reading The Walking People:A Native American Oral History by Paula Underwood, read by Miriam Moore miriam moore
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Many of these stories in the Walking People read/sung by Paula Underwood are on iTunes. The Walking People, recorded by Paula Underwood is deep in big ideas. May kind thoughts come. The stories soothes chaotic thoughts
Rhythm and words sing themselves: I find the gorgeous song in me inside the worlds. I have various blatherings on tictok, and blogspot.
I sing them in my long rope of strands in the braid. These stories are meant for all earths' children. Each understands it so I dare sing my own telling.
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5-6 Place keepers and followers after
We see the people can be either place keepers, like us. We hunt small animals, the biggest is sharp tusk. (I wonder if this is a pig? There were some sturdy pigs with good looking tusks in the ice age.) We also learned to plant beans, as Bending Woman and Grateful Daughter showed us to do. We gather roots and berries and dry some of these against the Long Cold.
Followers after sort through the dung of the herds, and sometimes get trampled by them. This is not our choice as a way of life. We value our way of life above all others.
Painting from Chauvet cave, France. -
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reading The Walking People:A Native American Oral History by Paula Underwood, read by Miriam Moore (Trailer)
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The story of RedSquirrel and GreySqirrel
Life is satisfactory. Some animals are not found. Some notice
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