Sunbeam of Running Warmth

A girl should be two things: Classy and Fabulous
curate:

Xuyen Pham’s Garden; East New Orleans, LA
After Xuyen Pham lost her New Orleans home to Hurricane Katrina, she turned the property into a farm to feed her community. She fled Vietnam with her husband and children at the end of the Vietnam War in 1975. After months in Southeast Asian refugee camps they were moved to Fort Chaffee in Arkansas. The family was eventually sponsored by a hotel owner in Oklahoma, but the cold proved too much so they moved yet again, settling in the “Mary Queen of Vietnam” community in East New Orleans.
This farm is surrounded by houses (we are right in the middle of a suburban housing tract in East New Orleans).
Xuyen stands amidst taro plants in her home garden. The plant stems are a base ingredient in traditional soups and congees found on most Vietnamese dinner tables. By growing taro and other vegetables, she keeps Vietnamese traditions alive in her community.
Xuyen’s definition of “food sovereignty”: The ability of community members to control food access (both effluent and influent) independent of outside food sources (such as supermarkets). Members of the community grow traditional fruits and vegetables and fisherfolk go shrimping, fishing, and crabbing to sell at local stores, the local Saturday farmers market, and most importantly, to feed their families and community members.
Xuyen is also a participant in a local New Orleans East aquaponics project. The project is being implemented by MQVN Community Development Corporation and was established originally by fisherfolk displaced by the BP oil drilling disaster as a way to create jobs and to ensure adequate food access in New Orleans East (a USDA-identified food desert). In the near future, she and her husband, with the help of MQVN Community Development Corporation, will construct greenhouses and an aquaponics growing system on their farm plot.
via Grist’s Lexicon of Sustainability : kimberlydelanghe
Beautiful. I hope to one day have my own garden and grow my own foods :)

curate:

Xuyen Pham’s Garden; East New Orleans, LA

After Xuyen Pham lost her New Orleans home to Hurricane Katrina, she turned the property into a farm to feed her community. She fled Vietnam with her husband and children at the end of the Vietnam War in 1975. After months in Southeast Asian refugee camps they were moved to Fort Chaffee in Arkansas. The family was eventually sponsored by a hotel owner in Oklahoma, but the cold proved too much so they moved yet again, settling in the “Mary Queen of Vietnam” community in East New Orleans.

This farm is surrounded by houses (we are right in the middle of a suburban housing tract in East New Orleans).

Xuyen stands amidst taro plants in her home garden. The plant stems are a base ingredient in traditional soups and congees found on most Vietnamese dinner tables. By growing taro and other vegetables, she keeps Vietnamese traditions alive in her community.

Xuyen’s definition of “food sovereignty”: The ability of community members to control food access (both effluent and influent) independent of outside food sources (such as supermarkets). Members of the community grow traditional fruits and vegetables and fisherfolk go shrimping, fishing, and crabbing to sell at local stores, the local Saturday farmers market, and most importantly, to feed their families and community members.

Xuyen is also a participant in a local New Orleans East aquaponics project. The project is being implemented by MQVN Community Development Corporation and was established originally by fisherfolk displaced by the BP oil drilling disaster as a way to create jobs and to ensure adequate food access in New Orleans East (a USDA-identified food desert). In the near future, she and her husband, with the help of MQVN Community Development Corporation, will construct greenhouses and an aquaponics growing system on their farm plot.

via Grist’s Lexicon of Sustainability : kimberlydelanghe

Beautiful. I hope to one day have my own garden and grow my own foods :)

(via daughtersofdilla)

It was a rough game, so close. Next time D. Rose

#Iamobsessed #soooofine

It was a rough game, so close. Next time D. Rose

#Iamobsessed #soooofine

(Source: derrickmartellrose)

I miss San Francisco- the City, itself. The end.

The Calm After the Storm

Today I woke up feeling blah and filled with anxiety. I also had this lingering thought that I was thiiis close to taking that step back to revert to my old ways.  So I went to work out which made my mood a lot better & then I remembered a conversation I had with someone who is on a similar path as I am and honestly is probably the only person who could understand what this transition really is because she is going through it too :)

There have been a sequence of events this past month that have really opened my eyes to life- the daily blessings and frustrations which has introduced me to a new way of approaching the act of gratitude. I am 22 years old and have this (at times) uncontrollable feeling that “I just want to be there already!” I want to be at that point in my life where I am already in my career, have my own place, & traveling the world. Sometimes I forget that I am heading in that direction, that “that life” will be mine really soon—that I am not going to be at this place in my life forever, that this really is just the beginning. That all there really is to do is learn as much as I can & be happy with where I am and what I have.

I have never had this much calm and peace within myself.

“It ain’t about how fast I get there, it ain’t about what’s waiting on the other side, it’s the climb […] keep movin’ keep fightin’ keep the faith”

Food for thought: The moment you let forgiveness in and stop fighting your reality (whatever that may be for you), you begin to be present in life.

mayette-ds:

lacedinweddings:

One truly amazing bridesmaid dress. In previous posts, I talked about how the high slit would be huge in 2012, and here you are. 
Monique Lhuillier 2012 Fall Collection
Source: The Wedding Chicks

look at that gradient and slit! absolutely stunning!

mayette-ds:

lacedinweddings:

One truly amazing bridesmaid dress. In previous posts, I talked about how the high slit would be huge in 2012, and here you are. 

Monique Lhuillier 2012 Fall Collection

Source: The Wedding Chicks

look at that gradient and slit! absolutely stunning!