Septarian

This beautiful stone, also known as dragonheart, is a combination of several different minerals, foremost being yellow calcite and brown aragonite, but it also found with clear or white barite, and other influences. Together they create an ally that reveals and assists us in clearing away outdated beliefs that adversely effects balanced mental energy. Holding or using this stone, we can more easily clear these accumulated attachments, finding more effective authentic ways of communicating. Although connected to the fire element, septarian calms and balances fiery emotions release of these old thought forms, creating space for deep emotional healing. Because of its strong support for tolerance and patience, these repetitive patterns in relationships can be broken and changed.

Septarian’s alignment with the 1st, 2nd, and 3rd chakras, grounds us, reminds us we are supported and safe, and bolsters self confidence (especially when speaking our truth). As a stabilizer of all our bodies - physical, emotional, mental, sepatarian is second to none, and assists us with knowing our best practical boundaries in the everyday world. As with both aragonite and calcite, septarian is particularly helpful to the muscular/ skeletal system, and issues involving calcium absorption, inflammation, broken bones, muscle spasms, twitches, or challenges with energetic vitality. This stone is a terrific reinforcer of the immune system in general.

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Rhodochrosite

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Rhodochrosite is an outgoing giving stone that aligns with the 3rd and 4th chakras and elements of both fire and water. The optimism it brings makes it a terrific stone for those that feel lonely, or are in a sorrowful place. Rather than encouraging us to send out love like many pink ray stones, rhodochrosite directs us first to self healing, especially the inner child part of us. If we were victims to physical, sexual, or emotional trauma, the suffering/shaming may have caused us to repress memories or even pushed us toward self-abandonment.

These experiences are a huge drain on our life force energy. Rhodochrosite reconnects us to a sense of playfulness, and helps us rediscover our inherent gifts and talents in creative ways, bringing what was lost back into our conscious lives. The lessons of self compassion and forgiveness vibrate powerfully with this stone ally in our hand. Facing fears and healing these wounds are key to reclaiming our true authentic selves.

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Rhodochrosite shares one of the most loving and soothing frequencies of any stone. Wearing it over the heart supports courage and confidence when actions need to be taken. Kept it in a pocket, it will foster joy and that sense of magical happiness natural to children. Physically, it is a good stone for relief of tension during challenging times, anxiety, or depression, and generally beneficial for and nervous system imbalances.

Stellar Beam Calcite

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These lovely stones are a type of dogtooth calcite known as stellar beam. All the various calcites are wonderful allies. If I had to choose but one stone to use in healing, calcite with its wide variety of energies and colors might be my choice. They are powerful yet gentle, cleansing yet restorative, helping move us through our old issues w/ friendly support. These stellar beams are associated w/ the elements of fire and storm and the 3rd, 6th & 7th chakras as well as the transpersonal/ etheric chakras above the head. Because it activates the higher centers and grounds energy through the solar plexus, stellar beam calcite connects higher levels of consciousness with clarity, focus, and will, linking the parallel realities of spirit and matter. This stone challenges our minds to think beyond self imposed limited awareness and conceive of new potential and possibilities. With a stellar beam in your hand you will find the courage needed to take evolutionary steps, and make the necessary shifts in consciousness to do so. Use it to confidently manifest your goals and allow your light to shine bright on the world.The golden beam is fearless and brings dynamism to our lives.They are wonderful to carry when we are in the midst of letting go of the false security of old patterns. In the environment they emit their uplifting energetic essence. Treat these calcite allies with full respect and use consciously and they will be at the ready. In a healing layout they may be placed either on various energy centers and used in concert w/ other gemstones and crystals. I particularly like to use them w/ black tourmaline and other calcite cousins.They are also excellent tools for psychic surgery to remove blockages. Stellar beams also assist us in aligning w/ our highest guides, angels and other lightbeings.

exploring the elements (5)–spirit/storm (and politics)

storm rainbow Greenbrier county

storm rainbow Greenbrier county

It seems a lifetime since I sat down to write. Although this has to do with Spirit (which I had intended to write about somewhat differently next), my focus has shifted. So much happened that called me away. The protests and events in the news precipitated by the murder of George Floyd, and all that has followed took and held my attention. It brought me into a space of personal reflection, feeling through how to best support the Black Lives Matter movement in my own way. All this has been on my mind and in discussions with others.

A fairly political person all my life, still in High School in rural South Carolina, I remember well writing in 1970 a paper for my English Class titled “Black is Beautiful”. I received an “ A+” and supportive comments from one of the two best teachers of my educational career. Place this in time, where there was not full yet integration of schools in my county until my senior year. Black families were required to sit in the balcony w/ a separate outside entrance at the picture show, and were not allowed in the town pool. My Daddy’s (Dr Wise) waiting rooms were designated “white” and “colored”, though there were no doors and everyone could see each other. Working for him in the summer, I learned the protocol was equality based. People signed in, and you took each person back to one of the three examining rooms in that order, no preference to skin color. I pretty much lived a life of white privilege, though I did not know it then. But there were people, experiences, and moments that formed a different response to the culture in which I was born. I read “Life” and “Time” magazines, watched the news, and thought about it. Several black students came to the “White School” as a transition, when I started 6th grade. Some were athletes, and we were on the same teams.I considered all my fellow classmates, and friends.

