Zoom)
Date: Sunday, April 10, 2022
"An Artist Enmeshed in the Web of Life": Andi Gelsthorpe is an Early Interventionist and Licensed Clinical Social Worker, as well as a prolific artist who has created vibrant and inspiring block prints that can be seen throughout Boone. Her projects include the "Keep Boone Healthy" poster and the "Crooked Path of Grief" art installation at the downtown public library. Nature, creativity, and community are strong themes in her work. Andi shares how she uses her art to spin bonds of connections and community all around her.
Not Recorded
"An Artist Enmeshed in the Web of Life": Andi Gelsthorpe is an Early Interventionist and Licensed Clinical Social Worker, as well as a prolific artist who has created vibrant and inspiring block prints that can be seen throughout Boone. Her projects include the "Keep Boone Healthy" poster and the "Crooked Path of Grief" art installation at the downtown public library. Nature, creativity, and community are strong themes in her work. Andi shares how she uses her art to spin bonds of connections and community all around her.
Not Recorded
Date: April 3, 2022
Topic: "My Path to Being Heart-Centered": Christine Davé is a local therapist and the founder of EDGE (EDucation for Girls Empowerment), a non-profit that aims to support the dreams and education of rural village girls in Odisha, India. Christine will share with us some of her background of trauma, the people and events that helped her create a thriving life, how she stays well, and more about EDGE. Warning: Please be aware that this service includes mentions possibly triggering topics of childhood abuse and sexual assault.
Playback Link (Zoom)
Topic: "My Path to Being Heart-Centered": Christine Davé is a local therapist and the founder of EDGE (EDucation for Girls Empowerment), a non-profit that aims to support the dreams and education of rural village girls in Odisha, India. Christine will share with us some of her background of trauma, the people and events that helped her create a thriving life, how she stays well, and more about EDGE. Warning: Please be aware that this service includes mentions possibly triggering topics of childhood abuse and sexual assault.
Playback Link (Zoom)
Date: March 20, 2022
Topic: "Recovering from Hemorrhagic Stroke with Jeanne Mercer-Ballard": Jeanne Mercer-Ballard, Associate Professor of Interior Design at Appalachian State University, will speak to us about her journey of recovery from a triple brain hemorrhage and hemorrhagic stroke.
Playback Link (Zoom)
Topic: "Recovering from Hemorrhagic Stroke with Jeanne Mercer-Ballard": Jeanne Mercer-Ballard, Associate Professor of Interior Design at Appalachian State University, will speak to us about her journey of recovery from a triple brain hemorrhage and hemorrhagic stroke.
Playback Link (Zoom)
Date: March 13, 2022
Topic: "Justice, Equity, and Compassion: the UU 2nd Principle": led by Linda Larson. We affirm and promote justice, equity, and compassion in human relations: that sounds pretty straightforward—but is it? This service, the second in a planned 8 part series, will explore the Unitarian Universalist second principle through words and music.
Playback Link (Zoom): Not recorded
Topic: "Justice, Equity, and Compassion: the UU 2nd Principle": led by Linda Larson. We affirm and promote justice, equity, and compassion in human relations: that sounds pretty straightforward—but is it? This service, the second in a planned 8 part series, will explore the Unitarian Universalist second principle through words and music.
Playback Link (Zoom): Not recorded
Date: March 6, 2022
Topic: "Collective Liberation: Spiritual Activism, Engaged Spirituality": "How can I be of service?" "Who do I want to be in the world?" "Are my actions in alignment with my values?" "Can I love myself (& others) when I (& they) get it wrong?" These are the some of the questions that yoga teacher, meditation practitioner and activist Sandra Diaz uses as her orientation to life. She will talk about how she connects her yoga and mindfulness practices and her activism.
Playback Link (Zoom)
Topic: "Collective Liberation: Spiritual Activism, Engaged Spirituality": "How can I be of service?" "Who do I want to be in the world?" "Are my actions in alignment with my values?" "Can I love myself (& others) when I (& they) get it wrong?" These are the some of the questions that yoga teacher, meditation practitioner and activist Sandra Diaz uses as her orientation to life. She will talk about how she connects her yoga and mindfulness practices and her activism.
Playback Link (Zoom)
Date: February 27, 2022
Topic: "A Conversation with the Watauga Riverkeeper": Watauga Riverkeeper Andy Hill has a passion for clean, cold, fishable, drinkable and swimmable water. As a long-time fly fisherman, educator, and guide, he thrives on using the outdoors as a source of learning and connecting people with our shared wild places. Andy is intimately familiar with our watershed from the headwaters to the tailwater and is passionate about protecting the places we love.
Playback Link (Zoom): Not recorded
Topic: "A Conversation with the Watauga Riverkeeper": Watauga Riverkeeper Andy Hill has a passion for clean, cold, fishable, drinkable and swimmable water. As a long-time fly fisherman, educator, and guide, he thrives on using the outdoors as a source of learning and connecting people with our shared wild places. Andy is intimately familiar with our watershed from the headwaters to the tailwater and is passionate about protecting the places we love.
