212 Matching Annotations
  1. Dec 2022
    1. Natives have been called red forever. I have never met a red native, noteven on my reservation, not even at the Museum of the American Indian,not even at the largest powwow in Parker, Arizona.

      haha, gotta love the constructs and how people labeled people.

    2. ~y Elder says: Cut off your ear,and you will live. Cut off your hand, you willlwe.Cut offyour leg,you can still live. Cut off our water:we will not livemorethan a week

      Another reason for how sacred water is and why our body is water, without water we don't survive.

    3. The water we drink, like the air we breathe, is not a part of our body butis our body. What we do to one-to the body, to the water-we do to theother.

      This is the highest level of connection to how we impact our environment and our bodies. We choose not to see how we destroy one, we destroy us all.

    4. This is not metaphor.

      I love this, because this is the truth, (as crazy as it may sound), every river is connected to our drinking source that fuels our cells. The amount of connectedness and presence to appreciate this.....

  2. Oct 2022
    1. Insidiously it would start, and grow, and grow, tormenting him with an endless cycleof the same questions, until they would become an obsession. “If she, a well-brought-up girl,could do that for me, then why not for other men? Were there other men? Who were they?” Intime a curtain of distrust would separate them, and that was no way for a husband and wife tospend their life together.

      Oooo! Smart woman! I never foreseen all that drama!

    2. Not even in exchange for what she would dearly love to know: whether that littlefigurine represented his prayer for her

      I don't know if I would have this much restraint. This is soo adorable. They were definitely meant for each other!

    3. She must tell Mitawa as soon as he couldunderstand how his father was handsome and strong, gentle and kind, modest of his abilities asa hunter, thoughtful, and, above all, fearless—even unto death. Mitawa must be proud of him!

      Beautiful

    4. When everyone was up to par in this kinship interchange of loyalty and mutual dependence, lifecould be close to perfect.

      If only everyone in the family could play by the rules!lol

    5. It was the way of father’s sisters and women cousins to overlook even one’s faults out ofloyalty to one’s father, their brother, believing the best of one even when the worst wasundeniably clear

      Haha, we have this in our family. It makes no sense to me and annoys me sometimes, but it feels like no other feeling I've ever felt before. A strong deep bond that you don't deserve. It's humbling and comforting at the same time.

    6. Waterlily shaped the mash into small cakes

      Ah, I didn't know they made mash with berries too! I know mash from gathering acorns. This is what we have every thanksgiving. I wonder if it has to be depoisioned like the acorns do.

    7. Oh, cousin,” she said, “once, after that awful time in thewilds, I said to myself, ‘Will a time ever come when I can be truly happy again?’ And I wassure it never would. But I was wrong. Such a time has come, and this is it.”

      the way of the world. Things don't last forever....good or bad.

    8. . “The boy is the old man; he is privileged, for hehas acquired the qualities readymade for him from the old one. He is strangely blessed. Hisgrandfather has left him those traits he made for himself through a long life—gentleness,kindness, fortitude, patience. The boy should carry his name.”

      lol exactly, it's a gift, not a coincidence. This is said to happen with strangers all the time.

    9. with perfect timing the baby came and the old man went, at dawn.

      Ah, this is VERY significant! Everyone will have high expectations of this little one as if he's lived on this planet before, maybe even spirit/body exchange with the grandpa! I have a cousin in my family that was born like this. I always wondered if my cousin was so much like my uncle because he was told he was, or if it really happened.lol

    10. honor Little Chief by giving to his wife someespecially beautiful item of dress, a handsome gown or a wrap perhaps. For it was the custom,part of the ancient ways of doing.

      honoring her brother ment gifting his wife

    11. Before she was twenty years old, Waterlily had crammed into a single year enough of life tolast her a long while.

      wow, she had to grow up fast. I was still clubbing and drinking all night at 20. Not even thinking about family obligations or having babies!

    12. Camp-circlepeople were civilized; they knew how to treat one another. They had rules. These childrenwere wild because they lacked any standards of social behavior

      Native Children vrs Colonizer Children

    13. . There were no others about them from whom they might learn by imitation. And sothey were growing up without civility—and the results were terrifying to see.

      Savage

    14. he warriors nevertheless extended hospitality to themand, out of human decency, sent them away with quantities of jerked meat and other foods.

