Author Topic: White Horse Circle  (Read 9671 times)

Offline earthw7

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White Horse Circle
« on: February 08, 2014, 01:57:44 am »
http://www.whitehorsecircle.com/visions.html
Celinda Reynolds Kaelin
anyone heard of this woman she has definition of the sweat lodge and
she sing some song that are suppose to be Lakota and they are very very bad and they don't make sense
she can not say our words and the songs don't make sense.

President and Historian
Pikes Peak Historical Society
Board Memberships and Affiliations
      Board Member
Catamount Institute
      Member
Western Writers of America
      Member
Women Writing
Education
      B.A. , Business Administration
College of Santa Fe
      Masters Degree , Business Administration


www.chamberorganizer.com, 31 Jan 2013 [cached]
Ms. Celinda Kaelin President PO Box 823 18033 Teller County Rd #1 Florissant, CO 80816 719-748-8259 Fax: 719-748-3562

caee.naaee.org, 24 Feb 2012 [cached]
Celinda Reynolds Kaelin: Living Artifacts Of the Ute People. April 19, 7 pm at Colorado College?s Tutt Science Center. There are two types of Ute culturally scarred trees common to the Pikes Peak area; Medicine Trees and Prayer Trees. Ute Indians inhabited the Pikes Peak region for thousands of years before the invasion of Europeans. However, their impact on the environment was negligible, and evidence of their presence is difficult to find. Fortunately, culturally scarred Ponderosa trees are the exception, for Ponderosas are known to live about 600 to 800 years. Celinda Reynolds Kaelin is a poet, author, lecturer, and historian who has worked and studied with indigenous Elders and spiritual leaders from over seventy First Nations. Kaelin is the author of three books, and is the president and historian of the Pikes Peak Historical Society.
2010 Celinda Reynolds ...
www.catamountinstitute.org, 20 Mar 2013 [cached]
2010 Celinda Reynolds Kaelin

Poet, philosopher, historian and author with a passion for the geographic and geological history of the Pikes Peak Region.
Collegiate Peaks Forum Series:Lectures - 2009 Overview
www.collegiatepeaksforum.org, 3 Aug 2012 [cached]
Celinda Reynolds Kaelin
...
Celinda Reynolds Kaelin (Tuesday, March 17 - 7:00 pm)

Celinda is the author of several books, hundreds of newspaper and magazine articles, and has lectured extensively throughout the Pikes Peak region.

Celinda Reynolds Kaelin, is a poet, philosopher, historian and granddaughter of New Mexico pioneer and homesteader, John Allen Reynolds.
...
Celinda is a member of Western Writers of America and Women Writing the West, and has served as president of the Pikes Peak Historical Society for fifteen years. Celinda began writing full time in 1989, after she took an early retirement from the Central Intelligence Agency.

She received her B.A. in Business Administration from the College of Santa Fe, and also has the equivalent of a Masters Degree in Business Administration earned from over 400 hours of post-graduate studies.

Tuesday's lecture, "Healing Waters, Broken Trails: Indigenous Peoples of the Upper Arkansas Valley" Celinda will explore the First Nations who inhabited the valleys and summits of the Collegiate Peaks before the coming of the white man. This region of North America was host to its earliest inhabitants, the Clovis People, who hunted the area until about 12,000 years ago. Later arrivals, the Ute Indians, bathed their ponies in the healing mineral waters of the Collegiates, and fought off constant incursions from Plains Indians envious of their "hunters' paradise. Celinda, named Sunif Mamuch by the Ute, will share music, legends, and cultural insights on these fascinating people of the Shining Mountains.
Celinda Reynolds ...
www.collegiatepeaksforum.org, 1 Jan 2009 [cached]

Celinda Reynolds Kaelin (Tuesday, March 17 - 7:00 pm) Celinda is the author of several books, hundreds of newspaper and magazine articles, and has lectured extensively throughout the Pikes Peak region.

Celinda Reynolds Kaelin, is a poet, philosopher, historian and granddaughter of New Mexico pioneer and homesteader, John Allen Reynolds.
...
Celinda is a member of Western Writers of America and Women Writing the West, and has served as president of the Pikes Peak Historical Society for fifteen years. Celinda began writing full time in 1989, after she took an early retirement from the Central Intelligence Agency.

She received her B.A. in Business Administration from the College of Santa Fe, and also has the equivalent of a Masters Degree in Business Administration earned from over 400 hours of post-graduate studies.

