More on her. For a supposed Cherokee and Micmaq, she keeps referring to Iroquois as "her elders" a lot, along with lots of human potential, pop psychology, and Nuage buzzwords and claims.
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http://earthharmonyhome.com/conscious-language-1-jane-ely-episode-34/Conscious language describes energy in the present now
Words as a tuning fork of clarity
Accessing more of ourselves
Where is your passion
The potential of who we are becoming
Dissolving the old paradigm
How to manifest now
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For a supposed Cherokee, she uses the medicine wheel a lot. Not sure if she's knocking off H Storm or Sun Bear.
Could our Cherokee speakers tell us if what she's speaking is what she claims it is?
http://jp.kauaihealthguide.com/directory/display.htm?listID=5043&lspecial=featured&hhsid=88af68935cbee3712750a60b24b7ca4e"The foundation for these teachings is the Medicine Wheel - a circle of life representing all creation.
The four aspects represented are the physical world - Mother Earth and our own bodies; the emotional world of fluidity and flexibility; the mental world of clear mind and wisdom; and the spiritual world of inter-relatedness with all life forms...
In the southern direction, with the physical Mother Earth and our selves, is the principle of community....
Community balance needs mutual respect and appreciation of differences of others, both culturally and spiritually. The Cherokee word for balance is u-ti-yv-hi. This is a concept of wholeness.
The second aspect of The Medicine Wheel represents cooperation, the emotional world of flexibility, the ability to change and remain fluid - "moving with" rather than moving "against." This is also the home of moving through life changes such as illness and walking into the time of transformation. The Cherokee word for co-operative energy is a-li-go-sv.
...The northern aspect of the Medicine Wheel is the home of our mental well-being.
...The Cherokee word is harmony - nv-wa-to-hi-ya-dv. It embodies the concept of to-hi, the word for peace.
The fourth aspect of the Medicine Wheel is the most significant. It is the practice of spirituality....There is a natural living presence that arises with inclusiveness. In Cherokee the word is a-tlo-ya-s-to-di."
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And here she makes some dubious claims about the Six Nations.
http://jp.kauaihealthguide.com/directory/display.htm?listID=5043&lspecial=featured&hhsid=88af68935cbee3712750a60b24b7ca4e"In 1992, Jane had a powerful vision that spoke of becoming a bridge-builder and peacemaker. She went on a Vision Fast, part of her American Indian tradition for prayer, insight and renewal, and came back with the vision of offering a series of retreats for others who are in the helping professions and public service. "Creator spoke very literally to me and I saw the beginning of The Peacemaker School it took several years and a few starts to implement the vision."
Drawing on the Six Nations (Iroquois Confederacy) White Roots of Peace that emerged from the Peacemaker who brought together five warring tribes in c. 1450"
Yeah, well...1450 is the date that white historians USED to claim the Confederacy was founded. More recently they've started to aggree with what the Six Nations themselves have long said, that it happened much earlier, as much as a thousand years earlier.
So her alleged elders were somehow repeating what white historians once said, instead of their own actual traditional accounts.
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Here she is knocking off what she says are Six Nations teachings again.
http://www.new-mind.com/HemiSyncChildren/hemisyncchildren.htm"Turtle Island (a bedtime story by Patricia White Buffalo and Jane Ely, PhD.) An American Indian "Creation" story for bedtime with Hemi-Sync sleep enhancement frequencies. This delightful tale is about how "two leggeds" came to Turtle Island - the land most people know as North America. It is a part of a revered Iroquois oral tradition for conveying spiritual and ancestral knowledge about eh origins and history of their native culture. The narrative teaches children the importance of honoring Mother Earth and all of her creatures. Track 1: Turtle Island voiced by Jane Ely, PhD., with Hemi-Sync sleep enhancement to guide your child into sleep. Track 2: soothing ocean surf (pink noise) with Hemi-Sync sleep enhancement."
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Some very Nuage stuff she claims is Cherokee.
http://jp.lanaihealthguide.com/healthtalk/display.htm?id=520"We are powerful beings of light. We can shift our inner awareness and consciousness to live in presence, balance and in harmony with all life....
In my mother language [Cherokee] we say “ nv-wa-to-hi-ya-dv, a tlo-ya-s-to-di???
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Three different people she's franchised out.
http://www.agapehealingcenter.com/html/reiki_training.html"Candy Nicolson is a Master Practitioner and teacher of Usui, Gendai and Karuna Reiki and has been teaching Reiki for over seven years.
....Recently, Candy also completed a four year intensive training program in transformational healing and psychology including shamanic and Buddhist techniques, studying under Jane Ely, PhD., DMin., practiced in the MicMac and Cherokee medicine ways former teacher for the Barbara Brennan School of Healing."
A former teacher now? And apparently claiming to teach Buddhist techniques.
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Second franchisee, whose been trained by many of the more famous frauds.
http://www.hummingbirdwoman.com/bio.asp"Carol R. Lindsay M.A. has worked in the holistic health field since 1987. She is a graduate of The Institute for Therapeutic Touch (1987) and the Barbara Brennan School of Healing (1997). She has studied the medicine way with Sun Bear, AmyLee and Jane Winyote Ely, shamanic studies with Jane Winyote Ely (Native American), Tom Cowan (Celtic shamanism) and Larry Peters (Tibetan shamanism), taken workshops with Babatunde Olatungi, Stephen Levine, Shelby Hammitt and a wilderness encounter with Doug Elliott through Omega Institute."
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The last one she claims to be starting a shamanic school with. Another alleged Cherokee claiming to be an expert in Lakota traditions (along with just about everything else, even Egyptian!).
http://www.schoolofsacredministries.org/school/faculty.html"Shirley and Dar Khabbaz - Lakota Traditions
Shirley specializes in working with death practices and is of Cherokee descent. She is currently working with Jane Ely in starting a Shamanic School. Shirley has an MS in Education, has taught twenty-six years in the public schools, and was voted one of the top teachers of the gifted in the state of Pennsylvania in 1986. She has worked with Lakota elders on the Rosebud Reservation in South Dakota for the past twenty years. She has been working with shamanic teachings from South America for the past five years and has studied ancient Egyptian healing practices and Kahuna healing. Shirley is a Ceremonial Leader, a grandmother and is especially interested in empowering abused women."
Dar, Shirley's son, is an expert in the Lakota tradition and is also of Cherokee descent."