Showing posts with label recovery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label recovery. Show all posts

Saturday, January 30, 2010

Connecting With Folks in Recovery at PantheaCon and Other Events


Folks at that Spiral Steps online support group are discussing how to hook up with others who want to stay clean & sober, keep on their food plan, handle the energy or just otherwise deal with some things (mental, emotional, physical and spiritual) that might come up at PantheaCon this year. Similar discussions are also going on at the PantheaCon communities at Facebook and Live Journal

Update 1/31/01 I am now told that there will be meetings among a group called Pagans In Sobriety but that these are not on the schedule (and why not?) I will post contact info when available.

Meanwhile, over at Spiral Steps,
This announcement was made at the Spiral Steps online board (and I post it here with permission).
Hi folks

I'd like to address the issue of finding support at conventions and other events. All sorts of issues can come up in such places, including eating issues and encounters with our shadow sides (and the shadow sides of other people). Many of us will also run into Exs (or ex circle members or former friends) and this can be tough.

Some backstory: Over the years, I've offered workshops on starting Spiral Steps meetings at PantheaCon, and often met with our group members and other attendees trying to stay clean, sober and sane at such high energy events. (1) Please Note: I will not be attending PCon this year but others from our group will be there.

As always, I encourage people to be self empowered in these cases. In other words, if we want something done, then we have to be the ones who step up and make it happen. I am delighted to see some folks doing that and I'm happy to give support and advice to others who want to do that same thing at other events.

So, if someone cares to arrange a Spiral Steps meet at any event, regardless of focus, tradition or path then I will give them any help and advice I can. All are welcome. I can be reached at info@spiralsteps.org

Dj
Spiral Steps

(1) ..I recently did this kind of networking at the North American Discworld convention and met a lot of great folks that way.
Related Articles:

Making a Sea Change: The Spiral Steps Support Groups

Everything Has A Song: Staying Present & Sober in Recovery

Pagans in Recovery - Wikipedia

Art:
Butterfly Woman by Lisa Hunt
To view more of her work, click on the link above.

Tuesday, July 21, 2009

The Lurkers Among Us OR Someone's Soul Is Listening


Today I am posting (with permission) a share on the silent lurkers among us at the Spiral Steps on-line support group. This is a non-cross talk meeting, not a chat group; something rare in cyberspace. This means that members do not comment directly on each other's shares or give any kind of advice. In this way they avoid what makes other boards so unsafe: favoritism, cliques, unwanted advice, bullying and trolls. The post speaks to the ways in which people read what we write and how it may impact their lives in ways we'll never know. As a result, I think it's relevant to earthwise bloggers and teachers, as well as to those in recovery.

I just wrote this note to a friend today:

Our teachers are sometimes not what we expect them to be, but the lessons are always there for us if we are brave enough to accept them as given.

As someone once said, the test comes first, the lesson afterwards. Survive the test, and you're well on the path...
Here's to all those willing to learn the lesson.

Sia

The Lurkers Among Us

Someone pointed out the other day that a lot of people lurk at this board.
...Why shouldn't people lurk? They do it in real world meetings all the time. A meeting needs to be a safe place where people who need to share can, and those who need to listen, can. The point is acceptance, yes? and respecting that people here will work this program as best they can.

Or not...Some people may very well come to this board and expect others here share their experience, strength and hope without ever giving back. Maybe they don't want to take the trouble to learn how we do things here. Maybe they don't take any of this seriously at all. Maybe they haven't yet worked up the courage to tell their truth here. But do we know that?

What do we know? ...In a real world meeting, I can see heads nodding in wry agreement. I can see people smiling or focusing on me with empathy. I can hear laughter, too, and get a hug after meeting. Here it's often silence. We've poured out our hearts to a circle of relative strangers, we've told secrets, shared things our best friends don't know, and sometimes all we get is a sense of release and respectful silence. Which is what bothered one of our members who recently said that they sometimes felt like they were sharing into a void. Ah...but are they?

A lurking member may read our share and light a candle or say a prayer for us. They may include us in their meditations that evening or simply keep us tucked in their hearts for a time. They may choose to send a private email to someone they relate to here or who they feel has a need and say "Thank you for sharing. I got a lot of that." or just, "Hang in there". None of this will ever come to light at the meeting itself.

A silent member may write about what we've said
that day in their journal or inscribe it directly on their hearts. They may share our insights with a sponsor, group, friend or loved one (1) or they may take it and use it in their own life to great effect. What we say today may give them the courage to make needed changes tomorrow. We'll never know unless they choose to tell us.

This is, perhaps, the one article of faith we have here, we who are non-denominational as a group, and require no faith at all. It is this: we choose to believe that what we do here matters. It matters to us personally and it matters to people we will never meet, people who may be doing more along with us and for us then we will ever know.

We do what we do here for ourselves. We hold the mirror up to our life experience and look into that mirror as honestly as we can, trusting that fearless examination will free us from our delusions, guilt, pain and suffering. We share here to focus both our concentration and our consciousness on healing and empowerment. No one ever said it was easy; we said it was worth doing. It may help to keep in mind that what we do here helps other people, as well.

So today I am thinking about the silent ones among us. May they share or not, depending on their need. We will trust that they read this board with attention, respect, compassion, and open hearts. We will trust they recognize the gifts they are given from those who do share here and that they accept these gifts with gratitude and honor.

Regards to all here,

A Moderator for the Spiral Steps board

Endnotes:

(1) Spiral Steps is an anonymous group so that everyone's privacy is protected.

Art: Cat by Serso found here.