      Don't seem like savages to me! they treated them like humans, even though they knew something was distinctly wrong.

    15. It was impossible that his wife at her age could be the mother of those smallchildren, and since the man was the only male, the conclusion was inescapable. “Somethingvery bad” was the way the warriors voiced their suspicion, carefully avoiding the uglyequivalent of “incest.”

      Ugh

    16. Waterlily heard the cousin’s proposal, andeven the name Lowanla, with complete passivity. She simply thanked the cousin of her deadhusband for his concern and turned away.

      Well played sis, well played.

    17. She had blushed toremember how once she had been carried away by a charming stranger who also was a singerand a very youthful Sun Dancer

      yup, it's your knight in sundance glory sis! OMG, this is better than Disney!

    18. “Wait for Lowanla.

      I don't know what to feel for her, upset that her current well being is estimated to needing a husband? or honored that they feel an obligation as one of their relatives, or annoyed by the fact that they already talked and basically proposed another husband for her and her son. Then instructed to "Wait for Lowanla". Either they have all the confidence in this Lowanla bro, or they have major balls and see benefit to keeping her in the family.

    19. The link that held her to them was broken. Kind as they were, she suddenly feltherself a complete stranger in their midst. They said to her, “His going makes no difference.You belong here.” She did not think so

      I don't blame her! With that type of trauma happening without my husband to protect me, I would feel permanently unsafe with his family and would crave a group I recognized as safe, which would be my childhood relatives.

    1. reduced to the very lowest poverty. Theywere in fact right back where their ancestors must have been before the advent of the horse.

      Sucks, They had to start all over again. Crazy how we don't realize the intersectional fights the natives fought all at one time. New Diseases Land Seizures Food shortages and the list goes on... all at once!

    2. pitiful sight they were, all brown and tawny and gray, their drabness almostindistinguishable from the sere prairies over which they crawled. They were wearing the lastof the clothing they had brought out with them, long since bedraggled and soiled, ripped andtorn. Even the last of the extra pairs of moccasins were now in holes. Their faces wereblotched here and there with the marks of their disease, and their hair hung loose andneglected, though that was partly in mourning.

      Dang, sad sight I bet.

    3. Before they leftthey burned everything, including the tipi, each person saving only one fur robe for a wrap byday and a cover for sleeping.

      I wonder why they burned everything? Is it symbolic or is it for health reasons or to keep clues away from the enemy?

    4. Last evening I found his body, out in those hills yonder, where he met theenemy like a man.” Echo heard this without tears.

      She knew. How savage they were with her and her child, she had to know.

    5. When it rained, their things were soaked; and when wintercame, it was plain, they would suffer cruelly from the cold. The problem of food also becamedesperate, until all they could rely on was an occasional rabbit that the boy snared or a birdthat he killed with his blunt arrows.

      The aftermath for the survivors makes you wonder if they wished they had a quick death instead of a drawn out suffering. The will to live HAS to be great to survive this!

    6. Oh, Mother, if only we had started homeward when I wanted to go. But no. ‘Waitfor your father,’ you said. ‘He will not fail us,’ you said.” And she sat down for a long,unhindered cry beside her dead

      The survivors guilt would have been unbearable if her mother survived and her daughter died.

      Now it's reversed and we see the daughter's survivors regret.

    7. In the darkness she felt Echo’s head and wept to find that the scalphad been cut away, leaving a raw, wet spot on her crown. Elsewhere on her head there wereugly gashes, too. Her baby, clasped in her arms still, was dead from an arrow that just missedEcho

      Can you imagine the shock and terror?!? Living through that type of surprise and blunt trauma! People die of shock with less...

    8. The cries and the din were designed to confuse the inmates of the tipi.

      So the raiders creeped up and started making loud noises behind the tent to create chaos and confusion to draw the natives out of their tipi?

    9. After two days of mourning, Echo’s mother proposed that they move to another spot alongthe stream, away from the scene of so much grief where her son and two of her grandchildrenhad died.

      I know it stank like dead bodies! Wait, what did they do with the children?!?

    10. Ordinarily men handled a man’s body and women a woman’s.

      I wonder how they dressed or preserved the body. Was it like the ancient Egyptians with oils and herbs, or how similar to other cultures who maintained the dead bodies for a while?

