Exploring the Human Path with my new friend enna reittort
Her book Krivda made me cry. Our conversation made her cry.
Some may feel that Covid-19 is the worst thing that ever happened. However, increasingly, I am finding silver linings. In the last four years, I have pondered and learned more about all manner of things, not least the WEF’s dystopian plans for us but also many wonderful things, that I previously have never considered – like the medicinal effects of curcumin and dandelion, the role of frequency and vibration in healing, and the effects of the unseen and immeasurable on human health and wellbeing.
I have also made so many new friends who share my vision of, trust in, and are sign-posting, a better way for humanity. So let me introduce you to the latest! Her name is enna reittort, and she is an anthropologist, linguist, regenerative peasant, contemplative meditator, author and natural human mystic. In case you are wondering, enna chooses to spell her name without capital letters.
Three-quarters of the way through enna’s book Krivda, which is Russian for ‘deception’, I am quite sure that it is essential reading for those starting to make sense of what is really going on. Krivda provides the religious context that has been missing from discourse on the matter of humanity’s derailment, our disconnection from one another and nature, and our current predicament.
Religion is the subject that one was taught to avoid at the dinner table, so I find it refreshing to read enna’s academic work on a matter so closely integrated with human identity that it continues to be exploited by the unscrupulous to manipulate, divide and conquer.
Her second book Broody Blue is quite different, a manual of sorts to being breathed. This concept reminds me of an experience I had a couple of years ago, which we discuss in our recorded conversation below. Indeed, the fundamental importance of breathing and the breath is also conceptualised in the World Council for Health logo that includes lungs, an apple, a hand and a heart. I am halfway through this book and realising that my doing-ness may be my undoing if I don’t learn some non-doing! I’ll have to keep you posted on my progress.
I do hope you will enjoy finding out more about enna’s very humble and human path. I was so curious about enna and felt so at ease speaking with her, I apologise if you feel like you are eavesdropping!