Friday, January 31, 2025

Imbolc dedication

Brigid-ine Dedications @ Imbolc

 In traditional PaGaian Imbolc ceremony these words are offered for 

the Brigid-ine commitments/dedications:

I commit myself to my particular small self, understanding that I am She – Gaia – She who is All. I am connected to Her as the tree bud is to the branch. ‘I am the beauty of the green earth and the white moon among the stars and the mystery of the waters’. I commit myself to this Originating Power present in me, the Sacred Flame in me, this Native Land who I am. I will protect Her and honour Her in myself – this particular Beauty, who is ever-new. I am a Promise of Life. Whatever She needs I will give Her. I will tend Her in myself – so that She may grow strong and flourish. [1]

It is a recognition of ourselves – bodymind –  as primary Land: this is the primary landscape/ecology (that grows out of Earth and Sea), and one which has been colonised. We commit to protecting and honouring this Land, this primary “environment” … which is understood to be seamlessly connected to All. And the She/Her metaphor need not be an issue for male-identified beings: we are speaking of our Gaian selves, our Earthbody selves.

This is a “Bridal” commitment – the primary wedding (how far is that from the average wedding?). It is a commitment to Brigid, who is understood to tend the Flame of Being … Her name itself means “the Great or Sublime One”, from the root brig, “power, strength, vigor, force, efficiency, substance, essence, and meaning.” (Ireland Michael Dames, p.233.). This commitment to the life-force, to bringing forth of being, may be understood as completely relevant and essential to this Planetary Moment we find ourselves in: it is  a Poiesis … the making of a world.'

Published in Pagaian Dot org.



Wednesday, January 29, 2025

You Gotta Believe In Something

 Nina Paley's wonderful animation!



The Year of the Snake

 I avoid all snakes, especially the ones on TV which are alive. No thanks. I find them creepy. When walking in nature, I keep a keen eye out as to where I  step.

But I also learned that other feminists have embraced snake powers...like the Minoan goddess followers (dancers?) who held snakes in their upraised hands wearing a costume of many flounces in their skirts and being completely bare-breasted. The following photo describes these figures as goddesses themselves.


The part of snake-ness that seems important to me, a goddess oriented, eco-feminist combating climate change by being a networker...they can only grow by shedding their outer skins. 

That transformative process must be a regular thing for them as they age.

 I sure can look back on my own life and see some transformations I've undergone which were both scary but growth oriented eventually. When my eldest two sons decided to move back with their father and his new wife...that transformation for my identity as a mother was a huge shock to myself. I needed so much to nurture a child that I became pregnant with my boyfriend who didn't want to be a father. I intended to, and did raise my third son by myself. But I learned a lot about what parenting really meant to me, thus keeping these new relationships with my eldest sons as well as nurturing a new baby as he grew into his own manhood.

I've been very brave and touched several live snakes in my lifetime, in various safe situations like Nature Preserves or zoos. Their scales are dry...not slimy as I and most who fear them think! But they are cold blooded. That's enough to turn me off to them. Fish might be ok as cold blooded creatures. 

So a year of the snake is ours to experience now. I already am dealing with my anxieties over the New Irrational President...so perhaps the qualities of snake will need to be considered.

Let me know if you have insights into this. I'm open to ideas.

------------------

Today's quote:

The goal of life
is to make your heartbeat
match the beat of the universe,
to match your nature with Nature.

The goal of life is to be a vehicle
for something higher.

- Joseph Campbell, 

Reflections on the Art of Living: A Joseph Campbell Companion 

Selected and Edited by Diane K. Osbon

----------------------------

Today's art:

By Charles Frizzell

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From a FB friend, 

Snake moves with wisdom, attuned to vibrational truths and trusting its instincts.
Align with snake by leaning into your inner wisdom, staying grounded and moving from a place of personal rhythm, rather than reactivity to what is happening in the world around us.
There is much potential for creative and spiritual rebirth this year. May we move slow and steady, to make greatest progress." Alana Fairchild.
So I'd like to wish us the joy to embrace the Sacred Feminine, the courage to go within, the flexibility to adapt and the agility to thrive in the ever changing environment.

Monday, January 27, 2025

Wild Clocks by David Farrier

 January 23, 2025

Attentive to the loss of age-old ecological relationships as “wild clocks” fall out of synchronization with each other, David Farrier imagines an opportunity to renew the rhythms by which we live.

In every living thing, there ticks a clock. “Lodged in all is a set metronome,” wrote W. H. Auden: when May comes round, birds “still in the egg, click to each other ‘Hatch!’” and “October’s nip” is the signal for trees to release their leaves.