But I was not allowed to have black team mates to my house, when I wanted to invite Everyone for a post season party. After an argument that I could not win, I chose no party. Yet, Dr Wise served the entire community’s health needs his whole working life, making housecalls to families, both black and white. I went with him often, sat on the porch or in the kitchen while he saw his patient. It was clear he was fair and committed to healing all equally. But even as I child, I witnessed his own personal struggle with racism and its conflict with the message of Christianity. They were following the social/cultural norms of their community and we had a certain status in that community. I witnessed that my parents understood there was something wrong in all of it, but were not able to take different stand. I never felt they encouraged hate at any time, and importantly, they absolutely promoted education and thinking for ourselves.

My family had a black woman begin working for us from my oldest sister’s birth on through when I went away to college. Rosa Lee was a huge influencer in my life. A special relationship of unconditional love, and physical affection existed between us, unlike what I had with my parents. I went to her little house on the ”other side of town” when my parents were gone occasionally and, played with the neighborhood children. I looked forward to it. When I was a child, she was always around, always caring. She was the archetypal nurturer, though she had no children of her own. Her sister worked for my cousins and Lucille, too, was a beloved figure, as was Rosa’s niece that worked for my parents off and on, then again in their last years after she returned to retire from Washington DC to her hometown. These women were all extraordinarily kind, giving people during times that must have been difficult for them. And there was also Levi in tattered overalls with his blue black skin who sometimes did heavy work in my mother’s yard and garden. He let me ride on the back of his mule…a thrill for this equine crazy tomboy. He ate in the kitchen, of course, and I loved listening to him and Rosa Lee talk and laugh. They treated me like family. I saw and felt the disparity when I was young, but rural feels different. Not until traveling to the nearest city to shop, and my mother getting lost, did I see urban poverty from the back seat of our thunderbird. That experience, among others around the same time, affected me deeply. Together they brought inequalities and injustice into better focus, made me question and talk to my pastor, and strongly pointed me toward a trajectory of different thinking.

In 1968, with the assassinations of Martin Luther King Jr and Bobby Kennedy (both heroic in my eyes) the Viet Nam war, pronounced civil unrest, as black people continued their struggle for justice, and the Mexico City Olympics. In that moment on the podium of fists raised in black gloves and bare feet, something snapped inside and I walked away from the part of my cultural roots that loudly proclaimed and quietly allowed for and supported racism. I did not return to my 10th high school reunion, because it was only to be a party for the white members of our graduating class. But what is writing a letter, and taking a very small stand compared to those with the foot of racism always on their backs from government and the oppression of separate and NOT equal in their own communities? By the 25th reunion, all were welcomed, my eldest son accompanied me, and it felt right.

Many died before George Floyd. Known massacres…Tulsa OK (1921), Rosewood FL(1923), Colfax LA (1873), Wilmington NC(1898), Elaine AR (1919), and Atlanta GA(1906), lynchings, police brutality again and again. I will not go into the history we were not taught, or the whitewash we were sold, especially as southerners, but informing ourselves is crucial. I wonder if folks who cling to the more palatable version are under the influence of deep guilt, and therefore cognitive dissonance is at play. I do understand that. Ashamed of my own southern-ness for years, I had to make my own peace with it. Racism exists everywhere we go, and has no Mason-Dixon line. One of my Mama’s last spoken thoughts was a wish that she had been kinder to Rosa Lee, who passed before her. She had come to truth of deeper understanding. Being able to say those words allowed her to make the transition ahead without regret in her heart, and with the gift of forgiveness awareness offers.

Yet here we are 2020, where the dark underbelly is being forced into the light. I believe, the ugliness of the last three years was created by folks fearing the loss of the power they know their “whitness” provides, the vocal racists still clearly out there, and a reactionary response to having an erudite black man for president. Fear exists. We know it, and it holds up a heavy m, hard hand to change. Now, we are having a reaction to the reaction. All is out there to be seen. This is an awakening of spirit. All the elements come together in Spirit, creating storm. Storm that cleanses and clears. The Power of Air engages our thoughts, our knowing, and collective values. The Power of Fire ignites our will, reminds us to take action, and create anew. The Power of Water mandates the deep daring required to face our feelings. The Power of Earth tells us to listen, hold all firm within us, and gives us courage. Spirit/Storm is the call to Activism, to be , to trust, and to even surrender to it. At the center of the compass wheel, but spirit can not be explained in any scientific way, as can air, fire, water, and earth. Yet it is the connector, a balancer between stillness and silence and the action of transmutation… change not only of appearance but of form.

Being the best human we can be, requires us to dive into the inner work, and also work outside ourselves in this world we were born into. Service and/or activism can take us forward in everyday ways, in our family, friendships, community, or in much bigger ways. When we balance the gifts of the elements within, the stillness of spirit and the moving cleanser of storm, real healing occurs. This is the sacred space in which we feel, find, and experience love of all kinds. Acceptance, forgiveness, also, of self and others resides here. Let us work to heal our own wounds, the ones that need a holyfire light to see everything clearly, and the burning passion to act for good of all. There are many ways to bring the change. There is not just one way.

We can take to the streets. We can work in political organizations. We can live our lives and dare to speak truth to power, and to those we know well, that still hold fearful/ hateful views. We can live our lives as an example.

Let go of white privilege as we come to understand it better. Stop being complicit in our silence. Have conversations. Ask questions. Listen, because we have lots to learn.