    11. improvised stretcher and hoist it into a tree that overhungthe shelter where death had occurred

      Did they put him in a tree to keep the animals away from his body? I wonder if they covered him so the birds like vultures wont get to his body either.

    12. as though he were a child or a weakling whose mind could bechanged for him. (Dakotas always resented that

      The Dakota's must have really resented the colonizers who came and totally treated them as children who were too weak to take care of themselves.

      This is no doubt why the Sioux battle happened that led to the Dakota 38.

    13. You might die in thenight all alone.

      I don't think it's normal for people to want to die by themselves unless they are resolved to fearlessly navigate what is on the other side of the unknown.

    14. even to the horrid marks that appeared on her smooth young face to mar its beauty.

      was this the chicken pox?!? These sucked, all the cousins got it at the same time at my grandma's house. I'll never forget falling off the top bunk, wishing for death!lol

    15. It was proper to wail lest one be accused of beingcallous and negligent of kinship.

      Crazy interesting. I was little when I was fascinated by how my mom's side were wailers and shameless criers at funerals while my dad's side were silent tear mourners at funerals. It was confusing as a kid.

    16. “Our relatives are precious to us, sick or well. However loathsome might be theirmalady, should we separate ourselves from them, as if they were animals, just to save ourselves?

      The loyalty is beautiful. This is how everyone should see each other. If they world adopted this viewpoint, racism would be eradicated, INDEED!

    17. their stay in the wilds was to become aseries of unforgettable horrors.

      They probably couldn't imagine anything they couldn't cure with their wild herbs and potions. This was something new, and unforgettably horrible.

    1. he sinister threathanging over the whole camp circle that very night, soon to fall upon it, scattering its frightenedpeople to the four winds.

      Oh no! Whats going to happen?

    2. We forgot our hunger and got busy. Everyone helped. Mother got the water ready whileOhiya went over the prairie, gathering fresh sage plants, the soft, fragrant kind with tender,velvety leaves, for her to wipe my father’s feet dry and cool them at the same time. I took downthe paint bag from the tipi pole where it always hung and opened it as carefully as I couldbecause the paint was in powder form. I spread it out so that it would be ready to use.

      The family feet painting memory

    3. He had not really expected her topaint his feet—not yet. That was another custom for seasoned couples who had learned toesteem one another from a long mutual kindliness through the year

      Established couple behavior

    4. they forget themselves, driven by their single desire tosoothe it. Then they pour out a steady flow of tender words into the infant’s ear—and soon theyhave the habit of talking. Just wait and see.

      Native men's perspective on how Motherhood makes shy woman talk

    5. A woman who hastily jumps into marriage by eloping mustneeds go all out to get acquainted with her husband. She can hardly affect bashfulness after herbold step. One who marries by mutual agreement needs only to meet her husband halfway. Butthe one who is bought—well, a man must expect to go all the way. He must do all his wooingafter marriage.

      The differences between native marriages. There are 3 different kind of newlyweds

    6. You madeyour first mistake in not staying for a while with her family, where she would have only you toadjust to. Then, when she knew you well, she would be better able to meet the problem of in-laws by itself. I say this out of my own experience.

      Very smart man. Maybe the guys need a little more help to understand women. I'm not mad about it if the advice is this great!

    7. Finally he went to consult his cousin, a man of more years and more experience than himself.“I am troubled, my cousin

      SO the men can talk about their marriage to other men? Is it because they rationalize this because the men are also allowed to praise the woman?

    8. . Thus kinship once again wielded a controlling force here, in muzzling allidle talk about marital intimacy involving specific personalities

      Why women didn't talk about their marriages makes sense. But still not the healthiest practices in my eyes today, but maybe neccessary in this close setting of relatives.

    9. Nor was there any need to flaunt her married state. Why should she, since there was noparticular triumph where the premise was “man in pursuit, woman overcome.” Thuspresumably she had not landed him; he had landed her. Let the man gloat,

      Very interesting reason why men gloated about their marriage and the woman didn't

    1. the family of birth and the family of marriage. In the one, a person was permitted toplay the child occasionally; in the other, he must strictly play the adult, as a matter of self-respect, once having accepted an adult role

      Truly describes the transition into marriage. A fulltime functioning adult.lol

    2. It was the habit of thepeople to eliminate other, similar objects until they isolated the one they wished to point out:not that, nor that, nor that yonder—but the othe

      How natives gave directions.

