POPULARITY
Send us a textThis heartfelt episode of Coffee in the Barn welcomes Chantel Pennicott and Vero Choi, two Animistic team members who each made the courageous leap of immigrating to the United States from South Africa and Ecuador, respectively.
Send us a textThis episode of Coffee in the Barn brings together global researchers to explore one central question: How can we feed piglets better for long-term health and performance?Recorded live at DPP, we dive deep into gut health, appetite challenges, and nutrient strategies that matter most in early piglet development.
In this soul-nourishing episode, Samantha Lewis opens the portal to "animistic listening" — a heart-based way of receiving the frequencies of spirit through plant consciousness, sacred patterns, and the geometry of living energy.From telepathy tapes with cats to the vibrational impact of sacred geometry in textiles, this episode bridges the seen and unseen realms, activating your senses to perceive the subtle magic always speaking to us.⚜️ If your travels are not only to landscapes but also to lifescapes — this episode will awaken you to a whole new way of weaving with spirit. ⚜️Tune in to discover:
Send us a textIn this lively and unscripted episode of Coffee in the Barn, Dr. Casey Bradley and Morgan Hart take you behind the scenes of the Midwest Swine Nutritionists' family reunion in Omaha, Nebraska—recorded straight from their Hilton hotel room.From Hilton skywalk networking to sneezing on sun-soaked skybridges, this episode captures the unfiltered reality of industry events: the good, the exhausting, and the energizing. Casey and Morgan share personal reflections on professional growth, confidence in public speaking, and why choosing the right outfit can change your whole presentation game.You'll also hear about travel with toddlers, on-the-road pumping logistics, award ceremonies that honor family support, and—of course—the vital importance of passionate people in ag science.Whether you're an academic, an ag industry pro, or just here for the real talk, this episode reminds us that community matters more than venue—and that authenticity (and colorful jackets) can go a long way.☕ What You'll Learn in This Episode:✔️ What makes Midwest Animal Science meetings feel like a reunion✔️ How style, confidence, and "doing your colors" impact public speaking✔️ The realities of balancing motherhood and ag careers on the road✔️ The emotional impact of industry layoffs and showing up for others✔️ Tips on better science communication—especially for microbiome data
Send us a textIn this deeply personal episode of Coffee in the Barn, hosts Morgan Hart and Dr. Casey Bradley are joined by Tracy Snider to shed light on the often-hidden realities of PTSD in everyday life—especially within agricultural communities. From domestic abuse survival to the long-term trauma faced by veterans and first responders, this episode dives into raw experiences that highlight the importance of empathy, awareness, and leadership support in the workplace.Tracy shares her emotional journey through complex PTSD, while Casey speaks openly about supporting her husband, a police officer, after an officer-involved shooting. Together, they emphasize how trauma manifests both personally and professionally—and why creating a trauma-informed environment in ag and rural industries is essential.Whether you're a manager, colleague, or simply someone who wants to be more aware, this is a must-listen episode on human resilience, healing, and how leadership can show up for people behind the scenes.
Send us a textIn this episode of Coffee in the Barn, we dive into the dynamic world of trade shows with industry expert Mark Ghaffori, who brings over 15 years of experience in organizing, strategizing, and elevating exhibitions across every sector imaginable. From agricultural expos to tech conferences, Mark shares what truly makes a trade show successful—and it's more than just flashy booths and freebies. We explore how to create meaningful connections, maximize ROI, and design interactive experiences that leave lasting impressions. Plus, we tackle the evolving challenges of balancing family life with professional commitments in an industry known for its hectic pace and constant travel. Whether you're an exhibitor, attendee, or event planner, this episode is packed with actionable strategies to transform how you approach trade shows—before, during, and after the event. What You'll Learn in This Episode: ✔️ How to stand out as an exhibitor without relying on giveaways ✔️ Pre-show, during-show, and post-show tactics to boost ROI ✔️ The future of trade shows in a hybrid and digital world ✔️ Why location, experience, and purposeful planning matter more than ever ✔️ The importance of avoiding the "same as last year" trap in event planning
Send us a textIn this episode of Coffee in the Barn, we welcome Charles Mayfield, founder of FARROW Skincare, whose unique journey bridges CrossFit, paleo nutrition, and regenerative agriculture. Charles shares how his personal experiences—ranging from a painful sunburn to deep-rooted agricultural practices—led him to create a skincare line using rendered pig fat (lard) that promotes natural healing and supports sustainable farming. We explore the links between what we eat, what we put on our skin, and the larger ecosystem of health and farming. Charles opens up about the surprising regulatory gaps in skincare safety, the microbiome on our skin, the truth about modern sunscreens, and how honoring animal by-products can reduce waste and support both people and the planet. What You'll Learn in This Episode: ✔️ How Charles's sunburn turned into a skincare business rooted in regenerative farming.✔️ Why most modern skincare products may be harming more than helping.✔️ The connection between gut health and skin health through a paleo lens.✔️ What regenerative agriculture really means—and how it builds soil and community.✔️ Natural ways to protect your skin from sun exposure without chemicals.✔️ How Charles's farming background and paleo cookbooks shaped his mission.✔️ The surprising origins and benefits of using animal fat in skincare.
Send us a textIn this powerhouse episode of Coffee in the Barn, Casey Bradley sits down with three industry leaders to explore some of the most exciting research presented at the 2025 Midwest Animal Science Meetings:
That's right folks, time for another amazing interview with your favorite paranormal podcaster, this is one i've been waiting to share with you all. I am being joined by a modern day monk, Sadhu Dah, world-traveling, digital nomad, and exorcist. Join us for some fascinating conversation as we talk about being a monk, walking meditation, Thailand, magic, the occult, akashic records, love spells, and more. Plus folks, there is some cryptid talk at the end of this show that is a first for this podcast. Please enjoy as much as I did! Sadhu's Website: https://www.thesadhudah.com/ Uncensored, Untamed & Unapologetic U^3 Podcast Collective: https://www.facebook.com/groups/545827736965770/?ref=share Tiktok: https://www.tiktok.com/@juggalobastardpodcasts?is_from_webapp=1&sender_device=pc YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8xJ2KnRBKlYvyo8CMR7jMg
Send us a textIn this episode of Coffee in the Barn, hosts Casey Bradley and Morgan Hart sit down with Tracy Snider, the new CEO of Animistic, to discuss the challenges and opportunities that come with major life and career transitions. Casey shares her journey of building Animistic over the past five years and why she made the decision to bring in new leadership. Tracy reflects on stepping into the CEO role, leading a faith-driven business, and navigating the evolving landscape of animal agriculture.The conversation also explores personal transitions, including Morgan's experience balancing work and family after having her third child. Casey, Morgan, and Tracy discuss how to trust the process, build strong teams, and embrace change in both professional and personal life.Key Topics Covered in This Episode:✔️ Transitioning into leadership roles and scaling a business✔️ Balancing family life with a demanding career in agriculture✔️ The role of faith and values in business decision-making✔️ Lessons learned from entrepreneurship and team building✔️ Strategies for navigating major career and life changesThis episode provides valuable insights for entrepreneurs, business leaders, and professionals in the agriculture industry looking to grow, adapt, and build sustainable success.Looking for a way to express your unique personality and support your favorite podcast? Check out Buy Blackett—your go-to destination for hilarious, heartfelt, and stylish coffee mugs, apparel, and more! With every purchase, you're not only adding a little fun to your daily routine but also helping Coffee in the Barn continue to bring you the latest in agriculture and beyond.Visit www.buyblackett.com/Animistic and use proSupport the showConnect with us on Facebook, Instagram and LinkedIn:@cofeeinthebarn
Send us a textIn this episode, Casey and Morgan take you inside the 2025 International Production & Processing Expo (IPPE) and recent pork industry trade shows to uncover key trends, challenges, and game-changing innovations.
Send us a textEpisode Summary:In this episode of Coffee in the Barn, we sit down with Jim Smith, a Senior Swine Nutritionist, Product Development Expert, and Technical Sales Leader with over 25 years of experience in the animal agriculture industry. Jim has played a pivotal role in launching innovative feeding solutions, leading technical sales teams, and mentoring the next generation of industry professionals. Now, he's taking on a new challenge as the host of Patio Ponderings, a podcast where he shares candid reflections on leadership, agriculture, and the industry's evolving challenges.Together, we dive into the raw and unfiltered realities of working in animal agriculture, including the mental fatigue that often goes unspoken, the pressures of career transitions, and the balancing act of maintaining resilience while staying true to ourselves.What You'll Learn in This Episode:✔️ The hidden toll of mental fatigue in agriculture and how to recognize it✔️ Why professionals in the industry often feel pressured to mask their struggles✔️ How Jim is redefining his career with the launch of Patio Ponderings✔️ The importance of authentic leadership and embracing career reinvention✔️ The role of Animistic in shaping the future of animal agriculture
In this episode, we are joined by Philiswa Makhaye, a traditional Zulu healer from South Africa. Initiated as a Sangoma at the age of 12, Philiswa has dedicated her life to ancestral communion, intergenerational healing and ancient earth-based spiritual wisdom.This conversation offers a rare glimpse into animistic spirituality, free from the limiting frameworks of non-animist worldviews. It continues a thread of enquiry explored in a recent episode with Dr Andy Letcher, who highlighted the animistic discourse as one of the most disruptive to the reductionist Western paradigm. Through Philiswa's insights, we delve into the deep relationality between the land, the ancestors and the healing traditions that have traversed across generations and cultures.Philiswa's presence at this year's Medicine Festival left a lasting impression, particularly during a powerful collective ceremony for peace, where wisdom keepers from around the world offered prayers from each cardinal direction. Her songful prayer, graciously recorded for this episode, is woven into the conversation - a gift to carry in your bones.For those who wish to experience the full, uninterrupted recording of Philiswa's prayer, it is uploaded on our patreon, available for all listeners. Additional meditations and resources are also available for those who wish to support the show. We have recently launched a free hour-long workshop on embodied deep ecology. Bookings have now opened to join us at Earth Medicine, our signature ceremonial retreat.Support the show
The game-changer! How to create your soul-aligned practise, which, as a truth-seeker is pivotal in unlocking your highest healing potential. This is the heart-centre of crafting a practise that's deeply aligned with your true essence, where your Reiki journey feels profoundly authentic. HERE is the link to our free community HERE is the link to the Shamanic Reiki Pathway wait-list You'll find me most @shamanicreikiuk on IG.
