

Shamanism Global Summit Compilation
Embracing Your Fear Spirit in a Friendly Manner
Everything with this planet has a spirit. Happiness is a live spirit, just as fear carries their own spirit, they are both alive and real. In order to move in a positive energy, one must embrace both with such a friendship as they will both bring you balance.
In This Session:
- Indentifying your current circumstances, what are the emotions (spirits) that are involved
- Identifying your ancestors pathways to your own We will help connect the dots of our ancestors to our own and how it will continue in the future
- How do we swim through a toxicity that we are not familiar with? We will help them better understand the realities of our own strengths we didn't know we had
Great-grandmother Mary Lyons
Great-grandmother Mary Lyons is an Ojibwe elder, known as a world-renowned wisdom keeper, empowerment coach, activist, and author. She is an international keynote speaker and seminar leader at such gatherings as the Parliament of World Religions, NYC Climate March, Global Elder’s Gathering on Climate Change, and she is also an elder observer at the United Nations Forum on Indigenous Issues, just to mention a few of her most important projects and activities. She is the author of Wisdom Lessons, focusing on self-development, self-care, and personal empowerment.
Mary teaches seminars internationally, and has appeared on radio around the world. She has a passion for helping people to broaden their perspective of reality, and for helping empower individuals to recognize and step into their wholeness.
She has dedicated her life to helping people take command of their lives in highly effective, powerful, positive ways. A pioneer in the human potential field, she has spent nearly 50 years teaching thousands of people meditation, prayer, affirmation, and intuition.
Mary is a visionary co-founder of several global groups, including Women of Wellbriety, Int’l, a 100% volunteer, online wellness group with yearly gatherings that promotes sobriety and healing. Amongst her strong commitments, she's also one of the co-founders behind the global Grandmothers of the Sacred WE. She developed a Circle Leadership style of organizational structure to bring the collaborative process to change the hierarchical structure in today’s society.
She continues to work at the intersections of criminal justice, environmental issues, and child welfare systems, and develops policy and advocacy strategies to help reduce the chances of family separation and MMIW (Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women.)
She is a writer, storyteller, and has published books about spirituality, self-examination, and cross-cultural understanding. She is also a community organizer, world traveler, and has often appeared in the media as an activist for climate justice and social justice issues. As an Ojibwe elder, a non-violent direct action activist, she believes we can change the world for the better again if we come together as a community.
Mary brings a de-colonial and anti-capitalistic framework to the mainstream environmental movement through spiritual wisdom lessons. She speaks at rallies, city council meetings, schools, women's prisons, and at global elder circles.
Being an activist and policy changer, she’s worked on issues including Native Lives Matter, Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women, LGBTQ issues, Moms Clean Air Force organization, and bringing awareness and action to protecting the four elements — water, air, fire and earth.