Choosing a Path – Part 9

Today we will hold our full moon and equinox ceremony as a tribe. It’s been a while since I’ve written as life here got busy due to the harvest rush to gather all we can before the snow flies. When living on the land, we must live within the cycles of nature, not the fictional cycles of man’s calendar and clocks. We live on bush time and that allows us to rest and relax when we want, but also demands that we work when needed. I continued to bring in fire wood for the tribe and have it nicely stacked for winter. But I also noticed that a couple within our tribe was at risk of not having their shelter built before winter. I shared that risk as mine has been delayed too.

I decided that it is within the tribes best interests if I stopped working on my built and helped them get their build done. By helping them I am also helping myself as they could move into their home and I could use the transport trailer converted into a shelter that they are currently in. So I get a shelter for winter by helping them build their shelter. That buys me some time to then finish my build in the spring. I’m okay with that and they appreciate the help too. Many tears where shared over the past number of weeks.

We also held the UNGRIP boot camp, which I’m now calling the UNGRIP Decolonization Ceremony. It was a full week of absolute magic, miracles, intimacy, connection, learning, healing and profound change for all involved. Tribes are built this way and to me that was very clear as nearly everyone will be returning to help with the next ceremony being held here October 4-8, 2021. People are returning to hold space, help facilitate, organize and do what ever it takes to help others have a wonderful experience and to help the tribe here as it is a daunting task doing this with just a few people.

What strikes me about what is starting to flow is how many people are suddenly interested in my work. This next ceremony was full weeks ago through word of mouth only. I have people contacting me wanting to get into the third one and I’ve not even held the second ceremony yet. Spirit requires motion and people are now starting to move and resonate with my teachings. This has been a long and lonely road for the last 16 years. It feels surreal and overwhelming to suddenly have such interest. Spirit is helping by forming a tribe around me able and willing to help as they also resonate and connect with the spirit of decolonization.

This is no longer about me. Actually, it never was about me. I shared my story in the hopes that people could relate to what I was saying, but this has always been about an idea. An idea shared for thousands of years but who’s time has come to be expressed and realized. This is about healing, reconciliation, decolonization, sovereignty, peace, freedom, prosperity, joy and love. This path is not easy but it has profound implications to our spiritual health and standing as well as the physical too!

This morning I woke up to another Liberal minority government in Canada. Saskatchewan has declared a state of emergency which gives them powers to override the Charter of Rights and Freedoms and many jurisdictions are implementing vaccine passports. The narrative in Canada continues to deteriorate with the support of the majority of people. Fear is a powerful weapon. I’ve been in the extreme minority for nearly 20 years as a result of my journey towards healing, freedom and balance between the physical, mental, emotional and spiritual. I’m used to having the majority rebuke or dismiss me. I will continue my work despite what others think. I don’t base my decisions on the opinions of others. I base my decisions on what my heart feels, spirit directs and my body & mind can accomplish.

Out of all my training, the phrase I learned from TaeKwonDo comes to mind clearly: Indomitable Spirit! This is the work that I’ve done for 20 years, to have a spirit that is impossible to subdue or defeat. Doubt and disbelief can trip one up quickly, as it has a few times in my life. But as I witness the deterioration of social order outside of my realm, it brings even higher resolve to hold space for an alternative. I care not what others thinks or say, I will continue to do my work because it feels right, spirit orchestrated it all and I’m willing to keep moving forward despite the attacks and violence.

I was told yesterday that when it comes to creating safe space for people, I ‘nailed it’. This observation hit my heart deeply and it came from someone that I love dearly. I pray that this knowledge and ability can spread quickly so that others can experience this type of peace and freedom to fully express the masculine and feminine energies that we need to heal, replenish this world and bring prosperity for ALL life on Mother Earth. May this tribe help spread this idea to home fires far and wide. I love you all. I really do!

Project Management Techniques for Tribe Development

Fish Bone Method

Back in 2005 I graduated from the N.A.I.T. Project Management program, which also reinforced a lot of the principles I learned during recovery as well.  I was moved to draw upon that training and the years of project management experience in the IT industry to help build stronger relationships within tribes.  While the scope is different, the intent and spirit is very much the same.  

