Wednesday, October 3, 2018

White Self-Existing Mirror/ Electric Deer Moon of Service, Day 14






4 Etznab

White Self-Existing Mirror

 Called in Sanskrit Sushumna
The central mystic Column
Of the Spine
Creates a Channel
For Energy to travel
Ascending and Descending
Like alternating
Currents Serpentine –

Ida (Moon) and Pingala (Sun)
Rising and falling through each Chakra
From Muladhara (base) to Sahasrara (crown)
Creating Masculine and Feminine
High/Low - Dark/Light – Ha/Tha –
Weavers of Third Dimensional
Reality of Duality
Fashioners of Relativity –

 Kundalini rises
Enlightening the Soul
Awakening subtle Bodies –
Rendering all that’s Relative
 Absolute.

©Kleomichele Leeds


Opaline Deveraux Wadkins


Opaline Deveraux Wadkins (1912–2000) organized the first school to train black nurses in Oklahoma City, fought for desegregation of the College of Nursing at the University of Oklahoma and founded the School of Nursing at Langston University. She was the first African American nurse to earn a master's degree from the University of Oklahoma. She was honored in 1987 by the Oklahoma Public Health Association and inducted into the Oklahoma Women's Hall of Fame in 1993.

Biography

Opaline Deveraux was born on March 26, 1912, in Carthage, Texas, to Henry and Effie (née Roquemore) Davereaux. Deveraux, a registered nurse, was hired by the Department of Public Health in 1938 to recruit black nurses. In 1940 in Oklahoma City, she married Bert V. Wadkins of Fayetteville, Tennessee. She and the Oklahoma Negro Medical Society lobbied University Hospital to admit African Americans and in 1945, the first hospital in Oklahoma City to treat black patients was established as the University Hospital South Ward. The regents of the University of Oklahoma also approved establishing a school to train African American nurses. In 1948, Wadkins, who was a nursing supervisor, was granted a pay raise and by 1949 she was the organizer of the first school for African American nurses in Oklahoma City. She trained over 200 LPNs between 1949 and 1953. During the same period, she participated in the annual Youth Negro Aquatic School held at Lake Murray.

Wadkins was the first African American to earn a master's degree in nursing from the University of Oklahoma, becoming instrumental in desegregating the University of Oklahoma College of Nursing. She recognized the need to provide health services to Native Americans as well, and she developed a health program and well-baby care initiative for Indians in Southwestern Oklahoma. It was the first pediatric service for native infants and effectively decreased infant mortality by 50%. She instituted health and diabetic clinics for black patients through Oklahoma City's African American churches. In the 1970's Wadkins developed a prenatal clinic for teenage mothers, naming it the "Stork's Nest," and at the same time, she established the Langston University School of Nursing.

In November 1976, Wadkins retired. David Boren, then governor of Oklahoma, declared November 14 as Opaline Wadkins Day. She was also honored by a citation from the VA Hospital Nursing Service. She was honored in 1987 by the Oklahoma Public Health Association and inducted into the Oklahoma Women’s Hall of Fame in 1993. In 2000, the Oklahoma City-Norman Chapter of the OU Black Alumni Society granted her their Trail Blazer award. Wadkins died on 11 April 2000 in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma.*




ETZNAB



Kin 238: White Self-Existing Mirror


I define in order to reflect
Measuring order
I seal the matrix of endlessness
With the self-existing tone of form
I am guided by the power of timelessness.


The art codes are actually memory codes interwoven in  an evolving mosaic of cultural belief structures.*



*Star Traveler's 13 Moon Almanac of Synchronicity, Galactic Research Institute, Law of Time Press, Ashland, Oregon, 2018-2019.









The Sacred Tzolk'in





Anahata Chakra (Silio Plasma)





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