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Hump Day High: A Romantic Getaway to a Dark Sky Community with the CannaSexual

January 16, 2019 by Staff Writer Leave a Comment

“This is where they keep the stars,” my boyfriend whispered in my ear. His arms encircled me as I gazed upward, eyes wide, mouth agape. All I could say was, “Wow!” over and over again.

Polyamory life usually means splitting or working around holidays, so since B was going to be spending NYE with his wife, we decided to go away for an overnight getaway the weekend prior. He chose the location, a quaint inn in Borrego Springs, California, because it boasted in-room fireplaces, beautiful views and a clothing-optional heated pool and hot tub.

As I began researching the locale, I learned the real reason he chose it — Borrego Springs is in the middle of the Anza-Borrego Desert State Park, which is designated as an international “Dark Sky Community.” This means they actively curtail light pollution so you can see infinitely more stars with the naked eye than you could in a typical city. We could actually see the Milky Way from our patio. There are about 15 of these Dark Sky locations in the United States, and we’re lucky enough to live about an hour and a half from one of them.

A Romantic Getaway to a Dark Sky Community with the CannaSexual

He got to my house at 9 a.m. on Saturday. We couldn’t check in until 3 p.m., so we had to occupy our time somehow. I made breakfast, then we cuddled naked in bed for an hour, then had sex for two, then cuddled more. At some point lunch happened. We arrived in the afternoon with luggage in hand — two suitcases each. This may sound like overkill for one night, but we always approach packing with a “more is more” mindset. One of my suitcases was filled with nothing but sex toys, lube and lingerie. The other one held my VapeXhale and some Galactic Jack flower, incense, tea lights, essential oils, a diffuser and some fuzzy warm things, because the desert gets cold at night!

As an eager service submissive, I took charge of the unpacking and setting up process while B showered and relaxed. Once the room was arranged to my liking, we had sex for another hour. Then we donned our fluffy cotton robes, took a few puffs from the vape, turned on the gas fireplace and went to check out the hot tub and watch the sunset. It was glorious. The sky was streaked in pink and orange and the stars started appearing right away. We soaked for a bit in the blissfully hot tub, naked, then meandered back to the room for more sex. By the time we took our next break, the sky was pitch black. He led me out to the patio with blankets and a sleeping bag and held me as I looked up at the stars in wonder. I touched the Tiffany chain and lock around my neck (my anniversary gift last year) and passionately proclaimed that I was his in every conceivable way. God, I love that man.

A Romantic Getaway to a Dark Sky Community with the CannaSexual

We stayed up until 2 a.m. having sex, making love, touching souls and flying through the universe together in every way we could think of. Toys, hands, mouths — nothing was off-limits. It was magical. One of the most romantic and connective nights we’ve ever spent together. Wow.

 

 

The post Hump Day High: A Romantic Getaway to a Dark Sky Community with the CannaSexual appeared first on DOPE Magazine.


Hump Day High: A Romantic Getaway to a Dark Sky Community with the CannaSexual
Source: Dope Magazine

Filed Under: Ashley Manta, Borrego Springs, Borrego Springs California, Dark Sky community, hump day high, Lifestyle, News, polyamory, romantic getaways, stargazing, The Cannasexual

Bodhi High’s Sam Kannall: Prioritizing Charity and Authenticity

January 15, 2019 by Staff Writer Leave a Comment

Sam Kannall believes in community service — the owner of the cannabis production company Bodhi High spent significant time abroad in Southeast Asia to study and teach organic farming techniques to orphanages in developing economies. And while his work in places like Thailand and the Philippines paid off abroad, he knew there was more work to do at home in the Northwest. “I realized after doing a lot of work in Asia,” reflects Kannall, “that there’s a big need for people in our own local areas.”

So, he followed his passion and manifested a vision he had for his Spokane-based company, which launched in 2015. Kannall created a business entity that empowers its employees and community by providing well-paying jobs and career training. Known for growing high-quality, pesticide-free products with organic methods in mind, Bodhi High focuses on high terpene extraction for their popular vape pens, crumbles and shatter. Bodhi High, a Tier II farm that grows most of the flower used in its oil extractions, now services over 200 dispensaries statewide and employs about 45 people.