We can make a difference. Spirit wants us to. Storm clears the way.

exploring the elements (4)---(earth)

I love the earth! Earth is home, our green and blue planet spinning through the vastness of space. In my mind, earth has always been synonymous with nature. I resonate most strongly with this element, my sun being in mutable Virgo. The nurturance and power of nature has sustained me through all these six plus decades. I was lucky. I had ponds and creeks, woods and fields, animals, and was left alone to make my way through it freely. As a result, I always feel accepted by Mother Earth, even when I have not in other settings in society. It is where I am still most at ease. My interaction and relationship with her plants, animals, minerals, and the other elements is one of curiosity, reverence, and intimacy. I know I am never alone.

Our breath is an oxygen/CO2 exchange with her plants and trees. We are part of it all, no separation. Earth is alive and we share a deep connection with her even when we are not aware of it. The indigenous peoples and all who live close to the land have this “knowing”. Great wisdom comes from an understanding of interdependence. Chief Seattle (1786-1866) clearly spoke,

“Human kind has not woven a web of life. We are but one thread within it. Whatever we do to the web, we do to ourselves. All things are bound together. All things connect.”

We need to expand our definition of kin and community in our lives to include all with which we have relationship…the winged ones, the swimming ones, the crawling ones, the 4 leggeds, the standing ones, the stone people. As someone who works with stones, I am reminded everyday by the power they hold in their structure, their color, feel and shape. They taught me how to go into silence, and slow down my listening to receive their messages. Stones are the wisdom keepers, the record keepers on earth. Transmitters of energy, crystals are highly evolved on their evolutionary path, and willing helpers as we travel ours. Just as plants do, the mineral queendom offers healing for body, mind, and spirit.

Over a decade ago Richard Louv wrote his classic, ”No child left inside”, beginning a sort of “back to nature” movement calling for us to reconnect children with the outdoors. The consequences of that loss are seen in many ways in the lives of our youngest ones, that are often left modeling the lives of their parents. Prior to technology becoming such an enormous part of daily life, children spent time in the wood and ditches, or at least in their yards playing and learning under the sky, clouds, and trees. With a touch of necessary benign neglect, we were free to explore, and free to do nothing. Free to listen, to feel, to be. As adults, disconnection from our earthhome leaves us stressed, depressed, anxious, and overwhelmed. And so follow the children. They see us, and their lives seldom support connection to the spirit of an embodied childhood in nature these days. Since the industrial revolution, society pushed a different agenda for success and happiness, and the divide began and continued to grow. Nature that brought access to spirit through its beauty and wonder, became something to use or subdue. Now is the time to reclaim our place on earth, restoring balance and creating harmony for ourselves and to our earthly home.

We must be grounded to do this work, present in our bodies, to fully experience our relationship with earth. We can let go of all the static from our thoughts, with awareness. We can focus on the energy coming up from the earth into us, filling our body vessel, and let distractions fall away. Feel our roots grow down. Breathe in the energy from the mother and let out outbreath fill the body with the energy of her constant presence. Sit with the power of her support. Important in meditation and ritual, grounding is no less so in the activities of our day to day living. Grounding brings us into alignment, helping us recover our balance, integrate spirit and body, providing stability and ease. Gratitude to the earth for all she does if we just let her! We can choose to walk the beauty path each day, acting with consciousness.

Today I go barefoot, sensing that grounding energy coming up through my feet…so good for my wellbeing, and with my hands working the soil, planting seeds, and saying prayers, I smile. Gardeners know the secret of opening to the blessings of earth energies. Watching and tending a garden through the seasons, and nurturing it along is soul fulfilling work, and it centers us. I find real magick in growing flowers, all kinds, but am a true lily lover, and I also await the end of summer for the blooms of the heavenly blues that greet me each morning when I have my coffee. Twining around the deck bannisters, their splendid radiant color connects the sky to the earth with their bright glory. This afternoon with its mix of sun and rain, I see the peonies and purple iris are opening, the trees are fully leafed out, and fecundity rules. Up on the mountain there is a celebration of every shade of green.

The elemental compass has earth resting on the north point. Its always been the point of power to me, representing winter, the dark of midnight, time of rest and incubation. It is associted with Mystery, with a capital “M”, and the power of silence. The physical body, bones, crystals, stones, and the colors black, brown, and green, are all associated with the earth. And here is where I envision the great earth mother. Lately I have come to revere Pachamama, as understood by those of the Incan tradition. She is earthmother, fertility goddess, and independent, omnipresent female spirit overseeing the planting and harvesting of crops. One with the mountains, with her generous, self sufficient creative power, she presides over life on earth. Like Gaia, from the Greek, and Danu from the Celts, and every other ancient tradition, Pachamama is the primordial mother of life, a feminine deity that protects and sustains her children.

With every heartbeat, with each step, each breath, honor and bless the earth, in return for all the blessings given. Let us begin again- to listen, to sense, to learn.

Grow things- in a garden, in your house. Lay flat on the ground and close your eyes. Find a stone totem to keep in your pocket. Sleep outside sometimes. Really notice trees, and be fully with them. Love the animals and care for them. Get outside for awhile everyday, in every season. Take off your shoes and let your feet touch and remember the earth. When you eat, acknowledge the earth, and all the elements, plants and animals that brought the food to your plate, and be thankful. Watch the changes in nature in a familiar place day to day, week to week, month to month, through the cycle of a year on earth. Feel the mystery. Know your connection. Hold the moments of wonder and beauty close.

Earth is sacred.

