Tuesday, June 20, 2023

I AM



No longer a spectator but an observer, my perception is my creation. No longer victim but creator, my creation is my act of love. No longer possessed but lover, my act of love is constant recognition.

I am old and weary, tired of the years.

Young am I, all wonder.

The beginning is me, and the end, and everything in between.

The hand that embraces me in love, is me in gratitude.

I am.


A piece of text that touched me, from the beautiful book by Hans Korteweg: "Many More Years" 


Art: Jacob's Ladder by William Blake


Sunday, June 4, 2023

Chalice




CHALICE

Purify what remains impure in me

that I may be a vessel full of honey


for without your help it will remain

an unrefined nothing,

my beekeeper, my queen.


You show me the path

which leads me to your hidden garden

winding through the labyrinth of my days.


For I know that in that blessed place

I can work freely,

and when the sun is high

I will kneel down.


I mirror myself in your sweet source

and the honey chalice opens.


Everything becomes light with you,

everything is renewed,

at your word the desert will bloom.


It is what I have longed for,

what I so long have sought,

what I have hoped for all my days:


To become a room

among the many rooms 

in the Mother-house of Love.




Art: Bhramari Devi - Hindu Bee Goddess. A form of Shakti who changed into a bee to fight demons and negativity. Artist: Greg Spalenka


Thursday, May 18, 2023

Ascension Day


Ascension Day comes when the season of blossoming is reaching fullness. Trees and plants, stirring upwards in growth, have been touched by the warmth and light from the blue bowl of the sky above and shower forth its blessings in color and scent. The whole of nature reaches upwards towards the heavens.

The longing of the human soul strives also upward, in unison with nature, seeking the touch of world-warmth from the sun. This mood of ascension attunes all of life to the expanses of the cosmos.

However closely heaven and earth are aligned, their relationship is not always the same. In this we see the miracle of the seasons - the breathing-in and breathing-out of the great earth soul.

At the time of the Ascension of Christ, nature celebrates the ascension of the soul of the earth. It can hardly be by chance that the forty days between Easter and Ascension coinside with the season.
Every year in the springtime, when the earth breathes out its yearning for the airy spaces above, the mystery of the Ascension of Christ, who is the Spirit of the Earth, is renewed.

And surely it must be so that as Christ has ascended to glory, in the fullness of time so too will humanity ascend, and be transfigured into what will become our soul's true and ultimate destiny.




Saturday, May 13, 2023

Your Children Are Not Your Children



"Your children are not your children.

They are the sons and daughters of life's longing for itself."

- Kahlil Gibran


A reflection

It is only human to be devoted and attached to one's family. To desire a good relationship with one's own children is probably the most genuine desire of any parent. To lose the connection, whether by death or by life, causes suffering. 

To come to peace with this loss is possible..; to lay the suffering to rest is also possible. But it is only possible when to the profoundest depths is understood that love is not an exclusive blessing for one's own loved ones, but that love abounds and permeates everything. Then the heart calms down and the surrender to what is simply follows.


⚜️⚜️⚜️


Art: Les enfants de Bretagne by Emil Vernon


Wednesday, March 15, 2023

The Sword of Light - Excalibur

 

The Sword of Light - Excalibur, is a gift from the inner Feminine power called the Lady of the Lake.

Merlin, Arthur's druid-like counselor, who act as mediator between the world of the court and the realm of the Otherworld, takes the young king to meet with the Lady.

Arthur rows out onto the lake to receive the sword from the Lady. This is a moment of great significance: up through the deep  feminine waters of the lake, a portal to the inner realms, the Lady raises the Sword, the masculine symbol of power for the new Sun King of the outer world. It emerges from the underworld like the first ray of the rising sun from beneath the horizon.

So does the goddess bless the king with the gift of Excalibur, a weapon of the Light with which to rule his kingdom. Inner and outer worlds come together to forge a sacred contract of divine kingship with the goddess of the land.

But the young king shows signs of the fatal dominance of masculine over feminine values, which will pervade his reign. Merlin asks him which he prefers: sword or scabbard (holder). Arthur, whom we can imagine brandishing the flashing blade in delight, replies that, of course he likes the sword best.