Related Articles:

Elders Revisited

A College of Priestesses

Monday, June 01, 2009

Everything Has A Song: Staying Present and Sober



Major Strasser: What is your nationality?
Rick: I'm a drunkard.
Captain Renault: That makes Rick a citizen of the world.
- Casablanca
When I read other blogs, I look for those small moments when the writer tells me what living their life is really like. Sometimes their posts illuminate spirit, sometimes mind and body. My favorite writers take note of the bond between all these. I found one such writing gem today at Meadowsweet & Myrrh:

Being a Druid is like searching for the presence not just of one God, but of all things--everything has Spirit, everything has a song. When I pray or meditate, I'm not just listening for that one Someone, I'm listening for the Song of the Whole World, and how we all fit into it. I quiet myself down and connect, and then I reach out to sing my own soul's song, the best way I know how. In Druidry, we can feel the whole world living and breathing around us, pulsing with sacredness and inspiration. We sing, we tell stories, we study old myths and new myths, we decorate our homes with pieces of art and expressions of nature--but mostly, we spend a lot of time trying to learn how to be fully present to the world.

Thank you, Ali, that's a lovely picture you've given me, one that mirrors my own experience. Funny enough, I find it to be a very good definition of recovery, as well.

I sit here today, a 50+ recovering addict and alcoholic and a child of same, feeling happy, grateful and peaceful. Ali's essay reminds me how lucky I am to get the chance to sing my own song.

Every very day, in meetings, in circles, from friends and strangers I hear the brave, conflicted, elegiac songs of others who are on their path. Listening well and being listened to with an open heart were not modeled in my family, these were things I had to learn. I'm still learning.

The song I tried to sing before was powerful but warped; so much so it almost killed me and I find nothing romantic now about writers or artists who drink too much; I've see too many who drank their talent away. Today my song is different. Today I will not wallow in regrets and I no longer love or write or live in pain. That's worth a song all on it's own.

Today I will take a hike, see friends, share a joke with my partner and plan (I love this) actually plan my day. I will not be desperate flotsam on the brutal tide. I will make my sunny plans, and head for the beach, and then I will laugh to see the ways in which my good plans are changed by wind and water. Even so, I will grab my board and ride the waves that are sent to me. Those waves were always there before, but now I can ride them with all my skills and talents in play. They'll help me stay balanced...more or less, depending on the day.

"In play" is such a lovely phrase. So much of my day is done "in play" even when it bears the title "work". However my life plays out, it is nothing like before. Again, I am grateful.

In the old days, riding those waves was, as a former teacher liked to say, like trying to surf with a bowling bowl tied to one ankle. Whenever I was drowning and someone sane would come by and point out that this emotional weight just might have something to do with it, I would reject their help. As the teacher said, we reply this way: "I can't loose this! This is my bowling bowl. This was my mother's bowling bowl. This is the only bowling bowl I've ever had!" What can I say? It seemed sane at the time.

I struggled for years to keep afloat carrying all that weight because I thought I couldn't live without it. Now, I can't understand how I managed to survive with it dragging me down. Today, even if I get knocked over by a wave, I can swim back to shore. The trick I find in recovery is being willing to brave the waves every day.

If you are on a path of healing, I offer you the hope that the pain you are feeling now will lead to a freedom and joy you've never known before. It gets worse before it gets better, but it does get better, I promise. Hang in there. My choices are my own now. That are not my mother's choices, they are not my fathers choices and they are not the choices of history. My choices (be they wise or no) are not filtered through any substance and I do not make them to sustain the false glamour of a sick relationship. As I write this I am 25 years clean and sober and happier then I've ever been before. I still make mistakes but any mistakes I make today are mine and mine alone and the choices I make are ones I am happy to own. They test me to the limit, these choices, but they do not break me down. Best of all, I find that I have triumphs and small, daily joys and these, too, I get to share. I can't tell you what that means to me, not entirely, but I can tell you that I rejoice in this the way a prisoner stuck in a dark cell for years rejoices every day that they live again in the light. Today, I am simply my Self, trying on a daily basis to sing that song. Whether I screech like a Banshee, croak like a tree frog or warble like a nightingale, it's my song, finally and eternally mine to sing whenever I want.

Go well, stay well,

Sia


Link:

Spiral Steps Support Groups
This is an on-line, anonymous meeting and all are welcome.

Posted in honor of Pagan values month

Wednesday, May 20, 2009

Loving



The topic for this week at the Spiral Steps on-line support group is loving. One member shared in a way I found so moving that I asked if I could reprint her share here. So, with her permission, I offer this essay by guest Blogger, Herself.
Loving
Today my thoughts on loving are a mix of events in my life.

Yesterday my mother called to say she will being seeing an Oncologist in two weeks because they believe she has uterine cancer, "don't tell your brothers, daughters or aunts yet". Loving is making the five hour drive to go to the appointment with her. Facing my fears of losing my last parent to cancer, of going through all that it entails again and this time not drinking my way through it. Loving is knowing that I can respect her wishes for secrecy and still be able to call friends in the program and tell them I am afraid. Taking care of my spirit and sobriety by reaching out. Feeling their support and knowing I can count on it.

Yesterday the postman brought a footlocker to my door, sent from a young man in Iraq. He loves my daughter and has invented a game to pass the time they must be separated. She must wait for his call to get the combination to the lock, inside their are clues that she must follow and at the end there will be some sort of silly irreverent thing that will make her (and the rest of the family) laugh. This is loving.

Today he called, we thought to give her the code but he had forgotten it and we had to cut the lock off anyway! LOL. We all will tease him about that for weeks. This is loving.

Today I watched as she took out his uniform shirts and buried her face in them because they smelled of him. My heart is so afraid for them both, I have to work hard at surrounding them in loving light to keep the darkness of fears out. Still I cry as I watch her take the shirt to bed with her, tears in her eyes, soft smile on her lips. I call to her as she passes my door, "enjoy your dreams Lovey". This is loving.

Not always sweet, not always romance or sexual attraction. Sometimes requiring all the strength we have to give or acceptance we do not wish to practice. Sometimes requiring us to reach out and ask for help, when our ego would have us isolate and live in the fears. Sometimes requiring a goodbye and grief.