    3. “well, he calls me ‘injun’—that meansDakota in his language. I say, ‘Got tobacco?’ when I want a smoke. It isn’t hard. And too, myfriend talks some Dakota, so we get along. Oh, he is my friend, all right!”

      I believe this Dakota and white man friendship starts off mutually beneficial. But I'm wondering how different is the motives and how contrasting is the Dakota's expectation in this friendship compare to his white man friend's expectations.

    4. But Red Leaf’s parents had taken the matter seriously and approvedit so much that there had been an exchange of presents. And then the two fellows wereseparated and were seemingly destined never to meet again, at least as playmates.

      Wow, lets hope that fellowhood survives teenage and post teen stages

    5. How he had come in breathless and solemn to announce tothe family, “We have gone into fellowhood.” Blue Bird and Rainbow had accepted the news alittle doubtfully, reminding Ohiya that such a friendship was for grown men who understood theheavy obligations and were prepared to face them always.

      Awh, the little boys want fellowhood.

    6. You say he is old and blind and alone. Don’t you know, people like thatyearn to die. So do not feel so bad ... anyway, we all must die

      The blunt truth about the last stage of life

    7. Waterlily recalled that on the previous evening, when she stood alone with her left earturned in the direction of her home, there had been a loud ring as if from far away. It had comedirectly at her and seemed to penetrate her being

      Very interesting how connected they must be to notice and remember stuff like this.

    8. tender affection and the only bit of demonstrativeness between husband and wife thatany outsider was permitted to see, for such things as kissing or embracing, even in fun, weredefinitely not done in public

      The Natives were very discreat PDA peoples.

    9. father-in-law was placidly dressing his wives’ hair, in turn. He was sitting at rightangles to the middle wife and had first unbraided the hair on that side, combed it all out gently,oiled it till it shone, and was now braiding it again. All his wives had very long hair. He wasproud of that

      Husband duties the father-in-law enjoys.

    10. if she was still at work on something, food would be standinginside, ready cooked, for her to serve her husband and herself. The many relatives of marriagesaw to that, vieing with one another to show her every courtesy. It was well that they did so,for Waterlily was tired after a day of heavy work

      The kindness towards newly weds.

    11. The married did not demand one another’s exclusive attention. Always awareof the presence of other people, they adjusted to them also. Waterlily asked for no moreattention from her husband than did other women from theirs, nor would she have wanted itpublicly; rather, it would have embarrassed her

      Daily work culture in the tribe

    12. The sod on top had been lifted out intact in large pieces. After bracing the openingunderneath as seemed sufficient, the men replaced that sod, mending the sutures with dirt andsprinkling grass and leaves and pebbles so that a passerby would have great difficultyrealizing what it was if he should happen onto that very spot, so out of the way—though itmight happen. They took that chance

      How they hid the cashe

    13. The countless steps pressingupon the meat had so completely broken up the fibers that now it was soft and pliable, asordinary jerked meat was not. With such tenderizing, the meat would “eat better” when it wascooked. The whole enterprise was an exacting task, with benefits far in the future.

      they tenderized the meat.

    14. By then it had been blanched to a grayishshade from the dark color it was when it underwent treading.

      ah so after treading, they blach it and hang to dry. So theres no flies just sitting on bloody meat

    15. whatever moisture still remained after the meat was exposed outside. After the treading, themeat was hung up again, to dry through and through. Day after day it was kept hanging out tillsunset

      Ok, so yeah, the rigor mortis (when meat or muscles contract and stiffen after calcium is no longer available to keep muscles uncontracted) That makes sense.

    16. . “When I was your age ... Alas, where is thestamina of youth today?” And the boys, trying to vindicate their generation, strove all theharder in their efforts to disprove the charge that boys weren’t what boys used to be.

      lolol dang! Nothing new under the sun. Grandpa's to this day, telling those SAME stories.lol

    17. old grandfathers,now helpless in all else but their tongues, sat by, singing their praises to keep them going, orcajoling, and finally ridiculing them good-naturedly.

      Everyone had to punch the clock!

    18. A carpet of fresh leaves was spread on the grass, on which the sheets of meat werelaid flat. More leaves were put over the meat, and finally a clean hide was thrown over thewhole. Then the treading began.

      I wonder what kind of leaves were used for treading.

