Thursday, December 29, 2016
Beannacht ("Blessing") for the New Year
On the day when
the weight deadens
on your shoulders
and you stumble,
may the clay dance
to balance you.
And when your eyes
freeze behind
the grey window
and the ghost of loss
gets in to you,
may a flock of colours,
indigo, red, green,
and azure blue
come to awaken in you
a meadow of delight.
When the canvas frays
in the currach of thought
and a stain of ocean
blackens beneath you,
may there come across the waters
a path of yellow moonlight
to bring you safely home.
May the nourishment of the Earth be yours,
May the clarity of light be yours,
may the fluency of the ocean be yours,
may the protection of the ancestors be yours.
And so may a slow
wind work these words
of love around you,
an invisible cloak
to mind your life.
~ John O'Donohue ~
Wednesday, December 28, 2016
Greenpeace holds a historic performance
with pianist Ludovico Einaudi on the Arctic Ocean (English)
https://youtu.be/dHpHxA-9CVM
https://youtu.be/dHpHxA-9CVM
What will draw world leaders’ attention to the dire effects of climate change? If not the plight of the polar bear, perhaps a beautiful, mournful piano composition played on a floating platform off the coast of Norway? This video showing Italian composer and pianist Ludovico Einaudi playing his “Elegy for the Arctic” has been making the rounds, with thousands like actor and environmentalist Adrian Grenier sharing it on on Twitter to say, “Let's change the world, starting at the top.”
The video was shot in collaboration with Greenpeace, who shipped the piano up to the Arctic from Germany. They’re currently running a campaign to get government officials to create the first Marine Protected Area to safeguard 10 percent of the Arctic Ocean at this week's OSPAR (Oslo-Paris) commission in Tenerife, Spain. When ice is falling off a glacier in the background as Einaudi plays, one sees how this performance could inspire action. And if not among leaders themselves, it’s extremely affecting for their constituents, bringing them to a place they don’t often see but whose wildlife and climate play an important role in global ecology.
As Tech Insider notes, climate scientists often point to the melting ice of the Arctic as an important warning sign for the rest of the planet. Polar regions across the north of the planet have been melting, and a viral video featuring a gorgeous composition is an excellent way to move people. “I'm crying, the most touching piano performance I've ever seen so far. Yes, please save the earth. Save us,” says Twitter user Elma Alfiah.
Einaudi himself is 60 and was born in Turin, Italy; he’s historically been open to inspiration and collaboration, releasing an album in 2001 inspired by traveling to Africa and working with a German electronic group in 2009. That openness of creative spirit is evident in this composition. “I’ve been about to see the purity and fragileness of this area with my own eyes and perform a song that I composed on the best stage in the world,” he said in a statement before the performance. Whether OSPAR is listening remains to be seen.
Sunday, December 25, 2016
Reflections on Patriarchal Mind, Despair and Hope
Yes, I know it is Christmas, but I celebrated the Solstice a few days ago in grand style, and today, I made the mistake of going to Facebook and reading some of the news feeds. Frankly, ever since the election and the scary people rapidly being put into power to determine the fate of America and the environment......I've felt shell shot. I don't know how to get my hope back, I feel the tides rushing very fast now. With every chest thumping, fist pounding gesture, and every impulsive, bullying tweet the new president makes, I am reminded of the famous words of Louis IIIIX, just before the French Revolution: "Apres moi, la deluge."
With the power to incite devastating war, with the urgency of environmental destruction ignored and denied, with every indication of repression, bigotry, and misogyny arising even before Trump takes office..........what hope is there? Is this something that will bring forth reaction and ultimate change? Or does it mean the real irretrievable splintering of this country? What do people like me do now, besides trying to be as kind, and generous as possible?
Trump and his cronies are already talking about "increasing our nuclear armaments" and enhancing the military. The Military in the U.S. already receives some 60% of the tax dollar. And this country has an arsenal of nuclear arms that could easily destroy every single living thing on the planet some 50 times over. This is the farthest imaginable extreme of the patriarchal mind.
I've marched against Vietnam, and against the invasion of Iraq, each time seeing the streets of San Francisco swollen with 300,000 people. Yet the wars went on. Why do we still have no control over the militarism of our country? Why is the new administration pulling out the phallic spectres of bombs so gleefully? Why does no one seem to notice the elephant in the room?