Merlin points out that the scabbard, clearly a feminine symbol, is more precious than the sword itself, because it magically protects the wearer's life. Merlin's advice comes from experience born of age that recognizes the deeper wisdom of the power that conserves life rather than destroying it.

But the young king's choice of sword over scabbard hints at the imbalance that contains the seeds of destruction for Logres, King Arthur's realm in the Matter of Britain, and the end of all hopes for a Golden Age of peace.

- Excerpt from Grail Alchemy; 'Swords of Light and Darkness', by Mara Freeman


Art: Sir John Lavery Triptych – ‘Madonna of the Lakes’


Thursday, January 26, 2023

Tuccia and the Basket

Tuccia showing the sieve with water.
Art: Giovanni Batista Benaschi

One of the most popular and enduring goddesses in Ancient Rome was Vesta, goddess of the hearth, and it was – and in so many houses still is – the cozy hearth fire which is regarded as the central focus of family life. Vesta’s popularity endured into early Christian times, and even today her name survives (although rather commercially!) as a brand name on boxes of matches.

The temple in Rome bearing the name of the goddess was served only by those dedicated women who were chaste of body and pure of spirit: the Vestal Virgins, and it is the story of one of them which has become legend. In the 3rd century B.C. the Vestal Virgin Tuccia found herself accused of being less than the pure one which her services in the temple of the goddess demanded of her.


From one deceitful mouth to another the false and ugly rumours about Tuccia quickly spread, and the poor young woman saw herself being threatened with expulsion, and separated from the temple – and from the goddess – to which she had chosen to dedicate her life. What must she do against these cruel and baseless claims? How must she show that she was as fully worthy to serve the goddess as she ever was?


Rather than protest her innocence with words of denial Tuccia chose to keep her silence. In so many situations actions can speak louder than any words, and Tuccia’s action in her own situation was to pick up a woven wicker basket. The basket was used as a sieve, and its base was a loose open weave with many holes. She carried the sieve down to the banks of the Tiber and, silently asking a blessing from her patron goddess, dipped the sieve into the flowing waters.


The sieve held. With the wicker basket full to the brim Tuccia carefully and dutifully walked back to the temple to offer the water as a libation to the goddess. Not a drop of the Tiber’s water was spilled, and all who saw her actions were silent and astonished. They knew that only the most pure of heart, only one who was the most deserving of Vesta’s blessings, could perform such a modest miracle. And it was this that was the clear conclusion of all those who witnessed Tuccia’s feat.


How many of us have at some time suffered through injustice? How many have, like Tuccia, been forced to show that they are not guilty of the accusations against them? Sometimes words of protest are not enough, but what then? We might not manage Tuccia’s small miracle, but to remain pure of heart, to be true to ourselves even in the storm, can also be enough. That… and perhaps also to remember that small miracles can, and do, sometimes happen.







Thursday, January 5, 2023

Life? Or Theatre?


Charlotte Salomon (1917-1943) was a German-Jewish artist. As a young girl she lived relatively carefree until the National Socialist takeover of power in 1933. In spite of this radical political change she was almost able to complete a course at the Berlin art academy. In January 1939 Charlotte fled Berlin and travelled to her grandparents in the south of France, who had already left Nazi Germany when the National Socialists took control. In 1940, after the outbreak of World War II, her grandmother committed suicide. Only then did Charlotte learn that her mother had also taken her own life in 1926.

The twenty four year-old Charlotte assimilated this turbulent family history and her experiences as a Jew in Berlin in an extraordinary way. In her anguish she resurrected her memories of her former lover, the singing teacher Alfred Wolfsohn (1896-1962). Among other things, he told her that in order to love life fully, one may have to embrace and understand its opposite – death. She decided to save herself with the help of his ideas and to undertake "something totally insanely special" as an alternative to suicide. She withdrew completely and began to paint in an unprecedented explosion of creative activity to ward off mental disintegration. And along the way she recreated her life. She used everything she had in her: her artistry, her visual and musical memory, her insight into the personalities of her relatives, her intellectual faculties, her humor and the inspiration she drew from her love for Wolfsohn.

In a unique interplay of art forms, Charlotte Salomon depicted her life in an artwork of almost eight hundred gouache watercolor paintings with overlaid sheets full of texts and musical references. In it she introduces herself and the people around her with assumed and grandly-resounding stage names as the protagonists in a musical theater play (a ‘Singspiel’). She mercilessly scrutinizes their lives in an ingenious game veering between fact and fiction, leaving her viewers with the question of what they are actually seeing: is this life itself – or merely theatre?

