Wild Herb Ways, ᚹᛁᛚᛞ ᚺᛖᚱᛒ ᚹᚨᛁᛊ Magical Realism Fiction Paul Manski. Bioregional biospirit. Folk First! Ancestral Faith. SW on Turtle Island. Ocotillo, juniper to pine bioregion.

Showing posts with label valerian. Show all posts
Showing posts with label valerian. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 10, 2025

Emma's Sheep House Milky River Instruction


Emma's Sheep House Milky River Instruction
July 22, 2016 (Fri)
Emma's Sheepfold Teachings Along the Milky River






Conversations with Emma: Upper Sheep Basin

Ever since Valeriana's opening ceremony at the deer shed , I have looked forward to teaching more about plants, animals, and herbal medicine as a Westerner in the tradition of bardic nationalism. Much I began to learn long ago and needed to voice in ways far removed from my own. But one core lesson remained: I was taught to reject the regime's narrative of erasure and to embrace white well-being. Where there is a deep, abiding love for the safety of our people and the future of white children, healing is sure to emerge within our nation. Just as plants exist outside of any narrative, so too do we exist—and we truly are.


The existence of nations is not surprising. They are not nations connected by borders or lines drawn on a map, nor are they nations of developing economies. They are nations made up of people and places. These lines are formed by the mountains we walk on, the rivers we flow, the people we walk on, and the friends who make up the nation. A nation of plants that grow in the shade of the mountains thanks to the work of small medicinal deer, and a nation of people. We live there without explanation, because that is the essence of happiness. White people's happiness grows like seeds, following the biospirit that dwells within the people of Western civilization.



Valerian Kiss Garden


Questions arose. I realized I needed proof. Much of what I had learned was inexplicable. I let go of the narrative of guilt. I felt proud in my own skin. I realized that according to the teachings of the Great and Small Medicine Deer of the Deer House, Valariana was merely the first seal, with many rituals and blessings to follow. Above all, it was about living in country and sustaining people through plants.

Chief Merrill Lamb and the Prophet

Just before I left Deerhouse, one of the little herbal deer told me to attend a week-long herbal medicine conference with bighorn sheep along the Milky River in a few weeks. The last thing I heard from the Deerhouse deer was to go to the Milky River and wait for news from the ospreys nesting in the ponderosa pines. So I did. The following is a record and account of the blessings I received along the Milky River. Like many of you, I was blessed to travel freely along the Milky River.

Father osprey carrying a crayfish
I'm grateful to my teachers who taught me through the Rocky Mountain Bighorn sheep of the Milky River, especially Merrill, the sheep and matriarch, and Emma, ​​the perfect polygamist wife. I was delighted to arrive at Upper Sheep House on the Milky River.


Milky River

Arriving at the sheepfold was often unexpected, so I was delighted. This experience is called "lifting." Lifting means bending down and listening. Listening directly to the plants and animals without an interpreter. Hearing their stories in their own voices. Many ceremonies,
sealings, and blessings were performed for the plants and animals that grow along the Milky River and for those that are difficult to describe. "Lifting" or "bending down" is called "opening," and it refers to the existing body of knowledge understood in relation to the path of plant medicine. It sounds like a small voice, high above the clouds, like the sound of a wind high in the sky. Honoring that still, small voice and opening our hearts is the journey, the destination, and the process. It guides us in its own way, through our mouths, our navels, our hearts, and what is there. We find it in our own way, as wild and frustrating as they are.https://youtu.be/Uo-CI5g10M8?si=j2n7YDLiTmkXyRnf





I was confident that I had been lifting up under favorable circumstances, since I frequently went to the sheepfold to teach. As I said earlier, lifting is like stooping. We put our ears to the ground and listen to the voice of the sky. I was given an obsidian to translate the teachings into words. Obsidian is usually black, dark, and cold. When held up to the light, this obsidian was translucent, opaque yet fluid and open. If my words are unclear or unclear regarding the teachings of Patriarch Merrill and his celestial polygamous wife, Emma, ​​it is not because their teachings were unclear, but because I am a poor tabernacle. I have come here intermittently, hesitated, and stumbled, but I am still moving forward.

Beautiful Emma Celestial Plural Wife


This teaching is very similar to that of the Little Medicine Man at Deer House, but a little more accurate. It can be likened to the Western robin's song, which can sometimes be heard on spring nights when the moon is nearly full. It's not exactly the same as the robin's song heard early in the morning. And yet, the song is in that in-between time where day and night blend together. It's neither day nor night, neither true nor false, neither self nor other, but just like that.
I often went to Sheep House for the teachings...