I was talking to Claude and he also reminded me of the masculine and feminine energies involved in this process as well.  When going through this journey, the beginning part involves strong feminine energies, where inclusion, involvement and making sure all is heard and the problems are flushed out and identified.  The following processes involve masculine energy, where solutions are identified and targeted objectives are reached to bring about the results.  This dance between the feminine and masculine is within each of us, but also between us as well and upon reflecting on this journey, this process is a good introduction on how the two energies can work together for the betterment of each individual and the whole tribe.

I also want to make it clear that my intent is to help facilitate this process for people to learn and integrate within their own tribes.  I also believe it is our duty to hold space for one another along this path.  While most are not currently willing to do this work, by walking the path and leading by example, it is my prayer that it inspires others to find that will and learn the skills, heal and participate in a way of life that is very different than the one currently facilitating our relationships and controlling our lives.  By using techniques learned through tried and tested project management protocols in business, industry, etc, we can target those lessons to help us with our day to day relationship challenges as we explore decolonizing and working on rebuilding our lost tribes.  This is done in the spirit of peace, decolonization and tribe building.

To break down the process, I surveyed the tribe to see where they are currently at.  This can be done with 10 or 12 simple questions to see how people are feeling, allowing them to rate each one from 0 to 9.

Next step involves doing a root cause analysis.  I used ideas from the project management course to do this, but this site comes close to what I did.

I then performed another survey of the group to prioritize the problems.  By addressing the top 20%, we can address 80% of the problems (80:20 rule).  

We then brainstorm solutions for those top 20% and then assign teams to work through the details of prioritizing and working on implementing those solutions. 

Each team will then report back to the group and obtain a consensus on the solutions.  When consensus is obtain, they solutions can then be implemented.

I will then perform another satisfaction survey to see if we actually improved the situation for the tribe.  That is measured by an increase in satisfaction within the tribe.  

Recorded January 31, 2021

Connecting to Spirit & Tribe

We had a beautiful discussion tonight about how each of us connect to spirit and it moved into the intricacy of tribe as well.  Towards the end of the class a stunning turn of events happened that demonstrated how powerful spirit really is and how fitting it happened during a conversation about this very topic.  Add this as another chapter to the book called:  You cannot make this shit up.  

Spirit orchestrates our lives when we surrender to it peacefully.  I am grateful to spirit to help show how beautiful, surprising and powerful it can be when we allow it to unfold and have the eyes to see and the ears to hear!  Thank you to everyone involved in this call.  I love you all.

Recorded October 25, 2020

Establishing Spiritual Honour within your tribe

It occurred to me this week that part of the decolonization process is not only healing myself, but helping my tribe re-establish protocols that are critical to healthy tribal life.  

When I study indigenous cultures, honour was a core component of life and feathers were often a symbol individuals obtained and received, as recognition of the highest honour, from other tribe members.  

Honour is still expressed today in many cultures, passed down for thousands of years.  Some of the things people do as a result of honour are rather barbaric and don’t qualify as honour in my world.  Killing people because they cheat or steal violates Spiritual Law in my view, yet people continue this honourable way of life.  

Honour is also a guiding principle with most military and para-military organizations.  That would extend to police departments and all the way up the command chain to the Governor General of Canada or the President of the United States.  In fact, those offices are held in such esteem that they are viewed as being sacred, demanding the highest honour.  

This is misguided honour as an expression of respect for fictional constructs only contributes to the corruption of the individual by the tribe.  When the tribe ends up being millions of people, we corrupt the individual by pouring out tremendous amounts of authority.  That is the trap that we must avoid.  Honour does not equate to authority but it has in the past in many cultures.

When I was training in the martial art of Tae Kwon Do, I trained under Grand Master James Lo.  He passed away recently and it is with great sadness that I reflect on the lessons I learned from him.  He showed me what healthy honour looks like.  He came to Canada from Hong Kong and brought with him a discipline taught not only in martial arts but his culture as well.  