As Nazi aggression escalated, the Berlin-born Jewish artist Charlotte Salomon sensed the end was near. She wrapped over 800 of her paintings in brown paper and handed them to a friend with the words "Take good care of it, it's my whole life". Miraculously, the gouaches survived.

Charlotte Salomon died in October 1943 in Auschwitz at the age of 26.


1939, painting in the garden at the Côte d'Azur, France

After the Second World War her father and his wife discovered Life? Or Theatre? in the South of France. They donated it to the Jewish Historical Museum in 1971.

 "And she saw with awakened eyes all the beauty around her, saw the sea, felt the sun and knew: she must disappear from the human surface for a while and make every sacrifice to create her world anew from the depths."





All the works are in the Jewish Historical Museum in Amsterdam. 


Sunday, December 25, 2022

Holy Nights


In the darkness of the winter night, when the great breath of the Earth Mother finds its greatest point of inhalation, man is offered the grace to touch magic as well as wonder. In the pause between her powerful inhalation and exhalation, there is a point of rest. This still point has long been known as the Holy Nights.  Christmas Eve is the first of these Holy Nights, twelve in number.

In these blessed nights, the angels circle around the world as in a great cosmic dance. They long to speak to listening human hearts. Down through the ages, the "listeners" on earth have heard the choir of angels; they have received messages of Peace and Love. 

May we all be the "listening ones" during these Holy Nights.

Peace to you, my readers, Deep Peace.






Wednesday, September 28, 2022

When Autumn Yellows All The Leaves

 


I must not tell how dear you are to me.

It is unknown, a secret from myself

Who should know best. I would not if I could

Expose the meaning of such a mystery

I loved you then, when love was Spring, and May.

Eternity is here and now, I thought;

The pure and perfect moment briefly caught

As in your arms, but still a child, I lay.

Loved you when summer deepened into June

And those fair, wild, ideal dreams of youth

Were true yet dangerous and half unreal

As when Endymion kissed the mateless moon.

But now when autumn yellows all the leaves

And thirty seasons mellow our long love,

How rooted, how secure, how strong, how rich,

How full the barn that holds our garnered sheaves!




- Vita Sackville-West, poem to her husband Harold Nicholson. From: "Portrait of a Marriage" by Nigel Nicholson

Portrait: Vita with red hat by William Strang (1859-1921)


Saturday, July 9, 2022

Maria Sabina, Shaman and Visionary

 


"There is a world beyond ours; a world that is far away, nearby and invisible. And that is where God lives, where the dead live, the spirits and the saints, a world where everything has already happened and everything is known. That world talks. It has a language of its own. I report what it says."

These are the words of Maria Sabina, a Mexican Mazatec shamanic healer of the last century.  A  shaman and visionary - not a poet in any ordinary sense - Maria Sabina lived out her life in the Oaxacan mountain village of Huautla de Jimenez, and yet her words, always sung or spoken, have carried far and wide, a principal instance and a powerful reminder of how poetry can arise in a context far removed from literature as such. Seeking cures through language - with the help of Psilocybe mushrooms, said to be the source of language itself - she was, as Henry Munn describes her, 'a genius who emerges from the soil of the communal, religious-therapeutic folk poetry of a native Mexican campesino people."

But Maria Sabina did not herself consider her chants in such a way: she was as humble in her approach to her healing as she was dedicated, and her life, which was hard enough, was devoted to her healing practices.  "I don't know in what year I was born, but my mother, Maria Concepción, told me that it was in the morning of the day they celebrate the Virgin Magdalene, there in Rio Santiago. None of my ancestors knew their age.

"The sacred mushroom, the teo-nanácatl,  takes me by the hand and brings me to the world where everything is known. It is they, the sacred mushrooms, that speak in a way I can understand. I ask them, and they answer me. When I return from the trip that I have taken with them, I tell what they have told me and what they have shown me.