The intent that created a place to share what I don't understand, is loving.

Loving is all these things for me.

Namaste and Thank you.

Herself
*******

May you have such loving in your own life.


Sia

Related Articles:

Making a Sea Change: The Spiral Steps Support Groups

Painting: Day by Robert Edward Hughes

Sunday, October 05, 2008

Karma, Love and Cage-Free Eggs

There seems to be an interesting karmic juxtaposition in my life right now, one that involves the history of California, especially it's egg farms and immigrant history; a history which strongly influenced both the early hippies and a good many Pagans, if they would but know it. Add to that mix, old lovers, diamonds, Jewish law firms, and gay marriage.

I can explain.

I'm chatting with an old flame on the phone: We were together through much of college and grad school and after we parted, he went on to become quite successful in his chosen field. We reconnected four years ago after many years of silence between us. (It happens when you love each other for a long time but realize in the end that you both want very different things.) (1) Our renewal of friendship these many years later has been a grace note in my life. I've known very few people as gifted and powerful as he is now who are also good human beings. As things happened, we reconnected just before his sister became ill and eventually died of cancer, as mine had done some years before. Both of our sisters were addicts and alcoholics. Both got clean and sober before they died. Both needed our help to stay that way so they could find a good death and be ready for whatever comes next. If you've ever been glad to pay off a karmic debt to someone you'll know what I mean when I say that this reconnection and mutual support has been a source of healing for us both.

That night we were taking about his kids. I've never wanted children of my own, and I've never regretted that choice, but I'm very glad that he was able to have a family. Unlike his own dad, he is a very involved and loving father. Something in the conversational air - you may call it chance, I call it Goddess - caused me to ask about the child of another attorney and his wife, people I knew when I lived in Los Angeles. I remembered this couple fondly, in part because the woman was a teacher and one of the few people connected to The Firm who could talk about books and culture at all those legal dinners and cocktail parties, where I, a eco-feminist with a lit degree was very much a fish out of water. The boy's father was one of those "brain the size of a planet" folks who still managed to be humble, considerate and kind. (2) They were, as I remember, very good parents. That's not an easy thing to be when your prestige law firm requires you to work ungodly hours. The Firm had, as I remember, two unspoken tracks for women lawyers and since this was the early 80's they had precious few of those. One track let you have a reasonable work schedule and time with your family. The other allowed you to make partner. Your call. (3).

Support groups are filled with the children of this workaholic culture, many of whom have the infamous "hole in their soul" where a parent should be. But not, it seems, in this case. The little boy I remember so fondly is now a fine young man, and a lawyer himself. He and his partner recently got married or as married as you can be when you are gay and live in these United States. At their wedding they asked friends and family not to give gifts but to donate funds to support the fight against Proposition 8, which would deny the rights of gay and lesbians to marry. I haven't seen him since he was a child, but I must say, I'm glad to hear that he turned out so well.

The Pagan Sphinx has a post about Proposition 8 and the fight for gay marriage rights in this country. She writes:

Right now, the other side is out-raising us by a wide margin. Soon, their ads – undoubtedly filled with lies and distortions about Prop 8, about us and about our families – will be on the air. Our ads will tell the real story — how real families will be affected if Prop 8 passes. Their ads won’t.

Love and Cage-Free Eggs:

Currently, both Presidential candidates argue that "marriage is between a man and a woman". One supposes that they could not get elected if they did otherwise. Let us hope they open their hearts and minds.

I plan to keep an eye on this issue and on the fate of Proposition 2 in my old state, where farming is both personal and political. This proposition addresses cruelty in the caging of farm animals. We need to change the way chickens and other farm animals are treated in this country. The SF Chronicle writes:

The measure comes at a time when animal rights issues have grabbed the national spotlight, and the consumer demand for cage-free eggs has captured the attention of national chain stores and fast-food restaurants.

Supporters say not only will laying hens have healthier lives if they are raised in chicken houses where they are free to roam the floor, but the price of cage-free eggs will go down. Currently 5 to 8 percent of the eggs produced in the state come from cage-free chickens. California is responsible for about 6 percent of all the nation's table eggs, a $330 million industry in 2007.

Florida, Arizona, Colorado and Oregon have passed similar laws involving rights for swine and veal. But California's referendum is the first to demand that all egg-producing chickens in the state be cage free.


If this issue is important to you, look for organic, cage-free eggs when you go to the grocery store. Your body - and perhaps your karma - will be all the better for it.

Sia

Endnotes:

(1) He wanted to get married, stay in L.A. and have kids. I did not. Eventually, both of us went on to find the lifestyles that suited us and we each choose partners based on heart-sense and shared values as well as attraction and romance. Perhaps we had learned something from our time together that helped us make different choices the next time love was offered - I like to think so,

(2) He was such an interesting guy. Among other things, he had clerked for a Supreme Court judge right out of law school, and worked his way through Harvard by working for Jewish diamond merchants. His stories open my eyes to a closed and little known world and I credit these stories for my life-long interest in the history of jewelry making, gems and semi-precious stones. To this day, while I admire ancient and antique jewelry (and have attended gem and jewelry exhibits all over the world), I have always refused to own or wear diamonds. The cost is, quite literally, too high.

This particular law firm began because two Jewish lawyers could not get work in the traditional white shoe law firms of the 50's and 60's. It was an interesting mix of high minded social politics and fiscal conservatism. Most of the attorneys I met there were Republicans, which they saw as the "responsible" party when it came to matters of money and the economy. (Ironic, no?) In those days, my friend was one of the few Christians hired at this firm. Having lived a privileged WASP existence before that point (I would say it was charmed but not rich, he had to work his way through college and grad school just like the rest of us) he experienced for the first time what it was like to be a minority. A life long Republican (something that was the cause of some heated conversations between the two of us for many years) he will now be voting for Obama.