Send us a textIn this riveting episode of Coffee in the Barn, host Philip sits down with Niall McCann, a biologist, conservationist, and adventurer whose extraordinary life has been shaped by his passion for exploration and protecting the natural world. Niall shares compelling stories from his adventurous life and reflects on the lessons these experiences have taught him about resilience, leadership, and the human connection to nature. A Life of Adventure From an early age, Niall was captivated by the outdoors, sparking a lifelong pursuit of adventure. Over the years, he's faced some of the world's most challenging environments, from rowing across the Atlantic to navigating the Amazon rainforest. Each expedition taught him invaluable lessons about perseverance, teamwork, and adaptability. Through his vivid storytelling, Niall brings these experiences to life, reminding listeners of the power of stepping outside their comfort zones. Conservation at the Core Beyond his personal adventures, Niall's dedication to conservation is at the heart of his life's work. In the episode, he discusses the pressing environmental challenges we face and the innovative ways he has contributed to protecting endangered species and ecosystems. His perspective is equal parts sobering and hopeful, emphasizing that positive change is possible when individuals take action, no matter how small. Reflections on Leadership and Resilience Niall and Philip also delve into broader themes of leadership and resilience, with Niall offering unique insights gained from his time in extreme conditions. His philosophy centers on leading with humility, embracing challenges, and finding growth through adversity—qualities that resonate with both adventurers and everyday listeners. This episode is a call to reconnect with the natural world and an invitation to find purpose in both personal and collective challenges. Niall McCann's inspiring journey will leave you motivated to embrace adventure and take meaningful steps toward a better future. Looking for a way to express your unique personality and support your favorite podcast? Check out Buy Blackett—your go-to destination for hilarious, heartfelt, and stylish coffee mugs, apparel, and more! With every purchase, you're not only adding a little fun to your daily routine but also helping Coffee in the Barn continue to bring you the latest in agriculture and beyond.Visit www.buyblackett.com/Animistic and use proSupport the showConnect with us on Facebook, Instagram and LinkedIn:@cofeeinthebarn
In this episode, I explore the concept of animism—what it means historically and how it can be applied in today's world. Animism is the belief that nature is alive and infused with spirit, a perspective that can help us connect deeply with both our animal and human selves. By shifting our view of the world, we can honor our sensory, emotional, and just natures, living more harmoniously on this dynamic, living planet. Together, we'll delve into the foundational principles of shamanism, reflecting on what it means to see ourselves as part human and part animal. We'll also confront darkness—an integral, yet often misunderstood, aspect of the animistic worldview. I'll share insights into what darkness can teach us, its potential dangers, and how we can protect ourselves from its perils. Using tools like prayer, ritual, and herbs, we'll discuss ways to bring light into the dark spaces of life. I'll highlight three powerful solar herbs—Rosemary, Angelica, and Calendula—sharing their historical significance and my modern approaches to using them. Known for their warming, diffusive, and protective qualities, these herbs have long been associated with the sun's energy and are invaluable allies for navigating the unknown. Join me as we light our lanterns and journey together into the wisdom of the dark. ———— *KICKSTARTER*
Send us a textIn this episode of Coffee in the Barn, Katie Dotterer, a third-generation dairy farmer and language educator, joins Morgan Hart to discuss her unique journey from dairy farming to building cross-cultural understanding within the agricultural community. Katie shares how her experiences on the farm led her to identify and address the language and cultural gaps between English and Spanish speakers in agriculture. Now, she teaches Spanish for agricultural workers and English for non-native speakers, helping to create a more inclusive and effective workplace. Highlights from the Conversation: Creating Language Bridges in Agriculture: Katie describes her mission to bridge the language gap between English-speaking managers and Spanish-speaking workers, enhancing teamwork and efficiency on farms. Empowering Workers Through Language: Her courses not only teach language skills but also empower individuals to communicate and advocate for themselves, fostering a respectful and collaborative work environment. Importance of Understanding Cultural Differences: Katie highlights how cultural awareness can lead to better relationships, mutual respect, and increased productivity across agricultural teams. Language as a Tool for Respect and Inclusivity: By learning even a few phrases in another language, English speakers can show respect and appreciation, building camaraderie and stronger connections with Spanish-speaking colleagues. Future of Multilingual Agriculture: Katie envisions a future where agricultural operations prioritize bilingual education to create cohesive, supportive teams. Tune in to hear Katie's inspiring story and discover how language learning can foster a more inclusive and collaborative agricultural community. Looking for a way to express your unique personality and support your favorite podcast? Check out Buy Blackett—your go-to destination for hilarious, heartfelt, and stylish coffee mugs, apparel, and more! With every purchase, you're not only adding a little fun to your daily routine but also helping Coffee in the Barn continue to bring you the latest in agriculture and beyond.Visit www.buyblackett.com/Animistic and use proSupport the showConnect with us on Facebook, Instagram and LinkedIn:@cofeeinthebarn
Send us a textIn this episode of Coffee in the Barn, Morgan Hart sits down with Kourtney Talkington, a fifth-generation Kansas farmer, mother of four, and mindful eating advocate. Kourtney shares her powerful journey of overcoming body image challenges and finding a balanced approach to food and wellness that celebrates joy, family, and community. This episode dives into the importance of self-care, the unique family traditions Kourtney fosters, and her mission to help women embrace mindful eating, even amidst life's busy seasons. Pour yourself a cup, settle in, and enjoy this inspiring conversation. Key Takeaways Redefining Food and Self-Care Kourtney opens up about her personal journey with food, emphasizing that it's about more than nutrition—it's a source of connection, joy, and meaningful family moments. The Value of Community and Support During the Holidays Through her group coaching program, Savor the Season, Kourtney supports women in reducing holiday stress around food and fostering a sense of community. Mindful Eating for the Next Generation Kourtney discusses her efforts to raise her children with a positive relationship with food, involving them in family traditions that promote mindful eating. Opportunities in Rural America Her journey to build a custom nutrition internship in rural Kansas highlights the potential for impactful careers in agriculture, wherever you are. Small Steps in Self-Care for Busy Moms Kourtney encourages listeners to prioritize small, intentional moments of self-care, reinforcing that nourishing oneself benefits the entire family. Featured Segments Featured Segments Body Image and Early Challenges Timestamp: 0:01:35 Kourtney shares her early struggles with body image and eating disorders, and how this experience inspired her mission to promote a healthier, more joyful approach to food. Creating a Rural Internship Timestamp: 0:08:07 Kourtney discusses her journey to build a custom internship in her rural community, showing that meaningful opportunities exist outside of urban areas. Building Family Memories with Food Timestamp: 0:20:14 Kourtney highlights her unique family traditions, like picnic dinners in the back of the SUV and trampoline pizza nights, which help her children build a positive relationship with food. Notable Quotes "Food is about connection and celebration. It's not just about nutrition—it's about being present with family and building memories that last." "Without nourishing ourselves, we're doing a disservice to the people around us. We have to take time for self-care to truly show up for our families." "I thought I needed to leave rural life to make an impact, but putting myself out there showed me that opportunities are everywhere if you're willing to take that first step." Next Episode Tease: In our nLooking for a way to express your unique personality and support your favorite podcast? Check out Buy Blackett—your go-to destination for hilarious, heartfelt, and stylish coffee mugs, apparel, and more! With every purchase, you're not only adding a little fun to your daily routine but also helping Coffee in the Barn continue to bring you the latest in agriculture and beyond.Visit www.buyblackett.com/Animistic and use proSupport the showConnect with us on Facebook, Instagram and LinkedIn:@cofeeinthebarn
Send us a textIn this episode of Coffee in the Barn, Casey Bradley welcomes Dr. Christine Alvarado, a poultry scientist and food safety expert, for a deep dive into food safety, antimicrobial resistance (AMR), and the need for clear communication within the food industry. Dr. Alvarado shares insights on the importance of educating consumers with facts over soundbites, addressing the critical role of recalls, and debunking common misconceptions around food safety and AMR. She emphasizes the value of transparency with consumers, explains how recalls contribute positively to food quality assurance, and advocates for reintroducing agriculture education to strengthen public understanding of food safety. Highlights from the Conversation: Supporting Women in the Meat Industry Dr. Alvarado talks about her involvement in the Women in Meat Industry Network (WMIN), which provides mentorship and resources to support women's careers in the meat and poultry sectors. Understanding Antimicrobial Resistance in Food Safety Dr. Alvarado explains the complexities of AMR, how it naturally occurs, and why data-driven decisions in food production are essential to managing it responsibly. The Role of Recalls in Consumer Protection She clarifies that recalls can be a proactive part of quality assurance, ensuring products meet safety standards and protect consumers, contrary to negative perceptions. The Power of Transparency with Consumers Dr. Alvarado highlights the need for open, clear communication around food safety to build trust with consumers and combat misinformation. Bringing Agriculture Back to Education As a strong advocate for K-12 agriculture and home economics education, Dr. Alvarado believes these subjects are essential to improving food safety understanding and self-sufficiency in future generations. Tune into this insightful episode for a clearer understanding of food safety practices, consumer transparency, and the shared responsibility of producers and consumers in upholding quality and safety standards. Looking for a way to express your unique personality and support your favorite podcast? Check out Buy Blackett—your go-to destination for hilarious, heartfelt, and stylish coffee mugs, apparel, and more! With every purchase, you're not only adding a little fun to your daily routine but also helping Coffee in the Barn continue to bring you the latest in agriculture and beyond.Visit www.buyblackett.com/Animistic and use proSupport the showConnect with us on Facebook, Instagram and LinkedIn:@cofeeinthebarn
Book one-on-one story sessions hereRead this as an article, and share your thoughts hereLet's open with a story.Tiger Farming TermitesNeat rows of wood are crisscrossed to draw in delectable foragers, though truth be told, Tiger tastes termites in a pinch. Waiting. Crouched. Poised. Bored as the boards he's laid out, until an unconscious ungulate wanders warily, to nibble green blades. Tiger pounces, rolls, breaks the creature's soft neck. Crushes termites.The dying words of the aardvark are ‘Oh brethren bugs! Warn my kin.'When the feast has passed, Tiger grumbles for weeks, hungry.Are Stories Good or Bad?If we ask the question of whether a given story is good or bad, this binary approach quickly falls apart. For this exploration, let's use the word ‘story' in the broadest sense. This story could be an old myth that nourishes a people's relation with the land, or an old myth that pits people against others. It could be propaganda, put out by a political group or corporation to corral people into certain behaviors. A story could provoke racism, casting certain people in victor roles and others as villains. A story may cast us humans as masters of the Earth, with dominion over all others, or rather as newcomers to this wondrous place, and the most dependent of all the other beings who preceded us. Is there anything as powerful as a story? The stories that we take in determine our behavior, over our lifetimes and over generations. A story can be about everyday people from our own time and place, and the happenings in their lives may divert us from the difficulties in our own. The tale in a television series might capture the minds of millions, season after season, so much so that viewers know more about these fictional folks than they do about the historical figures upon whom they're based. For the minds and motivations of the historical figures are opaque, but those of the characters are transparent, allowing us, the viewers, to enter in, get a sense of who they are, and why they act as they do. Living StoriesIs a given story good or bad? Instead of a binary rubric—rooted in computing and notions of piety and sin, good and bad karma, or a scale of justice—I instead propose an animistic understanding. I'm sitting now by a pond where I often write these articles. I see old man's beard moss hanging on willow trees, and sword ferns with spores dotting their undersides. I feel the sun shining on my forehead, hands and chest. A mosquito lands on the moss, a raven steals eggs from another bird's nest. As the season goes on, this sun's cool light will increase in heat until I must retreat indoors in the full of the day. Are these things good or bad? The mosquitoes bad for me, but good for the birds who eat ki. The willow is beautiful to me, but is out-competing reeds and ferns around ki. The sun nourishes our entire planet, and yet can bring death-dealing heat. So let us drop this consideration of good or bad, and even a spectrum between them. Let's instead consider the willow, the raven, the sun, the mosquito, as beings with their own natures and wills, and their own intricate relationships with each other. Now, let's bring this allegory of an ecosystem to stories: their identities, their natures, and their relationships with other stories. As there are predatory creatures, there are predatory stories: propaganda that divides and conquers, setting kin against kin, fomenting nations into war. As a bear upturns a stone and digs up the larvae underneath, some stories cause people to enter the homes of others and take whatever they want. Those stories say, ‘They are lesser than you. You deserve this.' The bear doesn't need stories to do this, but somehow we humans do. Migrating StoriesA stream of water will gradually wear a trough into the land. That trough, given enough water and time, will become a canyon. So too with some stories who begin in an unassuming way, then grow and grow until they're wearing a canyon into minds and hearts of listeners. Consider the story of Christianity: a rabbi and his followers preached revolutionary love at a time of colonization and war. After his death, that story gradually spread from land to land, and as it did, it adapted to people's hearts and minds, or you could say they tamed it for their own purposes. The story appeared one way in eastern lands, another in the West, North, South, and indeed in every individual who came into contact with that story, be they believers or not. So too with the spread of Buddhism: from a man's teaching in northern India, it spread north into what's now called China, Tibet and Bhutan, south into India and Sri Lanka, east into Japan, and now in pockets throughout the world. In each place this story adapted to the landscape of minds, hearts and culture, just as moss will grow differently on an aldar or on an oak. Story SporesThere are stories that support empires. Empires arose in Europe, China, Japan, South America, United States, Germany, Italy, Rome, and Vijay Nagar, and elsewhere. Each had standing armies, central power, and stories to live by, which told them that they had a right to rule others, a right to expand, to take, to tax. Yet the stories within them had many different flavors in different times and places. Perhaps the stories justifying empire are like spores on the wind, finding purchase in different cultures and changing according to their host. Are spores good or bad?The old animistic view considers stories as beings. As people. Just as we're negotiating situations throughout our lives—setting terms, considering what kind of connection we want with this person or that person—so too let us consider our relationship with stories. Just as our relationship with human people is not fixed but shifting, so too is our relationship with stories. PromptsReflect on a story that migrated into your life from a different culture or background. How did it adapt to your inner landscape?Think about a story that supported or challenged an empire-like structure in your life (e.g. a restrictive relationship or community). How did this story challenge the old guard? Where did that story find strength?Explore a narrative that your business or industry promotes. How does this story interact with the broader cultural landscape?Reflect on how the marketing of a similar product varies between audiences. For example, how do you see different kinds of vehicles being marketed, or brands of ice cream? Which stories take root in which soil?Until the next,happy creating,Theo This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit storypaths.substack.com/subscribe
Website- http---www.brministry.org - App- http---get.theapp.co-725c-You cannot reach the world until you understand their worldview. Dr. Timothy Warner, missionary and bible college prof., shares about all the different worldviews and why it is important to understand where a person's mindset is coming from. -You won't always say what you believe, but you always live what you believe.-
Website- http---www.brministry.org - App- http---get.theapp.co-725c-You cannot reach the world until you understand their worldview. Dr. Timothy Warner, missionary and bible college prof., shares about all the different worldviews and why it is important to understand where a person's mindset is coming from. -You won't always say what you believe, but you always live what you believe.-
A new MP3 sermon from Biblical Restoration Ministries is now available on SermonAudio with the following details: Title: Worldview: Monistic, Pantheistic, Animistic, and Western Subtitle: Worldview Speaker: Timothy Warner Broadcaster: Biblical Restoration Ministries Event: Sunday Service Date: 5/9/2008 Length: 81 min.