“‘You spend eight to 10 hours a day working … For somebody to spend half of their life not being their authentic selves doesn’t do anyone justice.’” – Sam Kannall, Bodhi High owner

“We try to help people be their [best] selves day to day,” he maintains. “It starts in the way our company engages with employees, giving them the opportunity to learn and grow and by holding a high set of ethics and standards for the products we produce.” A simple idea underpins these high-minded efforts: come to work as you are, naturally. “You spend eight to 10 hours a day working,” Kannall says. “For somebody to spend half of their life not being their authentic selves doesn’t do anyone justice. One thing I appreciate at Bodhi High is our team. We support each other as individuals. We realize all our differences are actually all assets.”

And while Bodhi High is growing as a company, they remember to reach out to other organizations in their neighborhood. Recently, the team partnered with animal rescue facilities in the Spokane area and a women’s recovery center to help in their efforts. As Kannall looks to the future, he hopes his brand and ideas will grow to larger markets. “We want to take Bodhi High to national and international markets,” he declares. “The future is looking bright.”

The post Bodhi High’s Sam Kannall: Prioritizing Charity and Authenticity appeared first on DOPE Magazine.


Bodhi High’s Sam Kannall: Prioritizing Charity and Authenticity
Source: Dope Magazine

Filed Under: Bodhi High, Bodhi High Extracts, Lifestyle, News, Sam Kannall, Sam Kannall Bodhi High, Washington

Bodysex with Betty Dodson and Carlin Ross

January 14, 2019 by Staff Writer Leave a Comment

Our resident CannaSexual, Ashley Manta, interviews Betty Dodson and Carlin Ross on their work in pioneering pleasure and women’s sexual empowerment. Accurately referred to as the Godmother of Masturbation, Dodson may be the motivation you need to start the new year off right.

 

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The post Bodysex with Betty Dodson and Carlin Ross appeared first on DOPE Magazine.


Bodysex with Betty Dodson and Carlin Ross
Source: Dope Magazine

Filed Under: betty dodson, bodysex, cannabis, carlin ross, Entertainment, Lifestyle, locked, News, sex, Trending

Legalize(d) It!

January 14, 2019 by Staff Writer Leave a Comment

Cannabis hit the polls in November of 2018, and the elections resulted in many firsts worth celebrating. We saw Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez become the youngest woman ever elected to Congress, watched as a record-setting number of women and LGBT candidates ran for office and celebrated as individuals like Jared Polis, Sharice Davids, Rashida Tlaib, Ilhan Omar and Sylvia Garcia saw victory in their jurisdictions.

We wanted to spend some time looking at what November’s cannabis victories will look like in 2019, and how the cannabis sector is contributing to both Democratic and Republican campaigns.

 

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The post Legalize(d) It! appeared first on DOPE Magazine.


Legalize(d) It!
Source: Dope Magazine

Filed Under: AMERICA, ballots, cannabis, Entertainment, law, Law & Politics, legalization, Lifestyle, locked, News, poll, Trending

The Scientific Year in Review

January 14, 2019 by Staff Writer Leave a Comment

Our talented team of freelancers penned pieces on a few dope scientific breakthroughs you might have missed in 2018, including progress in curing cancer, how stem cells are curing blindness and why a recent trip to Mars may change our perception of the Red Planet.

 

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The post The Scientific Year in Review appeared first on DOPE Magazine.


The Scientific Year in Review
Source: Dope Magazine

Filed Under: cannabis, Entertainment, innovation, Lifestyle, locked, new year, News, scientific, Trending, year in review

A Very Metaphysical New Year

January 14, 2019 by Staff Writer Leave a Comment

The new year brings with it hopes for the future: wishes of luck, prosperity and health abound; folks have their fortunes read, begin keeping diaries or make resolutions for the year to come. This year, forget vowing to never again eat carbs or cut down on cellphone use — let’s celebrate the passage of time and new beginnings in a more ancient way. Let’s get metaphysical.

 

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The post A Very Metaphysical New Year appeared first on DOPE Magazine.