Playback Link (Zoom): Not recorded
Date: February 13, 2022
Topic: "Ensuring Everyone Has Access to Local Food": Taylor Hochwarth is the Local Food Markets & Equitable Food Systems Designer through AmeriCorps VISTA for local non-profit, Blue Ridge Women in Agriculture (BRWIA). Taylor will share stories from BRWIA's innovative "Double Up Bucks," a healthy food incentive program that doubles value of federal nutrition benefits spent at farmers' markets, helping people access local food while supporting our local farmers and economy. This "One More Step" program is a combination of our first and seventh principles in action, affirming the worth and dignity of every person while recognizing that all of existence is an interdependent web.
Playback Link (Zoom)
Topic: "Ensuring Everyone Has Access to Local Food": Taylor Hochwarth is the Local Food Markets & Equitable Food Systems Designer through AmeriCorps VISTA for local non-profit, Blue Ridge Women in Agriculture (BRWIA). Taylor will share stories from BRWIA's innovative "Double Up Bucks," a healthy food incentive program that doubles value of federal nutrition benefits spent at farmers' markets, helping people access local food while supporting our local farmers and economy. This "One More Step" program is a combination of our first and seventh principles in action, affirming the worth and dignity of every person while recognizing that all of existence is an interdependent web.
Playback Link (Zoom)
Date: February 6, 2022
Topic: "Our Path to BUUF: Our Religious Past": What was your religious journey? Where did you come from and how far have you traveled away? Rev. Connie Simon from the First Unitarian Church of Cincinnati will set the stage in a short video to help us reflect on how we arrived at BUUF this morning. We will then break into small groups via Zoom to connect with one another about our own religious/spiritual journeys. There will be a few questions to help guide the conversation. Our intention is to arrive at the end of our time together knowing each other a little better.
Playback Link (Zoom): This service was not recorded.
Topic: "Our Path to BUUF: Our Religious Past": What was your religious journey? Where did you come from and how far have you traveled away? Rev. Connie Simon from the First Unitarian Church of Cincinnati will set the stage in a short video to help us reflect on how we arrived at BUUF this morning. We will then break into small groups via Zoom to connect with one another about our own religious/spiritual journeys. There will be a few questions to help guide the conversation. Our intention is to arrive at the end of our time together knowing each other a little better.
Playback Link (Zoom): This service was not recorded.
Date: January 30, 2022
Topic: "One More Step in the Middle East: U.S. Policy from Obama to Trump to Biden": Twice named a Peace Scholar by the United States Institute of Peace, Curt Ryan is a professor in the Appalachian State University Department of Government & Justice Studies. Ryan has spoken to BUUF many times in the past and we always appreciate his sharp wit and his ability to explain Middle East issues with insight.
Playback Link (Zoom): This service was not recorded.
Topic: "One More Step in the Middle East: U.S. Policy from Obama to Trump to Biden": Twice named a Peace Scholar by the United States Institute of Peace, Curt Ryan is a professor in the Appalachian State University Department of Government & Justice Studies. Ryan has spoken to BUUF many times in the past and we always appreciate his sharp wit and his ability to explain Middle East issues with insight.
Playback Link (Zoom): This service was not recorded.
Date: January 23, 2021
Topic: "A Journey from Technology to Humanity": Michael Goopta was born in New Delhi, India. After studying engineering in Varanasi, he came to sunny California in 1983 as a grad student. He worked various jobs as an engineer / hardware / software programmer in Sunnyvale, and London, and landed in Newark, NJ in 1992 with a wife and family. Disillusioned with life and society, and following a divorce, he became active in a number of spiritual organizations. He also learned Spanish and Portuguese, and travelled to South America, including to Brazil and Colombia. He worked as a “corporate nerd” until 2004 in India, CA, NJ and NYC. After 9/11, he felt his engineering career was meaningless. It took him a few years to figure out his next steps, during which he volunteered in a hospice. In 2004, he met Carole Bolini, his life partner, and she encouraged him to go to acupuncture school. Michael and Carole moved to Boone from Oakland, NJ in 2007, and Michael has been working as an independent acupuncturist since 2008. His journey has been challenging, but interesting and very rewarding. Michael will share with us his spiritual journey.
Playback Link (Zoom)
Topic: "A Journey from Technology to Humanity": Michael Goopta was born in New Delhi, India. After studying engineering in Varanasi, he came to sunny California in 1983 as a grad student. He worked various jobs as an engineer / hardware / software programmer in Sunnyvale, and London, and landed in Newark, NJ in 1992 with a wife and family. Disillusioned with life and society, and following a divorce, he became active in a number of spiritual organizations. He also learned Spanish and Portuguese, and travelled to South America, including to Brazil and Colombia. He worked as a “corporate nerd” until 2004 in India, CA, NJ and NYC. After 9/11, he felt his engineering career was meaningless. It took him a few years to figure out his next steps, during which he volunteered in a hospice. In 2004, he met Carole Bolini, his life partner, and she encouraged him to go to acupuncture school. Michael and Carole moved to Boone from Oakland, NJ in 2007, and Michael has been working as an independent acupuncturist since 2008. His journey has been challenging, but interesting and very rewarding. Michael will share with us his spiritual journey.
