The Book that Sent Bryan Reynolds Over the Edge (literally)

I suspect I’m not the only author who has a relationship-of-sorts with my characters. Okay, this sounds kind of weird, perhaps tripping the edge of insanity or at least schizophrenia. But what I’m saying is those voices in my head that belong to my characters can get loud and hard to ignore.

Let’s just say that the most important character in “The Curse of Dead Horse Canyon: Cheyenne Spirits” died in the Prologue.

Why?

Because Bryan Reynolds’ passion caused his death, kicking off the story that drove his widow, Sara, and best friend, Charlie Littlewolf, to put their own lives at risk to avenge his murder and find out what he found.

AI rendition of character Bryan Reynolds
Bryan Reynolds (thanks to AI)

What was Bryan’s passion that precipitated his demise and instilled such loyalty in the two most important people in his life?

Bryan had a big problem with corporations and crooked politicians running the country while the people he cared about suffered, such as homeless veterans and Native Americans living in Third World conditions.

When he discovered the Pearson Underground Residential Facility (PURF), built with government funds to protect lobbyists from an apocalypse, he went ballistic. He hacked a wealth of data related to PURF’s construction, but wanted tangible evidence. Thus, he and Sara went to its alleged location cross-country skiing, where they found what he was looking for.

Spotted by the PURF security team, they were ambushed. The accident killed Bryan and left Sara with no memory of the wreck, where they were, or why.

Scene from "The Curse of Dead Horse Canyon" of Bryan's pickup truck in Tomahawk Creek.

In the novel, Bryan’s hope was that public knowledge of this scandalous site would spark a rebellion. But upon reading more about why lobbyists are allowed to exist and have so much corporate influence on our freedoms, I realize more than ever what Bryan’s true backstory would comprise.

I never fully understood what kind of insanity allowed corporations to trample the rights of people. Now I do, thanks to the book, “Unequal Protection: How Corporations Became ‘People’ and How You Can Fight Back” by Thom Hartmann.

I have no doubts whatsoever that Bryan read this book and it’s what ignited his passion.

Do you understand how this came about? If not, let me explain. Of course it took an entire book to explain the situation in hypertension-promoting detail, but I’ll try and skip to the chase and provide the main points.

1. In 1886 there was a court case known as Santa Clara County v. Southern Pacific Railroad. In the court records headnote, which is written by the court reporter and has no legal standing whatsoever, it was mentioned that the issue of corporate “personhood” was discussed, but wasn’t an issue in the final decision, which was a tax dispute. The court reporter noted that the justices agreed that corporate “personhood” was probably legitimate, but it was not the subject of the case nor was it officially ruled upon.

Screen shot of post on X that what RFK Jr. said about Democrats selling out to corporations.

2. Originally, people were referred to as “natural persons” and corporations, churches, and the like were “artificial persons” who were subject to the laws written by “natural persons” who controlled, regulated, and chartered them.

3. The 14th Amendment was written after the Civil War to grant rights to the freed slaves. One of the people who composed it goofed (though some believe and evidence supports that it was purposeful) and referred only to “persons,” which opened it up to the potential that it applied to both “natural” and “artificial” persons.

4. Since the 14th Amendment was written specifically for “natural” persons, it’s clearly a huge stretch to include corporations and other “artificial” persons in the statement. However, lawyers will be lawyers, and judges, who are usually former lawyers or at least have similar thought processes, will beat a statement to death with supposed, albeit ill-conceived, logic, until it means what they want it to mean–especially if there’s something to be gained.

5. Thus, in subsequent cases, the headnote was referenced, which inappropriately elevated it to the status of a “precedent,” and thus an influence on  future trials–even though corporate “personhood” was never decided as part of an official ruling by the Supreme Court.

Corporate personhood is based on sloppy litigation research coupled with judicial shenanigans colored by political and financial interests.

It was never ruled upon officially by the Supreme Court.