A Very Metaphysical New Year
Source: Dope Magazine

Filed Under: cannabis, Entertainment, Lifestyle, locked, metaphysical, new year, News, Trending

21st Century Witches: Ylva Mara on Bringing Witchcraft into the Future

January 8, 2019 by Staff Writer Leave a Comment

AUTHOR’S NOTE: This Q&A is published as an addendum to the 21stCentury Witches article published in DOPE’s 2018 December Women’s Issue. That piece misrepresented its subject Ylva Mara by not making a distinction between non-aligned witchcraft traditions like Dianic Wicca and the efforts of Mara and Cunning Crow to develop a more intersectional conception of witch that includes all marginalized groups within their community. To correct the oversight, this Q&A will allow her initial interview responses the space to stand on their own. Mara’s responses are hers and have only been edited lightly.


Ylva Mara began dabbling in witchcraft when she was 13, around the same time she started exploring gender.

Though raised in a staunchly Catholic household, Mara knew her grandmother as a reluctant psychic, and in adolescence started experiencing trances that lasted from six to 12 hours, during which she’d usually retreat to the swamps surrounding her childhood home in northern Florida for solitude. Not long after, she founded a coven.

Today, Mara is the transgendered proprietress and high priestess of The Cunning Crow Apothecary and Teaching Temple in Seattle, comprised of a small metaphysical shop and adjoining common room used for everything from seances to webinars and addiction recovery groups. She founded the space in 2010 to function as a community hub for witches and other local spiritualists, but never anticipated the groundswell of interest her faith would receive in the years that followed.

Between shows like “American Horror Story: Coven” and flashy #WitchesOfInstagram posts selling handmade magic supplies, pop culture portrayals in recent years have risked reducing witches to a trendy shorthand for female empowerment. Mara talks to DOPE about what the modern resurgence of interest in witchcraft is missing, and why definitions of witch must be broadened to reflect the many marginalized groups – beyond just cis white feminists – it represents.

DOPE Magazine: What do you think are the major reasons people come to witchcraft?

Ylva Mara: The witch has always been the steward of sovereignty for those most marginalized by the oppression of society. The witch has always been a safe place for those whose existence serves as a threat against the ideals of a forced majority… a refugee for those who do not subscribe to conventions. Witch has never forgotten the inherent power of nature. We are disrupters of status quo and I believe that as more and more people wake up to their responsibilities to one another and our work in the world [they will realize] that this power is theirs to tend. This power rises through the knowledge that the authority assumed by others, over another’s life, is a false authority. The power of accountability to our proximity to privilege, the power of voice and choice … is one of the only authentic powers we have. The power to align ourselves with magic, this power lives inside of them.

Many folx who come to our temple and our shop are hungry for a new way of being in their lives. They are looking for ways to honorably wield their magic in serving their communities. They are looking for ways to use those magic in empowering the changes we see happening in the world around us. Many folx turn to magic because magic is calling us home again. The beauty of our modern world is that so many people have access to this call. Our hope is that once it is answered they dig deeper and turn their craft to the service of others. Additionally, people are turning to magic and the spirit of witch to push through the static of our modern world, to break through the glamour of complacency. Ours is a hungry world, those turning to magic and witchcraft may also feel the desperation of this hunger. This is a hunger only fed through an authentic and personal connection with our inherent magic. We are so disconnected from ourselves, our roots, that it’s nearly impossible to connect through spirit to community. We have been kept so far from our magic and for so long by colonial supremacy, that as the systems that uphold the veil crumble … we are witnessing waves of remembering in would be witches.

21st Century Witches: Ylva Mara on Bringing Witchcraft into the Future

How do witchcraft and gender/femininity relate, for you?

Witch has been a title given to those who hold wisdom and power. We know that in supremacy culture, particularly within colonial white supremacy, anyone who represents an identity outside of the culture of supremacy, is a threat. When those folx also possess wisdom and power, they become even more of a threat to the tenuous authority of supremacy. If we think about those who’ve historically posed the biggest threat to systems that perpetuate supremacist culture, they are black, brown and indigenous people of color. They are those who exist outside cis-gender and heterosexual centrism. They are non-binary and trans folx. They are queers. They are femmes. They are the disabled and the marginalized. The witch has always been the face and force behind movements of cultural change, including feminism. One thing to note however, is that Witch, like gender, is not limited to the binary of cis-centric, colonial, white supremacy. Witches CAN be women. Witch is NOT woman. Witch is revolution. Witch is genderless. Witch is a battle cry without constraint of language or allegiance to state. Magic is a faithless devotion belonging to everyone. Much like how our modern feminism must be intersectional to make any real impact … magic must also [be intersectional].

