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Title: The Spiral Dance Author: Starhawk Date: 1979 Language: en Topics: pagan, religion, feminist Source: https://starlightsanctum.files.wordpress.com/2016/02/the-spiral-dance-by-starhawk.pdf
This book could not have come into being without the love and support of
my former husband, Ed Rahsman, and my mother, Dr. Bertha Simos.
For the opportunity to explore and strive to understand the Mysteries, I
thank the members of my covens: in Compost, Guidot, Quest, Diane, Beth,
Arden, Mother Moth, Amber, Valerie, and Paul; in Honeysuckle, Laurel,
Brook, Susan, Zenobia, Diane, and especially Kevyn, for the added
inspiration I would also like to acknowledge those who have taught me
the Craft; and Cora Anderson, Ruth, Z. Budapest, and the others.
I am also grateful for the support and encouragement of the Bay Area
Pagan community and Witches of the Covenant of the Goddess, and for
friends and companions too numerous to be listed here, in particular, I
want to thank my brother-in-spirit, Alan Acacia, and my
brother-in-flesh, Mark Simos, for their contributions; Patty and Nada,
for being there in the beginning; Ann, for her inspiration; and Carol
Christ and Naomi Goldenberg, for their help in reaching a wider
community.
Finally, I want to express my appreciation to my editor, Marie Cantlon,
for her sensitivity and courage in taking on this subject, and to Sarah
Rush, for all her help.
To all of you, to She Who Sings in the Heart, and He Who Dances, this
book is dedicated.
I want to thank the members of Wind Hags, Matrix, and especially the
Reclaiming Collective. The rituals we have made together, the work we
have done teaching, writing, and organizing, and our s, conflicts,
jokes, and discussions through the years form the matrix from which my
own changes have been born-I have been extremely fortunate in my
associations in the publishing world. Marie Cantlon, who edited the
first edition, has remained my good friend and editor throughout this
decade and for all of my subsequent books. She has also edited many of
the books listed in the bibliography, being a true mother of this
movement. Jan Johnson and Yvonne Keller at Harper & Row have been
supportive and understanding editors of this edition. My agent, Ken
Sherman, has done his best over the last ten years to keep me solvent.
Pleides Akasha assisted me in preparing this manuscript with great
cheerfulness. Raven Moonshadow reviewed the Tables of Correspondences.
The Black Cats, members of my collective household, put up with my
complaining and called me to dinner. And I want to thank my friend Kate
Kaufman for suggesting the idea to do this edition.
While I was writing these revisions, two members of the old Honeysuckle
coven have made the transition into Mother in a literal sense, giving
birth to two beautiful daughters: Nora and Vivian Sarah. To all of you,
thanks and love.
I want to thank my editor, Liz Perle, and all the folks at Harper San
Francisco for their warm support for this new edition. I am also deeply
grateful for the continuing friendship and inspiration and guidance of
Marie Cantlon, who edited the first edition of this book. My agent, Ken
Sherman, has also hung in with me for the long haul.
I am fortunate having the love and support of many people around me. My
husband, David, keeps me smiling.
My housemates and magical partners keep me going, and Madrone and Jodi
Selene in different ways attempt to keep me organized. Mary Ellen Donald
trained me in the magical skill of drumming. But most of all, I want to
acknowledge the inspiration of working with the extended web of
Reclaiming teachers, organizers, and community folks as we cocreate
magic together.
And I acknowledge with sorrow the passing of my mother, Bertha Simos; of
Raven Moonshadow; and of Mother Moth. All of them leave a legacy of
contributions to this work.
STARHAWK CAZADERO, MARCH 1999
Movements are like plants. Some, like annuals, spring up in a season,
take over the garden, flourish, and die when winter comes. Others, and
the Goddess movement is one of them, grow like perennials. In the first
few years, most progress is underground. Only when they have developed
strong roots do the plants spring into wild and exuberant growth.
Perennials develop slowly, but they have staying power. They spring up
anew when winter ends. Their deep roots let them withstand drought. They
live long, and reproduce from roots and runners as well as seeds.
The Spiral Dance is a seed planted twenty years ago. Over the last two
decades, the Goddess movement has grown from many seeds, like a garden
of long-lived flowers and healing herbs. It's a big garden: I've tended
only one corner of it. But twenty years is long enough for perennials to
come into full blossom and for fruit trees to mature. We can look back
now and see the results of our planting, weeding, and tending.
In 1979, I ended the book with a chapter called "Creating Religion:
Toward the Future." One of the disconcerting things about life is that
the future has a way of catching up with you. I wrote the book on an
electric typewriter when White-Out was the leading-edge word-processing
technology. I wrote the ten-year notes on an early model home computer
with a minuscule screen and no hard drive, and I'm writing these notes
on a Mac laptop that, at five years old, is already outdated. My source
of power is the solar panels on my roof, and when I take a break from
working I'll be checking into an online meeting of Witchcraft teachers
and organizers from across the United States, Canada, and Europe, or
possibly updating my Web page. The future is already here.
Besides technological changes, political changes have reshaped the world
in the last two decades. This book was conceived during the Carter era.
Since then, we've seen Reagan and Bush come and go, the waxing and
waning of the revolutionary movements in Central America, the fall of
the Soviet Union, the end of apartheid, and the impeachment of a popular
president in a drama so sleazy and bizarre that no one in 1979 could
possibly have imagined it.
In approaching this new edition, I wondered if the book would still make
sense on the edge of a new millennium, and in the light of both world
changes and the tremendous growth of the Goddess movement in the last
two decades. Ten years ago, we were still putting down roots, growing
steadily but not as visibly. Today we are in that fine flush of
perennial growth when the roots reach deep for underground waters and
runners begin to multiply and spread.
In 1979, I was in my twenties, and most of my coven sisters and brothers
were also young. I was still inventing my own life and figuring out some
basic things, like what I wanted to be when I grew up and how to get the
dishes done before the supply of clean plates was exhausted. I'm amazed
at how that person, that mere snip of girl I remember being, knew some
of the things in this book and why, if she knew them, she didn't apply
them more clearly and consistently in her own life.
Now I'm middle-aged. I'm wiser, neater, and less judgmental although far
more irritable. I don't see or hear as well, although I'm probably
stronger and in better shape (if thicker around the middle) than I was
in my twenties.
I already am what I'm going to be when I grow up. Now I think about who
is going to carry on this work when I'm gone, and what I want to be in
my next life. In this one, it's too late for me to become a surfer, a
professional flamenco dancer, a biological mother. These are choices I
must now accept. Middle age is a time for coming to peace with decisions
and life choices. The garden beds are built, and the perennials have had
time to settle in.
Either you continue to tend them or you toss it all out and start all
over again at a time in life when double digging throws your back out.
Time runs differently. This year we planted a grove of olive trees: I'll
be in my midfifties by the time they bear fruit, and an old woman when
they reach full maturity. Recently a friend I thought of as a
contemporary informed me that she was "raised on the Spiral Dance." Not
long after, a young woman inquiring about a class asked a friend of mine
if she was familiar with the work of a woman named Starhawk. "Oh yes, I
know her well," my friend replied. "I work with her closely." "Oh-is she
still alive?" the caller asked.
I am still alive, and hope to remain so for a good long while yet. So is
this book. I'm gratified that I still want to work in this garden. The
soil is still rich, and the structure, the theology, the ethics, the
politics, and the magical training and exercises are sound.
The insights in this book form the basic framework of understanding that
has supported me throughout my adult life. The perennials that took root
twenty years ago still nourish me. I know more about magic, ritual,
energy, and groups than I did then. But the more I know, the simpler
magic becomes. I still use and teach the exercises given here, and when
I've changed them it is not because they're ineffective but because I
felt a personal need to do something new.
There are aspects of this book I wish were irrelevant. A major thrust of
this work is its challenge to the spiritual supremacy of patriarchal
males and male images. I would have hoped those issues would be outdated
by now, but they are not. I'd like to think the introduction to the
fiftieth anniversary edition might read:
"This classic work of the past millennium brings us back to a time when
religious teachers, leaders, and deities were nearly all men. How hard
it is to conceive of that era now, when women abound in the highest
decision- making bodies of every major religion, when rape, incest, and
domestic violence have become as rare and unthinkable as cannibalism,
when religious language is so universally gender-inclusive, when
children learn Solstice chants along with Christmas carols, Hanukkah
songs, and Kwanzaprayers, and new Goddess traditions spring up
annually." There are also plants that didn't grow and others that were
probably a mistake to introduce into the garden. In the 1989
introduction, I wrote extensively about my shift away from a polarized
view of the world as a dance of "female" and "male" qualities and
energies, and toward a much more complex and inclusive view of gender
and energy. That shift continues to deepen as I grow older, and it is
still the major change I would make in this book.
I have commented on others in the notes.
I also notice that throughout this book, I'm critical of Eastern
traditions. In the seventies, they were the alternative people often
turned to when mainstream religions left a void. There were new gurus
every month, and I saw many women I knew fall into what seemed to me
oppressive situations. Now, I have a lot more humility about judging
something that's not my own. I've also grown to appreciate the deep
wisdom and great diversity within those traditions.
Finally, were I writing today I would probably be more cautious about
the history I present. In researching a film on the archaeologist Marija
Gimbutas, I've become aware of the controversy that rages in academic
circles around the history of the Goddess. When I wrote this book, I was
not attempting to do historical scholarship or archaeology. Writing as a
Witch, I felt free to involve my imagination in a reconstruction of the
past. In reality, the most "objective" of historians do the same;
they're just not so blatant about it. Today I might exhibit more
middle-aged caution, but to do so might undercut the real power of this
history, which lies in the awakening of imagination and a sense of
possibilities. What I and many others are saying is simply, "Hey, it
wasn't always like this. It doesn't always have to be like this! So-what
culture do we want to live in? Let's create it!" That statement could be
read as the Short Form of the Origin Story of Contemporary Goddess
Worship. Recent attacks on the Goddess tradition have tried to discredit
our history, often with scholarship that is blatantly biased and
inaccurate. The idea seems to be that if they can disprove our origin
story, they can invalidate our spirituality. This is odd, because nobody
applies the same standards to the origin myths of other religions. Is
Buddhism invalid if we cannot find archaeological evidence of Buddha's
existence? Are Christ's teachings unimportant if we cannot find his
birth certificate or death warrant?
Witches, on the whole, are interested in discussions of our history.
There are now conferences, magazines, articles, and panels at the
American Academy of Religions on the subject. But that interest is
separate from any sense that the validity of our spiritual choices
depends on documenting their origins, their antiquity, or their
provenance. This has sometimes been misquoted as "not caring about
truth." In reality, it's simply saying that the truth of our experience
is valid whether it has roots thousands of years old or thirty minutes
old, that there is a mythic truth whose proof is shown not through
references and footnotes but in the way it engages strong emotions,
mobilizes deep life energies, and gives us a sense of history, purpose,
and place in the world. What gives the Goddess tradition validity is how
it works for us now, in the moment, not whether or not someone else
worshipped this particular image in the past.
In the past twenty years, our rituals have taken on a life of their own
separate from any question of origins. This year, on the Winter
Solstice, the temperature suddenly dropped below freezing on Solstice
Eve. Nevertheless, over two hundred people gathered on the beach, and
most of us stripped off our clothes and went running into the ocean for
our now-traditional ritual purification. The exhilaration of the cold,
the wind, the beauty of the night, the sheer wild craziness of the
plunge, and our naked ecstatic dance around the bonfire created an
archetypal Pagan ritual that felt thousands of years old. I know this
particular tradition was born out of a whim less than twenty years ago,
not Divine Decree lost in ages past. On one of the first Solstices I
celebrated with my early women's coven, we went to the beach to watch
the sunset before our evening ritual. One woman said, "Let's take off
our clothes and jump in. Come on, I dare you!" "You're out of your
mind," I remember saying, but we did it anyway. After a few years, it
occurred to us to light a fire, staving off hypothermia, and so a
tradition was born. (Do something once, it's an experiment. Do it twice,
and it's a tradition.) My knowledge of the less- than-celestial
inspiration of this rite doesn't diminish the power of the ritual for me
in the least. "What is the origin of this ancient custom?" is not
something Pagans are likely to say, although we might well ask, "Whose
idea was this, anyway?" In the history of the reawakening of the
Goddess, 1979 was a pivotal year. The ground had been fertilized by many
people: Witches meeting secretly in small covens, a very few open Pagan
groups, the hippies of the sixties, and the feminists of the early
seventies. Z. Budapest had been teaching feminist Wicca in southern
California for many years. Women were beginning to look at religion and
spirituality as a feminist issue. Merlin Stone's book When God Was a
Woman was published in 1976. In 1979, three important works were
published. One was this book. Margot Adler's Drawing Down the Moon
chronicled the growth of Witchcraft and Paganism through the seventies.
And Womanspirit Rising, edited by Carol Christ and Judith Plaskow,
introduced the world to the challenges women were posing to patriarchal
religion both within and outside of the churches and synagogues.
The year 1979 was also when my friends and I organized a large public
ritual. In part as a celebration of the publication of this book, we
gathered artists, musicians, and dancers and wrote poetry and music for
a Halloween ritual we called "The Spiral Dance Ritual." As in gardening,
some things you plant persist and take on a life of their own. The
Spiral Dance has now become an annual tradition in San Francisco, with
its own body of music and liturgy. (See Resources.) Last year fifteen
hundred people danced the double spiral.
The group that put on the first Spiral Dance evolved into a collective
we called Reclaiming. Many of us participated in nonviolent direct
action throughout the eighties, and the lessons we learned in
empowerment, participatory organization, and consensus process strongly
influenced our organization and the way we planned, taught, and created
ritual. Over the years, Reclaiming also evolved. From teaching,
training, and offering ritual in the San Francisco Bay Area, we began
giving weeklong summer intensives, "Witch Camps," in other parts of
North America and, later, Europe. Each camp, in turn, became the nucleus
of teaching and organizing in other communities. Our local newsletter
grew into a national magazine. Its latest issue reports classes and
rituals in fifteen or sixteen communities throughout the United States,
Canada, and Europe.