Let that sink in.

Meme that states, "Not trusting the government doesn't make you a conspiracy theorist. It makes you a history buff."

Corporate political campaign contributions became acceptable in 2010 in the case known as Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission.  Again, based on legal precedents and no official interpretation of the 14th Amendment’s application to corporations, the way was opened up for corporations to donate as much money and resources as they wanted to political parties and their candidates based on their 1st Amendment right to “Free Speech.”

Also note that the courts have allowed corporations to lie to the public, also based on their right to “Free Speech.”

What happened to truth in advertising? It was struck down as a violation of “free speech.”

Give me a break. In my world, a lie is a lie and deliberately deceiving the public should not be allowed. What have we become that this is okay?

Corporations exploit their “personhood” rights by using the 1st, 4th, and 14th Amendments to place them above the rights of “natural persons” and any laws previously put in place to control them. They use the 1st Amendment to buy the government and lie to the public. They use the 4th Amendment, which assures the right to privacy, to avoid the EPA, OSHA, and other government regulatory agency’s inspections related to environmental and workplace safety issues. They use the 14th Amendment assuring equal rights to squash individuals and local governments and jurisdictions that attempt to institute any laws or regulations to control them that don’t apply to the public or small businesses in general.

This is why corporations get billions of dollars in tax breaks as legislative favors from those they helped elect, the funding gaps they create dumped upon small businesses and individuals to fill the gap. Is it any wonder that heartless, soulless corporations and their CEOs continue to amass unheard of fortunes while the once strong middle class is reduced to shambles?

This is why Bryan was pissed.

And so am I.

Meme that says, "In America they call it lobbying. Everywhere else in the world, they call it Bribery and Corruption."

And I’m sure our Founding Fathers are likewise beyond disappointed in what our country has become.

The rebellion at the Bostom Tea Party was against this very situation!

The East India Company was in cahoots with the British Crown and got considerable tax breaks, which resulted in unfair competition that was driving small businesses in the colonies out of business. Sound familiar? How ironic, that as the much-repeated cliche declares, “Those who fail to learn from history are doomed to repeat it.”

And another factoid that further illuminates what the government has become, consider that corporations got personhood BEFORE WOMEN DID and thus considered eligible to vote!

It is time to undo this horrific transgression. And while we’re at it, let’s also consider how and why this travesty occurred. No one elected the Supreme Court. They make decisions that affect we, the people, who have no recourse when they promote blatant corporatism or other laws with which the majority disagree.

It seems to me that Congress should be entitled to overrule such decisions with a 2/3 vote as they can a presidential veto. 

This country was supposed to have a balance of powers, but they are currently skewed.

Changing the Constitution is purposely not simple. However, the world is not the same as when it was written. To amend it requires support by 2/3 of Congress. The other option is a Convention of States, which requires the official request by a minimum of 34 states’ legislatures.

It’s time.

I cannot believe this is what the Founding Fathers intended.


You can pick up a copy of Hartmann’s book on Amazon here.

The following website links are for organizations trying to do something about this situation. Check them out for more information and specifics about what you can do.                                                         

www.movetoamend.org – Focused on cutting out corporations from human rights.

www.celdf.org – Excellent site that promotes Mother Nature’s “rights” as fundamental.

This video explains what Montana is attempting to do about the situation. It would at least stop corporate contributions to political candidates.

Leave your thoughts on this issue in the comments below and feel free to share.

Did I Channel this Trilogy?

Okay, folks. Here’s the deal.

Pete Risingsun, my coauthor, and I did a vast amount of research when we wrote “The Curse of Dead Horse Canyon” trilogy. The depiction of the Cheyenne culture is accurate. The history referred to in the stories really happened, save that which was clearly made-up, though even that was feasible. Abandoned mines definitely are a pollution issue. The astrology is actual for the time and place and characters involved, which is weird and another blog in itself.

