Osiyo Oginalii!

Osiyo oginalii! Tsilugi - welcome, my friends and relations and all those of like-hearts and minds! Please take the time that you need to read my posts thoughtfully and then share your own thoughts about what you have read here. We are all in this together and we need each other as we move into an uncertain future. In the effort to communicate this with as many as possible, please see in the list of Elk Whistle Links below that I have four Facebook pages, a LinkedIn page, a YouTube channel, NuMuBu and ReverbNation music sites, and I'm on Twitter and Google+. There are important messages that we all need to share with each other. I hope you'll join me - dodanagohuhi...... dohiyi!

Thursday, December 11, 2014

SACRED TEACHINGS by Aaron Paquette

How well do you know your own world?
Do you walk? Do you sense? Do you watch the small life? Do your feet ever touch the ground, skin to soil?
We are the children of this earth and we forget that basic truth due to lives dictated by concrete and steel, glass and screens.
Our lives, our knowledge of our hearts, the lessons of the hoop, are forgotten in the grid, the segmentation, the great separation of connection our societies have drifted toward.
Even our beliefs, our understanding of how to live a good life become weighed down in needless complexity, rules, and judgements.
But really, it's all so simple.
Honesty
Truth
Courage
Humility
Respect
Love
Wisdom
Understand that life springs from Mother Earth and all mothers.
Our cycle hasn't got 12 months, but 13 moons.
Walk the Good Red Road
Allow ceremony to ground you, to cleanse you, remind you to be present, to connect your spirit, body, mind and feeling.
Honour those who came before for their sacrifice and prayers, their effort to preserve these teachings. They dance in the Aurora, watching us, loving us, reminding us of seven generations passed, seven generations to come. They remind us that we are a moment in the journey.
All barriers are in the end simply illusions. All fences mere guide posts to help us remember that.
Open your wings and soar.
Ooen your lungs and breathe.
Open your heart and feel the pulse of all life.
Open your eyes and see.
Open your arms and embrace the moment, no matter what it is. Pain, joy, excitement, wonder...there is a teaching.
Educate yourself. Share your knowledge with others.
Be humble, humble, humble.
What you know, others have known, what you don't know, others have seen. You are part of the whole.
Your voice is unique, as is every voice. Sing together. Dance together. Mourn together. Laugh together.
Don't fear the passing of time. Instead anticipate the gifts the new seasons bring.
Give.
Forgive.
Be kind.
Hiy hiy
*******
Aaron Paquette is a First Nations, Metis creator from Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.
He has an art show on right now at the Bearclaw Gallery. Go see it!
http://www.bearclawgallery.com
He has a book out called Lightfinder and people like it. Go read it!
http://www.kegedonce.com

Thursday, November 20, 2014

Elk Whistle Weekly Songs And Stories

Tune in to a weekly live streaming broadcast of traditional and contemporary Native American flute songs and stories every Tuesday at 6 PM Pacific Time by Bill Neal Elk Whistle, a master Native American flautist of Tsalagi ancestry - an actor, activist, writer, speaker, powwow coordinator, healer, mental health worker, former Native American spiritual leader in a California state prison, and, before that, a 22- year environmental professional - following a vision of the future since 1966.

Weekly broadcasts are now every Tuesday at 6 PM Pacific Time - tune in every week at: http://www.numubu.com/BillNealElkWhistle. Currently Adobe Flash Player is required to connect - some mobile devices, such as the iPhone and iPad, do not work with Flash Player. A remedy is to download and use the Puffin browser for mobile devices, available for download for Android devices as well as iPads and iPhones at https://www.puffinbrowser.com/download. Some time next month, Adobe Flash Player will not be the only way to connect, permanently solving this problem. If you are in some other part of the world and need to know what time the broadcast will take place where you are, go to this link to calculate for your time zone:http://www.worldtimezone.com/.