When I first started training with him, I did not learn this protocol from him, I learned it from his students.  They are the ones that taught me how to bow and why as I entered the gym.  It was a sign of honouring and respecting the space upon which we train.  Without it, we would have no where to practice our art form.  When we meet a blackbelt, we were taught to bow as a sign of honour and respect to those who are willing to teach us.  It is their knowledge and experience that we want to learn from and we cannot do it without them.  But something happened that really made me stand up and take notice.  Whenever a Master or Grand Master walked into the room, the whole room would stop everything that they are doing to bow to them.  To show another man or woman that much honour was to acknowledge their dedication to the art form and express gratitude and appreciation for being willing to dedicate their lives to the art form.  That level of honour is earned and acknowledged by the tribe due to dedication, hard work, time, commitment and walking the path for decades.

While we were training in the Martial Arts, there was a military chain of command and as such, senior instructors used that authority structure to help facilitate training.  Sadly some abuse their position and abuse students in the process as they failed to honour their students too.  But instructors with honour would not do that and not take advantage of their honour outside of the class either.  Grand Master Lo never gave orders outside of class or abused his honour, to my knowledge anyway.  

As a result of the high integrity he demonstrated to me, his voice carried great weight and influence with me and the people around him.  He was not always right and he made mistakes along the way too.  After all, he is human along with the rest of us.  But there was also protocol when confronting him or raising issues.  This protocol was followed to maintain honour and respect while helping him learn and grow as well.  I witnessed this protocol and he was open to receiving so that he could become a better instructor.  That is what makes good instructors GREAT!  But if this was done outside of protocol and with disrespect, we risked being kicked out of the club.

After all, he is there to teach and disrespect is never tolerated as it shows a lack of self control, self discipline and honour.  One of the core aspects of our training was to learn self control and discipline and it must be demonstrated at all times.  This is the core of a healthy expression of honour.  

The thing about honour is that it is not a self declared expression of the individual, it must be given to them as an expression of their tribe.  If others disrespect their honour, the tribe steps up to correct or protect that honour.  

Honour can be a tricky thing as it also depends on the moral and ethical foundations of the tribe.  Within the Pacem Arts, we are working to raise that foundation to the highest levels of peace, freedom, prosperity and love.  As a result, those people who don’t govern themselves at that level will not respect the work of those who do and as such will not honour them either. In fact, there is a risk that this highest level of ethics and morality would be attacked and rebuked as people may feel inferior, shame or even guilt for not takes the steps to achieve such spiritual consciousness.  

This makes it even more important for those that are doing this work to support one another and ironically, I feel that the Divine Feminine has a critical role to play in this process.

One of the struggles that the Divine Masculine has had through colonization is that honour no longer applies as it threatened the sacredness and sanctity of the fictional constructs we call the Crown, Pope, Queen, Governor General, Lieutenant Governor, Prime Minister or any of those offices.  The people sitting in these sacred offices could not tolerate others who had as much or more honour.  So the customs of the tribes got demolished or even outright banned to ensure that everyone was obedient to the new master.  

As we work on the decolonization process, the Divine Feminine is being asked to reflect on what level of ethics and morality they want to see expressed within their tribe and then ask the masculine to rise up and be a steward of that expression.  The divine masculine is also responsible for this expression too as it will require team work.  However, it is within the divine masculine to be the Spiritual Brave and defend this higher expression of healing, love, freedom and peace or confront those that don’t.

We all have a duty to heal and raise our consciousness to meet or exceed this highest expression of Spiritual & Natural Law, but the masculine has an extra duty to protect and honour the divine feminine in the process.  

Over the last 15 years I’ve taken this duty very seriously and in fact, decided to take on the risks in order to protect Carey and they boys through the process.  This is my way of being honourable while I took on the risk of testing this decolonization process.  The healing and learning that I acquired through the process was immense.  However, it has taken its toll on me as I’ve come to realize that my work has not been honoured.  This became blatantly apparent to me this week when words were spoken by a family member that suggested that I was toxic, abandoned my family and that I’m incompetent.   It is not his words that hurt me as I know they were a reflection of him.  It is the fact that nobody stepped up to protect my honour.  