Playback Link (Zoom)
Date: January 16, 2021
Topic: "A Glimpse of a Dream": What if the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. had been a Unitarian Universalist? The ways he might have shaped our movement are tantalizing to imagine. How might Unitarian Universalism shaped Dr. King? UU Rev. Lisa Romantum Schwartz, currently serving as an interim minister in Athens GA, is the guest speaker that will ponder these questions.
Playback Link (Zoom)
Topic: "A Glimpse of a Dream": What if the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. had been a Unitarian Universalist? The ways he might have shaped our movement are tantalizing to imagine. How might Unitarian Universalism shaped Dr. King? UU Rev. Lisa Romantum Schwartz, currently serving as an interim minister in Athens GA, is the guest speaker that will ponder these questions.
Playback Link (Zoom)
Date: December 26, 2021
Topic: "Evolving Holidays and Festivals": In this service, we will reflected on how holidays evolve over time, with a focus on some of the celebrations common to this month. Our presenter, Sandie Gravett, is Professor of Religious Studies in the Department of Philosophy and Religion at Appalachian State University, and has been one of BUUF's most popular guest presenters.
Playback Link (Zoom)
Topic: "Evolving Holidays and Festivals": In this service, we will reflected on how holidays evolve over time, with a focus on some of the celebrations common to this month. Our presenter, Sandie Gravett, is Professor of Religious Studies in the Department of Philosophy and Religion at Appalachian State University, and has been one of BUUF's most popular guest presenters.
Playback Link (Zoom)
Date: December 12, 2021
Topic: "Disability Issues in Education" - As a senior Special Education, Adapted Curriculum major and first-year Masters student in Special Education at App State with concentrations in Autism Spectrum Disorder and Emotional Behavioral Disorders, Gray Cohen shares zir experience and expertise in both the history and value of including students with disabilities in public education.
Playback Link (Zoom)
Topic: "Disability Issues in Education" - As a senior Special Education, Adapted Curriculum major and first-year Masters student in Special Education at App State with concentrations in Autism Spectrum Disorder and Emotional Behavioral Disorders, Gray Cohen shares zir experience and expertise in both the history and value of including students with disabilities in public education.
Playback Link (Zoom)
Date: December 5, 2021
Topic: "UU First Principle: The Inherent Worth & Dignity of Every Person" - In the first of a planned series of services featuring words and music, we will highlight each of the UU's Seven Principles (and proposed Eighth Principle). Even though individual UUs don’t necessarily agree on theology, we have agreed to affirm and promote the Seven Principles which form the basis of our shared faith. In this service, Kathy Parham will present and discuss the First Principle, the "inherent worth and dignity of every person."
Playback Link (Zoom)
Topic: "UU First Principle: The Inherent Worth & Dignity of Every Person" - In the first of a planned series of services featuring words and music, we will highlight each of the UU's Seven Principles (and proposed Eighth Principle). Even though individual UUs don’t necessarily agree on theology, we have agreed to affirm and promote the Seven Principles which form the basis of our shared faith. In this service, Kathy Parham will present and discuss the First Principle, the "inherent worth and dignity of every person."
Playback Link (Zoom)
Date: November 28, 2021
Topic: "Reflections on Afghanistan: Friends and Friendship in Flight" - Rachel McKinney worked in Afghanistan from 2003-2005, and those were years of hope. Hope that the new government could be rapidly built and address the needs of a country devastated by decades of conflict, hope that the education system could accommodate the hopes and dreams of thousands and thousands of girls and boys, hope that women would regain and retain basic rights. The education program Rachel supported was built on the energy and dedication of women and men who placed great hope in every teacher training they held, in every textbook distribution, and every student who found space in front of the chalkboards. Within a few months, what little hope the women still held in 2021 was destroyed by the rapid takeover by the Taliban. These strong women now hope to leave their homeland so that their own children can find space in front a chalkboard again.
Playback Link (Zoom)
Topic: "Reflections on Afghanistan: Friends and Friendship in Flight" - Rachel McKinney worked in Afghanistan from 2003-2005, and those were years of hope. Hope that the new government could be rapidly built and address the needs of a country devastated by decades of conflict, hope that the education system could accommodate the hopes and dreams of thousands and thousands of girls and boys, hope that women would regain and retain basic rights. The education program Rachel supported was built on the energy and dedication of women and men who placed great hope in every teacher training they held, in every textbook distribution, and every student who found space in front of the chalkboards. Within a few months, what little hope the women still held in 2021 was destroyed by the rapid takeover by the Taliban. These strong women now hope to leave their homeland so that their own children can find space in front a chalkboard again.
Playback Link (Zoom)
Date: November 21, 2021
Topic: "Giving Thanks" presented by Evelyn Asher - Evelyn Asher has lived and thrived in the Midwest, South Florida, Western North Carolina, and North Georgia. She has cruised down the Yangtze River and driven through the clouds of mountain ranges listening to Mozart Café. Her poems reflect her meaningful relationships wherever she is planted and styles of poetry that were introduced to her in the "Behind The Stacks" poetry group. As reading mentor for 13 years, she has a passion for literacy, finds utter fascination in strong mountain lives and storytelling and is currently crafting her second poetry collection.
