WILD WAYNE : Taco King of Dragons
Bio
DR. WAYNE STEIN Ted Talk Speaker, Amazon Author, Asian Gothic Scholar, Performance Artist; Yoga Certified, Black Belts. Writer Program Administrator, Writing Center Director, Korean Born , Raised in Japan, Italy, grew up In LA.
Stories (57)
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Samurai Mindful Walking Part 1: Deep Breathing Increases Metabolism and Lung Capacity🔥
✅It Starts with love. . .Ninja Breathing Is Coming. . . . . 🔥I have the Lung Capacity of a Marathon Runner: One deep long breath and 10 slow steps. . .. .not easy….. samurai breathing: Try It
By WILD WAYNE : Taco King of Dragons3 days ago in Longevity
How to Become an Afro Samurai: Yasuke, the Wild Super Hero
feeling liberating and not enslaved.. . . discovering super powers of alchemical compassion and zen mindful peace. . 𓂃˖˳·˖ ִֶָ ⋆🌷͙⋆ ִֶָ˖·˳˖𓂃 ִֶָ𓂃˖˳·˖ ִֶָ ⋆🌷͙⋆ ִֶָ˖·˳˖𓂃 ִֶָ𓂃˖˳·˖ ִֶָ ⋆🌷͙⋆ ִֶָ˖·˳˖𓂃 ִֶָ
By WILD WAYNE : Taco King of Dragons5 days ago in Poets
Blood Lust: Hybridity and Heteroglossia of Vampires
Mikhail Bakhtin: The Heteroglossia of Gothic Tales Bakhtin (1895 - 1975), the Russian literary theorist and linguistic rhetor, contends that within any text, there exists a multitude of social voices, often contradicting voices entangled in dialogue: the writer's, the reader's, and other cultural voices. Meaning is found or lost in the rhetorical act found between the two or multitude of speakers. This heteroglossia (Discourse in the Novel) presents a problem because we often miss the plurality of sounds and only notice the sound of Butoh Dancers of death and vampire leaders who suck our blood and taxes.
By WILD WAYNE : Taco King of Dragons5 days ago in Horror
Lessons Learned in a Wheel Chair, Singing in the Sunshine 🥀
It starts with love. . . and life . . . Motivational Mantra: Living with Disabilities “To think in terms of either pessimism or optimism oversimplifies the truth. The problem is to see reality as it is.” — Thich Nhat Hạnh
By WILD WAYNE : Taco King of Dragons5 days ago in Lifehack
Hoʻoponopono of Hawaiʻi: Home Sweet Home
Lost in America Growing up in Korea, Japan and Italy, it was hard to adapt to life in Mississippi and Oklahoma. I felt lost in America. Finally, in high school we moved to Los Angeles, where I became a gymnast and loved to practice martial arts. Finally, I found someplace I fit in. I learned Spanish because no one speaks English there; at least, none of my friends did, they spoke Chinese, Korean, Spanish or other languages. The only time I heard English was when people from different cultures were forced to talk to each other.
By WILD WAYNE : Taco King of Dragons6 days ago in Humans


