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Susan Rose
ESWoW Newsletter – May 5, 2012
- From the Leader - Motherhood and Why Evolution is True
- ESWoW Community Call - MONDAY, May 7, 2012 - Motherhood
- AEU Assembly Registration
From the Leader
Susan Rose writes about motherhood, and attending a lecture by evolutionary biologist, Dr. Jerry Coyne.
ESWoW Community Call
MONDAY May 7, 2012
Prior to Mother's Day, let's share our experiences of mothers and motherhood, either as mothers ourselves, as the child of a mother, or in society in general.
The call is at 5pm PT, 6pm MT, 7pm CT, and 8pm ET.
The number to join the call is 866-740-1260, access code 5766842#.
AEU Assembly
Our Assembly is an important point in our lives as Ethical Culturists. It is an opportunity to immerse ourselves in what it really means to belong to Ethical Culture. The annual Assembly gives us an opportunity to experience the Ethical Movement in a larger context.
This year, there is especially exciting programming. I am most excited about the social justice programming happening on Saturday, June 16, 2012. The social justice theme is Criminal Justice, and there is a stellar line-up of speakers both from within the Ethical Movement and people working in the criminal justice field.
There will be a special meeting time for ESWoW members to get to meet with each other in person and we are able to renew and make new acquaintances with members of societies from across the country. It is an exciting opportunity to learn from each other, not only through the many workshops but by strengthening communication Rose know if you are planning to attend the Assembly and interested in being an ESWoW delegate.
Motherhood

Most of us have a mother or had a mother. Some of us are mothers, want to be mothers, can't be mothers or choose not to be mothers.
It's not all as simple as Hallmark would have you believe. Sometimes there is a warm and loving relationship, but from the ones I know about, I wouldn't say they are simple. This perhaps most profound relationship of our lives is usually rich, complex, and sometimes even mucky. And sadly, sometimes there is no real relationship there.
We have such high expectations for mothers; for who our mothers should be, for what they should be able to do for us, for how they should prepare us for the world. And if we are mothers, we have such high expectations for ourselves. We think, or at least I think, "I'll only do the good things my mother did, not the bad. I'll do all the things I wished my mom had done, but didn't."
What a mixed bag. I wish my mother had lived long enough to be a grandmother to both of my children instead of dying when my son was 2 1/2. She loved those years as a grandmother, she had great joy and would have had total delight with her granddaughter who has so many of the same interests as my mother did.
I wish I could have asked my mom for advice, asked her what I was like when I was young, but mostly, I wish I could tell her that while it was easy to think that I'd only do good things for my kids, and none of the bad, that I now know how much it easier it is to think that as a teenager than to actually do it once you have kids. Read more »
Dr. Jerry Coyne on Why Evolution is True