Reclaiming has become much more than a local collective. We are a
tradition of the Craft. In the midnineties, we began a period of
reorganizing and restructuring, struggling with the question of how to
expand without becoming a hierarchy or a bureaucracy. In 1997, we
reached consensus on the following statement of our core values:
"My law is love unto all beings . . ." The Charge of the Goddess
The values of the Reclaiming tradition stem from our understanding that
the earth is alive and all of life is sacred and interconnected. We see
the Goddess as immanent in the earth's cycles of birth, growth, death,
decay, and regeneration. Our practice arises from a deep, spiritual
commitment to the earth, to healing, and to the linking of magic with
political action.
Each of us embodies the divine. Our ultimate spiritual authority is
within, and we need no other person to interpret the sacred to us. We
foster the questioning attitude, and we honor intellectual, spiritual,
and creative freedom.
We are an evolving, dynamic tradition and proudly call ourselves
Witches. Honoring both Goddess and God, we work with female and male
images of divinity, always remembering that their essence is a mystery
that goes beyond form. Our community rituals are participatory and
ecstatic, celebrating the cycles of the seasons and our lives, and
raising energy for personal, collective, and earth healing.
We know that everyone can do the life-changing, world-renewing work of
magic, the art of changing consciousness at will. We strive to teach and
practice in ways that foster personal and collective empowerment, to
model shared power, and to open leadership roles to all. We make
decisions by consensus, and balance individual autonomy with social
responsibility.
Our tradition honors the wild and calls for service to the earth and the
community. We value peace and practice nonviolence, in keeping with the
Rede "Harm none, and do what you will." We work for all forms of
justice:
environmental, social, political, racial, gender, and economic. Our
feminism includes a radical analysis of power, seeing all systems of
oppression as interrelated, rooted in structures of domination and
control.
We welcome all genders, all races, all ages and sexual orientations, and
all those differences of life situation, background, and ability that
increase our diversity. We strive to make our public rituals and events
accessible and safe. We try to balance the need to be justly compensated
for our labor with our commitment to make our work available to people
of all economic levels.
All living beings are worthy of respect. All are supported by the sacred
elements of air, fire, water, and earth. We work to create and sustain
communities and cultures that embody our values, that can help to heal
the wounds of the earth and her peoples, and that can sustain us and
nurture future generations.
Reclaiming's coming of age reflects similar growth occurring among many
Pagan groups. The nineties have seen Wiccan and Pagan groups continue to
expand. More people began openly teaching and offering public rituals.
The Internet supplied the safe meeting ground Pagans and Witches had not
had for centuries. When people had a way to make connections without
risk, the movement mushroomed. Now many groups are struggling with these
same issues of growth and continuity as we move into the new century.
Amory Lovins says the primary design criteria he uses is the question
"How do we love all the children?" Not just our children, not just the
ones who look like us or who have resources, not just the human children
but the young of birds and salmon and redwood trees. When we love all
the children, when that love is truly sacred to us in the sense of being
most important, then we have to take action in the world to enact that
love. We are called to make the earth a place where all the children can
thrive.
The Spiral Dance linked Goddess spirituality with political activism
decades ago. In spite of fears by some political feminists that interest
in the Goddess would divert energy from political work, Pagans and
Witches have accrued a proud record of involvement in feminist issues,
gay liberation, and antinuclear, antiwar, and environmental campaigns.
Personally, I stopped counting my arrests in direct action when they
numbered something like two dozen. I chronicled some of the work we did
in nonviolent direct action in the introduction to the tenth anniversary
edition of this book. Over the last ten years, our community's political
work has broadened in scope. In the last few months, for example, I've
gone up to the Headwaters forest base camp to offer support for the
blockade protesting the clear-cutting of old-growth redwoods; spoken at
rallies; circulated petitions, and picketed the GAP as part of a boycott
protesting logging activities in Mendocino County; visited an action
camp in Minneapolis, where a strong Pagan presence has been an integral
part of the organizing, to offer support and ritual; helped to found an
organization m our community to address land use issues; facilitated
meetings; opened a dialogue with vineyard owners around their use of
pesticides; traveled to El balvador to visit the sister communities
Reclaiming supports; passed out endless flyers; wrote to state, local,
and federal representatives and the California Department of
Forestry-not counting the petitions I've signed online, or the work of
teaching and writing, which I consider highly political, or the hands-on
organic gardening and permaculture I do on my own land. (And then there
are the tree-climbing lessons-but we won't speak of those. Let us all
pray that the survival of the redwoods never hinges on my ability to
scale up a tree higher than about fifteen feet.) I'm more public than
most Pagans, but not atypical. Our community has been deeply involved in
direct action around nuclear power and weapons, Central American
solidarity, and antimilitarism. We currently participate in an ongoing
support program for a group in El Salvador that teaches sustainability.
We are involved as well in feminist issues, gay liberation, and AIDS
activism. The latest issue of the Reclaiming Quarterly reports on issues
ranging from Headwaters to support for a local soup kitchen, from
protesting the School of the Americas to an interview with the director
of the Rainforest Action Network.
Not all Pagans or Goddesses are political activists, any more than all
Christians, Jews, or secular humanists are.
But in a cross section of the Pagan community you will find more
activists per population than in just about any other spiritual
tradition, except the Unitarians and Quakers, who have been breeding
activists for centuries. And some are second-generation Pagans, among
the first group of young people raised in the reemergent Goddess
tradition.
The new areas I'm exploring arise from changes in my own life. A few
years ago, while meditating in-where else?-my garden, I received this
message: "You're teaching too much meditation and not enough
observation." As a Witch, as a therapist, as a writer and novelist, I
had spent years immersed in my own and others' internal imagery. I loved
nature: I worshipped her and had often gone to jail defending her, but
in many ways I really knew very little about her. My education had
focused on art, psychology, and film, not biology, forestry, or
horticulture. I grew herbs and made compost and took long walks in the
hills, but often the garden, the forest, and the ocean were simply
scenic backdrops to my own thoughts.
I shifted my personal practice to spend some time each day in nature,
observing what is going on around me, whether I'm in the forest or in a
backyard in the city. I began reading and studying, attending
conferences; I took a permaculture design course that offered training
in reading the land, working with nature, and in ecological design. The
garden began talking louder and louder. "Grow food," the garden said.
"Do you realize how much I travel?" "I don't care, just grow food.
Because when you eat food grown on the land, you become the land."
Growing at least some food for myself and my friends and family became
part of my personal spiritual practice.
I began to look not just at food but at the herbs and plants we use in
magic in a new way. They were no longer just names gleaned from old
books but real characters that I had an ongoing relationship with. In
David Abram's book The Spell of the Sensuous, he writes: "The
traditional or tribal shaman, I came to discern, acts as an intermediary
between the human community and the larger ecological field" (p. 7). I
began to wonder what that role would look like in the high-tech world of
the nineties.
These changes coincided with other personal changes. Somewhere in there
I fell in love with and married a sweet, supportive, and funny man who
is also a Witch. David brought with him four wonderful stepdaughters. If
you call the youngest of them on the phone, her answering machine
invites you to "leave a message for any of these beautiful, empowered,
and independent women ...," which describes them all. I have two-soon to
be three- step-grandchildren and a tribe of Goddess daughters.
My mother died the summer I remarried. A couple of years later, the
coven I'd been in for sixteen years dissolved. Covens, like any
organism, have a life span, and ours had reached its end. At the same
time, Reclaiming's activities were expanding. I found that after
teaching five or six intensives a summer, what I needed as a
counterbalance was nature and solitude. I began spending more and more
time on our land in the coastal hills of northern California, living, as
a proper Witch should, in a little hut in the woods, complete with
skylights and solar panels.
Now nature was no longer an abstraction but a daily condition. The
elements were no longer theoretical: fire meant the real danger of
summer wildfire, and the fire I had to build in the woodstove out of
wood, someone had to chop. Water meant the hundred or more inches we
receive in a wet winter, the erosion it may cause, the spring that
supplies our drinking and irrigation water, the pipeline that carries
it, with its annoying tendency to break, the tanks that store it, and
the drip system that distributes it. The imagery and symbolism I'd been
working with for decades finally got real.
My current passion is to integrate more closely the worship of nature
with knowledge that comes from the observation of nature, and to infuse
science, ecological design, and environmental activism with the deep
connectedness that comes from acknowledging the sacred.
Looking back at the past inevitably leads to looking forward to the
future, especially on the edge of a new millennium. At one Brigid
ritual, I was sitting with Allison, a child I've known and loved since
her birth, who lived with us for her first two years. We were close to
the cauldron, watching people come up to the fire to make a pledge. The
Brigid doll, woven of wheat and grasses and dressed in white, was
especially beautiful that year, and Allison was watching with a look of
awe on her face. After a time, she gathered her courage and went to the
fire to make her first pledge. I realized that this ritual was as
central to her universe as the Jewish High Holidays were to me as a
child. I remembered the origins of each piece of the ritual: I could
say, oh yes, that year we began the pledges, that year we first made a
doll. But to her, this was simply a core marker in every year of her
life. (She is, after all, the child who at age two encountered the wild
crowds that filled the streets of San Francisco after the 49ers won the
Super Bowl and thought they were excited because the moon had come
back.)
I realized that we who had begun these traditions now had a sacred
responsibility. We could not abandon them if some year we simply weren't
in the mood, or had other commitments. Or rather, we needed enough of a
support system and structure so that if one person dropped back, others
would be there to carry on.
In middle age, I no longer operate under the delusion of immortality
that sustains the young. I know that I won't be here forever. My concern
has shifted from "How do I learn to do this?" to "How do I pass this
on?" How do I ensure that others will carry on the work, continue not
just to tend the garden but to continue to create it, expand it, compost
the plants that no longer thrive, and feed the deep-rooted ones that can
live a thousand years?
I hope that in the next two decades our traditions will develop more
resources for children and youth. We have not yet been able to love all
the children because we have not been free to openly educate our own. Up
until the present, the virulent prejudice against Pagans in the larger
culture has made any kind of work with children or youth problematic and
even dangerous.
That situation is slowly changing. More and more, Pagans are demanding
to be seen as a religious tradition just as valid as any other. The
ability to openly practice one's faith without fear is a basic religious
freedom. At twenty-eight, I didn't mind being a rebel. The need for
secrecy around Witchcraft just added to its charm. But at forty-eight,
as I see the children grow up around us, I find the necessity for fear
and secrecy around our tradition intolerable. We cannot pass on a
tradition to the next generation unless we can be open, honest, and
unafraid. We cannot continue to be forced to say to our children, "This
is beautiful, sacred, and meaningful-but don't tell anyone about it!"
Religious freedom is a political issue as much as any other. I'm deeply
grateful to the many Pagan organizations that have stressed education,
media outreach, and interfaith work in attempting to redress this
problem.
I also hope that in the next years, we as a movement can become ever
more inclusive, diverse, and accessible, that people of all backgrounds
and ancestries will find a warm welcome in our communities and a deep
understanding of the complex issues of race and class in our society.
Twenty years ago, we often had agonized discussions about whether gays
and lesbians and "straight people" could ever work together. Today, in
the communities I work with, we take for granted that many different
sexual orientations not only can W'ork and celebrate together but also
can enrich each other's understanding and broaden our perspectives.
There are many other kinds of diversity, however, that are not yet well
represented in our communities, and this is one of the greatest
challenges we face in the coming years.
A few years ago, I participated in a public ritual for El Dia de los
Muertos organized by the Latino community in San Francisco and warmly
supported by Reclaiming. That year, we mourned the youth who had died
from violence on our streets that year, called their names, and grieved
for the ways their deaths diminished our community. When the ritual was
over, a woman approached me. She was obviously a street person, her face
ravaged by years of hard living and pain. "Thank you for that ritual,"
she said. "I needed it. One of my babies died of an overdose, and one
committed suicide, and I really needed that ritual." Her comment stayed
with me as the challenge we take with us into the next century-how to
bring ritual and healing, how to bring the fruits we have grown to those
who most desperately need them.
When young people ask me for advice today, I generally say, "Decide what
is sacred to you, and put your best life energies at its service. Make
that the focus of your studies, your work, the test for your pleasures
and your relationships. Don't ever let fear or craving for security turn
you aside." When you serve your passion, when you are willing to risk
yourself for something, your greatest creative energies are released.
Hard work is required, but nothing is more joyful than work infused by
love.
My mother always hoped that Witchcraft was just a phase I was going
through. After twenty years, it seems more in the nature of a lifework.
What does it mean to have lived a life in service to the Goddess? In
spite of all the anti-Craft prejudice, it has not generally meant great
personal sacrifice or danger, although the possibility is always there.
What the Goddess has asked of me is more a certain shamelessness, a
willingness to stand up for ideas other people find weird, flaky, or
silly, to look foolish, to refuse to be molded by others' judgments. New
ideas always meet resistance, and one generation's woo-woo weirdness may
be another generation's brilliant breakthrough (too often becoming the
rigid orthodoxy of yet another era).
It was said of the Goddess Isis that "Her service is perfect freedom."
Freedom is among the great rewards I've received in this life-along with
love, friendship, good work with good companions, and the satisfaction
of feeling my gifts are well used. I've always had what I needed. I'm
not rich, but neither am I poor. I consider myself among the most
fortunate human beings on this planet, and if I work hard it's out of
the desire to give back a small part of what I have.
Twenty years ago, I ended this book with a vision of the future. We're
not quite as far into that future as I imagined we would be, but we've
made some steps. We have celebrated first blood rites for our daughters,
and coming-of-age rituals for our sons. On the Winter Solstice and the
full moon, many groups gather and celebrate, in San Francisco and around
the world. There are many Witches working to love all the children, to
heal the land, to defend the wilderness that remains, to succor the
homeless, to comfort the dying, to feed the poor, to nurture the power
and vision of women and men of goodwill.
But no, we cannot yet-say that in our city no one goes hungry, that no
one is left to die alone, that we can walk the dark streets without
fearing violence, that the air is clean, that life has returned to the
waters of the bay, that we are at peace.
The Goddess continues to awaken in infinite forms and a thousand
disguises. We have tilled the garden bed, planted seeds, and tended the
slow, early growth. But much work still remains.
STARHAWK CAZADERO, FEBRUARY 1999
rings with such a tone of authority when I remember that time of my life
as being quite insecure.
This book was really born the summer I was seventeen years old, the
summer of 1968. I spent most of it hitchhiking up and down the
California coast and camping on the beaches. For the first time, I lived
in direct contact with nature, day and night. I began to feel connected
to the world in a new way, to see everything as alive, erotic, engaged
in a constant dance of mutual pleasuring, and myself as a special part
of it all. But I didn't yet have a way to name my experience.
