Spider Woman Shapes the World
January 22, 2026
The first light of dawn had not yet painted the skies, but the world already stirred with potential. In the vast expanse of land
First Sunrise After Darkness
January 22, 2026
For many generations, the world had known only shadow. Even the stars had grown dim, and rivers mirrored nothing but black. People moved cautiously
Great Serpent Beneath the Earth
January 22, 2026
Long before human footprints marked the soil and before rivers learned their winding courses, the land rested upon something unseen yet alive. The earth
Sky Woman and the Turtle’s Back
January 22, 2026
High above the waters of the first world existed Sky World, a place of light, order, and careful balance. It was not a distant
Hog Killing Day of Winter
January 21, 2026
Winter announced itself in the Southern Appalachian hills without drama but with certainty. The air sharpened. Morning frost lingered longer on the ground. Breath
The Turning of the Sugar Maples
January 21, 2026
Late winter announced itself not with warmth, but with a pause. Snow still covered the ground in thick, uneven sheets. Streams ran beneath ice
The Thunder Month Garden Pause
January 21, 2026
Early summer did not always mean progress in Midwestern farming communities. Fields that looked ready for planting could suddenly become places of danger and
The June Bonfire Vigil
January 21, 2026
Warmth arrived differently in northern rural communities. It did not rush in with sudden heat but unfolded slowly through longer days and softened soil.
Candle Window of Winter
January 21, 2026
Winter settled early in many colonial and rural American communities, arriving not just with snow but with silence. Roads disappeared beneath drifts. Forest paths
The Corn Doll of Autumn
January 21, 2026
In early American agrarian settlements, the turning of the season from autumn to winter was a moment of both celebration and solemn preparation. Farmers