SUNBURY — Red and blue streamers fastened to wooden stakes snapped in the breeze 360 feet above the Susquehanna River Saturday as a shaman and his audience welcomed summer at the Shikellamy State Park overlook.
The daylong event, which also featured poetry, yoga and music, was marked by Hazleton shamanic practitioner Joseph Burinsky, who with about 30 people sat in a circle surrounded by the four wooden stakes, each representing a compass point.
The summer solstice, he said, is a time of quarterly reflection, to realize how you are doing in life and what accomplishments you had in spring.
This quarterly report “is a good reference,” Burinsky said. “It gives life structure. ... All the environment around us is doing this thing in the summer. We need to remember to get in tune, life gets easier.
“Summer is a time of giving life and doing special projects, when you need to encourage that life to make it want to revisit you for one more year.
“Without it,” he said, “autumn is a sad time. It is a time of completion, harvest, sharing, preparing to go home to God in the winter. Winter is resolution, detox, recovery of residual trauma of last year’s growth. And spring is intentions, strategies, choices, when the cycle starts again. The structure keeps moving forward.”
Shamanism is not what many people believe it to be, said Burinsky, who led songs with drumming and helped those in attendance do soul searching.
“We don’t worship the Earth animals, the river, the sky,” he said. “We form loving relationships with them and they help our lives. ... We are not worshipping them, but checking in on them.”
Sudharman, of the Integral Yoga Center of New Berlin, led a yoga session. Steve Mitchell, of Lewisburg, led a drum circle and Jerry Wemple, of Bloomsburg, read poetry. Jessica Jellen, originally of Kulpmont, performed music.
Celebration coordinator Mark Cox said the reasons for the event were to make sure those in attendance enjoyed it, and to help residents realize what a great resources the overlook and state park are.
“It’s amazing how many people were never up here,” Cox said. “... I can drive back and forth 15 times on one gallon of gas. It’s available to me right here. I can kayak for miles and miles right here.”
Friends of Shikellamy State Park are going to try to make it a yearly event, Cox said.
Author Jerry Wemple, a Shikellamy High School graduate, read poems at the event that were inspired by the area he grew up in.
“I’m fascinated with the river,” he said. “... This was a nice first effort, something the area needs. There are good things in this area that we don’t celebrate enough.”
Burinsky said he planned to be out welcoming the solstice for two or three hours, reminding those in attendance that it is a time to reflect and realize what you are doing with your life.
“If you get in contact with what’s going on in the season, all the rest is the same,” he said. “Choose and vow to do something special so in January you can look back and say ‘Last summer I did that!’”
News
Reflect during solstic, shaman tells 30 at event
- News
-
-
Lewisburg schools face cuts in personnel, programs
Superintendent Mark DiRocco told the Lewisburg school board Thursday night that a proposed block grant system of school budget funding will run the district short of cash that will have to be made up through personnel and program cuts.
-
Mom: Keller's response left her cold
Like many people, Elise Nicol is concerned about Marcellus Shale and the industry's effects on Pennsylvania's environment. The Lewisburg mother of two cares about it enough that she sent an email to state Rep. Fred Keller, R-85 of Kreamer, asking him to oppose House Bill 1950, which passed the General Assembly on Wednesday.
-
Point Township authority concerned by sewer plant violations
Point Township Sewer Authority members Thursday night expressed concerns about a Feb. 3 letter sent to the Northumberland Sewer Authority by the state's Department of Environmental Protection saying that the borough authority has violated the Clean Streams Act.
-
Persing truck fee idea stalls
While Pennsylvania has passed legislation allowing communities to collect impact fees in 35 counties, Northumberland County is not one of them, and business leaders and lawmakers do not think Sunbury Mayor David Persing's plan to try to do his own version of an impact fee will pass muster.
-
Barber draws a crowd
The talk can be spirited at times, ranging from hunting to sports to home repairs. "You hear all kinds of stories," Gene Koehler, of Riverside, said Thursday as he waited for a haircut at The Masters barbershop, 209 Mill St.
-
State board approves table games at Valley Forge casino
VALLEY FORGE — A casino resort scheduled to open this spring in the Philadelphia suburb of Valley Forge has been approved for table games.
-
Doctors telling more adults: Get out and exercise
ATLANTA — A new study shows more and more U.S. adults are being told by their doctor to get off their duffs and exercise. A government survey found nearly 33 percent of adults who saw a doctor in the previous year said they were told to exercise. That was up from about 23 percent in 2000.
-
Former Northumberland County judge and three others die in Florida crash
EVERGLADES CITY, Fla. -- A former Northumberland County judge was one of four people killed Wednesday afternoon when their car collided with a van at an intersection, according to the Naples News. The victims were identified as James J. Rosini, 66, William J. Rosini, 68, Patricia C. Rosini, 65, all of Coal Township, Pa., and Deborah A. Korbich, 59, of Elysburg, Pa.
-
Warden demotes four bosses
SUNBURY -- Northumberland County Prison Warden Roy Johnson was able to trim about $135,000 in expenses by demoting four supervisors. He said Wednesday that he found a way to cut costs without laying off any staff. "I cut out 120 hours of supervisors' pay each week, but I need to fill the correction officer positions," Johnson said.
-
DJ pumps up audience
Every Tuesday evening, Richard Grogg can be found spinning tunes at possibly the most well-attended dance in Snyder County. A resident at the Selinsgrove Center since 1988, the 57-year-old said the thing he likes most about selecting and playing music is "making people happy." "Some people come up and ask for requests," he said.
-
Agency closes adult center
PENNS CREEK -- Union and Snyder County caregivers have had to look farther and wider for another program that can offer respite because the Agency on Aging can no longer afford to provide the service. The adult daily living center at the Penns Creek Adult Resource Center was a helpful program each week to about eight adults from the area dealing with Alzheimer's and dementia. But it closed Dec. 30.
-
New Berlin pushes to acquire school
NEW BERLIN -- The Borough Council sold the property where the New Berlin Elementary School is to the precursor of the Mifflinburg Area School District for $1 back in 1950. It was deeded to the district for construction of a school.
- More News Headlines
-
Lewisburg schools face cuts in personnel, programs