Today our episode is all about finding ways to connect to each season. Why it is important to connect with each season, and different physical and spiritual ways to do so. I hope you enjoy this episode, love and light! --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/faewilde/message
Althaea Sebastiani is a spiritworker and religious educator whose work focuses on helping people navigate the realities of deep spiritual practice. Their work is punctuated by strong emphasis on doing the work and encourages learning through direct experience. A spirit-led witch with nearly 30 years' experience, their personal practice is land-based and devotional, focused on being responsive to the spirits of the land wherever their travels take them and doing right by the Gods Who have called them into Their service. In this chat we explore what animism is, how it relates to witchcraft, whether the gods from Earth would show up on other planets, and why the 'craft' part of witchcraft is so important! Find Althaea online: https://www.ladyalthaea.com/ Buy Alive with Spirits: https://amzn.to/4alH1qZ Sign up to Herbaria, the herbalism community by Rowan + Sage: https://school.rowanandsage.com/courses/herbaria?affcode=437598_3qokpyep Get your free guide to home protection the folklore way here: https://www.icysedgwick.com/fab-folklore/ Become a member of the Fabulous Folklore Family for bonus episodes and articles at https://patreon.com/bePatron?u=2380595 Fabulous Folklore Bookshop: https://uk.bookshop.org/shop/fabulous_folklore Enjoyed this episode and want to show your appreciation? Buy Icy a coffee to say 'thanks' at: https://ko-fi.com/icysedgwick Pre-recorded illustrated talks: https://ko-fi.com/icysedgwick/shop Request an episode: https://forms.gle/gqG7xQNLfbMg1mDv7 Get extra snippets of folklore on Instagram at https://instagram.com/icysedgwick 'Like' Fabulous Folklore on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/fabulousfolklore/ Find Icy on BlueSky: https://bsky.app/profile/icysedgwick.bsky.social Tweet Icy at https://twitter.com/IcySedgwick
This Earth Day, I'd like to honor the importance of our connection to the natural world by welcoming the insightful Derrick Jensen, an author and environmental activist whose work has profoundly influenced me from an early age. We explore the stark contrast between our knowledge of commercial jingles and movie stars versus our understanding of the stars in the sky and the edible plants in our own backyards. How has our relationship with nature changed so drastically over the centuries? And what does this mean for our souls and our future?Derrick paints a vivid picture of a world teeming with life, a stark contrast to the ecological devastation we witness today. Can we truly comprehend the rapid pace of loss that's occurring right before our eyes? We discuss the concept of addiction, not just in terms of substances, but in how we've become enslaved to technology and convenience. What are the implications of this enslavement for our planet and our very humanity?Join us as we grapple with these questions and consider the idea of communal decision-making. Could it be the key to balancing innovation with tradition, action with contemplation? And what might we learn from the Okanagan decision-making process that honors the perspectives of youth, elders, mothers, and fathers? Tune in to find out how we might navigate the complex relationship between our technological advancements and the natural world we seem to be drifting away from.Hailed as the philosopher poet of the environmental movement, Derrick Jensen is author of twenty-five books, including The Myth of Human Supremacy, Endgame and A Language Older Than Words. He holds a degree in creative writing from Eastern Washington University, a degree in mineral engineering physics from the Colorado School of Mines, and has taught at Eastern Washington University and Pelican Bay State Prison. He has packed university auditoriums, conferences, and bookstores across the nation, stirring them with revolutionary spirit.Books mentioned in this episode:A Language Older Than Words by Derrick JensenAll books mentioned on this podcast can be found at sometherapist.com/bookshop or by following the Amazon affiliate links provided here. Thank you for purchases that support the show!00:00 Start[00:02:37] The world we've forgotten.[00:05:07] Unimaginable abundance of wildlife.[00:08:10] Love story with the land.[00:14:27] Decline of Monarch Butterflies.[00:17:40] Appreciating the stars at night.[00:23:31] Nostalgia and envy.[00:24:55] Envy for lost species.[00:29:25] Communal decision making.[00:34:27] Technologies shaping social structures.[00:40:35] Trauma and warfare's impact.[00:43:28] Deal making with technology.[00:45:11] Addiction and enslavement concept[00:50:49] Animistic view of the universe.[00:53:30] The importance of perspective.[00:57:33] Racially discriminatory practices in healthcare.[01:04:25] Forgotten skills and cultural dynamics.[01:06:12] Connection to Earth through meditation.[01:10:26] Ecological grief.[01:14:18] The lost ecstasy experience.[01:20:28] The source of artistic inspiration.[01:25:17] Human connection through traditions.[01:26:53] The power of singing together.[01:30:53] Nature observation in rainforest.[01:34:41] The importance of boredom.[01:39:22] Making music in nature.[01:42:20] Greeting nature in new places.TALK TO ME: book a discovery call.LOCALS: Ask questions of me & guests; get early access to new episodes + exclusive content. Join my community.SUPPORT THE SHOW: subscribe, like, comment, & share or donate.DO NO HARM: join our community of concerned professionals.EIGHTSLEEP: Take $200 off your EightSleep Pod Pro Cover with code SOMETHERAPIST.ORGANIFI: Take 20% off Organifi with code SOMETHERAPIST.Watch NO WAY BACK: The Reality of Gender-Affirming Care. Use code SOMETHERAPIST to take 20% off your order. Follow us on X @2022affirmation or Instagram at @affirmationgeneration. SHOW NOTES & transcript with help from SwellAI.MUSIC: Thanks to Joey Pecoraro for our song, “Half Awake,” used with gratitude & permission. To support this show, please leave a rating & review on Apple, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts. Subscribe, like, comment & share via my YouTube channel. Or recommend this to a friend!Learn more about Do No Harm.Take $200 off your EightSleep Pod Pro Cover with code SOMETHERAPIST at EightSleep.com.Take 20% off all superfood beverages with code SOMETHERAPIST at Organifi.Check out my shop for book recommendations + wellness products.Show notes & transcript provided with the help of SwellAI.Special thanks to Joey Pecoraro for our theme song, “Half Awake,” used with gratitude and permission.Watch NO WAY BACK: The Reality of Gender-Affirming Care (our medical ethics documentary, formerly known as Affirmation Generation). Stream the film or purchase a DVD. Use code SOMETHERAPIST to take 20% off your order. Follow us on X @2022affirmation or Instagram at @affirmationgeneration.Have a question for me? Looking to go deeper and discuss these ideas with other listeners? Join my Locals community! Members get to ask questions I will respond to in exclusive, members-only livestreams, post questions for upcoming guests to answer, plus other perks TBD. ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★
@animisticbeliefs bring energy and innovation in equal measure whenever they serve up one of their electrifying sets or thrilling tunes. They are most at home when on stage cooking up captivating mixes of IDM, club music and drum & bass with smart infusions of influences from South East Asia and a sense of spiritualism that sees all things as equal. Their productions have come on labels like Cultivated Electronics and Pinkman and always push technical and emotional boundaries. The pair will be joining us at Dekmantel Festival 2024 in August and here offer up a teaser of what you might get: darkly involving moods, industrial textures and otherworldly timbres that are paired to a wide range of rhythms and tempos. There is a looseness to the set that keeps your body in constant motion while the details woven in between the beats keep your mind just as busy. From unusual instrumentation to foreign language vocals, this is an action-packed selection for peak-time dance floor fun.
Dr Saskia von Diest is the founder of Ecofluency, an organisation that offers consulting, teaching and facilitation in the science, art and practical magic of Nature communication worldwide. She has a PhD in plant pathology and has held two international collaborative postdoctoral fellowships to research intuitive farming. Ecofluency also promotes other human voices in the broader field of Nature communication, presenting multiple invitations into these deeper ways of knowing, for individual and collective transformation. Saskia has also trained in Family Constellations and in the Way of the Warrior Healer. Born during apartheid in a mixed-race family, she is committed to healing the internal, ancestral and socio-cultural damage that sexism, racism and privilege (white or class-based) causes in the world. Saskia is one of our special guests on our year-long slow study course Deepen Your Roots where she'll be joining us during the module ‘More-than-human kinship' where we'll explore:Animistic interspecies communicationBirdsong recognition and the myths and folktales carried in their wings and melodiesDeconstructing the dominant anthropocentric over-culture in the great unravelling of these timesDeep apprenticeship with furred, feathered, barked and budded onesDeepen Your Roots spans 13 moon cycles, weaving deep ecology, ‘the work that reconnects', and a folkloric, animistic exploration into the ecological self rewoven with place. It is an intergenerational calling into bioregional guardianship and the cultivation of profound belonging. Throughout the programme you will have the opportunity to explore and develop offerings to nourish your ecological-niche and bring your medicine forth into the world. Use the code DEEPEN10 at checkout for 10% off until Imbolc.And we are returning this summer with our gathering ANCESTRAL, where we embody the ancient ways of our indigenous ancestors - the ones who lived in full relationship with the landscapes - and through roundhouse councils, ceremonies and intimate village life, we access their wisdom and guidance for these turbulent times with new and ancient eyes. Explore our other gatherings and psilocybin retreats.Connect with us / gift your music.Music in this episode: Songs from Bonnie Medicine's latest album Wide Open (it's so beautiful).Support the show
Join Elyse & Leandra as they welcome Nathan M. Hall, Elyse's fellow columnist at the Wild Hunt and debut author of "Path of the Moonlit Hedge: Animistic Witchcraft". We're discussing animism, from the commodification of herbalism, to the partnership-based power dynamic of spirit work, to mushroom magic and the psychedelic revolution of today, to, of course, land spirits and the power of building relationships with them. Nathan M. Hall can be found as @moonlithedge on Instagram and his book can be purchased here.Join Leandra in The Rebel Mystic Community for LIVE rituals, group mentoring, and more. Get personal guidance from Leandra through Dark Mirror Coaching, Oracle Card Readings, and Spiritual Mentoring. And find the recordings from her summit there, as well. Click here for tickets to Elyse's next workshop, "To Cast a Circle: The Basics of Rituals, Spells, and Sacred Space".Access BONUS EPISODES of the Magick Kitchen Podcast + get several monthly rituals, meditations, and exclusive videos by joining at the Initiate tier or higher in Elyse's Magical Living Community. Start your free trial here: patreon.com/elysewellesJoin the newsletter: seekingnumina.comView courses here: patreon.com/elysewelles/shopAbout Your HostsHerbalist, Tea Witch, Shadow Witch, Occultist, Blogger & Author Leandra Witchwood has 25+ years of working knowledge in the Craft. Her training began with Ceremonial Magick evolving into a more organic free-form style of Witchcraft. Her work includes Magickal Herbalism, Tea Magick, Shadow Work, and Kitchen Witchery. Leandra also writes books on Witchcraft. Learn more at www.LeandraWitchwood.com or www.TheMagickKitchen.comElyse Welles is a Greek-Egyptian and American earth intuitive witch and author. An initiate of the eclectic Faery Tradition, her practice is centered on connections to land spirits and sacred places (numina). She is a monthly columnist for The Wild Hunt, & Witch Way Magazine. Learn more @seekingnumina on Instagram, and seekingnumina.comConnect with Leandra and Elyse in the Magick Kitchen Pantry: a free and paid community where you're invited to a library of Table Talk bonus episodes with us! Join through either of our private communities: The Rebel Mystic by Leandra Witchwood and Magickal Living with Elyse Welles. Follow Elyse @seekingnumina on Instagram and Facebook, and sign up for her newsletter, read her articles, and view her tours and retreats to Greece at seekingnumina.com. Follow Leandra @leandrawitchwood on Instagram, Facebook, and TikTok and find her blog and books at leandrawitchwood.com.Leave us a voicemail for a chance to be featured on an upcoming episode! https://www.speakpipe.com/TheMagickKitchenPodcast
Today we look at one of the main views within animistic practice. the belief that other than Humans are people with their own feelings and thoughts. We look at the sovereignty of personhood, that each being has the right to be treated with respect. We finally look at equity, how to be fair in realization what is fair within this viewpoint. Love and light! --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/faewilde/message
I attended Sophia's psychedelic psundsay psermon recently, on an actual Sunday in an actual church, in Asheville, NC. She may be an anthropologist, but she is no anthro-apologist, for this talk regarded “inter-species dialogues & plant consciousness.” & so we met up later that week to talk tardigrades, Jericho roses & the death & resurrection of words. To ponder prayer, spin recursive meme-o-spheres, encounter scary English angels in the polyglot-o-sphere & stand in “Uhhh” before the “awefullsome” in the realm of the sphere-its. We exchanged notes about what she calls “stacked spirit science” & we honored the ANTcestors with fancy-antsy words like “stigmergy” & “formication”. Even though all things that look/sound similar are connected, we managed to tell Huni Kuin from Loony Toons & Shipibo-Conibo from Evil-Knievel. We traced the riverine roots of the milk-mustached Drunk Monkey People's circuitous designs back to the anaconda choirs of their creation myth (scales for days). We sat, as if in ceremony, w the riddle of sickness & the serpent's place in amazonian&Asclepius' lore. Snake oil or serpent medicine? We weighed the value of dream-tending vs. analysis & as we wondered how to concoct a cure for loneliness I remembered the psycho-magical Dream Theatre I used to facilitate, where we would often transcend Joseph Conrad's maxim “we live as we dream—alone.” &just as Sophia & I considered questions that refuse to be answered & answers that refuse to be questioned, our pod-cast spell was interrupted by a phone-call from our friend comedian Shane Mauss. Sophia co-wrote the book When Plants Dream w Daniel Pinchbeck & has a bouncing baby blog on substack called NUMA. Find/follow Sophia: www.sophiarokhlin.com IG: @sophiarokhlin The Ungoogleable Michaelangelo www.theungoogleable.com IG: void_denizen patreon.com/voiddenizen -donate: Venmo (@voiddenizen) / paypal (snailconvention@gmail.com)
Katie Hemphill, author of We Are The Forest, talks with J about expanding the scope of our understanding through embodied living and collective healing. They discuss why Katie decided to study biomedical engineering, discovering yoga and marathon running, programming a cell, a problem/solution perspective, corporate jobs, grey areas in risk analysis of medical devices, meaning making in scientific process, nutrition science, optimizing connection, balanced containers, and questioning the stories that shape our reality. To subscribe and support the show… GET PREMIUM. Check out J's other podcast… J. BROWN YOGA THOUGHTS.