    19. They dug a round hole straight down to the length of a tall man’s arm and wideenough in diameter to admit a man. From that depth they began to widen it as they workeddown. They pulled up the loose dirt in bullhides as the diggers sent it up. Those on top carriedthe loads on their backs and dumped the dirt in the tall underbrush, so that no one could see itand speculate on the possibility of a storage cave nearby. When finished, the cache was aclean, roomy chamber far underground, its shape resembling an immense jar set into the earth

      Sounds like they are mimicking the ant for survival.

    20. What manner of men are they, to be so wasteful? Are they children? Do they not yethave their senses? If this keeps on, we shall all starve!”

      That sounds uncivilized. I' wish I could have been a fly on the wall when the Natives were told they were the savages.

    21. she said, explaining that the fourth, a complete outsider, was such atroublemaker that Good Hunter had sent her back to her family in a distant band

      Okay, now the blurry polygamy picture is developing and getting clearer. Theres the drama.lol

    22. He bought me.” Later on, heryounger sister had been given to him by her parents “that she might be with her elder sister, tohelp her and to enjoy her protection.” It was customary to do this, especially if the youngunmarried girl was motherless and needed the protection and counsel of her sister. Still later,the cousin, an even younger woman, had been added to the household on the same plea.

      Oh, ok. It makes more sense now. They are literally family even without marriage.

    23. Likewise, all the women were equally responsible for all thechildren, being mothers to them all. Indeed, until an outsider was well acquainted, he could nottell which woman was the real mother of any child, except the nursing baby.

      polygamy seems like it worked in the tribes. I heard it was practiced for social status and wealth accumulation purposes.

    24. Hunter had his own space, and the older children had theirs. Three young sons of the secondwife shared one, and six girls occupied two spaces, one of the girls being a cousin living withthem. Also present were a grandparent or two. And generally an uncle and his wife, or someother couple who were close relatives, stayed there also. There were spaces for them all

      I always wondered how they all lived in tipis. And what is a "space", or what makes a space or two spaces? Sleeping bags lined up with their heads against the wall?

    25. Our tipi had nineteen poles. My uncle’s had twenty-three. His wasbigger than ours because he always had a great deal of company, being head of our tiyoṡpaye.”The mother-in-law, Taluta, went on to say that the tipis of Good Hunter all required thirty-four poles, excluding the two outside that controlled the windflaps, and that it took men to raisethe poles and hoist the tent; women alone could not erect a tipi this size.

      Wow, it really takes a village to build a tipi!

    26. “But it is too much liberty that you take, the way you talk so freely with your son’s wife.” Towhich she replied, “What of it? I can’t let that rule stop me. She is only a child, after all, andfar from her own people because we carried her off. She must be homesick at times. If I cancheer her up, what is so bad in that?

      Savage, OG-Mama to the rescue!

    27. They must be distantly helpful andrespectful, and their respect must consist in not getting in her way or demanding her attentionon them. Her reciprocal role was the same.

      The in-laws relationship to New Relatives. Noted!

    28. hereupon one of her mothers-in-law, who was cooking at theoutdoor fire and till then had seemed not to see her there, called out to the child, “That’s right!Embrace her and make love to her. When you are big, perhaps she will leave Sacred Horseand elope with you. She is far too beautiful for him, anyway!” So Waterlily learned that it wasa little brother-in-law that she held on her lap

      Haha, cute. Funny to experience their sarcasm. Makes them feel like kin and humankind......

    29. They hoped Waterlily would joke back when she knew who they were. This was theirpreliminary skirmish, to introduce themselves and to find out whether she was the type to enjoythe joking privilege. It was all in fun—to get a rise out of her, if possible.

      I love how the children introduce themselves to their new relative. Very authentically with play.

    30. hey were having fun trying to rattle her.Nobody needed to tell her who they were. They were either brothers or cousins of herhusband, which put them in a joking relationship to her.

      O wow, I never thought about how children see couples. They expect the person to be coupled with a similar personality, when in fact they can be polar opposites.lol

    31. The relatives did not makedemands on her, or make her conspicuous and uncomfortable by focusing special attention onher or obliging her to talk, unless she wished. The delicacy of her husband’s people in thisrespect comforted her

      Thats dope! I can see the book now, "How to be an in-law for dummies....." lol

    32. This newresponsibility to represent her people kept her very quiet and observant, and she preferred tobe a little inconspicuous at all times. That was safer than to be too enthusiastic and perhaps sayor do the wrong things

      smart move!

