00:56:35 Benjamin Strickland: Hello from Taos, New Mexico! Former WCU student here.
00:57:36 Heather Fischer: Hello from Oregon State University in Corvallis OR, Ben, Lauren, and Heather are joining together.
00:57:52 Ashley Teren: Siyo from Sunriver Oregon
00:58:14 Lissa Forrest: Greetings from NMSU Las Cruces NM
00:58:17 Victoria Coats: Hello from OMSI in Portland, OR.
00:58:18 Abigail Smith: 🙏❤️
00:58:23 Jacqui Hoover: Aloha from Hawai`i
00:58:47 Raelene Crandall: Hello from the University of Florida in Gainesville, Florida
00:58:55 Rebecca Frances: Greetings from Taos, NM / Prescott College
00:59:04 Carolina Michel: Greetings from O’odham lands, what is now called Phoenix, AZ
00:59:04 Mireia Roig-Paul: Hello from Oregon state university (Corvallis, OR)
00:59:06 Daniel Hogan: Extra hello from the University of Florida 🙂
00:59:07 Lyford Rome: Greeting from San Diego, CA
00:59:14 JeLisa Marshall: Hello from Prescott College, but based in Washington!
00:59:17 Candice Everett: Hi from Ann Arbor, MI
00:59:27 Erin Leckey: Greetings from Washington DC, All!
01:00:01 Rod Wojtanik: My best to all from Portland, OR.
01:00:05 Jeanette Haynes Writer: Osiyo from Claremore, Oklahoma
01:00:16 Steven Moore: Checking in from Bend, Oregon
01:00:21 Beverly DeVore-Wedding: Hello from traditional Ute lands in NW Colorado
01:01:27 Anne Wilson: Hi from Agate Fossil Beds National Monument in Northwest Nebraska
01:01:46 Ed Lovato: Dáanzhó from Southern California
01:02:11 Mishy Lesser: Greetings from the homelands of the Massachusett Tribe.
01:02:57 Fiona North: Hello from Qutalleq (Seward), Alaska
01:03:14 Basundhara Maji: Hi from Germany
01:03:43 Suzan McVicker: Osiyo! Warm greetings from the Great Lakes area and Ho Chunk home land. Wado sgi for being here to share today!
01:03:54 Mishy Lesser: Dr. Tom Belt is featured in this beautiful short documentary, ᎤᏕᏲᏅ (What They’ve Been Taught). Freely available here https://www.reciprocity.org/films/udeyonv
01:04:02 Patricia Beuke: Hello – Joining you from the land of the Clear Salt Water (Suquamish) in Bremerton, Washington.
01:05:29 karen moore: Karen Moore checking in from Sicangu Makoce aka south-central South Dakota 🖤
01:35:49 Carolina Michel: ❤️🔥
01:35:50 Jennifer Kelly: Thank you. I have a meeting to attend so have to leave early. I appreciate the opportunity to listen during the webinar.
01:43:03 Carolina Michel: This is such a relevant talk!
01:50:17 Ghodsi Daneshbod-Skibba. MD: Thanks, I have to go to “indigenous political system “ class ,
01:50:43 Steven Semken: Thank you very much!
01:50:47 Abigail Smith: Such a beautiful and inspiring discussion!
01:51:18 Lissa Forrest: Thank you so much, inspiring!
01:51:24 Suzan McVicker: Doyu wado, thank you so much. I so hate to leave for an appointment. I feel more able to put into words some things about my people being buried in the mountains that you speak of. Deep respect and appreciation for your sharing.
01:51:26 Sabine Schelch: How true!
01:52:02 Patricia Beuke: Abundant appreciation for this knowledge and wisdom. Grateful for our time today.
01:52:19 Benjamin Strickland: Yes!!! Dr. Masaru Emoto has done extensive research on the effect of human thoughts, emotions, and words on the molecular structure of water.
01:52:21 Benjamin Strickland: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SDNhH8deZPg
01:52:35 Solen Penchevre: THANK YOU
01:52:56 Elizabeth Fortenbery: Thank you!
01:52:57 Anne Weiss: A very timely observation for these days…
01:53:14 Candice Everett: Thank you! (I need to leave for another meeting).