From the busyness of UK screen writer's rooms to the stillness of the Swedish forests. From mastering the story to serving the story. From performance to ceremony. From ego-centred to eco-centred. Zara Waldebäck's life, wisdom and thoughts on storytelling, resonance, relationship and attention are some of the many wonderful ingredients of this conversation. It developed and grew like a mycelial network of association and wonder, sprouting fascinating mushrooms to ponder, while pairing and playfully opposing the invisible and visible worlds in a dance of words. Find out more about Zara's projects https://www.writingwithsoul.org/ https://www.shamanism.dk/ https://www.asbacka.org/ Logo image: Hand drawn sketch of a maturing fungal colony from one volume of A.H.R. Buller's epic series Researches on Fungi (Buller, 1909-1934). Soundscapes: Kalimba Atmosphere from Pixabay and Frosty Wind – Nature Sounds by JuliusH from Pixabay. CONNECT WITH US https://www.intheborderlands.com/ SUPPORT US https://www.patreon.com/IntheBorderlands https://www.brittle.one/ https://smarturl.it/inanna REFERENCES Ramlila https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ramlila Ramayana https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ramayana Candomblé https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Candombl%C3%A9 Poetic Medicine: The Healing Art of Poem-Making by John Fox https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/203839.Poetic_Medicine The High Priestess Tarot card https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_High_Priestess Vladimir Propp https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vladimir_Propp Joseph Campbell https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joseph_Campbell Christopher Vogel https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christopher_Vogler Echo and Narcissus https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Echo_and_Narcissus Rasa (aesthetics) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rasa_(aesthetics)
In this episode I introduce Animate Lands, a live storytelling and music piece that recently showcased at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival.I introduce the Fianna and some of the old Celtic myths relating to them before sharing a Scottish story featuring the Old Grey Magician, a mysterious wizard type character in who appears in several old Celtic myths. This is a story you are unlikely to hear elsewhere............Dougie shares his summer adventures, including attending the Lithica Gathering in Norway, running a camp on the Scottish island of Egg, and participating in the Edinburgh Fringe Festival. The focus of the podcast is on Dougie's storytelling music show called Animate Lands, which explores the Birth of Ossian and the significance of deer stories in Celtic culture. The transcript highlights Dougie's passion for storytelling and his commitment to exploring the connections between folk culture, mythology, and the natural world.The second transcript delves into the evolution of Dougie's show Animate Lands, which combines storytelling and music. The show reflects on the loss of Animistic awareness in modern times and its impact on issues like climate change. A story from the show is shared, featuring the character of the Old Grey Magician and his apprentice, Donnran, who embarks on a transformative journey. The story draws parallels to figures like Merlin and the Dark Druid in Celtic mythology, showcasing the mystical nature of the Old Grey Magician.The third transcript explores the tale of the Magician in the context of Finn and Fianna. It highlights the originality and ancient roots of the story, rooted in Druidical stories and early Celtic culture. The importance of bees and the presence of a stag in the tale raise questions about their significance in ancient cultures. The transcript also mentions resources for further exploration of Fianna tales and the Finn cycle, as well as the Animate Lands show performed at the Edinburgh Fringe. Referenced in this episode are the following books:The Old Grey Magician, by George MacphersonOver 9 Waves, Mari HeaneyGods and Fighting Men, Lady GregoryFinn and the Fianna, Daniel AllisonAlso:If you're interested in participating in Myth as Medicine register interest via:https://sendfox.com/lp/m2gdw5Support the podcast by buying me a coffee via:https://ko-fi.com/dougiemackaystoryCheck out the Animate Lands teaser video:https://youtu.be/6PWu1LwawbI?si=cC3cPfLlzbSeU3qb
Website- http---www.brministry.org - App- http---get.theapp.co-725c-How can you help someone is lives in a animistic culture-- How does their culture and beliefs differ from our western mindset-- This Panel discussions is from 3 specialist and 1 guest missionary, Ruth Veltkamp, who share about helping, praying, and counseling those who live in fear. Animistic cultures experience curses, fear, overt occult activity and often a Power Encounter happens between Evil Spirits and God.--TimothyWarner -DeanHochstetler -ruthveltkamp -edmurphy--Chapters--0-00-00 - 0-09-00 - Animism Defined-0-09-01 - 0-09-58 - Speakers-0-09-59 - 0-14-47 - Dean Hochstetler-0-14-48 - 0-29-40 - Ruth Veltkamp-0-29-43 - 0-45-21 - Dean on Spirits-0-45-23 - 1-11-58 - Ed Murphy-1-11-59 - 1-17-18 - Summary
The Psychedelic Entrepreneur - Medicine for These Times with Beth Weinstein
Michelle Hawk (she/her) began practicing Shamanism in 2003. Her core lineages come from Hungarian and Celtic shamanism. A naturally gifted psychic and intuitive channel, Michelle's work with Alchemy, Shamanic energies and multiple certifications as a Master Healer allow her to offer the deepest level of transformational work. She mentors and trains practitioners in Ethical Shamanism, Alchemy and the healing arts, and helps people master their intuitive gifts and magical birthright. She is a host of the Shaman Sister Sessions podcast.In this episode Michelle Hawk and Beth Weinstein discuss…▶ Shamanic practitioner Michelle Hawk highlights the importance of respecting ancestral medicine and energetic healing in the psychedelic field▶ She highlights the limitations of the Western clinical therapeutic model and emphasizes the importance of emotional awareness in psychotherapy▶ Michelle warns against serving sacred plant medicines without a proper invitation and permission from the plants themselves▶ She believes that the quest for purpose is often externally motivated, and a true connection to the animistic worldview can provide a deeper sense of aliveness and meaning ▶ Despite initial rejection from peers and academia, Hawk surrendered to her true calling and expanded her practice to include shamanic healing and teaching▶ Hawk believes that everyone can serve in their zone of genius, advocating for spiritual practices to be infused into daily life▶ Michelle stresses on the importance of ethical shamanism and integrity in practice, acknowledging the potential for manipulation and harm▶ She emphasizes the importance of slowing down to allow purpose to come through, suggesting that psychedelics aren't a quick fix for a sense of a lack of purpose▶ She is reeducating and reframing people's relationship to shamanic practice, particularly in the US, where misconceptions are prevalentMichelle Hawk's Links & Resources▶ Website: https://michellehawk.com▶ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/michellehawk/▶ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/michelle.joy.hawk/▶ Free Shamanic Ritual Guide: Download at https://michellehawk.com
Lane Wilcken from Season 1 (2021) of Birdsong. Lane is a scholar, cultural tattoo practitioner, known as a mambabatok, and an advocate for the critically endangered practice of "batok" which are the cultural tattoos of the Philippines. He's studied many of the indigenous traditions of the Philippines and greater Pacific, with nearly three decades of research and experience. He's the author of "Filipino Tattoos Ancient to Modern" and "The Forgotten Children of Maui: Filipino Myths, Tattoos, and Rituals of a Demigod." He's also been a contributing writer to "Back from the Crocodile's Belly: Philippine Babaylan Studies and the Struggle for Indigenous Memory" and "Shamanic Transformations: True Stories of the Moment of Awakening," as well as several articles for various magazines and journals. In this conversation, we cover traditional cultural tattoo, animism, shamanism, mythology, origin stories, similarities between not just the Philippines, but many of the islands and cultures within and around the Pacific, cultural restoration, and several other threads that we stitch into the fabric of our dialogue. TIMESTAMPS: [3:35] Lane open the conversation with a Filipino prayer [6:25] How did Lane get started on this path? [7:30] The Philippines are a product of an admixture of peoples for over a millennia [8:15] Why did Lane feel so comfortable around Hawaiian culture? [9:15] The similarities between pre-contact Philippines culture and Polynesia [10:00] Lane's rite of passage into tattooing [18:20] Philippines: The Island of the Painted People [19:00] Ancient tattoo artifacts discovered roughly 4,000 years ago [19:45] The link between ancient tattooing and Chinese medicine / acupuncture points [21:20] Sacred geometry in tattoos and the potential link with psychedelic trips [21:56] Animistic relations and tattoo symbology [23:00] Filipino plant medicine and acacia?? [25:30] Animism and the understanding that everything has a spirit [26:00] Banyan trees and deification of the dead [26:35] Filipino afterlife beliefs [28:15] Filipino shamans (Babaylans) and ancestral rituals [31:36] Lanes grandmother as a Filipino healer [32:23] Lane discussing his “activation” of ancestral healing knowledge [35:00] Self-initiation as a response to the lack of connection with our ancestral roots [36:00] Was it predominantly the women who became the shamans? [37:47] The matriarchal thread throughout traditional Filipino culture [41:00] Women were considered spiritual portals into this world and the other [41:23] The story of the Babaylans being fed to the crocodiles [42:42] Headhunting traditions and eating part of the warrior as spiritual culture [44:00] Is there a link between symbology and practicality when it comes to shamanic canoe travel? [46:46] Cross-cultural pollination between seafaring Pacific cultures [49:33] The great debate of whether the Philippines is linked to South East Asia or Pacific Island [51:15] Mainland Asian culture vs Pacific culture [53:00] Linguistic similarities between traditional cultures [54:50] The sweet potato of the Philippines is of Native American origin [56:15] Did Maui, the Demigod, bring sweet potato to both the Philippines and New Zealand? [57:20] Laumuaig / Maui fishing up the islands [59:00] Tattoos as mnemonic devices that commemorate ancient mythology [1:00:36] For Filipinos, the Philippines is not our original homeland [1:01:30] The link between ancestral arrivings by bamboo tube and the symbolic feminine [1:05:10] Nurturing the soils of cultural restoration [1:15:38] The tribe known as the Dreamweavers [1:21:30] Cultural appropriation and rebuilding a visual vocabulary of entholinguistic groups of the Philippines [1:23:00] From pottery and textiles to tattoos on the skin [1:24:40] Receiving tattoo meanings through dreamtime realms [1:27:12] Lane gives thanks to close up the conversational container
Heather Grzych interviews author Rebecca Wildbear, on her book, Wild Yoga: A Practice of Initiation, Veneration & Advocacy for the Earth. Rebecca was a cancer survivor at a young age, and she explains why listening to the body is very similar to listening to Nature. She discusses why we need to embody the mysteries our dreams invite, and how to let dreams actually guide your life. Many different practices are mentioned, including specific yoga postures, journaling and a solo fast, in which the individual sleeps outdoors overnight while fasting. In this episode, Heather and Rebecca discuss: Why nature can feel scary sometimes Camping and backpacking alone Earth grief Receiving the love of trees Animistic perception Why climate change and environmental issues make people not want to have kids Why giving birth and becoming a mother is possibly the wildest yoga The importance of getting off your computer and going outside for a walk Why fasting and camping can both raise vata dosha Fasting indoors vs outdoors How having cancer impacts the way you appreciate nature Heather Grzych is the author of The Ayurvedic Guide to Fertility and the host of the Wisdom of the Body podcast. A board-certified Ayurvedic practitioner, she teaches the Regenerative Fertility Method to support future generations worldwide. Heather is on the board of directors for the National Ayurvedic Medical Association (NAMA) and has been a consultant for doctors, governments, and insurance companies. She offers virtual consultations and programs worldwide. www.heathergrzych.com Rebecca Wildbear is the author of Wild Yoga: A Practice of Initiation, Veneration & Advocacy for the Earth. She is also the creator of a yoga practice called Wild Yoga, which empowers individuals to tune in to the mysteries that live within the earth community, dreams, and their own wild nature so they may live a life of creative service. She has been leading Wild Yoga programs since 2007 and also guides nature and soul programs through Animas Valley Institute. www.rebeccawildbear.com Connect with Heather: Instagram.com/heathergrzych Facebook.com/grzychheather Read the first six pages of The Ayurvedic Guide to Fertility for FREE: https://www.heathergrzych.com Connect with Heather to balance your health for your fertility: https://www.heathergrzych.com/book-online This podcast is for educational and entertainment purposes only.