I returned home and started college at UCLA. A friend and I began
teaching a class in Witchcraft as an independent project for our
anthropology class. We didn't actually know anything about Witchcraft
when we began teaching, but that didn't stop us from offering the
course, which we ran as a sort of seminar, encouraging each of our
fellow students to research some aspect of the subject and report. Thus
we learned quite a lot, and even formed a coven, in spite of not knowing
exactly what a coven was or what it was supposed to do. We improvised
rituals, which as I recall involved a lot of banging on sticks and
rhythm and group massage.
When we finally met real Wiccan Witches, they came to the converted
fraternity house in which several of us were living in loose communal
fashion and read us the Charge of the Goddess. As I heard the words, I
had a strong sense, not of hearing something new, but of finding names
and a framework for understanding the experiences I had already had.
The concept of a religion that worshipped a Goddess was amazing and
empowering. Raised Jewish, I had been very religious as a child and had
pursued my Jewish education to an advanced level. But as I reached young
womanhood in the late sixties, something seemed lacking. The feminist
movement had not yet entered its period of resurgence, and I had never
heard the word patriarchy, but I sensed that the tradition as it stood
then was somehow lacking in models for me as a woman and in avenues for
the development of female spiritual power.
(In subsequent years, certain branches of Judaism have opened up more
directions for women's empowerment and broader ways of experiencing God,
but at that time this process had not yet begun.)
The Goddess tradition opened up new possibilities. Now my body, in all
its femaleness, its breasts, vulva, womb, and menstrual flow, was
sacred. The wild power of nature, the intense pleasure of sexual
intimacy, took center stage as paths to the sacred instead of being
denied, denigrated, or seen as peripheral.
We began training with the Witches we met, but they wanted certain
things from us that I was incapable of doing at the time: primarily, a
regular discipline of meditation, study, and exercise. I drifted away
but continued to treasure the introduction I had had to the religion of
the Goddess.
In the early seventies, I lived in Venice, a section of Los Angeles that
at that time was a strong community of many artists, writers, political
activists, and generally eccentric characters. I had become deeply
involved with the women's movement and identified myself as a feminist.
To me, there seemed to be a natural connection between a movement to
empower women and a spiritual tradition based on the Goddess.
While most feminists at that time were suspicious and critical of any
turn toward spirituality, identifying it with either patriarchal control
or apolitical escapism, some others were beginning to encounter the
history and symbolism of the Goddess. In Venice, Z. Budapest, a
hereditary Witch from Hungary, began teaching and training many women in
a feminist tradition of Wicca. I met her one day close to the Spring
Equinox, in her shop on a busy street, and she invited me to the first
large all-women's ritual I attended. We walked to a beautiful hillside
on the Santa Monica mountains, chanted, danced, and poured libations to
the Goddess. I asked for healing for a friend who was going through an
intense emotional crisis, and Z. looked me in the eye and said, "Ask for
something for yourself." "No," I thought, "that's bad, selfish, and
besides, I don't have any needs," but she was, wisely, adamant. "In our
tradition it's good to have needs and desires," she said. "We are not a
religion of self-abnegation." I can't recall exactly what I asked for
(which tells me how reluctant I was to own my own needs), but the ritual
began a process of change and transformation, working in the way magic
often does: by making everything fall apart. My relationship dissolved,
my job ended, and I decided to leave town.
I had begun writing the week I turned twenty-one. My mother gave me an
electric typewriter as a birthday and college graduation present. I was
starting graduate school in filmmaking at UCLA, and I took a summer
writing course. I sat down at the typewriter, and a feeling of doom
overcame me. Something said, "You're going to spend a lot of your life
here." So that summer and fall I wrote a novel that won the Samuel
Goldwyn Writing Award at UCLA, giving me what seemed at the time to be a
staggering sum of money and illusory expectations of immediate success.
I followed it with a second novel. Neither was ever published, which is
just as well. They served their real purpose, which was to teach me the
craft and discipline of writing.
But of course, nobody sits down and writes an entire novel with the idea
that it is just an exercise. So, the summer I turned twenty-three,
depressed by rejection slips, unsure what I wanted to do with my life,
and eager for physical challenges and contact with nature, I took off
with a bicycle to travel for a year.
That year was a formative one for The Spiral Dance, although I couldn't
have imagined it at the time. It became an odd sort of vision quest. As
I pedaled along in the wake of Winnebagos, camped in a leaking tent in
the rain, and developed an expertise in getting taken in by strangers,
as I spent every day out in the open air, tested the limits of my body,
and encountered the intricate, untamed wild places of the West Coast,
new dimensions of myself began to unfold. The year was an initiation
during which I learned to trust my intuition and let it be my guide.
By winter, my intuition led me to New York City, where I tried
unsuccessfully to find a publisher for my novels.
I wanted to be a writer, which at the time seemed to be partly a
function of living in New York and meeting the right people, but I
didn't know how to go about meeting the right people or what to say to
them if I met them. I cleaned house for an elderly woman for money and
imposed on the hospitality of some very nice people who let me stay in
their apartment far longer than they had any reason to. (I was, at that
time in my life, the terrible sort of person who shows up to stay for a
weekend and ends up living with you for three months. All I can say in
my behalf is that since then I have more than repaid my karmic debts in
this matter.)
I was cold, I was lonely, I was getting nowhere, and it seemed that
everyone else was suddenly going to law school. Then I had a series of
very powerful dreams. One told me to go back to the West Coast. In it I
was standing by the ocean, looking out on a rock outcropping. Suddenly I
realized that it was full of marvelous animals: sea lions, penguins,
birds. "I didn't know all of these wonderful things were here," I
thought.
In another dream I looked up to see a hawk flying across the sky. There
was a feeling to the dream that I cannot capture in words, as if the
universe shimmered and split to reveal some underlying shining pattern
of things. The hawk swooped down and turned into an old woman. I felt
that I was under her protection.
I made my way back to the West Coast (by car, not bicycle) and moved up
to San Francisco with my friend Nada, where I began reading Tarot cards
and palms at a series of psychic fairs and doing other odd forms of
temporary jobs. One of the agents I'd met in New York had suggested I
try nonfiction. She claimed it was easier to get published than fiction.
I decided that I wanted to write something about women, feminism, and
spirituality, so I began researching the history and traditions of the
Goddess. At first Nada collaborated, but after a short time she went on
to other pursuits. At the same time I began teaching classes in ritual
and related skills, and out of them the Compost coven was formed. For
teaching I began using the name Starhawk, which I took from my dream
about the hawk and from the Star card in the Tarot, which represents the
Deep Self. And I began actually practicing some of the disciplines of
magical training that had been suggested to me seven years earlier.
The Bay Area had a thriving Pagan community, and I soon met people from
many other covens and traditions, including Victor and Cora Anderson,
who trained me in the Faery tradition. Bay Area Witches formed the
Covenant of the Goddess, which incorporated as a legally recognized
church. I was elected first officer in 1976 and became active as a
spokesperson for the Craft.
All this time I was writing draft after draft of The Spiral Dance,
sending out proposals and sample chapters and receiving rejections in
return. One that I'll never forget said: "I don't think this author
knows what she's trying to say and I doubt that she has the intelligence
to say it if she did." In the fall of 1977 I finished an entire
manuscript of the book and, in a flush of enthusiasm, got married three
months later. This manuscript, like the earlier proposals, bounced from
publisher to publisher for the next year or two, receiving no interest
from anyone. I was still teaching, still writing, still involved with my
covens and with the small but growing community of people interested in
ritual and Goddess religion. For money I did temporary secretarial work
or wrote for technical films. But this was, to say the least, a
discouraging time in my life. I had been writing seriously for five or
six years with no success, as far as I could tell. In desperation, I
applied to the creative writing program at San Francisco State
University. They rejected me. (Perhaps you, the reader, are in a similar
phase in your life? Good luck!) Finally, my luck turned. Carol Christ,
coeditor of Womanspirit Rising, included an article I wrote about
Witchcraft and Goddess religion. She invited me to present it as a paper
at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Religion. There she
introduced me to Marie Cantlon, her editor at Harper 6k Row, San
Francisco. Marie was interested in seeing my book, and I sent it to her.
Months passed.
Then, at last, I got the news I'd been hoping for: They wanted to
publish the book. At that point, I sat down to revise the manuscript and
wrote the version you read here.
The past ten years have seen enormous changes, in my own life, in the
Craft and Pagan communities, and in the world as a whole. Interest in
feminist spirituality, Paganism, earth religions, and Witchcraft has
grown enormously. Nobody registers Witches or keeps official statistics
of Pagans, but some indication of this growth can be seen in the number
of boob on the Goddess published since 1979. Many, many people have
participated in circles and rituals. The Spiral Dance has sold over one
hundred thousand copies and been translated into German and Danish. I
have spoken and taught in communities all over the United States, in
Canada, and in Europe. Pagan publications, newsletters, and even
computer bulletin boards abound.
Feminist spirituality, Paganism, and Witchcraft overlap but are not
identical communities. Many feminists explore their spirituality in the
context of Christianity or Judaism, and within those traditions new
avenues have opened up for women, although, of course, there are still
many struggles to be waged. Others draw from Goddess traditions of many
cultures or prefer to create their own rituals without identifying with
any particular tradition.
Pagans, and even Witches, may or may not be feminists. Many people are
drawn to earth-based spiritual traditions, to the celebration of
seasonal cycles and the awakening of broader dimensions of
consciousness, without an analysis of the interplay of power and gender.
But the feminist Craft has also grown enormously, including many men as
well as women and participating in many arenas of social and political
struggle.
My own life has become much more politically focused in the past ten
years. The Spiral Dance was written during the Carter era, a more
sanguine time politically, before the right-wing backlash of the Reagan
years.
Many of us who had been politically active in the sixties felt that we
could, perhaps, relax a bit. True, society was still full of
inequalities, women's liberation was a process barely begun, and there
had been no major shift in social organization, but perhaps the road to
those changes needed to pass through the terrain of the interior and
transform our cultural imagery as well as our economic system and
national policy. Maybe, in fact, deep transformation of society could
only come from an underlying transformation of culture.
I saw The Spiral Dance as a political book, in the sense that it brought
into question the underlying assumptions on which systems of domination
were based, and I still see it that way. But over the last decade, as
the gap between rich and poor widened, as our nuclear arsenals were
rebuilt, and the homeless began to die in our streets and the jobless to
crowd the bread lines, as the United States moved into covert and overt
wars in Latin America, and the AIDS virus spread while legislators sat
on funds for education and treatment, as the environment deteriorated,
the national debt quadrupled, and the hole in the ozone layer grew
ominously, a more active political engagement seemed called for.
One of the core principles of the thealogy presented here is that the
earth is sacred. Believing that, I felt that action to preserve and
protect the earth was called for. So our commitment to the Goddess led
me and others in our community to take part in nonviolent direct actions
to protest nuclear power, to interfere with the production and testing
of nuclear weapons, to counter military interference in Central America,
and to preserve the environment. It led me down to Nicaragua and into
ongoing work to build alliances with people of color and the native
peoples whose own earth-based religions and traditional lands are being
threatened or destroyed. It led me out of a faltering marriage to live
collectively.
Many of these struggles are chronicled in my later books, Dreaming the
Dark and Truth or Dare. If I were writing The Spiral Dance today,
perhaps it would have a more overtly political focus. Yet in a way I'm
pleased with the focus as it stands. Political awareness can become a
tyranny of its own, not least because it locks us into the issues and
perspectives of a particular time. But when we are looking at the
questions of the sacred, we move beyond time. To create the changes in
consciousness needed to transform society at a deep level, we need
insights broader than those the issues of the moment can provide.
Spirituality and politics both involve changing consciousness. In fact,
Dion Fortune's definition of magic as "the art of changing consciousness
at will" could serve for both. Yet there are differences. Effective
political action, of whatever sort, needs to offer directions and at
least propose answers to current problems. But true spirituality must
also take us beyond the will, down into the realms of mystery, of
letting go, of echoing questions rather than resounding answers. So I'm
glad to have written this book at a time when I had the luxury of
pondering the mysteries.
Political activism does, however, increase our awareness in many
respects, and for me this has happened especially around issues of
inclusiveness and sensitivity to those who are different from myself.
Over the last ten years, I've worked to build alliances between women of
color and white women and have worked in groups with women and men of
differing sexual preferences, class backgrounds, and life choices. I've
learned that the viewpoints that arise from differing life situations
are vital to complete our picture of reality, and the effort to include
them, to take off our blinders and see through another's eyes, can be
tremendously enriching. So my major critique of this work now centers on
questions of inclusiveness. Inclusiveness is especially important when
we consider the mysteries, the deep question of our lives. For these
questions are meant not to generate dogma but to propel us on journeys.
When we ask, "What is reality?" we are not so much looking for an
ultimate definition as stating our willingness to be taken somewhere
beyond the boundaries of our previous experiences.
But that journey cannot be rich and varied unless we are willing to let
go of seeing our own experience, our own answers and styles and
insights, as defining reality for everyone. We need not deny our
experience but must recognize that it is one facet of the gifts that are
there for us in other perspectives. If I were writing The Spiral Dance
today, I would include more material from many races, cultures, and
traditions, especially in the historical sections.
When we ask the questions "What is femaleness? What is maleness?" we are
stating our willingness to change in ways that may seem frightening, for
our conditioning to experience our gender in culturally determined ways
runs very deep and in a primary way determines how we experience
ourselves. But Witches have a saying:
"Where there's fear, there's power." In opening to these questions, we
may encounter new aspects of ourselves that liberate our
power-from-within.
The feminist movement has prompted the culture as a whole to reexamine
questions of maleness and femaleness.
For the definitions are no longer working, hey are oppressive to women
and confining to men.
In this process of transformation, the Goddess and the Old Gods can open
doorways for us into new dimensions of our own possibilities, for they
are not just symbols but channels of power. Yet we must also be willing
to examine how our own interpretations have been shaped by the
limitations of our vision. And that is, perhaps, the most central change
I would make in this book and the one upon which many of my comments are
focused.
When I originally wrote this book, I saw femaleness and maleness as
reified qualities, like liquids that could fill us. I believed, along
with Jung, that each women had within her a male self, and each man a
female self. Now I find these concepts unhelpful and misleading.
