Aboriginal Dreamtime Journal


Book Description

This Aboriginal Dreamtime Journal offers a chance for you to better understand your own personal Dreaming, so that you can navigate your consciousness towards empowerment and self-healing. Aboriginal Dreamtime Journal relates to the stories of creation, encompassing Aboriginal values, beliefs, and lore - essentially ancient wisdom passed down from the Ancestors. The creation stories depict the values and the ways to live our lives, while being at one with Mother Earth and Father Sun. The ever-changing Dreaming allows our past to teach us how to live our lives in the present, so that our future is determined by the learning what we experience today. Use these messages to help you navigate your own journey as you use this beautiful interactive diary.




Animal Dreaming


Book Description

A young boy learns from his elder how the animals in the dreamtime created a world in which they could all live in peace and harmony.




Journey Into Dreamtime


Book Description

A book that tells about the magical world of Aboriginal Dreamtime and sharing the world's oldest living culture.




Aboriginal Dreamtime Oracle


Book Description

The Aboriginal Dreamtime Oracle is a gift from Our Aboriginal Ancestors and are channelled from the universal wisdom of past Caretakers of this ancient land. This set of Aboriginal Dreamtime Oracle cards are inspired by the close connection between the Australian Aboriginal Artist/Author's spirituality, and her relationship with Ancestors of the past. These cards were inspired by Australian Aboriginal Peoples Dreamtime stories for the purpose of exploring a clarifying issues that impact on our lives, together with celebrating the wonders of our successes.




Aboriginal Goddess Chakra Oracle


Book Description

The Aboriginal Goddess Chakra Oracle is a unique mix of aboriginal and universal spirituality, encompassing a range of deities from multiple cultures and infused with teaching of the seven energy chakras. A beautiful set with 49 colorful illustrations, each card is represented by a God, Goddess, Faery or Angel connecting with one of the seven chakras. This blend captures a distinctive feel of spirituality spanning across all time and ages never been seen before.




John Midas in the Dreamtime


Book Description

While visiting the site of sacred cave paintings in the middle of the Australian outback, John Midas slips back thousands of years and finds himself among a prehistoric aboriginal tribe.




Dreamtime


Book Description

Essays in which happiness becomes a magic carpet, lifting readers above momentary fret and making the ordinary appears wondrous.




Aboriginal Spirit Oracle


Book Description

Featuring 36 cards beautifully illustrated to represent the mental, emotional and spiritual aspects of our soul and desires, the Aboriginal Spirit Oracle Cards is a powerful tool to navigate your consciousness towards empowerment and self-healing. Touching on deeply spiritual qualities of the native aboriginal tribes, The Aboriginal Spirit Oracle is a practical tool to facilitate spiritual awareness to guide you through life and clarify questions and issues that arise, allowing peace to encompass your heart again.




The Spring


Book Description

Traversing the wild landscapes of the American West, prose and photography combine to create a lucid, dream-like vision of visitations and allegorical animal encounters with Snake, Owl, and Dragonfly, among others. The Spring tells a stirring, elegiac tale of death, love, rebirth, survival, and resilience.




Ancestral Power


Book Description

The Dreaming, or the Dreamtime, is the English translation of a complex Aboriginal religious concept. It relates to the idea of an ancestral presence which exists as a spiritual power that is deeply present in the land. This presence or power also exists in certain paintings, in some dance performances, and in songs, blood and ceremonial objects. In Ancestral Power, Lynne Hume seeks to further our understanding of human consciousness by looking through a Western lens at the concept of the Dreaming. She examines the idea that Aboriginal people may have used certain techniques for entering altered states of consciousness. Could their experiences in such states, together with their extensive knowledge of their environment, have helped to create the cosmological scheme we call the Dreaming? With these questions in mind, she brings together and examines, for the first time, a wide range of existing literature on Aboriginal cosmology and spiritual practices, together with studies of Aboriginal art, data from anthropologists and ethnomusicologists, and statements by Aboriginal people from many different regional areas of Australia. Much of the information she highlights is little known. Ancestral Power suggests that Aboriginal spirituality is much more complex and compelling than the early missionaries could ever have imagined.