Lately, I've been incredibly impressed by the blogging NTodd's been doing. It's creative. It's emotional. It's real. It's raw. And, it's revelatory. That's why it's creative, emotional, real, and raw. His recent podcasts will be examples, I think, when they get around to studying podcasting as an artform, of creative and non-derivative (of, for example, radio) podcasts.
I'm amazed, because NTodd and I have fairly similar Myers-Briggs profiles. And they both start with "I" for introvert. One of the things I enjoy about communicating over the internet is the ability to share only as much as I want. To dart behind the curtain any time I choose. To edit myself before presenting myself to the world.
So, when people ask me, as they have recently in e-mails, what my daily spiritual practice looks like, for example, I tend to want to retreat, move to generalities, obfuscate. I'm a nobody, in the Emily Dickinson sense. Why would anyone care what I do? Mostly what I do is do it wrong. And, yet, lately, part of what I'm working on is what I refer to as "inhabiting my life." By that, I think I mean pretty much the same thing that Ram Dass meant when he urged people to "Be Here Now." (Goddess, I am old.) By that, I mean, living in the real moment and not in either the future where I really WILL have gotten things together, (I once heard Christine Northrop talk about how in the he 1980s we all though that, if we could just get the right daytimer or Filofax, we'd really get it all together and it elicited one of those "Oh YES!" responses from me.) or in the past when I completely fucked it up. So, living in the present, here's my attempt to describe my spiritual practice.
Katrina Messenger once looked me dead in the eye and said that if you are not writing down your dreams, you are inhibiting your spiritual growth. So, even though, when I finally admit that I'm awake, I'm usually an hour or so behind where I'd like to be, I take a few minutes to jot down a few evocative phrases so that I'll be able to recall my dreams. Then, I'm off. I generally look up and gasp for air at about noon. Whatever I'm eating, and it can be lobster at the Palm with an interviewee or it can be a scoop of tuna salad and an banana at my desk, I try to stop and thank the dead fish and the dead fruit and vegetables, and the dead tea leaves for giving me life. And, then, I'm off. Somewhere in there, I try to walk on the treadmill, or do ecstatic dance, or, if I'm very lucky, swim. That's part of my spiritual practice. I don't enjoy it, generally, but I do it. My body IS the tool I use to do magic. I need to take care of my tools. I often work 10, 12, 14 hour days. By the time I drag myself home and feed the cat, I'm tired. And hungry. And wishing I'd gotten more done.
And there are times when my spiritual practice, and I am dead serious about this, is to go to sleep. We are, as T. Thorn Coyle has noted, embodied consciousness. We either take care of our bodies, or we don't. But to have a spiritual practice, I have to have a body. And, as I've learned the hard way from night school and the first years of practicing law, I need sleep.
But, if I can stay awake, I sit down, breathe slowly, and ground. Starhawk describes grounding in The Spiral Dance, and, for me, it is the basis of a spiritual practice. When I ground, it's specific. I see specific roots spreading from my orange and yellow chakras into the specific hummusy ground of my yard. I see my roots pulling up specific energy from my Mother, the Earth, and spreading throughout my specific body. I see any cancer cells being recognized by my immune system and destroyed, I see my right brain, which I often underuse, being filled with light. I see the light from the moon flowing through my violet chakara and blending with the energy from the Earth. This can take me a long time and a great deal of concentration.
At this point, I often call the quarters: "Earth, Air, Fire, Water, Come be with me, I'm your daughter." I call Center and I call the Goddess(es), generally Hecate and, recently, Cerridwen. I do an exercise from T. Thorn Coyle's book, Evolutionary Witchcraft, that ends in what she refers to as "feeding the sacred dove," and then, I do some magic.
Lately, I do some magic designed to protect my son, daughter-in-law, and grandchild during the birth. I've adapted a prayer of St. Patrick (that mothefucker), one that Madeline L'Engle, one of my favorite authors, used. It starts, "In Columbia, at this sacred hour . . . " All the rest, the incense, the altar, the athame, the herbs and stones, and sacred flames are just ways to involve my entire being, subconscious, consciousness, and Higher Self in the process, to seduce my entire being into whatever my left brain has decided is needed.
Then, I thank the Goddess(es) and the quarters and go take a bath, blog, read a book, throw in laundry, mow the lawn, sleep.