Once, these rhythms comforted and consoled, orchestrating innumerable ecological relationships and offering glimpses of the greater wheels within which our small lives turn. But as climate breakdown takes hold, more and more species are struggling to keep time as they once did. Biological clocks that evolved an exact synchronization over millions of years are falling out of sync: the beat does not fall where it should; syncopation becomes dissonance. Failing wild clocks are resulting in misalignments in time between predators and prey, herbivores and plants, or flowers and pollinators. The results can be catastrophic, as breeding seasons fail and the long-held relationships that weave species together around shared needs fray. In Australia, mountain pygmy possums are leaving hibernation before the emergence of their preferred food, the bogong moth, risking starvation....

This is a short part of an insightful article from Emergence Magazine. There's also an audio version available.

Unknown photographer


Saturday, January 25, 2025

God the Mother

Art by by Yulia Ustinova

 "Long before God the Father, there she was – God the Mother. Where did she vanish to, this great mother goddess? How did we women become so completely dispossessed? It wasn’t that I wanted to replace a male god with a female god; it wasn’t that I wanted to find a religion at all. I was simply looking for some sense that women might have worth. And I found it: there in the old stories of my own native land, I found it. Filled with images of women creating, women weaving the world into being, I took up knitting. Thread by thread, stitch by stitch, I began to knit myself back into being. I had never thought of myself as being a particularly creative soul, but I discovered that creativity was a wide-ranging affair. I simply thought about what brought me joy, and I began to cultivate it. I dug my hands into this strange foreign soil, and I began to grow things. I began to reacquaint myself with the soft animal object that was my body. Slowly, spending more and more time outside, focusing on the wisdom of my senses rather than on what was going on inside my head, I began to weave myself back into the fabric of the Earth."

— Sharon Blackie (If Women Rose Rooted: A Journey to Authenticity and Belonging)

Thursday, January 23, 2025

Mary Oliver on death

 

Thomas Mabry Lindover Viaduct on Blue Ridge Parkway 1.16.2024


Mary Oliver by Bill Sienkiewicz

Wednesday, January 22, 2025

Knowing from Within

  



Sometimes it feels as if you have lost Her (It, Him, Spirit, Connection)

and you think you have to learn more methods,
or you have to “let go and accept”.
You have to think good thoughts,
or get rid of thoughts all together,
or you have to process and heal something in order to find Her again.
You can follow the hooks of your inner Mrs. Fix-it for eons
and around and around you go.
Yet, at any moment
even now
She is right here.
She is like an expanding blossoming within, a Beingness.
She is not a state, or a high, or a celestial mirage who only visits on holidays.
She is that which breathes you right now, she is that nuclear power in the innermost chambers of all things that pulls
space and vibration and energy into this – what we call ordinary life.
There is nothing wrong in doing or thinking or analyzing or planning, but when these processes are uprooted from Being, they spin us into the hallucination of separation and dusty repetition.
Here we feel shut down from Her Shakti, the vitality, creativity and sense of belonging that our soul thirsts for.
You cannot “do” or “think” your way to Her.
It is through a moment to moment intimacy
that you can descend into Her infinite knowing
underneath the fixed compartments of the known.
~ Chameli Ardagh

From FB page Awakened Woman
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Tuesday, January 21, 2025

Images of God and Goddess

  ¨Visual images of the Goddesses stand in stark contrast to the image of God as an old white man, jarring us to question our culture's view that all legitimate power is male and that female power is dangerous and evil. The image of the naked Eve brazenly taking the apple from the serpent, then cowering in shame before a wrathful male God, tells us not only that female will is the source of all the evil in the universe, but also that the naked female body is part of the problem. This image communicates to the deep mind the message that female will and female nakedness must be controlled and punished by male authority. In contrast, the Goddesses show us that the female can be symbolic of all that is creative and powerful in the universe. The simplest and most profound meaning of the image of the Goddess is the legitimacy and goodness of female power, the female body, and female will.¨-Carol P. Christ, Rebirth of the Goddess




___________
The above was first published in 2015

Monday, January 20, 2025

Spiritual Ecology

 Spiritual Ecology

"Because for me it is not enough to say that we must respect the Earth. That the Earth is even sacred is not enough. We must understand that the Earth is a divine being filled with spirit that demands our engagement. "

The Radical Intimacy of Spiritual Ecology

A Talk by Emmanuel Vaughan-Lee


There's a transcript also available at that link, as well as audio presentation. He is the editor of Emergence Magazine.

