Showing posts with label Women and Mythology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Women and Mythology. Show all posts

Thursday, April 17, 2025

"NUMINA: Communion with Spirit of Place" - my Presentation at 2025 ASWM Conference

 

NUMINA:   Communion with Spirit of Place

By Lauren Raine MFA

"To the native Irish, the literal representation of the country was less important than its poetic dimension. In traditional Bardic culture, the terrain was studied, discussed, and referenced:  every place had its legend and its own identity....what endured was the mythic landscape."

    R.F. Foster

The Romans believed that special places were inhabited by intelligences they called Numina, or the "genius loci" of a particular place. Often a Shrine to the Numen of a place, like an orchard for example, would be placed so offerings could be left to ensure the goodwill of the numina. The Goddess Pomona, who later became the Roman Goddess of agriculture , was originally a spirit of place, a Numen. This process of personification in art and story is found throughout the world. 

Myth is a way for human beings to become intimate with what is vast,  deep, and ultimately mysterious. Modernism has continually  “de-enchanted” or “un-mythed” our world, ending the Conversation as place becomes commodity. And yet many have a deep longing for a magical and sacred experience of place, without being able to articulate it. And I  personally would like to propose that some stories, identified with special places or nature, may be rooted in actual  transpersonal visionary experiences.

With the evolution of patriarchal monotheism Divinity has increasingly been removed from Nature. We think of animism and the “nature religions” as primitive, trivial, even evil in light of a transcendent Biblical deity. With the rise of industrialization, we have looked at the world from a "users" point of view.  Yet every early or traditional culture has viewed environment as ensouled: stories about landscapes are full of invisible numinous beings that are conversant, protective, dangerous or beneficial, and responsive to what human beings do in some way.


For example, here in Southern Arizona, the Tohono O’dum view Baboquivari as their sacred mountain, inhabited and protected  by their creator God  I'itoi. According to legend, I'itoi inhabits a cave below the mountain, which is “the navel of the world – a place where the earth opened, and the people emerged after the great flood. According to local legend, at the beginning of the Spanish conquest of what is present day Arizona, a Spanish officer and his men tried to dig their way into the mountain. Suddenly, the ground under them opened and Baboquivari swallowed them. The O'odham believe that I'itoi continues to watch over them to this day, and they make pilgrimages to their sacred mountain.

 


In the UK,  when the Romans occupied the hot springs of Bath, they retained the name of the Numen honored there,  Sulis,  for fear of offending Her. The Baths became dedicated to both Sulis and Minerva.   


In recent times a famous experiment in working with the Numina to create a mind-boggling Garden and spiritual Center occurred at Findhorn in rocky Northern Scotland.  In the words of one of the founders, Peter Caddy, “The garden clearly had become the focal point for an experiment in the cooperation of three kingdoms:  the devic, the elemental, and the human. Each of us at Findhorn was playing a distinct role in the experiment. The ancients, of course, accepted  nature spirits without question as a fact of direct vision actual experience.” 

 Human experience changes when Place becomes "you" or "Thou" instead of "it". From selkies to Lorelei, naiads to dryads, Islamic Djinn or Hopi Kachinas,  local myths abound with  the numinous residents of special places. Sacred places were especially revered because they had the potency for revelation through dreams or prophecy, for healing or fertility, and for shamanic or transpersonal experiences important to the individual or to the tribe.


Early Christians knew this when they built churches on earlier pagan sacred sites. Many Catholic shrines exist where earlier goddesses associated with a holy spring or well  were revered, such as the ubiquitous Bridgit’s wells throughout Ireland,  or the sacred caves dedicated to Black Madonnas in Europe.

There is a geo-magnetic  energy concentrated at certain places  that have been visited throughout the millennia because they catalyze visionary experience,  even prophecy. Before they became identified by  religions or designated, even enhanced,  by monuments, sacred geometry,  and the accumulation of  human interaction, these sites were still,  in their essence,   places of intrinsic numinous power.

 Like acupressure points upon the earth, such places speak to those who visit, and sometimes no  religious practice or belief system is necessary for them to have a transformative effect on those who visit.

Roman philosopher Plinius   Caecilius commented that:

 "If you have come upon a grove that is thick with ancient trees which rise far above their usual height and block the view of the sky with their cover of intertwining branches, then the loftiness of the forest and the seclusion of the place and the wonder of the unbroken shade in the midst of open space will create in you a feeling of a divine presence, a Numina."

Many years ago I lived in Vermont, and one fall morning I stumbled down to the local Inn for a cup of coffee to discover a group of people about to visit one of Vermont's mysterious stone cairns on Putney Mountain. Among the researchers was Sig Lonegren, a well-known researcher of earth mysteries. I went with them to a chamber in the woods, constructed of huge stones, hidden among brilliant foliage, with an entranceway that would perfectly frame the Summer Solstice. Long investigated by the New England Archeological Research Society (NEARA), theories abound but no one knows who built these structures. There are many cairns, and some calendar sites, up and down the Connecticut River area that are very reminiscent of the same structures in Ireland.