She founded the Wisdom Collective that features ekphrastic art workshops during the pandemic with over 200 participants from twelve states, South Africa, and the U.K. She welcomes the opportunity to host these workshops for organizations and business groups.
Playback Link (Zoom)
Topic: "Giving Thanks" presented by Evelyn Asher - Evelyn Asher has lived and thrived in the Midwest, South Florida, Western North Carolina, and North Georgia. She has cruised down the Yangtze River and driven through the clouds of mountain ranges listening to Mozart Café. Her poems reflect her meaningful relationships wherever she is planted and styles of poetry that were introduced to her in the "Behind The Stacks" poetry group. As reading mentor for 13 years, she has a passion for literacy, finds utter fascination in strong mountain lives and storytelling and is currently crafting her second poetry collection.
She founded the Wisdom Collective that features ekphrastic art workshops during the pandemic with over 200 participants from twelve states, South Africa, and the U.K. She welcomes the opportunity to host these workshops for organizations and business groups.
Playback Link (Zoom)
Date: November 14, 2021 at 10:45 AM
Topic: "The Valor of a Woman: Fania Chapiro, a Life in Music" - Dutch - Jewish composer Fania Chapiro was a child prodigy pianist, survived World War II, moved to the U.S., and made a life back in the Netherlands as a pianist and teacher. This talk, presented by Deb Nemko, will focus on Chapiro's persistence and courage and will include a video performance by the presenter of some of her piano compositions. Dr. Nemko is Professor of Music at Bridgewater State University and instructor at New England Conservatory’s Piano Preparatory and School of Continuing Education. After her 2015 Fulbright Fellowship to the Netherlands for her project, “Suppressed and Forgotten Dutch Composers of World War II,” Nemko developed innovative recitals and workshops on Dutch composers of the Holocaust.
Playback Link (Zoom)
Topic: "The Valor of a Woman: Fania Chapiro, a Life in Music" - Dutch - Jewish composer Fania Chapiro was a child prodigy pianist, survived World War II, moved to the U.S., and made a life back in the Netherlands as a pianist and teacher. This talk, presented by Deb Nemko, will focus on Chapiro's persistence and courage and will include a video performance by the presenter of some of her piano compositions. Dr. Nemko is Professor of Music at Bridgewater State University and instructor at New England Conservatory’s Piano Preparatory and School of Continuing Education. After her 2015 Fulbright Fellowship to the Netherlands for her project, “Suppressed and Forgotten Dutch Composers of World War II,” Nemko developed innovative recitals and workshops on Dutch composers of the Holocaust.
Playback Link (Zoom)
Date: November 7, 2021
Topic: "A 40-year Spiritual Quest for Understanding" - Dr. Stuart Kaplan, current BUUF president, discusses his 40 year spiritual quest for a deeper understanding of life.In this program, he will share some of the lessons learned from many teachers, some well-known and others obscure, who inspire his practice of yoga and meditation. This journey continues with his commitment to Unitarian Universalism principles that proclaim the interdependent web of all existence.
Playback Link (Zoom)
Topic: "A 40-year Spiritual Quest for Understanding" - Dr. Stuart Kaplan, current BUUF president, discusses his 40 year spiritual quest for a deeper understanding of life.In this program, he will share some of the lessons learned from many teachers, some well-known and others obscure, who inspire his practice of yoga and meditation. This journey continues with his commitment to Unitarian Universalism principles that proclaim the interdependent web of all existence.
Playback Link (Zoom)
Date: October31, 2021
Topic: "On Turning & Time: Remembering & Reflecting on Day of the Dead" - Across human cultures and spiritual traditions, the remembering and honoring of the dead is a common theme. Many different celebrations of life, death and the intentional remembering of loved ones who have passed are observed at the end of October & beginning of November. BUUF past president and professor of Spanish Catherine Fountain will explore how Day of Dead and other mid-autumn holidays allow us to reflect on these passings and the turning of the seasons. As a part of the service, attendees will have the opportunity to share their own remembrances of friends and family who have passed, and as a community we will also create a space in which to remember and honor the more than five million people who have died worldwide of COVID-19.
Playback Link (Zoom)
Topic: "On Turning & Time: Remembering & Reflecting on Day of the Dead" - Across human cultures and spiritual traditions, the remembering and honoring of the dead is a common theme. Many different celebrations of life, death and the intentional remembering of loved ones who have passed are observed at the end of October & beginning of November. BUUF past president and professor of Spanish Catherine Fountain will explore how Day of Dead and other mid-autumn holidays allow us to reflect on these passings and the turning of the seasons. As a part of the service, attendees will have the opportunity to share their own remembrances of friends and family who have passed, and as a community we will also create a space in which to remember and honor the more than five million people who have died worldwide of COVID-19.
Playback Link (Zoom)
Date: October 24, 2021
Topic: "Trauma-Transformed" with Todd Carter, Chief Development Director of Hospitality House of Northwest N.C., shares with us his own story about how he came to this work with the region's homeless population after 15 years in corporate sales and marketing. One of Boone's most lively and engaging speakers, Todd is on a journey of becoming "trauma transformed" through his own life's struggles and how they intersect with his work at Hospitality House. Todd will share insights into the rewards and challenges of trauma fatigue and cultivating hope in the world today and will take questions about his journey and work at Hospitality House.
