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Yunkaporta (2020) suggests that Each part, each person, is dignified as an embodiment of the knowledge. Respect must be facilitated by custodians, but there is no outside-imposed authority, no “boss,” no “dominion over.” While senior people ensure that the processes and stages of coming to higher levels of knowledge are maintained with safety and c
... See moreDaniel J. Siegel • IntraConnected
For decades, Black families have been described as “broken.”
Mia Birdsong • How We Show Up: Reclaiming Family, Friendship, and Community
Aileen Moreton-Robinson, Talkin’ Up to the White Woman: Indigenous Women and Feminism
Tyson Yunkaporta • Sand Talk: How Indigenous Thinking Can Save the World
Now it’s my job — and not only my job but also other women’s jobs — to bring back the stories and tell the teachings: about how vanity was born, how ego was born, all of these things. About why vanity and ego are opponents of ours and how we can learn to walk with them, how we can be intimate with them. A lot of the old teachers have died now and h
... See moreMinmia Smith • Under The Quandong Tree

she redefines differences as opportunities, or pathways, enabling us to forge complex commonalities.
AnaLouise Keating • Transformation Now!: Toward a Post-Oppositional Politics of Change
She taught with the pull of a strong tide. Bit by exhausting bit we were pushed into an awareness of the pulse and beauty of life around us and how to put them together to make our own life song.”6
Rose Pacatte • Corita Kent: Gentle Revolutionary of the Heart (People of God)
Autism isn’t an illness. It’s a different way of being human.
Barry M. Prizant • Uniquely Human: A Different Way of Seeing Autism
Though Indigenous peoples comprise only about 5 percent of the global population, our lands hold approximately 80 percent of the world’s biodiversity and an estimated 40 to 50 percent of the remaining protected places in the world.