Buffalo Crow
Guides appear in different ways, a feeling, a voice, a picture that begins to move in your mind to which a feeling and voice are added. It depends on what? My thought is that when we tune into the right frequency it is all available to us. What is that frequency? Belief.
Buffalo Crow first appeared as an image, a big native American seated on a white and roan pinto pony. In his right hand he held a long spear with several bird feathers attached to its upper length....
His long hair was pulled back, away from his face. One braid to the right side, had a single jet black feather woven into the plait. Buffalo Crow materialized in a vision that involved a question concerning land in Montana. This land had come to my attention and to that of a friend of mine. We had seperately been drawn to focus on this area of the United States and then together we asked the reasons for this. After several moments Buffalo Crow came forward offering to be of assistance, he and his braves. On a ridge far behind him, many native warriors sat on their ponies.
What he conveyed to us was about the land and how that land had suffered, that many miles of land held the memory of a great battle. Many people had died. The land held the memory of that battle just as the collective consciousness, the field of collective human memory that exists like a great web around the planet, holds all thought since the beginning of our time here. If we are to heal ourselves and this planet we must change our thoughts to reflect what it is we want to see here in our garden of Eden not want we do not wish to see. We live in peace when that is the thought we have. Peace, love and harmony become our reality.
In 1874, Buffalo Crow was a young warrior of the Lakota Sioux, he had grown up in a time of great turmoil. In 1874 gold was discovered in the Black hills in South Dakota. Upon sacred Sioux land, miners and prospectors came seeking their fortunes. This land had been given to the Sioux by the government which now did nothing to protect the native rights. By 1876 native Americans together decided to protect their own lands. What took place was the battle of the Little Big Horn in southern Montana.
Buffalo Crow shares his wisdom to remind us:
"The land belongs to all of us. We are the land. There are those who have fought for many centuries over a piece of land. When we fight like this what is it we really want? To have something that leaves the other without? As long as there is any people on this land that want, we all suffer.Today I stand up for that which I pray to pass; I sit only when there is no ground to stand upon."
"In the beginning the people travelled the rainbow bridge to the shore of the mainland. Now the people seek the rainbow bridge to return."