Playback Link (Zoom)
Topic: "Trauma-Transformed" with Todd Carter, Chief Development Director of Hospitality House of Northwest N.C., shares with us his own story about how he came to this work with the region's homeless population after 15 years in corporate sales and marketing. One of Boone's most lively and engaging speakers, Todd is on a journey of becoming "trauma transformed" through his own life's struggles and how they intersect with his work at Hospitality House. Todd will share insights into the rewards and challenges of trauma fatigue and cultivating hope in the world today and will take questions about his journey and work at Hospitality House.
Playback Link (Zoom)
Date: October 17, 2021
Topic: "Our Whole Lives" with Mike Walker - Mike Walker will talk with us about OWL (Our Whole Lives), the sexuality education program from the UUA and United Church of Christ. OWL's curriculum extends from childhood through adulthood- our whole lives, right? Mike, a trained OWL facilitator, talks with us about his work in the local 7-9 grade OWL classes, offered with the HCUUC. OWL models compassion, respect, and justice; a holistic program that goes beyond intellect and addresses the attitudes, values, and feelings that youth have about themselves and sexuality.
Playback Link (Zoom)
Topic: "Our Whole Lives" with Mike Walker - Mike Walker will talk with us about OWL (Our Whole Lives), the sexuality education program from the UUA and United Church of Christ. OWL's curriculum extends from childhood through adulthood- our whole lives, right? Mike, a trained OWL facilitator, talks with us about his work in the local 7-9 grade OWL classes, offered with the HCUUC. OWL models compassion, respect, and justice; a holistic program that goes beyond intellect and addresses the attitudes, values, and feelings that youth have about themselves and sexuality.
Playback Link (Zoom)
Date: October 10, 2021
Topic: "The 12 Steps & the Hero's Journey" - The Twelve Steps, originally introduced by Alcoholics Anonymous, have become widely utilized by over hundreds of organizations and millions of people as a path to a better life. Through the myth of the Hero's Journey, popularized by Joseph Campbell, people can imagine themselves overcoming great obstacles in their lives. Mike Gordon will share his own journey of discovering both of these powerful concepts, how he implemented them into his own life, and his realization that they are one journey in the same.
Playback Link (Zoom)
Topic: "The 12 Steps & the Hero's Journey" - The Twelve Steps, originally introduced by Alcoholics Anonymous, have become widely utilized by over hundreds of organizations and millions of people as a path to a better life. Through the myth of the Hero's Journey, popularized by Joseph Campbell, people can imagine themselves overcoming great obstacles in their lives. Mike Gordon will share his own journey of discovering both of these powerful concepts, how he implemented them into his own life, and his realization that they are one journey in the same.
Playback Link (Zoom)
Date: September 26, 2021
Topic: "Americans We"- Why is "Americans We," the title of a circus march composed in 1929, the subject of this Sunday's service? Because we will be virtually hosting Bernard H. Flythe, a professional tuba player from Atlanta, Georgia. He will share with us his unique experience and voice as a gay African American man living in a world dealing with the pandemic, racial dynamics, and political fervor. Bernard will discuss how he uses his life story to shape his voice of empathy during these challenging times, how a UU congregation can implement the congregational covenant and the seven principles to help enhance their lives, and why he believes our planet will someday become the true ideal of America’s cultural “melting pot.”
Playback Link (Zoom)
Topic: "Americans We"- Why is "Americans We," the title of a circus march composed in 1929, the subject of this Sunday's service? Because we will be virtually hosting Bernard H. Flythe, a professional tuba player from Atlanta, Georgia. He will share with us his unique experience and voice as a gay African American man living in a world dealing with the pandemic, racial dynamics, and political fervor. Bernard will discuss how he uses his life story to shape his voice of empathy during these challenging times, how a UU congregation can implement the congregational covenant and the seven principles to help enhance their lives, and why he believes our planet will someday become the true ideal of America’s cultural “melting pot.”
Playback Link (Zoom)
Date: August 22, 2021
Topic: "Ms. Marvel and the Millennials" - Craig Fischer will talk about how current trends in popular culture—particularly the rise in Marvel superhero movies—intersect with both our First UU Principle (“The inherent worth and dignity of every person”) and the political activism of Generation Y. We’ll focus specifically on Ms. Marvel, Kamala Khan, a Muslim teenage superhero introduced in her own Marvel comic book in 2014 and poised to enter the Marvel Cinematic Universe in 2022. What can Kamala Khan’s popularity tell us about the state of the U.S. in the past and right now?
Playback Link (Zoom)
Topic: "Ms. Marvel and the Millennials" - Craig Fischer will talk about how current trends in popular culture—particularly the rise in Marvel superhero movies—intersect with both our First UU Principle (“The inherent worth and dignity of every person”) and the political activism of Generation Y. We’ll focus specifically on Ms. Marvel, Kamala Khan, a Muslim teenage superhero introduced in her own Marvel comic book in 2014 and poised to enter the Marvel Cinematic Universe in 2022. What can Kamala Khan’s popularity tell us about the state of the U.S. in the past and right now?