Today I don't use the terms female energy and male energy. I don't
identify femaleness or maleness with specific sets of qualities or
predispositions. While I have found images of the Goddess empowering to
me as a woman, I no longer look to the Goddesses and Gods to define for
me what woman or man should be. For any quality that has been assigned
to one divine gender can elsewhere be found in its opposite. If we say,
for example, "Male energy is aggressive," I can easily find five
aggressive goddesses without even thinking hard. If we say "Female
energy is nurturing," we can also find male gods who nurture.
Our whole modern tendency to look at myths and deities as role models
may be a misappropriation of the power of these images, born of our
desperation at not knowing how to be in the world and culture in which
we find ourselves. We are looking for permission to be more than our
society tells us we are. But the Goddesses and Gods are not figures for
us to copy-they are more like broomsticks: Grab hold, and they will take
us away somewhere beyond the boundaries of our ordinary lives.
Why are there two sexes? For the same reason we cut the cards before we
shuffle the deck. Sexual reproduction is an elegant method of ensuring
maximum biological diversity. Yet I would no longer describe the
essential quality of the erotic energy flow that sustains the universe
as one of female/male polarity. To do so enshrines heterosexual human
relationships as the basic pattern of all being, relegating other sorts
of attraction and desire to the position of deviant. That description
not only makes invisible the realities of lesbians, gay men, and
bisexual people; it also cuts all of us off, whatever our sexual
preference, from the intricate dance of energy and attraction we might
share with trees, flowers, stone, the ocean, a good book or a painting,
a sonnet or a sonata, a close friend or a faraway star. For erotic
energy inherently generates and celebrates diversity. And Goddess
religion, at its heart, is precisely about the erotic dance of life
playing through all of nature and culture.
In a world in which power and status are awarded according to gender, we
necessarily identify with our gender in a primary way. In a world in
which sexual preference is a grounds for either privilege or oppression,
we necessarily identify with our sexual orientation. But to take one
particular form of sexual union as the model for the whole is to limit
ourselves unfairly. If we could, instead, take the whole as the model
for the part, then whomever or whatever we choose to love, even if it is
ourselves in our solitude, all our acts of love and pleasure could
reflect the union of leaf and sun, the wheeling dance of galaxies, or
the slow swelling of bud to fruit.
The Spiral Dance was written before the AIDS epidemic surfaced. It is
harder today, but perhaps even more necessary, to affirm the sacredness
of the erotic. For to say that something is sacred is to say that it is
what we deeply value. And AIDS, which is an immune system disease passed
on in many ways, only some of which are sexual, has become an excuse for
an attack on the erotic, especially on those forms that do not meet
society's approval. Out of fear of both the disease and the stigma
attached to it, we close off options for ourselves and others.
If society valued the erotic as sacred, AIDS research would be a top
priority, as would research on safe forms of birth control. Support
would be given to those living with AIDS without extracting from them
payment in the form of humiliation or guilt.
AIDS can be a teacher. By confronting us with death, one of the great
mysteries, it challenges us to respond with courage, caring, and
compassion. Because of AIDS we must speak openly, honestly, and publicly
about sexuality. And as one of many immune system diseases we see
arising at this time, it serves as a warning that the immune system of
the earth herself is under attack from toxins and pollution. So AIDS
challenges us on many levels to become healers, of ourselves, our
communities, and the earth.
Another healing challenge that the Pagan community has begun to face
over the last decade is that of confronting our addictions. Many Pagans
are involved with Twelve-Step Programs such as Alcoholics Anonymous and
have found their spiritual approach to recovery one that can deepen
Craft practice. The Goddess can be a Higher Power, or perhaps we might
say a Deeper Power. The language of the Twelve Steps and the traditional
forms of meetings may not always work for Pagans, but their insights are
extremely valuable to anyone struggling with addictions or codependence
and can be adapted to fit our needs.
Awareness of these issues is reflected in one of the overall changes I
have made to this edition of the book-the substitution of other drinks
for wine in rituals and the change of what we used to call Cakes and
Wine to Feasting. I do this not because I think no one should ever drink
but so that ritual becomes a safe space for those who are struggling
toward recovery from addictions. Those who choose to may still drink
wine, but, out of our recognition that to some people in the circle it
may be destructive, we no longer pass it in the ritual chalice.
Another overall change has been the elimination of the terms High
Priestess and High Priest. Today, we work nonhierarchically. Any
participant might take on the roles once designated for "leaders." Now
that we have a core group of highly experienced ritual makers, power,
inspiration, and recognition can be more equitably shared. (Which is not
to say that we always reach this goal, but we aspire to it.)
The three core principles of Goddess religion are immanence,
interconnection, and community. Immanence means that the Goddess, the
Gods, are embodied, that we are each a manifestation of the living being
of the earth, that nature, culture, and life in all their diversity are
sacred. Immanence calls us to live our spirituality here in the world,
to take action to preserve the life of the earth, to live with integrity
and responsibility.
Interconnection is the understanding that all being is interrelated,
that we are linked with all of the cosmos as parts of one living
organism. What affects one of us affects us all. The felling of tropical
forests disturbs our weather patterns and destroys the songbirds of the
North. No less does the torture of a prisoner in El Salvador or the
crying of a homeless child in downtown San Francisco disturb our
well-being. So interconnection demands from us compassion, the ability
to feel with others so strongly that our passion for justice is itself
aroused.
And Goddess religion is lived in community. Its primary focus is not
individual salvation or enlightenment or enrichment but the growth and
transformation that comes through intimate interactions and common
struggles.
Community includes not only people but also the animals, plants, soil,
air and water and energy systems that support our lives. Community is
personal-one's closest friends, relatives, and lovers, those to whom we
are accountable. But in a time of global communications, catastrophes,
and potential violence, community must also be seen as reaching out to
include all the earth.
The health of the earth has declined alarmingly over the last ten years,
and the next decade may see us take an irrevocable turn, either toward
destruction or toward regeneration. We are beginning to reap the results
of exploitation and environmental callousness. The ozone layer is being
depleted. We see tropical rain forests, the earth's lungs, destroyed at
a rapid rate. Everywhere we find deforestation and poisoning of the
rivers, lakes and aquifers, and oceans. Every day species become
extinct. The sacred lands of native peoples are strip mined or taken as
sites for military bases and nuclear tests. If we saw the earth as our
extended body, perhaps we would treat her better. Or, given how many of
us abuse and harm our own bodies, perhaps we would need a global
Twelve-Step Program to counter our collective addiction to ecological
destruction.
The problems are overwhelmingly clear, but to solve them we need both
tools and vision. I see this book as a tool chest for visionaries,
containing many processes for engaging our collective imagination,
developing rituals, communities of support, spaces in which to create
and enact something new.
Ultimately, the reemergence of the Goddess religion is a conscious
attempt to reshape culture. In the past, culture has been reshaped by
force. The Witch persecutions of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries
are themselves one example. They can be viewed as a mass brainwashing, a
conversion through terror to the idea that women's power, and any power
not approved of by the authorities, is dangerous, dirty, and sinful.
But we cannot reshape consciousness by force or through fear, for to do
so would only reinforce what we are trying to change. We must bring
about change through nonviolence, physical and spiritual. We are called
to take a radical leap of faith, to believe that people, given the
opening to dream of new possibilities, with tools and visions will
create a living future.
Since divination is a traditional part of the Craft, I decided to
consult the Tarot cards for an indication of what to expect for the next
ten years. The card that turned up was the Priestess, the Moon Goddess
who sits between the pillars of duality, guarding the veil of the
mysteries. I take that as an indication that in the next decade we will
go deeper into magic and mystery, into explorations of the spirit and
forms of knowledge that go beyond the rational. But because the
mysteries of earth religion are not separate from this world and this
life, that deepened knowledge must lead us into the active work of
change.
The renewal of the Goddess religion and other earth-based spiritual
traditions will continue to grow over the next decade. As the community
grows, our spirituality becomes more embedded in every aspect of our
lives. As more children are ' born and grow up in the Goddess tradition,
we will develop more materials for them and more rituals rooted in life
cycles and transitions. And of course, the Goddess of inspiration
continually moves us to create music, art, theater, and dance as well as
creative actions to resist the destruction of the earth and her peoples
and to make manifest our visions of what could be.
The possibility also exists that we will experience more repression as
we become more visible. But we should never let fear silence us-or we do
the oppressors' work for them. Personally, as I've become more public
and more visible, I have at times experienced negative reactions, but
they have been far outweighed by positive support.
The times we face are both exciting and alarming. The next decade will
see crucial decisions made about the future of the environment, the
social structure, and the health of the world we leave to the
generations that follow. With courage, vision, humor, and creativity, we
can use our magic, our ability to change our consciousness, our world
view, and our values to reinstate the living web of all interconnected
life as the measure by which all choices are judged.
Except in a few cases, I have not changed the original text of this
book. Instead, I have added a running commentary, which you will find at
the end, keyed to page numbers and phrases in the text. Throughout the
text, asterisks mark sections for which new commentary appears,
beginning on page 231. Single asterisks mark notes from the tenth
anniversary edition; double asterisks mark notes from the twentieth
anniversary edition. I suggest that you read each chapter through first
and then glance back at the notes to find out what has changed in my
thinking. Of course, some of you may want to read the notes first and
then read the chapters. And if you're already familiar with the material
in the original edition, reading through the notes as a whole will give
you a picture of my current thoughts.
In some places I have given new versions of old myths or new
interpretations of the material. You are, of course, free to prefer
either the new or the old version and to use it as the basis for your
own rituals and meditations. In general, all of the material in this
book is presented so that you can take it and make it your own, adapt it
and change it if need be to fit your inclinations and circumstances, add
to what works and discard what doesn't. I consider this a book of tools,
not dogma.
I have used these tools myself now for many years and have found that
they work in my own life and community. Of course, as you will see, some
have undergone change. Other tools continue to be developed. For a
living tradition is not static or fixed. It changes and responds to
changing needs and changing times.
Many years ago I had a vision of the Goddess, although I didn't know
what it was at the time, and I have followed it ever since. I have no
regrets. The Goddess continually offers us challenges, but knowing that
she is within us as well as around us, we find the strength to meet
them, to transform fear into power-from-within, to create communities in
which we can grow, struggle, and change, to mourn our losses and
celebrate our advances, to generate the acts of love and pleasure that
are her rituals. For she is no longer sleeping but awake and rising,
reaching out her hands to touch us again. When we reach for her, she
reveals herself to us, in the stones and the soil beneath our feet, in
the whitewater rapids and limpid pools of the imagination, in tears and
laughter, ecstasy and sorrow, common courage and common straggle, wind
and fire. Once we have allowed ourselves to look into her open eyes, we
can never lose sight of her again. For she faces us in the mirror, and
her steps echo each time we place foot to ground. Try to leap away, and
she will pull you back. You cannot fall away from her-there is nowhere
she is not.
And so it is no accident that this is the moment in history when she
arises again, and stretches. For great as the powers of destruction may
be, greater still are the powers of healing. Call her the Resilient One,
for she is the circle of birth, growth, death, and regeneration. We, as
cells of her body, if we listen to our deepest hearts, cannot help but
serve the cycles of renewal. May our dreams and visions guide us, and
may we find the strength to make them real.
The moon is full. We meet on a hilltop that looks out over the bay.
Below us, lights spread out like a field of jewels, and faraway
skyscrapers pierce the swirling fog like the spires of fairytale towers.
The night is enchanted.
Our candles have been blown out, and our makeshift altar cannot stand up
under the force of the wind, as it sings through the branches of tall
eucalyptus. We hold up our arms and let it hurl against our faces. We
are exhilarated, hair and eyes streaming. The tools are unimportant; we
have all we need to make magic: our bodies, our breath, our voices, each
other.
The circle has been cast. The invocations begin:
All-dewy, sky-sailing pregnant moon,
Who shines for all,
Who shines through all...
Aradia, Diana, Cybele, Mah...
Sailor of the last sea,
Guardian of the gate,
Ever-dying, ever-living radiance...
Dionysus, Osiris, Pan, Arthur, Hu...
The moon clears the treetops and shines on the circle. We huddle closer
for warmth. A woman moves into the center of the circle. We begin to
chant her name:
"Diana. . ."
"Dee-ah-nah ..."
"Aaaah…."
The chant builds, spiraling upward. Voices merge into one endlessly
modulated harmony. The circle is enveloped in a cone of light.
Then, in a breath-silence.
"You are Goddess," we say to Diane, and kiss her as she steps back into
the outer ring. She is smiling.
She remembers who she is.
One by one, we will step into the center of the circle. We will hear our
names chanted, feel the cone rise around us. We will receive the gift,
and remember:
"I am Goddess. You are God, Goddess. All that lives, breathes, loves,
sings in the unending harmony of being is divine." In the circle, we
will take hands and dance under the moon.
"To disbelieve in witchcraft is the greatest of all heresies."
Malleus Maleficarum (1486)
On every full moon, rituals such as the one described above take place
on hill-tops, on beaches, in open fields, and in ordinary houses.
Writers, teachers, nurses, computer programmers, artists, lawyers,
poets, plumbers, and auto mechanics-women and men from many backgrounds
come together to celebrate the mysteries of the Triple Goddess of birth,
love, and death, and of her Consort, the Hunter, who is Lord of the
Dance of life. The religion they practice is called Witchcraft.
Witchcraft is a word that frightens many people and confuses many
others. In the popular imagination, Witches are ugly, old hags riding
broomsticks, or evil Satanists performing obscene rites. Modern Witches
are thought to be members of a kooky cult, primarily concerned with
cursing enemies by jabbing wax images with pins, and lacking the depth,
the dignity, and seriousness of purpose of a true religion.
But Witchcraft is a religion, perhaps the oldest religion extant in the
West. Its origins go back before Christianity, Judaism, Islam-before
Buddhism and Hinduism, as well, and it is very different from all the
so- called great religions.
The Old Religion, as we call it, is closer in spirit to Native American
traditions or to the shamanism of the Arctic. It is not based on dogma
or a set of beliefs, nor on scriptures or a sacred book revealed by a
great man.
Witchcraft takes its teachings from nature, and reads inspiration in the
movements of the sun, moon, and stars, the flight of birds, the slow
growth of trees, and the cycles of the seasons.
