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Debra Roberts -- Sacred Path of Bees

 
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Manage episode 181758795 series 1239650
Content provided by Awakin Call. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Awakin Call or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.
“Many of the challenges in this world stem from our disconnect with nature — both within us and outside of us. When we steward bees in a bee-centric rather than business-centric way, there is an opportunity to learn about the interconnectedness we share with all life.” When you first meet Debra Roberts there are two words that you’re likely to hear right away: bees, and Appalachia. Debra is a natural (treatment-free) beekeeper and international honeybee educator, speaker, mentor, advocate, artist, and writer. She stewards her bee sanctuary in the Appalachian Mountains of Western North Carolina, outside Asheville, where she lives with her husband Joe, cat Habla, and millions of honeybees. Debra says, “I am totally bee-sotted. I am not commercial and rarely harvest any honey. My bee sanctuary, right next to our house, is a place that is holy to me. … My path is to explore sacred relationship with the bees, to learn from them, and to inspire and support others in doing the same, and it is also to provide a safe place for bees to flourish in the world….” For Debra the “sacred path of bee” begins as soon as she enters her bee yard, which she calls her sanctuary. “When you enter the space of bees as a beekeeper, they teach you over the years that if you’re calm, you’re focused, you’re present, you’re free of anger, you’re respectful, you’re grateful – all of these things contribute to a much more successful and real relationship with bees. “I’m in my bee yard day in, day out, month in, month out, year in, year out. One day I realized, it was a practice! What if I could bring more consciousness to that? Not just calmness, but also consciousness. This practice was changing me, and they were changing me. From that point, the sacredness of the relationship welled up and out. Feelings of reverence, benevolence, and all of those lovely things were there. Then I realized that this practice is no different from any spiritual tradition that also values these same things.” Debra is founder of Holy Bee Press, Vice President of The Center for Honeybee Research, Founder of The Honeybee Project, a bee mentor for Hamaatsa (an indigenous learning center in New Mexico), editor of a series of ongoing articles about honeybees and natural beekeeping, on the Steering Committee of Bee City USA, and received her Master Beekeeping certification in 2010. She is founder faculty of The College of the Melissae: Center for Sacred Beekeeping in Ashland, Oregon and was chosen as one of the Heroes of Asheville in 2014. She also created the online series, The Sacred Path of Bee for bee appreciators worldwide. For Debra the Sacred Path of Bee is about even more than personal spiritual practice – it has become a life mission. This has intensified since 2006 when bees everywhere suffered a “colony collapse disorder” – for reasons which are still not fully understood but which are placing our whole food system at risk. “As a result,” she says, “more women have stepped forward into beekeeping than in the whole history of humans and bees.” The key to what Debra practices – and teaches and supports around the world – is what she calls “bee-centric” beekeeping, as opposed to commercial beekeeping. “There is now a flood of women worldwide stepping toward bees, like myself, not having it be a plan. The impulse is compassionate. It has nothing to do with commerce. It has nothing to do with bees as livestock. It is about beings who need to be well and have the right to be well. So this impulse is starting to change the face of beekeeping, which changes the face of life itself.” Debra came to beekeeping after spending years as a documentary film maker. She was burned out and decided to take a six-month sabbatical. During that time she went to Hopi territory to visit the family of Thomas Banyacya, a Hopi leader who had been chosen to reveal Hopi traditional wisdom and teachings, including prophecies for the future. Debra had met him and later heard he had passed, so she felt a calling to visit his family and pay her respects. “I wanted to bring them a gift. I lived near a man who had honey, and I had all these jars of honey. So I took some with me, got in the car, drove for three days, found my way to the door of his son, knocked on the door and said, ‘I’m Debra Roberts from North Carolina. I have infinite respect for your father.’ I offered my jars of honey to him and his wife. And she said, ‘Wow – I was just about to go to the store because we ran out of honey!’ “That’s the moment when I felt that bees sort of went under my radar and into the heart of my life. Then a couple of months later I saw a sign for bee school in Ashville. This was something I never planned to do but when I did, it was like falling in love. It was like – millions of beings had just kind of colonized my heart! It changed my path forever. I let go of everything else and just … went to the bees.”
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40 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 

Archived series ("HTTP Redirect" status)

Replaced by: Awakin Call

When? This feed was archived on March 12, 2018 19:08 (6+ y ago). Last successful fetch was on March 11, 2018 05:34 (6+ y ago)

Why? HTTP Redirect status. The feed permanently redirected to another series.