When I was in Bali I used to go to the Temple of Hanuman to feed the grey monkeys that lived in the forest there. It was a common sight to see the little females struggling to forage with an infant on their breasts, and an older child hanging on for dear life to their backs. One day I turned up with a bunch of bananas, and a very big alpha male monkey sauntered over, walking very much as a human bully would, bared his considerable teeth at me, and grabbed the whole bunch out of my hands. I wasn't going to argue. He sauntered away, sat down with the entire bunch, and all the rest of the monkeys gathered around, hoping he might drop something. With the power to incite devastating war, with the urgency of environmental destruction ignored and denied, with every indication of repression, bigotry, and misogyny arising even before Trump takes office..........what hope is there? Is this something that will bring forth reaction and ultimate change? Or does it mean the real irretrievable splintering of this country? What do people like me do now, besides trying to be as kind, and generous as possible?
Trump and his cronies are already talking about "increasing our nuclear armaments" and enhancing the military. The Military in the U.S. already receives some 60% of the tax dollar. And this country has an arsenal of nuclear arms that could easily destroy every single living thing on the planet some 50 times over. This is the farthest imaginable extreme of the patriarchal mind.
I've marched against Vietnam, and against the invasion of Iraq, each time seeing the streets of San Francisco swollen with 300,000 people. Yet the wars went on. Why do we still have no control over the militarism of our country? Why is the new administration pulling out the phallic spectres of bombs so gleefully? Why does no one seem to notice the elephant in the room?
I remember thinking, damn, I sure hope, as a very large tribe of naked monkeys, we can evolve beyond this.
Hollywood churns out distopian movies now that are all about a ruined world, with roaming bands of warriors fighting for alpha male status - endless mythos of a "hero" fighting it out, and ending up, like that grey monkey, for a while, with all the bananas and the best females. Until, of course, the next alpha male turns up with bigger firepower. This is the adolescent male fantasy that absorbs virtually all "action" films, and tragically, all it can imagine for the future is endless war and competition, although, if we're lucky, there is a certain pause in the action when the hero finally gets the girl.
But this is the foundational mythos that millions of boys (and girls) now addictively act out with video games, video games that will prepare them someday to push buttons that launch drone bombs to far away places, never seeing in their minds or hearts the face of the children, women, old people upon whom they will fall. They don't see the ruined faces of the children of Aleppo, a tragedy unfolding even as I write, they don't remember for one moment the faces of the dead of Kosovo, and bodies piled high in Vietnam, or in the pits of German concentration camps or the killing fields of Cambodia. None of this has been hidden, it's all been documented in living color for the past 50 years. And yet nothing changes.
This is the imbalance in the human psyche taking its continual toll. Has it always been like this? No. Marija Gimbutas and others have demonstrated that past cultures have existed for long periods of time, their economies and values, reflected in their art and their buriel remains, not based upon conquest and war. The his-story of humanity is not all the domain of the violent patriarchal war gods. This is what happens when the Goddess is removed from the sacred vocabulary.
Pray indeed for our country now, if the alpha male chest thumping of Trump has any substance to it. Pray for the ravaged earth our descendants must live on. And for the millions of innocents who will experience our bombs along with the violent tyranny of their own tyrants. And the thousands of youth who will not become doctors, or parents, or artists, or gardeners, or environmental activists, but who will die as soldiers.
When I feel stressed, thanks to Netflix, I now escape into Star Trek. Yes, there's a lot of fighting there, but there is also, especially in the earlier versions, a lot of hope that I no longer see in our media. I was fortunate, I see now, to live in such a hopeful time. Inherent in Star trek was the firm concept of a noble crew and captain, and a society that sought to explore "where no one has gone before" with the Prime Directive, leaving behind a home world without poverty or injustice. The recent "Star Trek" movies, featuring new actors portraying younger versions of Kirk and Spock, feature brilliant special effects - but nowhere is there the effort to teach some kind of morality, ethics, or human relational interest that was a concern in Gene Roddenberry's earlier series. It's like a video game - endless bang bang and blow 'em up. I imagine most young people find the "moralizing" of old Star Trek shows boring indeed. But if stories can't help us to learn how to be human beings, what does?
