Buffalo seasons Awareness in life

The Inner Map: Gray Whales, Coyotes, and the Solstice of the Self
As the longest day of the year stretches across our skies, the summer solstice invites us to pause—not just to mark the season, but to orient ourselves anew.
What if, like the gray whale, we possessed a hidden map within us?
A deep, fluid geography not etched in ink but felt in bone and breath—drawn by light, pulled by inner knowing. In this moment of maximum solar radiance, we’re reminded that we, too, are creatures of migration and memory, guided not only by visible landmarks but by the invisible tides of the psyche.

Becoming Your Own Myth: Rewriting Womanhood in the Second Half of Life.
There comes a moment in many women’s lives—quiet or cataclysmic—when the stories we’ve told or been told no longer fit. Roles we played with devotion begin to fray. The pace we’ve kept becomes unsustainable. And the questions we once ignored now rise with urgency: Who am I, really, when I am no longer who I’ve been?
This is not a breakdown. It is the beginning of myth-making.

Understanding Persephone’s Journey.
As spring nears, one of the most profound myths of transformation might come to mind: Persephone’s descent into the Underworld and her return to the living world. Through a Jungian, feminist lens, this myth is not merely a tale of abduction but a rite of passage—a journey into the unconscious, a confrontation with the Shadow, and a rebirth into sovereignty.