@Yogini2994 Thank you for posting this. The weather conditions have fluctuated so deeply in the area we live in. We’ve had to lean into what nature tells us when to plant in our veggie garden. Deep listening.
We are deeply honoured to have Jacqueline and her team here in the U.S. now--and the SIR being extended. A deep purification! Aloha, Mahalo. (Welcome & thank you)
@SovernLove Hm, i see. i experience most plants and trees as quite neutral in a sense. They appreciate though to be 'seen'. But the spiky ones want to be left alone. They have this aura of don't come closer dear one.
Hello beautiful ones, i'd love to share Being land, a project i've born last year and recently launched with people from the @realOracleGirl Purification space. We share our unique explorations of Being land as the interconnectedness of land and people.
beingland.synaps.media
@plumedart and it didn’t mind when I came closer with softness, atunement, great humility and respect.
This is an invitation to walk softly and quietly in the forest. Ya never know who you’ll meet 🤸♂️”.
Appreciate you asking ❤️
@plumedart 4 but this time there were no birds to see. The moment I came closer the song stopped, so I stood silently, in full stillness. Eventually the song blossomed from within the trees again . Oh so beautiful to hear!!! I spotted the one solo bird who told them it was safe to sing
@plumedart Tis beautiful timing, as I just posted this comment yesterday on a video someone had captured of a herd of white tail deer. This is only a small fraction of what I think of when I ponder Being Land ❤️🤭
A 19-year-old stops talking to his parents the way he used to.
Conversations feel awkward.
Short answers. Distance.
It doesn’t mean he loves them less.
According to Dr Steiner, this begins around age 14.
Not as rejection.
But as a transformation.
Before this age, the child lives naturally in the world of the parents.
There is closeness without effort.
Trust without questioning.
But then something shifts.
A new inner life begins to form.
Thoughts become more personal.
Feelings become more private.
Judgments are no longer borrowed; but created.
And this creates a strange tension:
He still loves his parents,
sometimes even more deeply than before,
but he can no longer express it in the same way.
Why?
Because the soul is trying to stand on its own.
What once lived openly in the relationship
now retreats inward to become independent.
And so:
Silence, awkwardness and distance appears.
Not because the bond is broken;
but because it is being transformed.
Many parents misread this moment.
They think:
“We are losing him.”
But in reality:
He is not moving away from love.
He is learning to carry it within himself.
And until that inner world becomes stable,
he will protect it; often with silence.
So instead of forcing closeness,
the real question becomes:
Can you give someone space…
without doubting the love that is still there?
You cannot truly heal a human being simply by imposing rules.
Not with diets.
Not with rigid routines.
Not with universal prescriptions about what everyone should eat, drink, or practice.
Why?
Because there is no single form of health.
Every person stands in a unique relationship with the world; with food, climate, work, thoughts, and emotions.
What strengthens one person may weaken another.
This is why Steiner warned against the modern obsession with health formulas.
Real health appears when a person develops an inner relationship with life itself.
When eating becomes conscious rather than mechanical.
When work awakens inner activity instead of draining it.
When the environment inspires rather than overwhelms.
Health grows where there is joy, creativity, rhythm, and genuine participation in the world.
Without that, even the "perfect" diet or cure becomes empty.
What if the real medicine was never outside us,
but in the way we meet the world?