We all know now we're not going to the stars. 2001 has come and gone, and unlike the vision Kubrick had, we didn't go to the moon in that year. Instead we went to war, again, and then again. And we have learned very little about how to live together on, and preserve, our beloved Mother Earth. Mostly I cry for the loss of so much that is beautiful, and I cry for the future, for our children and their children, who are not going to the stars or the moon, but rather will struggle to survive in the debris of our civilization, a civilization with so many wonders, so much possibility. Here's another email I recently received, from a woman named Ariadne:
"I'm not hopeful about the future. It's clear that this civilization will not survive the effects of climate change and the many other consequences of our pollution, overpopulation, greed and lack of empathy. Nor should patriarchal civilization survive, but it's unlikely to die without a catastrophic collapse. The survivors will be trying to scratch out an existence in a biologically depauperate world. To me, Goddess is Nature -- the Universe and the Earth. She does not need us; we need Her. But I think the evolutionary experiment on Earth of combining large brains with testosterone has been a fairly quick flop -- managing to exist for only a quarter million years before evolving to extinction. It's a big universe, and no doubt there are other experiments in "intelligence" under way elsewhere. Life will go on here on Earth for hundreds of millions of years after we are gone."
"GAIA" (1986)
|
Should I mince my words, for fear of offending, not share the anger and despair of people like Ariadne? I already have friends who are telling me to "chill", to calm down and stop being upset and political, who are talking about some variation or other of "everything happens for a reason." I think the people of Aleppo, or the people suffering in Mongolia right now as the permafrost melts and they can't farm anymore........would find no comfort in such mysticism. Yes, it is important to not lose one's center. But I do not think I will calm down.
I pray for real guidance, in spite of it all. We all know what good and beauty human beings are capable of - we celebrate Martin Luthor King for what he accomplished, and Susan B. Anthony, and FDR, and so many others who helped to make a better and more just America, the America that was capable of inspiring the world. People who represented that evolution beyond patriarchy, an evolution toward cooperation. No matter what, we must hold on to these principles, these possibilities. I do not believe in mindless "positivity". But I do believe in finding ways to go forward with love, with compassion, and with generosity - if not always hope.
I pray for real guidance, in spite of it all. We all know what good and beauty human beings are capable of - we celebrate Martin Luthor King for what he accomplished, and Susan B. Anthony, and FDR, and so many others who helped to make a better and more just America, the America that was capable of inspiring the world. People who represented that evolution beyond patriarchy, an evolution toward cooperation. No matter what, we must hold on to these principles, these possibilities. I do not believe in mindless "positivity". But I do believe in finding ways to go forward with love, with compassion, and with generosity - if not always hope.
"Dove of Sophia" by Hrana Janto. |
Sunday, December 18, 2016
The Winter Solstice
Serpent Mound illuminated through the efforts of the Friends of Serpent Mound |
When language was young, when even the gods and goddesses had not yet entirely taken human form but still ran with the deer in the forest, or flew with the wings of crows, or were glimpsed the depths of a numinous pool, when World was still a conversation, and poems were spoken by both bards and by trees, and our unimaginable ancestors danced and kept watch through the long, cold, dark night....... even then, long before the writing of words, but perhaps not before the telling of tales, this was a (w)holy day.
The Sun was returning to the dark and sleeping world, bringing life-giving light and warmth.
Before ever there were Christmas lights, or candles, or even torches burning olive oil, fires were lit to welcome the Shining One returning from the depths of the underworld. Stones aligned with the Sun's journey made a pathway, and food and drink and gifts were given to the young god, just born, to give him strength for the new year and his long bright journey across the skylands.
Perhaps they danced through the long cold night, and when they lit bonfires, they did so reverently and with love, knowing that they were helping him on his way, keeping vigil for him. Before ever he was called the Christ, or Osiris, or Lugh, he had other names, names lost to history that still whisper and sound sometimes sing again among the stones and circles of another time.
Happy Solstice!
I pledge allegiance
to the soil of Turtle Island,
and to the beings
who thereon dwell
one ecosystem in diversity
under the sun
With joyful
interpenetration for all.
"To go in the dark with a light
is to know the light.
is to know the light.
To know the dark, go dark.
Go without sight, and find
that the dark, too, blooms and sings,
and is traveled by dark feet and dark wings."
Go without sight, and find
that the dark, too, blooms and sings,
and is traveled by dark feet and dark wings."
Wendell Berry
Winter Solstice inside Newgrange |
SWEET DARKNESS
When your eyes are tired
the world is tired also.
When your vision has gone
no part of the world can find you.
Time to go into the dark
where the night has eyes to recognize its own.
There you can be sure you are not beyond love.
The dark will be your womb tonight.
The night will give you a horizon further than you can see.
You must learn one thing:
the world was made to be free in.
Give up all the other worlds
except the one to which you belong.
Sometimes it takes darkness
and the sweet confinement of your aloneness
to learn
anything or anyone
that does not bring you alive
is too small for you.