"I was four years old when my father died and used to go into the forest with my sister to pasture the beasts. We were very hungry, but we knew that there were mushrooms and that the mushrooms were our friends. The mushroom was in my family as a parent, a protector, a friend. But then I did not know yet how to distinguish the sacred mushrooms as el derrumbe, San Isidro, pajaritos, or from those who were not. My grandmother told me everything with pleasure because she saw that I was destined to become the priestress of the teo-nanácatl.  

"The mushroom is similar to your soul. It takes you where your soul wants to go. And not all souls are the same. Many people of the sierra have taken it and are taking it, but not everybody enters into the world where everything is known. The secrets the mushrooms reveal to me are enclosed in a big Book that they showed me and that is found  in a region very far away from their world, a great Book. They gave it to me when my sister Ana Maria fell ill. I took many, many more mushrooms than I had ever taken before: thirty plus thirty. I loved my sister and was ready to do anything, even to make a long trip, just to save her. I was sitting in front of her with my body, but my soul was entering the world of the teo-nanácatl and was seeing the same landscape that it had seen many other times, the landscapes that it had never seen because the great number of mushrooms had taken me into the deepest of the depths of that world. 

A duende, a spirit, came toward me. He asked a strange question: "But what do you wish to become, you, Maria Sabina?"  I answered him, without knowing, that I wished to be a saint.  Then the spirit smiled, and immediately he had in his hands something that he did not have before, and it was a big Book with many written pages. "Here," he said. "I am giving you this Book so that you can do your work better and help people who need help and know the secrets of the world where everything is known. "

"I thumbed through the leaves of the Book, many written pages, and I thought that unfortunately I did not know how to read. Suddenly I realized that I was reading and understood all that was written in the Book and that I became as though richer, wiser, and in that one moment I learned millions of things.

"I learned and learned. When I came to myself I was there, sitting in front of my sister. I looked for the herbs that the Book had indicated to me, and I did exactly what I had learned from the Book. And my sister Ana Maria got well.

"I didn't need to see the Book again because I had learned everything that was inside it. But I again saw the spirit that gave it to me and other spirits and other landscapes; and I saw, close by, the sun and the moon because the more you go inside the world of the teo-nanácatl, the more things are seen. And you also see our past and our future, which are there together as a single thing already achieved, already happened. I saw the entire life of my son Aurelio and his death and the face and the name of the man who was going to kill him because everything had already been accomplished, and it was useless for me to say to my son that he should look out, because there was nothing to say. 

"Millions of things I saw and I knew. I knew and saw God: an immense clock that ticks, the spheres that go slowly around inside the stars, the earth, the entire universe, the day and the night, the cry and the smile, the happiness and the pain. He who knows to the end the secrets of the teo-nanácatl can even see that infinite clockwork."


Excerpts from: 'María Sabina: Her Life and Chants', by Álvaro Estrada. Translation and commentaries by Henry Munn, with a retrospective essay by R. Gordon Wasson and a preface by Jerome Rothenberg. Published by Ross-Ericson, Inc., 1981.







Tuesday, June 14, 2022

Between Christ and Ishtar


In the midst of the gardens and hills which connect the city of Beirut with Lebanon there is a small temple, very ancient, dug out of white rock, surrounded by olive, almond, and willow trees. Although this temple is a half mile from the main highway, at the time of my story very few people interested in relics and ancient ruins had visited it. It was one of many interesting places hidden and forgotten in Lebanon. Due to its seclusion, it had become a haven for worshippers and a shrine for lonely lovers.

As one enters this temple he sees on the wall at the east side an old Phoenician picture, carved in the rock depicting Ishtar, goddess of love and beauty, sitting on her throne, surrounded by seven nude virgins standing in different posses. The first one carries a torch; the second, a guitar; the third, a censer; the fourth a jug of wine; the fifth, a branch of roses; the sixth, a wreath of laurel; the seventh, a bow and arrow; and all of them look at Ishtar reverently.

On the second wall there is another picture, more modern than the first one, symbolizing Christ nailed to the cross, and at His side stand His sorrowful mother and Mary Magdalene and two other women weeping. This Byzantine picture shows that it was carved in the fifteenth or sixteenth century.

On the west side wall there are two round transits through which the sun's rays enter the temple and strike the pictures and make them look as if they were painted with gold water color. In the middle of the temple there is a square marble with old paintings on its sides, some of which can hardly be seen under the petrified lumps of blood which show that the ancient people offered sacrifices on this rock and poured perfume, wine, and oil upon it.

