**#0382 The Naomi Lynn Tarot's and Fortune 🔮✨ teller and Dream catcher Visions and White Witch!

**#0382 The Naomi Lynn Star 💫 ✨ Tarot's and Fortune 🔮✨ teller and Dream catcher Visions and White Witch! I'm a Tarot card ♠️♦️ Reader and I also Make Spell books,witches Rune's and candle's and more and Im a Spiritual Walker and more since very young! ( This is a real picture I took in front of my house 🏡 in Milwaukee Oregon in May 2020 !from my cell phone anyways me and my kids and grandkids all have Fairy garden's so do you believe after seeing this picture?

Tuesday, June 16, 2026

Ancient Native Americans did not have a single, unified religion; rather, they shared hundreds of diverse tribal cosmologies. However, most Indigenous traditions were rooted in animism and a profound reverence for a Creator, believing that all elements of the natural world possess a spirit, interconnectedness, and inherent wisdom.While there is no single specific figure historically known as "The Truth Seeker," ancient Native American beliefs generally centered around core concepts of seeking truth, balance, and harmony:The Creator and the Great Mystery: Most tribes believed in a singular, all-encompassing Creator or "Master Spirit". For example, the Lakota concept of Wakan Tanka (the Great Mystery) represents an abstract life force existing within all things—rocks, winds, animals, and humans.Animism and Interconnectedness: Indigenous traditions universally considered the earth a sacred mother and viewed animals and elements as older relatives. "Truth" was discovered by observing, respecting, and listening to the natural world.Vision Quests and Dreams: To find personal truth, purpose, and guidance, individuals frequently engaged in vision quests, periods of isolation, and fasting. Dreams and signs were interpreted as messages from the spirit world.The Circle of Life: Teachings often revolved around the medicine wheel, emphasizing the interconnected nature of all things, the four directions, and the importance of physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual balance.Second, most native peoples worshiped an all-powerful, all-knowing Creator or “Master Spirit” (a being that assumed a variety of forms and both genders). They also venerated or placated a host of lesser supernatural entities, including an evil god who dealt out disaster, suffering, and death.

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