David Whyte
Photo by NASA |
Wednesday, December 14, 2016
Wassailing Celebrations
I wrote about a synchronicity involving bees recently, and it brought back that notion of living in a “conversant” world. Instead of seeing "nature" as "other", or a "resource", we could see ourselves, as earlier cultures did, as having a mythic, even friendly and reciprocal, relationship with the extended community of life we inhabit. When we talk to the trees, the animals, even stones………..we might just might begin to notice that we get a response sometimes!
For example, there is the old English custom of “telling the bees” when someone has died in a farm family, and documented cases of a swarm of bees turning up at the funeral. Or “wassailing”, singing to trees in celebration of Christmas. Who is to say that the apple trees don’t enjoy being part of the festiivities? How would our world be a different place if we saw apple trees as being our generous friends, or inviting bees to the funeral of those they have lived among?
Although Wassail is popularly a spiced cider drink, often with brandy added and served hot, originally it included the Yuletide custom of singing to the trees, in particular, the orchards of apple trees from which the celebratory drink came. The spiced cider was offered in honor to the trees, and around the time of the Solstice, wassailers would prepare traditional wassail – soaking pieces of bread, cake or toast in it – and travel from apple orchard to apple orchard singing and offering to the trees, in order to ensure a good harvest for the coming year. Wassail-soaked pieces of bread or toast were then left at the trees’ roots or hung in the trees’ branches to appease the tree spirits and feed them well until the next harvest.
Like the Romans' offerings and small farm shrines dedicated to the "Numina", the spirits of place that assisted them with their crops and orchards (the indigenous Roman Goddess Pomona, whose name meant "apple", originated as a Numen of the orchards), this custom, which is still practiced with a lot of good cheer in some rural areas of England, reflects that ancient pagan sense of "reciprocity" with an intelligent, spiritually inhabited natural world.
Here's what goes on in Whimple, England to this very day: (http://www.whimple.org/wassail.htm)
Our ritual follows the traditional well-tried and tested ceremony of our predecessors with the Mayor in his robes of office and the Princess carrying lightly toasted bread in her delicately trimmed flasket, whilst the Queen, wearing her crown of Ivy, Lichen and Mistletoe, recites the traditional verse. The original Whimple Incantation has been retained:
Here's to thee, old apple tree,That blooms well, bears well.Hats full,caps full,Three bushel bags full,An' all under one tree.Hurrah! Hurrah!
Her Majesty is then gently but manfully assisted up the treein order to place the cyder-soaked toast in the branches whilst the assembled throng, accompanied by a group of talented musicians, sing the Wassail Song and dance around the tree. The Mulled Cider or 'Wassail Cup' is produced and everyone takes a sample with their 'Clayen Cup'.
I read recently that our habit of "toasting" may go back to Wassail revelries. "Waes hael" revelers would say, from the Old English term meaning "be well". Eventually "wassail" referred less to the greeting and more to the drink. The contents of the Wassail bowl varied, but a popular one was known as 'lambs wool'. It consisted of hot ale, roasted crab apples, sugar, spices, eggs, and cream served with little pieces of toast. It was the toast floating on the top that made it look like lamb's wool. The toast that was traditionally floated atop the wassail eventually became our "toast" - when you hold up your glass and announce, “Let’s have a toast,” or ”I’ll toast to that,” you’re remembering this very old ritual of floating a bit of toast in spiced ale or mulled wine or wassail in celebration.
Wassailing – visiting neighbors (and much appreciated, friendly trees), singing carols and sharing warmed drink – is a tradition related to the Winter Solstice with ancient roots indeed.
I found a good Wassail recipe, which I've taken the liberty of sharing at the end of this post. I don't know if I'll be going out to sing to the Saguaros this Solstice, but who knows what I might end up doing if I drink enough Wassail with brandy. I'm sure the Saguaros wouldn't mind the attention.
Happy Wassailing!
Photo by Martin Beebee |
Compiled in The Stations of the Sun by Ronald Hutton
From the South Hams of Devon, recorded 1871:
Here's to thee, old apple tree,
Whence thou mayst bud
And whence thou mayst blow!
And whence thou mayst bear apples enow!
Hats full! Caps full!
Bushel--bushel--sacks full,
And my pockets full too! Huzza!
From Cornworthy, Devon, recorded 1805:
Huzza, Huzza, in our good town
The bread shall be white, and the liquor be brown
So here my old fellow I drink to thee
And the very health of each other tree.