Playback Link (Zoom)
Date: August 1, 2021
Topic: “The Loving Collective: Parenting Across Racial Differences” - This summer marked the 56th anniversary of the landmark Loving v. Virginia case that made intermarriage between white and non-white people legal in the United States. Corey Bennett Williams is part of the “Loving Generation,” born to a black mother and a white father. She writes, “ Growing up in a small racially divided town was a challenge – with me constantly trying to understand my identity.” Now as a parent, she recognizes that “parenting across racial differences comes with a unique set of challenges. It means that as a parent, your identity, your story, and your way of moving through the world is different than your child’s. It requires unique skills, proactive nurture and a lot of de-centered listening ability to raise a child of a different race.” Corey will share some of her story and describe her work as an antiracism educator and the founder of the Loving Collective, “A kind, supportive community for white parents of Black and Black biracial children to deepen knowledge, find proactive tools and support one another in loving community.”
Playback Link (Zoom)
Topic: “The Loving Collective: Parenting Across Racial Differences” - This summer marked the 56th anniversary of the landmark Loving v. Virginia case that made intermarriage between white and non-white people legal in the United States. Corey Bennett Williams is part of the “Loving Generation,” born to a black mother and a white father. She writes, “ Growing up in a small racially divided town was a challenge – with me constantly trying to understand my identity.” Now as a parent, she recognizes that “parenting across racial differences comes with a unique set of challenges. It means that as a parent, your identity, your story, and your way of moving through the world is different than your child’s. It requires unique skills, proactive nurture and a lot of de-centered listening ability to raise a child of a different race.” Corey will share some of her story and describe her work as an antiracism educator and the founder of the Loving Collective, “A kind, supportive community for white parents of Black and Black biracial children to deepen knowledge, find proactive tools and support one another in loving community.”
Playback Link (Zoom)
Date: July 11, 2021
Topic: History of Unitarian Universalism (brief overview from Rev. Lee Paczulla)
Video Link (YouTube)
Topic: History of Unitarian Universalism (brief overview from Rev. Lee Paczulla)
Video Link (YouTube)
Date: June 27, 2021
Topic: Because of, not in spite of
Counselors and social workers Marissa Cornell, Mollie Furman, and Ashley Wurth will discuss their healing vision of restorative justice, a response to crime that strives to repair the "harm caused or revealed by unjust behavior through inclusive and cooperative practices that involve the victim, offender, and community members.” Furman and Wurth work with the Law Enforcement Assisted Diversion (LEAD), a partnership with the Watauga Police Department designed to channel non-violent offenders away from jail and into case management services that decrease recidivism. Ashley and Mollie will discuss some of their personal journeys and experiences into recovery, and how they work today to support and serve some of our communities most vulnerable populations through the Watauga LEAD and Watauga Detention Recovery on the Inside Programs. Service Leader: Linda Larson.
Playback Link (Zoom)
Topic: Because of, not in spite of
Counselors and social workers Marissa Cornell, Mollie Furman, and Ashley Wurth will discuss their healing vision of restorative justice, a response to crime that strives to repair the "harm caused or revealed by unjust behavior through inclusive and cooperative practices that involve the victim, offender, and community members.” Furman and Wurth work with the Law Enforcement Assisted Diversion (LEAD), a partnership with the Watauga Police Department designed to channel non-violent offenders away from jail and into case management services that decrease recidivism. Ashley and Mollie will discuss some of their personal journeys and experiences into recovery, and how they work today to support and serve some of our communities most vulnerable populations through the Watauga LEAD and Watauga Detention Recovery on the Inside Programs. Service Leader: Linda Larson.
Playback Link (Zoom)
Date: June 6, 2021
Topic: A Healthcare Professional’s Perspective on the Pandemic
No person is immune to the impact of living through a pandemic. Daily life, socializing, family connections, life rituals--not to mention health—everything that used to be taken for granted became a coveted treasure or a compounded loss throughout 2020-2021. Like many healthcare chaplains across the country, Melanie Childers showed up to a job that was barely recognizable even to herself. Sitting with the people who were most profoundly sickened by COVID-19, and sometimes died with no family around them, was excruciating and demoralizing. Typical methods of providing spiritual care were no longer possible, or sufficient—for patients/families, for staff, and even for herself. This session will provide a perspective of the pandemic from inside the hospital, along with some lessons learned and some lingering questions.
Melanie Childers is the system director of pastoral care for Appalachian Regional Healthcare System, where she has worked for 22 years. Ordained by the United Church of Christ, Melanie seeks to provided supportive care, crisis intervention, and grief support to people of any faith or of no faith.
Playback Link (Zoom)
Topic: A Healthcare Professional’s Perspective on the Pandemic
No person is immune to the impact of living through a pandemic. Daily life, socializing, family connections, life rituals--not to mention health—everything that used to be taken for granted became a coveted treasure or a compounded loss throughout 2020-2021. Like many healthcare chaplains across the country, Melanie Childers showed up to a job that was barely recognizable even to herself. Sitting with the people who were most profoundly sickened by COVID-19, and sometimes died with no family around them, was excruciating and demoralizing. Typical methods of providing spiritual care were no longer possible, or sufficient—for patients/families, for staff, and even for herself. This session will provide a perspective of the pandemic from inside the hospital, along with some lessons learned and some lingering questions.
