tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8340509256597314249.post6768372876340341304..comments2023-04-06T05:22:09.258-07:00Comments on notes from the Heart of the World ...: Grandmother, I'm home!Shannynhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00022174876852656598noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8340509256597314249.post-77362066392826601792011-02-16T14:31:39.291-08:002011-02-16T14:31:39.291-08:00I love your story. Thank you for posting it. My ...I love your story. Thank you for posting it. My dear (adoptive) grandmother lived in Toledo - my grandfather a revered Ob/Gyn prior to his passing in 1970. But nothing has been more dear to me than the finding of my biological mother and my biological ancestry - as I am doing the family tree. My closest ancestors' grave sites are all nearby and I have visited them, my maternal grandmother & great-grandmother. I was given pictures of them by an elder half-sister. How complete I feel now, how much more real my Scottish & Irish & French/Quebecois ancestry has become. <br /><br />I am fascinated by the story of Jigonsaseh. DH & I enjoy driving to Lake Ontario for the day in nice weather and we often would drive over Sandy Creek, or around the area. The land was beautiful to me there, but I also felt a serenity and a sacredness to it. I've been searching for a local sacred divine feminine connection this afternoon as I've been playing on the web - and I have found her in Jigonsaseh.Susanhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01446549810507929146noreply@blogger.com