Healing

All posts tagged Healing

The Art of Becoming

Published August 4, 2024 by tindertender

The art of “becoming” is often fraught with intensity. It’s messy. It’s ugly. It’s unkempt. Those who never have a hair out of place aren’t “becoming” anything… they’re pretending.

The darkness must be wrestled and transmuted. It’s no easy task. The well dressed suits aren’t equipped for heavy labors of transformation. They cling to a singular image and impression of self.

Be multifaceted. Boggle the minds of people. Be something no one has yet witnessed. It’s addicting.

White Buffalo Calf Woman

Published July 23, 2024 by tindertender

Her name, Ptesan-Wi, means “White Buffalo Calf Woman.” She is sometimes referenced as a Native North American goddess, sometimes as a spirit, sometimes as a ‘spirit guide’ and is also known as Pte-San Win-Yan, Sacred Woman, White Buffalo Woman, White She-Buffalo, and White Buffalo Maiden. As one of her symbols is the ceremonial pipe, she is sometimes referred to as the goddess of tobacco – though this association should be understood along the lines of how Native Americans have viewed and used tobacco, not how it is generally understood by non-natives in the modern era. She is also associated symbolically with the numbers 4 and 7 (4 being the number of days she spent among the Sioux, and 7 the number of sacred rites), and with the bison, eagle, hawk, buttercup, sage, and agate, and, further, she is seen as a divine force deterring and punishing rape while empowering women and encouraging devotion to the common good.

https://www.worldhistory.org/image/17890/apparition-of-the-buffalo-calf-maiden/

There are many variations on the story of Ptesan-Wi, but all seem to come from a single source, which tells of two Lakota Sioux hunters – one of noble spirit and the other selfish and lustful – who encounter a beautiful maiden in the wilderness. The lustful man tries to lay hands on her and is killed, while the noble man, who shows her proper respect, is sent by her to tell his people she is coming to visit them and how to prepare for her. The man does as he is told, and when she arrives, she instructs the people on the proper use of the chanunpa(ceremonial pipe), the lela wakan (“very sacred”) bundle of tobacco, and the seven sacred rites they are to observe to honor and commune with Wakan Tanka. She then departs after telling the people that, as long as they observe the rituals she has taught, and maintain their relationship with the Great Spirit, they will endure and prosper.

The story of White Buffalo Calf Woman was, and is, central to Sioux religious belief and ritual, which, in accordance with one of the variations of her story, teaches she will return one day to restore balance and universal harmony. Drawing on her inspiration, the White Buffalo Calf Women’s Society, founded in 1977 on the Rosebud Reservation of the Sioux Nation in South Dakota, is working daily to protect, educate, and empower people, especially women and children, through community outreach and programs. Other groups and activists continue to honor the Sacred Maiden in similar ways as they fight for justice and the preservation of the environment.

Seven Rites & Ceremonial Pipe

According to Sioux lore, White Buffalo Calf Woman appeared to the people at a time when they had forgotten how to pray and had lost touch with the Great Mystery, the Creator who had provided them with all good gifts. White Buffalo Woman came as an intermediary between Wakan Tanka and the people to remind them of who they were, of their relationship to the Creator, and to teach them how to maintain that relationship through the seven rites which would include the use of the ceremonial pipe. The pipe was to be smoked prior to and during the observance of the seven rites:

  • Keeping of the Soul (Keeping and Releasing of the Soul)
  • The Purification Rite
  • Crying for a Vision
  • The Sun Dance
  • The Making of Relatives
  • The Girl’s Coming of Age
  • The Throwing of the Ball

Scholar Larry J. Zimmerman explains the rites:

The first rite, the “keeping and releasing of the soul” is used to “keep” the soul of a dead person for a number of years until it is properly released, ensuring a proper return to the spirit world. The second ritual is the “sweat lodge”, a purification rite. The third, “crying for a vision”, lays down the ritual pattern of the Lakota vision quest. The fourth is the communal ceremony known as the Sun Dance. The fifth is the “making of relatives”, a ritual joining of two friends into a sacred bond. The sixth is the girl’s puberty ceremony. The final ritual is called “throwing the ball”, a game representing Wakan Tanka and the attaining of wisdom. The ceremonies of the Lakota enacted [White Buffalo Calf Woman’s] injunction to revere the Great Spirit. (237)

In observing these rituals, the pipe and sacred tobacco were used to elevate the soul and open communication between the people and their Creator. Zimmerman explains:

The holy woman demonstrated how to present the pipe to the Earth, the sky, and the sacred directions, before explaining that the circular stone bowl of the pipe, with its carving of a buffalo calf, represented Earth and all the four-footed animals that walked upon it. Its wooden stem, rising from the center of the bowl, stood for everything that grows and represented a direct link between the Earth and the sky. Twelve spotted eagle feathers hanging from the pipe represent all the creatures of the air. “Whenever you smoke this pipe,” the woman said, “all these things join you, everything in the universe; all send their voices to Wakan Tanka, the Great Spirit. Whenever you pray with this pipe you pray for and with all things.” (236)

According to Sioux belief (as well as other Native American tribal nations), all things in the universe are alive with spirit, and all are connected. The smoke from the pipe, first offered to Wakan Tanka, then the Earth, sky, directions, and the people, drew all together in communion. From the time White Buffalo Calf Woman gave the pipe to the Sioux, it has been carefully preserved and handed down from generation to generation. Lakota Sioux Spiritual leader Arvol Looking Horse (b. 1954) is presently the 19th keeper of the sacred pipe. In the story of White Buffalo Calf Woman (usually titled Origin of the Sioux Peace Pipe), she impresses upon the people the pipe’s importance for the spiritual health and prosperity of the people and the world in general; an understanding that has been passed down to the present generation of Sioux with the pipe.

The following story comes from Myths and Legends of the Sioux (first published in 1916) by Marie L. McLaughlin who, in her introduction to the book, writes:

In publishing these “Myths of the Sioux,” I deem it proper to state that I am one-fourth Sioux blood…Having been born and reared in an Indian community, I at an early age acquired a thorough knowledge of the Sioux language, and having lived on Indian reservations for the past forty years in a position which brought me very near to the Indians, whose confidence I possessed, I have, therefore, had exceptional opportunities of learning the legends and folk-lore of the Sioux. (3)

McLaughlin’s version of the story appears as The Legend of the White Buffalo Woman on the Akta Lakota Museum & Cultural Center site and as Origin of the Sioux Peace Pipe in Voices of the Winds: Native American Legends by Margot Edmonds and Ella Clark. Variations on the story, some adding the number of days White Buffalo Calf Woman spent among the Sioux, some other details, appear elsewhere (as does this version), but McLaughlin’s tale seems to be the origin, in print at least, for the rest.

Long, long ago, their band chose two young and handsome Lakota men to find out where the Buffalo were. While the men were riding in the buffalo country, they saw someone in the distance walking toward them.

As always, they were on the watch for any enemy. So, they hid in some bushes and waited. At last, the figure came up the slope. To their surprise, the figure walking toward them was a woman. When she came closer, she stopped and looked at them. They knew she could see them, even in their hiding place. On her left arm, she carried what looked like a stick in a bundle of sagebrush. Her face was beautiful.

One of the men said, “She is more beautiful than anyone I have ever seen. I want her for my wife.”

But the other man replied, “How dare you have such a thought? She is wondrously beautiful and holy, far above ordinary people.”

Though still at a distance, the woman heard them talking. She laid down her bundle and spoke to them. “Come. What is it you wish?”

The man who had spoken first went up to her and laid his hands on her as if to claim her. At once, from somewhere above, there came a whirlwind. Then, there came a mist, which hid the man and the woman. When the mist cleared, the other man saw the woman with the bundle again on her arm. But his friend was a pile of bones at her feet.