Emmanuel Vaughan-Lee:
 

If we have the courage to respond, to engage, to pick up that thread that was woven long ago into our very being, into the DNA and the fabric of our existence as human beings; if we have the courage to say, I remember you, I remember you, then a journey begins, a real practice of spiritual ecology.




Given at St. Ethelburga’s Centre for Reconciliation and Peace in London in November 2024, this talk by Emmanuel Vaughan-Lee concludes a series on the theme of spiritual ecology. It explores how an embodied practice of spiritual ecology is a radical act amid a culture that has forgotten the sacred nature of our relationship with the Earth. A remembrance of this intimate connection is the spiritual responsibility of our time, and when our hearts recognize and hold this reality, we can keep alive an essential connection through our darkening days and offer a practice of love to the suffering Earth.


The Radical Intimacy of Spiritual Ecology


A Talk by Emmanuel Vaughan-Lee

Dear friends,


As the new year unfolds and our society travels deeper into a realm of toxicity and instability, I find myself increasingly returning to the essence of our relationship with the living, breathing Earth as a space to find ground amid uncertainty. Like oneness and multiplicity, that essence is part of the whole while also being a unique experience. This relationship is so individual and intimate that it is as much a part of us as our own breath, and we must each find our own way to honor it.


In November, I gave a talk at St. Ethelburga’s Centre for Reconciliation and Peace in London—part of a series given over the last two years on the theme of spiritual ecology. This talk is about how an embodied practice of spiritual ecology is a radical act amid a culture that has forgotten the sacred nature of our relationship with the Earth. It’s clear that we can no longer wait for our systems and institutions to lead the way. Instead, my belief is that it’s the spiritual responsibility of our time for each of us to awaken a primordial memory of the Earth as a divine being imbued with spirit. When our hearts recognize and hold this reality, we can begin the journey of remembering what it means to embody this relationship; of keeping an essential connection alive through our darkening days; and offering a practice of love to the Earth in the midst of Her suffering. As we each engage in our own spiritual ecology, a bridge between this moment and the future we know is possible can begin to form.


Thank you for listening,


Emmanuel Vaughan-Lee

Emergence Executive Editor


 Here is a link to an audio from Emergence Magazine. 

https://emergencemagazine.org/conversation/the-radical-intimacy-of-spiritual-ecology/?utm_source=Emergence+Magazine&utm_campaign=74ef53c215-Newsletter_20250119&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_-0be9b497cf-357088886

It also has a transcript of the audio presentation. 


Sunday, January 19, 2025

Gainism, polytheism and pantheism

 That's the site which has lots of FAQ's about pagan topics. And it's a great magazine about Pagans and Witches. I usually call our mother earth, Gaia. I also call pantheism an earth-based religion. http://witchesandpagans.com/paganism-101/introduction-to-paganism/286-faq-about-paganism.html


Q: What is a Gaian? What is Gaianism?

A Gaian is a person who focuses his/her spiritual faith upon the Earth (Gaia.) Gaianism is a growing movement devoted to the creation of an earth-wise spirituality that honors the Earth and all life as the primary source, sustainer, and reality for life. Gaians may be Pagans, Christians (see Creation-Spirituality movement of Matthew Fox), atheists, Scientific Pantheists, or any other religion/faith that is willing to focus its energy upon the spirituality of connection with the biosphere. As a very young offshoot of Paganism, Gaian theology, philosophy, and ethics are still in a formative stage.

Q: What are the ethics of polytheistic and pantheistic traditions?

A: Because each tradition has its own set of ethics, these vary considerably. Common ethical guidelines include: Treat all sacred objects, places, and entities with respect. Honor the Earth who gave you life. Take only what you need, and offer fair return for whatever you take. Destruction in its proper time can prove beneficial, but do not destroy anything just for the sake of destruction. Every person contains a little spark of divinity, so speak to the divine spark in everyone you meet. Allow others to worship as they choose. Sexuality is a blessing, not a curse; yet the power to create new life brings with it the obligation to do so responsibly. Do not meddle with that which you do not understand.
==========================

Polytheism has more than one god or goddess.

Pantheism is the belief that all living things have the divine within them.