According to our legends, Witchcraft began more than thirty-five
thousand years ago, when the temperature of Europe began to drop and the
great sheets of ice crept slowly south in their last advance. Across the
rich tundra, teeming with animal life, small groups of hunters followed
the free-running reindeer and the thundering bison.
They were armed with only the most primitive of weapons, but some among
the clans were gifted, could "call" the herds to a cliffside or a pit,
where a few beasts, in willing sacrifice, would let themselves be
trapped. These gifted shamans could attune themselves to the spirits of
the herds, and in so doing they became aware of the pulsating rhythm
that infuses all life, the dance of the double spiral, of whirling into
being, and whirling out again. They did not phrase this insight
intellectually, but in images: the Mother Goddess, the birthgiver, who
brings into existence all life; and the Horned God, hunter and hunted,
who eternally passes through the gates of death that new life may go on.
Male shamans dressed in skins and horns in identification with the God
and the herds; but female priestesses presided naked, embodying the
fertility of the Goddess. Life and death were a continuous stream; the
dead were buried as if sleeping in a womb, surrounded by their tools and
ornaments, so that they might awaken to a new life. In the caves of the
Alps, skulls of the great bears were mounted in niches, where they
pronounced oracles that guided the clans to game.In lowland pools,
reindeer does, their bellies filled with stones that embodied the souls
of deer, were submerged in the waters of the Mother's womb, so that
victims of the hunt would be reborn.
In the East-Siberia and the Ukraine-the Goddess was Lady of the
Mammoths; She was carved from stone in great swelling curves that
embodied her gifts of abundance. In the West, in the great cave temples
of southern France and Spain, her rites were performed deep in the
secret wombs of the earth, where the great polar forces were painted as
bison and horses, superimposed, emerging from the cave walls like
spirits out of a dream. The spiral dance was seen also in the sky: in
the moon, who monthly dies and is reborn; in the sun, whose waxing light
brings summer's warmth and whose waning brings the chill of winter.
Records of the moon's passing were scratched on bone, and the Goddess
was shown holding the bison horn, which is also the crescent moon.
The ice retreated. Some clans followed the bison and the reindeer into
the far north. Some passed over the Alaskan land bridge to the Americas.
Those who remained in Europe turned to fishing and gathering wild plants
and shellfish. Dogs guarded their campsites, and new tools were refined.
Those who had the inner power learned that it increased when they worked
together. As isolated settlements grew into villages, shamans and
priestesses linked forces and shared knowledge. The first covens were
formed. Deeply attuned to plant and animal life, they tamed where once
they had hunted, and they bred sheep, goats, cows, and pigs from their
wild cousins. Seeds were no longer only gathered; they were planted, to
grow where they were set. The Hunter became Lord of the Grain,
sacrificed when it is cut in autumn, buried in the womb of the Goddess
and reborn in the spring. The Lady of the Wild Things became the Barley
Mother, and the cycles of moon and sun marked the times for sowing and
reaping and letting out to pasture.
Villages grew into the first towns and cities. The Goddess was painted
on the plastered walls of shrines, giving birth to the Divine Child -
her consort, son, and seed. Far-flung trade brought contact with the
mysteries of Africa and West Asia.
In the lands once covered with ice, a new power was discovered, a force
that runs like springs of water through the earth Herself. Barefoot
priestesses trace out "ley" lines on the new grass. It was found that
certain stones increase the flow of power. They were set at the proper
points in great marching rows and circles that mark the cycles of time.
The year became a great wheel divided into eight parts: the solstices
and equinoxes and the cross- quarter days between, when great feasts
were held and fires lit. With each ritual, with each ray of the sun and
beam of the moon that struck the stones at the times of power, the force
increased. They became great reservoirs of subtle energy, gateways
between the worlds of the seen and the unseen. Within the circles,
beside the menhirs and dolmens and passage graves, priestesses could
probe the secrets of time, and the hidden structure of the cosmos.
Mathematics, astronomy, poetry, music, medicine, and the understanding
of the workings of the human mind developed side by side with the lore
of the deeper mysteries.
But later, cultures developed that devoted themselves to the arts of
war. Wave after wave of Indo-European invasions swept over Europe from
the Bronze Age on. Warrior Gods drove the Goddess peoples out from the
fertile lowlands and fine temples, into the hills and high mountains
where they became known as the Sidhe, the Picts or Pixies, the Fair Folk
or Faeries.[11] The mythological cycle of Goddess and Consort, Mother
and Divine Child, which had held sway for thirty thousand years, was
changed to conform to the values of the conquering patriarchies. In
Greece, the Goddess, in her many guises, "married" the new gods-the
result was the Olympian Pantheon. In the British Isles, the victorious
Celts adopted many features of the Old Religion, incorporating them into
the Druidic mysteries.
The Faeries, breeding cattle in the stony hills and living in
turf-covered, round huts, preserved the Old Religion.
Clan mothers, called "Queen of Elphame," which means Elfland, led the
covens, together with the priest, the Sacred King, who embodied the
dying God, and underwent a ritualized mock death at the end of his term
of office. They celebrated the eight feasts of the Wheel with wild
processions on horseback, singing, chanting, and the lighting of ritual
fires. The invading people often joined in; there were mingling and
intermarriage, and many rural families were said to have "Faery blood."
The Colleges of the Druids, and the Poetic Colleges of Ireland and
Wales, preserved many of the old mysteries.
Christianity, at first, brought little change. Peasants saw in the story
of Christ only a new version of their own ancient tales of the Mother
Goddess and her Divine Child who is sacrificed and reborn. Country
priests often led the dance at the Sabbats, or great festivals. The
covens, which preserved the knowledge of the subtle forces, were called
Wicca or Wicce, from the Anglo-Saxon root word meaning "to bend or
shape." They were those who could shape the unseen to their will.
Healers, teachers, poets, and midwives, they were central figures in
every community.
Persecution began slowly. The twelfth and thirteenth centuries saw a
revival of aspects of the Old Religion by the troubadours, who wrote
love poems to the Goddess under the guise of living noble ladies of
their times. The magnificent cathedrals were built in honor of Mary, who
had taken over many of the aspects of the ancient Goddess. Witchcraft
was declared a heretical act, and in 1324 an Irish coven led by Dame
Alice Kyteler was tried by the Bishop of Ossory for worshipping a
non-Christian god. Dame Kyteler was saved by her rank, but her followers
were burned.
Wars, Crusades, plagues, and peasant revolts raged over Europe in the
next centuries. Joan of Arc, the "Maid of Orleans," led the armies of
France to victory, but was burned as a Witch by the English. "Maiden" is
a term of high respect in Witchcraft, and it has been suggested that the
French peasantry loved Joan so greatly because she was, in truth, a
leader of the Old Religion. The stability of the medieval Church was
shaken, and the feudal system began to break down. The Christian world
was swept by messianic movements and religious revolts, and the Church
could no longer calmly tolerate rivals.
In 1484, the Papal Bull of Innocent VIII unleashed the power of the
Inquisition against the Old Religion. With the publication of the
Malleus Maleficarum, "The Hammer of the Witches," by the Dominicans
Kramer and Sprenger in I486, the groundwork was laid for a reign of
terror that was to hold all of Europe in its grip until well into the
seventeenth century. The persecution was most strongly directed against
women: Of an estimated nine million Witches executed, eighty percent
were women, including children and young girls, who were believed to
inherit the "evil" from their mothers. The asceticism of early
Christianity, which turned its back on the world of the flesh, had
degenerated, in some quarters of the Church, into hatred of those who
brought that flesh into being.
Misogyny, the hatred of women, had become a strong element in medieval
Christianity. Women, who menstruate and give birth, were identified with
sexuality and therefore with evil. "All witchcraft stems from carnal
lust, which is in women insatiable," stated the Malleus Maleficarum.
The terror was indescribable. Once denounced, by anyone from a spiteful
neighbor to a fretful child, a suspected Witch was arrested suddenly,
without warning, and not allowed to return home again. She was
considered guilty until proven innocent. Common practice was to strip
the suspect naked, shave her completely in hopes of finding the Devil's
"marks," which might be moles or freckles. Often the accused were
pricked all over their bodies with long, sharp needles; spots the Devil
had touched were said to feel no pain. In England, "legal torture" was
not allowed, but suspects were deprived of sleep and subjected to slow
starvation, before hanging. On the Continent, every imaginable atrocity
was practiced-the rack, the thumbscrew, "boots" that broke the bones in
the legs, vicious beatings-the full roster of the Inquisition's horrors.
The accused were tortured until they signed confessions prepared by the
Inquisitors, until they admitted to consorting with Satan, to dark and
obscene practices that were never part of true Witchcraft. Most cruelly,
they were tortured until they named others, until a full coven quota of
thirteen were taken. Confession earned a merciful death: strangulation
before the stake.
Recalcitrant suspects, who maintained their innocence, were burned
alive.
Generically, Witches are female-this usage is meant to include males,
not to exclude them Witch hunters and informers were paid for
convictions, and many found it a profitable career. The rising male
medical establishment welcomed the chance to stamp out midwives and
village herbalists, their major economic competitors. For others, the
Witch trials offered opportunities to rid themselves of "uppity women"
and disliked neighbors. Witches themselves say that few of those tried
during the Burning Times actually belonged to covens or were members of
the Craft. The victims were the elderly, the senile, the mentally ill,
women whose looks weren't pleasing or who suffered from some handicap,
village beauties who bruised the wrong egos by rejecting advances, or
who had roused lust in a celibate priest or married man. Homosexuals and
freethinkers were caught in the same net. At times, hundreds of victims
were nut to death in a day. In the Bishopric of Trier, in Germany, two
villages were left with only a single female inhabitant apiece after the
trials of 1585.
The Witches and Faeries who could do so escaped to lands where the
Inquisition did not reach. Some may have come to America. It is possible
that a genuine coven was meeting in the woods of Salem before the
trials, which actually marked the end of active persecution in this
country. Some scholars believe that the family of Samuel and John Quincy
Adams were members of the megalithic "Dragon" cult, which kept alive the
knowledge of the power of the stone circles.[14] Certainly, the
independent spirit of Witchcraft is very much akin to many of the ideals
of the "Founding Fathers": for example, freedom of speech and worship,
decentralized government, and the rights of the individual rather than
the divine right of kings.
This period was also the time when the African slave trade reached its
height and the conquest of the Americas took place. The same charges
leveled against the Witches-charges of savagery and devil worship-were
used to justify the enslavement of the Africans (who were brought to the
New World, supposedly, to Christianize them)
and the destruction of cultures and wholesale genocide of Native
Americans. African religions took on a protective cloak of Catholic
nomenclature, calling their orishas saints, and survived as the
traditions of Macumba, Santeria, Lucumi, and Voudoun, religions that
have been as unfairly maligned as the Craft.
Oral tradition tells us that some European Pagans, brought over as
indentured servants or convict labor, fled to join the Indians whose
traditions were similar in spirit to their own. In some areas, such as
the American South, black, white Pagan, and Native American elements
combined.
In America, as in Europe, the Craft went underground, and became the
most secret of religions. Traditions were passed down only to those who
could be trusted absolutely, usually to members of the same family.
Communications between covens were severed; no longer could they meet on
the Great Festivals to share knowledge and exchange the results of
spells or rituals. Parts of the tradition became lost or forgotten. Yet
somehow, in secret, in silence, over glowing coals, behind closed
shutters, encoded as fairy tales and folk songs, or hidden in
subconscious memories, the seed was passed on.
After the persecutions ended, in the eighteenth century, came the age of
disbelief. Memory of the true Craft had faded; the hideous stereotypes
that remained seemed ludicrous, laughable, or tragic. Only in this
century have Witches been able to "come out of the broom closet," so to
speak, and counter the imagery of evil with truth. The word Witch
carries so many negative connotations that many people wonder why we use
it at all. Yet to reclaim the word Witch is to reclaim our right, as
women, to be powerful; as men, to know the feminine within as divine.
To be a Witch is to identify with nine million victims of bigotry and
hatred and to take responsibility for shaping a world in which prejudice
claims no more victims. A Witch is a "shaper," a creator who bends the
unseen into form, and so becomes one of the Wise, one whose life is
infused with magic.
Witchcraft has always been a religion of poetry, not theology. The
myths, legends, and teachings are recognized as metaphors for
"That-Which-Cannot-Be-Told," the absolute reality our limited minds can
never completely know. The mysteries of the absolute can never be
explained-only felt or intuited. Symbols and ritual acts are used to
trigger altered states of awareness, in which insights that go beyond
words are revealed. When we speak of "the secrets that cannot be told,"
we do not mean merely that rules prevent us from speaking freely. We
mean that the inner knowledge literally cannot be expressed in words. It
can only be conveyed by experience, and no one can legislate what
insight another person may draw from any given experience. For example,
after the ritual described at the opening of this chapter, one woman
said, "As we were chanting, I felt that we blended together and became
one voice; I sensed the oneness of everybody." Another woman said, "I
became aware of how different the chant sounded for each of us, of how
unique each person is." A man said simply, "I felt loved." To a Witch,
all of these statements are equally true and valid. They are no more
contradictory than the statements "Your eyes are as bright as stars" and
"Your eyes are as blue as the sea." The primary symbol for
"That-Which-Cannot-Be-Told" is the Goddess. The Goddess has infinite
aspects and thousands of names-She is the reality behind many metaphors.
She is reality, the manifest deity, omnipresent in all of life, in each
of us. The Goddess is not separate from the world-She is the world, and
all things in it: moon, sun, earth, star, stone, seed, flowing river,
wind, wave, leaf and branch, bud and blossom, fang and claw, woman and
man. In Witchcraft, flesh and spirit are one.
As we have seen, Goddess religion is unimaginably old, but contemporary
Witchcraft could just as accurately be called the New Religion. The
Craft, today, is undergoing more than a revival; it is experiencing a
renaissance, a recreation. Women are spurring this renewal, and actively
reawakening the Goddess, the image of "the legitimacy and beneficence of
female power." Since the decline of the Goddess religions, women have
lacked religious models and spiritual systems that speak to female needs
and experience. Male images of divinity characterize both Western and
Eastern religions.
Regardless of how abstract the underlying concept of God may be, the
symbols, avatars, preachers, prophets, gurus, and Buddhas are
overwhelmingly male Women are not encouraged to explore their own
strengths and realizatiions, they are taught to submit to male
authority, to identify masculine perceptions as their spiritual ideals,
to deny their bodies and sexuality, to fit their insights into a male
mold.