Sunday, October 26, 2014

Native American and Native Alaskan Heritage Celebration


Music, dance and film for Native American and Native Alaskan Heritage Month featuring Bill Neal Elk Whistle, the Sherman Indian High School White Rose Singers, and the American Indian Changing Spirits Drum. Also featuring a Festival of Short Films by Native Americans throughout November.Advance ticket purchase is strongly recommended. Purchase tickets online at http://www.museumoftolerance.com/, call 310-772-2505, or email info@museumoftolerance. No charge for MOT members. This show coincides with "Anne", the new exhibit about Anne Frank.
"How wonderful it is that no one has to wait but can start right now to gradually change the world." - Anne Frank

Friday, October 24, 2014

Black Elk Speaks: The Power Of The Circle

“You have noticed that everything an Indian does in a circle, and that is because the Power of the World always works in circles, and everything and everything tries to be round. In the old days all our power came to us from the sacred hoop of the nation and so long as the hoop was unbroken the people flourished. The flowering tree was the living center of the hoop, and the circle of the four quarters nourished it. The east gave peace and light, the south gave warmth, the west gave rain and the north with its cold and mighty wind gave strength and endurance. This knowledge came to us from the outer world with our religion. Everything the power of the world does is done in a circle. The sky is round and I have heard that the earth is round like a ball and so are all the stars. The wind, in its greatest power, whirls. Birds make their nests in circles, for theirs is the same religion as ours. The sun comes forth and goes down again in a circle. The moon does the same and both are round. Even the seasons form a great circle in their changing and always come back again to where they were. The life of a man is a circle from childhood to childhood, and so it is in everything where power moves. Our teepees were round like the nests of birds, and these were always set in a circle, the nation’s hoop, a nest of many nests, where the Great Spirit meant for us to hatch our children.” Black Elk, Holy Man of the Oglala Lakota (1863-1950).

Friday, October 3, 2014

Elk Whistle Weekly Songs and Stories

Listen and watch free every Wednesday at 12PM PT - we can chat during the broadcast - let's make it our go-to interactive circle on NuMuBu for songs, traditional and contemporary, and stories, traditional stories and stories from my own experience! Come join me at http://www.numubu.com/billnealelkwhistle - help support this give-away from Bill Neal Elk Whistle and NuMuBu for the like-hearted and like-minded! Share this information with your loved ones, friends, and relations and gather in the circle!

Honoring the Meadowlark

There was a time when the earth was pure and clean, and all living things spoke the same language. The people, the animals that flew, those that crawled, swam and lived in the earth could talk to one another. There was peace and harmony because there was respect for everything and everyone. Sadly, evil spirits – those against life – came among the living beings on the earth. During that time, there was one nation of people who were good messengers: the meadowlark. These people liked visiting and keeping everyone informed about the good things of life. The joyful meadowlark sang about the good taking place so all beings of the universe would know about it. Every spring day when the sun is coming up, you can hear the pretty song of our meadowlark relatives. It is this time of day one hears all living things talking and singing to the Creator, iits-tsi-pah-tah-pii-op, meaning “the source of life.” The meadowlark follows the road of the summer season, singing about the good things of life. All the relatives of meadowlark who lived on earth respected and loved him for the good he brought into their lives. They prayed for him and asked the Creator to bless meadowlark in some way. Because of this, the Creator came to learn about the good that meadowlark was doing for his relatives. As a result of these prayers, the Creator gave a gift for all to see. The gift was the yellow shirt and black necklace the meadowlark proudly shows while he sings his summer song. This story is to remind us that the gift of kindness is always rewarded. Story told by Long Stand Bear Chief, a member of the Blackfoot Nation.

Wednesday, September 24, 2014

Live Streaming Broadcast Today: INDIGENOUS Online Tribal Music Festival On NuMuBu!

Wednesday, September 24th, 2014, from my garden through http://www.numubu.com/billnealelkwhistle - at 5 PM PT "Elk Whistle Songs and Stories", my solo program of traditional and contemporary songs and stories for families. Then at 6:30 PM PT "Elk Whistle and Friends" with John and Gabriel Vera - is it jazz, is it blues, or is it Native American contemporary? You decide!