Mitakuye Oyasin

exploring the elements (3)---fire

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Today the sun burns bright, pouring gold on the 100’s of shades of green that are late May’s dress up clothes. The color of sky, blooming flowers, and all it touches, as I sit writing on the deck, is enlivened by sunlight. I love the sun, the heat, the expansion that exists because of it.Today my attention rests on the vivid red honeysuckle planted for the hummingbirds a few years ago.Within it I feel nature’s expression of fire on earth. But even on the starkest winter day, the fireball sun gives its energy creating contrast in the landscape. In many traditions the sun is Father, or Grandfather, the male counterpoint to Grandmother or Sister moon.The fiery outer, active, creative force balances the deep, dark receptivity of the feminine (water). Of all the elements, fire is probably considered most dangerous.Though air brings tornados, water floods, earth quakes, fire with its unpredictability of volcanos erupting and wildfires raging seems much less controllable. We are warned from childhood, not to play with fire.Yet, fire is the warmth of hearth and home. Fire is also the peace and hope of candles burning.

We gather around the campfire to tell our stories, sing songs, and ponder the mystery. It sustains us and, in its unique way, brings community. The holy spirit is seen as a flame in the Christian tradition. All world religions, and indigenous peoples have strong associations with fire. We speak of the spark that begins life. Remember, there is a burning molten core inside the earth mother, our closest life sustaining star, and all those that fill the night sky. I was attuned to the energies of holy fire in the Reiki that I practice. We know fire is transformative energy, like all the elementals, cleansing in its own way. Out of the ashes the phoenix rises. Humans have a deep unconscious fascination with fire, its power, and potential dangers. We know the heat of desire, sexual attraction and pleasure, and the passion of creativity that we feel “burns” within us. We experience, in moments of true awareness, the powerful focus akin to lightening striking the earth. Remember Saul on the road to Damascus? And it is in the heat of the forge that humans created tools of both war and peace, the sword and the plow. So fire is paradoxical, as are all elements, and can be supportive and nourishing, or destructive when out of balance. Although essential for us to live our lives on earth, fire gives a clear reminder to pay attention and treat its power respectfully.

On the elemental compass fire follows the eastern position of air, residing in the south, with its quadrant ending with water in the west. Fire needs air to burn, then water comes after, keeping balance and control in the west. When not connected to our deeper feelings from a place of wisdom, the fire of anger can do harm to us and others. We need fire to motivate us, spur us on, and express our will and intent. I believe there are times for righteous anger where change is needed, to evoke courage, and when injustice needs a voice.

The tarot symbol and tool on the elemental altar expressing fire is the wand. A wand symbolizes primal energy and inspired creativity, ambition and expansion.We have old tales from many cultures of the magick wand, a stick that directs incantations or prompts transformations. Used for good in the Cinderella story, we easily relate to wanting wishes to come true. But it takes the heat of the sun for earth to do its alchemy, inner passion to catalyze our creativity, warm pleasure of commitment to the home fires that offer communion and connection in a daily way. Fire is our guide in manifesting our wishes, moving them to action, and expression.

Stir the pot. Lay in the sun. Wear red and orange. Light a candle. Build a fire. Dance an ecstatic dance. Create an adventure.

There is magick in the mundane. Raise your energy. Channel your life force. Feel empowered joy. Fire is sacred. Enter the fire.

exploring the elements (2)---water

The last few months have been wet. The end of winter and coming of spring changed little as winter was milder than usual, and spring cooler. But both have seen much rain, from days of drenchers to intermittent showers. The barn lots have been a mess of muck, that sucking mud that holds your boots tight. Muddy horses stand with heads down, backs against whichever way the wind blows the cold rain in, when they don’t choose to be under the shedrow. Because of course they want to be out munching that delicious new grass. Damp hens look for places during daylight hours to get out of the worst of it and still find those earthworms that wash up from the saturated earth. Wet dog smell permeates the house.

Not a fan of long periods of cool, cloudy, and damp, this season has been an opportunity to open the senses wide and acknowledge the blessings of water. Beyond the mesmerising rhythm of ocean, majestic waterfall, or rocky river, we love water. It shifts something in us. Baptised this year by the constant, yet essential cleansing stream from the sky, I remember farmers pray for rain all summer. I recall how often our recreation is interwined with water. Animals live nearby a creek, lake, or river because it creates an environment for them to thrive. Humans feel called to be near it as it nourishes our spirit selves with its energy. We drink it for health and to quench our thirst. We shower and bathe our bodies. In religions we may dance for it, cleanse our souls in it, or christen a baby with it. We swim through it, delighting in the rush around our body. We travel down or across it, for pleasure of being “on/in the water.” And we are largely made of water ourselves, after all.

As an element, water, dwells in the west on the compass, the place of feeling and emotion. Always in motion, water is known by an understanding of transition, of “flow.” In the tarot deck, water, symbolized by cups, looks at feelings beneath the surface, and all emotions moving and shifting through our lives. Water has depth, carrying the deep unconscious below, and yet, light reflects light off it. When calm, it can be a mirror. Water is transformative, as it shapes to its container, and is ever changing. Restorative to our body and spirit, water adds beauty and meaning to our daily lives. I think about words often. River rhymes with giver, and ocean with emotion. That seems right. Without water and connection to feelings we would lead parched lives. Salty tears fall from our eyes in times of grief and sadness, when we are joyous, or touched by deep feelings of love and caring.