Melanie Childers is the system director of pastoral care for Appalachian Regional Healthcare System, where she has worked for 22 years. Ordained by the United Church of Christ, Melanie seeks to provided supportive care, crisis intervention, and grief support to people of any faith or of no faith.
Playback Link (Zoom)
Date: May 30, 2021
Topic: Reinventing Yourself During the Pandemic
James Geary is the pharmacy outreach coordinator at the health and Hunger Coalition. Before the pandemic he was operating a small screen-printing business, specializing in eco-friendly and high-end screen-printing processes. When the pandemic hit, he lost all of his clients at once including his largest client which makes climbing equipment used in the Olympics. Once the Olympics were canceled and local business shut down, he knew it was time to explore other options. He’d already gathered the equipment for an event photography business, but all events were cancelled as well. He made his way doing handiwork, dog sitting and odd jobs but was financially in a tight spot. He’s from Boone and knew about the Hunger and Health Coalition and accepted food assistance while transitioning into other work. He was grateful to the organization and promised himself to return the favor if he could. That opportunity came when Hunger and Health Coalition lost all of their interns and volunteers at once due to ASU shutting down and volunteers mainly being senior citizens who had compromised immune systems. He volunteered for about six months and was eventually hired when a new position on the outreach staff became available. James says: “I was raised Quaker and I’ve always believed in public service and I’m very happy to have this opportunity to be involved in the front lines of what I believe is the largest crisis facing America which is access to healthcare and the price of medication which is criminal.”
Playback Link (Zoom)
Topic: Reinventing Yourself During the Pandemic
James Geary is the pharmacy outreach coordinator at the health and Hunger Coalition. Before the pandemic he was operating a small screen-printing business, specializing in eco-friendly and high-end screen-printing processes. When the pandemic hit, he lost all of his clients at once including his largest client which makes climbing equipment used in the Olympics. Once the Olympics were canceled and local business shut down, he knew it was time to explore other options. He’d already gathered the equipment for an event photography business, but all events were cancelled as well. He made his way doing handiwork, dog sitting and odd jobs but was financially in a tight spot. He’s from Boone and knew about the Hunger and Health Coalition and accepted food assistance while transitioning into other work. He was grateful to the organization and promised himself to return the favor if he could. That opportunity came when Hunger and Health Coalition lost all of their interns and volunteers at once due to ASU shutting down and volunteers mainly being senior citizens who had compromised immune systems. He volunteered for about six months and was eventually hired when a new position on the outreach staff became available. James says: “I was raised Quaker and I’ve always believed in public service and I’m very happy to have this opportunity to be involved in the front lines of what I believe is the largest crisis facing America which is access to healthcare and the price of medication which is criminal.”
Playback Link (Zoom)
Date: May 16, 2021
Topic: Healing Nature: Lessons from Buffalo Cove
The founder of the Buffalo Cove Outdoor Education Center, Nathan Roark has been providing opportunities for inner-city, foster children to experience the power of being immersed in the natural world since 1995. Buffalo Cove now serves youth from all walks of life from Atlanta, Miami, Baltimore, Washington DC, and well as many local kids from this Fellowship. Roark believes that getting kids outside, learning and playing in community, and away from their screens, is imperative in making a well-rounded person and will share stories of the impact of these powerful outdoor experiences on children’s lives. He explains, “We learn by doing, and we know others do too. We get dirty, we get wet, we get scratches, we get frustrated, we get excited, and we gain so much wisdom in the process.”
Playback Link (Zoom)
Topic: Healing Nature: Lessons from Buffalo Cove
The founder of the Buffalo Cove Outdoor Education Center, Nathan Roark has been providing opportunities for inner-city, foster children to experience the power of being immersed in the natural world since 1995. Buffalo Cove now serves youth from all walks of life from Atlanta, Miami, Baltimore, Washington DC, and well as many local kids from this Fellowship. Roark believes that getting kids outside, learning and playing in community, and away from their screens, is imperative in making a well-rounded person and will share stories of the impact of these powerful outdoor experiences on children’s lives. He explains, “We learn by doing, and we know others do too. We get dirty, we get wet, we get scratches, we get frustrated, we get excited, and we gain so much wisdom in the process.”
Playback Link (Zoom)
Date: April 25, 2021
Topic: Reawakening Awe in the Zoom Era
A state of awe can have profoundly positive effects on people. In its wake, people act more generously and ethically, think more critically when encountering persuasive stimuli, like arguments or advertisements, and often feel a deeper connection to others and the world in general. Awe prompts people to redirect concern away from the self and toward everything else. And about three-quarters of the time, it’s elicited by nature. How can we reawaken awe in the Zoom Era? In this presentation, Amy Renfranz will describe ways to observe the world around you – in hopes that you will be able to experience awe and the joy it brings in your daily life.