(3) My friend is now a senior partner and he has worked to change that. He admits, though, that while he is admired for being a dedicated father when he takes time off to coach or attend to his two son's sports events or takes family vacations, if a woman in this same law firm (and there are more of them now, thanks to him) does the same thing, she is still seen by the other attorneys there as "not quite committed to the team."

Photo: Diamond encrusted Faberge Egg and gold carriage from the Russian Gifts and Souvenirs website. These little eggs have a fascinating history, which you can read about at their website.

Related Articles:

The Organic Farming Movement: Trailblazers and Pioneers

Gay Weddings: What to Expect?

Certificate of Inequality

Hate Crimes Towards the Other

San Diego Mayor Supports Gay Marriage

Differently Oppressed Folks Need Protection Too

Links:

Shumei Natural Agriculture

Friday, June 06, 2008

Energy Vampires

(sigh) We have way too many of these in our community.

Lest I depress you, please see the earlier post on Good Teachers for a joyful antidote.

Circles are not meant to be the place where we play out our drama and trauma. I tell my students to "Bring your best self into circle and leave the whining at home".

Real trouble happens, and everyone needs a bit help now and then or a shoulder to cry on, me included. That's what support groups, therapy, self help books, meditation, journaling and personal introspection, and sometimes medical help, are for. Our Priestess can be our role model, coach and a guide. She is not there to fix us. In most cases, that is well within in our power to do. It's our journey - not one else can walk the path for us.

It's important to note that we can wear out our friends (and our welcome) with the same old complaints. At some point, we all have to stop talking about what's wrong and start making changes in our lives.

There are mystical words of power to use in such situations: They are

* I can * I will * I choose *

Sometimes, all we can do is get through the day, and that's OK. We all need to take small steps some days, so we make the choices we can make there and then. At other times, we need to focus on the big picture and not let our busy lives distract us from what is really important. That is when we bring forth our will to it's furtherst extent and say "This is the life I want." But it is the small, daily choices that make that life possible.

The path to recovery and healing has many tools and many facets. Some wisdom is often very simple. I like this one: "Success means getting up one more time then we fall down." Seriously. We get up again, we take what we learned and we move forward. That's how it works.

Or, we can can find a rut and furnish it. Our call.

Much of what I need now on my spiritual path, I learned as a kid: Get up. Put one foot in front of the other, fall down, laugh, cry, play with whatever you find in front of you, check out that potential new friend over there, watch how the big kids do it, pet the kitty, hug the dog, get up again. Toddlers are very Zen.

To those among us who are sympathetic listeners I say this: If someone asks us for help and we give good advice (or better yet, avoid giving advice but ask the right questions) and we constantly hear the response "Yes, but...." then we are hearing people who do not want to change, they just want to complain. Bless them, and let them go. They have some more learning to do. In such cases, we are do one any good. In fact, by enabling them (1), we are simply getting in the way, and wasting our own precious spirit in the process.

Here are some helpful tips for dealing (kindly, firmly and compassionately) with Energy Vampires.

Energy vampires are everywhere and it's important to have as good and positive boundaries as we can so they don't suck us dry. If we have such people in our life on a regular basis, then it's time to ask, "What is is about me that attracts these people?"

Sia

Endnotes:

As Eli H. Newberger notes in his book The Men They Will Become, there are two sides to this coin. The term enabling indicates behavior that tolerates, sometimes ignores or denies. or even promotes self-destructive patterns of behavior by another person. Enabling interactions include explanation, problem-solving, and empathy. Constraining interactions are distracting, devaluing, or judgmental of another person's behavior or opinions.

Sunday, March 09, 2008

If You're Such A Goddess, Then Why Do You Treat Yourself Like S%*t?



I came to Paganism because this spiritual path respects women and supports our connection to all living things. It does not treat my body as something shameful and it does not view consensual sex as sinful. The Pagan path empowers us to make choices that enrich our lives and the lives of those around us. So I was surprised to find that so many Pagans abuse themselves with what I call the Three Pagan Demons: stress, mess and excess. (1) We women, in particular, rejoice to finally find a place where we can celebrate our connection to the divine feminine but very often we continue to treat our precious Selves like s%*t. I, for one, struggle with the need to make healthy choices every day, so I was inspired to read Deborah Oak's wonderful article on just this point:
Last year after Pantheacon, I had a dream of Margot Adler telling me something important that I couldn't remember upon waking. Margot caused a stir last year at Pantheacon by challenging Pagans to take better care of our health, of making exercise part of our lives. Like many others in the community, I have heartily embraced the philosophy of “eat, drink, and be merry”. For real health and well being, that should best be followed by a good walk. Many of us prefer a good book. I had applauded Margot’s challenge last year, but I hadn’t truly listened to it.

I'm no Margot Adler, but this is something I have been saying for many years. In 1999 I put my time and energy where my mouth was. Anyone who wants support in making healthy choices is welcome here:


These groups are based on earthwise ethics, they deal with any and all issues. People of all faiths (or none) are welcome. The on-line meeting is open 24/7. Sharing is done anonymously. These are non cross-talk meetings, members use I Messages when they share (2).

Are you trying to make new, healthier or more positive life choices? Please know that you are not alone.

Regards,

Sia

Related Articles:

Making A Sea Change: The Spiral Steps Support Groups

Heal This by Inanna

Related Articles:

Mural: Update 10/10:
I originally found a photo of this piece listed on-line as Red Goddess from the Mission Creek Mural by Lillian Sizemore and Laurel True. It's a piece I've seen before in my many visits to San Francisco and I've always loved it. I've since be told by a reader that I should list this particular image on the mural in this way:

TONANTSIN RENACE
at corner 16th St. at Sanchez St. in San Francisco
Castro District
By Colette Crutcher, 1998

This image is one of the most popular one's I've ever posted, so I've added a bit more info about it below:

Here is Ms. Crutcher's homepage. She is a member of a very interesting group called Nordic 5 Arts and she leads the 16th Avenue Tiled Steps Project.