But if there was one thing that was made up it was the source of the conspiracy, i.e., the Pearson Underground Residence Facility (PURF).

Or was it?

My jaw dropped when a friend sent me this article about just that, such a facility on an even grander scale than I have in our novel! Check it out here.

The article in The New York Post linked above opens with the following paragraph, “The federal government has secretly spent trillions building an elaborate network of subterranean ‘cities’ where the rich and powerful can shelter during a ‘near-extinction event,’ a former Bush White House official sensationally claimed.”

Much of its source and, if you’ll excuse the expression “from the horse’s mouth,” can be found in this short video (12 minutes) where Elizabeth Austin Fitts, who served as the assistant secretary of Housing and Urban Development for Housing between 1989 and 1990, talks about it on Tucker Carson’s podcast.

While I knew there were plenty of underground bases (because the History Channel says so, right?) which made PURF credible, I had no idea it was even worse than I imagined!

So if anyone out there thinks that part of the story is a stretch, bear in mind that they have actually spent even more, by several orders of magnitude, than I have noted in the books. We’re talking TRILLIONS whereas in the story it was BILLIONS.

The money probably came from those “magic money machines” the DOGE team found, right? The actual corruption coming out these days makes my fictitious situation pale by comparison.

While Pete and I were writing these books I was amazed by how many actual situations–historical and otherwise–fit perfectly. Particularly, as we researched Cheyenne ceremonies, much came out that drove and further defined the storyline. I didn’t know anything about the Massaum as the Earth Giving Ceremony, the meeting of Indigenous leaders at Walker Lake, Nevada, or any number of other things when I conceived this story. I knew how it would end but I had no idea how.

As I look back, I can’t help but wonder where this story came from? Mine and Pete’s imagination? I may have mentioned this before, but I’m what they call a “pantser,” not a “plotter.” In other words, I write “by the seat of my pants.”

I start with a very general idea/theme in mind. I populate it with characters and turn them loose. I’m more of a scribe than an author making the story up. I simply watch what they do and write it down. My characters repeatedly get themselves into scrapes where I have absolutely no idea how they’ll get out.

But they do. Usually in some way I never dreamed of.

Did I channel these books rather than make them up?

I think most of us can agree there are other dimensions out there. Psychic phenomena are very real and no doubt operate in some other reality beyond what we can currently detect. Did these stories actually take place in one of them?

I had much the same experience while writing the Star Trails Tetralogy, especially in “The Terra Debacle: Prisoners at Area 51″ in developing the science behind a telepathic walking plant.

One of the reasons I love research is all the amazing, serendipitous factoids I uncover that fit and often drive the plot and action. It’s as if the story is already out there, just waiting for some writer’s muse to whisper it in their ear.

I must say, not knowing what will happen makes writing as much fun as reading. I like to think that if it has me in suspense that such will be conveyed to my readers as well.

Here’s one teaser from “Revenge of Dead Horse Canyon: Sweet Medicine Spirits – Novavose” where I had absolutely no idea what would happen. The character in question popped up quite late in the book, but she fit perfectly.

If you’d like to get the entire trilogy in a single mega-ebook that also includes some bonus material about that Earth Giving Ceremony, you can pick one up on Amazon here.

Let me know in the comments what you think regarding where stories come from as well as whether you find my stories predictable. Like I say, I know how they’ll end, but rarely if ever know how it comes about.

Sweet Medicine: Cheyenne Culture Hero

Image Credit Pixabay

Today we recognize September 23, 2022, as Native American Day, the perfect time to honor Cheyenne Culture Hero, Sweet Medicine.

As with most tales preserved by oral tradition, there are different versions regarding Sweet Medicine’s origin. One version (from Cheyenne Memories by John Stands in Timber and Margot Liberty) tells of a young woman who lived with her parents. She had a dream where someone said, “Sweet Root will come to you, because you are clean, and a young woman.” She thought it was just a dream, but it repeated the next three nights. At this point she told her mother who said it was nothing and not to worry.

