The medicine wheel teachings - Fulcrum 5 racing wheels.
The Medicine Wheel Teachings
- A large circular pattern made on the ground through the placement of stones. The patterns could include other rings, spokes and cairns. The Blackfoot indians used these kinds of structures as part of a death lodge to inter famous and powerful warriors.
- A stone circle built by North American Indians, believed to have religious, astronomical, territorial, or calendrical significance
- Medicine wheels, or sacred hoops, were constructed by laying stones in a particular pattern on the ground. Most medicine wheels follow the basic pattern of having a center of stone(s), and surrounding that is an outer ring of stones with "spokes", or lines of rocks radiating from the center.
- Since 50 states werenit enough, yuppie New Agers stole this ritual so they could use it to fix flat tires on their mountain bikes and Jeeps.
- In education, a teacher is a person who provides schooling for others. A teacher who facilitates education for an individual student may also be described as a personal tutor. Employment|occupation]] or profession at a school or other place of formal education.
- One of the most misunderstood words in the Hebrew Bible is the Hebrew word torah. This word is usually translated as "law" which by definition is a set of rules and regulations established by a government and is enforced with the threat of fines or imprisonment.
North
Day 63/365
Medicine Wheel Series #4
North-Blue, sadness, defeat, wisdom, teacher
"The Medicine Wheel has been adopted by most First Nations people as a universal symbol of healing, interconnectedness and a holistic foundation of peaceful interaction and personal growth. The teachings mirror your life and it sometimes requires courage to look and really see what is being reflected back to you because some experiences are painful, while others joyful and reflective. However, it is ultimately facing it all that makes you a stronger and better person."
~Shannon Thunderbird
Two daughters of a Sioux chief on horseback, 1910
Sioux women have always been seen as equal as the men as the Sioux believe in the teachings of the medicine wheel,which means that all things are connected and part of the same circle. If anything on the circle becomes out of place then the entire wheel wobbles until it breaks. The women are seen as the keepers of a tribe, while men hunt and protect. Photo by , Edward S. Curtis, 1910
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