In deze aflevering is dirigent Manoj Kamps te gast. Manoj is een van de grootste talenten van deze tijd; werkte met De Nederlandse Opera, BBC Philharmonic en Asko|Schönberg. Hedendaagse muziek is voor hen erg belangrijk maar ook oude muziek speelt een grote rol; heeft Manoj voor Aniek & Job vooral nieuwe muziek meegebracht of ook wat ouds? Deze muziek hoor je in de aflevering: * Monteverdi - uit L'Orfeo: - Vi ricorda, o bosch'ombrosi (https://open.spotify.com/track/3Cop2dS8YfGAsAbHdQtj9h?si=e0fa8c940bcf4634) - Dove, ah, dove te'n vai (valerio …) (https://open.spotify.com/track/4FFUvADXT0JnWs54844tnV?si=582c2dfc5c054212) * Monteverdi - uit Vespro della Beata Vergine: - Faux-bourdon Domine ad adjuvandum me (https://open.spotify.com/track/7kpnMdWZA43vgsv57qbFPH?si=JOvigW4rTAm87kooy5LJzA) - Toccata et Domine ad adjuvandum me (https://open.spotify.com/track/3VR0Q2GCMt2jiSDCkuNNxF?si=3K_w-Fl7TBmoq8S2XRM44g) * Holly Herndon - Eternal (https://open.spotify.com/track/3SBhkamFAVooQtvDNz4ZJb?si=b6f10869f3124551%20) * Messiaen - François d'Assise (https://open.spotify.com/track/1QasTVt09ndkjCiGQzg0F5?si=71a252e586504580) * Olof Dreijer - Echoes from Mamori (https://open.spotify.com/track/3DrBZ2HFVJAgRsHynxYDwL?si=e6f1bfccb35a486d) * Rick van Veldhuizen - Unde imber et ignes deel 4: implicor corpore tuo (https://open.spotify.com/track/4Cplz5VUa1Zi0CNvEWw5L5?si=fdad41c498fc4af1) * Animistic beliefs - Untitled [Khi Minh Gâp Lai] (https://open.spotify.com/track/3drimkzZEtbh6WGMXjdzN6?si=57c2c1f9a96348dd%20) Alles over de Mengtafel (https://www.npoklassiek.nl/thema/de-mengtafel)
Today we begin with an aura cleansing meditation. We follow that up with a talk called the Politics of Christmas and the Animistic reasons why not. I follow that up with a talk on my favorite Christmas traditions. Love and light! --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/faewilde/message
Last week for many Christians was the first Sunday of Advent. At this time we gather together for Holiday parties and many around the world continue traditions their family, community, religious group, or country have had for many years or are starting new ones. Today I talk about the importance of traditions you can create for yourself within Animism such as laying out offering plates for your loved ones, planting a tree, or other ideas centered around your Animistic practice. We talk about why traditions are so important to each one of us and why we might be nostalgic for others. Love and light! --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/faewilde/message
Today we get to talk to Dr. Carla Ionescu again! Although not necessarily a Goddess themed episode, we are certain there were rituals and rites in both of these locations. Kelly is sure that at least some of the people that utilized these areas were Goddess worshippers, because there have always been Goddess worshippers. OK, it may be a stretch but she's always been fascinated by these structures. Listen anyway, you'll like it.
Today we open with the calling of the elements. then move into a pyramid of emotions meditation before I talk about my Animistic Faith. How I came to it. Before we close with the thanking of the elements. Love and Light! --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/faewilde/message
Hidden deep within our minds is the mysterious unconscious and from its deep well springs most of who you are. Your likes, dislikes, and indeed most of your personality all emanate from its imponderable depths. However recent advances in scientific research are helping us to better understand the unconscious and its influence upon us. We take a look at the neuroscience from a new angle and consider how magic is essential to your mind. We also hear the story of a German woman who meets and interacts with the elemental spirits of her home. Then in our Plus+ extension we dive into encounters with auric fish entities, haunted object battles and crystal shop espionage. Links Spellbound: Modern Science, Ancient Magic, and the Hidden Potential of the Unconscious Mind The Molecule of More: How a Single Chemical in Your Brain Drives Love, Sex, and Creativity Nature Spirits and What They Say: Messages from Elemental and Nature Beings Thoughts that Shine like Stars Check out the MU store here! Plus+ Extension The extension of the show is EXCLUSIVE to Plus+ members. To join, click HERE. Ghost Crystal Phenomena Mag Issue 157 Enlightenment Medicine Ceremony Crystal Healing & Power in the Great Southern Land Crystals, Elementals & Nature Spirits Fairys, Elementals, Crystals and Auras Bizarre Real Demon Traps Yoni Eggs: Dangerous? Your Ultimate Guide 'Dark force' and entity troubles — The real way to clear them Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Today we have a short episode where I talk about cultural appropriation and Animistic practice. Love and light! --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/faewilde/message
Green Dreamer: Sustainability and Regeneration From Ideas to Life
“An animistic worldview is one I think that is deeply embedded in relationality, exactly the kind we need at this moment of crisis. So far from it being a ‘primitive thing,' I think actually it can show us ways forward about how to be in the world, and how to be in the world with gratitude, knowledge, reciprocity.” In this episode, we welcome Andy Letcher, a Senior Lecturer at Schumacher College, Devon UK, where he runs the MA Engaged Ecology. He is the author of Shroom: A Cultural History of the Magic Mushroom and numerous papers and chapters about the nature of contemporary psychedelic experience. Some of the topics we explore in this conversation include different interpretations of ecology and how they influence our approaches to caring for the planet, how the animistic worldview offers guidance for our paths towards collective healing, what it means to root personal engagements with psychedelic medicines within deeper cultural changes, and more. (The musical offering featured in this episode is Power by India Blue. The episode-inspired artwork is by ) Support our in(ter)dependent show: GreenDreamer.com/support
Is animism a dirty word? How is this belief system interpreted by different cultures? I have no idea, but I sure as heck know my own slavic culture started as animistic! Where do Early Slavs fit on the animistic spectrum? For the sake of inclusivity, I unify all the Balkan Slaviic cultures and share a small portion of our folkore, our beliefs of inanimate objects possessing a soul, and the deliberate destruction of our true spiritual origins! WARNING: Our folklore is very fucked up. You will hear stories of women being walled into castles as a blood sacrifice, dead unbaptized infants haunting their own parents for not conforming to Christian propaganda, and even watermelons turning into vampires! ====================== Send us suggestions and comments to tracingowlspodcast@gmail.com Follow us on Instagram @tracingowls Intro sampled from "Something strange lurks in the shadows" by Francisco Sánchez (@fanchisanchez) Sound effects obtained from https://www.zapsplat.com ====================== FURTHER READING: The Legend of Rozafa Castle in Albania | Culture Trip Rozafa Castle | Wikipedia Early Slavs | Wikipedia Slavic paganism | Wikipedia Roots Revival: How Slavic Faith Returned to Poland | Culture.pl Slavic Native Faith | Wikipedia Vampire pumpkins and watermelons | Wikipedia Serbia The Birthplace of Vampires | Culture Trip Plakavac | Monstropedia Myling | Wikipedia Tiyanak | Wikipedia A History of Animism and Its Contemporary Examples The Survival of Animism in Russia – and Its Destruction in the West The Mystery of Bosnia's Ancient Pyramids | History Cyril and Methodius | Wikipedia Christianization of the Slavs | Wikipedia Christianization of Serbs
Zukeran, Patrick | Host of Evidence and Answers Broadcast Millions of people around the world believe in some form of Animism: spirits, forces, and multiple gods that interact with us on a daily basis. Why do people still believe the spirits of their dead ancestors still linger? Listen now as Pat explores this topic before a live audience.
Zukeran, Patrick | Host of Evidence and Answers Broadcast Millions of people around the world believe in some form of Animism: spirits, forces, and multiple gods that interact with us on a daily basis. Why do people still believe the spirits of their dead ancestors still linger? Listen now as Pat explores this topic before a live audience.
Zukeran, Patrick | Host of Evidence and Answers Broadcast Millions of people around the world believe in some form of Animism: spirits, forces, and multiple gods that interact with us on a daily basis. Why do people still believe the spirits of their dead ancestors still linger? Listen now as Pat explores this topic before a live audience.
Zukeran, Patrick | Host of Evidence and Answers Broadcast Millions of people around the world believe in some form of Animism: spirits, forces, and multiple gods that interact with us on a daily basis. Why do people still believe the spirits of their dead ancestors still linger? Listen now as Pat explores this topic before a live audience.
Welcome to our one year aniversary. Thanks for sticking by me for all this year. May we have another good one to come. Today we talk about moon magic and how to incorporate it into an Animistic practice. Love and light! --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/faewilde/message
Among tribal groups in East Asia, new believers in Christ can be forcibly removed from their homes and villages. Animistic tribesmen desire to please and appease the spirits they worship; those who come to faith in Jesus are seen as angering the spirits. However, those who follow Jesus are part of a new community as brothers and sisters come alongside to encourage one another amidst persecution. Matt and Linda are working with people from one of these tribes. They'll explain how the gospel is spreading and what Christian persecution looks like in that setting. Linda helps run a Sunday school program which is serving children from believing and unbelieving homes alike. Even parents who don't know Christ are encouraging their kids to go! Listen as Matt and Linda share the importance of teaching Bible stories in these tribal communities, and how younger generations point their parents toward the Lord. As villagers see the power of God and His love for them, hearts are touched and transformed. Pray for gospel workers in tribal communities in Asia, and for the safe distribution of God's Word into hostile areas and restricted nations in the region.
Among tribal groups in East Asia, new believers in Christ can be forcibly removed from their homes and villages. Animistic tribesmen desire to please and appease the spirits they worship; those who come to faith in Jesus are seen as angering the spirits. However, those who follow Jesus are part of a new community as brothers and sisters come alongside to encourage one another amidst persecution. Matt and Linda are working with people from one of these tribes. They'll explain how the gospel is spreading and what Christian persecution looks like in that setting. Linda helps run a Sunday school program which is serving children from believing and unbelieving homes alike. Even parents who don't know Christ are encouraging their kids to go! Listen as Matt and Linda share the importance of teaching Bible stories in these tribal communities, and how younger generations point their parents toward the Lord. As villagers see the power of God and His love for them, hearts are touched and transformed. Pray for gospel workers in tribal communities in Asia, and for the safe distribution of God's Word into hostile areas and restricted nations in the region. Never miss an episode of VOM Radio. Subscribe to the podcast.