Tuesday's lecture, "Healing Waters, Broken Trails: Indigenous Peoples of the Upper Arkansas Valley" Celinda will explore the First Nations who inhabited the valleys and summits of the Collegiate Peaks before the coming of the white man. This region of North America was host to its earliest inhabitants, the Clovis People, who hunted the area until about 12,000 years ago. Later arrivals, the Ute Indians, bathed their ponies in the healing mineral waters of the Collegiates, and fought off constant incursions from Plains Indians envious of their "hunters' paradise. Celinda, named Sunif Mamuch by the Ute, will share music, legends, and cultural insights on these fascinating people of the Shining Mountains.
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« Last Edit: February 08, 2014, 02:09:20 am by earthw7 »
In Spirit

Offline earthw7

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Re: White Horse Circle
« Reply #1 on: February 08, 2014, 02:11:40 am »
Journey Song

A Spiritual Legacy of the American Indian
by Celinda Reynolds Kaelin , Ed McGaa

- See more at: http://www.betterworldbooks.com/journey-song-id-0964517388.aspx#sthash.MYioL5MJ.dpuf
In Spirit

Offline educatedindian

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Re: White Horse Circle
« Reply #2 on: February 09, 2014, 02:10:26 am »
She's an amateur historian with business degrees, doesn't teach at any college I could find. She is president of that Pike's Peak Historical Society, which is 9 years old.
Their contact page takes you to her email.
http://www.pikespeakhsmuseum.org/PPHS/Main%20Headings/contact_usPPHS.htm
They have a partnership with Utes to help them travel to the Peak to do their ceremonies. They don't say which of the Ute tribes.
http://www.pikespeakhsmuseum.org/PPHS/Main%20Headings/Ute%20Indians.htm

She does speak to classes, doing her own version of ceremony.
https://sites.coloradocollege.edu/blockfeatures/2012/11/01/beyond-words/
http://sites.coloradocollege.edu/blockfeatures/author/m_riley/

The first link the student thought she was Lakota, the second only that she'd spent time on Pine Ridge.


Offline Diana

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Re: White Horse Circle
« Reply #3 on: February 09, 2014, 04:28:43 am »
She's an amateur historian with business degrees, doesn't teach at any college I could find. She is president of that Pike's Peak Historical Society, which is 9 years old.
Their contact page takes you to her email.
http://www.pikespeakhsmuseum.org/PPHS/Main%20Headings/contact_usPPHS.htm
They have a partnership with Utes to help them travel to the Peak to do their ceremonies. They don't say which of the Ute tribes.
http://www.pikespeakhsmuseum.org/PPHS/Main%20Headings/Ute%20Indians.htm

She does speak to classes, doing her own version of ceremony.
https://sites.coloradocollege.edu/blockfeatures/2012/11/01/beyond-words/
http://sites.coloradocollege.edu/blockfeatures/author/m_riley/

The first link the student thought she was Lakota, the second only that she'd spent time on Pine Ridge.


I'm not comfortable with this woman's....for a lack of a better word "fetish". And if you read the second blog entry by Mark 14 he writes "We are headed up to Pine Ridge, South Dakota to a Lakota Indian Reservation. We will be there till Friday. Expectations are running wild; vibes are certainly positive. Today, sitting in dance rehearsal, I focued my attention on having a powerful and meaningful experience. I haven’t prayed in years, but this feels like the closest I've gotten. And it felt so natural. We will be experiencing sweat lodges, meeting people, touring the reservation, and I’m sure doing other things that will be pretty fascinating."

Is this woman leading a pay to pray tour to Pine Ridge? Also I noticed Mark 14 never wrote about his experience to Pine Ridge, which seems kind of odd since he was so over the moon about it.


Diana

Offline earthw7

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Re: White Horse Circle
« Reply #4 on: February 09, 2014, 05:08:17 pm »
Spiritual tourism >:( i bet people she is taken people too don't know what she is doing
In Spirit

Epiphany

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Re: White Horse Circle
« Reply #5 on: February 09, 2014, 08:23:03 pm »
Quote
Celinda Kaelin's Experience
Leader
White Horse Circle of World Council of Eldeers

2012 – Present (2 years) Florissant, CO

Lakota Spirituality Pipe Carrier and Sun Dancer

http://www.linkedin.com/pub/celinda-kaelin/1a/2a0/1b0

Epiphany

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Re: White Horse Circle
« Reply #6 on: February 09, 2014, 08:53:52 pm »
How the Spirits Healed Bird Flu http://www.whitehorsecircle.com/uploads/5/4/8/1/5481182/yuwipi.pdf

Quote
I am deeply indebted to Eagle Man, Ed McGaa, for opening the door to these Lakota ways which feed my spirit and made these ceremonies possible.