Why do you think the current resurgence of interest in witchcraft is happening now?

I think that our world needs magic. Magic needs witch to wield it … witch is one word for the keepers of earth honoring wisdom. Honestly, the witch isn’t the only force of spirit rising in the world. there is a surge of young folx turning to the Abrahamic faiths as well. There is a hunger for soul, for connection to source, Magic is a faithless devotion. It belongs to any person of spirit who walks with faith.  I teach that magic has no affinity except to what lives in the heart of the one who wields it. I have seen many people of faith act with kindness and I have seen many people of faith act with cruelty. I think that the Witch is waking and rising in prevalence because of the things I’ve discussed above. There is a deep need for an anti-racist, anti-supremacist, anti-cis/het/sexist, anti-xenophobic, anti-ableist, intersectional cultural shift. Witch has the capacity to hold the cultural complexities and social justice narrative necessary to invoke a truly inclusive cultural shift.

21st Century Witches: Ylva Mara on Bringing Witchcraft into the Future

What are your biggest concerns about witchcraft becoming more trendy, or tied to a specific political stance?

One of my biggest concerns is rooted in one of my biggest joys in regards to the rise of modern witch, which is social media accessibility. The depth of magic and the art of the witch is now available at our finger tips. This is fucking awesome. Anyone with a penchant and a curiosity for the craft can find almost anything they could ever want in regards to information about Witchcraft. What concerns me about this accessibility is that what can’t be so easily procured through social media is the soul and spirit of the Witch; we are not for sale. This can only be cultivated through personal practice. I know that a lot of witches have feelings about the fashionability of the modern witch … in my mind I say … well, however a witch comes home their sibling witches must welcome them. It’s my hope that burgeoning witches find the resources being provided by stewards rooted in the craft. That they seek out new opportunities to deepen and explore their craft with trusted leaders, teachers and communities. In addition to The Cunning Crow Apothecary and Witches Teaching Temple, folx whose work I love and are doing just that:

  • The HoodWitch
  • Olde Ways Apothecary
  • The Mexican Witch
  • Haus of Hoodoo
  • Good Fight Herb Co.
  • Dori Midnigth
  • The Portland School of Astrology
  • Kook Teflon
  • The Full Time Witch

What’s your stance on casting curses or hexes?

I believe that our work as witches is first in for most to serve as stewards of sovereignty. In particular the sovereignty of those who are most underrepresented in common culture and those who are actively oppressed by systems of supremacy. As the craft of which becomes more popular and more accessible, folks are turning towards the power of magic in effort to reclaim their personal authorities and to reaffirm their sovereignty in life. With all of the work being done by activists and witches to dismantle colonial, cis-centric, white supremacy and its cultural legacy of violence against those it marginalizes. Those underrepresented in the conversations about change are beginning to reclaim our voices. We are starting to remember our power and as we do we are wanting to wield it in the further dismantling of the systems that silenced us.

My thoughts on hexing are that there are times for such workings but the cost to the witch and their community is high. There are much more effective and clever ways to accomplish the goals of a hex without casting them. I teach my students that a true witch can break the spell of another without compromising the integrity of their own altar. My default is to offer spells of empowerment to those fighting to abolish supremacy culture. My first response is to cast protections around those made most vulnerable by systemic oppression. My direct action usually involves a banishment of those perpetuating violence and harm rather than hexing them.

21st Century Witches: Ylva Mara on Bringing Witchcraft into the Future

When I think back to the months following the 2016 presidential election, there were so many conversations calling witches to hex Donald Trump. When I think of the anatomy and physiology of a hex, the energy required to fuel the hex require the binding of life force. A curse affects not just the target but everything it is in relationship with, including those casting it. In regard to Trump, all those hexes were directed to him in relationship to his ill-appointment as president of a colonizing, white supremacist government. All the power associated with that title, all the energy and life force woven into the seat and title of president would have also been bound into those spells. The result being a doubling down of his violent regime … the consequences being an increase in volatile policies enacted against marginalized communities.