People Group Details: https://joshuaproject.net/people_groups/12666 Listen to "A Third of Us" podcast with Greg Kelley, produced by the Alliance for the Unreached: https://alliancefortheunreached.org/podcast/ Watch "Stories of Courageous Christians" w/ Mark Kordic https://storiesofcourageouschristians.com/stories-of-courageous-christians
Across Africa, the church is undergoing attacks on its members and their meeting places. Yet despite the destruction, our Christian brothers and sisters exhibit an overwhelming joy in Christ. Sean Paton and Jeremy Malkin continue the conversation from last week on VOM's efforts to help our persecuted brothers in Burkina Faso, Benin, Sudan, and Mozambique. Listen as Jeremy and Sean share how Christians are responding to the persecution in these regions—and share encouraging stories of God's work in Africa during the past year. Animistic ideology and belief in the spirits of their ancestors is prevalent in Benin. Christianity is often seen as destroying that culture. New believers are rejecting the rituals and practices of animism and holding fast to their faith in Christ, and therefore being targeted. In Burkina Faso, thirteen churches were destroyed within a week last year by mobs who wanted to rid the area of Christianity. Yet our brothers and sisters gathered to worship the Lord amidst the destruction because of their hope in Him. Listen as Jeremy shares their stories and how we can pray for them. In Mozambique, there has been horrific persecution of Christians by Islamic extremist groups who have pledged allegiance to ISIS. This has forced many Christians to flee and VOM is helping to meet physical needs and spiritual hunger for God's Word. In Sudan, political tension continues to grow, which has given a window to provide spiritual encouragement and support to Christians through Bibles and other evangelistic resources. Pray for our brothers and sisters to be bold and courageous for Christ in Africa as they face animistic and Islamist persecution, and to be reminded that what men intend for evil, God can use for good
Across Africa, the church is undergoing attacks on its members and their meeting places. Yet despite the destruction, our Christian brothers and sisters exhibit an overwhelming joy in Christ. Sean Paton and Jeremy Malkin continue the conversation from last week on VOM's efforts to help our persecuted brothers in Burkina Faso, Benin, Sudan, and Mozambique. Listen as Jeremy and Sean share how Christians are responding to the persecution in these regions—and also share encouraging stories of God's work in Africa during the past year. Animistic ideology and belief in the spirits of their ancestors is prevalent in Benin. Christianity is often seen as destroying that culture. New believers are rejecting the rituals and practices of animism and holding fast to their faith in Christ, and therefore being targeted. In Burkina Faso, thirteen churches were destroyed within a week last year by mobs who wanted to rid the area of Christianity. Yet our brothers and sisters gathered to worship the Lord amidst the destruction because of their hope in Him. Listen as Jeremy shares their stories and how we can pray for them. In Mozambique, there has been horrific persecution of Christians by Islamic extremist groups who have pledged allegiance to ISIS. This has forced many Christians to flee, and VOM is helping to meet physical needs and spiritual hunger for God's Word. In Sudan, political tension continues to grow, which has given a window to provide spiritual encouragement and support to Christians through Bibles and other evangelistic resources. Pray for our brothers and sisters to be bold and courageous for Christ in Africa as they face animistic and Islamist persecution, and to be reminded that what men intend for evil, God can use for good. Never miss an episode of VOM Radio! Subscribe to the podcast.
Morning Devotions from an Animistic perspective --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/faewilde/message
People Group Details: htps://joshuaproject.net/people_groups/12640 Listen to "A Third of Us" podcast with Greg Kelley, produced by the Alliance for the Unreached: https://alliancefortheunreached.org/podcast/ Watch "Stories of Courageous Christians" w/ Mark Kordic https://storiesofcourageouschristians.com/stories-of-courageous-christians
People Group Details: Sign up to receive podcast: https://joshuaproject.net/people_groups/19568/PE Listen to "A Third of Us" podcast with Greg Kelley, produced by the Alliance for the Unreached: https://alliancefortheunreached.org/podcast/ Watch "Stories of Courageous Christians" w/ Mark Kordic https://storiesofcourageouschristians.com/stories-of-courageous-christians
In this episode, Luis dives into animism with Daniel Foor, Ph.D., a teacher of Earth and ancestor reverence, and author of Ancestral Medicine: Rituals for Personal and Family Healing. "[Animism] is a way to refer to a set of values that basically says living humans are just one kind of person in a much wider field of kinship, community, and other kinds of people. Those other kinds of people include the ancestors, the plants, the animals, deities, nature spirits, planets... you name it.""If we can't see other people, we can't really see them on a soul level, we're not going to be as useful to them. And there's going to be something that doesn't quite click. Making a study of the different forms and patterns and expressions of the sacred is important if you're going to be in a healing capacity, because you'll be more able to see people accurately.""Like any of the binaries we're being asked to disrupt, there's who we've been and there's who we are now. And it's not that we choose one over the other, but how do we bring all of what we are into the moment? And see the powers that are unifying, the earth that is beneath all of us, and the stars, the bigger frame that we're being held in. It's important to spend time resting in what's unifying, as well." To learn more about the Ancestral Lineage Healing online course, ancestor circles and the work of Daniel Foor, visit www.ancestralmedicine.org.
Join us for the International Day for the Unreached on May 23, 2021 #AThirdofUs https://athirdofus.com/ People Group Details: Sign up to receive podcast: https://joshuaproject.net/people_groups/18894/SO Listen to "A Third of Us" podcast with Greg Kelley, produced by the Alliance for the Unreached: https://alliancefortheunreached.org/podcast/ Watch "Stories of Courageous Christians" w/ Mark Kordic https://storiesofcourageouschristians.com/stories-of-courageous-christians
Foxx and DDO have a penetrative conversation about Living as a Trans Woman with Animism Worldview, the common tropes of transphobia, storytelling, the fox as a mythology of shapeshifter, and so much more. Foxx is a writer and multimedia creator from the Pacific Northwest with a passion for the literary, audio-visual, and movement arts. She is also a non-binary trans woman and a proud member of the queer community, a perspective that heavily influences the stories she tells. When she's not writing fiction, Foxx creates original scripted content for her YouTube Channel, 'FoxxTales', that looks at how mythology and storytelling impact our daily lives. She also collaborates with artists around the world as a project coordinator, voice actor, and story editor.Bio for yoU! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
We talk about my journey into spirituality with Animistic practice. Then we get into things I'd like to do with the podcast. Gods bless. Love and light, and blessed be. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/faewilde/message
People Group Summary Sign up to receive podcast: https://joshuaproject.net/people_groups/11029 Listen to the "Gateway to the Unreached" with Greg Kelley, produced by the Alliance for the Unreached: https://alliancefortheunreached.org/podcast/ Watch "Stories of Courageous Christians" w/ Mark Kordic https://storiesofcourageouschristians.com/stories-of-courageous-christians God's Best to You!
António BolotaBenguela, Angola, 1962. Vive e trabalha em Lisboa.António Bolota começou a expor em meados dos anos 90, trazendo para o universo artístico saberes oriundos da Engenharia, área onde radica a sua formação. Um conjunto de conhecimentos técnicos são convocados na criação de esculturas que se confrontam com o espaço para onde são construídos ou que se fundem com a própria arquitetura. Em 2008 concluiu o Curso Avançado no Ar.Co – Centro de Arte e Comunicação Visual. Mora e trabalha em Lisboa.Uma seleção das suas exposições individuais de António Bolota inclui galerias e espaços como: Travessa da Ermida, Lisboa (2020), Fundação Carmona e Costa, Lisboa (2019), Galeria Quadrum, Lisboa (2019), Galeria Vera Cortês, Lisboa (2016), Appleton Square, Lisboa (2016), Galeria Quadrado Azul, Lisboa e Porto (2014/2012/2010) e Pavilhão Branco, Lisboa (2010); Fórum Eugénio de Almeida, Évora (2016) e Ermida de Guadalupe, Vila do Bispo (2010). Das exposições coletivas em que participou destacam-se: Black Box: Potlatch, curadoria de Julião Sarmento, Museu do Caramulo, Portugal (2019), Escala 1:1. 21 artistas contemporáneos portugueses, Tabacalera, Madrid (2018), Cosmic, Sonic, Animistic, CIAJG Centro Internacional das Artes José de Guimarães (2017), Sala dos Gessos, Museu da Electricidade (2016), Canal Caveira, Cordoaria Nacional (2015), Ar Sólido (2015) e António Filipe, Parkour (2013), Lisboa; LandArt, Cascais (2014), Como Proteger-se do Tigre, 16ª Bienal de Cerveira, Vila Nova de Cerveira (2011), Estados Gerais, Artecontempo (2009) e Telhado, Interpress (2006), Lisboa. Em 2009 foi nomeado para o Prémio edp Novos Artistas.É representado pela Galeria Vera Cortês em LisboaSara Antónia MatosNasceu em Lisboa (1978), cidade onde vive e trabalha. Directora do Atelier-Museu Júlio Pomar da EGEAC, desde 2012, tendo acumulado também a direcção e programação das Galerias Municipais de Lisboa desde Janeiro de 2017 a Março de 2019. No Atelier-Museu é responsável pela concepção e projecto de abertura do museu, definindo a programação e implantando o seu projecto artístico e executivo, um serviço educativo e um projecto editorial em parceria com a editora Sistema Solar – Documenta. Nas Galerias Municipais fez a reorganização da orgânica, em estreita articulação com a tutela, e a definição das linhas estratégicas de programação para o conjunto das 5 Galerias Municipais tendo em conta a noção de serviço público, as características e potencialidades de cada espaço, bem como as necessidades e expectativas do tecido artístico nacional. Esteve à frente do projecto de remodelação da Galeria Quadrum, que devolveu ao espaço expositivo a transparência arquitectónica e a amplitude que lhe eram características. Implantou um projecto editorial transversal e comum à orgânica bem como o site das Galerias Municipais, não apenas com uma vertente de divulgação mas como um arquivo de memória das actividades e exposições.Presentemente faz parte da Comissão Instaladora do Banco de Arte Contemporânea – BAC, um projecto de espólios documentais e artísticos de arte contemporânea, da EGEAC-CML, numa parceria estabelecida com a Fundação Carmona e Costa e o IHA da FCSH da Univ. Nova de Lisboa, Lisboa.É formada em Escultura na Faculdade de Belas-Artes da Universidade de Lisboa, Mestre em Estudos Curatoriais e Doutorada com a tese “Da Escultura à Espacialidade” na mesma Universidade.É curadora desde 2006 tendo apresentado exposições em várias instituições, desde o CAM da FCG, FCC, Museu Berardo, MACE, etc. Publica regularmente ensaios sobre arte, em catálogos e revistas da especialidade e é coordenadora da colecção Cadernos do Atelier-Museu Júlio Pomar. Foi docente convidada da Faculdade de Belas Artes da Univ. de Lisboa e coordenadora do Curso de Escultura do Ar.Co.Linkshttps://antoniobolota.com/https://www.veracortes.com/artists/antonio-bolota/workshttp://www.missdove.org/2016/05/antonio-bolota-at-appleton-square.htmlhttps://www.sabado.pt/gps/detalhe/um-poema-ao-espaco-branco-na-galeria-appleton-squarehttps://contemporanea.pt/edicoes/03-04-2019/antonio-bolota-assentamentohttps://www.photodocumenta.pt/antoniobolota-marcopires/https://institutodehistoriadaarte.wordpress.com/sara-antonia-matos/https://www.ateliermuseujuliopomar.pt/html/textos/textos/pdfs/Entrevista_JoseMarmeleira_a_SAM.pdfhttps://observador.pt/2018/05/23/sara-antonia-matos-julio-pomar-olhava-para-a-frente-e-nunca-para-o-passado/https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s2SFd9zIi1Ahttps://www.facebook.com/watch/?v=631993464094004https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f1WiObVFHrsEpisódio gravado dia 09 de Dezembro 2020http://www.appleton.ptMecenas Appleton: HCI / ColecçãoMaria e Armando CabralCom o apoio da Câmara Municipal deLisboa - Fundo de Emergência Nacional - Cultura
BALFA - Tu Ansiedad Como Receta MAKOSSA & MEGABLAST - Kunuaka (Booka Shade Remix) DEMETRIUS - Keep Going (Joyce Muniz Remix) COSTELLO - Hyperstition FRANK SONIC - Planetarium DAPHNI - If RHYS FULBER - Konsum ANTARES MATES - movimento 2 (Chevel Remix) ANIMISTIC BELIEFS - Reflection of a Language ANIMISTIC BELIEFS - Margiela Face Mask ANIMISTIC BELIEFS - Digitone_X005 ANIMISTIC BELIEFS - Dream Journal [Excerpt 57] THE HACKER - Open (1999)
