Before America Had a Name – A Meditative Journey Through Time – Fall Asleep To History
Let your mind gently drift into a world before history — a world untouched by noise, war, or walls.
On this episode of Lunar Lullaby, we invite you to fall asleep to a soothing, beautifully boring storytelling journey across ancient America — before clocks, before cities, before names.
“Before America Had a Name” guides you through forests that taught patience, rivers that whispered stories, and skies unmarked by borders.
This narration blends peaceful history with meditative rhythm to help you unwind, relax, and sleep deeply.
Whether you're seeking calm during anxious nights, soft background ASMR, or simply a gentle voice to help you fall asleep, this video offers sanctuary.
🎧 Best with headphones for full immersion.
💤 Let the silence of the old world carry you home.
— from Lunar Lullaby, where sleep and story meet.
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Sources:
National Museum of the American Indian (Smithsonian Institution)
– “Native Peoples of North America: Cultural Regions and Traditions”
– https://americanindian.si.edu/
Library of Congress – Native American History Collections
– Primary ethnographic materials and oral traditions.
– https://www.loc.gov/collections/nativ...
National Park Service (U.S. Department of the Interior)
– “Ancestral Puebloan Culture at Mesa Verde”
– “Cahokia Mounds and Mississippian Civilization”
– https://www.nps.gov/
The Canadian Museum of History – Arctic Peoples & Inuit Traditions
– https://www.historymuseum.ca/
The American Indian Heritage Month Resources (U.S. Government)
– Ethnographic summaries of Iroquois, Algonquin, Sioux, Pueblo, Haida, and Inuit cultures.
– https://nativeamericanheritagemonth.gov/
Public Domain Historical Works
• Franz Boas – “Handbook of American Indian Languages” (1911–1922)
• James Mooney – “Myths of the Cherokee” (1900)
• Edward S. Curtis – “The North American Indian” (1907–1930)
• Frederick Webb Hodge – “Handbook of American Indians North of Mexico” (Smithsonian, 1910)
(All these are U.S. government or public domain works.)
Modern Scholarly Overviews (non-copyright quotations, general references)
• Colin G. Calloway, “First Peoples: A Documentary Survey of American Indian History” (Oxford University Press)
• Charles C. Mann, “1491: New Revelations of the Americas Before Columbus” (Vintage Books)
(These two are excellent modern secondary references to cite, but do not quote directly — you’re fine under Fair Use as inspiration.)
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