The balance on our blue planet is precarious in these modern times. Humankind has lost its way of being stewards of our precious resources, or even to acknowledge their importance. Years ago government created The Clean Air and Clean Water acts, but most recovery and protection work has been done by small (sometimes larger) groups of committed citizens. We dam the wild rivers. We send our waste into our water sources. Decisions are made with no thought of damage to the blood of the earth. The correlation between the wellbeing of our physical bodies and our spiritual selves is enormous, but neglected. Like air, water is life. And water is sacred. Without it, we can not live. Without emotional connection and awareness of our feelings, we do not feel alive. We are separated, isolated from ourselves, and others. This is an illness. Water as an elemental force, can show us the wayback to ourselves.

Tonight I stand under a new moon sky, listening to the spring peepers calling out loudly their chorus of thanksgiving for the water. So I welcome this season of falling rain, and the glory of green that inevitably follows. I welcome the sponge of soft earth, grey clouds, and hours spent in the house or barn, or just reading in bed. I listen to the sounds on the roof. I see its power in the swollen streams and creeks. I claim my connection to water, to my deepest feeling spirit, to change and growth. May we all be blessed by water, and may we honor it.

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exploring the elements (1)---air

In this season of spring, although the earth is greening with the sun offering growing light and heat, it is the elements of air and water that have my full attention. We have had more than showers of rain, or spring breezes this year. The transitions between the seasons always have reminders for us, messages, if we pay attention. This year, such days of wind, I seldom can recall. One can not talk about the element of air, without speaking first of breath. Transitions between birth to life, and life to death depend on that first and last breath. It is breath that sustains us. We breathe. Our cells breathe. Breath is life.

When we go to the wheel of the year, we begin in the East. It is air that resides there, aligning with the energies of spring, sunrise, new life, the winged ones, awakening sound, clarity of mind. It is birdsong on an early morning. It is the air moving in our throat when we sing or speak. It blows across the mountains, and oceans, carves patterns in desert sands, rustles the old dry weeds and grasses left standing after the winter. Air brings freshness. Air brings life.

Connected to our thoughts, ideas, and learning, air is an educator. Related to our intellect, swords in tarot, or the athame in the Practice, air w/ its associated tools, supports us cutting through confusion, bringing the world into focus, and supports our discernment for truth. 2020, coming into spring, has had much on the wind. Covid- 19 has us looking closely at our personal breath, our community’s health, and the world’s viability and values. I’ve heard so many say “they were holding their breath” in the last 3 months. We have been required to literally “see” the preciousness of breath, ours and the earth’s. I can not help but know in heart and mind, it is the correlation with the degradation of our air and water on the planet (with other complex environmental factors/climate change) that has brought us to the point we are now with the global coronavirus pandemic. After decades of burying our heads into “not looking.”

If we are to use the gifts of the elements to empower us in this crisis, air tells us to begin again and to make a new start, one that shows us how to breathe with intention, in a grounded in the earth, into a place of coming back into balance. By using the gifts of our clear knowledge, we break down the old rickety structures and systems that have not served us very well for so long. There is a quote that comes to me that says something like, “Who knows where the wind blows?” The wind is blowing everywhere, and it wants to clear the way for a re-claiming of wisdom that sadly self serving humans lost along the way during our short tenure here. Re-claim, not by going backward, but forward, with power based in honorable co-creation with all living beings. Air offers insight. Air blesses us with every breath. Let us return the blessing.

The First Tattoo.

Arm on the Farm

Arm on the Farm

I had made it through 64 years nearly with no body art. Never thought about it again since my elementary aged children talked me out of going with friends for a tat, 30 years ago. But then, out of the unconscious, all 6 symbols came to me in a dream ( 6 is my personal magickal number).Waking with them in my mind, I felt directed to put them in order, and have them permanently placed on my body. I was sure that the design was to be made vertical, their meaning easily seen by me anytime, and placed on my non-dominant, receiving side. Lower inner arm was an easy decision, and I felt the story being told began with the circle image (spirit).The double chevron (creating our own reality) follows, and the elemental compass, central, honoring my spiritual path. Below it, comes a mountain symbol for adventure. Then, the chevron over an open triangle (being open to movement and change). And finally at the bottom, Awen, a Celtic/ Druid symbol with its the 3 rays of light denoting “flowing inspiration” (poetry, music, creation…), and the 3 dots, drops from the cauldron of the goddess Cerridwen (knowledge, transformation, rebirth). Awen is seen as divine essence. 3’s dominate Celtic patterns and knots (spirit, mind, body; sky, earth, sea; past present, future…) I asked my talented son, Schuyler for help joining them together, to make a more artistic design. He and I agreed on his vision, adding 2 small dots and 1 larger, creating what I now have on my arm. After i lived with it awhile, I noticed the story meaning can be read or told from both top or bottom.

Not long after, I left on a 4 month adventure in the Mountains of Michoacan Mexico, having never been out of country before. That is a story of beauty I blogged about elsewhere, culminating in 3 days with the Monarch butterflies. Over the winter of 2019, my lifetime dream came true when I traveled solo again, to New Zealand for the full season there. The communion and solitude I found in that paradise changed me. The life map my tattoo provides everyday reminds me to follow inner guidance, and trust it wholeheartedly. After my return, everyone soon asked “Where are you going next?” and I answered from my knowing, “This is my sacred West Virginia winter”. Spending it here in my home mountains has been a great adventure of a different sort, but just as meaningful and interesting. Time has been dedicated to rumination and reflection, reacquaintance and resilience. It led me to open an office in town, being less solitary, and more willing to be known in my community and the world. Trusting my intuition was good, with the Covid-19 showing itself. Although sadly having clients on my table came to an abrupt stop, the open time allowed me to devote myself to creating this webpage w/ my designer friend up north, dream new dreams, create a new reality, while remaining open to change. So, my first Tattoo has become my WisdomWays brand logo. Until the website process began, it had not been clear to me, but then suddenly, it was. Seems just right. I carry it with me everywhere I go. As Don Oscar Miro Quesada says, “We are creativity, creating creation.” Led by spirit, fueled by inspiration, with my spiritual compass which embodies all times, worlds, and possibilities, I am finding my way each moment.

