11th day
daylight
send
send something you can’t count
13 Responses to Yoko Ono’s 13 Days Do-It-Yourself Dance Festival : 11th day
Leave a Reply
Page 1 of 11
11th day
daylight
send
send something you can’t count
|
| |
Yoko Ono - Songs for Spring |
|
Group Show: Teatr życia (Theatre Of Life) (Centre of Contemporary Art Znaki Czasu, Toruń, Poland)
Happy Mother’s Day! love, yoko
MY MOMMY IS BEAUTIFUL is a tribute to all Mothers of the World from each of your children
Yoko QandA day – Fridays on Twitter & Facebook – latest answers here:
Yoko Ono Lennon & Sean Lennon on WNYC 93.9FM – ‘Spinning On Air’ on Mothers Day, 13 May 2012 at 7-9pmET
MusicForOccupy: Occupy This Album: benefitting OWS
Yoko Ono: ADD COLOUR (TheMuseum, Kitchener, ON, Canada)
Coming June 2012 – Yoko Ono: To The Light & #smilesfilm (Serpentine Gallery, London, UK)
Group Show: Ecstatic Alphabets/Heaps of Language (MoMA, New York, USA)
Record Store Day: The Flaming Lips with YOKO ONO PLASTIC ONO BAND – Do It! from new ‘Heady Fwends’ 2xLPAdd yours & your friends' smiling faces at
www.smilesfilm.com
PEOPLE HAVE IMAGINED PEACE |
| Tweet |

My children… (lol, I guess I don’t have THAT many!!) But if you think of all the children in this world that I care about, all the children that I don’t even know, all the hungry, sick, abandoned, orphaned children and children in danger in war torn countries, it would be awful hard to count them. You probably could, but it would be hard, especially since some of them aren’t even born yet. God Bless them, and God Bless us all
Wow, what a intriguing concept.
I would have to say the most obvious answer is love.
But my first instinct was to say “Kisses”,
but I guess you could count those…
the value of peace!
The idea of sending a countless idea is the idea i like.
Its important to me as a disability equality trainer.
In 1981, the first international year of disabled people we got together to discuss and understand our experience. We decided we had to tell everyone to think of disability in a different way, a new way.
Think now. What does disability mean to you?
Hold onto that idea.
How do you understand disability?
What is disability?
Where does disability come from?
Who are disabled people?
Did you answer disability is discrimination based on impairment? Or did you say something else. If you said something else that’s ok. Its where you are now.
Did you say disability comes from somewhere other than society, that it is society that actively discriminates against disabled people? If you didn’t that’s ok. That’s where you’re understanding is now.
When you looked at who disabled people are did you say that disabled people are those people who are discriminated against by society? If you said something else that’s fine that’s where you are now.
Take your thoughts about disabled people and disability and test it.
Look t your thoughts and see how society excludes the people you thought about. Look at how it organises itself, how it needs to change. Look at the attitudes that society has about disabled people. Look at how society constructs an environment that is only fit for active young men who are not pregnant. Look how the environment is built for 20% of the populace.
We can change these things. We can remove these barriers. We are removing these barriers. Over here in the UK we have the disability discrimination act. Its not the act disabled people campaigned for but it does go part of the way towards a civil rights bill that includes all disabled people, that understands and recognises the whole spectrum of our lives, that is enforceable.
I came to work this morning thinking about the personalisation and self directed support programmes that we are building in the uk and i could see the hands of disabled people all over it. Because we stopped to think about ourselves and our experience, because built a social model and upheld and shared it with others, and because the idea got out there, was heard, was understood, we are changing our lives, our experiences are getting better.
We have more say about who we are, who we want to be, we are given more opportunity to chase our dreams and realise our aspirations and all this is good.
But we need to hold to the idea, we have to cherish it, we have to promote it over and over cos sometimes society who we involve in the idea don’t hold it so dear and they still make mistakes, still discriminate. Just look at the welfare reform nonsense we have had to put up with this year. Just look at how the government uphold an economic model of disability and try to make monetary savings by keeping us out and how the press meekly backs them up with tales of disabled people scrounging, skiving.
Hold the idea. Cherish it. Pass it on. Let it be heard again.
my worries…
you can have all
I’m sending love, happiness, peace, friendship, smiles, dreams, closeness, non conformism, freedom, and Nutopia.
I wish everyone knew about Nutopia….
Thanks Yoko. I love todays dance…I love all of them.
sending waves of energy,
yellow rays,
pink rays,
all the colours under the sun,
all mixed up with love and laughter.
Love & Light
Smiles & winks … possible some blinks.
Everything that counts ……
Dance
I'll take a deep breathe, exhale slowly into an envelope, and as I exhale I'll quietly & slowly say R-E-L-A-X.
sending appreciation
sending laughter
sending love inward and outward
i’ll send love…
you can’t count love
Compassion, sympathy, support, courage.
LA
A bountiful Smile, Hope and Love bouquet tied together with Peace.
Oh I love this one – send something you can’t count – too clever!! That’s how we should live, it so is!
An Idea, a Whisper, a Nod, a Wink, a Thought, a Gasp, a Smile, a Cough, – just thinking outloud – I’ve got it.
LAUGHTER.