Ash & Honey: Where Ancient Wisdom Meets Modern Healing
A research journey told out loud. Historian and ancestral formulator Alexandria Quinn Love moves through the great healing traditions — humorism, Ayurveda, European ancestral practice — to find what they knew that we stopped knowing. One frame. One system. One consistent truth.
For the ones who never stopped asking.....
history of medicine • constitutional health • Ayurveda • humorism • European ancestral healing • stillroom tradition • whole body care • resilience • storytelling
Ash & Honey: Where Ancient Wisdom Meets Modern Healing
Ash & Honey-What the Bones Remember | S3E1 | Stone to Skin
Use Left/Right to seek, Home/End to jump to start or end. Hold shift to jump forward or backward.
Scientists can now measure your ancestors' trauma in your DNA. Your great-grandmother's hunger, your great-grandfather's war — written into the chemistry of your body before you were born. This isn't metaphor. It's peer-reviewed science. And the ancient healers of Neolithic Britain already knew it.
In the Season 3 premiere of Ash & Honey, we begin where the record begins — 6,000 years ago, in the stone and soil of northeast England and Scotland. We explore the emerging field of epigenetics and transgenerational trauma, the remarkable archaeological evidence of surgery and care in Neolithic Britain, and why every healing tradition your ancestors built was engineered to work with exactly this biology.
This season, we're not borrowing wisdom. We're going home.
What the body carries. What the stones remember. What you inherited — and what you can do with it.
In this episode: — The Dutch Hunger Winter and what it revealed about inherited trauma — Rachel Yehuda's landmark research on Holocaust survivors and their children — Trepanation, meadowsweet, and the physical evidence of ancient healing in Britain — Why Stonehenge may have functioned as a healing center — Your assignment: find your place on the map and hold something real
Season 3: Stone to Skin — tracing European healing wisdom from the Neolithic to your nervous system.
Let the burn teach you. Let the honey keep you.
Until next time — be gentle with the body that carries you.