13 Chuen
Blue Cosmic
Monkey
Into the wild Sea
I dive –
Into the wild Wave
One with the open
Sky
Am I
One with an open
Wing
Into the Forest
green
I wander
Into a mountain
Spring
I am One with these
Sea – Sky and Wood
Fierce and free like
these am I
The Rhythm of Nature
Life – Death – Life
Is replicate in me
For I am this
Dancing Magic –
Calling forth the
Soul in Thee.
©Kleomichele Leeds
Sarah Winifred Brown
Sara Winifred Brown (1868–1948) was a prominent African American teacher and doctor. She worked in disaster relief and gynecology. In 1910, she helped to found the group that would later become the National Association of University Women, and in 1924 was the first woman to serve as an alumni trustee of Howard University.
Early Life
Sara Winifred Brown was born in Winchester, Virginia.
Education
Brown attended Hampton University, then called Hampton Normal and Agriculture Institute, graduating with honors. She taught English in Washington, D.C., then took a leave of absence to attend Cornell University in 1894. At Cornell, she lived at Sage College dormitory, which three decades later changed its policy and barred residency to women of color. At Cornell, she became interested in biology, graduating with a BS in biology in 1897. She returned to DC and taught biology. She then enrolled in Howard University, receiving her MD in 1904.
Career and Family
After receiving her MD from Howard, she entered medical practice but continued to pursue her educational interests in sociology and anthropology. In 1908, Howard University hired her to lecture on gynecology, and she continued to practice medicine and teach high school biology. In 1910, she joined in the founding of the College Alumnae Club, which came to be called the National Association of College Women, and is now known as the National Association of University Women. During World War I, she was one of 50 women chosen by the Women's War Work Council to be part of the "Flying Squadron". In 1924, she was elected to the board of Howard University, the first woman to serve as an alumni trustee. In 1927, she joined a Red Cross relief effort to assist victims of severe flooding in Mississippi and Louisiana. In 1930, she joined a Gold Star Mothers pilgrimage to France.. She was struck by a bus in 1948 and died as a result of her injuries.
Legacy
The United States Department of Health and Human Services lists her as an African American Pioneer in Health Care. In the 1950's, her brother, Dr. John William Brown, donated $40,000 to Howard University, which renamed their Friendship Clinic to the Sara Winifred Brown Memorial Clinic. In 2010, as part of their Centennial celebration, the National Association of University Women planted a tree and placed a plaque to honor her founding efforts.*
CHUEN
Kin 91: Blue Cosmic Monkey
I endure in order to play
Transcending illusion
I seal the process of magic
With the cosmic tone of presence
I am guided by the power of vision.
Other dimensions are penetrated by an interior mental resonance
which puts you in touch with higher-dimensional phenomena.*
*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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