This goddess is from Aztec mythology. Here is a flickr photo of the whole piece taken by ehoyer, who does some wonderful photography work in San Francisco.

My thanks to Winterjade for the photo. To see more SF Mosiacs go here

If you live in the Bay Area, please support the Mission Creek Bikeway and Greenbelt

Endnotes:

(1) Looking back now, I am surprised that I was surprised. Paganism, like any other path, works with human nature and many Pagans come from dysfunctional families and systems where they did not get caring for themselves as a tool in our life's tool box. We humans often prefer, as the saying goes, the devil we know to the bliss we could have, especially when that bliss involves effort, courage, hope and change.

(2) Cross Talk & I Messages:

All Spiral Steps meetings are Non-cross talk meetings. Member's use "I Messages” (I think, I feel, I will, I believe as opposed to You are, You should, etc.) The other members will take what they need from our shares, and leave the rest. Those who want advice can ask for it, and the members will then share with them off the board on a one to one basis. In this way, they keep this circle open as a safe and secure place to share whatever is true for them.

Saturday, August 11, 2007

Happy Anniversary to Spiral Steps


It's a little bit late in coming, but I'd like to say Happy Anniversary to all those in the Spiral Steps Support Group. These meetings are now 6 years old.

You can read how and why they started at the new blog.

Homepage

Online Support Group - all are welcome

All good things,

Sia

Saturday, May 05, 2007

Recovering From Our Culture: Why Words Matter

Off the Shelf:

She Who Changes: Re-imagining the Divine in the World by Carol P. Christ

The Dance of the Dissident Daughter by Sue Monk Kidd

Colonize This!: Young Women of Color on Today's Feminism (Live Girls) - Daisy Hernández, Bushra Rehman (Editors)

Crones Don't Whine: Concentrated Wisdom for Juicy Women by Jean Shinoda Bolen

Many Roads One Journey: Moving Beyond the 12 Steps by Dr. Charlotte Kasl.

A series of recent events has got me thinking about words and the power they hold.


During the Civil Rights era, a famous case called Brown vs Board of Education challenged the White's Only school policy in the south. (1) Attorneys with the NAACP (future justice Thurgood Marshall among them) used Kenneth Clark's Doll Study to show the psychological effects of the so-called "separate but equal" system on black children. In this study, psychologists showed little black children two dolls, one black and one white, and asked them to describe them. They described the white dolls as beautiful, smart, and sweet. They described the black dolls - the ones that looked just like them - as ugly stupid and lazy. That is how insidious Jim Crow culture was; little children clearly understood the comments, behavior and assumptions of adults around them and they interpreted this to mean that that they did not matter, and were somehow consider less worthy than other people by their very nature. (1)

We have made progress as a culture, and it was evident when the Women of Rutgers stood up with dignity and grace and pride and denounced the insults they had received.

And we still have a long ways to go.

Why This Matters:

When someone tells me that it doesn't matter that generations of girls grew up with a white, male god, and were told that they were not allowed to be priests, and were somehow more sinful (because of Eve's disobedience, and their own sexual nature), and that they were even occasions of sin in others and must be shamed and shut away, then I say this:

What we say and how we say it matters a great deal. The images we use, the words we use, the assumptions about power and worth we hold in mainstream culture all suggest that men are better and women are less important, even less important to God, because we are not, after all, made in "His" lordly image.

Inclusion

We are told that these are just words and that they should not matter. We are criticized for making too much out of too little. The same thing was said when the NAACP objected to the disgraceful treatment of their people in the Jim Crow south. A "Whites Only" sign is more then just words.

The Witches' Voice recently published an amusing, heartfelt and thought provoking article by Rabbi Geoffrey Dennis on the challenge posed by including everyone at our spiritual table. It is based on his experience as the only non-Christian in the room on Texas Clergy Day:

The superintendent, an affable old scion of Texas, began talking about church-state separation. Not so much about how it limits church participation in the public schools, really, but more about how were the best ways for ministers to work around it. ....That means, ” he continued, “that we’re not going to allow hate groups like the Klan, neo-Nazis, or Wiccans get access to our children…”

As if seized by a dybbuk, my innate Jewish need to kibitz took me over. My hand shot in the air. Flustered by the interruption, he paused mid-presentation. “…Yes?”

“Excuse me, I’m Rabbi Dennis, I’m new to the area, but did I understand that you just lumped Wiccans in with hate groups?”

“Well, yes, we feel…”

“Pardon me, ” I went on, “But Wiccans are not a hate group, they are a religious movement – they have chaplains in the United States military, for God’s sake – and they are entitled to the same access as any other religious group. And as for this whole concept of ‘limited equal access’, ”I went on, “That sounds like code for ‘selective access’ – if you are going to allow any religious groups to operate inside the schools, then you have to allow all religions to do so, that’s the law…”

It was all boilerplate religious freedom rhetoric, but at the time I suddenly felt like I was a Jew arguing for freedom of conscious before the Holy Office of the Inquisition.

My speech effectively ended the presentation. He muttered a summary statement and invited us to enjoy the cold cuts buffet. As for my fellow clergy, half sat in aghast silence, the other half buzzed among themselves in amused whispers. At lunch one of the Methodist ministers simply chuckled and said to me, “Well, you certainly know how to kill a party.”

A Modest Proposal:

To anyone who thinks that words still do not matter, and that I should just read "her" whenever I read "him" or or see "her" when the image is male, I say this:

I would like to offer a modest proposal. It's this: Men have had power over the history we read, the words we use, the money we spend and the wars we fight for centuries. They have carved and painted images of the powerful male for us to admire and portrayed women as the weaker sex. They have projected this patriarchal view of Father God and Male Leader for over 5,000 years and hidden any evidence to the contrary. Now it's our turn.

