Lynne Ferguson is a musician living just outside Seattle, on a section of Native land that she loves. For over 20 years, she’s run Native Horsemanship Youth Program, a non-profit that teaches horse skills to tribal and special needs young people, and helps them heal their emotional wounds. She talks about her life as a musician; recovering from a traumatic event with the help of dear friends in Nashville, where she lived and played music for a few years; raising a family, including facing the challenges of having a son who’s an addict and what boundaries she needed to draw; living in poverty while she built her tiny house on her Native property where she runs her non-profit, and how she got through it all. She also talks about the inheritance her father left her, and how that now she has substantial money, she’s having a hard time figuring out where to spend it…
Epis.#29: Lynne used to put all her money towards her family, then her non-profit; now she can spend it on herself, but she’s not sure where to start.
by michaelshaw_sar@yahoo.com | May 7, 2019 | 2019, Uncategorized