This cut me deep into my heart and is the foundation of this post.  If the masculine is going to step up and do the work to fix our tribes, take the risks and heal, they must be supported in that effort.  That support is done through the acknowledgement and ceremony of honour and by taking steps to protect that honour.  What I struggle with is wondering if I have yet to earn that honour from those around me, or that those around me have no idea how to show and protect that honour.  

As part of the decolonization process, I find myself being challenged on what honour would look like, post colonization.  Within the colonized, honour is often replaced with respect.  People with degrees have more respect than people with high school diplomas.  People with doctorates, likewise rank higher than people with degrees.  But most blatant is people who are elevated to the rank of royalty or those with billions of dollars.  No longer are we concerned about behaviour, ethics or morality, we are now caught up in status, money and worshiping sacred offices.  

So is it any wonder that people who reject those colonial constructs and work towards Christ level consciousness are not respected or treated with honour?  If that is the case, then those that do this work need the support and recognition from their tribes, or those outside of the tribe interested in learning.  The divine feminine has an important role to play as their acknowledgement and efforts to perform ceremonies for those Spiritual Braves that are doing the work to fulfill their highest visions of morality, ethics and stewardship will solidify a level of commitment and dedication that they may have never experienced in their lives or ever seen within the colonial systems.  

People all over the world are risking their lives, reputations, relationships and social standing in order to change how we are governing ourselves and confronting the violence, abuse, greed and genocide that is unfolding around us.  These people have made sacrifices beyond what most others can even comprehend.  Honour is, by far, the best way to support these people and we can do that by acknowledgement through ceremony or symbolic gifts, but most importantly, by protecting that honour when others seek to destroy it.  If it is to be destroyed, it will be by the dishonourable behaviour of the individual, not by those around him / her.  

Divine Masculine is floundering because colonization does not allow honour, only obedience and those who are decolonizing have yet to earn their honour among the tribe.   This is mainly due to the tribe not being aware of these issues and not clear as to what standard of morality and ethics the tribe will govern themselves by.  As such, how can we evaluate honour as a result and protect it from those who refuse to govern themselves at that standard?

Within the constructs of this school, we are working on obtaining the highest level of morality and ethics so that students can work towards a Christ level of consciousness to integrate within their tribe.  I will continue to work hard to earn honour from those who support me here and those outside of the school wanting to learn.  I will admit that earning honour for this type of work has been the most challenging and difficult part of the whole decolonization process.  

I bow to you all out of respect and honour as you express an interest in learning and growing with me.  Honour flows both ways and that is something else that Grand Master Lo taught me.  He honoured me just as much as I honoured him.  I do this work, despite the conflict, because I love people and I do my best to honour them, hold space for healing and forgiveness.  If I’ve acted out of honour, I ask for forgiveness.  

So, you want to join an intentional community

One of my most popular posts on Facebook in months was a simple question:   If a few of us started an eco village around the Edmonton area, who would be interested? 

Uploaded by Mikael Häggström, CC0, via Wikimedia Commons

A lot of people liked the idea and over 50 people put their hat into the circle.  I feel moved to write about the idea.  My own experience over the last 13 years to work with people on the land has been full of failure, but also some astounding success.  I am no fan of using colonial constructs to build community.  If we are going to decolonize, return to the land and rebuild our ancestral tribes, we must go through a significant amount of healing and decolonization.  Most of the intentional communities that I’ve read or heard stories about, have fail or struggle because some foundational truths are not realized and addressed.  As a result, trauma, co-dependency and colonial constructs seep into the relationships and start to erode the hard work that people have put into the community.  

My school, White Walking Feather’s School for the Pacem Arts, is designed to work on those core fundamentals to help people prepare for life within such communities.  With the deterioration of modern social structures, institutions and relationships, people are now interested in returning to the land, growing their own gardens and working together to provide for our basic needs, social interaction and security.  