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The above was posted in 2014

Saturday, January 18, 2025

Hypatia of Alexandria

 The surviving fragments of Hypatia’s teachings indicate a mystical orientation. Glimpses of her spiritual views survived in the letters of her disciples, which speak of “the eye buried within us,” a “divine guide.” As the soul journeys toward divinity, this “hidden spark which loves to conceal itself” grows into a flame of knowing. Hypatia’s philosophy was concerned with the “mystery of being,” contemplation of Reality, rising to elevated states of consciousness, and “union with the divine,” the One. [Dzielska, 54-5, 48-50]


Hypatia’s father Theon was an astronomer and mathematician who was devoted to divination and astrology and the pagan mysteries. He wrote commentaries on the books of Orpheus and Hermes Trismegistus and poems to the planets as forces of Moira (destiny). Nothing indicates that Hypatia departed from her home culture. The Chaldean Oracles and Pythagorean numerological mysticism figured in her teachings, as the letters of Synesius indicate. Like her father, she saw astronomy as the highest science, opening up knowledge of the divine.

The following is excerpted with kind permission from “War Against the Pagans,” in Secret History of the Witches © 2000 Max Dashu
Hypatia+of+Alexandria… The Roman state gave free rein to Christian extremists who destroyed pagan shrines and images, or who committed violence against pagan leaders. They attacked people at pagan services and destroyed their temples. Arson was a favorite tactic. From the late 300s on, monks stand out as the primary aggressors in the battle to suppress pagans in the east. Even Christian documents describe them as violent and crime-prone, beating people they considered sinful, stirring up sectarian strife. [MacMullen, 171-2] The pagan Eunapius remarked that these monks looked like men but lived like pigs, “and openly did and allowed countless unspeakable crimes.” [Eunapius, 423] He added bitterly, “For among them, every man is given the power of a tyrant who has a black robe and is prepared to behave badly in public.” [Hollland-Smith, 170] Some were not above murder.

One target of the fanatical monk was Hypatia, an astronomer, mathematician and philosopher of international reputation. Socrates Scholasticus wrote that “she far surpassed all the philosophers of her time,” and was greatly respected for her “extraordinary dignity and virtue.” [Ecclesiastical History] Hypatia’s house was an important intellectual center in a city distinguished for its learning. Damasius described how she “used to put on her philosopher’s cloak and walk through the middle of town” to give public lectures on philosophy. [Life of Isidore, in the Suda]

 Admired by all in Alexandria, Hypatia was one of the most politically powerful figures in the city. She was one of the few women who attended civic assemblies. Magistrates came to her for advice, including her close friend, the prefect Orestes. [Damasius, Socrates Scholasticus] In the midst of severe religious polarization, Hypatia was an influential force for tolerance and moderation. She accepted students, who came to her “from everywhere,” without regard to religion.

Hypatia was a Neoplatonist. Some have claimed that she does not really qualify as a pagan, only as a rationalist philosopher. But this description is inaccurate and misleading. First, the meaning of “philosopher” had changed considerably by late antiquity, encompassing even Christian ascetics. [MacMullen, 205 fn 24] Second, such a narrow definition of paganism fails to recognize, as its enemies did, that it constituted a much broader spectrum than temple rites and theurgy. The sacred books of the Neoplatonists were pagan—Orpheus, Homer, the Chaldean Oracles—and they embraced “the esoteric doctrines of the mysteries.” [Cumont, 202] Third, Neoplatonist philosophers were persecuted as pagans, and identified as such in the struggle over the temples. They joined and even led in the pagan defense of the Serapium in Alexandria.

One of these leaders, Antoninus, had been initiated by his mother, Sosipatra of Pergamum, a Neoplatonist philosopher and mystic seeress. Antoninus “foretold to all his followers that after his death the temple would cease to be, and even the great and holy temples of Serapis would pass into formless darkness and be transformed, and that a fabulous and unseemly gloom would hold sway over the fairest things on earth.” The Serapium was razed in 391, the year after Antoninus died. [Eunapius, 416-7] …

Her disciples certainly regarded her in the light of a spiritual leader. Synesius of Cyrene called her “the most holy and revered philosopher,” “a blessed lady,” and “divine spirit.” Though a Christian, he refers to “her oracular utterances” and writes that she was “beloved by the gods.” [Dzielska, 47-8, 36] She spoke out against dogmatism and superstition: “To rule by fettering the mind through fear of punishment in another world, is just as base as to use force.” [Partnow, 24] Unquestionably, Hypatia’s teaching represented a challenge to church doctrine. The apparent destruction of her philosophical books underlines the point. Her mathematical works survived and were popular into the next century.

