Home
Categories
EXPLORE
True Crime
Comedy
Society & Culture
Business
Sports
Health & Fitness
Technology
About Us
Contact Us
Copyright
© 2024 PodJoint
Loading...
0:00 / 0:00
Podjoint Logo
US
Sign in

or

Don't have an account?
Sign up
Forgot password
https://is1-ssl.mzstatic.com/image/thumb/Podcasts115/v4/a8/c4/7a/a8c47a1f-891e-f558-9147-b1efca1aa19e/mza_16211903673150568934.jpg/600x600bb.jpg
Miriam Moore reads TheWalkingPeople:ANativeAmericanOralHistory, by Paula Underwood.
miriam moore
124 episodes
1 week ago
Many of these stories in the Walking People read/sung by Paula Underwood are on iTunes, recorded by Paula Underwood in deep big ideas. May kind thoughts come, she wrote me. I liked how she looked. The stories she read had stood ages, now they sooth chaotic thoughts. Rhythm and words sing themselves: I find the gorgeous song inside the words. I sing the strands in the braid. These stories are for all earths' children. I sing my own telling.
Show more...
History
RSS
All content for Miriam Moore reads TheWalkingPeople:ANativeAmericanOralHistory, by Paula Underwood. is the property of miriam moore and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Many of these stories in the Walking People read/sung by Paula Underwood are on iTunes, recorded by Paula Underwood in deep big ideas. May kind thoughts come, she wrote me. I liked how she looked. The stories she read had stood ages, now they sooth chaotic thoughts. Rhythm and words sing themselves: I find the gorgeous song inside the words. I sing the strands in the braid. These stories are for all earths' children. I sing my own telling.
Show more...
History
Episodes (20/124)
Miriam Moore reads TheWalkingPeople:ANativeAmericanOralHistory, by Paula Underwood.
817: unity of thought; a long rope
1 year ago
2 minutes 53 seconds

Miriam Moore reads TheWalkingPeople:ANativeAmericanOralHistory, by Paula Underwood.
819-20: notes. p5, 6,11, 14, 21

tentative conclusion, passing earlier transmissions, inclusions tenatively. pass on to later humans.

Show more...
1 year ago
6 minutes 22 seconds

Miriam Moore reads TheWalkingPeople:ANativeAmericanOralHistory, by Paula Underwood.
5-6 Place keepers and followers after
We see the people can be either place keepers, like us.  We hunt small animals, the biggest is sharp tusk.  (I wonder if this is a pig?  There were some sturdy pigs with good looking tusks in the ice age.)  We also learned to plant beans, as Bending Woman and Grateful Daughter showed us to do.  We gather roots and berries and dry some of these against the Long Cold.   Followers after sort through the dung of the herds, and sometimes get trampled by them.  This is not our choice as a way of life.  We value our way of life above all others.   Painting from Chauvet cave, France.
Show more...
1 year ago
2 minutes

Miriam Moore reads TheWalkingPeople:ANativeAmericanOralHistory, by Paula Underwood.
Bisons rumble
We can run!
Show more...
1 year ago
1 minute 30 seconds

Miriam Moore reads TheWalkingPeople:ANativeAmericanOralHistory, by Paula Underwood.
We wait to see what they will do

These ones have more energy than most, and we wanted to confirm our most recent stories of a land beyond the dark ocean to the jagged mountains

Show more...
1 year ago
44 seconds

Miriam Moore reads TheWalkingPeople:ANativeAmericanOralHistory, by Paula Underwood.
Many fun, comfort in their continuing way

556 Our communities live with no big changes. Some who have ability to learn all the stories of our past. Among these are a few with so much energy, they can choose a long path West toward the long jagged path to the west.