People Group Summary https://joshuaproject.net/people_groups/18443/CH Listen to the "Gateway to the Unreached" with Greg Kelley, produced by the Alliance for the Unreached: https://alliancefortheunreached.org/podcast/
Lane Wilcken is a scholar, cultural tattoo practitioner, known as a mambabatok, and an advocate for the critically endangered practice of "batok" which are the cultural tattoos of the Philippines.He’s studied many of the indigenous traditions of the Philippines and greater Pacific, with nearly three decades of research and experience. He’s the author of "Filipino Tattoos Ancient to Modern" & "The Forgotten Children of Maui: Filipino Myths, Tattoos, and Rituals of a Demigod" and contributed to "Back from the Crocodile's Belly: Philippine Babaylan Studies and the Struggle for Indigenous Memory" and "Shamanic Transformations: True Stories of the Moment of Awakening." Please support our journey into the sacred ways….Check out the Patreon pageLeave us a review on iTunesFull Resources & LinksTIMESTAMPS:[3:35] Lane opens the conversation with a Filipino prayer[6:25] How did Lane get started on this path?[7:30] The Philippines are a product of an admixture of peoples for over a millennia[8:15] Why did Lane feel so comfortable around Hawaiian culture?[10:00] Lane’s rite of passage into tattooing with his fathers dying wish[18:20] Philippines: The Island of the Painted People[19:00] Ancient tattoo artifacts discovered roughly 4,000 years ago[19:45] The link between ancient tattooing and Chinese medicine / acupuncture points[21:20] Sacred geometry in tattoos and the potential link with psychedelic trips[21:56] Animistic relations and tattoo symbology[23:00] Filipino plant medicine and acacia??[25:30] Animism and the understanding that everything has a spirit[26:00] Banyan trees and deification of the dead[26:35] Filipino afterlife beliefs {28:15] Filipino shamans (Babaylans) and ancestral rituals[31:36] Lanes grandmother as a Filipino healer[32:23] Lane discussing his “activation” of ancestral healing knowledge[35:00] Self-initiation as a response to the lack of connection with our ancestral roots[36:00] Was it predominantly the women who became the shamans?[37:47] The matriarchal thread throughout traditional Filipino culture[41:00] Women were considered spiritual portals into this world and the other[41:23] The story of the Babaylans being fed to the crocodiles[42:42] Headhunting traditions and eating part of the warrior as spiritual culture[44:00] Is there a link between symbology and practicality when it comes to shamanic canoe travel to the underworld and otherworlds?[46:46] Cross-cultural pollination between seafaring Pacific cultures[49:33] The great debate of whether the Philippines is linked to South East Asia or Pacific Island[51:15] Mainland Asian culture vs Pacific culture[53:00] Linguistic similarities between traditional cultures[54:50] The sweet potato of the Philippines is of Native American origin[56:15] Did Maui, the Demigod, bring sweet potato to both the Philippines and New Zealand?[57:20] Laumuaig / Maui fishing up the islands[59:00] Tattoos as mnemonic devices that commemorate ancient mythology[1:01:30] The link between ancestral arrivings by bamboo tube and the symbolic feminine[1:05:10] Nurturing the soils of cultural restoration[1:15:38] The tribe known as the Dreamweavers[1:21:30] Cultural appropriation and rebuilding a visual vocabulary of entholinguistic groups of the Philippines[1:23:00] From pottery and textiles to tattoos on the skin[1:24:40] Receiving tattoo meanings
People Group Summary: https://joshuaproject.net/people_groups/20292/ID Listen to the "Gateway to the Unreached" with Greg Kelley, produced by the Alliance for the Unreached: https://alliancefortheunreached.org/podcast/
People Group Summary https://joshuaproject.net/people_groups/20293/ID International Day for the Unreached SPECIAL 90-minute Webcast "Gateway to the Unreached": Be inspired. Be challenged. God is at work bringing the gospel to the unreached. Webcast available now: https://alliancefortheunreached.org/ Listen to the "Gateway to the Unreached" podcast with Greg Kelley, produced by the Alliance for the Unreached: https://alliancefortheunreached.org/podcast/
A Special issue of the 3world Podcast looking at some of the Shamanistic and Animistic elements to the current Corona Virus Pandemic (March 2020)
Part of a two part series. Millions of people around the world believe in some form of Animism: spirits, forces, and multiple gods that interact with us on a daily basis. Why do people still believe the spirits of their dead ancestors still linger? Listen now as Pat explores this topic before a live audience.Read the postEpisode 180 – Animism: The Animistic Worldview Part 2
Part of a two part series. Millions of people around the world believe in some form of Animism: spirits, forces, and multiple gods that interact with us on a daily basis. Why do people still believe the spirits of their dead ancestors still linger? Listen now as Pat explores this topic before a live audience.Read the postEpisode 180 – Animism: The Animistic Worldview Part 2
Part of a two part series. Millions of people around the world believe in some form of Animism: spirits, forces, and multiple gods that interact with us on a daily basis. Why do people still believe the spirits of their dead ancestors still linger? Listen now as Pat explores this topic before a live audience.Read the postEpisode 179 – Animism: The Animistic Worldview Part 1
Part of a two part series. Millions of people around the world believe in some form of Animism: spirits, forces, and multiple gods that interact with us on a daily basis. Why do people still believe the spirits of their dead ancestors still linger? Listen now as Pat explores this topic before a live audience.Read the postEpisode 179 – Animism: The Animistic Worldview Part 1
BALFA - Tu Ansiedad Como Receta MAKOSSA & MEGABLAST - Kunuaka (Booka Shade Remix) DEMETRIUS - Keep Going (Joyce Muniz Remix) COSTELLO - Hyperstition FRANK SONIC - Planetarium DAPHNI - If RHYS FULBER - Konsum ANTARES MATES - movimento 2 (Chevel Remix) ANIMISTIC BELIEFS - Reflection of a Language ANIMISTIC BELIEFS - Margiela Face Mask ANIMISTIC BELIEFS - Digitone_X005 ANIMISTIC BELIEFS - Dream Journal [Excerpt 57] THE HACKER - Open (1999)
with Matthew Wood, Herbal homeopathic wizard, animator of the doctrine of signatures… that we humans may have the manners of approaching the world with informed reverent curiosity, and re-joining the Choreography of Creation “…medicine, to be holistic and curative, must include mythic elements to satisfy the soul and spirit.” – Matthew Wood https://www.matthewwoodinstituteofherbalism.com/ http://matthewwoodherbs.com/Mattwood.html Support The Visionary Activist Show on Patreon for weekly Chart & Themes ($4/month) and more… *Woof*Woof*Wanna*Play?!?* The post The Visionary Activist Show – Dark of Animistic Kinship Beltane Sympathetic Magic Moon appeared first on KPFA.
Q&A episode this week! Animistic explorations of what happens when physical forms change or die, the best kitty litter, and whether animism is pagan. (Thank you for your patience with some sound issues this week.)
***About This Episode**** The term ‘right relationship’ can immediately bring to mind warm fuzzies, and all is well with the world. But that’s not the case. Right relationship is about stepping out of your comfort zone, finding more courage that you thought you ever possessed and possibly going against the norms of family, friends and the prevalent culture. On this episode we are raising a sensitive and controversial subject. There can be a hesitancy to bring this topic up, because of the strong emotions, opinions and moral convictions attached to it. The reason behind this episode is so a door to conversation can be opened and we can take advantage of opportunities for both listening and learning. We need to be willing to become aware of our own triggers and sensitivities around this uncomfortable topic because not everything is what it seems to be. Guest Nicholas Haney joins us in talking about the ethics of animistic hunting. Nick has worn a lot of hats over the years. In addition to being a writer, and an author; he is also a blacksmith, a hunter, and a student of anthropology. He has been a hunter for almost fifteen years, and has six novels published to date. *Errata - In this interview, Nicholas mistakenly linked Chronic Wasting Disease, and Epizootic Hemorrhagic Disease. The symptoms of each are different, but both are usually fatal and tragic. See the episode resources for more information about these diseases. *** Episode Resources**** Nick’s Blog The Thought Forge https://fireiceandsteel.wordpress.com/author/fireiceandsteel/ Wired to Hunt, with Randy Newberg http://wiredtohunt.com/2015/09/17/wired-to-hunt-podcast-72-randy-newberg-conservation-politics-and-hunter-ethics/ Chronic Wasting Disease: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chronic_wasting_disease Epizootic Hemorrhagic Disease: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Epizootic_hemorrhagic_disease ***Support This Podcast*** If this podcast has inspired or informed you or expanded possibilities in your world, a contribution would be a deeply appreciated way to show your support. You can make a one time payment of any amount or make a monthly subscription. Thank you! Your contribution makes my work sustainable. - janetroper.com/make-a-contribution/ ***About Host Janet Roper*** 1. Podcast: #EverydayAnimism - anchor.fm/everydayanimism 2. Infographic 6 Steps To Reawaken Right Relationship bit.ly/InfographicRightRelationship 3. 5 Animal Communication Tips - bit.ly/5AnimalCommunicationTips 4. Join me on Facebook - bit.ly/FacebookJanetRoper 5. Join me on Instagram - www.instagram.com/janetroper/
The podcast for Indelible, a documentary in progress for the week of September 22, 2018. In this quasi-video podcast, (it has hidden images…), the method used to construct a controversial history is discussed. It has become clear through the research phase of this documentary project that recording a history using traditional techniques can only be… Continue Reading The post Constructing an Animistic History: Voice, Relation of Place and Being appeared first on Marta Lyall | n+Fold.
This week we discuss various ways to observe the midpoint in the season, ranging from our regional awareness to personal and symbolic levels.
Q&A this week! Hear our thoughts on being an animist while also being a Christian, trusting your intuition, and reconciling multiple points of agency within Self, particularly with regard to soul and body as individuals unto themselves.
The week we discuss the complicated nature of our modern relationship with food and the source(s) of our food, including exploration of blessings and death work before eating, realistic mindfulness of sourcing, and opportunity (responsibility?) to reframe advocacy for two of our biggest life givers, water and air.
The cohosts discuss the upcoming summer solstice (2018 is June 21st at 6:07 am EST in Northern Hemisphere) and how each experience the seasonal change in animistic ways. If you're looking for ways to understand this event and also observe, several options are offered. Blessed Solstice to listeners in all hemispheres, winter or summer! References: 6 things to know about the longest day of the year (Vox) Ep 25 of What in the Wyrd - “Summer Solstice” Summer Solstice - Wikipedia
Is it possible to heal trauma in our personal and family lives by connecting with our well, deceased ancestors? Well... Provided you possess a beginner’s mindset equipped with the right animistic framework, my guest today, Dr. Daniel Foor of AncestralMedicine.org, would say yes—you absolutely can. This week, Daniel and I delve into practical animism: where ritual and ceremony are used as tools for personal, family, and cultural healing. A few months ago I was surprised to receive an early copy of Daniel's magnum opus, aptly titled Ancestral Medicine: Rituals for Personal and Family Healing. Since then, I've probably recommended Daniel's book to nearly all my closest rewilding friends. Why? Partly because trauma—and ways we heal from trauma—was central to many of the topics shared at this year's first annual North American Rewilding Conference. It’s also worth mentioning that Daniel’s work was brought up several times throughout the two-and-a-half-day experience. So, without further adieu: In today's episode, you'll learn... How our well and unwell ancestors influence the living and non-living; How directly speaking with the spirits and other-than-humans can break centuries of colonialism, patriarchy, and scientism; How practical animism directly enriches our day-to-day relationships; and... Much, much more.
Laura and Dr. Bob inside the head of Lady Liberty Caroline, returned from Egypt, welcomes the return of her new ancient allies, Laura Cortner and Dr. Bob Hieronomous – that we may play Liberty goddess, obelisk, odalisque, Egypt, (real) Isis, Washington DC – imminent climate march…. The Secret Life of Lady Liberty: Goddess in the New World (by Dr. Bob Hieronimus and Laura Cortner), available at: secretlifeofladyliberty.com amazon.com & barnesandnoble.com The post The Visionary Activist Show – Animistic Activism- Everything's Alive New Moon Radio! appeared first on KPFA.