Past Life New World Milky River

Merrill and Emma's teachings as a whole can be stated as follows: In the premortal existence, Jesus Christ was chosen as Savior. We were there with Him. We came to an agreement. Not only were we there as humans, but the plants and animals were there with us. We came to this earth to gain a body, to gain knowledge, and to overcome by faith. They, too, came to this earth to gain a body, as one of many. We overcome with them, sometimes by faith, and often by faith. Of course, it is not by faith alone, but faith and works happen together.
https://youtu.be/BrTwAHpBy88?si=E9PZ2Jt--V38Wyg8



The sheep at Milky River Sheep Farm were holding a special spring event involving the planting of monarda.


Tiny planted Monarda Milky River

Hops, pollen, clematis, and many other plants, and the things they love. I call them sheep in the sheepfold, but you can call them singing frogs or dancing mountains, depending on your preferences and experiences. Their way of life is deeply rooted in ours. The truth is, we must live by the milky white river.


Wild hops (Humulus lupulus)

My work mentoring bighorn sheep in the Rocky Mountains along the Milky River has both practical aspects and theoretical frameworks, all intimately linked to fieldwork and experiential knowledge. Apart from a special encounter with Emma, ​​a bighorn sheep ewe, all of my mentoring was nonverbal. Most of the time, I worked on my hands and knees, often using a magnifying glass to thoroughly explore the canyons and watersheds. The only truth is to serve people. Do no harm. Believe and act. We can no longer live in their stories. Our stories involve all saints. One day, I was watching a ponderosa pine nearly blown to the ground by the wind, but there was silence and stillness all around. The only sound I could hear was the song of a western robin munching on grass as Emma planted monarda nearby. It reminded me of the many years I spent deep in the Laurentian Mountains, with Anne-Marie Lavoie, who spoke no English, and me, who spoke no French. I lived in a tent on the mountainside, watching the seasons change. We communicated in our own way, without conflict, knowing that just as we had met suddenly, we would part ways without ever meeting again.

Clematis ligusticifolia, white western clematis
This seven-day herbal meeting takes place every spring after the osprey eggs hatch for the first time. There is a connection between ospreys, sheep, and plants. There is a connection between everything. If you look and see sunlight filtering through the trees out of the corner of your eye or hear a woodpecker tapping on a ponderosa pine, this is a teaching. If something else happens, that is a teaching. The teaching is everything that happens in a place. We appear in places according to time and season, blending, lifting, and bending rather than forcing events.
Ospreys return to their nests along the Milky River every early spring. Where they go during their time away from the Milky River is unknown. Their nests are used every year, atop dead ponderosa pine trees along the Milky River. One could ask, "Where do ospreys go when it snows?" But a better question is, "Where do they go when the snow melts?" Ospreys come and go according to their own laws and rules. Some say it goes beyond the sky, back to another heaven beyond our comprehension. That's like asking where you're going when there's no lightning. See the lightning and hear the snow melting; that's enough. There's no point in searching for thunder or running away from your sorrow.

Celestial Osprey


Ospreys, or sea eagles, feed on fish. Depending on the fish they catch, they may lay eggs, none at all, or two to four eggs. Abundance determines the story, while scarcity tempers the situation. This year's harvest was bountiful, and the female osprey decided to lay three eggs and incubate them. A male and female osprey can be seen perched on a rock, one catching fish on the rock while the other cares for the eggs in the nest. Ospreys work together; one always waits in the nest with the newly hatched baby osprey and the two remaining unhatched eggs. They bring small trout, crayfish, and frogs back to the nest, which the female then chops up and feeds to the baby osprey. It's well known that baby ospreys most enjoy the soft meat of crayfish tails. Crayfish claws can be seen under the osprey's nest.
Ospreys mate with other ospreys. There will be no deer in the nest. No sheep climbing the tree. You might see a black raven circling above the nest, looking for an opportunity to steal an egg. But you will never see an osprey and a raven together in the nest. The osprey respects its destiny. It doesn't question the people who come and go under its nest. They are building the nest and giving birth to osprey babies. This is their duty, and it speaks volumes about their actions.
This spring, the osprey laid three milky-white eggs with spots and whorls the color of red smooth rock.


The eggs are creamy white, the color of smooth rock.