Tuesday, September 16, 2014

AFICIONADOS OF NATIVE AMERICAN MUSIC AND CULTURE

Join Bill Neal Elk Whistle for the live streaming broadcast of his solo program "Elk Whistle Songs and Stories" at 5 PM PST and then again at 6:30 PM PST for "Elk Whistle and Friends" with excellent musicians John Vera and his son Gabriel for Native American flute music plus! Is it jazz? Is it blues? Is it Native contemporary? You decide!

Thursday, September 11, 2014

The Bristlecone: Honoring Our Elders and Ancestors - Elk Whistle (USA)


Bill Neal, known as Elk Whistle, is a performer, recording artist, storyteller, teacher,and director of the Elk Whistle Ensemble. Neal, whose ancestry is Cherokee, plays the plains–style cedar flutes of the Lakota, Kiowa, and Comanche Nations, and the river cane flutes of the Choctaw and the Cherokee. 
He was honored in a naming ceremony when the
Tongva Tribe, the original people of the
Greater Los Angeles area, gave him the name,
"Mah–na–che–a–shun," which means “He
Sings With His Heart.” Elk Whistle also sang
for a number of years with the Red Spirit
Singers, a northern traditional powwow drum
group based in Southern California.
 
The following derives from an impromptu
talk that Elk Whistle was asked to give after

playing flute at the November 2007 Monthly
Sampai at Shumei America's National Center
in Pasadena. The November Sampai is
customarily set aside for honoring elders and
ancestors. The text has been edited for use in
this publication.

"I do not usually speak without my flutes in my hand.
Usually when I speak I tell stories about the songs that the flutes play.
Fifteen years ago, for some reason I was given the gift of playing
these instruments. The flutes that I play come
from a time when the world was still young and
all the living things on the Earth could still understand
each other and could still speak to
each other. When Native People talk about all
the living things on the Earth, we mean the
two–legged, the four–legged, the winged ones of
the air, the dwellers of the water, the creepy–
crawlies, the green things with roots that cling to
the earth, and even the stones of the Earth are
living things with a spirit and a voice and a will.
When I play these flutes, I always hope that
people hear within the voice of the flute that
connection between all other living things in the
circle of life.
The Lakota people of the Northern
Plains have seven sacred ceremonies, and in
all of their ceremonies they use an expression
in their language, which is “mitakuye oyasin.”
“Mitakuye oyasin” roughly translated
means “all my relations.” When they say “all
my relations,” they are talking about every
single living thing in the circle of life. Among
my people and among all Native People, we
talk about the sacred directions. Among my
people, the Cherokee or ‘Tsalagi,’ we talk
about seven sacred directions. The four cardinal
directions, East, South, West, and
North, represent all of creation. The fifth direction
is the Sky above, the sixth direction
is the Earth below, and the seventh direction
is Inside, at the Center.
When Native People talk about
standing at the Center, they mean
that they understand that they have
a hundred percent responsibility
for what they create in the world.
They are a hundred percent responsible
for how they live their
lives. There are things in the
world that we do not have control
over. What we do have control
over is how we behave when
things take place, how we react,
the decisions we make in response
to those things that
happen. The decisions and actions
we take in response to
all these things that occur is
how we create in the world.
Where you are right here,
right now, is the sum total of
every action and every decision
that we have ever made in our
entire lives that has brought us
to this point. We created it that
way. We are all creators, and as
creators, we have a hundred
percent responsibility to
every other living thing
in the circle.
These are things that I am still learning
myself. I am still learning how to live my
life. The flute that I played for you is a very
important flute to me. I always begin with it
and I almost always end with it. It is starting
to get a little battered–looking; it has water
spots on it from being rained on. I had a little
problem with that for a while. When I
would start playing, the wind would start
blowing and it would start raining. One of
my elders, a Kickapoo from Oklahoma, who
has since passed on, was very knowledgeable
in traditional Native People's ways. On
more than one occasion, he took me aside to
explain to me what my responsibility was in
playing these instruments. He told me about
a young man who was playing his flutes and
did not understand the power of the instrument
(because they are not just musical instruments),
and so it rained for six weeks
straight from his playing. The elder told me
to stick to the love songs, because one of the
traditional ways in which they were used
was by young men playing love songs for
young ladies.
I had to tell him that, in order to stay out
of trouble with the flutes, I had to be careful
about playing the love songs because I did not
want my wife to get upset with me. My flute is
starting to look a little battered, but it is the
flute that I used to welcome my
grandson into the world and to help
my elders pass on.
On the mouthpiece of the
flute is a black lump, the
lifeblood, the pitch of the
bristlecone pine tree of California.
Maybe some of you are familiar
with the bristlecones? If you go to
the Sequoia National Park, in the
Visitor's Center there you
hear languages from all over
the world from people who
come to visit those gigantic and
wonderful trees. But the bristlecone
pine is not a gigantic tree like the sequoias.
It is not as tall as the sequoias.
Bristlecone pines grow at ten– to
eleven–thousand foot elevations
in almost pure rock. They grow
in places where the wind blows
so hard and the snow on their
branches is so heavy that the
trees get broken and twisted. So,
they are very small and have
very twisted shapes. But there
is a kind of scientist called a
‘dendrochronologist’ that
is involved in studying
those trees. These scientists have discovered
that the bristlecone pines are the oldest living
things on the face of the Earth. There are
bristlecone pines here in California that are
nine to ten thousand years old, and they are
still growing. They are still putting out new
needles in springtime.
When my wife and I were there, visiting
those grandfather bristlecones, I asked for a
gift. I put a little bit of the lifeblood of one of
those grandfathers on the mouthpiece of my
flute. I hoped that when I played that flute, and
tasted the lifeblood of that grandfather, it
would remind me of something that I thought
I needed to remember. I am a grandfather,
too. I will be 65 on my next birthday. Sometimes,
there are people listening to my words
and my songs who are old enough to be my
grandfather, and yet none of us have been here
very long.
When they teach about the history of this
Earth that we all share in the schools, they
have a chart that goes all the way across the

