About Wave-Dancers
Could there be a new and possibly better way to live? Can we apply the wisdom of the ancients
to our current world? Can we change our life to embrace the simplest of things?
Is it man's destiny to rule the world? Or is there a higher destiny possible for him— one more wonderful than he has ever imagined?
Wave-Dancers has been created to chart a new life course and offer out a tribal alternative to the current culture of totalitarian agriculture.
Our Mission: We Chose To Evolve.
Our Vision: To live the simplest life that allows for greatest happiness.
We will daily be focused on food, shelter, clothing, and surf. As a nomadic tribe of surfers, we shall embrace all that is aquatic and support one another in our daily lives. Living on sailboats will be our connection with the ocean, becoming expert watermen in wind, waves, and tides. Each sailboat will operate under the independent command of the captain and come together in council to support our mission. We will strive at all times to have a positive impact on the environment and become stewards of the ocean and lands that sustain us. We only take what we need on a daily basis and do not waste any of our natural resources. We chose to be our own individual messiah
We wish to live in peace and once again embrace all of nature that exists in and around us.
Tribe
| Born in the holy land of 10,000 Lakes and raised in and around the water. Eagle Scout, Champion Swimmer, Musician, Teacher, Minister, Father, Coach, Dancer, First Responder, Surfer, and all around swell guy. Currently certified boat captain and working on International Captains license. Also
studying and schooling in sailmaking and sail repair.
Captain of La Bohemia. |
| Loves bitches, playing fetch, and TREATS. Still a kook, but learning to surf. Eats all organic food and treats. Huey. Like the Greek god Poseidon, Huey controls the sea. Surfers offer up prayers to him, and he demands regular surf-board sacrifices on the best and biggest waves. In a moving ritual of cultural solidarity, those who have ridden a "killer wave" and suffered a "terminal wipe-out", have their ashes scattered by their mates on their home surf before they head off to Huey's great surfing kingdom in the sky. Huey: Spanish word for dude; used on the westside |
The Soul of the Wave-Dancer
Michael FordhamAs I listened to its soothing litany I remembered what acid guru and Harvard Professor of Psychology Timothy Leary said about surfers. According to Leary the destiny of mankind as a species was to evolve toward an entirely aesthetic realm, a realm dedicated to the dance. Leary saw surfers as the living, breathing embodiment of a sector of human society dedicated purely to the dance, and as such that they were the throw-aheads of human evolution. The dance was, in the very earliest days of human history, no less than the creation of the Now. The moment of the dance was the instant that truthful, unmediated being came into existence. The dance was beautifully symbolic therefore, of the transcendence of the animal necessities of food, shelter and protection that humans have been perennially burdened by. The image of the surfer riding close to the curl, at the point where the energy of the wave is exploding, resonated with Leary as symbolic of the complete, joyful immersion in the present. Whilst riding a wave, he said, the past is exploding into nothingness behind you, and the future is unwinding and unfurling in front of you, begging to be created. For Leary, being dedicated to the search for these fleeting moments rather than acquiring the trappings of ‘success,’ the surfer achieved merely moments in the ever-present, but in so doing tapped into a part of the human soul accessed rarely by the mass of men. Through a kind of evolutionary wrong-footedness, rather than placing that life-affirming dance at the centre of his existence, early man put the will toward accumulation in its place, and built entire cultures dedicated to the kind of material wealth that created the world around us.
True Path Walkers
To bring back the natural harmony that humans once enjoyed.
To save the planet from present practices of destruction.
To find and re-employ real truth.
To promote true balance between both genders.
To share and be less materialistic.
To become rid of prejudice.
To learn to be related.
To be kind to animals and take no more than we need.
To play with one's children and love each equally and fairly.
To be brave and courageous, enough so,
to take a stand and make a commitment.
To understand what Generations Unborn really means.
To accept the Great Mystery
in order to end foolish argument over religion.
Jonathon ClarkDifference between modern religion and Huna
In religion one worships a supreme being, picturing it usually as a man, one fears him, so one prays to him for favours, bribes him with sacrifices, worships him and obeys his imagined laws. In Huna, you loved (not worshipped) the Higher Self, a totally trustworthy parental spirit and a part of you, which lays no laws on you, in a relationship of mutual love and respect. There were no books, no religion, no philosophical needs, no salvation, and no hell. Now which sounds more appealing?
The 13 Moon Calendar from Law of Time.org
Valum VotanThe 13 Moon, 28-day calendar is a new standard of time for all people everywhere who desire a genuinely new world. If the calendar and time we follow is irregular, artificial and mechanized, so becomes our mind. As is our mind, so our world becomes, as is our world today: Irregular, artificial and mechanized. But if the calendar we follow is harmonic and in tune with natural cycles, so also will our mind become, and so we may return to a way of life more spiritual and in harmony with nature.
The 13 Moon calendar synchronizes solar and galactic cycles on July 26 correlating with the star Sirius. Each of the 13 moons has a power, action, and quality which define an annual program to synchronize our consciousness with the galactic cycles.
The 13 Moon 28-day synchronometer is a harmonic timespace matrix. It takes the moon 28 days to orbit the Earth; it makes this orbit 13 times each year. The standard of measure is the 28-day cycle, called a moon, because it is the median between the 29.5-day synodic cycle of the moon (new moon to new moon) and the 27.1-day sidereal cycle of the moon. Hence, it is a measure of Earth’s solar orbit using the 28-day lunar standard. This creates a perfect orbital measure of 13 moons of 28 days, totaling 364 days, or 52 perfect weeks of 7 days each. Because the 365th day is no day of the moon or week at all, it is known as the "day out of time" - a day to celebrate peace through culture


