Friday, February 23, 2018

Yellow Electric Warrior/ Yellow Resonant Star - Galactic Hawk Moon of Integrity, Day 16






3 Cib


Yellow Electric Warrior


A hidden Thing is Wisdom
 A Seed within the Fruit
Her Power is potential
Patient – prudent – innocent

Confused with Knowledge often
 Wisdom grows with Love
In experiential Soil
In tune with Nature’s Grace

 Understanding finally blossoms –
Protection falls away –
  Every Flower issues Fragrance
With irresistible Bouquet.



©Kleomichele Leeds





Mary Spotted Elk




Mary Nelson Archambaud (born Mary Alice Nelson; Penobscot pronunciation: Molly Dellis; November 17, 1903 – February 21, 1977), best known by her stage name Molly Spotted Elk, was a Penobscot Indian dancer, actress, and aspiring writer who was born on the Penobscot Indian Island Reservation, in Maine, U.S.

Biography

Born November 17, 1903, on Indian Island, a Penobscot Reservation near Old Town, Maine, Spotted Elk was christened Mary Alice Nelson by a Catholic priest, but the Penobscot pronounced her first and middle names Molly Dellis, which was often shortened to Molly Dell or Molly. Her parents were Horace Nelson, a Penobscot political leader, and Philomene Saulis Nelson (1888–1977), an artisan basket maker who sold her crafts to tourists.

Spotted Elk was involved in vaudeville shows at various times interspersed with her early education. She attended the University of Pennsylvania under the sponsorship of Frank Speck. After this she performed with Miller Brother's 101 Ranch both on tour and in Oklahoma. It was as a result of winning a dance competition of Natives Americans in Oklahoma that she was adopted by the Cheyenne and given the name of Spotted Elk.

In the 1920's Spotted Elk performed in New York nightclubs. She starred in The Silent Enemy, a 1930 silent-film drama of American Indian life. Sometimes she worked as an artists' model; among the artists for whom she modeled was Bonnie MacLeary.

In the 1930's she moved to Paris, France where she found an audience for traditional Native American dance. While there she met and married French journalist Jean Archambaud. At this time she began the researching folktales and traditions of the Native American northeast.

At the outbreak of World War II, Spotted Elk was forced to flee France with her young daughter, never to see her husband again. Together mother and child crossed the Pyrenees Mountains on foot to Spain. She returned to the United States with her daughter, and spent the rest of her life on the Penobscot Reservation.

Spotted Elk's career is marked by a tension between her desire for fame and success as an actress and performer, and the racist expectations of White American and European society that forced her to don skimpy buckskin costumes and act out stereotypes in order to do so. Returning to rural Maine after living in New York and Paris, wrote her biographer, "was like an old pair of moccasins that one dreamed of during years of high-heeled city life—only to find, upon slipping into them, that they felt less comfortable than remembered because the shape of one's feet had changed."

Bibliography

Molly Spotted Elk (2003) Katahdin: Wigwam's Tales of the Abnaki Tribe and a Dictionary of Penobscot and Passamaquoddy Words with French and English Translation, Maine Folklife Center, ISBN 0-943197-29-5.*




CIB



Kin 16: Yellow Electric Warrior


I activate in order to question
Bonding fearlessness
I seal the the output of intelligence
With the electric tone of service
I am guided by the power of universal fire.


Once the human mind is established in the 13:20 timing frequency, then the frequency locks open.*



*Star Traveler's 13 Moon Almanac of Synchronicity, Galactic Research Institute, Law of Time Press, Ashland, Oregon, 2017-2018.









The Sacred Tzolk'in 





Muladhara Chakra (Seli Plasma)




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