top of the blackboard from one corner of the
room to the next corner of the room. The history
of the two–leggeds is at the very end of
the chart. And yet in our brief time on this

Earth, we have figured out how to destroy
everything - the water, the soil, the air - each
other - and the Earth itself. So when I play
my flute and I taste the lifeblood of that
grandfather bristlecone, I hope for my
sake that it helps me remember that I need to
live my life in balance. I always hope that it
helps give me a sense of perspective about
what my place is in the circle of all living
things. We owe one hundred percent responsibility
to every other living thing in the
circle. These flutes come from a time when
the world was still young.
Back in the 1960s, the Smithsonian Institution
took a look around in Indian country
to see where this instrument was still
alive. They only found six Indian men in
the entire country who were keeping this
instrument from becoming nothing more
than a museum exhibit. One of those was a
man named 'Doc' Tate Nevaquaya, an elder of
the Comanche people of southern Oklahoma.
The Smithsonian Institution made some
recordings of his music, and the state of
Oklahoma declared him a living treasure
before he passed on. This is an unusual
thing in this country, where most do not
have a tradition of revering our elders. Native
People of North America have always
revered their elders.
Today, after 500 years of living in a society
with a dominant culture that is different
than the Native way, a lot has been lost. Until
1978, there were laws in this country that
kept Native people from their religious ways.
It was only in 1978 and again in the early
1990s that laws were passed to give back to
the Native People the right of religious freedom
that everyone else takes for granted as
citizens of this country. Fortunately for us,
our elders have kept those old ways from
disappearing—the songs, stories, ceremonies,
and dances. We honor them for that,
and our elders mean a lot to us. They are respected
in our community, and we thank
them for what they have done for all of us
who have come later. This flute that I have
been playing today came alive again for a
reason. We are at a crossroads. There is an
old Ojibwe prayer that says, “It is only the two–
leggeds that are broken.”
Here in Southern California, there are
people from all over the world living side by
side, probably more so than anywhere else in
this country. We are all still learning how to
be human beings together. I always hope that
people can hear in the voice of the instruments
a reminder that we are all part of the circle. We believe
the spirits of our ancestors are still here
guiding us, so I am thankful for the opportunity
to be here today, as you honor your
ancestors, as well, and give thanks for that
which has been given to all of us. It is too
easy to forget in the day–to–day struggle to
meet the demands of life how much has
been given to us. Native People sometimes
get caught up in dealing with the hardships
that have been handed to them. But all people,
in one way or another, have hardships.
We have to remember how much has been
given to us. I am thankful that I can do what
I do. I have no musical training, and I did
not start playing until I was 50 years old. I
feel like this gift was given to me for a reason,
and so I do my best to try to live up to
the music in one way or another.
I always hope that people, when they hear
the voice of the flute, will understand what
my words are about."