This week i am so excited to bring you another episode on the topic on animism.We explore none other than the Evenki people of northern Asia. They are a facsinating look at Animism in play. So we take a lot of the topics we talked about last episode and look at how it applies to the Evenki people."Everything you hear about shamanism, well... The Evenks have it in abundance" - Damon SmithThere is a lot in this episode specifically on the Evenks and their Shamanism aswell. Animistic peoples are mistreated to the extreme. The Evenks had to endure tremendous hardships at the hands of invaders. Its especially interesting to see how cunning the Evenks were in evading the Christian forces for as long as possible. All of this and more is covered in this weeks episode of the Woven Energy podcast on ShamanismThings covered in this episodeA close look at the Evenki people, reindeers, their Shamanism and AnimismThe word 'Shaman' and where it comes fromHow Animism moves from being a hook into the natural world towards faith and beliefHierarchy and what this means in animistic societies
Daniel, Jack Graham, and Kit Power discuss the 2016 American presidential election, and what Donald Trump means for the world. Main Topic: The 2016 Election. Wrists. Fine. Clever. Remembrance. Catastrophe. Climate. Break. Pattern. Discovery. Savage. Memory. Map. Literally. Traits. Electorate. Popular. Godwin. Levity. Nazis. Rules. Material. Brownshirts. Movement. TV. Klan. Irrelevant. Disagree. Wolf. Shoulders. Scared. Shorthand. Toggle. Tipping. Ascension. Unusual. Superficial. Stability. Wind. Atwater. Dogwhistle. Able. Brexit. Chocolate. Establishment. "Intellectual." Mail. Ageist. Vulnerable. Shit. Neoliberalism. Leash. Numbers. Emails. Movement. Clooney. Black. Comprimised. System. Intentions. Bernie. Change. Jew. Lives. Marxist. Privilege. Education. Polls. Lawsuits. Ivanka. Animistic. Statistics. Silver. Yuge. Coverage. Table. Fox. Michigan. Factors. Suppression. Arrival. Notice. Incarceration. Slow-motion. 13th. America. Phenomenon. Hope. Sunshine. Safety-pin. Decency. Parent. Gesture. Virtue-signal. Social. Symbolism. Engage. Sandbox. Daleks. Feminism. Margin-of-error. Anonymous. Passports. Realpolitik. Godfather. Sympathy. Ratings. Conversations. Pence. Standard. Capital. Policy. Seriously. FTN. Deniability. Gas. Liminal. Psychology. Analysis. Seriously. Milo. Tone. Trolls. Positionality. We. Decency. Notice. Banned. Women. Photoshop. Attention. Helping. Apprentice. Entertaining. Thompson. L&O. Eastwood. Benghazi. Equivalence. Brush. Jackson. Hoover. Wall. First. BLM. Arc. Headline. Thatcher. Populist. Incoherence. Moving. Pollyanna. Coalition. 2008. Mess. Job-creators. Dick-Guillotines. Wrap-up.
Transcript -- The Mi'kmaq people have lived in Newfoundland for generations
The Mi'kmaq people have lived in Newfoundland for generations
Transcript -- The Mi'kmaq people have lived in Newfoundland for generations
The Mi'kmaq people have lived in Newfoundland for generations
We chat with the Mythic Folk Musician and Druid, Damh the Bard This is our first interview and we are lucky to be able to interview the famous Celtic Folk musician, Damh the Bard, and his wife, the multi-talented Artist Cerri Lee. Links to their websites and their work can be found below in the Show-notes. We also bring you an amazing competition for Damh's latest album, Tales from the Cowman as well as some astounding news about the revival of a national tradition in Ireland - the Festival of the Fires taking place on Beltane. Full Show-notes, with all credits, can be found on our main Website at http://celticmythpodshow.com/bardinterview Running Order: Intro 0:42 News & Views 1:25 The Festival of the Fires 1:58 Twa Corbies by Damh the Bard 04:15 Damh the Bard Interview 7:54 Blodeuwedd by Damh the Bard 29:24 The Cauldron Born by Damh the Bard 45:51 Pagan Spirit Gathering 1:02:19 Cerri Lee 1:05:48 Grimspound by Damh the Bard 1:17:57 Competition 1:23:00 Spirit of Albion by Damh the Bard 1:24:19 Out-takes 1:28:44 We hope you enjoy it! Gary & Ruthie x x x Released: 30th April 2010, 1h 31m It's always great to hear from you! Email garyandruth@celticmythpodshow.com, or leave us a message using Speakpipe The Festival of the Fires Our fabulous news item introduces the Festival of Fires which is a resuscitation of the ancient fires of Tara that were lit on the Hill of Uisneach and the taken from County to County to ignite all of the fires in Ireland. Originally known as Bealtaine, the summertime festival was an important fixture on the worldwide calendar, attracting attendees from the four corners of the ancient world. Having not being officially celebrated in hundreds of years the festival is to return, rising from the ashes of the Bealtaine name as Festival of the Fires. It promises to be an event unlike anything ever witnessed in modern times - an iconic national celebration to truly ignite the summer. Created through the alchemy of ceremony, heritage, music, theatre, literature, arts, crafts, poetry, holistic health and sustainability. Festival of the Fires will feature the collective talents of hundreds of participants drawn from all over Ireland and the world, gathering at the exact centre-point of Ireland to celebrate the onset of summer. One of the ceremonial highlights of the festival will be the lighting of a national fire, ignited first on the summit of Uisneach and then carried to hilltops in every one of Ireland's 32 counties. In ancient times, this sacred Uisneach fire was the catalyst for coast-to-coast celebrations with festivals and gatherings taking place in the fire sites, and in the communities below. You can find out more about the festival on the website at http://festivalofthefires.com/. Twa Corbies by Damh the Bard A classic folk track, the Twa Corbies or 'two crows', given the Damh the Bard magical treatment for the new Crowman album. Damh the Bard Interview (Pronounced 'Dave') Damh is a musical storyteller who works within the world of myth that cannot be proved; where the Faerie really do dance on Midsummer's Eve, where the trees talk, and the Hollow Hills take you into the realms of Annwn. Where the Goddess rides her horse, guiding you to magic, and the Horned God of old calls us from the shadows of the Greenwood. [source] Damh is also the relaxed voice behind Druidcast, the podcast from the Order of Bards, Ovates and Druids (OBOD). You can find out more about Damh and his work on his website at paganmusic.co.uk or on our Contributor Page. Blodeuwedd by Damh the Bard The tale of Blodeuwedd taken by Damh from the Fourth Branch of the Mabinogi. The Cauldon Born by Damh the Bard The Story of Cerridwen and how we are all, in a fashion, Cerridwen's Children, or "the Cauldron Born". Pagan Spirit Gathering The Pagan Spirit Gathering (PSG) is one of America's oldest and largest Nature Spirituality festivals. Since its inception in 1980, PSG has been bringing together hundreds of people from throughout the United States, plus other countries, to create community, celebrate Summer Solstice, and commune with Nature in a sacred environment. Sponsored by Circle Sanctuary, PSG is open to long-time practitioners as well as newcomers of a wide range of Nature religion traditions, including Wiccan, Contemporary Pagan, Druidic, Heathen, Celtic, Baltic, Greco-Roman, Isian, Shamanic, Hermetic, Animistic, Egyptian, Native American, Afro-Carribean, Taoist, Pantheistic, Ecofeminist, and Nature Mystic. PSG is an opportunity for personal renewal, networking, education, and cultural enrichment. You can see their musical line-up (including Damh) or book tickets on their website. Cerri Lee Cerri Lee is a multi-talented visionary artist who can turn her hand to almost anything creative. She is inspired by nature, and the ancient Pagan myths and legends of many cultures, her beliefs as a modern day Druid as well as those around her. She can create anything from Rights of Passage gifts and altar pieces to wedding and birthday gifts, and will happily take on commissions. Each piece of artwork she creates is individual and can be personalised to you or your loved ones. Her artwork has been used for album covers, featured in leading Pagan magazines, used as tattoos, and her sculptures are sent throughout the world. Cerri is equally in her element when she is up to her elbows in clay or painting one of her fabulous pictures. She is partner to Druid musician and long-time supporter of our show, Damh the Bard and can be found supporting him at many of his performances. You can see a gallery of Cerri's artist work on our website at Cerri's Gallery and you can find out more about Cerri and her work on her website on cerrilee.com or on our Contributor page. Grimspound by Damh the Bard Grimspound is a late Bronze Age settlement high on the moor. It’s surrounded by a large fallen stone wall, and inside you can still see the remains of the roundhouses. On a beautiful day it is incredibly peaceful, but on a typical Dartmoor day, with the wind and the rain, it must have been a harsh place to live. "I sat with my guitar inside the remains of one of the roundhouses and just began to play on the guitar – looking around, breathing in the history of the place, imagining it full of life. What kind of people lived there. A Raven called overhead, and I felt I could see torchlight on the Tors either side of me. Voices of the Ancestors singing. The Land singing. And the melody of the guitar began to take shape. A ghostly and reflective refrain." Competition Damh left us with a signed copy of his latest album, Tales from the Crowman, to give away as a competition prize. So, we set a competition based on Welsh Mythology for you. Spirit of Albion by Damh the Bard Damh plays us his rousing anthem, a paean of praise to the land, Spirit of Albion from the album of the same name. Get EXTRA content in the Celtic Myth Podshow App for iOS, Android & Windows Contact Us: You can leave us a message by using the Speakpipe Email us at: garyandruth@celticmythpodshow.com. Facebook fan-page http://www.facebook.com/CelticMythPodshow, Twitter (@CelticMythShow) or Snapchat (@garyandruth), Pinterest (celticmythshow) or Instagram (celticmythshow) Help Spread the Word: Please also consider leaving us a rating, a review and subscribing in iTunes or 'Liking' our Facebook page at http://www.facebook.com/CelticMythPodshow as it helps let people discover our show - thank you :) If you've enjoyed the show, would you mind sharing it on Twitter please? Click here to post a tweet! Ways to subscribe to the Celtic Myth Podshow: Click here to subscribe via iTunes Click here to subscribe via RSS Click here to subscribe via Stitcher Special Thanks Diane Arkenstone The Secret Garden. See her Contributor page for details. Kim Robertson The Hangman's Noose. See her Contributor page for details. Jigger Time Ticks Away. See her Contributor page for details. For our Theme Music: The Skylark and Haghole, the brilliant Culann's Hounds. See their Contributor page for details. Extra Special Thanks for Unrestricted Access to Wonderful Music (in Alphabetic order) Anne Roos Extra Special thanks go for permission to use any of her masterful music to Anne Roos. You can find out more about Anne on her website or on her Contributor page. Caera Extra Special thanks go for permission to any of her evocative harping and Gaelic singing to Caera. You can find out more about Caera on her website or on her Contributor Page. Celia Extra Special Thanks go for permission to use any of her wonderful music to Celia Farran. You can find out more about Celia on her website or on her Contributor Page. Damh the Bard Extra Special thanks go to Damh the Bard for his permission to use any of his music on the Show. You can find out more about Damh (Dave) on his website or on his Contributor page. The Dolmen Extra Special thanks also go to The Dolmen, for their permission to use any of their fantastic Celtic Folk/Rock music on the Show. You can find out more about The Dolmen on their website or on our Contributor page. Keltoria Extra Special thanks go for permission to use any of their inspired music to Keltoria. You can find out more about Keltoria on their website or on their Contributor page. Kevin Skinner Extra Special thanks go for permission to use any of his superb music to Kevin Skinner. You can find out more about Kevin on his website or on his Contributor page. Phil Thornton Extra Special Thanks go for permission to use any of his astounding ambient music to the Sonic Sorcerer himself, Phil Thornton. You can find out more about Phil on his website or on his Contributor Page. S.J. Tucker Extra Special thanks go to Sooj for her permission to use any of her superb music. You can find out more about Sooj on her website or on her Contributor page. Spiral Dance Extra Special thanks go for permission to use Adrienne and the band to use any of their music in the show. You can find out more about Spiral Dance on their website or on their Contributor page. We'd like to wish you 'Slán Go Foill!', which is Irish for 'Goodbye', or more literally 'Wishing you safety for a while'! Save Save
An example of tribe story telling in an animistic culture. Special thanks to The JESUS Film Project Check out http://www.oralbible.com for more information. Thank you for watching!