springtime spiraling

Longer, warmer days find me everywhere but inside at my laptop. This is a good thing. On my knees in the flowerbeds, weeding for hours yesterday with the sun on my face and a flock of chickens surrounding me felt like heaven on earth. Granted I have a quarter sized raw place in the palm of my right hand from pushing the trowel beneath 10,000 deeply rooted dandelions, clumps of grass, and hawkweed. You know I can not wear garden gloves that separate me from the tactile pleasures of the soil. Last night I was that good kind of tired, slept deeply, and awoke to a cardinal calling me from bed at daylight. My knobby old fingers were sore and a bit stiff reaching across the frets for a little morning music, but I was happy, and definitely felt like singing. Another day begins.

Supper never graces the table til after dark now, and it will continue to come later and later, as the daylight grows into the summer. These are changes I longed for all winter. Each morning I feel Walt Whitman’s, “A Child Went Forth…Everything I see becomes who I am…” for a stretch of minutes or hours, lost in time. The spiral brings me back to childhood, adolescence, and years of  being a young mother. Returning to this season of doing, blooms of  tulips, periwinkle and forsythia may as well be the same ones I played beside in my Mama’s garden, the same ones where the pleasures of romance found me at college, or the same ones planted so hopefully in the empty yard of a tiny rental house with a baby cooing on my back. Everything changes, yet everything remains the same. I know this blue sky, this nearly neon green grass, this gusty warm air like the lines on my face. And I can close my eyes and be the tomboy child, the barefoot girl in a long dress, and the young woman wanting to make a home for a family. So much has changed, but all those incarnations are alive and real, just waiting for permission to come out and play. The years fall away…a tear, a smile. I feel it in my heart, my belly. 

If we are formed by our experiences,  I believe it is the experiences out in this place of doing that form us. Spring always declares a beginning. Open the windows. Turn the soil and plant something. Clean and organize.  We are getting ready for the fullness of what comes next. The buzz of life calls to us to use our minds and bodies, to notice, to begin, but mostly to remember the all of who we are and what we know. Shake off the amnesia. Let the child go forth to wander. Let the desire of first love reawaken. Let long ago dreams polish present ones.  Long ago I may not have imagined myself filled with delight in finding worms to hand feed my hens, or in “manure meditation”( the process of picking up the barn lot in silence, broken only by natural chanting from all parts of the farm and woods). But the dreams of a little girl in Buster Browns, playing with her plastic horses in the rocks by the forsythia bushes give such a shine to the dreams I live on such mornings.

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Front Porch Swing

Front Porch Swing

Yesterday brought all possible weather. April came in like early March with gale force winds driving sheets of snow into the creaking trees on the mountain. The curtain like movement seemed a daytime version of Northern lights made of white flannel. Then, suddenly the air would clear, the sun would shine, and mist would rise up from the ground. Next it would rain, or hail. This pattern repeated over and over. The wind seemed the great sorcerer in all this.  A wild weather spell was being cast. So today when I woke to quiet golden light, with birdsong fluttering into my senses, I had to go see. It is easy to throw back the quilts on such a morning. I went out to see what magick had been left… and found a rare and brilliant day.

I noticed down along the river yesterday in Ronceverte, the willows leafing out with their characteristic color. Every year I am again reminded of the first four lines of  Frost’s” Nothing Gold Can Stay”.

“Nature’s first green is gold,

Her hardest hue to hold

Her early leaf’s a flower;

But only so an hour.”

This is that hour!  I do not want to close my eyes for fear of missing even a single minute of it. Once dressed I went first to the chicken yard to let them out to forage. Thunder, the giant black Australorp rooster, led the way into the frosty field with his hens following along scratching here and there. Standing in the polished light, flapping and crowing, striking green and purple iridescence reflected in his feathers. Off to the barn, the horses stood slumbering in the warmth,  heads down, a back hoof cocked. They roused easily, stretched, then walked over, knowing the joy of  turnout onto new spring grass.

What next? I get to choose. Coffee in the front porch swing, for the first time this year, wins hands down. This becomes a ritual once the weather turns warm, usually before the morning chores call my name. Today I sit there at a bit later  hour. My coat and boots keep me comfortable. All the cats and dogs find their places around. Even old Sage, grey tabby, sits with me. He hides out in the hay all winter, grumpy and acts a little crazed. This I understand. But once Spring breaks open, he comes out, seeking attention. This is a good sign. I notice  for the first time the rosy blush on the cherry trees and maples along the fence line. Another good sign. The muck will thaw, the lilacs and apple trees will blossom, the horses will shed their buffalo robes and be slick and shiny again. This body will grow used to feeling looser and younger. I will go searching for wildflowers, and say all their  names out loud. I will write  poems in my head as I walk. I will  find more questions  than answers, and delight in them. There is no going back. The world expands and calls. The inner ruminations of winter are coming alive again on the front porch, in the woods and on the creek banks of Spring.

