07 June 2007

The Less Complicated...The More Miraculous

Really. What could be simpler? And yet what could be more miraculous? I was just sitting out on my small apartment balcony looking at the pots in which I'd planted sweet peas and nasturtiums. Sure enough, despite colder than average temperatures and little sun over the past week, the seeds had started to sprout! It struck me how simple it all is...Nature gives us seed, we plant it in a little dirt, give it a little water, and receive an abundance of colorful and fragrant summer blooms.

How did I miss the enormity of this before? I feel like I've just awoken from a very long sleep.

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31 May 2007

Once in a Blue Moon


"If they say the mone is blewe
We must believe that it is true."

[Rede Me and Be Not Wroth (1528)]

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23 May 2007

Letting Go of Jesus

I wrote a letter to a friend today, discussing the Avalon East Pagan Gathering that's being held not far from where I live. She, too, follows her own spiritual path, and our discussion about this event and others led to the following paragraphs:
...But I DO embrace an earth-based spirituality. If anything, I guess I'm more an "eclectic pagan" or a "neo-pagan"... I'm not sure one has to put a label to it, anyway. I believe in a higher power, that's for sure. I don't necessarily think of it as a Goddess or God, but more like an all-knowing spirit. But for two years now, I've had this overwhelming need to get closer to...nature? the Earth? In a spiritual way. Thinking of spirit as earth and moon and stars, forests and streams and oceans...those things are constant. Reliable. Touchable. Tangible. I can go hug a tree. :-) And this need is not borne of a desire to worship, but rather a search for peace, I believe.

I guess I feel the need to get closer to something peaceful that's REAL. I've completely turned away from any Christian associations. I respect those who adhere to that in the same way I'd expect them to respect my spirituality...There's just so much about Christianity that I can't buy or accept *for me*. And if I'm honest with myself, there's still a teeny little part of me that keeps looking over my shoulder when I say that, waiting for that proverbial bolt of lightning! I guess that comes from years of having it beat into your head. I don't despise Jesus...he just isn't the one for me...
Now that I've exposed my confusion about my search for peace and meaning, one sentence stuck out as I re-read this...it is hard to let go of Jesus. To relinquish the Christian rites that were more or less forced upon you as a child and young adult. All the troubled times you prayed, for favors and forgiveness, answered or not. Even though I'm at peace with my decision, there is still that tiny, nagging voice. It's almost like mourning for something beautiful that could have been, but never was. Like a promise not kept. If that makes any sense.

There are no coincidences. There are many things--some of them serendipitous--that have brought me to this place. I remember the first time I watched the movie Phenomenon--the scene where George closes his eyes and sways to the rhythm of the wind in treetops. I remember thinking wow, that's the sort of peace I want. And I've swayed to the wind in the trees many times since then. That was a very long time ago. I remember the first Loreena McKennitt CD I bought and how amazed I was at both the lyrics and melodies of those songs. I remember the night I dropped my daughter off at a rave about an hour from my apartment. As we pulled to the side of the graveled road, you could see a group of young people who had formed a drum circle at the edge of a lake. A huge, September moon, full and balanced on the horizon, lit the scene. Other parents shook their heads and couldn't wait to leave...I thought, how magical, and longed to join in. Books, music, friends' conversations, signs.

I've let go of Jesus. It wasn't that difficult. But I suspect there will still be those moments when, like a homesick child, I'll forget my new-found happiness and remember where I've come from. But rather than looking back, I'll smile and wave and keep walking.

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18 May 2007

The Road Taken

""I shall be telling this with a sigh,
somewhere ages and ages hence..."
[The Road Not Taken - Robert Frost]

I have communed with Nature since I was a little girl. Having lived by the ocean all my life, rock and water, wind-swept fields of wildflowers, groves of poplar and birch, were all my playgrounds. I lived a "pagan lifestyle" long before my regimented, Christian upbringing which gently forced, and then strongly suggested, regular attendance at church. Properly attired in dress, hat and gloves, I listened from a tender age to the stories of the Bible--intrigued, but not quite understanding a vehement God who could strike you dead with one hand, and with the other, bestow forgiveness, simply for the asking. I don't remember the precise moment that it stopped being merely confusing and that blind acceptance became more than I could give, but I eventually felt the deception as something tangible.

It has only been in recent years--since the internet has given easy access to research and the terms pagan and heathen and (God forbid) Wiccan didn't seem so negative--that I started to explore other spiritual paths. There was always a tiny, nagging fear that that metaphorical bolt of lightning might still strike me down dare I even explore this beautiful pathway.

The fear is gone and has been replaced by a contentment of spirit and a peaceful heart. While I would never deny this new enlightenment, I still would not intentionally mention it to my family and some of my friends. Not because I am ashamed or embarrassed, but mostly because they just wouldn't understand. So I suppose I am somewhat "in the closet" still, but I will openly embrace this new communion.

I have much to learn. And that is what this journey is all about.

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