Forwarded from MoonMaidenMusings
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Teach your children to co-create with nature and go outside! 💪🏻🌿
l.kohanov.6.28.07.webedit.bncd
Linda Kohanov: The Tao of Equus
🗓️ 6/9/07 • 🕑 53:27 • 📁 26 MB
Podcast: Attunement: Deep Conversations
Author: Linda Kohanov and Anthony S Wright PhD
Web player: https://podcastaddict.com/attunement-deep-conversations/episode/84374019
Episode: http://www.attunement.biz/AttunementMain/podcasts/l.kohanov.6.28.07.web.mp3
A Woman's Journey of Healing and Transformation Through the Way of the Horse
t.me/TheSovereignHorse/198
t.me/IntuitivePublicRadio/11682
🗓️ 6/9/07 • 🕑 53:27 • 📁 26 MB
Podcast: Attunement: Deep Conversations
Author: Linda Kohanov and Anthony S Wright PhD
Web player: https://podcastaddict.com/attunement-deep-conversations/episode/84374019
Episode: http://www.attunement.biz/AttunementMain/podcasts/l.kohanov.6.28.07.web.mp3
A Woman's Journey of Healing and Transformation Through the Way of the Horse
t.me/TheSovereignHorse/198
t.me/IntuitivePublicRadio/11682
Max here.
One of the things I love about Lainie Liberti's work is that it maps beautifully onto what is required for the recovery and neurological repair of people of all ages who have experienced neurological violence.
Neurological damage and traumatic brain injury result in parts of the brain being set back to a baby or child state; maybe not the whole brain, in many cases, but parts of the brain's processing that even as an adult may now have to start from scratch and learn again how to make more complex and resilient adult discernments.
When this happens, the way that person's environment "parents" them means everything about whether or not they can get through it to restore their life and livelihood.
The way Lainie describes partnership parenting, worldschooling, and child-rearing altogether are ESSENTIAL comprehension for ANYONE working to recover from brain injury, AND for their loved ones & community members to practice in order to provide effective support.
When I say brain injury or neurological injury, I'm referring to situations of blunt head trauma, yes; and also crucially, injuries from poisoning and other forms of trauma the brain experiences.
For all those with brain and neurological injuries out there who have been told they would never recover fully (or at all)... really, we have felt that it's work like Lainie's, particularly, that is usually missing from the equation.
Considering how widespread and unrealized neurological injury is across populations, EVERYBODY should be reading Lainie's work and supporting her.
Important to note -- Lainie's modalities are also imperative for stopping and preventing human trafficking, which heavily relies upon causing neurological injuries that are invisible, unrecognized, mischaracterized, or that no one believes can be recovered from.
Here's Lainie's conversation with Demi Pietchell at t.me/StarfireCodes --
https://www.starfirecodes.com/p/video-s10901-worldschool-lainie-liberti-podcast
...and my note on Substack (please follow if you're over there, and join us if you aren't yet) --
https://substack.com/@intuitivepublicradio/note/c-21471750
Great pleasure to have watched this and part 2 today.
Thank you, ladies.
t.me/MaxMoRadio/6283
t.me/IntuitivePublicRadio/11688
One of the things I love about Lainie Liberti's work is that it maps beautifully onto what is required for the recovery and neurological repair of people of all ages who have experienced neurological violence.
Neurological damage and traumatic brain injury result in parts of the brain being set back to a baby or child state; maybe not the whole brain, in many cases, but parts of the brain's processing that even as an adult may now have to start from scratch and learn again how to make more complex and resilient adult discernments.
When this happens, the way that person's environment "parents" them means everything about whether or not they can get through it to restore their life and livelihood.
The way Lainie describes partnership parenting, worldschooling, and child-rearing altogether are ESSENTIAL comprehension for ANYONE working to recover from brain injury, AND for their loved ones & community members to practice in order to provide effective support.
When I say brain injury or neurological injury, I'm referring to situations of blunt head trauma, yes; and also crucially, injuries from poisoning and other forms of trauma the brain experiences.
For all those with brain and neurological injuries out there who have been told they would never recover fully (or at all)... really, we have felt that it's work like Lainie's, particularly, that is usually missing from the equation.
Considering how widespread and unrealized neurological injury is across populations, EVERYBODY should be reading Lainie's work and supporting her.
Important to note -- Lainie's modalities are also imperative for stopping and preventing human trafficking, which heavily relies upon causing neurological injuries that are invisible, unrecognized, mischaracterized, or that no one believes can be recovered from.