Mary Daly, author of Beyond God the Father, points out that the model of
the universe in which a male God rules the cosmos from outside serves to
legitimize male control of social institutions. "The symbol of the
Father God, spawned in the human imagination and sustained as plausible
by patriarchy, has in turn rendered service to this type of society by
making its mechanisms for the oppression of women appear right and
fitting." The unconscious model continues to shape the perceptions even
of those who have consciously rejected religious teachings. The details
of one dogma are rejected, but the underlying structure of belief is
imbibed at so deep a level it is rarely questioned. Instead, a new
dogma, a parallel structure, replaces the old. For example, many people
have rejected the "revealed truth" of Christianity without ever
questioning the underlying concept that truth is a set of beliefs
revealed through the agency of a "Great Man," possessed of powers or
intelligence beyond the ordinary human scope. Christ, as the "Great
Man," may be replaced by Buddha, Freud, Marx, Jung, Werner Erhard, or
the Maharaj Ji in their theology, but truth is always seen as coming
from someone else, as only knowable secondhand. As feminist scholar
Carol Christ points out, "Symbol systems cannot simply be rejected, they
must be replaced. Where there is no replacement, the mind will revert to
familiar structures at times of crisis, bafflement, or defeat." The
symbolism of the Goddess is not a parallel structure to the symbolism of
God the Father. The Goddess does not rule the world; She is the world.
Manifest in each of us, She can be known internally by every individual,
in all her magnificent diversity. She does not legitimize the rule of
either sex by the other and lends no authority to rulers of temporal
hierarchies. In Witchcraft, each of us must reveal our own truth. Deity
is seen in our own forms, whether female or male, because the Goddess
has her male aspect. Sexuality is a sacrament. Religion is a matter of
relinking, with the divine within and with her outer manifestations in
all of the human and natural world.
The symbol of the Goddess is poemagogic, a term coined by Anton
Ehrenzweig to "describe its special function of inducing and symbolizing
the ego's creativity." It has a dreamlike, "slippery" quality. One
aspect slips into another: She is constantly changing form and changing
face. Her images do not define or pin down a set of attributes; they
spark inspiration, creation, fertility of mind and spirit: "One thing
becomes another,/In the Mother ... In the Mother ..." (ritual chant for
the Winter Solstice).
The importance of the Goddess symbol for women cannot be overstressed.
The image of the Goddess inspires women to see ourselves as divine, our
bodies as sacred, the changing phases of our lives as holy, our
aggression as healthy, our anger as purifying, and our power to nurture
and create, but also to limit and destroy when necessary, as the very
force that sustains all life. Through the Goddess, we can discover our
strength, enlighten our minds, own our bodies, and celebrate our
emotions. We can move beyond narrow, constricting roles and become
whole.
The Goddess is also important for men. The oppression of men in Father
God-ruled patriarchy is perhaps less obvious but no less tragic than
that of women. Men are encouraged to identify with a model no human
being can successfully emulate: to be minirulers of narrow universes.
They are internally split, into a "spiritual" self that is supposed to
conquer their baser animal and emotional natures. They are at war with
themselves: in the West, to "conquer" sin; in the East, to "conquer"
desire or ego. Few escape from these wars undamaged. Men lose touch with
their feelings and their bodies, becoming the "successful male zombies"
described by Herb Goldberg in The Hazards of Being Male: "Oppressed by
the cultural pressures that have denied him his feelings, by the
mythology of the woman and the distorted and self-destructive way he
sees and relates to her, by the urgency for him to 'act like a man,'
which blocks his ability to respond to his inner promptings both
emotionally and physiologically, and by a generalized self-hate that
causes him to feel comfortable only when he is functioning well in
harness, not when he lives for joy and personal growth." Because women
give birth to males, and nurture them at the breast, and in our culture
are primarily responsible for their care as children, "every male
brought up in a traditional home develops an intense early
identification with his mother and therefore carries within him a strong
feminine imprint." The symbol of the Goddess allows men to experience
and integrate the feminine side of their nature, which is often felt to
be the deepest and most sensitive aspect of self. The Goddess does not
exclude the male; She contains him, as a pregnant woman contains a male
child. Her own male aspect embodies both the solar light of the
intellect and wild, untamed animal energy.
Our relationship to the earth and the other species that share it has
also been conditioned by our religious models.
The image of God as outside of nature has given us a rationale for our
own destruction of the natural order, and justified our plunder of the
earth's resources. We have attempted to "conquer" nature as we have
tried to conquer sin. Only as the results of pollution and ecological
destruction become severe enough to threaten even urban humanity's
adaptability have we come to recognize the importance of ecological
balance and the interdependence of all life. The model of the Goddess,
who is immanent in nature, fosters respect for the sacredness of all
living things. Witchcraft can be seen as a religion of ecology. Its goal
is harmony with nature, so that life may not just survive, but thrive.
The rise of Goddess religion makes some politically oriented feminists
uneasy. They fear it will sidetrack energy away from action to bring
about social change. But in areas as deeply rooted as the relations
between the sexes, true social change can only come about when the myths
and symbols of our culture are themselves changed. The symbol of the
Goddess conveys the spiritual power both to challenge systems of
oppression and to create new, life-oriented cultures.
Modern Witchcraft is a rich kaleidoscope of traditions and orientations.
Covens, the small, closely knit groups that form the congregations of
Witchcraft, are autonomous; there is no central authority that
determines liturgy or rites. Some covens follow practices that have been
handed down in an unbroken line since before the Burning Times. Others
derive their rituals from leaders of modern revivals of the Craft-the
two whose followers are most widespread are Gerald Gardner and Alex
Sanders, both British. Feminist covens are probably the fastest-growing
arm of the Craft. Many are Dianic: a sect of Witchcraft that gives far
more prominence to the female principle than the male. Other covens are
openly eclectic, creating their own traditions from many sources. My own
covens are based on the Faery tradition, which goes back to the Little
People of Stone Age Britain, but we believe in creating our own rituals,
which reflect our needs and insights of today.
The myths underlying philosophy and theology (a word coined by religious
scholar Naomi Goldenburg from thea, the Greek word for Goddess) in this
book are based on the Faery tradition. Other Witches may disagree with
details, but the overall values and attitudes expressed are common to
all of the Craft. Much of the Faery material is still held secret, so
many of the rituals, chants, and invocations come from our creative
tradition. In Witchcraft, a chant is not necessarily better because it
is older. The Goddess is continually revealing Herself, and each of us
is potentially capable of writing our own liturgy.
In spite of diversity, there are ethics and values that are common to
all traditions of Witchcraft. They are based on the concept of the
Goddess as immanent in the world and in all forms of life, including
human beings.
Theologians familiar with Judeo-Christian concepts sometimes have
trouble understanding how a religion such as Witchcraft can develop a
system of ethics and a concept of justice. If there is no split between
spirit and nature, no concept of sin, no covenant or commandments
against which one can sin, how can people be ethical?
By what standards can they judge their actions, when the external judge
is removed from his place as ruler of the cosmos? And if the Goddess is
immanent in the world, why work for change or strive toward an ideal?
Why not bask in the perfection of divinity?
Love for life in all its forms is the basic ethic of Witchcraft. Witches
are bound to honor and respect all living things, and to serve the life
force. While the Craft recognizes that life feeds on life and that we
must kill in order to survive, life is never taken needlessly, never
squandered or wasted. Serving the life force means working to preserve
the diversity of natural life, to prevent the poisoning of the
environment and the destruction of species.
The world is the manifestation of the Goddess, but nothing in that
concept need foster passivity. Many Eastern religions encourage quietism
not because they believe the divine is truly immanent, but because they
believe she/he is not. For them, the world is Maya, Illusion, masking
the perfection of the Divine Reality. What happens in such a world is
not really important; it is only a shadow play obscuring the Infinite
Light. In Witchcraft, however, what happens in the world is vitally
important. The Goddess is immanent, but she needs human help to realize
her fullest beauty. The harmonious balance of plant/animal/human/divine
awareness is not automatic; it must constantly be renewed, and this is
the true function of Craft rituals. Inner work, spiritual work, is most
effective when it proceeds hand in hand with outer work. Meditation on
the balance of nature might be considered a spiritual act in Witchcraft,
but not as much as would cleaning up garbage left at a campsite or
marching to protest an unsafe nuclear plant.
Witches do not see justice as administered by some external authority,
based on a written code or set of rules imposed from without. Instead,
justice is an inner sense that each act brings about consequences that
must be faced responsibly. The Craft does not foster guilt, the stern,
admonishing, self-hating inner voice that cripples action. Instead, it
demands responsibility. "What you send, returns three times over" is the
saying-an amplified version of "Do unto others as you would have them do
unto you." For example, a Witch does not steal, not because of an
admonition in a sacred book, but because the threefold harm far
outweighs any small material gain. Stealing diminishes the thief's
self-respect and sense of honor; it is an admission that one is
incapable of providing honestly for one's own needs and desires.
Stealing creates a climate of suspicion and fear, in which even thieves
have to live. And, because we are all linked in the same social fabric,
those who steal also pay higher prices for groceries, insurance, taxes.
Witchcraft strongly imbues the view that all things are interdependent
and interrelated and therefore mutually responsible. An act that harms
anyone harms us all.
Honor is a guiding principle in the Craft. This is not a need to take
offense at imagined slights against one's virility-it is an inner sense
of pride and self-respect. The Goddess is honored in oneself, and in
others. Women, who embody the Goddess, are respected, not placed on
pedestals or etherealized but valued for all their human qualities. The
self, one's individuality and unique way of being in the world, is
highly valued. The Goddess, like nature, loves diversity. Oneness is
attained not through losing the self, but through realizing it fully.
"Honor the Goddess in yourself, celebrate your self, and you will see
that Self is everywhere," says Faery priest Victor Anderson.
In Witchcraft, "All acts of love and pleasure are My rituals."
Sexuality, as a direct expression of the life force, is seen as numinous
and sacred. It can be expressed freely, so long as the guiding principle
is love. Marriage is a deep commitment, a magical, spiritual, and
psychic bond. But it is only one possibility out of many for loving,
sexual expression.
Misuse of sexuality, however, is heinous. Rape, for example, is an
intolerable crime because it dishonors the life force by turning
sexuality to the expression of violence and hostility instead of love. A
woman has the sacred right to control her own body, as does a man. No
one has the right to force or coerce another.
Life is valued in Witchcraft, and it is approached with an attitude of
joy and wonder, as well as a sense of humor.
Life is seen as the gift of the Goddess. If suffering exists, it is not
our task to reconcile ourselves to it, but to work for change.
Magic, the art of sensing and shaping the subtle, unseen forces that
flow through the world, of awakening deeper levels of consciousness
beyond the rational, is an element common to all traditions of
Witchcraft. Craft rituals are magical rites: they stimulate an awareness
of the hidden side of reality, and awaken long-forgotten powers of the
human mind.
The magical element in Witchcraft is disconcerting to many people. Much
of this book is devoted to a deep exploration of the real meaning of
magic, but here I would like to speak to the fear I have heard expressed
that Witchcraft and occultism harbor fascist tendencies or are linked to
Nazism. There does seem to be evidence that Hitler and other Nazis were
occultists-that is, they may have practiced some of the same techniques
as others who seek to expand the horizons of the minds. Magic, like
chemistry, is a set of techniques that can be put to the service of any
philosophy. The rise of the Third Reich played on the civilized Germans'
disillusionment with rationalism and tapped a deep longing to recover
modes of experience Western culture had too long ignored. It is as if we
had been trained, since infancy, never to use our left arms: The muscles
have partly atrophied, but they cry out to be used. But Hitler perverted
this longing and twisted it into cruelty and horror. The Nazis were not
Goddess worshippers; they denigrated women, relegating them to the
position of breeding animals whose role was to produce more Aryan
warriors. They Were tne perfect patriarchy, the ultimate warrior
cult-not servants of the life force. Witchcraft has no ideal of a
"superman" to be created at the expense of inferior races. In the Craft,
all people are already seen as manifest gods, and differences in color,
race, and customs are welcomed as signs of the myriad beauty of the
Goddess. To equate Witches with Nazis because neither are
Judeo-Christians and both share magical elements is like saying that
swans are really scorpions because neither are horses and both have
tails.
Witchcraft is not a religion of masses-of any sort. Its structure is
cellular, based on covens, small groups of up to thirteen members that
allow for both communal sharing and individual independence.
"Solitaries," Witches who prefer to worship alone, are the exception.
Covens are autonomous, free to use whatever rituals, chants and
invocations they prefer. There is no set prayer book or liturgy.
Elements may change, but Craft rituals inevitably follow the same
underlying patterns. The techniques of magic, which has been termed by
occultist Dion Fortune "the art of changing consciousness at will," are
used to create states of ecstasy, of union with the divine. They may
also be used to achieve material results, such as healings, since in the
Craft there is no split between spirit and matter.
Each ritual begins with the creation of a sacred space, the "casting of
a circle," which establishes a temple in the heart of the forest or the
center of a covener's living room. Goddess and God are then invoked or
awakened within each participant and are considered to be physically
present within the circle and the bodies of the worshippers. Power, the
subtle force that shapes reality, is raised through chanting or dancing
and may be directed through a symbol or visualization. With the raising
of the cone of power comes ecstasy, which may then lead to a trance
state in which visions are seen and insights gained. Food and drink are
shared, and coveners "earth the power" and relax, enjoying a time of
socializing. At the end, the powers invoked are dismissed, the circle is
opened, and a formal return to ordinary consciousness is made.
Entrance to a coven is through an initiation, a ritual experience in
which teachings are transmitted and personal growth takes place. Every
initiate is considered a priestess or priest; Witchcraft is a religion
of clergy.
This book is structured around those elements that I feel are constants
among all the varied traditions of the Craft. Interest in Witchcraft is
growing rapidly. Colleges and universities are beginning to feature
courses in the Craft in their religious studies departments. Women in
ever greater numbers are turning to the Goddess. There is a desperate
need for material that will intelligently explain Witchcraft to
non-Witches in enough depth so that both the practices and the
philosophy can be understood. Because entrance to a coven is a slow and
delicate process, there are many more people who want to practice Craft
than there are covens to accommodate them. So this book also contains
exercises and practical suggestions that can lead to a personal Craft
practice. A person blessed with imagination and a moderate amount of
daring would also use it as a manual to start her or his own coven. It
is not, however meant to be followed slavishly; it is more like a basic
musical score, on which you can improvise.
