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Am I Honoring or Borrowing?

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Manage episode 513903442 series 3602162
Content provided by Mark Weisman. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Mark Weisman or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

The difference between honor and borrowing is relationship. Borrowing takes without assent, context, or return. Honor asks permission, learns history, and gives back. The heart knows the difference by the feeling in the hands: one snatches, the other offers.

Start with intention. Before you adopt any practice—runes, songs, smudging, drums—ask, “Why this? For what healing? For whom?” If the answer is novelty or display, set it down. If the answer is healing and kinship, proceed slowly. Learn from sources within the tradition when possible. Pay for teachings when asked; credit your teachers when you speak. Relationship has receipts.

Prefer what your hands can make and your voice can carry. A candle you light daily with a whispered blessing may honor more than a stack of objects with no story. If you hold an item from another people’s worship, ask: Was this sold with consent? Is it meant for public use? If the answer is uncertain, choose abstention or seek guidance.

Create a practice of reciprocity: for every teaching you receive, return something measurable—time, labor, advocacy, funds—to the communities who keep that teaching alive. If you cannot find a direct doorway, support local efforts that protect land, language, or elders. Reciprocity cleans the hands.

When corrected, open your palms. Defensiveness is a mask for fear; curiosity is a bridge. Say, “Thank you for trusting me with that correction.” Then adjust. Honor is not error-free; it is responsive.

Remember that you have ancestors too. Ask them for a practice you can carry without harm: a blessing over bread, a winter song, a way of welcoming guests. Grow from your own root system even as you stand in respect beneath another’s tree. In this way, the forest remains diverse and whole, and you walk through it as a good guest whose presence leaves more life than you found.

Links:

https://akumedia.akulfhednar.com - Main Website

https://akulfhednar.org - Shaman’s Website

https://akulfhednar.org/newsletter - Newsletter

Tags:

#akoutlaw, #akulfhednar, #shaman, #alaska, #whispers, #respectfulpractice, #culturalrespect, #reciprocity, #consent, #learnandgiveback

  continue reading

102 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 513903442 series 3602162
Content provided by Mark Weisman. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Mark Weisman or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

The difference between honor and borrowing is relationship. Borrowing takes without assent, context, or return. Honor asks permission, learns history, and gives back. The heart knows the difference by the feeling in the hands: one snatches, the other offers.

Start with intention. Before you adopt any practice—runes, songs, smudging, drums—ask, “Why this? For what healing? For whom?” If the answer is novelty or display, set it down. If the answer is healing and kinship, proceed slowly. Learn from sources within the tradition when possible. Pay for teachings when asked; credit your teachers when you speak. Relationship has receipts.

Prefer what your hands can make and your voice can carry. A candle you light daily with a whispered blessing may honor more than a stack of objects with no story. If you hold an item from another people’s worship, ask: Was this sold with consent? Is it meant for public use? If the answer is uncertain, choose abstention or seek guidance.

Create a practice of reciprocity: for every teaching you receive, return something measurable—time, labor, advocacy, funds—to the communities who keep that teaching alive. If you cannot find a direct doorway, support local efforts that protect land, language, or elders. Reciprocity cleans the hands.

When corrected, open your palms. Defensiveness is a mask for fear; curiosity is a bridge. Say, “Thank you for trusting me with that correction.” Then adjust. Honor is not error-free; it is responsive.

Remember that you have ancestors too. Ask them for a practice you can carry without harm: a blessing over bread, a winter song, a way of welcoming guests. Grow from your own root system even as you stand in respect beneath another’s tree. In this way, the forest remains diverse and whole, and you walk through it as a good guest whose presence leaves more life than you found.

Links:

https://akumedia.akulfhednar.com - Main Website

https://akulfhednar.org - Shaman’s Website

https://akulfhednar.org/newsletter - Newsletter

Tags:

#akoutlaw, #akulfhednar, #shaman, #alaska, #whispers, #respectfulpractice, #culturalrespect, #reciprocity, #consent, #learnandgiveback

  continue reading

102 episodes

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