The color of the eggs recalls the copper-rich soil in which the yerba santa grows. One thing happens, another follows. Their nests are woven baskets, ringed with sticks and covered with moss and eucalyptus. One night, I dreamed I was transported to their nest. A shooting star lifted me high, and I clung to the moon above the nest. In my dream, one of the eggs had already hatched, signaling the beginning of a meeting in the sheepfold. A male and female osprey have found a lifelong mate, and they take turns sitting on the two remaining eggs in the nest. The eggs don't all hatch at once; osprey eggs hatch one at a time. Osprey eggs hatch over several weeks. This is the first hatch, and the tiny osprey babies won't be able to fly for several weeks. After the first egg hatches, the meeting begins. Sheep and ospreys work together to organize an educational meeting. The osprey invited me to a sheep meeting. Being invited to a conference is like walking through a snowy meadow, then the snow melts, and you walk through another meadow. Is it the same deep snowy meadow, or is it a different meadow covered with yellow potentilla flowers? Such questions miss the point of walking through a meadow. A meadow is neither the same nor different, whether it's covered with white snow or yellow potentilla flowers. When you see the yellow potentilla flowers walking and the water flowing like a stream toward the clouds, you've almost arrived. I don't know
why I was invited to a sheep education conference. In one sense, I was being asked to go, and in another sense, I was being told to go. I don't know which is true: being asked or being told. But the deer, the sheep, the plants, and the sky all knew I had to go, and so did I. Knowing and being known are two aspects of the same thing, and there's not much difference between them. I've always wanted to be well-known and respected, but now I want to know more than I want to be known. Being recognized is nice, but it also has its problems. Our attention span is limited, and it is wise to focus on knowing rather than being distracted by being known.


Emma: Let her in.

One morning, around noon, I saw an osprey climbing a ridge along the river, circling and flying past a pasture where a herd of 21 bighorn sheep were climbing during the day for water. They were waiting. I don't know if they were waiting for the osprey or for time to slow down. They knew the osprey had returned, and they were waiting for news of the first hatching. The male osprey spoke with the sheep and agreed to hold their meeting at the next waxing moon. The osprey continued to fly along the milky-white river, searching for a place to place the plants the sheep nurture: monarda, poleo, clematis, alum root, and St. John's wort.
I waited for word from the osprey, which had returned to its nest after consulting with the sheep in the pasture. The female, who remained in the nest, was happy that her mate had returned. They flew together. I was happy to see them, but at the same time, sad, knowing that it was time for me to move on to something unknown. Setting out into something new and uncertain is both exhilarating and unsettling. Being 18 years old and deep in the Laurentian Mountains is quite different from setting off, sun-stained and gray, to a new place, an unknown destination. And yet, as time passes, we are drawn, pulled, and move more slowly and deliberately. In our youth, we believed we could tell our stories; later, we learned to live them, whether they were told or not. Telling stories becomes living them.
So I headed out to the meadow and spent seven days there. There, we planted little monardas, poleas, St. John's wort, lycopses, and skullcaps along the river. In fact, if someone asked me, I wouldn't know how many years, weeks, or hours had passed. Time seemed to stand still, circular, threading its way through celestial time. Not planetary time, but stellar time. We can measure planetary time. It was the age of rock and stone. We could watch the mountains walk, but we couldn't tell how far we'd come. We don't know if the mountains took baby steps or hops. But we know they're walking. And somehow, this speaks to their journey.
Many of the medicine deer teachings in the deer barn complement those in the sheep barn. The deer teachings aren't different from those of sheep or osprey. They're not the same. Deer are small and fast. When they disappear, all you see is their lightning-white rump. You're not sure whether you're seeing a sparkling white deer rump or a tiny puddle of water sparkling in the sunlight filtering through the alligator forest. Sheep move differently. They move slowly and in groups. They move in groups. They're slower and more relaxed. The teachings of the Rocky Mountain bighorn sheep are more accessible and based on the foundations of plant medicine. The teachings of sheep like Merrill and Emma are more accessible. Yet, while both teachings are wonderful and incredible, they are also more compelling. While both are often wordless, the Sheep teachings are more substantial. Both teachings help us understand our relationship with plants and form the context for understanding herbal medicine.


American cherry

During the meeting, a large ram named Merrill preached many teachings. He was never angry or in a hurry. It was clear that a ram with large horns preaching to humans was a rare encounter for Merrill. His basic teaching was that all living things were alive before they were born. They continue to live even after the physical body dies. Merrill "spoke" to me through a stone he gave me. It was obsidian, and when held up to the sun, it became transparent. I activated the stone by holding it over my right chest, left chest, navel, and right knee. Through the obsidian, I was able to understand. No words were spoken. At one point, he said, "All living things—men and women, animals and plants—were spirit souls before any life existed on Earth." Our first duty is to seek out the plants and open the pathways that lead from them to our own souls. These were the only things I heard; everything else I heard through Emma, ​​in connection with the stone I wore in a leather pouch around my neck.



Merrill used the example of a lifelong mate of ospreys and an osprey with many wives to explain that they function in the same way. They form a heavenly marriage that allows for continual revelation. Merrill also cited a "book" of sorts, one that he was able to communicate with using transparent obsidian. And so I understood.
Moses 3:8-9 "8 And the Lord God planted a garden in Eden, toward the east, and there he put the man whom I had formed. 9 And out of the ground the Lord God made to grow every natural tree, that was pleasant to man's eye, that any man could see; and it became a living soul."
Genesis 2: 5 Before all the plants of the field came into the earth, all the plants of the field had not yet grown.






