Dear reader, Here at Deem, we are always looking for ways to give you insight into our research process. We are never thinking alone. Rather, we come from intergenerational lineages of thought and intention. From the visions of place gathered by the community of students at Mycelium Youth Network to a conversation with Ramsay Taum, a practitioner and instructor of several native Hawaiian practices—ho‘oponopono (stress release and mediation), lomi haha (body alignment), and kaihewalu lua (Hawaiian combat/battle art)—Issue Four, “A Sense of Place,” is no different.
006—Archiving Is a Means of Remembering
006—Archiving Is a Means of Remembering
006—Archiving Is a Means of Remembering
Dear reader, Here at Deem, we are always looking for ways to give you insight into our research process. We are never thinking alone. Rather, we come from intergenerational lineages of thought and intention. From the visions of place gathered by the community of students at Mycelium Youth Network to a conversation with Ramsay Taum, a practitioner and instructor of several native Hawaiian practices—ho‘oponopono (stress release and mediation), lomi haha (body alignment), and kaihewalu lua (Hawaiian combat/battle art)—Issue Four, “A Sense of Place,” is no different.