Well may ye blow, well may ye bear
Blossom and fruit both apple and pear.
So that every bough and every twig
May bend with a burden both fair and big
May ye bear us and yield us fruit such a stores
That the bags and chambers and house run o'er.
http://www.aspicyperspective.com/2013/09/wassail-recipe.html
Yield: 10-12 servings, Prep Time: 5 minutes, Cook Time: 4 hours
Wassail Recipe
Ingredients:
- 1 gallon Apple Cider
- 4 cups orange juice
- 4 hibiscus tea bags
- 10 cinnamon sticks
- 1 tsp. whole cloves
- 1 Tb. juniper berries
- 1 1/2 inch piece of fresh ginger, cut into slices
- 1 apple, sliced into rounds
- 1 orange, sliced into rounds
Directions:
- Place all the ingredients in a slow cooker and cover.
- Turn the slow cooker on high heat and cook for 3-4 hours, until the color has darkened and the fruit is soft. Remove the tea bags and serve hot.
Labels:
Christmas traditions,
folk traditions,
Numina,
Solstice,
Wassail
Monday, December 12, 2016
Class with the Lilith Institute
Lilith is so important for our time, because she represents the wounded and disenfranchised feminine, and the de-sacralization of sexuality. She is the archetypal Dark Goddess. I'm pleased to share here a forthcoming class with my friend D'vorah Grenn.
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Saturday, December 10, 2016
Thursday, December 8, 2016
SPIDER WOMAN’S HANDS: A Metaphor for Our Time
I've been feeling unable to "center" ever since the election, confronting the division and hostility that seems to be overtaking our country so quickly. I guess the image of "a webbed vision" seemed important, along with circles...............
“What might we see, how might we act, if we saw with a webbed vision? The world seen through a web of
relationships…as delicate as spider’s silk,
yet strong enough to hang a bridge on.”
Catherine Keller, Theologian, From
a Broken Web (1989)
Years ago I climbed
the Superstition Mountains in Arizona, just outside of Phoenix, where I used to live. It was a long and hot climb, and I was
exhausted when at last I sat beneath a mesquite tree to enjoy a panoramic view
of the Sonoran desert below. The
silence was broken only by the sound of wind whistling through the needles of
the great saguaro cactus, and an occasional cry of a red tailed hawk circling
overhead.
I happened to
be sitting before a spider web, stretched between two dry branches. By shifting my point of view I could view the entire landscape through the
web’s intricate, transparent pattern…..a
landscape seen through the
ineffable strands of an almost, but not quite, invisible web that shimmered with the currents
of the air.
I think I’ve
been seeking “a webbed vision” ever since, trying to reclaim that overlay and
underlay of an invisible, yet tangible inclusiveness - to see the links,
instead of the breaks and tears, beneath everything. I’ve been on the trail of Spider Woman.
Spider
Woman is ubiquitous through the Americas.
Pueblo mythology tells that when each of the previous worlds ended, it
was Spider Woman who led the new people through the sipapu, the kiva (or birth canal) into the next world, after a
great catastrophe destroyed the previous era.
According to the Hopi Calendar,
as well as that of the ancient Maya of Mexico, the Fourth Age has ended, and we
have entered the Fifth Age. Spider Woman, revealing the ultimate
interdependency of all beings, is once again the Midwife to a sustainable
paradigm.
The Pueblo people, from northern New Mexico to the
mesas of Arizona, still inhabit their ancestral lands. They are descendants of the ancient Anasazi
peoples, who built cliff dwellings and ceremonial centers throughout the area
over millennia, including the famous Chaco Canyon. Spider was the first weaver, bringing
order and form, balance and symmetry to the primal, formless chaos. Spider Woman is also called Tse Che Nako, Thought Woman, the “one who creates the world with the
stories she tells”. The
world shaping power of story is also a gift she gives to her relations - an
eternally generative thread.
Stories don't end after we close the book, or turn off
the electronic box. When we talk about “spinning a tale“ we’re
participating in something that has to potential to keep evolving, generation
into generation, from the waking world to the dreamtime, back into the past,
and forward into the stories of those who are yet to come. So what kind of stories are we telling about
being in the world, about being a part of the world?
