EARTH, WIND, FIRE AND WATER
Stone, rounded in my hand
tell me your story - the secret waters
that shaped you,
veining and coursing into darkness
humming their songs
of bones, pottery shards,
stones smoothed past memory or telling
be my teacher.
Hawk, tell me what you see.
Small on the ground, I am blind.
In widening circles you write an
incantation for the far journey
in the sky. Be my teacher.
Fire, speak, if you will.
Illuminate the shadows
filling this careful house of sticks
I have built. Burn me empty and full,
teach my feet to dance.
Fire, you be my teacher.
Rain, tell me. I am listening.
Your voice is a multitude,
your story grows
in the telling. Into the mouth
the mouth of the ocean,
this song you sing.
Rain, you will be my teacher.
(1993)
~My help is in the mountain~
Where I take myself to heal
The earthly wounds
That people give to me.
I find a rock with sun on it
And a stream where the water runs gentle
And the trees which one by one give me company
And so I must stay for a time
Until I have grown from the rock
And the stream is running through me
And I cannot tell myself from one lone tree.
Then I will know that nothing touches me
Nor makes me run away.
My help is in the mountain
That I take away with me.
Earth cure me. Earth receive my woe.
Rock strengthen me. Rock receive my weakness.
Rain wash away my sadness. Rain receive my doubt.
Sun make sweet my song.
~Nancy Wood~
It is an interesting point whether the pagan community is marginalised by 'society', or whether it is itself responsible for that marginalisation.
ReplyDeleteMy mentor, Herr Jung, would say that whenever a group of people sees 'enemies', those enemies are projections of the group's own shadow.
There is a theory that shadow projection is responsible for all conflicts and all wars. I'm not sure if that is entirely true, but it's a really good idea.
More:
http://www.awakeninthedream.com/artis/shadow%20projection%20fuel%20of%20war.html
Great words, Lauren, and I just love the hands.
ReplyDeleteI am so excited to have found your blog! I was researching the Taras and came across your post.
ReplyDeleteThank you for your words. I will be back often
Trish and Robb.........thank you!
ReplyDeleteAola, good to meet you; thanks for visiting my place in cyber space.
Robur; I appreciate your comments, and am also fascinated with Dr. Jung's ideas; I attended a "shadow" workshop in October with the Jung society here. I think addressing the issue of shadow, and projection, is of vital important, personally, and collectively.
There's some truth about what you say with Pagan culture too.....there is an element, indeed, that enjoys feeling marginalized and persecuted; I've seen it often enough in my many years of belonging to and working with pagan groups. I think each group has its unique shadow issues. There are many pagans who do not want to be viewed as an accepted religious path, for, I believe, exactly that reason, because unconsciously they need to feel "victimized".
I strongly feel, deeply feel, that right now it is vitally important that we all connect with our authentic power. Carolyn Myss became rather unpopular when she addressed this shadow issue with what she called "woundology".
This is worth writing about ..... but I guarantee it gets a lot of danders up!
Mmmm such beauty, I love the hands, too.
ReplyDeleteAnd the conversation is potent- about our shadow as Pagans. Just the other day, at the Catholic funeral of a family member, I was thankful for all the high ritual, and seeing many of the themes and symbols and stories that we all share. I did, however, wonder that if I had been open about who I was - what I practiced - would I be as welcome in the service?
hello Valerianna,
ReplyDeleteI think the need to hide affiliation with the Pagan movement has been a sound reality for many people - I remember, not so very long ago, several women in Arizona who had their children taken away because they were pagans. And remember the struggle the widow of a soldier who died in Iraq had for the right to put a pentacle on his gravestone. Hollywood has not helped, with all of it's exploitation of pagan symbols as "devil worship".
Yet, things are, I believe, different now..........I remember the struggle people like Selena Fox (keynote speaker at the conference this year) had to establish Circle Sanctuary in Wisconsin........or Frank Barney, when he created Brushwood in western New York. Or what Starhawk and Reclaiming went through. These people were brave, and dedicated, and had to face down a lot of intolerance and hatred in order to practice their religious beliefs.......I truly salute them!