It's not much. But tonight, and for the next 29 nights, I'm doing it in complete darkness. We'll see if it makes a difference. Tonight, I went to the dark after about a half an hour of ecstatic dance. I found it lovely, peaceful, deep. I realized that, although I've found a place that's very dark, it's still noisy. i can hear my sump pump. I can hear my furncace. I can hear my monkey mind, just below the surface.
Dancing in the dark. Wherever you go, there you are. Are you ever alone in the dark? On purpose?
A New Era
3 hours ago
12 comments:
So, about the magic and witchcraft and stuff. It's bad enough that we've got huge numbers of superstitious idiots on the right. How does your leftist superstitious balderdash help progressive causes?
You seem to have lost interest in this on the comments to your last post.
It's not much. But tonight, and for the next 29 nights, I'm doing it in complete darkness. We'll see if it makes a difference.
Ooh, I bet it will. It'll probably make a big difference. I'll bet Bush will be impeached, and the Lion will lie down with the Lamb. Can't wait.
(Voice from afar: Grow UP)
Don't be a poopy head. We're talking about *complete darkness*. It'll be REALLY dark, not just kinda dark. That'll do it for sure.
anonymous,
Wow, It really bothers you. Why is that, do you suppose?
Do I think my time in the dark will get Bush impeached? No, of course not. Do I think it will teach me about myself, make me more powerful, show me things I didn't know before? Yes. Yes, I do. I'll tell you what. Why don't you do this with me? Why don't you and I both commit to spending at least fifteen minutes a night alone in the darkness and reporting here what we find out? And, let's both keep doing the other things we do: writing letters, demonstrating, givng money, etc. I'll be very interested in what you find in the darkness. Let's tell each other what's there.
Don't be hard on the witch. Many years ago, dissenters were tarred as witches. So we must gather them in. We need every fool we can get.
No one on the other side will ever realize that we're allied with boobies. We don't care if they're idiots. As long as they vote Democrat.
Wow, It really bothers you. Why is that, do you suppose?
Because I'm sexually frustrated? Because my dick is too small? Because I don't know what women really want? Did I get that right?
Do I think my time in the dark will get Bush impeached? No, of course not. Do I think it will teach me about myself, make me more powerful, show me things I didn't know before? Yes. Yes, I do.
If you want to learn about things, I'd recommend some time with a good book. Have you read "Tragedy and Hope"?
I'll tell you what. Why don't you do this with me? Why don't you and I both commit to spending at least fifteen minutes a night alone in the darkness and reporting here what we find out?
I do that daily. I find that I tend to go to sleep. I'll let you know if that changes.
And, let's both keep doing the other things we do: writing letters, demonstrating, givng money, etc. I'll be very interested in what you find in the darkness. Let's tell each other what's there.
"OK" he said, hoping that was some sort of proposition.
Anonymous,
Who wrote Tragedy and Hope. I'll add it to my list if you'll add The Spiral Dance to yours.
And, as Rumi said, Don't go back to sleep.
Who wrote Tragedy and Hope. I'll add it to my list if you'll add The Spiral Dance to yours.
T&H written by Carroll Quigley. It's better than magic. Bill Clinton took his class, loved the guy. I don't say that makes Quigley right, but it makes him important.
Starhawk? I poked around on her site long ago. Like I said in the first place: good for fleecing the rubes.
OK, anonymous, you're full of shit. Anyone who knows anything about Starhawk knows that she's been involved in more direct political action than almost anyone else on the planet. She's made a career of being arrested. She's put her body on the line in Palestine and she's organized trash collection and soil reclamation in New Orleans following Katrina.
You can agree or disagree with her religious ideas. Quite frankly, this form of spirituality isn't for many people; in fact, it isn't for most people. It probably isn't for you, and that's fine. But there's no need to make an ass of yourself lying about someone as dedicated to liberal causes as Starhawk.
Per Wikipedia, "Caroll Quigley:
is well known among those who believe there is an international conspiracy to bring about a one-world government. In his book Tragedy and Hope he claims to have studied the papers of an organization that secretly controls the US and European governments through a series of Round Table Groups. The round table group in the US is the Council on Foreign Relations. He alleges that both the Republican and Democratic parties are controlled by an “international Anglophile network" that stages elections."
(Balderdash? Gee, anonymous, project much?)
Be that as it may, I wish for each of you that which empowers, comforts and inspires. So mote it be!
Hecate, you struck a nerve with an anonymous soul.
You're doing something right!
Hecate,
Thank you for writing from your heart and sharing your authentic self with us.
And somehow, I became Mr. Geodesic. Who says there are no miracles.
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