Cultivate a Sacred Life Rooted in Spiritual Wisdom & the First Nations Peoples’ Good Mind with Diane Longboat (October – November 2020): Be inspired by an Indigenous Thanksgiving Address to deepen your connection with life. Experience First Nations Peoples’ teachings of the Good Mind to nurture gratitude and peace. Discover your connection to Spirit, Source of Life, and all of Creation.
IMPORTANT NOTE: We hope you’re able to catch the event as scheduled… however, if you register and miss it, you’ll receive a downloadable recording as soon as it’s available.
Experience First Nations Peoples’ Teachings of the Good Mind to Nurture Gratitude & Connection to the Source of Life
Do you long to feel a greater connection to the Source of Life, Spiritual Wisdom, and all of Creation?
Values rooted in gratitude and Giving Thanks daily help us nourish our mind and remember our Good Mind — our spirituality as embodied wisdom.
We open to cultivating inner peace and building unity through our similarities and by celebrating our differences as ways of deeper learning about one another.
The principles of the Good Mind give us the spiritual discipline to hold deep peace within and enable us — by our presence alone — to help heal others and the Earth. The Good Mind helps us turn the negatives in life into something positive to benefit our personal growth and help others.
On Saturday, October 24, 2020, Kahontakwas Diane Longboat, ceremonial leader and teacher of Indigenous spiritual ways, will guide you in developing your Good Mind and the spiritual wisdom, gratitude, and peace within you — in Cultivate a Sacred Life Rooted in Spiritual Wisdom: First Nation Peoples’ Teachings of the Good Mind to Nurture Gratitude, Peace, Courage, Respect & Love.
You can register for free here:
During this inspiring hour, you’ll:
- Discover ways to develop the First Nation Peoples’ Good Mind, spiritual wisdom or spiritual intelligence, to cultivate a life of happiness, honor, respect, love, and peace for yourself and others
- Learn how Kanaronkwa Medicine evokes love for Self, your partner, source of life, and all of Creation
- Discover the Haudenosaunee Worldview as an example of a good life, and the importance of ceremony, story, song, dance, dreams, Giving Thanks and connecting with the land in cultivating such a life
- Experience Ohen:ton Karihwatehkwen, a beautiful thanksgiving address as nourishment and inspiration for creating your own blessings of gratitude
- Be immersed in a Creation Story as a rich pathway to deepen your relationship with Self — and expand your family to include all living beings
Diane believes that understanding the importance of traditional ceremony, story, song, dance, and teachings ( like the First Nations People teachings) as healing invocations is imperative to society’s wellbeing and the renewal of all Life Beings.
More than anything, you’ll experience why these ancient practices hold the power to help us remember our deep connection with the land, to the source of life — and the spiritual wisdom of the Good Mind for cultivating inner peace and unity with all.
Liz Gracia
Founder & Conscious Curator of Transformational Events
The host of Your Weekly Dose of Higher Consciousness Podcast
P.S. In Cultivate a Sacred Life Rooted in Spiritual Wisdom: First Nations Peoples’ Teachings of the Good Mind to Nurture Gratitude, Peace, Courage, Respect & Love, you’ll be nourished and inspired by Ohen:ton Karihwatehkwen —the Haudenosaunee Thanksgiving Address — to create your own powerful words of gratitude and deepen your connection with all of life.
We hope you’re able to catch the event as scheduled… however, if you register and miss it, you’ll receive a downloadable recording as soon as it’s available.
About First Nations Peoples Teacher Kahontakwas Diane Longboat
Kahontakwas Diane Longboat is a member of the Turtle Clan, Mohawk Nation, at Six Nations Grand River Territory, Canada. She is a ceremonial leader, a traditional teacher, a builder, and a healer. Diane is founder of Soul of the Mother, a Healing Lodge, born of vision in 1994, on the shores of the Grand River, with extensive relationships with First Nations in Canada and globally.
Diane is a professional educator with a master’s degree in education. In 2017-2018, Diane was the Indigenous Education Advisor to the Premier of Ontario, Kathleen Wynne, and two Ministers of Education. Diane is also the founder of First Nations House (Office of Aboriginal Student Services and Programs) at the University of Toronto.
Recently, Diane was co-chair for the Indigenous Peoples Program at the Parliament of the World’s Religions global gathering in Toronto in 2018. Diane is recognized as an Evolutionary Leader by the Source of Synergy Foundation and is a member of the Council of Elders of many organizations in North America, including the Canadian Museum of Human Rights in Winnipeg, Canada.
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