The Medicine Wheel Company - Skateboard Wheels
The Medicine Wheel teachings &
Skateboarding as Healing
The Medicine Wheel teaches us that healing is holistic by touching the physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual aspects of life. Skateboarding, too, can be medicine. It builds strength within us, clears the mind, lifts the heart, and connects us to our body and mind.
The Medicine Wheel teachings differ from nation to nation. Some have more than four directions; some communities have six directions, or more directions, and colors vary as well, according to the traditional teachings in each of the hundreds of nations across Turtle Island. Some nations have a 3-D Medicine Wheel with a center circle, which often represents the self or the child. This central point is sometimes connected with the individual’s own journey or inner being, and in some teachings, it specifically symbolizes the child, highlighting the importance of personal growth and connection within the Medicine Wheel’s teachings.
Examples of colors and directions:
Yellow - East
• Represents new beginnings, childhood, and the element of air.
Red - South
• Represents youth, passion, and the element of fire.
Black - West
• Represents adulthood, introspection, and the element of water.
White - North
• Represents elderhood, wisdom, and the element of earth.
The Medicine Wheel is not a single, uniform system; it’s a living teaching that changes by nation, community, and Elder. For example, in many Lakota sources, the wheel commonly appears with Yellow (East), Red (South), Black (West), and White (North), and ties each direction to seasons, life stages, animals, and elements. The Aktá Lakota Museum and Lakota teachers describe these associations in detail. The Anishinaabe / Ojibwe often use yellow, red, black, and white as well, but frequently include seven directions and attach different teachings, medicines, and stages of life to those directions.
Across the Plains and other regions, nations such as Blackfoot (Siksika), Cheyenne, Cree, Dene, Haudenosaunee, Mi’kmaq, and Cherokee each have their own wheels or related circular teachings; some use different color orders, some include more than four directions, and some describe a 3‑D wheel with a central circle representing the child or the self.
People need to stop generalizing or adopt a “one-size-fits-all” model, which erases nation-specific authority. Scholars and Indigenous peoples note that pan‑Indian or mass‑market medicine wheel models have mixed different teachings and created confusion. To be respectful and want authentic Indigenous practice and language about colors, directions, and ceremonies, consult community Knowledge Keepers or Elders from the specific nation you’re referencing.
**If you have any more education attached to the Medicine Wheel, please contact me **
Chi Mikwec,
Aho,
References
Aktá Lakota Museum & Cultural Center. Lakota Medicine Wheel: Sacred Circle of Life. Aktá Lakota Museum.
Four Directions Teachings. Ojibwe Teaching. Fourdirectionsteachings.com.
Medicine wheel (symbol). Wikipedia.
Nabigon, J., et al. (2014). Medicine Wheel Teachings – Historical and Contemporary Realities: Movement Towards Reconciliation. Open Library Publishing Platform.