As cancer treatments and supportive remedies are explored further, maybe we will find ourselves going back to using some of the basic ingredients found in nature.
PUBLISHED April 04, 2018
Tamera Anderson-Hanna is a Licensed Mental Health Counselor, Certified Addiction Professional, Certified Rehabilitation Counselor and became a Registered Yoga Teacher while coping with breast cancer in 2015. She owns Wellness, Therapy, & Yoga in Florida where she provides personal wellness services and coaching and she is a public speaker on wellness-related topics. You can connect with her at www.wellnesstherapyyoga.com.
Sometimes what we need for our healing can come from our own back yard and garden.
Growing up in Michigan, I got to enjoy all the seasons and learned a little bit about nature from a Native American perspective. Story has it, one of my great grandmothers was full-blooded Native American. My grandfather would tell me stories of nature and a little about Native American heritage, which was mostly the importance of respecting nature. My grandfather died from cancer while I was in middle school, but I was fortunate that I got to spend time with him learning the basics of hunting, fishing and the importance of sustainability. Most of his wisdom was about listening to our environment and helping to be a protector of it.
Growing up in Michigan, I got to enjoy all the seasons and learned a little bit about nature from a Native American perspective. Story has it, one of my great grandmothers was full-blooded Native American. My grandfather would tell me stories of nature and a little about Native American heritage, which was mostly the importance of respecting nature. My grandfather died from cancer while I was in middle school, but I was fortunate that I got to spend time with him learning the basics of hunting, fishing and the importance of sustainability. Most of his wisdom was about listening to our environment and helping to be a protector of it.
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