Editor's note:

The bristlecone tree survives
 the environment found at 10,000 to 11,000

feet above sea level, the bitter extremes of cold,
wind, aridity, and exposure to ultraviolet light,
by growing very slowly. This slow growth results
in a very hard wood, so resinous that it is
extremely resistant to decay and disease. A
hero of vegetation, this pine gets tougher as
conditions become harsher. In times of long
draught and cold, the bristlecone dies back,
leaving mostly deadwood and just a thin slip
of living bark to sustain its future life; then,
when more favorable circumstances come, it
grows again.
The highly alkaline soils favored by the
bristlecone, along with the other harsh conditions,
result in little underbrush or ground cover
in the terrain on which it grows, thus eliminating
competition for the scarce nutrients.
Known as the Methuselah Tree, named for
the longest–lived Biblical character, a living
bristlecone has been dated to over 4,900 years
old, making it among the oldest living things on
earth. Ironically, this oldest living bristlecone
discovered so far, the oldest on earth, was cut
down for research purposes—research that
eventually proved the tree's antiquity. When a
bristlecone pine at long last dies, its wood could
be so thick and resistant to weather and pests
that it might survive the elements and stand for
over a thousand more years.
Bristlecones live at high elevations throughout
the Southwest of the United States.


Shumei's English Language Bi-Monthly Magazine
Vol. 275 May/June 2008

Saturday, August 30, 2014

TAKING CARE OF PEOPLE

A very recent LinkedIn post by Michael Walters Young described "Taking Care of Your People" as the first rule of management. That is a lesson I first learned back in the mid-1970's while working as an assistant to the district silviculturist. In that position, I took on a job that was much-hated by the rank and file, especially by the seasonal firefighters who wanted to get back to work early before fire season started again after having been laid off all winter. The job was tree-planting, grueling stoop labor that went on for about three months, following the snow-melt up the mountains. It had to be done while there was sufficient soil moisture to give the seedlings a chance to get their roots established before the soil dried out. The seedlings were planted on a certain spacing that required the tree planters to move in formation, in unison. The crew followed a boundary such as a road, rock outcrop, or the edge of an area of brush-field that had been cleared with a tractor-mounted brush-rake, ready for planting. There was an appointed lead planter who started first and set the pace, following the boundaries of what might be an entire mountainside. The remainder of the 25-man crew keyed off of the the lead planter, maintaining the specified spacing and moving at the pace set by the lead planter. It was not a popular job. We worked in the rain, the mud, the snow - our hands cracked by the the water and the anti-transpirant in which the seedlings' roots had to be kept until they were put into the ground. The crew members who took the lead position were rotated around until it finally was settled on by two young men who liked to move quickly when they set the pace for the other planters, season after season. They became loyal to me as their supervisor despite the fact that I was very demanding - when seeing someone leaning on their tool to talk to another crew person, I would say to them "If you can't talk and work at the same time, don't talk!" My favorite was "Asses and elbows, gentlemen, asses and elbows!" (When engaged in stoop labor that is what you saw - asses and elbows.) We planted more forest acreage than any previous crews had ever done. Late in the season one spring I caught wind of the news that our district resource management officer had been given a $1,000 performance award for having written a 10-year resource management plan for the district which was not adopted but was considered worthy of recognition. I decided that my two young lead planters deserved as much recognition and so I put in for performance awards for both of them, something which hitherto had never happened for plebeian tree planters/firefighters. They were each awarded $150 with a letter of recognition going into their personnel files. I think some of the management on the district thought that I was overstepping my bounds but I felt that it was legitimate and needed. That was my first lesson in a teaching that was to become more and more important to me. And now I come to my final point. Life is filled with these opportunities - take advantage of them when you see them, not just for subordinates or colleagues, or friends and relations, but for everyone with whom you come into contact in your life. Have you ever thought about what might be called your "circle of compassion"? Who does it include? There is always room for more. Think of it as widening your circle of compassion, not in some pollyanna way, but as a means to reinforce behavior that is worthy of recognition. When enough of us choose to live our lives that way, imagine what the world will become. So I look beyond a rule of management to a more universal law. I need it, you need it, they need it - the world needs it. It is part of what used to be called among the indigenous peoples of North America the "Original Instructions".