Mother Goddess is reawakening, and we can begin to recover our primal
birthright, the sheer, intoxicating joy of being alive. We can open new
eyes and see that there is nothing to be saved from, no struggle of life
against the universe, no God outside the world to be feared and obeyed;
only the Goddess, the Mother, the turning spiral that whirls us in and
out of existence, whose winking eye is the pulse of being-birth, death,
rebirth-whose laughter bubbles and courses through all things and who is
found only through love: love of trees, of stones, of sky and clouds, of
scented blossoms and thundering waves; of all that runs and flies and
swims and crawls on her face; through love of ourselves; life-dissolving
world-creating orgasmic love of each other; each of us unique and
natural as a snowflake, each of us our own star, her Child, her lover,
her beloved, her Self.
CHAPTER 2. The World View of Witchcraft 1 Between the Worlds CREATION
Alone, awesome, complete within Herself, the Goddess, She whose name
cannot be spoken, floated in the abyss of the outer darkness, before the
beginning of all things. And as She looked into the curved mirror of
black space, She saw by her own light her radiant reflection, and fell
in love with it. She drew it forth by the power that was in Her and made
love to Herself, and called Her "Miria, the Wonderful." Their ecstasy
burst forth in the single song of all that is, was, or ever shall be,
and with the song came motion, waves that poured outward and became all
the spheres and circles of the worlds. The Goddess became filled with
love, swollen with love, and She gave birth to a rain of bright spirits
that fitted the worlds and became all beings.
But in that great movement, Miria was swept away, and as She moved out
from the Goddess She became more masculine. First She became the Blue
God, the gentle, toughing God of love. Then She became the Green One,
vine-covered, rooted in the earth, the spirit of all growing things. At
last She became the Horned God, the Hunter whose face is the ruddy sun
and yet dark as Death. But always desire draws Him back toward the
Goddess, so that He circles Her eternally, seeking to return in love.
All began in love; all seeks to return to love. Love is the law, the
teacher of wisdom and the great revealer of mysteries.
"The Sioux idea of living creatures is that trees, buffalo and men are
temporary energy swirls, turbulence patterns . . . that's an early
intuitive recognition of energy as a quality of matter. But that's an
old insight, you know, extremely old-probably a Paleolithic shaman's
insight. You find that perception registered so many ways in archaic and
primitive lore. I would say that it is probably the most basic insight
into the nature of things, and that our more common, recent occidental
view of the universe as consisting of fixed things is out of the main
stream, a deviation from basic human perception." Gary Snyder [2]
The mythology and cosmology of Witchcraft are rooted in that
"Paleolithic shaman's insight": that all things are swirls of energy,
vortexes of moving forces, currents in an ever-changing sea. Underlying
the appearance of separateness, of fixed objects within a linear stream
of time, reality is a field of energies that congeal, temporarily, into
forms. In time, all "fixed" things dissolve, only to coalesce again into
new forms, new vehicles.
This view of the universe as an interplay of moving forces-which,
incidentally, corresponds to an amazing degree with the views of modern
physics-is a product of a very special mode of perception. Ordinary
waking consciousness sees the world as fixed; it focuses on one thing at
a time, isolating it from its surroundings, much like viewing a dark
forest with a narrow flashlight beam that illuminates a lone leaf or a
solitary stone.
Extraordinary consciousness, the other mode of perception that is broad,
holistic, and undifferentiated, sees patterns and relationships rather
than fixed objects. It is the mode of starlight: dim and silvery,
revealing the play of woven branches and the dance of shadows, sensing
pathways as spaces in the whole.
The magical and psychic aspects of the Craft are concerned with
awakening the starlight vision, as I like to call it, and training it to
be a useful tool. Magic is not a supernatural affair; it is, in Dion
Fortune's definition, "the art of changing consciousness at will"-of
switching the flashlight off and on, of picking out details, of seeing
by the stars.
Ordinary consciousness is highly valued in the Craft, but Witches are
aware of its limitations. It is, in a sense, a grid through which we
view the world, a culturally transmitted system of classification. There
are infinite ways to look at the world; the "other vision" frees us from
the limits of our culture.
"Our fellow men are the black magicians," Don Juan, the Yaqui shaman,
tells his student Castaneda in Tales of Power. * "Think for a moment.
Can you deviate from the path that they've lined up for you? No. Your
thoughts and your actions are fixed forever in their terms. I, on the
other hand, brought you freedom. Freedom is expensive, but the price is
not impossible. So fear your captors, your masters. Don't waste your
time and your power fearing me.
In Witchcraft, the "price of freedom" is, first of all, discipline and
responsibility Starlight vision is a natural potential inherent in each
of us, but much ork is required to develop and train it. Powers and
abilities gained through heightened awareness must also be used
responsibly; otherwise, like the Ring of Sauron (in Tolkien's Lord of
the Rings), they will destroy their possessors. Those who would be free
must also be willing to stand slightly aside from the mainstream of
society, if need be. In modern Western culture, artists, poets, and
visionaries, let alone Witches, mystics, and shamans, are often somewhat
alienated from their culture, which tends to devalue intangibles in
favor of the solid, monetary fruits of success.
But the final price of freedom is the willingness to face that most
frightening of all beings, one's own self.
Starlight vision, the "other way of knowing," is the mode of perception
of the unconscious, rather than the conscious mind. The depths of our
own beings are not all sunlit; to see clearly, we must be willing to
dive into the dark, inner abyss and acknowledge the creatures we may
find there. For, as Jungian analyst M. Esther Harding explains in
Woman's Mysteries, "These subjective factors ... are potent psychical
entities, they belong to the totality of our being, they cannot be
destroyed. So long as they are unrecognized outcasts from our conscious
life, they will come between us and all the objects we view, and our
whole world will be either distorted or illuminated." Perhaps the most
convincing way to present the Craft conception of the self is to examine
some of the recent experimental findings of biologists and
psychologists.* and ** Robert Omstein, in The Psychology of
Consciousness, describes experiments with brain-damaged and epileptic
subjects, demonstrating that the two hemispheres of the brain appear to
specialize in precisely the two modes of consciousness we have
discussed.
"The left hemisphere (connected to the right side of the body) is
predominantly involved with analytic, logical thinking, especially in
verbal and mathematical functions. Its mode of operation is primarily
linear. This hemisphere seems to process information sequentially." Like
our flashlight beam, it focuses on one subject at a time, excluding
others. It perceives the world as made of separate things, which we may
fear or desire, which can be manipulated to suit our purposes. "It seems
to nave been evolved for the primary purpose of ensuring biological
survival." The right hemisphere (again, remember, connected to the left
side of the body) seems specialized for holistic mentation. Its language
ability is quite limited. This hemisphere is primarily responsible for
our orientation in space, artistic endeavors, crafts, body image,
recognition of faces. It processes information more diffusely than does
the left hemisphere, and its responsibilities demand a ready integration
of many inputs at once." This is the starlight vision, which sees the
universe as a dance of swirling energies, which "does not postulate
duration, a future or a past, a cause or an effect, but a patterned,
'timeless' whole." This mode of awareness is vital to creativity. As
Anton Ehrenzweig states in The Hidden Order of Art, "The complexity of
any work of art, however simple, far outstrips the powers of conscious
attention, which with its pin-point focus, can attend to only one thing
at a time. Only the extreme undifferentiation of unconscious vision can
scan these complexities. It can hold them in a single, unfocused glance
and treat figure and ground with equal impartiality." The following
exercise, used to train artists, is helpful in learning to experience
the mode of awareness just described.
Take a blank sheet of paper and a soft pencil or stick of charcoal. Sit
down and observe a scene that interests you. Forgetting about objects,
names, and things, observe only the play of light and shadow over
various forms.
Block in the shadows, not with lines but with patches of broad strokes.
Do not be distracted by local color; do not worry about reproducing
"things." Let the patches of shade create forms. Spend at least ten
minutes on this exercise. Remember, the point is not to create a "good"
drawing or to prove your artistic talent (or lack of it); the point is
to experience another way of seeing, in which separate objects disappear
and only pattern remains.
People who are less visually oriented may find themselves more
comfortable with the following exercise. M.V
Close your eyes. Listen to the sounds around you, forgetting what they
represent. Be conscious only of the vast rhythm they create. Even in the
city, forget that the whooshes, thumps, clacks, chirrupings, rumbles,
and bangs are passing cars, workmen's hammers, footsteps, sparrows,
trucks, and slamming doors-hear only the intricate, organic pattern in
which each is a separate beat.
As we have said, both modes of perception are valued in the Craft, but
the holistic vision of the right hemisphere is considered to be more in
touch with underlying reality than the linear vision of the left
hemisphere. This view is borne out by experiments with biofeedback,
which gives people visual information about their involuntary body
processes, allowing them to monitor and eventually control such
functions as heartbeat or brain waves.
Barbara Brown, New Mind, New Body, describes experiments showing that
"long before conscious recognition, the body and its subconscious
substructure both recognize and make judgements about what goes on in
the environment." Subjects were monitored as "naughty" words were
flashed on a screen, too briefly to be recognized consciously. Their
skin, heart rates, brain waves, and muscles all showed reactions to the
"unseen" words. The subconscious can respond correctly to reality even
when it is given incorrect information by the conscious mind. In one
experiment, subjects were told that they would be given a series of
shocks that varied in intensity. Consciously, they perceived that the
shocks grew weaker; in reality, the shocks were of the same intensity
each time. Skin reactions proved that the subconscious was not
fooled-monitors recorded exactly the same skin response to each shock,
even when the conscious reaction was different." In the Faery tradition
of Witchcraft, the unconscious mind is called Younger Self; the
conscious mind is called Talking Self.** Because they function through
different modes of awareness, communication between the two is
difficult. It is as if they speak different languages. It is Younger
Self that directly experiences the world, through the holistic awareness
of the right hemisphere.
Sensations, emotions, basic drives, image memory, intuition, and diffuse
perception are functions of Younger Self. Younger Self's verbal
understanding is limited; it communicates through images, emotions,
sensations, dreams, visions, and physical symptoms. Classical
psychoanalysis developed from attempts to interpret the speech of
Younger Self. Witchcraft not only interprets, but teaches us how to
speak back to Younger Self.
Talking Self organizes the impressions of Younger Self, gives them
names, classifies them into systems. As its name implies, it functions
through the verbal, analytic awareness of the left hemisphere. It also
includes the set of verbally understood precepts that encourage us to
make judgments about right and wrong. Talking Self speaks through words,
abstract concepts, and numbers.
In the Faery tradition, a third "self is recognized: the Deep Self or
God Self which does not easily correspond to any psychological concept.
The Deep Self is the Divine within, the ultimate and original essence,
the spirit that exists beyond time, space, and matter. It is our deepest
level of wisdom and compassion and is conceived of as both male and
female, two motes of consciousness united as one. It is often symbolized
as two linked spirals, or as the the infinity sign, the 8 on its side.
In the Faery tradition, it is called Dian Yn Glas, the Blue God. Blue
symbolizes spirit; the Deep Self was said to appear blue when
psychically "seen." The Picts stained themselves blue with woad,
according to our traditions, in order to identify with the Deep Self.
"Dian" is related to both Diana and Tana, the Faery name of the Goddess;
also to Janicot, the Basque name of the Horned God, and to the given
names Jean, Joan, and Jonet, which Margaret Murray documents as being
popular in Witch families.
In the esoteric Judaism of the Cabalah, the Deep Self is named the
Neshamah, from the root Shmh, "to hear or listen": The Neshamah is She
Who Listens, the soul who inspires and guides us. In modern occultism,
the Deep Self often appears as the "Spirit Guide," sometimes in dual
form, as in John C. Lilly's account of his LSD experiences in an
isolation tank, where he reports meeting two helpful beings: "They say
that they are my guardians, that they have been, with me before at
critical times and that in fact they are with me always, but that I am
not usually in a state to perceive them. I am in a state to perceive
them when I am close to the death of the body. In this state there is no
time. There is an immediate perception of the past, present, and future
as if in the present moment." Lilly is describing the holistic,
right-hemisphere awareness linked to Younger Self. The Faery tradition
teaches that the Deep Self is connected to Younger Self, and not
directly linked to Talking Self. We do not, fortunately, have to be
nearly dead before we can perceive the Deep Self, once we learn the
trick of communication. It is not the conscious mind, with its abstract
concepts, that ever actually communicates with the Divine; it is the
unconscious mind, the Younger Self that responds only to images,
pictures, sensations, tangibles.** To communicate with the Deep Self,
the Goddess/God Within, we resort to symbols, to art, poetry, music,
myth, and the actions of ritual that translate abstract concepts into
the language of the unconscious.
Younger Self-who can be as balky and stubborn as the most cantankerous
three-year-old-is not impressed by words. Like a native of Missouri, it
wants to be shown. To arouse its interest, we must seduce it with pretty
pictures and pleasurable sensations-take it out dining and dancing, as
it were. Only in this way can the Deep Self be reached. For this reason,
religious truths have not been expressed throughout time as mathematical
formulas, but in art, music, dance, drama, poetry, stories, and active
rituals. As Robert Graves says, "Religious morals, in a healthy society,
are best enforced by drums, moonlight, fasting, dancing, masks, flowers,
divine possession." Witchcraft has no sacred book. Its allegiance is not
to "The Word" of the Gospel of John, but to the power of symbolic action
that unlocks the starlit awareness of Younger Self, and opens a free
flow of communication between all three selves at once. The myths and
stories that have come down to us are not dogma to be taken literally,
any more than we are meant to take literally statement that "my love is
like a red, red rose." They are poetry, not theology - meant to speak to
Younger Self, in Joseph Campbell's words "to touch exhilarate centers of
life beyond the reach of vocabularies of reason and coercion.
Aspects of Witchcraft rituals may sometimes seem silly to very
serious-minded people, who fail to realize that ritual is aimed at
Younger Self. The sense of humor, of play, is often the key to opening
the deepest states of consciousness. Part of the "price of freedom,"
then, is the willingness to play, to let go of our adult dignity, to
look foolish, to laugh at nothing. A child makes believe that she is a
queen; her chair becomes a throne. A Witch makes believe that her wand
has magic power, and it becomes a channel for energy.