Approaching the site,  I was stunned when Sig placed divining rods in our hands, and I watched them open and close as we traced  what he called ley lines that ran into this site. Standing on the top of the submerged chamber, my divining rod "helicoptered": Sig explained that this represented the center or crossing point of two ley lines, a potency for which he believed the site had intentionally been built. 

Months later people gathered to sit in that chamber as the Summer Solstice sun rose through its entranceway. We all felt awe as the sun illuminated the chamber. And for me this was the beginning of a lifelong journey into the mystery of sacred places, and a quest to find the ancient Earth Mother.

Earth mysteries researchers like John Steele and Paul Deveraux in their book EARTHMIND have written that we suffer from "geomantic amnesia".  We have forgotten how to listen to the Earth, to engage in "geomantic reciprocity", instinctually, mythically, and practically - to our great loss.

The act of making a pilgrimage is among the oldest of human spiritual endeavors. The Eleusinian Mysteries of Greece apparently combined sacred place with mythic enactment to transform pilgrims for many years. The ancient Greeks built their Temple for Gaia at Delphi because  the unique personality, or Numina,  of that place was divined to be especially suited to the Goddess and to the Oracles of Delphi that would reside there. They also sited their healing Dream Temples according to the particular auspiciousness of place. Respecting what inspired the early Greeks to decide on a particular place may be important not only to pilgrims, but to creating future sustainable human societies.

I’d like to share a quote by a Mentor of mine,  Gloria Ornstein, one of the founders of Eco-Feminism:

“The ecofeminist arts do not maintain that analytical, rational knowledge is superior to other forms of knowing. They honor Gaia’s Earth intelligence and the stored memories of her plants, rocks, soil, and creatures. Through nonverbal communion with the energies of sacred sites in nature, ecofeminist artists obtain important knowledge about the spirit of the land, which they can then honor through creative rituals and environmental pieces”

Gloria Orenstein, The Re-Flowering of the Goddess


In 1999 I went to Harbin Hot Springs in California, where I had an extraordinarily vivid dream. I dreamed I was given an antique typewriter. When I set it on my desk I saw that it was covered with fine loamy dirt, like potting soil, as if it had come out of the Earth.  As I watched, the typewriter began to type by itself, and soon sheaf after sheaf of stories about Goddesses flew from it.  Soon the papers became color photos of Goddesses……….and then they became actual women, all colors, white, black, brown, yellow, even blue. The dream concluded with a long line of Goddesses standing in a procession………all looking at me!

Two months after that I received a commission to make masks for the Invocation of the Goddess at the 20th Anniversary of the Spiral Dance in San Francisco, and I spent that summer making multi-cultural masks of 25 Goddesses for the Procession. And that was the beginning of my longest collaborative work with women, performance, and masks.

One of the most famous pilgrimages is the "Camino" of Spain,  which concludes at the Cathedral of Santiago at Compostella.

 Some believe the pilgrimage was earlier made to the original “Black Madonna of Compostella", a very  ancient effigy.


Many of the Black Madonnas may originate prior to the advent of Christianity, and, because so many of them occur in numinous caves or near springs,  I suggest they also represent the Earth Mother,  She who brings forth  life and takes it back in an unending cycle, within the Womb of the Earth.

Compostella comes from the same root word as "compost",  the alchemical soup to which everything living returns, and is  resurrected by the processes of nature into new life, new form. When pilgrims came to Compostella they were 'composted' in a sense, cleansed and renewed.  

In 2011 and 2018  I visited the Chalice Well,  and the White and Red springs of Glastonbury. The mythic Goddess  there is the  Lady of Avalon, who appears in the Arthurian stories, and whose origins are pre-Christian. More than a myth, She is  a presence I and many others experienced personally.


In 2013 it was my privilege to create a series of masks for a play by Anne Waters she called “Numina:  the Awakening”, which was produced in Willits, California. She and her collaborators imagined what it would be like to give voice to the Powers of the elements and of nature in this time of climate change. To hear what they might have to say. Her community was even invited to meditate together  to “listen” prior to rehearsals.

Among those voices was a prayer to “Our Lady of the Desert Spring” (read in both English and Spanish), Glacier or Ice,  and Dawn, a hopeful voice for a New Age .

 

Sig Lonegren has spent many years exploring sacred places, and commented that possibly, as human culture changed, we began to lose a mediumistic form of  consciousness, a daily gnosis with the “subtle realms.”  Perhaps this empathic capacity can return to us again, within a new evolutionary process, facilitated by re-inventing and re-discovering mythic pathways to the Numina.