Wednesday, January 22, 2014

"Seven Pillars of Wisdom" Concert

For your viewing pleasure, the "Seven Pillars of Wisdom " Concert in which I was honored and privileged to participate. This concert is currently booking tour dates around the world. http://vimeo.com/84613445

Tuesday, January 21, 2014

Playing At The Ranch

I will be performing again for the sound-healing workshops at Rancho La Puerta in Tecate, Mexico, at 11 AM and 4PM starting Monday, February 3rd, through Thursday, February 6th. I will be working with Susana Moore, Director of Contemplative Programs at the Ranch. I love being at the Ranch - the number one destination spa in the world according to readers of "Travel and Leisure" magazine. I am much healthier by the time I leave - even after only a few days..... https://www.facebook.com/rancholapuerta?ref=ts&fref=ts

Thursday, January 16, 2014

A Letter from the Future - from an older me

'Siyo Bill, I'm writing to you from the future. I know this is a little weird, but it's the only way I could get a message through to you - and know that you got it ;) It's 2024 - which should be just about 10 years out from when you get this message. I know that you've done a lot in your life so far - but I want to tell you that there is something much bigger in store for you in the not-too-distant-future... ...the problem is that there a few things you MUST learn in order to achieve your destiny... but... um... Well, there's no easy way to tell you this. Ok... Here goes nothing: If you don't step up your game in the next couple of weeks - this future that I live in... The one I'm writing to you from... It won't exist. Not at all. If things keep going they way they are right now - then everything is doomed. And when I say everything - I mean EVERYTHING! As you progress you're going to run into some problems. Some SERIOUS problems. There are some BIG things in store for you - but in order to accomplish them you're going to face your worst fears... You're going to go up against obstacles that you've never imagined... You MUST persevere. You MUST stay focused. You MUST be relentless every day driving toward your goal - your vision - your DESTINY! You are going to be tremendously successful IF you are relentless - ALWAYS - in everything you do. Remember this the next time your spine quivers... The next time you consider giving up... The next time you face a challenge you aren't up for. Press on. Go forth. If only you have the courage to step forward and grasp what I've left behind for you. You've already taken massive steps toward your own progress - I understand! It's time to make See you in 10 years. It's going to be incredible (I hope you make it - for everyone's sake) DOHIYI, Bill

Tuesday, January 14, 2014

Ojibwe Prayer - source unknown

Grandfather, Look at our brokenness. We know that in all creation Only the human family Has strayed from the Sacred Way We know that we are the ones Who are divided And we are the ones Who must come back together To walk in the Sacred Way Grandfather, Sacred One, Teach us love, compassion and honor That we may heal the earth And heal each other. ~ Ojibway Prayer