When Cyril became bishop in 412, he began pushing to extend his power into the civic sphere. His enforcers were the parabalanoi, strongmen who had been the shock troops of bishop Theophilus’ war on pagans and Jews. Bishop Cyril persecuted heterodox Christian groups, closing their churches and expelling them from the city. He spread rumors of a Jewish conspiracy to murder Christians and instigated a brawl between Jews and Christians at a theater. The Jews protested that the bishop’s agents had provoked the fight. The prefect Orestes (himself a Christian) heard out their grievances and arrested one of the bishop’s allies. In 414, armed conflict broke out between Cyril’s supporters and the embattled Jews. It ended with the looting and seizure of synagogues, and the bishop expelling the ancient Jewish community from Alexandria.

Many Christians in the city sided with Orestes and put pressure on Cyril to desist. Instead, he escalated the conflict, calling in hundreds of monks from the desert. They mobbed Orestes in the streets, calling him a “sacrificer” and “Hellene”—in other words, a pagan. [Chuvin, 87-9] The monks hurled stones, wounding him in the head. The prefect’s bodyguards fled, but a crowd of bystanders jumped in to save his life.

Accusations of Witchcraft

Realizing that he was losing on public relations, the bishop changed tactics. Now he attempted to turn the people against Hypatia as a powerful woman by accusing her of harmful sorcery. A later church chronicler, John of Nikiu, explained that “she beguiled many people through satanic wiles.” It was Hypatia’s “witchcraft” that kept the prefect Orestes away from church and made him corrupt the faith of other Christians. Further, she was involved in divination and astrology, “devoted at all times to magic, astrolabes and instruments of music.” [John of Nikiu, Chronicle 84. 87-103, Online:7-20-01]
In March of 415, Peter the church lector led a mob in attacking Hypatia as she rode through the city in her chariot. Socrates Scholasticus wrote that “rash cockbrains” dragged her into the Caesarion church, stripped her naked, and tore into her body with pot-shards, cutting her to pieces. Then they hauled her dismembered body to Cinaron and burned it on a pyre. [Alic, 45-6] John Malalas accords with Socrate’s statement that the mob burned Hypatia’s remains. Hesychius’ account agrees that the mob tore Hypatia to pieces, but simply says that “her body [was] shamefully treated and parts of it scattered all over the city.” [Dzielskaielska, 93]

In John of Nikiu’s version, men came for “the pagan woman who had beguiled the people of the city and the prefect through her enchantments.” They found her sitting in a chair and dragged her through the streets until she was dead, then burned her body.[Chronicle, 84.87-103] After Hypatia’s assassination, Orestes disappeared (fled? assassinated?). Cyril prevailed, and his parabalanoi were never punished for killing Hypatia. The bishop covered up her murder, insisting that she had moved to Athens.

No one was fooled. Our nearest contemporary sources agree that the bishop was behind the witch-rumors and the killing, and that his men carried them out. Public opinion may be measured by the fact that Christian city officials continued appealing to imperial officials to curb the parabalanoi, to bring them under secular control and restrict them from public places. They were only partially successful, since the imperial court itself was in the midst of a crackdown on pagans. As for Cyril, whom John of Nikiu credits with destroying “the last remnants of idolatry in the city,” he was later declared a saint. [Dzielskaielska, 97-8, 104. 94]

Hypatia was not targeted only as a pagan. Other pagans—men—continued to be active at the university of Alexandria for decades after her death. It is clear that Hypatia’s femaleness made her a special target, vulnerable to the accusation of witchcraft. Her courage in opposing the escalating anti-Jewish violence and her moral stance against religious repression were factors as well. In defending the assault on the philosophical tradition of tolerance, Hypatia had everything to lose, yet she acted boldly.

Later in the century, her male counterparts also came under attack. By the mid-400s, pagan professors were being sentenced to death in Syria. Some time after 480, an Alexandrian Christian society called the Zealots hounded the pagan prefect and his secretary from office and into exile. The Zealots capped their triumph with the burning of “idols.” Two of them moved on to Beirut, where they incited further hunts of leading pagans. They formed a group to collect denunciations, using informers, and brought names and accusations to the bishop. This worthy held joint hearings with city officials, which led to more bonfires and the exile of pagans. [MacMullen, 26, 194 fn95]
The cultural repression used to Christianize the Roman empire was unprecedented anywhere up to that time, in extent, duration and geographic scale.
Read more about Hypatia of Alexandria:
The Life and Legacy of Hypatia by Danielle Williams
The Real Wonder Woman: Hypatia of Alexandria by The Secret Sun
Great Philosophers:  Hypatia at Oregon State University online

A repost from 2014