Here's Lainie's conversation with Demi Pietchell at t.me/StarfireCodes --
https://www.starfirecodes.com/p/video-s10901-worldschool-lainie-liberti-podcast
...and my note on Substack (please follow if you're over there, and join us if you aren't yet) --
https://substack.com/@intuitivepublicradio/note/c-21471750
Great pleasure to have watched this and part 2 today.
Thank you, ladies.
t.me/MaxMoRadio/6283
t.me/IntuitivePublicRadio/11688
Prayers for Maui. • 🔊 Makawao • Intuitive Public Radio Makawao Maui • IPR ••• Follow community feed: t.me/+SBkAH6AcOJPnDFBS • t.me/OceaniaIPR/120, t.me/IntuitivePublicRadio/11706
Moorea Boardman shares:
' Just a dog.
From time to time people tell me “chill out, it’s just a dog” or “it’s a lot of money just for a dog.” They don't understand the distance traveled, the time invested, or the costs incurred by "just a dog".
Some of my proudest moments have occurred with “just a dog.”
Many hours have passed being my only company "just a dog", but not for one moment did I feel despised. Some of my saddest moments have been because of “just a dog,” and on those gray days, the gentle touch of “just a Dog” gave me comfort and the reason to get through the day.
If you also think “it’s just a dog”, then you’ll probably understand phrases like “just a friend”, “just a sunrise” or “just a promise.” “Just a dog” brings into my life the very essence of friendship, trust and pure unbridled joy. “Just a dog” brings out the compassion and patience that make me a better person.
For "just a dog" I will get up early, take long walks and look forward to the future. So for me and people like me, it’s not “just a dog,” but an embodiment of all the hopes and dreams of the future, the memories of the past, and the absolute joy of the moment. “Just a dog” brings out the good in me and takes my thoughts away from myself and daily worries.
I hope one day they can understand that it’s not “just a dog”, but the one that gives me humanity and keeps me from being “just a human.” So the next time you hear the phrase “just a dog”, just smile because they “just don’t get it”.
“Just A Dog,” by Richard A. Animals.
"Master bedroom," (1965) Andrew Wyeth '
facebook.com/100001339784821/posts/pfbid09mMqAB454mbZUXTGWaCBo7yTHUSJgV2durxDgXYRuX4gVoXL5sQUwj5jkWZccKBtl
t.me/SpaceDogSchool/2315
' Just a dog.
From time to time people tell me “chill out, it’s just a dog” or “it’s a lot of money just for a dog.” They don't understand the distance traveled, the time invested, or the costs incurred by "just a dog".
Some of my proudest moments have occurred with “just a dog.”
Many hours have passed being my only company "just a dog", but not for one moment did I feel despised. Some of my saddest moments have been because of “just a dog,” and on those gray days, the gentle touch of “just a Dog” gave me comfort and the reason to get through the day.
If you also think “it’s just a dog”, then you’ll probably understand phrases like “just a friend”, “just a sunrise” or “just a promise.” “Just a dog” brings into my life the very essence of friendship, trust and pure unbridled joy. “Just a dog” brings out the compassion and patience that make me a better person.
For "just a dog" I will get up early, take long walks and look forward to the future. So for me and people like me, it’s not “just a dog,” but an embodiment of all the hopes and dreams of the future, the memories of the past, and the absolute joy of the moment. “Just a dog” brings out the good in me and takes my thoughts away from myself and daily worries.
I hope one day they can understand that it’s not “just a dog”, but the one that gives me humanity and keeps me from being “just a human.” So the next time you hear the phrase “just a dog”, just smile because they “just don’t get it”.
“Just A Dog,” by Richard A. Animals.
"Master bedroom," (1965) Andrew Wyeth '
facebook.com/100001339784821/posts/pfbid09mMqAB454mbZUXTGWaCBo7yTHUSJgV2durxDgXYRuX4gVoXL5sQUwj5jkWZccKBtl
t.me/SpaceDogSchool/2315
Foraged violet & dandelion greens, musk mallow, aegopodium podagraria, mint flowers & leaves, lemon balm, hibiscus syriacus, lavender leaves, russian sage flowers, mock strawberry & leaves, lady's thumb, plantain leaves, yarrow, clover.