I’ve modified the medicine wheel to reflect some of these de-colonization medicines required for us to make this transition. It starts with the green circle in the middle of the wheel, which represents our heart.  By healing, we find space within ourselves to no longer participate in war, violence, force or aggression.  This is why the school is centered on the Sacred Heart Circle and started here first.  By being vulnerable and walking as Spiritual Braves, we confront our past, heal and build profoundly intimate relationships with one another.  If people refuse to do this work, it will be identified early and could safe a lot of problems and heart ache as some people refuse to end the war and declare peace.  It is this type of peaceful relationships that is at the core of any intentional community or tribe.   War has no place here.  By learning the protocols on how to do this work, we significantly increase the probabilities that our relationships within the community or tribe will be successful.  

The blue circle is all about personal knowledge and health.  Of all the investments in the world, these two reap the greatest rewards and can never be taken away from us by others.  When we explore the physical, emotional, mental and spiritual relationships in our lives, we acknowledge the wide scope and depth of our relationships with self, Creator, Mother Earth and everyone else who shares this realm with us.  When we have done significant work to heal ourselves, we are now ready to venture out into the world and explore what community is all about.

When we are invited to learn about a community, it is our responsibility to learn, adapt and grow.  There are four seasons and each season brings with it many challenges and learning opportunities.  That is why it takes a full year to really get to know what the community is all about.  Explore all aspects of the medicine wheel within the community, such as the land, buildings, earth, plants, animals, air, water, energy, waste recycling, collection, storage, ceremony, protocols, etc.  This is an important aspect of the medicine wheel and is often where colonial constructs seep into the organization as the heart centric work has not been done.  When intellect drives the process we will end up with colonized institutional type thinking within the community.  But when we heal and allow spirit and our heart to guide the process, that is when our communities can be strong, vibrant, flexible and resilient. 

After a year of exploring the community, learning and growing, the community then must gather within its Elder’s Circle (purple circle) and make a decision on whether to extend an invitation to invite people into their inner circle.  This is a serious decision as it has a profound impact on the community as a whole.  This whole process is allowing both sides to learn and grow with one another to make sure it is going to be a good fit.  It may also mean suggesting that people explore other tribes or communities as the fit may be better suited with other groups. 

I am in no position to dictate protocol, how communities are formed, built, etc.  In fact, I suspect that when billions of us go through this protocol we will end up with millions of different types of solutions and that is a good thing to do.  Our environment, ancestors, beliefs, thoughts, feelings, challenges, etc will all form different and unique solutions that we can share with one another openly on social media and other forums.  

My new book:  UNGRIP – A Sacred Transformation, will take the reader through this protocol as I’m writing my book to follow this idea.  If people are willing and able to work with me, I am open to the challenge.  This is not ‘my’ community or tribe.  I am a facilitator to help people work through these protocols.  I claim no ownership and refuse to have co-dependent relationships with people.  I am looking for people willing to build their own independence and work on having a healthy, respectful and equal relationship with me and others within the group.  

We will have dispute resolution protocols and other techniques to help people work through any challenges that may come up.  That is the whole spirit and intent of the school.  If this interests you, then you can sign up at the lowest level to start reading my book, at the Sacred Heart Circle level to start your heart centric journey, or as a student to really dig into the meat and potatoes of what it’s going to take to participate fully within a community and decolonize.  

I fully suspect that when people do this work, our own communities and tribes will start to manifest naturally as spirit moves us to work together!  Each of you will gravitate towards each other and your community and tribes will form organically, as they should!  If this resonates with you, then I encourage you to join the school and lets get to work!  

I am running a whole bunch of classes over the coming months to help with this process.  I’ll be posting a calendar shortly!  Please check in with me in a few days if the classes interest you.  I was scheduled to go to Blood reserve to teach classes this spring, but due to the pandemic, that is off.  So I’m going to do this work online instead.  