But as time passed, she began to feel as if she were expecting a baby, which her parents noticed as well. Yet this made no sense, since she never met anyone, other than the voice in the dreams.

When it was time to give birth, she left the village and went down by a creek where she built a small shelter and had a baby boy. Rather than take him home, however, she left him there, since she and her parents were ashamed.

Later that day an old woman was down by the creek collecting rye grass as bedding when she heard the baby crying. She found him and brought him home. Her husband was very happy and said “That’s our grandson. And his name shall be Sweet Medicine.”

The similarities to the virgin birth of Christ are hard to miss. Perhaps this shows a Christian influence creeping into later versions of the story. The Cheyenne’s high moral standards encouraged their women to be virtuous, so would embrace such a detail.

(If you’re a fan of The History Channel’s Ancient Aliens program, you may notice parallels to UFO abduction stories, many of which date back centuries. Native American connections with extraterrestrial visitors are well-documented, including Nancy Red Star’s book, Star Ancestors.)

The version of Sweet Medicine’s beginnings in George Bird Grinnell’s The Cheyenne Indians: Their History and Ways of Life (Volume II) is less dramatic. It states that Sweet Medicine was the second born child of a married woman, but nonetheless a very unusual child and individual.

Sweet Medicine was said to have performed various miracles, from conjuring up a buffalo calf when the tribe was hungry, to being able to elude pursuit by covering vast distances in record time, i.e., shades of Superman’s ability “to leap tall buildings in a single bound.”

Specific laws and ceremonies were among his most important contributions to Cheyenne culture. He organized the original four warrior societies, Swift Foxes, Elks, Red Shields, and Bowstrings. He instituted a sophisticated leadership structure that included ten chiefs from each of the four societies, plus four “old man chiefs,” one of whom carried the sacred medicine bundle he gave them. This brought stability to the Cheyenne that other tribes lacked.

You chiefs are peacemakers. Though your son might be killed in front of your tepee, you should take a peace pipe and smoke. Then you would be called an honest chief. You chiefs own the land and the people. If your men, your soldier societies, should be scared and retreat, you are not to step back, but take a stand to protect your land and your people.

He admonished chiefs to be examples of peace and courage. As stated in Cheyenne Memories, Sweet Medicine said, “Listen to me carefully, and truthfully follow up my instructions. You chiefs are peacemakers. Though your son might be killed in front of your tepee, you should take a peace pipe and smoke. Then you would be called an honest chief. You chiefs own the land and the people. If your men, your soldier societies, should be scared and retreat, you are not to step back, but take a stand to protect your land and your people.”

Generosity was another requirement imposed on chiefs. “When you meet someone, or he comes to your tepee asking for anything, give it to him. Never refuse. Go outside your tepee and sing your chief’s song, so all the people will know you have done something good.”

The four Sacred Arrows were another gift along with the sacred medicine bundle. Two arrows were for hunting and two for war, a detailed ceremony provided for renewing their power, which was lost should a Cheyenne murder a member of the tribe.

He taught the complex ceremony known as the Massaum, a.k.a. Animal or Crazy Dance, which bears some resemblance to an origin story among Plains Indians referred to as “The Great Race.”  The Wolves of Heaven by Karl H. Schlesier is a comprehensive work focused on the Massaum. As an anthropologist, Schlesier places the ceremony’s origins, and thus Sweet Medicine, in the 500 – 300 BCE timeframe.

So where did Sweet Medicine gain his profound wisdom?

The legend states that Sweet Medicine and his wife disappeared for four years, which was spent deep inside the Sacred Mountain where they were taught by spiritual beings known as maiyun. (This is very similar to stories about other important spiritual leaders as expressed on Ancient Aliens, Season 18/Episode 20, “Secrets of Inner Earth.”)