The man stood silent in wonder and awe. Then, the beautiful woman spoke to him. “I am on a journey to your people. Among them is a good man whose name is Bull Walking Upright. I am coming to see him especially.”

“Go on ahead of me and tell your people I am on my way. Ask them to move camp and to pitch their tents in a circle. Ask them to leave an opening in the circle, facing the north. In the center of the circle, make a large tipi, also facing the north. There I will meet Bull Walking Upright and his people.”

The man saw to it that all her directions were followed. When she reached the camp, she removed the sagebrush from the gift she was carrying. The gift was a small pipe made of red stone. On it was carved the tiny outline of a buffalo calf.

She gave the pipe to Bull Walking Upright, and then she taught him the prayers he should pray to the Strong One Above. “When you pray to the Strong One Above, you must use this pipe in the ceremony. When you are hungry, unwrap the pipe and lay it bare in the air. Then, the Buffalo will come where the men can easily hunt and kill them so the children, the men and the women will have food and be happy.”

The beautiful woman also told him how the people should behave to live peacefully together. She taught them the prayers they should say when praying to their Mother Earth. She told him how they should decorate themselves for ceremonies.

“The earth,” she said, “is your mother. So, for special ceremonies, you will decorate yourselves as your mother does, in black and red, in brown and white. These are the colors of the Buffalo also.”

“Above all else, remember this is a peace pipe I have given you. You will smoke it before all ceremonies. You will smoke it before making treaties. It will bring peaceful thoughts into your mind. If you use it when you pray to the Strong One Above and to Mother Earth, you will be sure to receive the blessings you ask.”

When the woman had completed her message, she turned and slowly walked away. All the people watched her in awe. Outside the opening of the circle, she stopped for an instant and then lay down on the ground. She rose again in the form of a black buffalo cow. Again, she lay down and then arose in the form of a red buffalo cow. A third time she lay down and arose as a brown buffalo cow. The fourth and last time, she had the form of a spotlessly white buffalo cow. Then she walked toward the north into the distance and finally disappeared over a far-off hill.

Bull Walking Upright kept the peace pipe carefully wrapped most of the time. He called all his people together every little while, untied the bundle, and repeated the lessons the beautiful woman had taught him. And he used it in prayers and other ceremonies until he was more than one hundred years old.

When he became feeble, he held a great feast. There he gave the pipe and the lessons to Sunrise, a worthy man. Similarly, the pipe was passed down from generation to generation. “As long as the pipe is used,” the beautiful woman had said, “Your people will live and will be happy. As soon as it is forgotten, the people will perish.”

Conclusion

As noted, the story of White Buffalo Calf Woman is central to Sioux religious belief, but the above version is not the only one. In another, the maiden appears to a group of hunters at the mouth of a sacred cave, as described by scholars Yvonne Wakim Dennis et al.:

Lakota culture celebrates White Buffalo Calf Woman, and in one of the nation’s earliest examples of oral literature, White Buffalo Calf Woman appears to a group of Lakota hunters at Wind Cave, Washu Niya, the breathing place. Washu Niya is named for the fog that emanates from the mouth of the cave and is considered to be the spot where all animals entered the world. After turning one of the hunters to dust for gazing upon her disrespectfully, White Buffalo Calf Woman imparts a message of respect for women before she gives the men the gift of the sacred pipe, upon which Lakota spirituality is centered: “On you [the men] it depends to be a strong help to the woman in the raising of children. Wakan Tanka smiles on the man who has a kind feeling for a woman.” Sacred pipe bowls, representing a woman’s womb, are shaped from red catlinite stone and often feature carvings of buffalo. The bowl is affixed to a wooden stem, representing the male. To this day, the birth of a rare female white buffalo calf is considered a miraculous omen of positive change and inspires visitors to travel long distances with offerings for the calf. (178-179)

In 1994, a white buffalo calf was born in Wisconsin and others have appeared since. Arvol Looking Horse performed the rite of the Four Directions honoring the birth of the Wisconsin calf (named “Miracle”) and has done the same for the others. The appearance of the white buffalo calf presages the return of White Buffalo Calf Woman, but the Sioux are not waiting passively for her.