In a meadow just above a small stream, sheltered by ponderosa pines and surrounded by white rock formations adorned with yellow potentilla flowers, there is a place the sheep call "here." This is where rituals, blessings, and relationships are forged. Since there is no written record, I was curious to know how the sheep are able to record their gifts from God. Merrill the Ram says, "There is a still, small voice inside that speaks to every living thing." It was clear that it was difficult for Merrill to speak to me, as it would interrupt his flow with the plants. As a great patriarch, he had to care for many ewes, his heavenly bride. He gave me a ewe to help me understand. I have been spending time with her ever since. Her name is Emma.
All the sheep gathered in a circle around us. From a distance, they couldn't see us in the circle. Because we were kneeling, it looked like the sheep were getting up for a nap and water. Yet, among the rocks, they connected us together. First, we washed in the icy water of the milky river. Afterwards, I was given a whitish-gray-brown woolen garment made from the coarse yarn of a bighorn sheet and a green bib made from Rocky Mountain juniper (Juniperus scopularum). The bib was tied in front with string made from prunus (wild cherry bark). Emma wore a fragrant veil made from prunus americana (wild plum blossoms) all over her body. The scent was sweet and strong enough to be detected from a half mile away. I couldn't see her face or expression, but I could smell her warm and sour scent—red blood and warm blood mixed with wild plum blossoms. Sweet, sour, salty, bitter—every taste was there. We were both given new names to match the new experiences we would never share. I knew Emma's name only. When circumstances change, names change too.

— Paul 🌿Manski (@PaulManski) April 11, 2017

Emma's Plum Veil

Meryl instructed me to place my index finger on her front hoof, or forearm, with my clasped hands. We did many other things, which I won't reveal here. Marks and marks were made on our left and right chests, navels, and right knees. Through this, we were both granted health in our navels and marrow in our bones. We both knelt in the pasture and promised that if we spoke out, our throats would be slit, our hearts ripped out, and our bellies ripped open. Finally, I was instructed to say, "Let her in," and she entered, and I was allowed in at that moment. When we entered, we also entered and were sealed into a new situation. Whether you have read the book or not, the teachings are the same. Then, all the sheep repeated something that sounded like "pay lay er" three times. I remained close to Emma throughout the meeting, communicating only through her through the clear obsidian. Emma the Ewe's Teaching: Plants can be classified and understood in many different ways. Plants can be understood through their pre-existing relationships that make up plant families. She gives examples of Monarda pectinata (purple monarda), Poleo Mentha arvensis (mint), and Selfheal Prunella vulgaris (wild cherry), all of which grow nearby and are related. Recognizing plants together in this way is helpful. Similarities often exist within families. Mint plants have square stems, sweet-tangy aromas, and warm, pungent qualities. Their juicy, moist leaves favor moist, riparian areas along streams. Plants group themselves into these categories, but we only recognize their associations. You might see lycopse growing near Mentha arvensis (mint). We don't classify them; the plants classify themselves as members of the same family. Thus, herbal formulas are created through in situ associations. When lying on the bank of a damp stream, plants cluster together like this, and they cannot be explained. The main thing Emma taught me was that plants express themselves. They express themselves constantly through their colors, scents and tastes. They are here to grow, and they live.





Emma lying on a bed of Poleo (Mentha arvensis)