Thus, the tradition arose of fasting on the Sacred Mountain for four days to commune with the holy people. Bear Butte in South Dakota is the Cheyenne’s Sacred Mountain while other tribes have their own versions. There are numerous references to Devil’s Tower in Wyoming in these stories, another location infamous for UFO sightings, as immortalized in Steven Spielberg’s 1977 movie, Close Encounters of the Third Kind.

Cheyenne Sacred Mountain, a.k.a. Bear Butte, South Dakota

Before Sweet Medicine died at a very old, but undetermined age, he gave his final address, which included admonitions along with a prophesy:

“I have brought you many things, sent by the gods for your use. You live the way I have taught you and follow the laws. You must not forget them, for they have given you strength and the ability to support yourselves and your families.

“There is a time coming, though, when many things will change. Strangers called Earth Men will appear among you. Their skins are light-colored, and their ways are powerful. They clip their hair short and speak no Indian tongue. Follow nothing that these Earth Men do, but keep your own ways that I have taught you as long as you can.

Image credit Pixabay

“The buffalo will disappear, at last, and another animal will take its place, a slick animal with a long tail and split hoofs, whose flesh you will learn to eat. But first there will be another animal you must learn to use. It has a shaggy neck and tail almost touching the ground. Its hoofs are round. This animal will carry you on his back and help you in many ways. Those far hills that seem only a blue vision in the distance take many days to reach now; but with this animal you can get there in a short time, so fear him not. Remember what I have said.

“But at last you will not remember. Your ways will change. You will leave your religion for something new. You will lose respect for your leaders and start quarreling with one another. You will lose track of your relations and marry women from your own families. You will take after the Earth Men’s ways and forget good things by which you have lived and in the end become worse than crazy.

“I am sorry to say these things, but I have seen them, and you will find that they come true.”

So who exactly was Sweet Medicine?

A real person?

Or no more than another figure in the realm of folklore and mythology?

We may never know, but his prophesy’s accuracy is pretty hard to ignore.

Lakota Healing Song

This morning a beautiful Lakota healing song showed up in my YouTube feed. I didn’t understand a word, but it brought tears to my eyes. If there was ever a time when many of us–the entire planet, actually– needs it, it is now.

It also had special meaning because it fits perfectly with a scene in book 2, “Return to Dead Horse Canyon: Grandfather Spirits.”

 In Chapter 19, Leaping Elk, an Oglala Lakota medicine man, performs a healing ceremony for Charlie. You will meet Leaping Elk again in book 3. Here’s the excerpt:


BELTON MEDICAL CENTER

July 15, Sunday

1:50 p.m.

Charlie sensed a presence. Opening his eyes failed. The soul-crushing weight remained, confirming he was alive, like amasani told him. Surely it didn’t hurt this much to be dead. Every breath filled his lungs with pain soaked in suffocating fire.

The realization someone was speaking in a grandfather voice stirred within his soul. The reverent, beseeching tone indicated prayer, but he couldn’t understand the words. Not Diné or Tsetsehestaestse, and certainly not English or Spanish.

Who was it?

Why was he there?

Mysteries and ceremonies came to men like Sweet Medicine from within the earth. Was that where he was?

Why else were some sounds muffled, others not? Though distinct, the man’s speech came as if from a great distance.

Perhaps he was within the earth. Swallowed by an angry Earth Mother.

The prayer ended and the man began to sing, accompanied by the rhythmic swish of a rattle. Even without understanding the language he recognized it as an honor song. Its healing effects settled upon him with an unexpected sense of peace.

The singing faded.

Again all was deathly still.


Here’s the song. Close your eyes and feel the words, even if you can’t understand them.

Some of the comments on YouTube explain the song is asking the Creator to have pity on us, that we understand our suffering is a vehicle to teach us something, and to please heal us.

There is so much to be learned from this beautiful culture. Teachings that we need today, more than ever before.


Image by Aline Berry from Pixabay