Quotes
“I’m grateful for anything that brings me back to Colorado.” – Sheryl Lee
“After college, I moved to Breckenridge, Colorado, and went snowboarding every day. I didn’t know what I wanted to do, but I knew what I didn’t want to do. So I applied to grad school for writing, and I just gave it a shot and took it from there.” – Kaui Hart Hemmings
“Being from Colorado is, to me, very, very special. I’m just very thankful to be here. I’m also thankful to be a part of the history of this state.” – Dianne Reeves
“Growing up in Denver, I’m sure it started with loving the Colorado mountains.” – Gale Norton
Each year, millions of skiers come to Colorado to experience its superb emergency medical facilities.” – Dave Barry
Colorado Women
Clarissa Pinkola Estés, PhD Born in the dirtiest steel mill town in the USA, Gary Indiana, and of Mexican/ Native American heritage, Estés was adopted as an older child by immigrant Hungarians who were hard workers but could not read or write, or did so haltingly.She received her doctorate from The Union Graduate School in ethno-clinical psychology, the study of groups with emphasis on indigenous history.
She has been in clinical practice with war veterans and persons who are survivors of massacres and disasters, for 50 years as of 2020.As a specialist in post-trauma recovery, through Young Audiences and La Sociedad de Guadalupe, Estés served Columbine High School and its community for three years after the massacre.
“I’m grateful for anything that brings me back to Colorado.” – Sheryl Lee
“After college, I moved to Breckenridge, Colorado, and went snowboarding every day. I didn’t know what I wanted to do, but I knew what I didn’t want to do. So I applied to grad school for writing, and I just gave it a shot and took it from there.” – Kaui Hart Hemmings
“Being from Colorado is, to me, very, very special. I’m just very thankful to be here. I’m also thankful to be a part of the history of this state.” – Dianne Reeves
“Growing up in Denver, I’m sure it started with loving the Colorado mountains.” – Gale Norton
Each year, millions of skiers come to Colorado to experience its superb emergency medical facilities.” – Dave Barry
Colorado Women
Clarissa Pinkola Estés, PhD Born in the dirtiest steel mill town in the USA, Gary Indiana, and of Mexican/ Native American heritage, Estés was adopted as an older child by immigrant Hungarians who were hard workers but could not read or write, or did so haltingly.She received her doctorate from The Union Graduate School in ethno-clinical psychology, the study of groups with emphasis on indigenous history.
She has been in clinical practice with war veterans and persons who are survivors of massacres and disasters, for 50 years as of 2020.As a specialist in post-trauma recovery, through Young Audiences and La Sociedad de Guadalupe, Estés served Columbine High School and its community for three years after the massacre.
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Her books include Women Who Run with the Wolves, a manifesto of family tales and their psychological applications to the inner soul and creative lives of women. Translated into 42 foreign languages, this work has been hailed by Maya Angelou, Alice Walker, Wilma Mankiller and others, as a classic, a seminal work on the root nature of women.
Estis was inducted into the Colorado Women's Hall of Fame in 2006
Estis was inducted into the Colorado Women's Hall of Fame in 2006
Scenic Trail Reopen Open Soon
Hanging Lake Forest Service officials have announced that hopefully that the trail to Hanging Lake, near Glenwood Springs would be opened as soon as June 25. Last summer floods from above washed out the steep trail from Glenwood Canyon to the small but picturesque lake 1,200 feet above the highway through the canyon.
Worker had/or will remove debris and replace two or the seven bridge required to make the route passable. Funds for the work have come from Glenwood programs and the White River National Forest federal forest.
Wish You Were Here
I was walking along a trail and ran into my friend named Nick. It was quite a see-Nick trail today.
My wife and I were walking on a trail and were lost. She was annoyed and threw the map at me, so now I know where I stand.
Our group was determined to finish the hike around the lake, come hill or high water.
.Why are mountains so funny? Because they are hill areas.
I was walking along a trail and ran into my friend named Nick. It was quite a see-Nick trail today.
My wife and I were walking on a trail and were lost. She was annoyed and threw the map at me, so now I know where I stand.
Our group was determined to finish the hike around the lake, come hill or high water.
.Why are mountains so funny? Because they are hill areas.