Crow and Diana

Crow and Diana
Timbered Lake

SINGERS/POETS

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Turtle Island
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Wednesday, October 7, 2009

Cedar Winds/ "BEING WITH"



Let us not patronize Mother Earth. Always ask first how you can best help rather than presuming that you know best. Do this through prayer, meditation, and ceremony.
Wait for a leading before you go rushing in to save the day. Respectfully seek her strength and wisdom and do not impede her cycles. Be watchful and aware of her condition but intervene to assist only if necessary. Most importantly do not undermine her cycles by imposing man made solutions upon her. Mother Earth was created with her own toolkit for self-repair and balance.
Earth and sky are so interdependent, so married~ the health of one deeply affects the well being of the other. The jeweled dew drops, laden with bitter deposition of metals cover the grasses of early morning.
The lowly earthworm is more an ally to the earth than is man in his arrogance, outpacing his own ability to be fully aware. It is man alone whose actions have compromised the health of earth and sky and thus himself, and yet he will prefer in his feelings of entitlement to displace the blame for the myriad consequences being visited upon himself. And feeling thus victimized he will try to war against the effects using essentially the same mindset that produced the imbalances to begin with.
Human attempts to produce technological solutions will continue to spawn unintended outcomes unless he learns to become a midwife instead of a conqueror. The good midwife is one who is respectfully “with” the birthing woman. She intuitively takes her cues from the birthing woman’s nature rather than imposing her own will upon the process. So much the wiser our applied sciences and technologies would become if we would look to the ways of nature itself for our leading.
~Diana Ramsdell Newman


2 comments:

  1. The tall, dry grasses in the heading's photo (taken by Diana at Swanlake in Swanville, Maine) resemble the traditional chief's headdress of the Passamaquoddy and Penobscot. I used to only be aware of the western plains Indians grand headdresses but as I have become aware of my Passamaquoddy heritage I find myself really appreciating the distinctive style of headdresses originating from the East.~Crow Suncloud

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  2. Was honored to hear your sweet melodic voices yesterday at Naples Pow Wow. I am a fan!

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