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wonder of wildflowers

trillium and others

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Lovely wood sorrel

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sweet yellow violet

dirty fingernails

When I finally let myself down into the steamy tub last night to soak in mineral salts, I took a moment to look at my hands and fingernails. They were ragged, banged up and stained. But I couldn’t help but smile, having never been able to keep ladylike hands. My hands have always been big, strong, and very busy. Now because of age, add knobby and wrinkled to the list. And I can’t get off the tight jar lids like I used to. But when I see dirty fingernails, I pause to think of the working pleasure that put that soil under them. It has always been that way. Remembering  sitting in church as a child, with a pretty homemade dress on, and my not so pretty fingernails makes it clear that I have not changed much. Saturdays were spent in the building of hideouts with pine branches and tall weeds, messing with horses, or digging for treasure in clay ditch banks. There is much pleasure in the sweet smelling earth that can only be gotten to with hands.

This Sunday morning my hands are the same as fifty years ago, with their torn cuticles and dirty fingernails. Ahh…another Saturday spent enjoying myself! Mama sewed those lovely Sunday dresses for my sisters and me to wear, and yet never criticized my tomboy ways.  She loved to work in the dirt herself, and chose a life dedicated to her enormous yard, spending countless hours in happy creation. She loved the peace and the beauty only found under the sky. I am her daughter that way. Yesterday while I was digging the big hole for a fire pit, fully engaged in determining placement, depth, shape, and size, I remembered Mama building a bench with local rock and mortar, and always adding to her paradise with planning and hard work in a hundred different ways. I felt her there, right over my left shoulder. She was pleased.

Garden gloves get in the way. They prevent the intimacy of the process, such a necessary component. The shovel is a great tool, and digging with one is a satisfying full body effort. But taking off the sod and removing the rocks is a job for hands. When you are on your knees you smell the cool ground, and see its many details. The chickens were scratching around here and there, delighted to see the grubs, beetles, and worms I threw to them every so often. I thought about my mother’s mother, Grandmama Langston. She kept chickens, had a beautiful flower garden and screened in porches filled with swings and rocking chairs. The drinking ladle hung by a spigot at the large front steps made of crushed shells and mortar. This place by the swamp, the heavy scent of her mock orange and the multitude and beauty of her Sweet William beds still live on the edge of a waking dream. It is funny how I am just in the last few years connecting the generational dots.

Although the daffodils have been putting on a show, and all the tree and plant buds are getting plump, we had a few inches of snow last night. The newly dug hole looks cold and raw surrounded by white, in the empty grey light. The search in the rock batter along the property line for good flat rocks to line it, and others to surround it, will have to wait a few days. I can imagine the future however, and completing it will allow for new expression of  life out here in the country.  This will be a place to reflect, alone, and also a setting for friends and family to gather, tell stories, and sing. One more way to be out in the air, beneath the stars or sun, all seasons of the year…where past and present meet, and dirty fingernails and ancestors are welcome.

winter to spring

After a cold day of blowing snow yesterday, this morning the sun is bright, the air is resting, and the blue shines brilliant. Not one cloud. Just remnants remain beneath the trees of all those furious wet flakes. March always seems a struggle between  these two. I can almost visualize winter’s refusal to give in as her power wanes to the softer side of the always turning wheel. Spring smiles because she knows victory is safe, and  just lets winter bluster every so often… a kind sister.  Even us humans may complain, but we tolerate these tantrums, because we feel within us the shift. All the signs are present.  Our hopes begin to feel like possibilities again. Our hearts begin to open a little wider.

When our hearts open, our senses begin to operate fully. We can smell the sweet earthy aroma beneath our feet, and are moved to rake the garden beds, dig, and work (that feels like play). We see the subtle green begin to show in the pasture grass. We hear the crows begin their springtime chortle. We feel a stronger sun on our faces. And we look up more now. We remember the growing season to come, what seeds and plants give. And I do not only mean luscious homegrown  tomatoes, or showoff peony blossom lace. They provide us with joy, beauty, and a strong, often forgotten connection to the earth, on a deep, sometimes unconscious level. 

It is looking at each day now like a birthday where the gifts surround me. It does feel like being born again every March,”Happy Birthday to me!”.  My thank you notes are sent directly to this mother that freely gives. I speak my gratitude with words and songs and prayers. I catch myself chanting as I walk and work outside, and laugh at myself. Laughter is so much easier now. 

But here I want to speak about winter. Although cold is not this body’s friend, and I succumb to the short, dark days unwillingly, I know it is the winter sleep that allows for what awakens in my spirit now. I celebrate the time of quiet rest on the Winter Solstice, and unfailingly appreciate the holy silence and bright stars of the winter sky. The snow is beautiful, and a gallop through it, beyond exhilarating. But this is often a difficult time for many. Yet incubating ideas and dreams all winter, like tiny seeds beneath the snow, is what brings me to where I am now…to this place where a restored creative life can unfurl its first small leaves.

coltsfoot and peepers

There are signs that spring is here, finally, but none more real to me than the little yellow coltsfoot blooms. When I rode in last night right at dusky dark , they were unseen. But today I was out early, and there they were. Perhaps the warm night had teased them into showing their radiant, sunlike blossoms this morning. The ditch banks were filled. If you weren’t paying attention, you might think…dandelions, but look again. There is that definite soft center surrounded by fine fringe, and no leaves. They leap from the earth into full flower, in less than 12 hours time.  Every March this  little flower  says” TaDa!” with it’s bold surprise. The name of course comes from their leaves that appear next…big, broad, and shaped like horses hooves. Then the happy blossom finally turns onto the seed heads, looking more akin to those dandelions.