Hexes are necessary as a last resort. These times call for spells of banishment, rituals of empowerment and protection, and the ceremonies to break the staves of power being wielded by ill-anointed leaders like Trump and his legion of white supremacists. If your first impulse is to hex, or your understanding of the circumstances are limited, your actions will be out of desperation and likely the results they yield will be desperate. However, there most certainly are those witches whose altars, skills, understanding of the craft, relationships with magic, and spirits are deeply aligned to and able to navigate the complexities of hexcraft and curse work with ease. Those witches know who they are and they know what they are doing. IF a witch doesn’t know what they are doing … better seek out one who does and begin to learn the ways they are being called to.

What are the most prevalent forms of anti-witch discrimination you see today.

I can’t help but feel that in addition to all of the above…. witches are still being erased due to binary opposition. What I mean is that I hear a lot of folx say, “You’re a witch? oh, so you don’t believe in God/Jesus/Science?” What people forget is that the Witch invented God. We invented Science, and mystics like Jesus Christ served at the altar of Witch as they conjured a faith rooted in the magic of compassion, sovereignty and love. The Witch doesn’t exist despite or because of anything other than the Witch themselves. We exist as an embodiment of nature, wild and urban. The only other force of discrimination I think the Witch faces are those that give rise to opposition and binary. The same forces we are and have always been tasked with dismantling.

21st Century Witches: Ylva Mara on Bringing Witchcraft into the Future

The post 21st Century Witches: Ylva Mara on Bringing Witchcraft into the Future appeared first on DOPE Magazine.


21st Century Witches: Ylva Mara on Bringing Witchcraft into the Future
Source: Dope Magazine

Filed Under: American Horror Story, DOPE Women's Issue, Lifestyle, modern witches, Transgender, Transgender Rights, witchcraft, witches, Ylva Mara

Supernova Women: Bay-Area Women Build Equity for Communities of Color

January 8, 2019 by Staff Writer Leave a Comment

When some stars reach the end of their life, they explode. The cosmic event — known as a supernova — emits light so bright that it can outshine entire galaxies. Though it results in the death of the star, it’s a source of enrichment for the universe. Supernova Women, an Oakland-based nonprofit organization, takes their namesake and inspiration from that sprawling surge of energy.

“Essentially, [a] supernova is an explosion of energy that [helps] form other galaxies,” explains Amber E. Senter, co-founder and executive director of the organization. The dynamism of Senter’s organization helps launch other businesses and projects in the Bay Area and beyond. Supernova Women was founded in Oakland in 2015 with the mission to empower and create opportunity for people of color in the cannabis industry nationwide. Its co-founders — Senter, Nina Parks, Sunshine Lencho and Andrea Unsworth — formed the nonprofit while working on their own respective projects in the cannabis industry.

Supernova Women: Bay-Area Women Build Equity for Communities of Color

They’d meet to smoke near Lake Merritt or the Bay to discuss issues in the industry. “The industry was very white,” Senter says, “so we decided to use our knowledge and our talents to help get as many black and brown people involved in the industry as possible.”

Supernova Women aims to lower the barrier of entry into the industry by raising funds and awareness through advocacy, education and networking events. They work with other groups, including the Minority Cannabis Business Association (MCBA) and local incubators; the group was one of the first to work with the state and the individual cities of Oakland, San Francisco and Los Angeles to implement equity programs. Recent efforts include helping delivery businesses added as a type of cannabis license in California.

“ …we decided to use our knowledge and our talents to help get as many black and brown people involved in the industry as possible.” – Amber E. Senter, Supernova Women co-founder and executive director

The organization’s panel discussions feature Bay Area ganjapreneurs such as San Francisco-based attorney Kyndra Miller and Kiki Taylor, who co-owns the iCANN Berkeley dispensary alongside her mother, Sue Taylor. In 2019, Supernova Women plan to focus attention on linking people with capital. “Networking is important because folks need access to capital,” Senter illustrates. “Money is the most important piece of the puzzle — if there’s no money, there’s no business.”