                     Job 12:8  "Speak to the earth, and it will teach you"

Saturday, June 26, 2021

ASWM 2021 Virtual Conference: Celebrating the Work of Marija Gimbutas

 

Register Here!
A Conference I've attended and presented at several times in the past, one I very much have enjoyed and learned from!  
Wisdom Across the Ages ~ Celebrating the Centennial of Archaeomythologist
Marija Gimbutas
July 16-18

PROGRAM NEWS
 
We've added some great blog posts on our website. Joan Marler's remarks on her upcoming Symposium keynote "Remembering a Great Woman of Science", introducing the Symposium panelists and topics on “Voices from/for the Land: Wisdom of Place and Tradition”.  Also, Miriam Robbins Dexter discusses her latest book and how she is honoring Marija Gimbutas in her current projects.

ABOUT OUR EVENT WEBSITE:
 

Our Symposium is hosted through a different event website. You can recognize it by the red and gray color scheme and the ASWM Bee logo in the upper left of the Menu. We want you to get the most out of your online experience. Please review these notes about the event website.   

Notes for everyone:
 While the program sessions are only open to those who register, some features of the site are available to everyone. They are:

Gratitude and Tributes to Marija: This is an interactive page open to all of our members and friends, whether or not you have registered for the event. You may add words or videos to an archive of appreciations. If you met or knew Dr. Gimbutas, or you were influenced by her research, or you just want to express gratitude for her vision and persistence, your remarks will become part of the permanent record of this important centennial event.
 
On Demand Program: Here you will find samples of music and performances by featured speakers and others whose work is inspired by Marija Gimbutas. We'll share the link as soon as the page is available.

 Online Art Exhibition: Watch for information about the opening of our international, juried art show through both the event site and our ASWM site. It is free and open to the public for 60 days as a companion to our event. 

Notes for Those Who Register:

Talk to us -  Live Chat: You can chat with the event team to answer questions about registration or logging in. This feature is Live between 9 and 5 Eastern Daylight Time, M-F. At other times you may leave an email and get a prompt response. The Chat button is on the bottom right of any page.
Time Zones: When you are looking at the schedule for the Symposium, please note that the time indicated is reflected in YOUR local time zone (according to where your computer is located).
Logging In: Once you have registered, you can Login to the site using your email. There is no password associated with your registration. Click "Login", enter your email address (be sure to use the one you registered with) and you're in!

Watch at leisure: Don't miss a thing! All of our programs will be recorded, and will remain available (to all who are registered) for 12 months following the event.
Test Drive the experience on Demo Days: To help you navigate the site and get the most out of the event, our Team is offering Demonstration Sessions on July 14 and 15. They will help you navigate the site and access all of our programming with ease so you don't miss a moment of content! Once you're registered, you'll get an email with all the details.
 
 MEMBERS: be sure to register from the ASWM webpage to get the member-only discount: www.womenandmyth.org. 

Friday, May 18, 2018

Vibrant Voices: Women, Myth, and the Arts



I'm very pleased to be included in a new publication by ASWM (I just attended their Conference in Las Vegas in March).   For all those interested in Women's Spirituality, Goddess studies, Women and Mythology, and the work of Marija Gimbutas and her Colleagues, this books will be greatly appreciated and insightful! 
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We are proud to announce the publication of Volume 2 of our ASWM Proceedings. This beautiful full-color volume highlights the work of 33 artists, scholars, and poets.  Vibrant Voices:  Women, Myth, and the Arts. Carol Christ, author of Goddess and God in the World and A Serpentine Path," calls it: “A stunning testimony to the importance of the path-breaking, boundary-crossing work of the Association for the Study of Women and Mythology.” And Miranda Shaw, author of Passionate Enlightenment: Women in Tantric Buddhism and Buddhist Goddesses of India, says “Vibrant Voices is an essential guide and touchstone for all future work on women and mythology.”

To celebrate, Vibrant Voices and Myths: Shattered and Restored are both 20% off until May 30th! Follow the links and use promo code ASWM at checkout, or give the folks at Goddess Ink a call and they can take the order over the phone! 505-225-2142.

Save the Date!

"Women Rising! New Visions for a Post-Patriarchal World" Women's Spirituality Conference, October 12-14, 2018. Sponsored by the Women's Spirituality Conference of California Institute for Integral Studies.

Our thanks to all of you who attended our 2018 Association for the Study of Women and Mythology Conference. Your scholarship, enthusiasm, and support for one another created a welcoming community for all. We will be back in 2020. 

Your ASWM Board of Directors 
Copyright © 2018 Association for the Study of Women and Mythology, All rights reserved.

Our mailing address is:
Association for the Study of Women and Mythology
P.O. Box 150018
Van Brunt Station
BrooklynNew York 11215