Our Nature is Tribal

As governments around the world continue to lock down their populations, fear seems to be the main weapon being used against the people.  In Edmonton, police are stopping people and giving $1000 tickets to occupants of the vehicle if they have different addresses on their ID.  People are being ticketed for walking by themselves in the park or being on the beach.  This is not about a pandemic, this is about control, fear and tyranny.  

Why are we in a position like this now?  I would suggest that we have moved away from our nature and live life far beyond where we are supposed to be.  We abandoned our tribal ways of life in exchange for being a herd.  In the process we abandoned our duty within our tribe and asked that privileged people rule over us within that herd.  As such, those leaders guide the herd as they see fit and the herd must follow.  

We are then confronted with disease that sweeps through the herd.  Disease is a natural event governed by natural law.  Its design is to thin herds, especially the sick and weak.  The scavengers and predators also prey upon the herd to help keep it moving and strong.  But our herds don’t move.  They sit in one spot, cities.  As such, these herds end up consuming all the resources of that spot and must ship food and other materials in from the country side.  They then consume and turn that one spot into toxic waste due to the accumulation of waste, pollution and other environmental issues.  

Herds are supposed to be constantly on the move.  Some tribes would follow the herds and as such are used to picking up camp and following the herds.  But with our modern herds being in one location, these people want to move around, so they travel where ever they can.  Some of us don’t like traveling.  Our ancestral tribes remained relatively in the same spot, small and in harmony with our surrounding environment.  

But people don’t live like that any more.  We gave up our ancestral ways in favor of being in a herd and that causes sickness, tyranny, stress, anxiety and slavery.  While we remain in herds, we will be farmed like cattle and only when we leave the herd and start rebuilding our ancestral tribes will we find health, freedom and peace.  

This requires healing, learning, knowledge, experience, teachings, relationships, trust and spiritual family.  This is not an easy path as most people want to bring their herd mentality into the tribe and that will not work.  Colonization is a violent, abusive and brainwashing protocol to remove people from the tribe to integrate them into a herd.  If we want to reverse that trend, we must find peaceful, loving, decolonization protocols to help people heal so that they can embrace their nature.

When we do that, the trauma will heal and we will find that we have time to spend with others.  The stress will be significantly less as we find the tribe can support our needs while we participate in supporting the needs of others.  Nobody gets left behind because the tribe is small enough where everyone is included, cared for and a valued member of the tribe.  People can come and go if they choose, but protocol is important as this changes the dynamics of the tribe.  

I’m exploring these protocols and relationships in my new book, which you can read here on my Patreon page.  By healing ourselves, we are no longer manipulated or trapped by fear, the foundational weapon that tyrannical governments use to control people.  

I don’t buy the story being spoon feed by media and government.  I still see their end game being rolled out before our eyes and the majority of people support it.  I don’t.  I refuse to comply with their tyranny.  I declare peace and I will govern myself so that I don’t fall into the war that is being played out.  This is indeed war, World War III!  This is not a war of bullets, yet.  Instead, this is a war of ideas, control, manipulation, propaganda and tyranny.  Their weapon is fear.  They know people better than the people know themselves.  

Heal thy self, that way fear can no longer control or manipulate oneself.  They depend on traumatized people to want to be protected by a parent.  The people are the children, the state is the parent.  As long as people remain children, they state will feel obligated to parent them.  However, when we heal and learn how to stand as adults, the relationship changes and that is how we can change the world.  We do it by healing ourselves and taking on the duty to fully self-govern.  

That requires that we provide supports around ourselves to accomplish that goal.  We need to re-connect with our ancestral tribal structures.  This too requires healthy individuals to start this journey.  When the tribes get to a sufficient size, then the capacity to take on the sick, elderly, young, etc can be fully realized.  We need to get moving on these ideas as the state will soon loose it’s capacity to look after those who are vulnerable.  In fact, it is already starting as reports are coming in where staff are abandoning seniors residence resulting in dead bodies, feces and starving seniors (Montreal Gazette)

By practicing the Pacem Arts, we provide ourselves with the healing, tools and tribal protocols we all need to start returning to our home fires and building healthy relationships with those around us.  We can then walk away from the battle field governed by the state and start to fix the foundational issues that have plagued mankind for thousands of years.  I truly believe we are ready for this next evolutionary process in our consciousness.  This requires Christ level consciousness and it is now time.  