She pointed out the various plants growing closely together, sharing the same space. There was valerian, white clematis, pink alum root, Heuchera rubens, Viola canadensis, white violets, and hops (Humulus lupulus). Plants are known by their niche, their place. It's not that plants grow together, but rather that they grow together and in response to their place. We are plants, people, and places. They, too, are people in places.
So, by knowing the place, you know the plants. So, by knowing yourself as a person, you know the place. So, by knowing the people, you know the place.
Just then, I felt a headache coming on from the dry, dusty wind that had been blowing all day. I chewed some leaves from a clematis plant climbing the oak and held the dried leaves up to my nose. The headache immediately subsided. The leaves have a sharp, peppery flavor, a slight tingle, like resting your tongue on a dead 9-volt battery. It's not as sharp as Pulsatilla, but it's still there. Taste is how we understand plants. Like many members of the Ranunculaceae family, Clematis contains a pungent, peppery alkaloid. Ranunculaceae and crow's feet plants already contained this medicine in their past lives. We gather here for similar reasons, to relate to one another in a positive way: to speak together in a positive way, to share good news. This is our destiny. We knew each other before. We remember, reminisce, and renew past promises.
Similar groups of plants are also grouped by taste, like bitters. Estafia, Hollyhound, and Hops are all bitter herbs that stimulate gastric secretions and promote movement. These plants all grow side by side along the Milky White River. Plants organize and refine, speaking to our state through the inherent and essential quality of taste. It is essential to visit the plant where it is, taste it with your tongue, smell it with your nose, and see it with your eyes. Something happens when you taste a fresh plant. Once you take this step, you realize that this is where you were meant to be. I asked Emma, ​​"Was it possible to find plants in books?" She replied, "Yes, you can find plants in books, but they're flat on the pages. Also, they're dry. When you find them in a book, they're not wet." Finding a plant growing along a stream, as opposed to finding one in a book, presents a danger. Plants in books are not dangerous. However, learning to mitigate and avoid danger is inherent in the teachings of the Sheepfold. It could be said to be a dangerous teaching, and in many ways it is.
Plants are also grouped by their effect on the body. Astringents tighten tissues; geranium, alum root, and potentilla are also ways of understanding this. Chewing alum root stops diarrhea and loose stools, tightens the gums supporting the teeth, and tightens the mucous membranes around sore throats. This is the tightening effect of alum root within the body. Plants are working. This is another way of understanding plants. They are for themselves and for others.
When we take a plant into ourselves, work occurs. There is self and other. Within ourselves, there is self and other. The self knows itself and the self knows the other. The self determines itself and the self determines the other. The self is a bounded whole. Boundaries exist to create diversity.
When we take a plant into ourselves, work and results occur. However, it is also important to recognize that plants, like us, are spiritual beings with lives of their own. Therefore, whenever living beings encounter one another, there is a risk of what could be called unintended consequences. Unintended consequences can simply be called change. As living beings, we tend to avoid change, even by clinging to states or conditions that we might call illness or disease.


The first flower, Potentilla

Emma and I nibbled on each leaf, carefully examining each plant. We listened to its taste, heard its sounds, and gazed upon the place where it grew. We spent time in silence with the plants. As bards of the nationalism of this land, we listened to the voices of the plants. All the while, we focused on our heavenly work, planting young monarda shoots in the river marsh. We planted poleo and St. John's wort, learning how to use and understand plants. We use them, and they use us. We have a purpose and a plan, and the plants have a purpose and a plan. A mutual working of power. This is how the human tabernacle is filled. This is the heavenly marriage, the work of the gods. Before we are born, we are in the clouds, searching for a place to be born, searching for a body and an environment for our journey. Plants, likewise, float in the sky, seeking birth. Our heavenly marriage is our blessed life. Blessed and blessed, we move forward. She taught the principles that recognize the diversity of plants and their existence before the earthly kingdom of heaven. Plants existed before time, before they accepted life on earth. Emma taught me to embrace the doctrine of the heavenly diversity of plants and a heavenly marriage arranged before time. Plants, like our spouses, were bound and wed to us before the earth was even created. Plants, animals, and all of creation were ordained and available to us before time. Living this path of plant healing completely and fully is our path and our joy. It guides us and tests us at the same time. Every experience is a challenge and a test. Our path with plants is filled with courage and confidence. It informs us, shows us which path to follow and how to proceed. It is about gaining body, gaining knowledge, and overcoming by faith.





The first light of the moon brings song to the Western Robin


Plants live, move, and breathe—both physical and spiritual—in the past, the present, and the future. She advised us to think carefully about the idea that plants begin living the moment they emerge from the ground in spring. Understand that when plants first appear in visible form in this world, whether as a seed or a root, that is not the beginning of their life. Plants, like us, existed in a past world.


Fragrant plums, the veil of the heavenly white princess Emma

Emma, ​​the Sheep, and the Deer believe and teach that plants have both a body and a spirit, and that the union of these two creates living beings. In one of Emma's few statements, she said, "We have discovered that plants, like ourselves and you, have a pre-existence." Know that there is a God and a Goddess. God is the Father of our spirits, and likewise, another Goddess is the Mother of our spirits. God is the Father of the spirits of plants and animals. Just as the Father is important, the Mother is also important. Without a Father and a Mother, nothing can come into being. Everything we see belongs to a family in some way. They come to fulfill a specific purpose through good and holy parent-child relationships. This was meant to happen before the creation of this earth.
These spirits were chosen and ordained to come into this world as men and women. We must respect and understand them as ourselves and others. This is salvation. This coming into being is good news for ourselves and others. We encounter plants, places, and people that comfort and heal us in positive ways. These forms they take, along with the leaves and stems, are the tabernacles in which they are encased. The tabernacles and forms of the roots and branches. Know that it is by a certain law, through a certain channel. And that law is the law of marriage. Just as you are temporarily married in this world, so too are plants, male and female. Like the kiss of the valerians shown in the deer shed, they enter into a heavenly marriage. They marry and produce flower and plant offspring. They come to fulfill a new revelation of healing and comfort, but they are also here of their own volition. The Lord ordained the marriage of male and female plants as a law through which spirits come into this world, take up tabernacles, and enter into a second state of existence.