    1. In all respects shehad the makings of a contented lifelong virgin

      Would she be labled as A-sexual? I don't think I've ever an a-sexual person, or an old virgin, for that matter. Is the pope supposed to be an old virgin or am I tripping? I need to travel more. ---___---

    2. Property comes and goes and comes again. And it matters not that it goes, since itcannot endure but must decay, even were one to hold onto it with both hands

      powerful words of wisdom

    3. Waterlily was hot with shame and dared not speaklest her voice betray her embarrassment.

      O!!!!!!! This is why she was soooo ashamed of her behavior towards the young dancer after sun dance! Totally makes sense now! Tisk-tisk. lol

    4. ven if you are greatly attracted to a man, you mustnot go after him. That is a man’s part; a woman’s is to be pursued.

      old school or nah? I don't consider my belief system old fashion, but surprisingly, this is exactly how my husband and I met. When I wasn't looking for attention, didn't pursue him, and quiet frankly didn't want him to pursue me! lolol

    5. I want you to remember certain things: When a man talks to you, do not commit yourself atonce. Do not be hasty to consent, no matter how charming you think he is. He may be onlyplaying at courtship. Many do, to try a woman out. If she is too easy, they do not want her forlife, knowing they cannot trust her.“Above all, remember this: he must see you and decide he is interested—not you, him.

      Very good advice, that might still be valid in today's culture, but a bit old fashioned?

    6. o talk to her, using the unhappy young woman as an object lesson.

      Natives chose to talk to prevent disobedience. This may be why the natives perceive the settler's form of punishment "hitting"to be too brutal.

    7. But the introduction of white man’s goods, exciting as it was, could not overshadow a recentscandal in the camp circle that was creating a great to-do as the travelers returned. A youngwoman from a good family had eloped with a philanderer who, after keeping her with him inthe hills for several days, had left her to return home. That was a tragedy for her, for herreputation would always suffer because of it. There was no real forgiving such a step

      The pros come with cons, always.

    8. a novel touch indeed, combiningancient custom and new material.

      I feel like this is what old traditions need to do to stay relevant and not boring to they younger generations.

    9. as was customary, her friends brought courtesy foods to Blue Bird and she gavethem return gifts, those gifts were novel indeed: dress-length material, or a bowl of china ormetal, a dipper, a kettle, or perhaps an ingeniously made water keg.

      They did a barter system. They gave her food and she gave them foreign gifts.

    1. Almost at once the smoke rose thick and dark and very aromatic. The holy man waited asecond and then held the pipe above it, letting the smoke play over it thoroughly.

      I believe the incense they are talking about is sage. "Smudging" is usually connected to ceremonies. This is cool too because him holding the peace pipe over the dark, aromatic smoke because, smoke is believed to cleanse all negative or evil intentions before offering blessings to everyone above, beneath, and in all four corners of the world..

      Super interesting to see similar practices I am familiar with, but also learning new ones. So cool.

    2. Even the terrible pity that drove her to such anastonishing performance no longer seemed to explain it satisfactorily. And suddenly she feltshe never wanted to see that singer Lowanla again

      Maybe I missed something. What did she do that was so bad? Did she make the young dancer break his fast too early? Or is she feeling guilty because she is acting too forward?

    3. And as he continued to dance he threw himselfviolently away from one post to another in a frantic effort to tear himself free.

      Awh man, I can only imagine. The way they show empathy for each other, there must have been an ora of pain.

    4. made up of many small rites and elements accompanyingthe actual dancing while gazing at the sun.

      I wonder what significance gazing straight into the sun has, and what kind of damage was done to the person afterwards. Like sore/ sensitive eyes, temporary blindness, sunburnt eyes.

    5. Sun Dance whistle between his lips and blew in sharp, shrill staccatos. Thewhistles were made from the bone of an eagle’s wing,

      I've seen my uncles make these from our turkey bone stew. I was told that Bird wing bones are the best because they are light, skinny, long and perfectly hollow. After eating the marrow inside the bones, we would all put the bones to the side to dry a little but while still soft carve a triangular hole. Then when dry they would fine tune and shave the hole a little more with a stone.

    6. I take your tree only that my people may learn of you“‘The way to raise their young as you raise yours, with tender care.’”“He says, ‘Only so that my people may live!