Supernova Women: Bay-Area Women Build Equity for Communities of Color

The post Supernova Women: Bay-Area Women Build Equity for Communities of Color appeared first on DOPE Magazine.


Supernova Women: Bay-Area Women Build Equity for Communities of Color
Source: Dope Magazine

Filed Under: California, DOPE Women's Issue, Lake Merritt, Lifestyle, News, Oakland, Supernova Women, Supernova Women Bay Area, Supernova Women Oakland, women in cannabis

NORTHWEST FOLKLIFE FESTIVAL: Four Days of Amazing Food and Inspirational Art and Music

June 4, 2017 by Staff Writer Leave a Comment

The Northwest Folklife Festival brings together up to 250,000 people in celebration of the diversity of the Pacific Northwest. This year’s Memorial Day weekend was a vibrant display of the communities that make up Washington and a wonderful chance to immerse yourself and engage with those communities. NWFLF is located in Seattle Center and shares this space with Festál, which celebrated 20 years this year!

Festál started with the mission of making the center of Seattle a place to “celebrate who we are as Seattleites, and also a way to learn about our neighbors and to learn from our neighbors.” Cultural equity is of utmost importance to Festál. Not wanting programming based on diversity to become “tokenized,” Festál requires “the participation and guidance of the community itself… putting each event together of and for their own community.”

With this shared space and distinction in the mission and purpose, NWFLF and Festál have once again created an inclusive environment for learning, sharing, thoughtful engagement and celebration of arts and cultures from all around the world that reside right here in Washington.

Although there were more than 5,000 performers, the draw for many foodies was the spread of savory, sweet, spicy and overall spectacular food vendors that grace the festival each year. Your taste buds can take a tour of Belizean food made from scratch, Caribbean Cuisine, authentic northeast African Coastal cuisine from the Horn of Africa, Lebanese Cuisine at Lajitana, Polish cuisine at Taste of Poland and so many more! One attendee explained how she loved all that NWFLF had to offer but could spend all day just trying all of the culturally distinct food available. Good thing the festival is four days long!

There is so much to taste, see and do it’s easy to see how someone could get easily roped into just one aspect of the festival, including the smallest of attendees. The Discovery Zone is full of performances and activities sure to spark those happy laughs, creative cognition and mature reception of everything that kids are exposed to over the weekend. With Creative Kidz Bollywood performances, children’s flamenco dances and so much more all across the festival, everyone young in age and spirit was smiling ear to elephant ear.

However, this year the festival’s future is on the line. The festival has always been put on free of charge to the public so to “remove any economic barriers and ensure that everyone can experience and share in cultural traditions,” but this year attendees were asked to support the festival with donations at the entrance in an attempt at raising $350,000 so that the cyclical nature of learning, growing and accepting the beauty of the unknown could continue for years to come. NWFLF is a staple not only to Seattle but to the Pacific Northwest. People travel from all over to perform and attend one or all four days of freedom of expression and cultural acceptance that is proudly showcased in Seattle Center and now it is time to give back.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iOOGlH4zaF8

After all these years of attendance and admiration, DONATE to a festival that has inadvertently combated aggressive bigotry and repressive ignorance for decades through exposure to culturally equitable engagement. Being able to see groups like Batucada Yemanja with their Brazilian Samba and Choro, music and dance celebrations of indigenous tribes and local staples like the Massive Monkees with their Hip Hop flavor is exactly what we need in a time of such polarity.

Become a friend of Folklife so that we can all enjoy what NWFLF has to offer for decades to come.

The post NORTHWEST FOLKLIFE FESTIVAL: Four Days of Amazing Food and Inspirational Art and Music appeared first on Dope Magazine.


NORTHWEST FOLKLIFE FESTIVAL: Four Days of Amazing Food and Inspirational Art and Music
Source: Dope Magazine

Filed Under: Acceptance, Beauty, Culture, Donate, Lifestyle, News, Northwest Folk Life Festival, NWFLF, seattle, Washington

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