We will use only Her words and Her images for the next 5,000 years. Only women can be Priests and Presidents, and let's not pay men anywhere near what we make for the same work (assuming we let them do that work at all). Let literature, film and music portray women as powerful and men as weak tools and victims and then let us use our religions to suggest that they have a good but lesser place, and that is in the home. We will control their sexual behavior and their reproductive rights, of course, because they are not mature enough to make these decisions on their own. Meanwhile, our charming boys can "rule" the domestic sphere, and we women will honor them for their dedication and compassion by praising them from the pulpit while refusing to pass, let alone fund, child care, health care, education reform or social initiatives that would serve them and their families.

And here we ask (as another modest proposal once did), "Who in their right minds would want to subjugate, humiliate and legislate another human being in this way?"

It's a long list - How much time ya got?

The Blessings of the Goddess

To embrace the womanly part of the divine, to see ourselves as holy, connected and worthy is a necessary part of our spiritual practice and our personal healing. One way we do that, is to find that part of the sacred that is also a part of you and me.

To be honest, I think that the nature of the divine is beyond the issues of gender, race and culture. I also believe that divine is connected to all these at the same time. When I perform a Celtic rites to celebrate Bridget, I am connected to all the Celtic women in my line, and to all of the power and the sacredness that this implies. As women who were told that only men could do or be certain things, we find healing in rejecting that negativity and power in supporting our precious and poetic spirit.

Pagans and Others in Recovery:

Words are dangerous when they support ignorance and hate, but they can also have a less obvious, but insidious effect. One example of this would be the experience of Pagans and others in traditional 12 Step groups.

Pagans, feminists, gays and lesbians and people of color often don't feel welcome in rooms where God is (always and only) spoken of as a white male Christian construct. Supposedly, these are non-denomination meetings, but Pagans and others know that the Christian bias in 12 Step meetings (as well as the heterosexual bias, the well meaning, but limited world view in their literature, and the outdated assumptions about addict and codependent psychology) is a very touchy subject.

Some of their members get it. Many don't.

Why are you so upset, they ask? This isn't a Christian God at these meetings. We clearly state that we speak of "God (singular) as you understand Him."

(sigh)

Pay no attention to the use of The Lord's Prayer after every meeting.

The use of this Christian Testament prayer is not enshrined in either the 12 Steps or the 12 Traditions. It is simply a habit, and a bad one at that. These are good and decent people, overall, but it does not occur to them to wonder if a Jewish, Hindu or Buddhist person would feel welcome at a meeting that insists on saying this prayer. I don't believe that 12 Steps meetings do this to be mean (although I could wish that they would open their minds and their hearts a bit wider). I believe that they are comfortable sitting in the middle of the mainstream and they just don't get it that others follow a different, and equally valid path.

So, here we are, back at my modest proposal: Let's start today by rewriting all the texts in AA to say only "Goddess as you understand Her" and talk only of "God the Mother" as a Black African female, and speak only of Yemaya and never Christ in these meetings. I'm sure it won't matter. It's only words, after all.

Focusing on the Solution:

Some Pagans in Recovery choose to attend Spiral Steps meetings or Pagan-only 12 Step meetings, and avoid traditional 12 Step groups entirely. Some Pagans cherish the fellowship (sic) and recovery that they find in traditional meetings so much that they simply find ways to live with the language. Some Pagans go because these traditional meetings are the only available recovery meetings in their area. (2) I know Pagans and feminists who attend traditional meetings, but they also use words like Her, Goddess and Mother when they do the readings, and in their shares. And if some of the AA old guard find that it bit jarring when they hear that then perhaps it will cause them to question how women have felt in hearing Him, God and Father for so long. (3)

Where Do We Go From Here?

Firing one idiotic shock jock for calling a team of beautiful, strong, educated young women "nappy headed Ho's" doesn't even begin to cover the extent of harm done spiritually, psychologically and physically to women all over the world that the use of such language and the assumptions behind it support. Although it was a nice start. One hopes that people will remember those splendid students, and let Don Imus fade into obscurity, where he belongs. As the mainstream media turns it's attention to other matters (I hear that Paris is in the news again) let us continue this dialog among ourselves, but let's take it further afield. Questioning the words we use, all the words, sacred, sexual and mundane, is a sure, firm step towards healing.

Sia

(1) These were, in fact, a series of cases.

(2) For information on finding or starting a Spiral Steps group in your area, write to Dj at info@spiralsteps.org or visit the website to join the cyber support group: www.spiralsteps.org

(3) For more in this issue, read Many Roads, One Journey: Moving Beyond the 12 Steps by Dr. Charlotte Kasl.

Sunday, March 25, 2007

Out of the Frying Pan, Into the Fire: Dysfunctional Families and Group Energy

Off the Shelf

Wheels of Life: A Users Guide to the Chakra System

The Sevenfold Journey

Eastern Body, Western Mind: Psychology and the Chakra System as a Path to the Self

- all by Anodea Judith

John Bradshaw On The Family by John Bradshaw

Truth or Dare by Starhawk

100% of all money made from book sales via the Powell & Amazon links at this website go to support non-profit efforts by FCE, such as the Pagan Voting Project, the Spiral Steps Support Groups, The Gaia's Guardian's Project, and the Earthwise Networking Project. Information on all these projects is available at www.fullcircleevents.org

Sia's Post

For those who are interested, this article by Dr. Anodea Judith (with a Forward by yours truly) now appears at The Witches' Voice:



Out of the Frying Pan, Into the Fire: Dysfunctional Families & Group Energy



Excerpt from Forward: This article, a powerful triple weaving of ideas put forth by Starhawk and John Bradshaw, along with personal wisdom she gained working in the Pagan community, was written in 1989 by a counselor named Anodea Judith. In her essay (which appears below) the author discusses the roles, which many of us learned to adopt as children, and shows how these roles can later haunt us as adults. She describes how assuming these roles again in later life (also known as “working from our shadow sides”) can sabotage attempts to build community and undermine even our best projects by poisoning our group's energy system and supporting toxic relationships.