      I wonder, was their soul purpose to emulate the birds? And thats why they choose to use a tree?

      Or do they need the tree, so they choose to learn how to survive by emulating what also needs trees?

      I was always told the ancestors learned how to survive new environments by emulating the animals that thrived in that environment.

    7. great circle overhead

      He's addressing all the birds in the 4 corners of the planet.

      Interesting, I just noticed how important gestures are in native culture, as well as words. But you can do a gesture to replace words as well.

      If he was silent and just circled smoke above his head, you could tell he was giving a silent prayer blessing to all things in the sky.

    8. Apology to theBirds.”

      This is because natives see birds and every living thing as our kin. Because we are not above or beneath but apart of the circle of life. So we are to treat the birds as if they were our neighbor who we took from.

    9. But thiswas a ceremonial move and it was essential to make the four ritual pauses along the way, inhonor of the four sacred directions, the Four Winds

      The number 4 is HIGHLY important in native culture. Everything adheres to the sacred directions that make up the entire universe. 4 Seasons, North=Winter South=Summer East=Spring West=Fall 4 sacred paths Up=yellow (above the stars) Down=Brown (earth) Center=Green (forgot exactly but we see everything as kin) Self= forgot what color, I think red (is the sacred fire where all paths meet). 4 directions West=Black (wisdom/thought) North=Red (New Beginnings/Purity) East=Yellow (Salvation/Spirit guide) South=White (Conclusion/Fullness) if I remember correctly. And you can see this on the native medicine wheel, which symbolizes healing and treating the entire being, not just ailments, to stay balanced in life and health.

    1. Sometimes, when in a circle, if I wish co exit, I muse leap.And let the body swing.From che platform.Outco the grasses.53

      This is very cleverly spaced. It builds a nice visual while reading. I've never noticed anything like this. I love how clever it is, and still simple and understood in its simplicity, or you can go deep.

    2. ne of che first co be executedby the Dakota was Andrew Myrick.

      I wish I could have been a crow on the branch. I wonder if there are any native accounts of this incident. What happened? Was he sorry, or did he hold his savage disposition until the end?

    3. In addition, local government traders would not offer credit co "Indians" co purchase food orgoods.Without money, score credit, or rights co hunt beyond their ten-mile trace ofland, Dakota peoplebegan to starve.The Dakota people were starving

      Huge injustice, so why were the Dakota men punished? Seems like Abraham Lincoln had a debt he didn't pay to the Dakota people. What that his real motive?

    4. "trickery."

      no transparency, thats sad when you are dealing with people's lives giving no transparency. I can't imagine the immense stress the native decision makers had on their mind.

    5. The signing of the Emancipation Proclamation was included in the film Lincoln;che hangingof the Dakota 38 was not.

      Just wow! This clearly shows who is incharge of rewritting history, and how they use different mediums to solidify false historical accounts.

    1. isitors should notstraightway enter, without first letting it be known that they were about to arrive.

      Interesting and respectful native custom that I feel we as Americans have adopted.

    2. he hugged Smiling One close, feeling sick with sympathyfor the unknown children.

      She felt that kindred love for the unknown children she felt were being abused by their white parents.

    3. By talking loudly and fast and by striking them, the people doubtlesshope to scare them into good behavior. I know it sounds queer.”

      scare them into good behavior.......ummm thats so accurate, but a really silly idea when I say it out loud.

    4. “Listen! those peopleactually detest their children!

      Thats crazy now that I think about it, natives gave their children a lot of autonomy and freedom to roam and learn by way of natural means. Settlers were more about following rules and less autonomy to assimilate to what was acceptable by the church. And this reflected in how they raised their children

    5. And their children—what aboutthem?” Her interest always leaned toward children, her own first and then others

      It's only natural to ask about the children having hair on their faces too. Maybe she will recognize settlers are more similar to natives than she originally thought.

    6. They go along on their waywithout recognizing fellow humans as they pass, very unmannerly they seem,

      The settler communities have different mannerisms than the native communities regarding kin and allyship.

    7. obligations were a pleasure.

      And they found pleasure in this type of friendship! Wow, if American society adopted this value, we would have turned out WAY different than we are now.

    8. In every phase of life they must act without thought of self, in defense of andto the advantage of the other. One must give one’s life to save the other.