Added rainbow carrots, heirloom tomato, avocado, farm eggs, diced ginger root, golden flaxseeds, fresh rosemary & oregano leaves, crushed garlic; apple cider vinegar, olive oil, turmeric powder, dried oregano pearls, pan salt, cracked black pepper.
t.me/IntuitiveKitchen/2100
t.me/MaxMoRadio/6317
t.me/IntuitiveFood/183
t.me/SylvaniaIPR/14
Added rainbow carrots, heirloom tomato, avocado, farm eggs, diced ginger root, golden flaxseeds, fresh rosemary & oregano leaves, crushed garlic; apple cider vinegar, olive oil, turmeric powder, dried oregano pearls, pan salt, cracked black pepper.
t.me/IntuitiveKitchen/2100
t.me/MaxMoRadio/6317
t.me/IntuitiveFood/183
t.me/SylvaniaIPR/14
Forwarded from MoonMaidenMusings
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Teaching a toddler to sing • facebook.com/reel/3538475326383724 • t.me/IntuitiveFamily/729
Forwarded from The Barefoot👣Gardener🌻 (Barefoot👣 Kansan1111🇺🇸)
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' Disastrous and Sublime
Song Notes
Music by Laurence Cole. This song was inspired by a quote from Barry Lopez, a writer of numerous books on his explorations and deep experience of the wild and natural world, among them Arctic Dreams. He spoke of the great pleasure and privilege he feels when in the presence of indigenous elders who exemplify the central value of their cultures by “living in the heart of every moment they find themselves in, disastrous and sublime.” I thought about how it’s only possible to find myself by finding the heart of the moment, which is the felt sense of interconnected and interdependent relatedness with all that is. The moment is a living reality, with a vast heart that holds all diversity in a unified web of connection and mutual flourishing. I thought of some words I heard Jungian psychotherapist and author James Hillman speak many years back; “The Self isn’t in community, it is community.”
The phrase, “disastrous and sublime”, seemed appropriate and accurate to my experience of these times, as I navigate between perceptions and feelings of a great unravelling and at the same time an intensified capacity to experience the exquisite piquancy of the still vibrant and miraculously beautiful living world. So this song asks me to lean into these moments, and slip through to the palpable sense of “all my relations.”
How can this create the world we want? By healing the break in belonging, and rejoining in our natural birthright to hold sacred witness and be held in sacred witness by All That Is. From this place, there could be no throwaway people, no throwaway creatures, no throwaway air, no throwaway water, no throwaway mountains, grasslands, oceans, forests, rivers, soils. Everyone would be seen as so much more than the worst thing they’ve ever done, as Bryan Stevenson says. There would be justice and mercy, generosity and enough for all. and no decisions and resultant actions would be taken without the paramount consideration of the impact such decisions or actions will have on the coming generations of “all our relations.” We’d be grown people.
Lyrics
Part One:
Live in the heart of every moment you find, disastrous and sublime.
Part Two:
Lean in. The veil is thin. All of life is sacred kin. '
laurencecole.com/album/disastrous-and-sublime
t.me/IntuitiveSong/40
Song Notes
Music by Laurence Cole. This song was inspired by a quote from Barry Lopez, a writer of numerous books on his explorations and deep experience of the wild and natural world, among them Arctic Dreams. He spoke of the great pleasure and privilege he feels when in the presence of indigenous elders who exemplify the central value of their cultures by “living in the heart of every moment they find themselves in, disastrous and sublime.” I thought about how it’s only possible to find myself by finding the heart of the moment, which is the felt sense of interconnected and interdependent relatedness with all that is. The moment is a living reality, with a vast heart that holds all diversity in a unified web of connection and mutual flourishing. I thought of some words I heard Jungian psychotherapist and author James Hillman speak many years back; “The Self isn’t in community, it is community.”
The phrase, “disastrous and sublime”, seemed appropriate and accurate to my experience of these times, as I navigate between perceptions and feelings of a great unravelling and at the same time an intensified capacity to experience the exquisite piquancy of the still vibrant and miraculously beautiful living world. So this song asks me to lean into these moments, and slip through to the palpable sense of “all my relations.”
How can this create the world we want? By healing the break in belonging, and rejoining in our natural birthright to hold sacred witness and be held in sacred witness by All That Is. From this place, there could be no throwaway people, no throwaway creatures, no throwaway air, no throwaway water, no throwaway mountains, grasslands, oceans, forests, rivers, soils. Everyone would be seen as so much more than the worst thing they’ve ever done, as Bryan Stevenson says. There would be justice and mercy, generosity and enough for all. and no decisions and resultant actions would be taken without the paramount consideration of the impact such decisions or actions will have on the coming generations of “all our relations.” We’d be grown people.
Lyrics
Part One:
Live in the heart of every moment you find, disastrous and sublime.
Part Two:
Lean in. The veil is thin. All of life is sacred kin. '
laurencecole.com/album/disastrous-and-sublime
t.me/IntuitiveSong/40
Forwarded from MoonMaidenMusings