Dr. Judith does not simply bemoan the problem; she also offers practical, common sense solutions. Anyone who has encountered dysfunctional behavior in a circle, coven, class, festival, ritual group, organization, or workplace will find her article both relevant and useful.

Share it as you see fit.

Sia





Saturday, March 03, 2007

Too Much of a Good Thing? Spending & Hoarding in the Pagan Community


I have a dear friend, let's call her The Librarian, who I've known for over 20 years. We met when we were both working in an academic library and among the things we share are a deep love of books and book collecting. Unlike your average bibliophiles, we are not interested in first editions. We are interested in knowledge, esoteric and otherwise. As a result, we both have large reference libraries on a vast array of subjects. The running joke is that we must have been two lowly scroll loving scribes in ancient Alexandria. Having seen the world's greatest library destroyed in a previous lifetime, we now collect books, both fiction and non, with a fierce, protective passion.

As excuses go, it'll do.

Got Books?

We're not alone in this. Many Pagans I know feel this way about their libraries. It's as if we were all saving this information, not just for ourselves, but for future generations. As book lovers our biggest fear seems to be that some really good stuff will go out of print and never be seen again. Given both the state of publishing and the rise of censorship, that fear is not far fetched. For example, my partner collects Science Fiction classics, some of which have indeed gone out of print (and what is this world coming to when great stories die of neglect like that?). I'm thinking of starting a club with t-shirts for our members that say "They got the library at Alexandria. They're not getting mine!".

Is Your Stuff Making You Sick?

The difference a healthy vs an unbalanced relationship to one's possessions comes down to two things: Clutter and Spending.

I personally dislike clutter, so my books and other items have a place in our shelves. If not, I sell them, give them away, or store them carefully away for future use. I've known people who can't walk around in their houses for all the books they have. Such careless hoarding is bad for the books (Aaaah!!) and it's also bad for us. Books and knick knacks easily collect dust and dirt and a cluttered environment can actually make us sick and depressed.

Sometimes it really is best to let go of a few of our treasures. I know, I know - it's hard for me, too. But I keep in mind that other people can use these things. It can be marvelous to set them free to do some good, elsewhere. That's why the Goddess made Craig's List.

She who dies with the most toys.....wins?

We all know that things can't make us happy but many of us act as if they can. Our culture as a whole, as well as the Pagan subculture, hasn't learned this lesson yet. It's as if, like the ancient Egyptians, we think we can take it all with us.

I've learned the hard way that I can't make a haven here at home amid chaos, clutter, and mess. So I've worked hard to get organized, live a bit more simply and let my soul breath. I love my books because they support beauty and meaning in my life. When my collection no longer does that, I have to reconsider what I'm holding on to, and why. I've lightened my personal load of "stuff" several times in my life, and it's freed me each time.

Today I'm still unpacking boxes from our move eight months ago. I'm still deciding what to keep and what to sell or give away. We got rid of a lot of things before we moved and now, faced with the last of our boxes, I am willing to let go of yet more things I once thought it important to keep. What I try not to do is beat myself up for having these things in the first place. That really doesn't serve me. These items have served me well in the past, now it's time to bless them and let them go.

One of everything. With a ribbon.

For some of us, it can go beyond a few boxes. Some of us moved well past the Pack Rat stage and are deep into a classic case of Hoarding. For those interested in that subject, this is a useful title:

Buried in Treasures: Compulsive Acquiring, Saving and Hoarding

Compulsive hoarding often goes hand in hand with compulsive buying and spending. Here are some useful articles on those topics:

Compulsive spending and Overcoming Compulsive Hoarding

Shiny Things!

Despite what many claim, Pagans as a group are not poor, and they love to spend money. Ask any Pagan vendor about this. They can you how much our people love to shop and how much they spend doing it.

Poor Me

I've seen this scene hundreds of of times at conventions: One minute a Pagan is crying poor for all around to hear, saying they can't afford a small item at one booth (and trying to get that vendor to drop the price). The next moment they'll drop $60.00 on a different item in another booth, without blinking.

The moral of this story is: If they want it, they will spend.

Awwwk! Mine!

In wonder just how many Pagans there are out there with closets full of ritual tools, occult supplies, oils, stones, clothes, incense, jewelry, (what my friend Snakemoon calls "Pagan Bling") as well as tarot cards, altar supplies, costumes, and other goodies? Now let's be fair: Who among us did not spend a bit too much on "stuff" when we first discovered the Craft? I certainly did. Many of us are like ravens; we'll bring any bright and shiny object back to our nest, regardless of whether we need it or not. Most of us grow out of it.

I Can't Be Overdrawn, I Still Have Checks Left!

The cliche, as I've said, is that Pagans despise money and believe that it is somehow more sacred not to have any.

Piffle.

I would put it another way; some Pagans fear money (or the responsibility that comes with it) and some do not. (1)

Pagans with a gift for abundance know that money is simply an element, one with it's own unique energy, much like earth, fire, wind or water. It can be useful or it can harmful. It can be a positive force in our lives or a negative one. The relationship we have with both money and things depends entirely on us.

Abundance

I know a good many Pagans who are careful and responsible with their funds. Some of these folks are professionals, but not all of them. Some Pagans have a families, and wish to provide a good future for their children. Others have various efforts they choose to support or personal goals they wish to achieve. They all know this mystery: In order to do well and do some good in this life they have to use money as a resource, and they have learned how to manage it wisely.

