Deborah’s review of Anasazi Vision: Profound Wisdom From The Four Corners Desert And One Woman's Journey To Peace > Likes and Comments

6 likes · 
Comments Showing 1-4 of 4 (4 new)    post a comment »
dateUp arrow    newest »

message 1: by Michael (new)

Michael O This chapter hit me deeply because of how respectfully she approaches the ancestral presence around her. She doesn’t claim ownership or pretend to understand them — she simply acknowledges them. The atmosphere she creates is incredible: the dark canyon, the starlight, the quiet hum of the earth. Then the realization that the “others” she sensed were not spirits haunting her, but a community welcoming her into their space… that part stayed with me for days. It is powerful without being dramatic.


message 2: by ELIZABETH (new)

ELIZABETH C. Deborah, I really love the way you captured that Chapter. You highlighted something so important the balance between spirituality and grounded awareness.
And honestly, Anasazi Vision deserves a much higher ranking than where it currently sits. This book shouldn’t be anywhere near its current level. It’s operating on a higher frequency, and more readers need to recognize that.


message 3: by True (new)

True North Hi Deborah,
I wanted to personally reach out and thank you for your beautiful review of Anasazi Vision.
I read your words with a full heart.
Every reader brings their own life, grief, tenderness, questions, and inner landscape to a story, and when someone takes the time to reflect on what the book stirred in them, it means more to me than I can properly express.
Your review touched me deeply.
This story came through me with so much reverence for the land, for the unseen, for grief, for healing, and for the quiet ways life continues to speak to us. To know that it reached you in a meaningful way is a gift I do not take lightly.
As a thank-you, I would love to offer you something I created for readers who have completed the book.
It is called After the Desert Speaks: A Quiet Reflection Experience After Anasazi Vision.
It is not a workbook or a study guide. It is simply a gentle place to land after the final page, a quiet continuation for whatever the story may have awakened or left moving inside you.
A place to pause.
A place to breathe.
A place to listen to what remains.
If you would like to receive it, you can access it from my website, as Goodreads doesn't allow links in the comment section.
Thank you again for reading Anasazi Vision, for honoring it with your words, and for allowing the story into your life.
With deep gratitude, True


message 4: by True (new)

True North Hi Deborah,
I wanted to personally reach out and thank you for your beautiful review of Anasazi Vision.
I read your words with a full heart.
Every reader brings their own life, grief, tenderness, questions, and inner landscape to a story, and when someone takes the time to reflect on what the book stirred in them, it means more to me than I can properly express.
Your review touched me deeply.
This story came through me with so much reverence for the land, for the unseen, for grief, for healing, and for the quiet ways life continues to speak to us. To know that it reached you in a meaningful way is a gift I do not take lightly.
As a thank-you, I would love to offer you something I created for readers who have completed the book.
It is called After the Desert Speaks: A Quiet Reflection Experience After Anasazi Vision.
It is not a workbook or a study guide. It is simply a gentle place to land after the final page, a quiet continuation for whatever the story may have awakened or left moving inside you.
A place to pause.
A place to breathe.
A place to listen to what remains.
If you would like to receive it, you can access it from my website, as Goodreads doesn't allow links in the comment section.
Thank you again for reading Anasazi Vision, for honoring it with your words, and for allowing the story into your life.
With deep gratitude, True


back to top