To me a manifesto is a poetics of a community, it is beautifully heartfelt, compassion-based, and inclusive (in the best of cases), and can be used to set us apart from others, our intersections are unique to us and our language of community is likewise, distinct and beautiful. Manifestos allow us to announce our existence,... Continue Reading →
Saad: Part Dįį’
“...In that engagement in spirit and heart we will always know who we are. It will never be taken from us ever again, ever. Ever, ever, ever.”1 –Dr. Myra Laramee “Skoden!”2 –the kids Declaring our presence with a word! Imagine! Two-Spirit, Indigiqueer, all these words are a declaration, a resistance. Two-Spirit is the container for... Continue Reading →
Saad: Part Taa’
Ahé’héé for your continued interest in this blog! This post is the third part of a series on etymology1 of words/wyrds2/saad, word-making, and tongues and lingoes. The first two parts were on the power of words and the power of words in world-making/building. And speaking on building via language, these days I’ve been spending my... Continue Reading →
Saad: Part Naakí
My Dilbaa Dreams: Saad Part Naakí To begin, I offer a poem to the language that is yet to be made: we declare via our tongue (can you hear us?) we move together with purpose with deliberate speak..deliberate literacies… this is us…who we are…how we talk… learn it, respect it, we made it, for us,... Continue Reading →
Saad
Saad. Words. Werdz. Word. You know, units of speech (written or spoken) that hold meaning? Mmm…words are COOL and mysterious and have a lot of power, we give them power. I’m learning my language, slowly (it’s an experience that I’ll write about someday). Sometimes I’ll hear a saad being spoken in my dreams, or I’ll... Continue Reading →
Reading in Kinship: Roll Call
Roll Call!! WYA!? These days I’ve been leaning into the glitter-anointed magic that is our 2SLGBTQIA+ youth, all y’all’s creative genius has sustained me and has me looking to the horizons of gender/gender expression, gender talk, gender walk, gender everything. Ahé’hee for building your own theory and gender practice you are showing us just the... Continue Reading →
Reading in kinship: Shepherd Tsosie
Meeeeeeee! haha Well, I feel like I’ve been talking about myself throughout the blog. So I don’t have much to say. This post is a footnote of sorts, a link in the chain of our discussion and our lineage of dilbaa and nádleeh. For Diné cultural teachings, context is foundational. Words are “the how” of... Continue Reading →
Reading in Kinship: Carrie House
“The Holy People gave me a female body and a male embodiment: as mother earth and father sky” –Carrie House1 Carrie House is a filmmaker, poet, and essayist. And they self-identify as a fourth-gendered Diné person, like me. House’s life as a non-cis man showed me that we do exist in the world, in context... Continue Reading →
Reading in Kinship Part II: Hastiin Klah
In part one of this post, I outlined a framework for reading I call reading in kinship. This post is a continuation in that it’s an introduction to one of many of my nádleeh relatives/teachers. I recently read excerpts from a biography of Hastiin Klah[1]. Klah is frequently referenced as an example of a prominent nádleeh in Diné... Continue Reading →
Reading In Kinship: A Framework
I find reading and learning about myself from the ethnographic record is…an experience, good and bad, and requires a lot of reading beyond the words and taking a lot of it with a good heap of skepticism. Looking for scraps and slivers of nádleeh and dilbaa is wonderfully affirming, but also frustrating, sad, addictive, immersive in the... Continue Reading →

