Election Night Potluck and Poll-Watching
Unitarian Universalist Church of BoulderAfter our 5:30 election day service, bring a dish to share and gather for food, connection, and conversation as we watch poll results come in.
After our 5:30 election day service, bring a dish to share and gather for food, connection, and conversation as we watch poll results come in.
A service of community singing, reflection, and prayer. A time to connect in solidarity and hope with each other. It matters that we're not struggling alone. A space to be together in shock, grief, and hope in an uncertain time.
On this Sunday after the election, we gather to reanchor ourselves in our values, history, and hope.
On this Sunday after the election, we gather to reanchor ourselves in our values, history, and hope.
The embodied experience of music -- making it, hearing it, feeling it -- is one of the oldest spiritual practices in the world. Whether you think of yourself as a singer or not, singing changes your body and heart and brain.
The embodied experience of music -- making it, hearing it, feeling it -- is one of the oldest spiritual practices in the world. Whether you think of yourself as a singer or not, singing changes your body and heart and brain.
The UUCB Staff will offer a Pancake Breakfast as a thank you to the whole congregation. Stop by to eat, drink, and visit!
After a 10:00am pancake breakfast, gather for this all-ages service at 11:00 celebrating abundance and lifting up gratitude -- especially in times of complexity or uncertainty.
Our reactions to visual art are personal and subjective. There are also universal patterns in humans' engagement with art, suggesting that it is somehow necessary for us. What does visual art do for us?
Sean Velazquez, a Harm Reduction Specialist and Community Educator/Trainer with Boulder County Public Health, leads this half-hour training on overdose response and how to administer Narcan for an overdose. All are welcome and invited!
Our reactions to visual art are personal and subjective. There are also universal patterns in humans' engagement with art, suggesting that it is somehow necessary for us. What does visual art do for us?
Across religious traditions, mystical paths often ask: what does it mean to be fully present, engaged, and awake in the world? How do we practice that work of showing up to ourselves, each other, and as embodied beings in the world?