01:54:57 Tracy Doreen: The water molecule study is pseudoscience. The experiments did not hold up to replication…https://theness.com/neurologicablog/the-pseudoscience-of-masaru-emoto/
01:59:36 Warren Marcus: Greetings from Western New York. I find these programs to be important to my gaining a better appreciation of how all the various groups that makeup the totality of society. This must be must be understood as essential to moving as part of a larger integrated effort striving to gain learning how to understand who we are. We live as individuals but are no complete if we do not understand who we are also parts of the totality of the larger community.
02:02:48 Rita Deedrick: “My Stroke of Insight”
02:03:41 Kristina Church: My Stroke of Insight: A Brain Scientistʼs Personal Journey is a New York Times bestselling and award-winning book written by Dr. Jill Bolte Taylor, a Harvard-trained neuroanatomist
02:03:44 Rita Deedrick: “My Stroke of Insight” by Jill Bolte Taylor – fascinating!
02:05:53 Abigail Smith: 👍
02:05:56 JeLisa Marshall: I am interested!
02:06:03 Carolina Michel: Yes 🙌
02:06:18 Denise Thornhill: A continuation program would be wonderful!
02:06:25 Anne Marie Elliott: Absolutely yes please!
02:06:29 Sabine Schelch: Thank you for that offer!
02:07:03 Abigail Smith: Rosemary is very helpful for memory. It increases bloodflow to the brain.
02:08:21 Kristina Church: Definitely!! I am always on for these webinars…my favorite thing I have EVER experienced on Zoom. When one of your series comes out, I clear my schedule because I know it will be amazing!
02:08:40 Elizabeth Smith-Incer: Thank you for sharing this wonderful webinar with our world! ✨💕✨
02:09:36 Chris, IEI: Here’s the link to the University of Alabama Press for the “Sounds of Tohi”
02:09:38 Chris, IEI: https://www.uapress.ua.edu/9780817361914/sounds-of-tohi/
02:09:40 mariana moscoso: Let’s avoid Amazon 🙂 they are so exploitative to people, water, and land
02:11:13 Lacey England: Kinship boxed set
https://ptreyesbooks.com/book/9781736862551
02:11:29 Chris, IEI: Our previous webinars are available at our website : https://indigenouseducation.org/multimedia/
02:11:31 Victoria Coats: I think I found the kinship book here:
02:11:43 Victoria Coats: https://humansandnature.org/kinship/
02:13:25 Jennifer Bennett: One book I really loved is “The Voice of the Infinite in the Small: Re-Visioning the Insect-Human Connection: by Joanne Elizabeth Lauck.
02:15:41 Warren Marcus: Let us respect other as human beings who have various way of knowing but all are part of our larger total humanity. Until we come to know and respect each other that way none of us will become all we might be.
02:18:03 Victoria Coats: Thank you so much for your deep insights and wisdom and your generosity.
02:19:23 Chris, IEI: Dr. Gregory Cajete presented for one of IEI’s Speaker Series – you can watch it here: https://youtu.be/azcjbe2l8sk
02:19:52 Cris White: This has been an incredible conversation. Thanks to you both for sharing your words and wisdom today. Thank you!
02:19:57 Kristina Church: I have a very intriguing book called Research Is Ceremony: Indigenous Research Methods by Shawn Wilson who is Opaskwayak Cree from Manitoba and lives in Australia. I haven’t finished it but have read a few chapters.
02:22:52 Kristina Church: It is always so wonderful to be here! Thank you so much for sharing your wisdom and time and presence!
02:28:06 Sabine Schelch: Thank you! Danke!
02:28:16 Jacqui Hoover: Mahalo for sharing your mana`o (wisdom). Powerful and greatly appreciated.
02:28:30 James Wark: Thank you!
02:28:33 Carolina Michel: Thank you for these very hopeful, wise words. Thanks for the wonderful resources and for your generosity in sharing your wisdom. Thank you, IEI, for your excellent programming.
02:29:12 Ed Lovato: Ntsaa’gó ihe’din (Big thank you!)
02:29:22 Liz Jansky: Thank you for this extraordinary webinar today!
02:30:03 Chris, IEI: Dropping out link one more time: https://indigenouseducation.org/multimedia/
02:32:18 Anne Weiss: thank you! 🙂
02:32:24 Sabine Schelch: ❤️
02:32:30 Carolina Michel: Blessings!