RAVEN PROJECT
  • Neahkahnie.org
  • The Raven Project
  • Art of Aging & Dying Sessions
    • Death Happens: What to do now
    • List of Past Sessions
  • Art of Aging
    • Local Aging Resource Contacts
    • Books About Aging
    • Getting Your Affairs in Order
    • Alzheimers
  • Art of Death & Dying in Community
    • RESOURCES
    • Books, Films, Articles on Death & Dying
    • Classics
    • Grief
  • WEAVING OUR NETWORKS
    • Trainings & Workshops
    • Resource Contacts
  • Traditions Re-Membered
    • Doing It Ourselves
    • Green Burials
    • Shamanic Cultures
    • Life After Life
  • In Memoriam
    • Remembering Our Pets
    • We Remember
  • Contact
  • Neahkahnie.org
  • The Raven Project
  • Art of Aging & Dying Sessions
    • Death Happens: What to do now
    • List of Past Sessions
  • Art of Aging
    • Local Aging Resource Contacts
    • Books About Aging
    • Getting Your Affairs in Order
    • Alzheimers
  • Art of Death & Dying in Community
    • RESOURCES
    • Books, Films, Articles on Death & Dying
    • Classics
    • Grief
  • WEAVING OUR NETWORKS
    • Trainings & Workshops
    • Resource Contacts
  • Traditions Re-Membered
    • Doing It Ourselves
    • Green Burials
    • Shamanic Cultures
    • Life After Life
  • In Memoriam
    • Remembering Our Pets
    • We Remember
  • Contact
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Death & Dying in Shamanic & Indiginous Cultures 

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Meeting the Dark Mothers : The Goddesses of the Dead  - Kimberly Moore - Motherhouse of the Goddess, Oct 12, 2014

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Brook Medicine Eagle
Alberto Villaldo
Sobonfu Some
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*  Art of Aging

* Art of Death & Dying 
* Rainy Day Village Network
* Resources

"
In Native American lore, the raven is often celebrated as the light-bringer; the one who gifted humanity with understanding and discernment. The raven holds understanding in balance, attributed with the dual ability to both share and keep secrets.
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The black raven reminds us that wisdom can be found not only in the light, but also in the dark, shadowy void that our over-culture so fears and runs from.
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Carl Jung associated the raven with our shadow, that part of our psyche that we refuse to see or acknowledge. When we contemplate raven energy, we can tap into the courage to hold all of ourselves in awareness. The shadow contains the energy that we need to grow, to change, to break through from egoic pettiness and worry into the full, radiant being that each of us has already become."

                                                 ​-ShamanTube

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