Showing posts with label mask making. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mask making. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 22, 2026

The Corn Comes Down from the Stars: A Story of Corn Mother


I feel very privileged to share this wonderful story and the mask she made at our recent workshop.  Thank you, Alicia.  Beautiful, and Sacred.
 

A Story for the People


A couple of weeks ago, over Easter weekend, I had the privilege of participating in The Masks of the Goddess workshop offered by Lauren Raine. Thanks to Lauren’s artistic brilliance and soulful generosity, the being pictured above emerged over the course of two and a half days. At first she was just layers of dark colors, then she requested stardust, a crown of multicolored maize seeds, and a blue corn sprout at her third eye. As she took shape, I imagined she was likely connected to the story I’d heard Jade Wah’oo Grigori offer about the Seven Sisters of the Pleiades and the Blue Corn maidens. But there was something else about her; she was familiar to me in a different way. I couldn’t quite place her, but it’s as if my cells could recognize her on the tip of my senses.

Who are you?

The evening before our closing circle, Lauren sent us off to dialogue with our beings. I couldn’t stay overnight with the rest of the group, so I returned to the familiar chaos of my home, tending my daughter, getting her to sleep. As usually happens, by the time the household was settled, I was too tired to do anything. I went to bed with the lingering echoes of this being, hoping she might tell me more in my dreams.

At 5 AM I bolted up in bed.

That’s who you are!

I snuck out of the bedroom, threw open my laptop and tried to remember where I had saved the story that had dropped into me two years earlier while I was lying in a MRI tunnel listening to the trills and clanging of the machine. The story had arrived so clear and crisp into my awareness that as soon as my scan was over, I raced to a café where I typed everything out over breakfast burritos and coffee.

Hello again.

My body recognized the sensory signature of this being behind the mask.

You are the story.


Today, in the wake of the Super New Moon in Aries and the dramatic dance of the celestial bodies this week, I offer this story again, now delivered anew with the goddess of the mask.

Just to set the scene a bit, this is a different kind of writing than I usually share here on Substack. This comes from my collection of soul stories, which are tellings that don’t map onto ordinary reality. This telling comes through a familiar duo in my medicine world: Nana Coyo is an old crone spirit I often sense here in my Sonoran Desert home. Her name is derived from the Mexica moon goddess, Coyolxauhqui. Lázaro is a presence who often comes to talk to me about the wounded masculine seeking the care of a healing crone. They have a lot to say, these two, and they deeply love each other.

And with no further ado…

The Pleiades as seen from Mt. Lemmon, AZ SkyCenter. WikiCommons Media.

The Corn Comes Down from the Stars: A Story for the People

Nana Coyo never sleeps on the night before the day of remembering. As soon as the sun has dropped with certainty behind the western mountains, she arranges herself on a folding chair outside in her backyard. She places her feet on a hot water bottle and wraps a rebozo around her shoulders. At her side is the thermos of steaming atole with piloncillo and chocolate for wakefulness. There is nowhere she’d rather be.

This year, the cycles of Earth and Cosmos arrange for the Moon to be wearing her darkest cloak. Nana Coyo hums and mutters. She sings as the sky reveals what people nowadays call secret knowledge. Nana Coyo knows better; these are simply memories retained. This is what she tells her adoptive son Lázaro.

When Lázaro was younger, he’d furrow his brow and complain about Nana Coyo and her odd ways of explaining things.

“Why can’t you just talk like a normal person?” he’d say.

She would laugh and tug at his ear.

“Te estoy entrenando a los oídos, hijo mío. One day you will know how to listen.”

Now that Lázaro’s hair is greying and Nana Coyo is practically old enough to join the stars, he feels a longing in his bones to sit outside with her. He walks out into the dark. He can barely make out Nana Coyo’s silhouette against the blackness of the night. He follows the sound of her voice, a trail of vocalizations beyond any language he recognizes. Clicks and trills. Hoots and whistles. Murmurs like the wings of hummingbirds. As his eyes adjust to the dark, he sees her huddled figure outlined by starlight.

Without a word, Lázaro sets up his folding chair next to Nana Coyo. She pats his knee. He feels a smile in the warmth of her hand, and she pours him a cup of atole. He breathes in the smells of roasted corn ground into flour, boiled in water, and whisked into a frothy beverage. As he raises the cup to his mouth, he can almost taste the hints of cinnamon and chocolate, but Nana Coyo’s bony fingers gently intervene, pulling back his cup before he can take a sip.

“Antes de todo, una pruebadita para Madrecita.”

As if she is assisting a child, Nana Coyo holds Lázaro’s hands in her own. She guides them down to the ground, where she tips the cup and spills out a taste of atole onto the cool desert floor beneath their feet.