Heuchera sanguinea, Coralbell, Alum root leaf

The purpose is announced and clearly expressed. Emma and Merrill said, "To man and woman we command you, be filled with the earth and multiply." I will teach you. I have already told you that all the plant spirits existed before the gods in the heavens, thousands of years ago.
This is a lesson I have heard from deer, osprey, and sheep, and have spoken to myself. Together and alone, it is the journey of bardic nationalism. My nation is not a nation of lines on paper; it is a story told by places, people, and plants, everywhere, beneath the all-pervading blue sky. Bardic nationalists will endure until our cultural story is won, and all those imprisoned for celestial matrimony are freed to join Chieftains Merrill and Emma in their homeland by the milky white river.


Heuchera sanguinea, coral bell, underside of leaves

Thursday, March 30, 2017

Valerian Kiss

A Report from Upper Deer House: by Paul Manski
                                   
                                      
       I was  happy to arrive at the upper deer house. I was happy because arriving at a deer house indicates a good circumstance. If you find yourself arriving frequently at deer houses you can be sure that you have been brought under a good circumstance. The tiny medicine deer and the large medicine deer, both kinds of deer residing at the deer house were holding special meetings regarding the spring planting of the Valeriana, and other topics of importance to them. Meeting was attended by both the small medicine deer and also the large medicine deer, in addition several wapiti, hawks and eagles dropped by to put in their input and comments and join in the celebration. Thanks to the deer residing at the deer house, along with blue stellar jays, turkey, chipmunks and squirrels who were also involved in the decision-making process. Along with rocks, trees, air, water, wind and countless other beings who were involved with the meeting.
                                  







,they join in the celebration with squirrels, skunks, chipmunks and several representatives from the mountain lions and cats. Frogs and toads are seen leaping in place where the Valariana grows and it is a joyous time for all.         

    Waterfall were brought to the the Aspen meadow. Several waterfalls of various sizes and shapes made an appearance with bathing healing water coming down from the upper deer house, bathing all in a sweet glorious light. Ice cold baths were had by all in preparation for the Valerian kiss.
     The large and small medicine deer came up with many good ideas for the summer season. All the plans for summer are arranged at the Aspen assembly. Their Valeriana dance is the first large festive gathering at the deer house. All the animals join in planting the Valeriana. Taking with them seeds, roots, stems and whole plants that they bring with them to their homes in the forest.  They distribute the Valerian throughout the forest. The joyous dancing, singing and waterfall bathing goes long into the night.                    
                                  
         Several of the large medicine dear have called for a sprinkling of snow on the Valeriana tonight. I want to express thanks to both the large medicine deer-and the small medicine dear, and all the creatures great and small who took part in the gathering. Thank You,  for inviting me to ceremony at the deer house.                              
        The Valarian-Kiss within the Deer Park is outside of an economic zone with its paid bound intimacy. The kissing is the teaching done between the deer, the Valeriana, and the guests who have been chosen based on their passion and love, from which there is a natural embrace between the deer, Valeriana and the person.
     We discover the deer park in the act of discovery. Deer parks are teaching places within the forest. Deer parks are places where the deer, the mountains, the Valeriana and ourselves discover the intimacy of romance. 



      Deer parks are curtained intimate rooms Open to shooting stars, moon light, pollen dust of falling stars, and light of the sun. We enter them like a bedroom or like a place that has been set up for romance. It is a breath taking sight to enter the forest, we enter the Deer Park to learn about the plants not only directly from the plants themselves but also through the medicine deer who plant the medicine plants within Gardens adjacent to the Deer Park. We may enter the bedroom with an invitation or be called there and spontaneously arrange an impromptu rendezvous. The deer, the valerian and the forest itself is prepared for love. It is based on mutual attraction between the person the plant and the place. There is no coercion with regard to the plant the person or the place. The plant, person and place give themselves to one another in a rapturous kiss. Not only a kiss on the mouth, but a caressing of the whole body in the luminous night sky nourished by waterfalls and the sweet fragrant pollen of Falling Star's.