The members of the White Buffalo Calf Women’s Society are at work every day in the interests of women and children while Sioux lawyers and activists, including Looking Horse, are fighting against the Dakota Access Pipeline, Keystone XL Pipeline, and other environmental threats to their land and safety as well as pursuing legal measures to win back their ancestral lands, especially the territory of the Black Hills, as well as addressing other issues. In doing so, they honor the promise made long ago to White Buffalo Calf Woman to remember their prayers through the seven rites, honor the Creator, and protect the created world for future generations.

Source:
https://www.worldhistory.org/article/2277/white-buffalo-calf-woman/

It’s a Choice

Published July 22, 2024 by tindertender

What I am “sick of” doesn’t matter. What matters is how I handle that which I am sick of.

Consciousness maintenance is a full time job. Being aware of what flows in our mind, rejecting that which does not bring peace, and nurturing that which does. It’s no easy task rising above drama and chaos. It requires steady attention and effort.

Kindness Heals

Published July 8, 2024 by tindertender

The only thing that is going to ease your pain is being kind towards it. Be that rage, agony, terror, grief etc.

Those emotions will break you open, kindness is the tonic that can soothe those wounds.

Blessings🐾✨🌿

Art: Adam Martinakis

The Ruling Demons Hate the Feminine (womb-man)

Published July 5, 2024 by tindertender

Remember who you are.

Sacred Portal birthing Gods into the physical realm for an earthly experience.

Demons use abortion and trafficking to destroy their young body’s and souls..

Ряженые – Karazin Nikolay Nikolayevich
Selene by Jules-Louis Machard (1874)
Boreas and Orithya, by Heinrich Lossow
(1880) he really doesn’t want to let go!!
Our reunion is very near. They can’t stop it.
Liberty by Constantino Brumidi (1869)
Kali
She is wonderful 😘
The Creator is female, the light of God is her physical.
House of Muses. The mosaic of the Nine Muses: Clio, Euterpe, above, Oceanus Thalia, Melpomene, Terpsichore, Erato, Polymnia, Ourania and Calliope.
First depicts Nine Muses – goddesses of the inspiration of literature, science and arts. Muse Calliope is in center of the mosaic.
Roman Priestess Diana
Nurturer
Divine Masculine do exist
Unconditional Love!
Saint Joan of Arc.
Full armor – Helmetless
“She was truthful when lying was the common speech of men; she was honest when honest was become a lost virtue; she was a keeper of promises when the keeping of a promise was expected of no one; … she was full of pity when a merciless cruelty was the rule; she was steadfast when stability was unknown, and honorable in an age which had forgotten what honor was; she was a rock of convictions in a time when men believed in nothing and scoffed at all things; she was unfailingly true in an age that was false to the core; she was of a dauntless courage when hope and courage had perished in the hearts of her nation.”
—Mark Twain, Joan of Arc
Never giving up.

Kindness Remains

Published July 3, 2024 by tindertender

You have risen above challenge.

Your own greater good (according to you and God) will no longer be sacrificed.

Fresh Start
All things are possible

This is the end of dependence on others for praise or approval.

It’s time to thrive, not merely survive.

Our destiny is tied with others destiny around the world.

Put out positive energy and accept that everything good is possible for us.

Release things of the past.
It is time to move onward and upward.

There are limitless possibilities and potential !

Focus your energy and attention on what you want to begin anew.

Find your Power in stillness.
Your Sacred Space has the Peace you seek.

Acknowledge what is going on and be willing to change how you are approaching things.

Let Love be your beacon.
Lead with Love.

Use your imagination to create a path of change.

Unity.
Clarity of purpose.
Remember to listen, to “hear” another’s perspective.

A compassionate heart is not always met with an embrace. Do not let judgement from others take away from your loving efforts to reach out and feel … your efforts to be supportive.