She whispers to the ground and sighs with satisfaction.

“Ahora sí, mi amor. Drink up.”

And he does.

They sit for hours. Nana Coyo sings. She stretches her legs. She claps her hands. She stomps her feet. She settles into a chorus of sounds that only tall grasses know how to make in the wind.

Together, they drink the atole.

Without even intending it, Lázaro turns over his consciousness to the dark sky. He forgets that he is awake, staring into the starry abyss, with only the smell of corn and the tug of gravity to remind him that he is still a terrestrial creature. At some point during the night, he realizes that he can understand the meanings of the strange sounds being spoken by Nana Coyo. He surrenders to the warming spread of awareness through his body.

The Corn Mothers came to us long ago. They seeded themselves into us, generation after generation. Beings as big as the stars became morsels of nourishment. In Madre Maíz, they came as clusters of constellations, all the colors of light, the energy of nuclear fusion—the glow of blue, yellow, red, orange, white, and every glimmer in between. They joined with the stones and made their way into our bones, our cells, the spiraling ladders of the fabric of our being. They fed us with the food of remembering because they knew a different kind of darkness would descend on the land. It is not the blackness of the night but the disease of forgetfulness. They knew there would come a day when we would eat and never be satiated. Ravenous, we would devour everything in our path, as if we had no memories.

Nana Coyo pours the last of the atole into Lázaro’s cup.

The Mothers are as close to you as your body. On this night before the day of remembering, drink and eat, mi amor. See them adorned in starlight and radiating with power. Receive their ripened bellies. Be filled by them.

With that Nano Coyo cups Lázaro’s head in her hands. She turns his gaze toward the Eastern sky. Against the mountains, the horizon begins to define itself as the night softens. A shard of light pierces through the worlds and illuminates the shoulders of the mountains.

In that moment, Lázaro’s heart cleaves open. His body spills to the ground. In heaving sobs, he wraps himself around Nana Coyo’s feet. He cries like a baby.

When he eventually comes to stillness, Nana Coyo pulls out her left foot and gently rests it on the small of his back. She applies the slightest pressure and rocks him gently. He breathes in deeply, as if reacquainting himself with air.

They rest this way, the two of them—together at the precipice between worlds.

They greet the day of remembering.

Wearing the mask of the goddess. Photo by author.

Last night, I wear the mask for the first time, gazing out from behind her dark splendor. I light the candle and offer the smoke of the copal to the night. I rattle and read the story of Lázaro and Nana Coyo aloud to the cosmos. I record it, but the audio isn’t great and doesn’t seem to want to be shared. Nonetheless, here is an image of us together. There is a sense in me that this Blue-Seeded Mother will be joining with Corn Mother in her basket. Who knows where our journeys will take us.

The Corn comes down from the Stars, and She grows up from the Earth.

As above, so below.

May the Corn Mothers remind us who we are as a People.

In these times, may it be so.

 https://open.substack.com/pub/offeringsforcornmother/p/the-corn-comes-down-from-the-stars?utm_campaign=post-expanded-share&utm_medium=web

Monday, May 17, 2021

Gather and Offer: A Story of the Gathering Basket

 

I remembered the other day an extraordinary poem gifted to me by Ilana Stein, who I met in one of the workshops I gave at the Kripalu Institute in 2008. 

Ilana was a retired midwife, renowned in her field, who had been undergoing cancer treatment when she decided to take a workshop at Kripalu.  After the workshop she was on her way to California to spend time with her daughter.   The poem, "Gather and Offer" she wrote during that 4 day workshop, in which she also made several masks that accompanied her work.   Four months after meeting Ilana, I learned that she had died.  I reflected then, as now, how beautiful her poem and my experience of working with her was, this woman who had spent her life bringing souls into this world, and preparing to leave it.

I posted this in 2008.......I think it's well worth copying and sharing again, as it is so much with me today.
Hands of the Midwife (2005)

 2008:

I've been meaning to share this story from the MASKS OF THE GODDESS workshop I taught in April at the Kripalu Institute  - while I always am moved and astounded by the work others do, I found this work especially moving. Ilana has graciously allowed me to share photos of the masks she made, and gave me permission to print the poem she wrote in the workshop. 

Ilana is a well known Midwife and Birth Coach  from New York City.  She is a slight woman with intense eyes, and her hair was gone sparse because she's been undergoing  chemotherapy, which she shared as we began our introductory Circle. 

We begin our four day process with a "shamanic journey" to the Underworld, to encounter the Goddess, in whatever form She may care to appear.  I feel this is important as each participant prepares to create her mask. Often I ask them to  see if She gives them a gift of some kind, and almost always something meaningful is presented.


