Wednesday, March 7, 2018

Yellow Lunar Star/ Yellow Rhythmic Sun - Galactic Hawk Moon of Integrity, Day 28






2 Lamat 


Yellow Lunar Star


This silent Ship
This lunar Star

Molten golden
Blazing arc

Sailing
Pole to Pole

Floating Latitudes
Gliding Longitudes

Blending Opposites –
Into Light

Her Name?
A Fire within the Flame.

©Kleomichele Leeds









Luci Tapahonso



Luci Tapahonso (born November 8, 1953) is a Navajo poet and a lecturer in Native American Studies. She is the first poet laureate of the Navajo Nation, succeeded by Laura Tohe.

Early life and education

Born on the Navajo reservation in Shiprock, New Mexico to Eugene Tapahonso Sr. (Tódichʼíinii or Bitterwater Clan) and Lucille Deschenne Tapahonso (Áshįįhí or Saltwater Clan), Luci Tapahonso was raised in a traditional way along with 11 siblings. English was not spoken on the family farm, and Tapahonso learned it as a second tongue after her native Navajo. Following schooling at Navajo Methodist School in Farmington, New Mexico, she attended Shiprock High School and graduated in 1971. She embarked on a career as a journalist and investigative reporter before beginning her studies at the University of New Mexico in 1976. There she first met the novelist and poet Leslie Marmon Silko, who was a faculty member and who proved to be an important influence on Tapahonso's early writing. She initially intended to study journalism at New Mexico, but Silko convinced her to change her major to creative writing. She earned her bachelor's degree in 1980. In 1983, Tapahonso gained her MA in Creative Writing, and she proceeded to teach, first at New Mexico and later at the University of Kansas and now at the University of Arizona.

Writing

Silko helped Tapahonso publish her first story, "The Snake Man", in 1978. Her first collection of poetry, One More Shiprock Night (assembled when she was still an undergraduate), was published in 1981, but did not make much impact. Following Silko's lead, Tapahonso's early work is often mystical and places much importance on the idea of the feminine as a source of power and balance in the world. She also frequently uses her family and childhood friends in her poetry. Several more collections followed, as well as many individual poems which have been anthologized in others' collections, activist literature, and writing in magazines.

Her 1993 collection Saánii Dahataal (the women are singing), written in Navajo and English, was the first to gain her an international reputation, a reputation then cemented by 1997's blue horses rush in.

Tapahonso's writing, unlike that of most Native American writers, is a translation from original work she has created in her tribe's native tongue. Her Navajo work includes original songs and chants designed for performance. For this reason, her English work is strongly rhythmic and uses syntactical structures unusual in English language poetry.

Awards

Lifetime Achievement Award, Native Writers' Circle of the Americas, 2006
Wordcraft Circle Storyteller of the Year (Readings/Performance) Award, 1999
Award for Best Poetry from the Mountains and Plain's Booksellers Association, 1998
New Mexico Eminent Scholar award, New Mexico Commission of Higher Education, 1989
Excellent Instructor Award, U. of New Mexico, 1985
American Book Awards, Honorable Mention, 1983
Southwestern Association of Indian Affairs Literature Fellowship, 1981*




LAMAT




Kin 28: Yellow Lunar Star



I polarize in order to beautify
Stabilizing art
I seal the store of elegance
With the lunar tone of challenge
I am guided by the power of universal fire.


Everything is contained within the vastness of space and within the human body; we are cultivating evolution in the form of the Earth Wizard.*



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






The Sacred Tzolk'in 





Anahata Chakra (Silio Plasma)






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