The Navajo (who call themselves the Dinah) revere Spider Woman (Na'ashje'ii
sdfzq'q) for teaching them how to weave, which may be seen as a spiritual
practice more than simply a craft. Wool
rugs often have “Spiderwoman's Cross” woven into the pattern, representing the union
of the four directions. Some Navajo
weavers, it's said, still leave a flaw in the work - because the only perfect
web is that of Grandmother Spider Woman, the first weaver. To the Navajo,
Spider Woman is a wise guide but one must be prepared to listen.2 Spider Woman is a bridge that allows a certain
kind of knowledge to be transmitted from the sacred dimension to the mundane
among those who have been initiated and can thus be receptive to her
teachings. To immature eyes she will
appear only as an insignificant insect, a web invisible, unseen and unheard.
Weaving and spinning, the creation of baskets and rugs
from cotton (and later wool) was important throughout native America,
just as it has been in other parts of the world. It was both a practical and a
holy activity, and is usually associated with women. Among the Maya, Ix
Chel was an important earth goddess, matron of childbirth and weaving. She
was reincarnated as the Aztec Goddess Tlazolteotl, “the great weaver”,
illustrated in Aztec art holding spindles and with strands of cotton fibers in
her earrings.
In shell ornaments belonging to the Mound Builders,
the prehistoric Mississippian people, a ubiquitous spider with a cross within a
circle on its back symbol occurs. And
among the Osage, until little more than a generation ago, important women had spiders
tattooed on the backs of their hands.
Spider Woman
has a way of getting around. Some say that the World Wide Web is her
latest appearance. Although she can
be found in the canyons and deserts of the Americas, her archetype is found in
many other places and times. In the
Odyssey there is the faithful wife Penelope who wove and unwove a shroud
each night as she waited for Odysseus.
Yet the name Penelope probably derives from a much earlier oracular or
fate goddess, because it means "with a web on her face". Another way of translating the origins of
this name might be expressed as one who “sees with a webbed vision”
Spider Woman wove the world with the stories she told, and she reveals the timeless web of interdependency that unites all beings. Even today, among some Navajo when a girl is born a spider web is rubbed into her hands so she will become a good weaver.
May we all be good weavers, rubbing a bit of spider
web into our palms.
References:
Loftin, John D., Religion and Hopi Life, Second Edition,
Indiana University Press, 1988
Keller, Catherine, From a Broken Web , Thames & Hudson,
1989
Patterson-Rudolph, Carol, On the Trail of Spiderwoman,
Ancient City Press, 1997
Franke, Judith A., The Gift of Spider Woman, Dickson Mounds Museum, “The Living Museum”, volume
61, No. 2, 1999
Saturday, December 3, 2016
Old Paintings, Dreams and Musings
It's 4:00 in the morning, which is always a spare, silent, beautiful and lonely hour to find oneself. A dream woke me up.* Long experience has taught me that trying to go back to sleep at such an hour is futile and frustrating, better to pad around the house, let the mind discover what it will. 4:00 is a potent hour. One of the things I rambled into was the memory garden of forgotten paintings.
The painting above I did as part of a series that just burned out of me one magical summer while I was at the (now extinct) Cummington Community in western Massachusetts. I was reading "Shaman: The Journey of the Wounded Healer" by Joan Halifax. I never showed them. They represented transformation of consciousness, with fire being the medium or symbol of transformation. In some, the figure confronts the flame with terror, the burning away of the old self, in others there is the infant representing rebirth, new birth. The "Fire Dancer" I love still, ecstasy, learning to dance with the fire, to "be" the fire.
And the one above, I think I called it "the Sacred Marriage" or "Anima and Animus" (but I don't actually remember what I called it) - there the woman is offered the creative fire by the man. I don't know why I dream of weddings, or remember this painting, but both are about "joining with" and being "ignited by" something, a good sign. Who, or what, am I about to "marry"?
So in this dream of a second wedding I said "This time we'll do it your way", which it seemed was a kind of apology, a recognition of having learned something in the years since. I don't know what this dream means, except that preparing for a wedding, and giving up "the way I did things before" is a good sign. I need to see what this dream reveals.
I remember that I had a hard time letting go of the marriage, letting go of the dreams I had, and the community we actually created together. We were a good creative team in many ways. When I left New York I went through a period of grieving, which was what I needed in order to release and to grow internally in order to go forward and create a new life. That grieving was a kind of emptying out, and I understand the significance of allowing the grieving process. But I remember a dream I had at that time - I was in a kind of empty apartment in some Eastern city, perhaps New York. Just a few chairs, and a window with a night time view of the city. Duncan turned up, and we had a warm, friendly talk in which he told me that he was with someone else now. And after that, it was much easier to just move on.
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