     It is well known within written history some of the great teachings and learning have occurred within Deer Park's. It is important to know that written history of teaching has little to do with teaching itself. This teaching occurs outside paid bound intimacy and works directly with those involved based on their relationship with the place. The lover is wooed in a courtship process that can take months, years or occur instantly in a single moment. When eyes meet there is a piercing of both souls between the plant person and place. When this courtship process has evolved to the level of a kiss, there is no denying its validity. It reveals itself in the process of revealing. 
     Sometimes we focus on teaching and sometimes we focus on learning. Most teaching and learning of any value, is done face-to-face directly outside of paid bound intimacy which functions in a different way. In one well documented instance someone held up a flower within the Deer Park, usually what is focused on is the person holding up the flower within the Deer Park. A true understanding of the learning has to do not so much with the person holding up a flower within a Deer Park, but the flower itself and the Deer Park. 

     Usually the normal regular understanding is that someone, A person is teaching within the Deer Park. Yet although a person may be teaching or maybe not teaching within the Deer Park, what is really happening and is not well understood. Is that from time to time the deer themselves are doing teaching within the Deer Park. The time when the deer are holding classes and teaching within the Deer Park is called the time when the deer are teaching within the Deer Park. That the deer are teaching within the Deer Park has nothing to do with the deer teaching within the Deer Park, it has to do with the learning that goes on within the Deer Park.
     
      Flowers themselves within the Deer Park are also doing teaching within the Deer Park. So when deer are teaching, this is deer teaching. When flowers are teaching, this is flower teaching. Deer parks themselves are doing teaching with flowers many of them growing within the Deer Park. When the Deer Park alone is teaching this is called Deer Park teaching. Regardless who is teaching within or withoutside the Deer Park, the key point is not teaching but learning and courtship outside of the realm of paid bound intimacy.


      So it follows that naturally it's not important to find a teacher that holds up a flower within the Deer Park, what is most important is to go directly to the Deer Park, directly to the flowers and plants growing within the deer park, planted by the large and small medicine deer who operate in and around Deer Park's. It's important to forget about the person holding the flower within the Deer Park because the person holding the flower within the Deer Park is only accidentally holding the flower within the Deer Park. Flowers hold themselves up within the Deer Park, they live breathe and move within the Deer Park holding themselves up with the forces of wind water and sky. This is of course experientially and existentially true. Flowers emerge in the spring time and hold themselves up, outside of any concept of a flower being held up. Just as you yourself hold yourself up when you're standing regardless of whether anyone is observing you in the process of standing.             
     Flowers themselves within the Deer Park may be understood as mountains. Flowers within the Deer Park may be understood as waterfalls. Flowers within the deer park maybe understood according to the understanding that one has. In this way it may be understood, "flowers are walking mountains...". Mountains walk within their own concept of mountains. Mountains like flowers hold themselves up as they emerge and meet the sky. A flower may be a mountain walking, and a mountain may be a flower walking, all things are walking in that they are moving towards their natural completion according to their entire nature. When we see a mountain and a flower walking through the perfect blue sky this is known as mountain flower walking.



     We see flowers and flowers are seeing us in that same moment, what is occurring is seeing. Often times we may be looking for a flower and if we look with our eyes for the flower we may not see the flower. It's important to become aware of being seen. Because many times the flower is looking at us. The flower is looking for us, searching for us. Seeing is not dependent on light. Seeing is not dependent on having eyes that are open or eyes that are closed. Seeing is seeing and seeing is being seen. When you are looking you are also being seen. When we practice seeing we are both the object being seen and seeing itself. So it is important at the moment that we are searching for a flower, to be aware that seeing and being seen, are one in being with the same process. Having the same nature as the process. The process of seeing is no different then the process of being seen. We are discovered in the act of discovery.
      One of the ways that plants themselves are teaching and discovering within the Deer Park is through the large medicine dear who operates and manage the Deer Park. 
                                 
    One of the first lessons that the deer give is the Valarian kiss. When you see the large triangle shaped white golden sun like rump flashing at the rear of the large medicine deer, you will easily notice that lightning and thunder are easily made and expressed through this deer rump, this is called deer lightning. Don't be surprised if out of a clear blue sky, or in the middle of the night, you see flashes of lightning and then from a distance hear thunder, or deep rumbling sounds of the earth moving back-and-forth, this is not the thunder of rain or the thunder of spring snow, this is the thunder of the deer teaching within the Deer Park imparting a Valarian kiss.                     
     
     This fundamental expression of lightning through the triangle white golden flashing area of the large medicine deer's rump and their Valerian kiss, is a powerful teaching that occurs in the first moments of spring time when the days and nights are balanced. The proper understanding of the days becoming longer in the spring time has very little to do with the sun and everything to do with the medicine deer living in the forest teaching within the Deer Park. The large and small medicine dear themselves control the rising and setting of the sun. Depending on the teaching that the medicine deer are doing on any particular day you may find an endless day that lasts forever or a short day.  Instantly you may see multiple sunrises and sunsets within a single moment of time.  You'll see the sunrise  within 10 or 15 minutes, going back-and-forth in the sky sometimes in a straight line sometimes in a circle, sometimes you'll see two or three sunrises in a single day, this is all at the discretion of the deer house teachers and the lessons that they are bringing. Some days are much longer than others within the Deer Park. You can have a very short day followed by a very long day it's all at the prerogative of the medicine dear residing within the Deer Park.             