That's not always easy. I know, I struggle with it all the time. I love buying books and I like my various hobbies and I like giving to charity, too. I also know that I have to save for a rainy day, and stay out of debt. Much of money wisdom involves planning ahead, and delaying gratification. Try offering that workshop at a festival.

Not So Much a Hobby, As an Obsession

Over the years, I've seen our people spend money on the supplies for their hobbies, such as beading or quilting or costuming like there is no tomorrow. Some people do this with three or four different passions at once. I suspect that their real hobby is not creating or crafting, but simply acquiring the bits and pieces that go along with it. If we crafty Pagans aren't careful, both the clutter and the cost can overwhelm us, and the fun we once had in our hobby is lost. Spending money on such a scale, without having any real joy in doing so, is not enjoying true abundance, it's just sad.

Consumer Culture: Now There's An Oxymoron

Why do we do it? Why to we spend money we don't have on things that we (or our kids) don't need and make ourselves miserable in the process? Well, for one thing, spending is a rush. It lets us feel powerful. It allows us escape our daily grind, and live our fantasy life, at least for a little while. At least, that is, until the bills come due.

When I realized how money really works in this world, I put myself on a budget. I simply do not spend what I do not have. The only exceptions are emergencies, and by that I mean, unexpected car repairs, illness, and such. Buying that book I want is not an emergency, even if I think it will help me somehow. If I want something, I have to save up in order to buy it. This not something most people in Western culture know how to do anymore. Credit cards are a deadly form of instant gratification. Who among does not know someone who is drowning in debt? A debt burden adds terrible stress to many lives, leading in turn, to feelings of hopelessness and depression. All this feeds our issues, additions and avoiding behaviors, and so the cycle continues....

People who want to spend can always find an excuse to do so. All addicts, no matter the addiction, excel at making excuses for their behavior. The trick is to stay conscious, and watch out for those rationalizations. Otherwise, we might not listen to our Higher Self; that part which nurtures, loves and protects us. That part knows the difference between a Want and a Need.

Spending and hoarding are known process addictions, and professionals in the field take them seriously. Help is out there for those who struggle with this problem - the trick is to want that help.

There are several good books and articles on this subject. By and large they agree that folks who have this compulsion are:

a) Trying to fill a hole in their soul,
b) Trying to live the life they would like to have and avoid the reality they do have and,
c) Often struggling with addictive/compulsive behavior.

Sometimes it's all three issues, coupled with physical issues such as OCD, and depression. All this which makes it very hard to find a healthy balance for our selves in a Consumer Culture.

Such a culture is bad for the planet, and it's bad for us.

Take a Deep Breath

When a behavior is hurting us, it's time to take stock and make change. While some people need drugs to help them cope with compulsive shopping or hoarding behaviors, most of us just need the desire to lighten our load. We can do this with the help of group, if we like, or maybe just one friend at our side saying "OK. Take a deep breath. Now, let's start sorting things”. I've had good friends do that with me over the years, and I've done it for them. It really does help to have someone objective there to help you sort through the various energy bombs (2) that may be lurking in your closet. Prioritizing makes you think, and when stuff is sitting there it in piles in front of you, you get a healthy reality check. And you get some hope. Handling this is like handling anything else: Take it one baby step at a time, one day at a time.

Lighten Up:


For those of you wrestling with issues like these, hang in there. Balance is possible. Go easy on yourselves, make small changes every day, and find a support group of some kind to cheer you on and lend you their experience, strength and hope.

We're Pagans. We can do this.

Go well, stay well,

Sia

Note: using keywords on Google like compulsive spending, compulsive shopping or compulsive acquiring, etc will give lots of useful information.

Fair Warning: It can be temping to buy a bunch of books on this subject that can "fix" us. I've found it useful to buy one book, read it through, and then get the next one after I've finished. Otherwise, it's just another pile of books we'll read "later" and then we've spent more money then we should.


Off the Shelf:

A Gentle Madness: Bibliophiles, Bibliomanes, and the Eternal Passion for Books by Nicholas Basbanes

Making Peace with the Things in Your Life: Why Your Papers, Books, Clothes, and Other Possessions Keep Overwhelming You and What to Do About It by Cindy Glovinsky

Endnotes:

(1) Pagans & Money is a very tricky subject.

Some Pagans don't have a lot of stuff or don't care about making money; they live simply, by choice. Others are struggling to make ends meet because they spend their money unwisely or made life choices that deny them greater means. Still others struggle with finances through no fault of their own. Bad stuff happens.

You can always tell the difference between these types if you look at their attitudes towards abundance. The first kind are peaceful and fulfilled. The second kind are full of envy and complaints. The third kind just gets on with life, and does what they can to make their future better than their past.

Those who are poor through mismanagement like to blame everyone but themselves for their circumstances. They will be the first to tell us all that money is somehow evil, and that those who earn it are "sell outs" while wishing for it all the same.

For once and for all, let's be clear.

1. We are Pagans, and we do not need to conform to any one else's guilt and shame around money.

2. The quote most people think of, when they think of morals and money is one most people got taught in Sunday school and most got it wrong. The Christian Testament (Timothy 6:10, King James Version) does not say that "Money is the root of all evil". It says that "The love of money is the root of all evil." Our Christian friends have it right: Money isn't the problem folks, it's greed that's the problem. (For a good example of this, simply compare Enron to Oprah). So, please, let's stop buying tickets on that particular guilt trip. Rather than sitting around whining on and on about how poor and perfect we are, wouldn't it be better to make enough money for our needs, and then use the extra bits to do some good?

(2) My thanks to T. for this very useful concept.

Art: Cleopatra by Waterhouse. The Egyptian Queen is best known for her love of learning. No. I tell a lie. But the girl did love to read. She studied philosophy, literature, art, music, history, and medicine, and spoke six different languages.