Show more...
1 year ago
33 seconds

Miriam Moore reads TheWalkingPeople:ANativeAmericanOralHistory, by Paula Underwood.
517 bisons rumble
We lose everything with which we cannot grab and run with.
Show more...
2 years ago
1 minute 30 seconds

Miriam Moore reads TheWalkingPeople:ANativeAmericanOralHistory, by Paula Underwood.
How can a long walk of years not distribute a story like this: a story of our early beginnings

336

Show more...
2 years ago
2 minutes 6 seconds

Miriam Moore reads TheWalkingPeople:ANativeAmericanOralHistory, by Paula Underwood.
334-5. Apparent dissimilarities allow learning also

We listen to the Ancient story from she who has 86 years; she learned great wisdom from Ancient Wisdom, she who told us our own history as we walked toward Walk by Waters on the original island.

We all are brothers. We all are sisters.

Show more...
2 years ago
2 minutes 41 seconds

Miriam Moore reads TheWalkingPeople:ANativeAmericanOralHistory, by Paula Underwood.
331 -333. Who are the human Beings?

We may learn from skimmers, swimmers, flyers...yet those who walk on two feet are closest to us physically, and easiest to learn from.

Show more...
2 years ago
4 minutes 4 seconds

Miriam Moore reads TheWalkingPeople:ANativeAmericanOralHistory, by Paula Underwood.
811-813

811-813

Show more...
3 years ago
17 minutes 20 seconds

Miriam Moore reads TheWalkingPeople:ANativeAmericanOralHistory, by Paula Underwood.
809-811 conceptual training

809-811


Show more...
3 years ago
12 minutes 7 seconds

Miriam Moore reads TheWalkingPeople:ANativeAmericanOralHistory, by Paula Underwood.
808

808

Show more...
3 years ago
4 minutes 54 seconds

Miriam Moore reads TheWalkingPeople:ANativeAmericanOralHistory, by Paula Underwood.
806-808

806-808

Show more...
3 years ago
10 minutes 47 seconds

Miriam Moore reads TheWalkingPeople:ANativeAmericanOralHistory, by Paula Underwood.
806 annotations on changes in thought through these thousands of years

806 like "dry, grainy earth" rather than "sand."  We ask questions about the development of human social thought.

Show more...
4 years ago
2 minutes 5 seconds

Miriam Moore reads TheWalkingPeople:ANativeAmericanOralHistory, by Paula Underwood.
794-806 Let us choose these active youth to also learn the Peaceful Way.

Our increasingly argumentative people, walking the way of fear close the ears.  The children who have proclivities fro the way of war who yet also be offered the Peaceful Way, holding each way in either hand.

Show more...
4 years ago
10 minutes 50 seconds

Miriam Moore reads TheWalkingPeople:ANativeAmericanOralHistory, by Paula Underwood.
794-805

794

Show more...
4 years ago
3 minutes 40 seconds

Miriam Moore reads TheWalkingPeople:ANativeAmericanOralHistory, by Paula Underwood.
789-793

The games of War we played became more.  We had impartial groups, divergent, impartial, to adjudicate.  We enjoy games of strength and skill, until they turn ugly.

Show more...
4 years ago
5 minutes 47 seconds

Miriam Moore reads TheWalkingPeople:ANativeAmericanOralHistory, by Paula Underwood.
777-788

Eastern and Western doors.  We can destroy our Brother at the North in their adversity.  Or we can help our brothers and they will learn our value of Peace.  

Show more...
4 years ago
12 minutes 52 seconds

Miriam Moore reads TheWalkingPeople:ANativeAmericanOralHistory, by Paula Underwood.
764-776

those learned in War learned better ways of War, and those in Peace learned better ways of Peace.  No seelf-interest entered judgment, and even handedness all around.  Delaying decision past present anger allow pertinent description of this circumstance, walking a mind path, and the mind follows.  

Show more...
4 years ago
15 minutes 56 seconds

Miriam Moore reads TheWalkingPeople:ANativeAmericanOralHistory, by Paula Underwood.
Many of these stories in the Walking People read/sung by Paula Underwood are on iTunes, recorded by Paula Underwood in deep big ideas. May kind thoughts come, she wrote me. I liked how she looked. The stories she read had stood ages, now they sooth chaotic thoughts. Rhythm and words sing themselves: I find the gorgeous song inside the words. I sing the strands in the braid. These stories are for all earths' children. I sing my own telling.