There is nothing else in that little temple except deep silence, revealing to the living the secrets of the goddess and speaking worldlessly of past generations and the evolution of religions. Such a sight carries the poet to a world far away from the one in which he dwells and convinces the philosopher that men were born religious; they felt a need for that which they could not see and drew symbols, the meaning of which divulged their hidden secrets and their desires in life and death.

In that unknown temple, I met Selma once every month and spent the hours with her, looking at those strange pictures, thinking of the crucified Christ and pondering upon the young Phoenician men and women who lived, loved and worshipped beauty in the person of Ishtar by burning incense before her statue and pouring perfume on her shrine, people for whom nothing is left to speak except the name, repeated by the march of time before the face of Eternity.

It is hard to write down in words the memories of those hours when I met Selma - those heavenly hours, filled with pain, happiness, sorrow, hope, and misery.

We met secretly in the old temple, remembering the old days, discussing our present, fearing our future, and gradually bringing out the hidden secrets in the depths of our hearts and complaining to each other of our misery and suffering, trying to console ourselves with imaginary hopes and sorrowful dreams. Every now and then we would become calm and wipe our tears and start smiling, forgetting everything except Love; we embraced each other until our hearts melted; then Selma would print a pure kiss on my forehead and fill my heart with ecstasy; I would return the kiss as she bent her ivory neck while her cheeks became gently red like the first ray of dawn on the forehead of hills. We silently looked at the distant horizon where the clouds were colored with the orange ray of sunset.

Our conversation was not limited to love; every now and then we drifted on to current topics and exchanged ideas. During the course of conversation Selma spoke of woman's place in society, the imprint that the past generation had left on her character, the relationship between husband and wife, and the spiritual diseases and corruption which threatened married life. I remember her saying: "The poets and writers are trying to understand the reality of woman, but up to this day they have not understood the hidden secrets of her heart, because they look upon her from behind the sexual veil and see nothing but externals; they look upon her through the magnifying glass of hatefulness and find nothing except weakness and submission."

On another occasion she said, pointing to the carved pictures on the walls of the temple, "In the heart of this rock there are two symbols depicting the essence of a woman's desires and revealing the hidden secrets of her soul, moving between love and sorrow—between affection and sacrifice, between Ishtar sitting on the throne and Mary standing by the cross. The man buys glory and reputation, but the woman pays the price."

No one knew about our secret meetings except God and the flock of birds which flew over the temple. Selma used to come in her carriage to a place named Pasha park and from there she walked to the temple, where she found me anxiously waiting for her.

We feared not the observer's eyes, neither did our consciences bother us; the spirit which is purified by fire and washed by tears is higher than what the people call shame and disgrace; it is free from the laws of slavery and old customs against the affections of the human heart. That spirit can proudly stand unashamed before the throne of God.

Human society has yielded for seventy centuries to corrupted laws until it cannot understand the meaning of the superior and eternal laws. A man's eyes have become accustomed to the dim light of candles and cannot see the sunlight. Spiritual disease is inherited from one generation to another until it has become a part of people, who look upon it, not as a disease, but as a natural gift, showered by God upon Adam. If those people found someone free from the germs of this disease, they would think of him with shame and disgrace.

Those who think evil of Selma Karamy because she left her husband's home and met me in the temple are the diseased and weak-minded kind who look upon the healthy and sound as rebels. They are like insects crawling in the dark for fear of being stepped upon by the passer-by.

The oppressed prisoner, who can break away from his jail and does not do so, is a coward. Selma, an innocent and oppressed prisoner, was unable to free herself from slavery. Was she to blame because she looked through the jail window upon the green fields and spacious sky? Will the people count her as being untruthful to her husband because she came from his home to sit by me between Christ and Ishtar? Let the people say what they please; Selma had passed the marshes which submerge other spirits and had landed in a world that could not be reached by the howling of wolves and rattling of snakes. People may say what they want about me, for the spirit who has seen the specter of death cannot be scared by the faces of thieves; the soldier who has seen the swords glittering over his head and streams of blood under his feet does not care about rocks thrown at him by the children on the streets.


Kahlil Gibran - from The Broken Wings