Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘Intergenerational trauma’

What began as a character study of a complicated, mystical, Oglala Lakota Medicine Man became a “slow-motion collision between ancient and modern minds.” 

Sidney Fire Blurr_Poster_Tepper_022 Live a Religion

Six years ago the filmmakers were granted an  interview for a short educational film. We never thought it would leed to performing the Vision Quest and Sun Dance Ceremonies for four-years.

But the ancient rituals of suffering, prayer, and gratitude added several layers of depth and intensity to the overall experience,  becoming a six-year long exploration of an ancient religion surviving the modern age.

DSC_0149 copyAnd Medicine Man, Sidney Hasnohorses, never spared the gory details about growing up in one of the poorest, most violent counties in the country. He was brutally honest about his own past, openly revealing character flaws and inter-generational trauma.

But this documentary was an unlikely occurrence, the director, Salvatore Consalvi, was hip deep in another documentary, Deep Field Antarctica, about the remote and isolated experience managing field camps in the highest, driest, loneliest place on earth. For a time, he entertained finishing both projects at once. Yet returning exhausted from a hot water drill camp on the glacier tongue of Pine Island Glacier to performing the most rigorous Lakota rituals that included fasting and traditional flesh offerings proved too much.

Consalvi_Camp and Painful Shoot_ Cropped 1500x500 twitter banner

Now, the experience has progressed from the spiritual identity of one religious leader to a deeper understanding of mind and consciousness, one consistent with many earth-based religions, and translatable to many modern-minds. And the filmmakers are deep into a Kickstarter Campaign that will fund post-production and tell this story of Ancient Wisdom, Modern Torment, Quantum Consciousness, and a Link to the Spirit World.

Screenshot 2015 Sidney_Fools Crow Bust_ Big Gesture Kickstarter Backers_Blog_Paper_Yellow V2

Read Full Post »

After returning from a great trip to Portland and Seattle I was drawn into some much needed Environmental Consulting work.

As a result, I’ve been very lax with the #SocialMedia projects begun after the Digital Professional Institute classwork, but plan to get back up and running.

I have not stopped work on the project however and though I do not consider the reading I do to be strictly “research”, I have continued  to find and read fantastic books from dedicated scholars that will no doubt influence the final edit of the film.

The latest is “American Holocaust” by David Stannard. In painting an accurate, well researched picture of the cultural landscape Europeans found when they arrived, and the practices they employed against them, I can better explore and understand the concept of #intergenerational trauma.

When finished I will return to more spiritual topics with Sacred Language by  William Powers and “The Ghost Dance Religion” by James Mooney; but for now the truth of our greatest cultural horror; honestly and professionally presented by an exceptional scholar; has begun to affect my thoughts and dreams concerning this #Documentary project.

American Holocaust: Wikapedia

Stannard’s research on the indigenous peoples of North and South America (including Hawaii)[1] has produced the conclusion that Native Americans had undergone the “worst human holocaust the world had ever witnessed, roaring across two continents non-stop for four centuries and consuming the lives of countless tens of millions of people. (more…)

Read Full Post »