Returning to the "above world", after our trance, Ilana told  the group she had met a Goddess all in white.   She called Her the "White Goddess".  This Being  emerged from the darkness to dance before her. Her dance, Ilana said,  was like a figure 8, the "eternity symbol" -  Her gestures consisted of gathering on one side, and giving forth on the other, a flowing movement  of taking in and giving forth.

It happened that another of the women in the workshop was a professional dancer (a ballerina, actually!) who was retiring.   She brought with her a dress from her performance years as a possible costume, and in the course of the workshop she gave Ilana this beautiful white dress - which was Ilana's size!

One of the two masks Ilana made was "scarred", to represent the suffering she had been going through in the course of her treatment for cancer.  Yet it  contained a bright red, and very open,  heart.  Above is the other mask she made for the White Goddess she encountered.  A white mask with a basket on one side, and flowing forms with blooming flowers on the other.  A mask for gathering, and for offering.   And here is the poem she wrote - I feel privileged to share it.

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8/12/08 Postscript:   I am sad to have to add that Ilana passed away 4 months after this workshop.  But when I think of that, I think the  Goddess who came to her, and the poem she wrote, were all about leading the Way.

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GATHER AND OFFER
Ilana Stein

Gather towards the West
Gather towards the North
Gather towards the South
Gather towards the East
Gather Above, gather below and gather the great Mystery

Gather what you’ve studied
Gather what you’ve learned
Gather how you’ve lived, and gather what you’ve earned.

Gather what you’ve loved and gather what you’ve lost.
Gather what you’ve soiled and gather what it’s cost
Gather what you’ve wasted and gather what you’ve saved
Gather what you’ve shopped for and gather what you’ve tasted

Gather who your friends are and gather how they’ve cared
Gather your relations and gather how you’ve fared
Then Gather birth and celebrate, gather death and cry
Gather hope, regret and longing and gather up the why

Gather up the waiting, gather struggles, gather challenges.
Gather all the goals you’ve met and gather up the bravery
Gather faceless fear and all the broken promises.
Gather yesterday today, and gather time tomorrow

Gather what you’ve ruined and gather when you’ve failed.
Gather up the personal and gather up the frail
Gather up the culture and gather up the myths
Gather all the songs you’ve sung, and all expressive art
Gather dances gather dreams and gather up your heart

Gather in the garden and gather at the beach.
Gather on the mountain and gather what’s in reach
Gather in the workplace, and gather on the roads
Gather in the home you’ve made and gather all you kin
Gather your impatience, your frustration and your greed.
Gather up the words you’ve said and gather what you need.

Gather up your journey and all the time you’ve spent
Gather up your courage and walk inside your tent.
Gather up your secrets and and gather up your wisdom
Gather what you’ve forgotten
Gather what you’
ve meant.
Gather faith and Reverence

Gather truth and and gather lies,
Gather secrets great and small
Gather wisdom of the ages and wrap them in your shawl
Gather sickness, Gather health gather tenderness and rage
Gather all your stories and gather on the stage

Gather up your gatherings, and stir the basket’s bounty
Gather all remaining threads and search across the county
Look out among the human beings, look out among relations

Then offer up your gatherings to all nations and creations


Offer to your children and offer to your kin
Offer to the hungry, to the needy and the grim
Offer to the blessed and offer to the prim
Offer to the kings and queens the princess and princesses
Offer to the beggars, paupers, jesters and priestesses

Offer to the little birds the chipmunks and the deer
Offer to the badger, mole, the frogs, and yes the bear
Offer to the green spring shoots, the white and yellow crocus
Offer to the budding trees the bushes and the rushes

Offer to the sand and mud the concrete and the buildings
Offer to the cook and maid the seamstress and the butler
Offer to the farmers - offer to the farm
Offer to the doctors and offer for no harm

Offer to the visionaries offer to the artists
Offer to the frightened, offer to the scared
Offer to the endangered and to the unprepared
Offer to the hurting, offer to be healed,
Offer to your neighbor and offer to the field

Offer grace and offer peace offer possibility
Offer privilege trust and faith
Offer gratitude amazement wonderment and awe
Offer loving kindness, compassion, joy and love

Offer up your story, offer honor and integrity
Offer for community Offer your vulnerability

Offer what you’ve learned and offer what you have
offer what you know
Offer what you’
ve shared
Offer both your ears, your shoulders and your tears
Offer all you’ve gathered, offer all your cares

You’ve gathered through the springtime,
the summer and the fall.
And you’
ve offered season’s greetings without going to the mall.

Now rest and build your strength up. Cycle with the moon. Cycle through the mystery time. Close your eyes and sleep. Dream the dreams of where you’ve been.
Dream of where you’re going – dream the dream that dreamers dream.

Then gather.