Join us in circle and go through the material that I’ve put up so far.  I’m confident that when we surrender our violent ways and do the hard work to heal, that we can overcome what ever unfolds around us.  Read my books if that helps too!  Print them out and make notes along the way.  I welcome those who want to surrender their old ways and explore what these new relationships may look like.  I don’t have the answers as what will unfold will be co-created by us all.  But I am willing to hold space for that creative process to unfold.  I welcome it.  

Peace, healing, good health and love to you all.

Note:  The picture is from a tribe in Europe.  Even our European ancestors lived as tribes before we too were colonized.  Our indigenous brothers and sisters have a lot that they can teach us, if we are open to remember all that we lost through the trauma of colonization.

The Importance of Ceremony

Meadow – Winter Solstice 2019

One of our dear friends and member of our tribe is having a baby.  She is living off grid and doing a traditional home birth and asked Carey and I to help her.  She is starting labour and could get deep into delivery any moment.  When that happens, we will be called away and could be gone for several days.  Carey’s roll within this beautiful ceremony is to help her with the baby.  My roll is to smudge the perimeter of the house, hold the space and protect them all.  The divine masculine and feminine have specific rolls to fulfill in one of the most beautiful ceremonies any of us could witness and experience.  

Everything in life is sacred and as such, deserves that we approach it as a ceremony.  It reminds us of the sacredness and having protocols to keep its sacredness is equally important.  

I’m humbled as I’ve been asked to hold that sacred space by many people over the past few years.  As I develop ceremonies, spirit moves people to reach out to me.  Some of these ceremonies are new as nobody has ever worked on decolonization protocols since this experience is so new to us all.  Spirit moved me to make a ceremony to four corner the land and I’ve performed this ceremony several times for friends in Alberta and Ontario.  I’ve also performed spiritual ceremonies to help people within their wedding ceremonies too.  

I’ve been working on ceremony in my life for years now.  When ever a slaughter an animal or even harvest a plant, I work hard to ask for permission from their spirit first and I leave tobacco in exchange so that I’m not taking but rather making a trade.  There are small but important things that we can do to bring balance back to our actions and behaviours within our lives.  I grow our own tobacco specifically for this purpose and it was taught to me by the nehewin people of Treaty 6.  The tobacco I use is traditional indigenous ceremonial tobacco from the pueblo people in the southern end of Turtle Island. It is sacred medicine.  The sweetgrass grows on our land and the sage is from around here as well.  We have no cedar here, but people give us cedar to round out the four medicines on the medicine wheel.  

Holding ceremony and space for a baby being born is new to me, but I honour the trust and power of what is unfolding.  The divine masculine energy flows through me stronger than ever before as I start to explore what that actually means.  Holding that space in a healthy way is humbling and inspiring.  It helps the divine feminine feel safe, comfortable and secure so that she can engage in the most powerful transfer of energy ever seen on this planet.  The merging of spirit and land to allow another spiritual being to manifest here THROUGH her body.  She is a portal between the spiritual realm and the physical realm.  The divine feminine is sacred and special to be able to hold the space for such an awesome transformation.  It is my duty to hold the space so that she can do her work!

I will be away from the school for a few days, but I will return.  We will dig into these conversations deeply as we explore the spiritual aspects within the school’s curriculum.  I won’t speak or disclose who are what happens, but instead we will explore the deeper meaning, duty and power associated with ceremony within our lives so that we can hold the space and bring balance back to our existence here.

As we finish the ceremony of the winter solstice, may Creator bless each of you with peace, freedom, prosperity, joy and love as we embark on a new solar year and a period of birth and renewal.  It is all fitting together as you can see! Â