Two others aren't suitable for the squeamish, instructing people to use "Menstrual blood and urine, watered down" as fertilizer (April 24th), and telling people to switch to reusable menstrual products (November 29th). There's also a lot of completely random stuff that honestly just doesn't belong at all on one day (August 4th) there's a short list of "tips" to "bypass fossil fuels". Additionally (and unsurprisingly) there's also plenty of material that should've just been left out for the sake of respect and not screwing with stuff that isn't yours to mess with in the first place- such as deviations into Chinese medicine in multiple areas, as well as several deviations into Indigenous American practices (because we know no spiritual book would be complete without it). In keeping with the trend of these kinds of books, of course, most entries are barely 2 paragraphs long. In this one in particular, sections are aligned to the holidays of the Neopagan "Wheel of the Year"- though I don't really see any purpose in bothering to do so entries alternate between sharing some of the author's personal thoughts, encouraging some sort of activity, and a variety of other things that are "meant to deepen your connection to nature" in some way. Living Earth Devotional is structured in pretty much the exact same way as The Wicca Book of Days and In the Company of Trees in that there is one entry in the book per day, assigned by the day's calendar date.
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