What now? If you were subscribed to this series when it was replaced, you will now be subscribed to the replacement series. This series will no longer be checked for updates. If you believe this to be in error, please check if the publisher's feed link below is valid and contact support to request the feed be restored or if you have any other concerns about this.

Manage episode 181758795 series 1239650
Content provided by Awakin Call. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Awakin Call or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.
“Many of the challenges in this world stem from our disconnect with nature — both within us and outside of us. When we steward bees in a bee-centric rather than business-centric way, there is an opportunity to learn about the interconnectedness we share with all life.” When you first meet Debra Roberts there are two words that you’re likely to hear right away: bees, and Appalachia. Debra is a natural (treatment-free) beekeeper and international honeybee educator, speaker, mentor, advocate, artist, and writer. She stewards her bee sanctuary in the Appalachian Mountains of Western North Carolina, outside Asheville, where she lives with her husband Joe, cat Habla, and millions of honeybees. Debra says, “I am totally bee-sotted. I am not commercial and rarely harvest any honey. My bee sanctuary, right next to our house, is a place that is holy to me. … My path is to explore sacred relationship with the bees, to learn from them, and to inspire and support others in doing the same, and it is also to provide a safe place for bees to flourish in the world….” For Debra the “sacred path of bee” begins as soon as she enters her bee yard, which she calls her sanctuary. “When you enter the space of bees as a beekeeper, they teach you over the years that if you’re calm, you’re focused, you’re present, you’re free of anger, you’re respectful, you’re grateful – all of these things contribute to a much more successful and real relationship with bees. “I’m in my bee yard day in, day out, month in, month out, year in, year out. One day I realized, it was a practice! What if I could bring more consciousness to that? Not just calmness, but also consciousness. This practice was changing me, and they were changing me. From that point, the sacredness of the relationship welled up and out. Feelings of reverence, benevolence, and all of those lovely things were there. Then I realized that this practice is no different from any spiritual tradition that also values these same things.” Debra is founder of Holy Bee Press, Vice President of The Center for Honeybee Research, Founder of The Honeybee Project, a bee mentor for Hamaatsa (an indigenous learning center in New Mexico), editor of a series of ongoing articles about honeybees and natural beekeeping, on the Steering Committee of Bee City USA, and received her Master Beekeeping certification in 2010. She is founder faculty of The College of the Melissae: Center for Sacred Beekeeping in Ashland, Oregon and was chosen as one of the Heroes of Asheville in 2014. She also created the online series, The Sacred Path of Bee for bee appreciators worldwide. For Debra the Sacred Path of Bee is about even more than personal spiritual practice – it has become a life mission. This has intensified since 2006 when bees everywhere suffered a “colony collapse disorder” – for reasons which are still not fully understood but which are placing our whole food system at risk. “As a result,” she says, “more women have stepped forward into beekeeping than in the whole history of humans and bees.” The key to what Debra practices – and teaches and supports around the world – is what she calls “bee-centric” beekeeping, as opposed to commercial beekeeping. “There is now a flood of women worldwide stepping toward bees, like myself, not having it be a plan. The impulse is compassionate. It has nothing to do with commerce. It has nothing to do with bees as livestock. It is about beings who need to be well and have the right to be well. So this impulse is starting to change the face of beekeeping, which changes the face of life itself.” Debra came to beekeeping after spending years as a documentary film maker. She was burned out and decided to take a six-month sabbatical. During that time she went to Hopi territory to visit the family of Thomas Banyacya, a Hopi leader who had been chosen to reveal Hopi traditional wisdom and teachings, including prophecies for the future. Debra had met him and later heard he had passed, so she felt a calling to visit his family and pay her respects. “I wanted to bring them a gift. I lived near a man who had honey, and I had all these jars of honey. So I took some with me, got in the car, drove for three days, found my way to the door of his son, knocked on the door and said, ‘I’m Debra Roberts from North Carolina. I have infinite respect for your father.’ I offered my jars of honey to him and his wife. And she said, ‘Wow – I was just about to go to the store because we ran out of honey!’ “That’s the moment when I felt that bees sort of went under my radar and into the heart of my life. Then a couple of months later I saw a sign for bee school in Ashville. This was something I never planned to do but when I did, it was like falling in love. It was like – millions of beings had just kind of colonized my heart! It changed my path forever. I let go of everything else and just … went to the bees.”
  continue reading

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