Playback Link (Zoom)
Topic: Reawakening Awe in the Zoom Era
A state of awe can have profoundly positive effects on people. In its wake, people act more generously and ethically, think more critically when encountering persuasive stimuli, like arguments or advertisements, and often feel a deeper connection to others and the world in general. Awe prompts people to redirect concern away from the self and toward everything else. And about three-quarters of the time, it’s elicited by nature. How can we reawaken awe in the Zoom Era? In this presentation, Amy Renfranz will describe ways to observe the world around you – in hopes that you will be able to experience awe and the joy it brings in your daily life.
Playback Link (Zoom)
Date: April 18, 2021
Topic: Reciprocity in Nature: Lessons from Braiding Sweetgrass
History, science and indigenous practices all teach us about how to be good stewards of our natural resources. Join us for an Earth Day service focused on relationship and sustainability.
Rev. Kim Mason started as the minister of First Unitarian Church of St. Louis in the fall of 2019. Before that she was an intern minister at Jefferson Unitarian Church. Kim is a graduate of Meadville Lombard Theological School. Kim is a highly experienced leader, having served UU churches in various capacities for the past 18 years.
Playback Link (Zoom)
Topic: Reciprocity in Nature: Lessons from Braiding Sweetgrass
History, science and indigenous practices all teach us about how to be good stewards of our natural resources. Join us for an Earth Day service focused on relationship and sustainability.
Rev. Kim Mason started as the minister of First Unitarian Church of St. Louis in the fall of 2019. Before that she was an intern minister at Jefferson Unitarian Church. Kim is a graduate of Meadville Lombard Theological School. Kim is a highly experienced leader, having served UU churches in various capacities for the past 18 years.
Playback Link (Zoom)
Date: March 28, 2021
Topic: "Courage is What Love Looks Like"
The poet David Whyte wrote, “To become human is to become visible.” With us now are the stirrings of a new season, another time of renewal and growth, a time of the earth awakening and the persistent flowers of spring blooming with unwavering strength. But what about us? What does it mean for us to awaken? In our present time of withdrawal in the face of Covid, what does it mean to see? To be seen? What does it mean to open one’s eyes to those around us? We did not choose Covid; it built its walls around us, and we have little choice but to stay behind our walls, remembering what seems lost. We long for a community we cannot quite have, and it seems strange and new to feel cut off, marginalized. But is it possible that the walls that divide us mirror a broader history we have never quite grasped? This sermon will take us back to a time when some people lived behind walls of their own making while excluding others. It will be a story of the invisible becoming visible, of the blind suddenly seeing, of the “inhuman” suddenly showing itself to be more human than many had imagined. It’s a story of race and renewal, of humanity growing and flowering, just a bit. It’s a tale of a small flower blooming its way through a thick hard wall; of the people who saw its beauty and of those who chose not to; and of the work that remains to be done.
Brian Griffin grew up in Soddy Daisy, Tennessee, and is now a resident of Knoxville. He has taught English and creative writing at The University of Virginia, Pellissippi State Community College, and The University of Tennessee. He was Youth Programs Coordinator for Tennessee Valley Unitarian Universalist Church for several years before becoming Director of Lifespan Religious Education there. He is now a freelance writer and househusband for a very busy professional cellist, Stacy Nickell, who works full time with the Knoxville Symphony Orchestra.
Playback Link (Zoom)
Topic: "Courage is What Love Looks Like"
The poet David Whyte wrote, “To become human is to become visible.” With us now are the stirrings of a new season, another time of renewal and growth, a time of the earth awakening and the persistent flowers of spring blooming with unwavering strength. But what about us? What does it mean for us to awaken? In our present time of withdrawal in the face of Covid, what does it mean to see? To be seen? What does it mean to open one’s eyes to those around us? We did not choose Covid; it built its walls around us, and we have little choice but to stay behind our walls, remembering what seems lost. We long for a community we cannot quite have, and it seems strange and new to feel cut off, marginalized. But is it possible that the walls that divide us mirror a broader history we have never quite grasped? This sermon will take us back to a time when some people lived behind walls of their own making while excluding others. It will be a story of the invisible becoming visible, of the blind suddenly seeing, of the “inhuman” suddenly showing itself to be more human than many had imagined. It’s a story of race and renewal, of humanity growing and flowering, just a bit. It’s a tale of a small flower blooming its way through a thick hard wall; of the people who saw its beauty and of those who chose not to; and of the work that remains to be done.
Brian Griffin grew up in Soddy Daisy, Tennessee, and is now a resident of Knoxville. He has taught English and creative writing at The University of Virginia, Pellissippi State Community College, and The University of Tennessee. He was Youth Programs Coordinator for Tennessee Valley Unitarian Universalist Church for several years before becoming Director of Lifespan Religious Education there. He is now a freelance writer and househusband for a very busy professional cellist, Stacy Nickell, who works full time with the Knoxville Symphony Orchestra.
Playback Link (Zoom)
Date: August 30, 2020
Topic: Gene Nichol, UNC School of Law, on COVID, Race, and Poverty
Playback Link (Zoom)
Topic: Gene Nichol, UNC School of Law, on COVID, Race, and Poverty
Playback Link (Zoom)
Date:
Topic:
Playback Link (Zoom):
Topic:
Playback Link (Zoom):