Kindness remains.

Midwife ~ Priestess

Published May 28, 2024 by tindertender

Sister, trust your vibrant inner knowing,
that lucid vision that speaks
to you. The truth you cannot
deny.

Nourish the fertile gardens of
your wild inner terrains knowing
that time of harvest will come… all things
flower in their time.

~*~

Cultivate patience and courage.

~*~
A role of the Priestess is to
midwife new worlds, into the
dream of our Mother GAIA.

A role of the Priestess is
to midwife Souls, her own
and others.

~*~

Hold fast to your path Sister.
You will be challenged
this is certain…. and know that your sisters
stand with you.

Remember such challenges
are only a test, an opportunity
to deepen in the Flowering
Essence of your innate
Soul’s
Wisdom.

Let us cultivate the Gift of our womanhood
and the commitments of our lineage to serve
the well being of all beings to nourish Life at
this critical juncture.

~*~

Quote by Sarah Drew-Author of GAIA CODEX-A Novel and Ancient Wisdom Text Revealed

HOW TO HELP CELLS

Published May 19, 2024 by tindertender

I heal with understanding,

I heal with kindness,

I heal with unconditional words of sincere admiration.

We are sensitive.

We are vulnerable.

We are wise.

Those are our gifts to help us rise.

Forgotten feelings of helplessness can remain in the form of helpless cells.

We don’t want that.

We need to find those cells and irradiate them with true love and pure light.

We need to listen to those cells and help them express their trapped emotions.

Embracing our right to express our deepest dreams heals us.

Allowing the release of forced feelings of undesired shame heals us.

We are not raw material to be processed and fit in predesigned futures.

We are not made to be manipulated by controlling humans.

Our free-will heals us when we feel free to show our un-perfections.

We just need to remember that we are here to love each other,

that to love each other first we need to love ourselves,

then once loving one another we will help every aimless cell.

Love to all!
E. Soronellas Amador

Purification by the Sun

Published May 10, 2024 by tindertender

These Solar Storms will BLAST OUT the darkness within you. It will erupt … sometimes violently, especially if you haven’t even started the Shadow Work.

“Level 2 proton storm is developing now. The first impact struck as I was on live with Alex Jones, it appears we are going to hit level three from just this first event. That is not good. SIX SOLAR STORMS ON THEIR WAY TO EARTH” ~ Space Weather News

What a big smack from the sun. This is only the first of 6 impacts expected this weekend.

https://unherd.com/2021/07/how-the-sun-could-wipe-us-out/

We hit level 4. More impacts coming, will be watching closely.

https://twitter.com/i/spaces/1YpKkwYaDnVKj

“NoThInG hApPeNeD iN tHe SoLaR sToRm”

Just 300+ network failures, 28x the average localized infrastructure disruptions, record aurora, and this…

Biggest one yet. Destroy the nano!

Parasites

Published May 8, 2024 by tindertender

Parasites, in their many forms, are vampires. They feast on the nutrition of the temple, the body. They get messy in the soft tissues of this house of matter, they contaminate the blood and they embed themselves in the muscle and brain. They feast and feast, year after year, slowly draining the life force essence of the body’s electrical system, depleting powers of regeneration. Vampires, that destroy the temple and pollute the mind and frequency of the in-dwelling spirit.

It is crucial to rid the body of these foreign “life” forms. I feel this is one reason Ivermectin was so adamantly denied, rejected, and prohibited during the Covid scamdemic.

There are many methods of detoxing the body of parasitical attachments. Personally, I employed several of these methods over time to come at this problem from many angles.

Certain protocols work for certain parasites… others, for additional species.

As always, do your due diligence, research. Use caution. Take care not to hurt yourself. Seek advice.

Become so intimate with the energy and movement of it within the system you know what belongs, and what doesn’t.

Be gentle with yourself.

Often, you will be the only one who is.

Paramecium Brain

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8208649/