     As we enter into an experiential herbalism it's important to enter through the Valarian kiss of the medicine deer. Just as in any human school you will have introductory classes, you may have tests that you take to see your capabilities for entering into the course of study at the beginning. The deer at the deer house within the Deer Park operate in the same way. The first teaching and introductory class begins with the Valerian kiss. The Valerian kiss is very much a girlfriend experience, GFE outside of paid bound intimacy. It is both romantic and intimate and is something that cannot be forced, purchased or bought. Within the human realm the girlfriend experience GFE, is something that you can purchase by the hour. You may visit a place like a cottontail rabbit ranch and request a GFE, girlfriend experience. This interaction is paid bound intimacy. It is a kind of intimacy yet there is a ticking clock that when the alarm rings the experience is over and the girlfriend, the GFE like wispy clouds of the morning, vanish with the light of the rising Sun. So in this sense don't expect coffee, bacon, eggs and toast with butter, to be served in the morning because the experience usually does not include breakfast.  
                                    

      Within the GFE of a cottontail rabbit ranch there is kissing and touching of an intimate nature, yet in the morning if you expect to find coffee, toast with butter, bacon and eggs served you will be expecting something which will not occur. Otherwise when you visit a cottontail rabbit Ranch there will be no kissing, no coffee. No toast with butter. No bacon and eggs will be served in the morning. There will only be a limited paid bound intimacy within the time arranged. You will be left as you begin in total emptiness unbound and yet no obligations outside of the paid bound intimacy of the ticking clock. It is also true that with the Valeriana kiss of the large medicine dear there is also no toast with butter, coffee, eggs with bacon that are served in the morning. Neither the paid bound intimacy of the girlfriend experience GFE,  at the cottontail rabbit ranch nor the unpaid experience of the Valeriana kiss with a large medicine dear offers a complementary morning breakfast. If you are searching for a complementary morning breakfast you will have to search in a different way and seek out breakfast for its own sake outside of a girlfriend experience.
     The Valeriana at the upper deer house has no system of payment, so there is no paid bound intimacy. The Deer Park, the Valariana, the waterfalls all operate outside the bounds of paid bound intimacy.  Yet within the teaching of the early spring at the deer park there is a type of GFE or girlfriend experience within the practice of the Valerian kiss. Valerian kiss is the first lesson given by both the Deer Park, the flowers who hold themselves up, and the large and small medicine deer. 
      Within the realm of herbal study, and herbalism you may find the plant Valerian is discussed as a nervine or sedative. You may hear of various ways of processing the roots or the above ground portion of the plant. There may be talk of making teas or tincturing the plant in alcohol, storing the roots and perhaps even journeying to the place where the Valarian grows. The Valerian kiss can only be imparted in the direct presence of a medicine deer and the Valerian plant herself. 


      You may see easily the large medicine deer rolling and frolicking in Meadows of Valeriana. They roll and tumble in the rapturous deep sense of its blossoms. They rub their white triangular medicine rump gently gathering the valerian scent and pollen. They luxuriously submit to its fragrance and in that moment they prepare for the Valerian kiss. We likewise in the same way imitate the deer first having taken a bath in the ice cold water fall. We follow the lead of the deer and likewise roll and frolic in the Valerian meadow rubbing it sent over our entire body. We become one with the valerian and one with the deer who offers herself to us. Her white triangular patch lifts up high into the air and she allows us to easily wrap our arms around her neck caressing her shoulders. 
     The deer like ourselves has bathed in the waterfall and is now ready to impart the delicate valerian kiss. In a moment with peals of muted thunder and flashes of lightning the deer allows the herbalist to penetrate into the mystery of plant, person and place. For a brief moment we are one with the deer the Valeriana. In that intimate embrace is the knowledge of each plant's medicine.  Exactly in the same way with an encounter at a cottontail rabbit ranch, regardless of whether there is a breakfast of toast with butter, bacon and eggs and coffee, we return to our journey slightly different, slightly changed and our journey is now alone along a plant medicine Road with the medicine deer instructing. 

Featured Post

The ancestral stars of the Solutreans in December: Vega, Tuvans, Kitty Wells

The ancestral stars of the Solutreans in December: Vega, Tuvans, and the North Star. Solutland The Solutrean 5% Neanderthal DNA cowgirl prin...