      Wow, their friendships or fellowhoods are what we expect in a marriage, not friendships. This is great!

    9. eternal loyalty.

      I feel like this is the closest thing we have to marriage, but ever marriage isn't expected to survive eternity. The fact natives had this normalized for friendships is a whole other level of kinship and community solidarity.

    10. There he and Palani met and took an instant liking to each other, and beforeparting they entered into what was known as fellowhood, a solemn friendship pact that mustendure forever

      Ah, how awesome! It's like he found his twin flame!lol

    11. When, for instance, it was the Kit Fox’s turn, the members must be ready for anyassignment and any emergency. The rest of the time they were a loosely organized social cluband met occasionally for dancing and feasting, free to pursue their individual interestsotherwise.

      This is so cool!

    12. It was not demanded of them, or of any man, to go to war unless he wanted to go. Themilitary orders functioned rather as messengers, scouts, camp police, in short, as guardians ofthe camp circle and its people. They patrolled and regulated the communal hunt and in everyway carried out the orders of the magistrates and council.

      Noone was forced to fight in battle, but they were appointed to do other security jobs. I think this is a really great community guideline to follow. Gives fighters autonomy and a voice at war times.

    13. Spurious societies sprang upfrom time to time, flourished for a while, and then died out.

      I wonder why these societies died out? What kind of societies were they? Did they serve the tribe or were they just for entertainment or hobbies?

    14. In addition,every candidate must have a record of consistent hospitality and generosity, which were thequalities that marked a good citizen of the camp circle

      A "good indian"

    1. Ella Deloria’s work of transcription, translation,and cultural interpretation has provided the data and insight from which we can come tounderstand the Sioux people of the last century in the way that she intended, as fellow humanbeings.

      Deloria accomplished her goal of having non-natives see the natives as fellow humans.

    2. The twists and turns of plot are no morefantastic than the true-life autobiographies Deloria recorded from living people. The story ischarged with universal human interest, set firmly in the matrix of Sioux cultural practices andunderstandings.

      I guess this is a simplification of what the book is all about

    3. she developed a shrewd ability to encode strategies of dissidence withinEuroamerican narrative forms.

      super intriguing. I will read and think of Why she felt the need for this and how she executed this dissidence.

    4. out of her interviewees’many voices came her texts

      This is soooooo native spiritual. Its all about the Organic collective. Makes me super excited to read this now, because it has a sacred meaning (many ancestral voices) its powerful.

    5. Most of Ella Deloria’s lifework still remains unknown, unpublished, and unanalyzed

      Thats a shame because I believe she has a unique sense of duty and perspective of both worlds.

    6. Ella Deloria was the only woman directly related to these remarkable

      Ah, now I know what it means by cultural brokerage...I think. Her and her family full of men were the authorities in the native's pedigogical interactions. And this might be another reason why she knew what the non-natives expected and she couldn't give them, due to her being a woman amongst a male dominated role, I'm guessing?

    7. Her whitegrandfather, Brig. Gen. Alfred Sully, was a career Indian fighter.)

      Wow, her family has some strong contrasts. Wonder if they had family gatherings and what that was like.

    8. cultural broker

      What's that? like a real estate broker? Who manages and oversees all the exchanges of property? If thats what I think it is, that would be a VERY tall order and important job!

    9. she knew what they expected and that she could not offer them all ofwhat they wanted, or even all of what she wanted.

      I wonder what she thought they expected and does that equate to what the non-natives actually expected? And why did she feel like she couldn't offer what they wanted or everything that she wanted? What were her limitations and the limitations of the day? Are those rectified today or do they still persise?

    10. her aim was to interest Episcopallaypeople in learning more about Indian peoples.

      I think this is powerful! Creating a bridge for church people to see the savages as humans that have feelings and lives. By laypeople reading the life of natives creates a kinship they probably never had.

    11. Her life was migratory, like thatof her people traditionally, although her travels were governed by the grant and proposaldeadlines of the North American academic year rather than by seasonal, cyclic time. Herhousehold was as meager as it was portable

      This shows how the natives were very fluid and adaptable people. Maybe she was able to produce content while living this lifestyle others wouldn't be productive in, is because she was accustomed to it, except the added western ideas like the bills and her travels that were predicated on capitalistic endevors instead of natural cycles like she was accustomed to.