πŸ”Š @MakePeaceLifeSchool β€’ Make Peace Life School β€’ Intuitive Public Radio β€’ IPR β€’β€’β€’
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Somehow I really like the word Alamosa
like it has a sacred meaning in many languages even though i dont know it yet
Make Peace Life School is a public broadcast channel on Telegram messenger referencing the day-to-day components of a series of projects initiated and nourished by Mara Bird, who is making safe locations for survivors of invisible violence.
When we school ourselves according to peace-oriented methodologies, we are able to respect and engage more fully with one another in our whole world of honored living beings.
The land on which we are building is holy, dedicated to the safety and well-being of those who have suffered the most severely and invisibly. Its names continue emerging as we learn more about where we’re going.
https://t.me/MakePeaceLifeSchool/163
https://t.me/IntuitiveCopy/391
Dailies. What does dailies mean?
What moves us is moment-to-moment. Each day of moments has the sun setting and rising again; time and relationship. What compartments link us to the resonance of earth, sky, and self? How do we mark the passage of moments in a way that brings us into meaningful relationship with ourselves, with one another, and the world?
How do we move through moments of uncertainty… where we were hurt before, but can now renew our attention to kindness and healing?
How do we come to know one another better?
Here is how we speak up each day. Maybe there’s a broadcast or edition published that day, maybe there isn’t.
Still we spoke up, and the voice is daily strengthened.
Throat chakra blessings.
Stretch and move each day: Are these the non-verbal words - pictures - ideas - experiences we yearned for honoring? A peace of art. A plate of food. A minute of dance. A humming song. A pattern that matters.
Your dailies will be different. I am writing this part of this daily; writing is essential to my personal dailies. What is essential to yours?
Each of us and all of us find our patterns, then notice them together. All of our different daily rhythms combine into a garden of nourishments that is evolving and learning and living.
Your dailies, my dailies, their dailies, our dailies.
Gathering the parts to export a PDF allows us to share what we have with others we care for, and improves our memory.
Dailies happen in all kinds of ways, emerging medicinally and speaking through our bodies.
That’s the most important thing.
β€”-@MaxMorris, https://t.me/MakePeaceLifeSchool/164
lightly steamed asparagus fresh carrot top greens diced carrots sliced garden tomatoes seaweed sauerkraut crushed garlic strawberries blackberries β€’ https://t.me/IntuitiveKitchen/1561
"All I am saying in this book can be summed up in two words--Trust Children. Nothing could be more simple--or more difficult. Difficult, because to trust children we must trust ourselves--and most of us were taught as children that we could not be trusted.

And so we go on treating children as we ourselves were treated, calling this "reality," or saying bitterly, "If I could put up with it, they can too." What we have to do is break this long downward cycle of fear and distrust, and trust children as we ourselves were not trusted. To do this will take a long leap of faith--but great rewards await any of us who will take that leap."

John Holt, How Children Learn
https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/freedom-learn/201712/the-joy-and-sorrow-rereading-holt-s-how-children-learn
Where do the children learn that They
Must stop and not harm another They
And help as able when They see
When do they learn that
I
is
We

--Onyx Books, age 48
"The first person to ever achieve The Triple Crown of Hiking was Eric Ryback. Ryback completed the Appalachian Trail in 1969 as a 16-year-old. He completed the Pacific Crest Trail in 1970 and chronicled it in his 1971 book The High Adventure of Eric Ryback: Canada to Mexico on Foot. Ryback completed a route approximating today's Continental Divide Trail in 1972 and chronicled it in his second book, The Ultimate Journey (now out of print).[6]

In 2013, Reed Gjonnes, age 13, became the youngest person to thru-hike all three trails to complete the Triple Crown. A thru-hike is defined as completing a long trail in a single trip. She hiked all three trails as continuous northbound hikes in one hiking season each.[7] Along with her father Eric Gjonnes, she hiked The Pacific Crest Trail in 2011, the Appalachian Trail in 2012, and the Continental Divide Trail in 2013.

As of 2018, Christian Geiger, age 9, is the youngest person to have hiked all three trails to complete the Triple Crown.[8] Christian, known by his trail name Buddy Backpacker, completed all three trails with his step-father Dion Pagonis.[9] Together they completed the Appalachian Trail in 2013 when Buddy was 5,[10][11] the Pacific Crest Trail when he was 6 in 2014,[12] and began the Continental Divide Trail in the spring of 2016 and completed it in September 2017 when he was 9.[13]

On September 15, 2019, combat veteran Will Robinson, age 38, became the first African American to complete the Triple Crown. Will thru-hiked the Pacific Crest Trail in 2017, the Appalachian Trail in 2018, and completed the Continental Divide Trail in 2019.[14] Will's trail name is Akuna, from the Swahili phrase Hakuna Matata meaning "no worries", and made popular by a song in The Lion King.

Elsye Walker, known as Chardonnay on the trail, is the first Black woman to complete the Triple Crown.[15] She thru-hiked the Pacific Crest Trail in 2015, the Appalachian Trail in 2016/2018,[16][17] and in 2017 she thru-hiked the Continental Divide Trail. "

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Triple_Crown_of_Hiking
πŸ”Š Learn & Grow Together β€’ @MakePeaceLifeSchool β€’ Make Peace Life School β€’ Intuitive Public Radio β€’ IPR β€’β€’β€’ https://t.me/joinchat/RKYDYWQjp3hi1sXf β€’ https://t.me/MakePeaceLifeSchool/181