Coltsfoot is used in traditional medicine for a variety of ailments. Best to make an infusion of the leaves and flowers beneficial for upper respiratory ailments such as coughing, (especially that morning cough), expelling mucous, and as an anti inflammatory.  So gather,  boil it down, and you have a free gift from nature’s pharmacopeia. It is good for my mind, as well. All I have to do is see it there, reaching toward the sun, and it acts as a natural anti depressant. This morning my good mare Jane passed by, and I spied it there in the mud and tall grasses, I just had to shout, “Hallelujah!” It is a simple weed, yet it says so much about where we are on the wheel of the seasons. Yes, I have a few croci blooming in the yard, but I planted them. Although thrilled to see those little purple friends, the coltsfoot lives a wild life, and that I greatly respect with its uncultivated moxie, to be the first bloomer out there in an uncertain world.

Late last night I heard the spring peepers for the first time this year. Another cause for celebration.  Earlier I had ridden through the fields around the ponds a few miles from home looking and listening, but there was silence except for a liquid “plop… plop” here and there around the full circumference. The lesser blue heron  scolded us raucously as we disturbed her off the nest, and she flew low across the water. The moon had risen over Butler mountain awhile before dark, and I stopped there to admire its reflection in the still blackness. It was one of those moments lost from the counting of time. I breathed it all in, content in the spring evening. I wondered to myself about the peepers, “When will the chorus begin”? Then Bess, dog of a lifetime, (who lives to go out riding), decided to follow her bliss into the pond shattering the egg shaped image into many moons, made into lace, among the rippling circles. Rather than creating an unwelcome interruption, a  joy deepening into peace swept through me. My dear 4 leggeds and all the sensual blessings of earth joined together to cast a spell and expand my heart. I thought of all those I love, my children, husband, sisters, friends. I also considered all those that I don’t know across the planet that are feeling pain, suffering anxiety, loss, and transmitted the here and now of this experience, out in waves…knowing in some way the energy of this space in time would reach them, and perhaps touch their hearts with this palpable, deep peace.

At some point, I turned toward home and walked quietly off. It was getting dark. The moon shining bright as a lantern guided me through familiar fields, to the gates, and out to the hardtop. Another 20 minutes to the driveway. As I unsaddled at the barn, I heard the peepers begin, as if waiting  for my return. Off in to the woods, by the creek to the west  of the big pasture I could hear them singing, shouting, exulting. I had won the bet with Rick . He predicted the 12th. Not as optimistic, I said the 20th. Here it was Saint Patrick’s day, and the green frogs with their beautiful mix of baritone and tenor were crooning. Spring’s pre game show had really begun. Maybe it was last night’s peepers that sang the coltsfoot into bloom this morning.

early spring rain

I want to talk about rain. It has been raining for three solid days now. In spring we often say, “showers”, because we are more tolerant now than two months ago, and the word, showers, sounds pleasant. These are not the cold downpours we grumbled about a month ago. I personally would prefer seeing snow sparkling in the barn light, rather than suffer those drenching long black streaks of winter rain. Two nights ago I sat comfortably in the barn aisle just listening to the rain on the roof and the horses content, munching hay. With Bess dreaming dog dreams beside my feet, I pondered the ending of winter in a week, and what its lessons had been this year. Reflection is a part of growth, even when it is means climbing back in and through those old tunnels we prefer not revisiting. Winter always cuts to the marrow of what needs digesting, to survive. I am still chewing. It is pretty tough, and a bit bitter at times.

I also wondered what new would sprout from thoughts and ideas planted at the time of returning light, way back on the holyday of winter solstice. They were given further form and energy in February on imbolc. Today the stirrings seemed to be reaching up through my own consciousness as well as the rain softened ground. The sky brightens from dark slate to dove grey. Yellow shows through the tight green daffodil buds, but I tell them to be patient. I worry the surely to be counted on cold snap will burn the blooms. To the apple and peach trees, I say, “Hold On.” as their little buds consider loosening, much to early. Concerned they will be fooled by this temporary mildness in their rush toward growth, and not bear fruit, so I counsel them. Here I am standing in the rain talking to flowers and trees. But that is what I do. I remember my barn reflection. Okay, I get the connection. Here is the wisdom for my own process. 

Ahhh…patience. This is the difficult one. Excitement, yes! Passion, run toward it! Fear lives only inside my struggle with patience. The stubborn warrior that craves action wakes up.What might I miss if I wait, think about possibilities far too much, for too long? I have nurtured some new hopes and dreams along through the winter. Now they must be protected from this old foe. I have known the pain and loss she suffered by her own hand, and I have compassion. Tell her to take a nap, for now. I must not forget what has been learned.

Just now the wind picks up and brings in a heavy shower of hail. “See what I mean!” I say. Things change so fast. Spring is such a flirt, creating a powerful desire in us. We all seek the movement. But the rain reminds us to pay attention.  The ponds and puddles are beyond full, the river is flooding. The ground is saturated. Trees will fall over now in the wind, their big root balls giving way, pulling up earth and rock. The mountain road is a mess, cut by the water boiling out of the ditches. Snow will fall again, no doubt. Now is the time to just be open, just allowing for a sweet, slow transition from stillness to action, from winter to spring.  This may be the time to go to the barn, listen to the song on the tin roof, and smell the sweet breath of my good mare, who is always patient.

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