Dear Dr. Coyne, Read more »
Sad to See the Lilacs, An Earth Day Reflection

I love lilacs. A lot. One of the best things about living in New England is that there are lots and lots of lilac trees here. Way more than any other place I have ever lived. I like to stop and smell them, and every few years, I go to the Arnold Arboretum and glory in the hundreds of lilac trees they have there.
So why am I sad about lilacs now? Because I am writing this on April 19, 2012, and I've been seeing lilac trees in bud for several days now. Lilacs aren't supposed to be in bud here until May - the middle of May. They are a full month early the way I see it.
We have had a wacky winter in New England. Following the great amounts of snow wehad last year, this winter has been exceptionally mild, and at times, even tropical with there being days in a row of weather in the eighties.
Yes, there is climate change, and yes,people are part of what is exacerbating climate change. What signs of climate change have you noticed where you live? What are you doing to help the rate of climate change slow down?
I never thought I'd be sad to see lilacs, and yes, I will still stop and smell them, but what will I do in the middle of May when they might even be gone? I'll be sad again, but roses will probably be blooming early too.
ESWoW Newsletter - April 9, 2012
- Around the Ethical Movement - Anne Klaeysen, Bart Worden
- Community Call - SUNDAY, April 22, 2012 - with Bart Worden
- American Ethical Union Assembly - June 14- 17
Around the Ethical Movement:
Two colleagues have had articles published recently and I share them both with you.
Anne Klaeysen, Leader of the New York Society for Ethical Culture, and a recent presenter for an ESWoW Community Call, was published in the NY Times Room for Debate Forum. Her article, "The Founders Preferred E Pluribus Unum," addresses the language found on all US currency. Here's part of what Anne wrote:
The cost is only part of the problem with U.S. currency. As a religious humanist, I am more concerned with the words imprinted on every coin and bill in the United States: “In God We Trust,” a motto that the House of Representatives recently saw fit to reaffirm in a resolution that cited “a crisis of national identity.” A far more inclusive motto, “E pluribus unum,” proposed for the first Great Seal of the United States by John Adams, Benjamin Franklin and Thomas Jefferson in 1776, also appears on all of our coins and some of our bills.
Please take a look at the full article and add a comment if you'd like. Read more »
ESWoW Newsletter - March 31, 2012
- From the Leader - Keep Your Laws Off My Body
- Community Call - Monday, April 2, 2012 - Womb Raiders
From the Leader
Keep Your Laws Off My Body
Susan Rose writes about women's reproductive rights, a subject that is surprisingly prominent in the news these days.
ESWoW Community Call with Catherine Bordeau
Catherine Bordeau joins our ESWoW Community Call to share her knowledge and expertise about women's reproductive rights.
"First, an understanding of reproductive rights includes that women should have the right to her own reproductive decision-making, including voluntary choice in marriage, family formation and determination of the number, timing and spacing of her children and the right to have access to the information and means needed to exercise voluntary choice.
Second, a more specific priority includes the right to sexual and reproductive security, including freedom from sexual violence and coercion, and the right to privacy. Read more »
ESWoW Newsletter - March 16, 2012
- From the Leader - Barbara Raines meets Richard Feynman
- Community Calls - Sunday, March 18, 2012 and MONDAY, April 2, 2012
- Member Blogs - Promoting "In Defense of Smut"
- AEU Assembly - Albany, NY - June 14 -17
From the Leader
In her blog titled "Barbara Raines meets Richard Feynman", Susan Rose writes about her meeting Barbara Raines both as a young girl and then as a Leader-in-Training. She shares about what a creative person Barbara was, how she was dedicated to the Ethical Movement, and some of the organizations she helped create.
Community Calls Read more »
Barbara Raines meets Richard Feynman

Opening Words
First let me say that I saw as the immediate goal of women in Ethical Culture to work< toward the achievement of full equality for women, inside the Society, not by becoming more like men, but by securing an equal valuingof those qualities which in our culture have been called feminine and denigrated: greater sensitivity to people - greater empathy, compassion, warmth, nutururance; greater awareness of and response to physical surround;greater openness to the immediately felt quality of life, to what is immediately apprehended rather than logically comprehended, i.e., mediated by the intellect. In short, greater valuing and incorporation of intuition, emotionality, human heartedness.
I am not saying women should bow to men intellectually any more than I would deny that there are men who are gifted with these "feminine" attributes. Read more »
ESWoW Newsletter - March 1, 2012
- From The Leader - Admit I'm An Atheist? Maybe Not
- Community Call - Sunday, March 4, 2012
- Extra Reading
From The Leader
Admit I'm An Atheist? Maybe Not is Suan Rose's take on Randy Best's take on a piece by John Shook. The subject will be explored furhter in our next Community Call.
ESWoW Community Call - Sunday, March 4, 2012
Non-Theism Today: Where is Ethical Humanism?
Randy Best, Leader Ethical Culture Society of the Triangle, NC
Given the recent proliferation of non-theistic authors and greater awareness of the non-theistic life-stance and non-theist groups - Where does Ethical Humanism stand in this contemporary landscape of ideas?
Please join us for the ESWoW Community Call on Sunday, March 4, 2012 at 5pm PT, 6pm MT, 7pm CT, and 8pm ET.
The contact number for the call is 866-740-1260, access # 5766842#.
Please join us and invite anyone you think might be interested.
Extra Reading
Here are two readings Randy provided for us:
- Sally Quinn's 5 Lessons After 5 Years of On Faith
- John Shook's response - A New Year's Resolution: Admit You're An Atheist
Talk to you Sunday!
Yours in Ethical Community,
Susan Rose, Leader
Ethical Society Without Walls