Of course, balance is necessary. There is a difference between magic and
psychosis and that difference lies in maintaining the ability to step
back, at will into ordinary consciousness, to return to the awareness
that, as my high school health education teacher used to affirm in the
height of the psychedelic era, "Reality is that when you jump off a
roof, you break your leg." Drugs can open the holistic awareness of
Younger Self, but often at the expense of Talking Self's survival
judgment: If we "play" at flying in the body, we may smash a femur. But
a trained awareness has no quarrel with ordinary reality; it flies
further, in the spirit, and gains insights and perceptions that can
later be verified by Talking Self.
Humor and play awaken the sense of wonder, the basic attitude that
Witchcraft takes to the world. For example, last night my coven held a
May Eve ritual, the central action of which involved winding a
"Maypole," and weaving into it those things we wish to weave into our
lives.** Instead of a pole, we used a central cord, and instead of
ribbons we had strings of colored yarn, anchored to a central hook on
the ceiling of our meeting room.
We also had eleven people in the circle. Of course, we knew perfectly
well that it is impossible to wind a Maypole with an odd number of
people, but we did not want to leave anybody out. So, with a cavalier
disregard for ordinary reality, we went right ahead.
The result, to begin with, was chaos and confusion. Everyone was
laughing as we dodged in and out, creating a tangled knot of yarn. It
was scarcely a scene of mystical power; a ritual magician would have
blanched pale and turned in his wand on the spot. But an odd thing began
to happen as we continued. The laughter began to build a strange
atmosphere, as if ordinary reality was fading away. Nothing existed but
the interplay of colored cords and moving bodies. The smiles on faces
that flashed in and out of sight began to resemble the secret smiles of
archaic Greek statues, hinting at the highest and most numerous of
Mysteries. We began to sing; we moved in rhythm and a pattern evolved in
the dance-nothing that could ever be mapped or plotted rationally; it
was a pattern with an extra element that always and inevitably would
defy explanation. The snarl of yarn resolved itself into an intricately
woven cord. The song became a chant; the room glowed, and the cord
pulsed with power like a live thing, an umbilicus linking us to all that
is within and beyond. At last the chant peaked and died; we dropped into
trance. When we awoke, all together, at the same moment, we faced each
other with wonder.
The Creation myth that heads this chapter clearly expresses the attitude
of wonder, to the world, which is divine, and to the divine, which is
the world.* and ** In the beginning, the Goddess is the All, virgin,
meaning complete within Herself. Although She is called Goddess, She
could just as easily be called God-sex has not yet come into being. As
yet, there is no separation, no division, nothing but the primal unity.
Yet the female nature of the ground of being is stressed-because the
process of creation that is about to occur is a birth process. The world
is born, not made, and not commanded into being.
The Goddess sees her reflection in the curved mirror of space, which may
be a magical insight into the form of the universe, the curved space of
modern physics. The mirror is an ancient attribute of the Goddess,
according to Robert Graves, in her aspect as "the ancient pagan Sea
Goddess Marian . . . Miriam, Mariamne (Sea Lamb), Myrrhine, Myrtea,
Myrrha, Maria, or Marina, patroness of poets and lovers and proud mother
of the Archer of Love A familiar disguise of this same Marian is the
merry-maid, as 'mermaid' was once written. The conventional figure of
the mermaid-a beautiful woman with a round mirror, a golden comb and a
fish-tail- expresses 'The Love-Goddess rises from the Sea.' Every
initiate of the Eleusinian mysteries, which were of Pelasgian [the
indigenous, matrifocal people of Greece] origin, went through a love
rite with her representative after taking a cauldron bath the mirror did
also form part of the sacred furniture of the Mysteries, and probably
stood for 'Know thyself."'16 The same mermaid/ocean mother is named
Yemaya in West Africa and Iamanja in Brazil.
Water is the original mirror; the image conveyed is also that of the
moon floating over the dark sea, watching her reflection in the waves. A
faint echo can be heard in the opening of Genesis: "The earth was
unformed and void, and the spirit of God floated on the face of the
water." There is yet another aspect to the mirror: A mirror image is a
reversed image, the same, but opposite, the reverse polarity. The image
expresses the paradox: All things are one, yet each thing is separate,
individual, unique.
Eastern religions tend to focus on the first part of the paradox,
holding the view that in reality all things are one and that separation
and individuality are illusions. Western religions stress individuality
and tend to see the world as composed of fixed and separate things. The
Western view tends to encourage individual effort and involvement with
the world; the Eastern view encourage withdrawal, contemplation, and
compassion. Witchcraft holds to the truth of paradox and sees each view
as equally valid. They reflect and complete each other; they do not
contradict each other. The world of separate things is the reflection of
the One; the One is the reflection of the myriad separate things of the
world. We are all "swirls" of the same energy, yet each swirl is unique
in its own form and pattern.
The Goddess falls in love with Herself, drawing forth her own emanation,
which takes on a life of its own. Love of self for self is the creative
force of the universe. Desire is the primal energy, and that energy is
erotic: the attraction of lover to beloved, of planet to star, the lust
of electron for proton. Love is the glue that holds the world together.
Blind eros, however, becomes amor, the love that, in Joseph Campbell's
terminology, is personal, directed to an individual, rather than the
universal, sexless charity of agape, or indiscriminate, sexual desire.
The Goddess's reflection takes on its own being and is given a name.
Love is not only an energizing force, but an individualizing force. It
dissolves separation and yet creates individuality. It is, again, the
primal paradox.
Miria, "The Wonderful," is of course, Marian-Miriam-Mariamne, who is
also Mari, the full moon aspect of the Goddess in the Faery tradition.
The sense of wonder, of joy and delight in the natural world, is the
essence of Witchcraft. The world is not a flawed creation, not something
from which we must escape, not in need of salvation or redemption.
However it might appear from day to day, by the nature of its deepest
being it fills us with wonder.
Divine ecstasy becomes the fountain of creation, and creation is an
orgasmic process. Ecstasy is at the heart of Witchcraft-in ritual, we
turn paradox inside out and become the Goddess, sharing in the primal,
throbbing joy of union. "The fundamental characteristic of shamanism is
ecstasy," according to Mircea Eliade, and although he interprets the
state somewhat narrowly as "the soul forsaking the body," he admits that
"in all probability the ecstatic experience in its many aspects, is
coexistent with the human condition, in the sense that it is an integral
part of what is called man's gaining consciousness of his specific mode
of being in the world. Shamanism is .not only a technique of ecstasy;
its theology and its philosophy finally depend on the spiritual value at
is accorded to ecstasy. Witchcraft is a shamanistic religion, and the
spiral value placed on ecstasy is a high one. It is the source of union,
healing, native inspiration, and communion with the divine-whether it is
found in center of a coven circle, in bed with one's beloved, or in the
midst of the forest, in awe and wonder at the beauty of the natural
world, ecstasy brings about harmony, the "music of the spheres." Music
is a symbolic expression of the vibration that is a quality of all
beings. Physicists inform us that the atoms and molecules of all things,
from an unstable gas to the Rock of Gibraltar, are in constant motion.
Underlying that motion is an order, a harmony that is inherent in being.
Matter sings, by its very nature.
The song is carried forth on waves that become spheres. The waves are
the waves of orgasm, light waves, ocean waves, pulsating electrons,
waves of sound. The waves form spheres as swirling gases form stars. It
is a basic insight of Witchcraft that energy, whether physical, psychic,
or emotional, moves in waves, in cycles that are themselves spirals. (An
easy way to visualize this is to borrow a child's "Slinky" toy-a coiling
spiral of very thin metal. When stretched and viewed from the side, the
spirals appear very clearly as wave forms.)
The Goddess swells with love and gives birth to a rain of bright
spirits, a rain that awakens consciousness in the world as moisture
awakens green growth on earth. The rain is the fructifying menstrual
blood, the moon's blood that nourishes life, as well as the bursting
waters that herald birth, the ecstatic giving forth of life.
The motion, the vibration, becomes so great that Miria is swept away. As
She moves farther from the point of union, She becomes more polarized,
more differentiated, more male. The Goddess has projected Herself; her
projected Self becomes the Other, her opposite, who eternally yearns for
reunion. Differentness awakens desire, which pulls against the
centrifugal force of projection. The energy field of the cosmos becomes
polarized; it becomes a conductor of forces exerted in opposite
directions.
The view of the All as an energy field polarized by two great forces,
Female and Male, Goddess and God, which in their ultimate being are
aspects of each other, is common to almost all traditions of the
Craft.** The Dianic tradition, however, while recognizing the Male
Principle, accords it much less importance than the Female.
Some modern, self-created traditions, especially those stemming from a
feminist-separatist political orientation, do not recognize the Male at
all. If they work with polarity, they visualize both forces as contained
within the female. This is a line of experimentation that has great
value for many women, particularly as an antidote to thousands of years
of Western culture's exclusive concentration on the Male. However, it
has never been the mainstream view of the Craft. I personally feel that,
in the long run, a female-only model of the universe would prove to be
as constricting and oppressive, to women as well as men, as the
patriarchal model has been. One of the tasks of religion is to guide us
in relationship to both that which is like ourselves, and that which is
unlike ourselves. Sex is the most basic of differences; we cannot become
whole by pretending difference does not exist, or by denying either male
or female.
It is important, however, to separate the concept of polarity from our
culturally conditioned images of male and female. The Male and Female
forces represent difference, yet they are not different, in essence:
They are the same force flowing in opposite, but not opposed,
directions.** The Chinese concept of Yin and Yang is somewhat similar,
but in Witchcraft the description of the forces is very different.
Neither is "active" or "passive," dark or light, dry or moist-instead,
each partakes of all those qualities. The Female is seen as the life-
giving force, the power of manifestation, of energy flowing into the
world to become form. The Male is seen as the death force, in a
positive, not a negative sense: the force of limitation that is the
necessary balance to unbridled creation, the force of dissolution, of
return to formlessness. Each principle contains the other: Life breeds
death, feeds on death; death sustains life, makes possible evolution and
new creation. They are part of a cycle, each dependent on the other.
Existence is sustained by the on-off pulse, the alternating current of
the two forces in perfect balance.
Unchecked, the life force is cancer; unbridled, the death force is war
and genocide. Together, they hold each other in the harmony that
sustains life, in the perfect orbit that can be seen in the changing
cycle of the seasons, in the ecological balance of the natural world,
and in the progression of human life from birth through fulfillment to
decline and death-and then to rebirth.
Death is not an end; it is a stage in the cycle that leads on to
rebirth. After death, the human soul is said to rest in "Summerland,"
the Land of Eternal Youth, where it is refreshed, grows young, and is
made ready to be born again. Rebirth is not considered to be
condemnation to an endless, dreary round of suffering, as in some
Eastern religions. Instead, it is seen as the great gift of the Goddess,
who is manifest in the physical world. Life and the world are not
separate from Godhead; they are immanent divinity.
Witchcraft does not maintain, like the First Truth of Buddhism, that
"All life is suffering." On the contrary, life is a thing of wonder. The
Buddha is said to have gained this insight after his encounter with old
age, disease, and death. In the Craft, old age is a natural and highly
valued part of the cycle of life, the time of greatest wisdom and
understanding. Disease, of course, causes misery, but it is not
something to be inevitably suffered: The practice of the Craft was
always connected with the healing arts, with herbalism and midwifery.
Nor is death fearful: It is simply the dissolution of the physical form
that allows the spirit to prepare for a new life. Suffering certainly
exists in life-it is a part of learning. But escape from the Wheel of
Birth and Death is not the optimal cure, any more than hara-kiri is the
best cure for menstrual cramps. When suffering is the result of the
social order or human injustice, the Craft encourages active work to
relieve it. Where suffering is a natural part of the cycle of birth and
decay, it is relieved by understanding and acceptance, by a willing
giving-over to both the dark and the light in turn.
The polarity of the Female and Male Principles should not be taken as a
general pattern for individual female and human beings. We each contain
both principles; we are female and male both.** To be whole is to be in
touch with both forces-creation and dissolution, growth and limitation.
The energy created by the push-pull of forces flows within each of us.
It can be tapped individually in rituals or meditations, and it can be
attuned to resonate with others. Sex, for instance, is far more than a
physical act; it is a polarized flow of power between two people.
The Male Principle is first seen as a nearly androgynous figure: the
Child, the flute-playing Blue God of love.** His image is connected with
that of the personal Blue God, the Deep Self, which is also androgynous.
Gentle youth, beloved son, He is never sacrificed.
The Green aspect is the vegetation God-the corn spirit, the grain that
is cut and then replanted; the seed that dies with every harvest and is
eternally reborn each spring.
The Horned God, the most "male" in the conventional sense, of the
Goddess's projections, is the eternal Hunter, and also the animal who is
hunted. He is the beast who is sacrificed that human life may go on, as
well as the sacrificer, the one who sheds blood. He is also seen as the
sun, eternally hunting the moon across the sky. The waxing and waning of
the sun throughout the seasons manifest the cycle of birth and death,
creation and dissolution, separation and return.
Goddess and God, Female and Male, Moon and Sun, Birth and Death swing in
their orbits-eternal, yet ever changing. Polarity, the force that holds
the cosmos together, is love, erotic, transcendent, and individual.
Creation did not happen once in a fixed point in time; it goes on
eternally, occurring in each moment, revealed in the cycle of the year:
In love, the Horned God, changing form and changing face, ever seeks the
Goddess. In this world, the search and the seeking appear in the Wheel
of the Year.
She is the Great Mother who gives birth to Him as the Divine Child Sun
at the Winter Solstice. In spring, He is sower and seed who grows with
the growing light, green as the new shoots. She is the Initiatrix who
teaches Him the mysteries. He is the young bull; She the nymph,
seductress. In summer, when light is longest, they meet in union, and
the strength of their passion sustains the world. But the God's face
darkens as the sun grows weaker, until at last, when the grain is cut
for harvest, He too sacrifices Himself to Self that all may be
nourished. She is the reaper, the grave of earth to which all must
return. Throughout the long nights and darkening days, He sleeps in her
womb; in dreams, He is Lord of Death who rules the Land of Youth beyond
the gates of night and day.
His dark tomb becomes the womb of rebirth, for at Midwinter She again
gives birth to Him. The cycle ends and begins again, and the Wheel of
the Year turns, on and on.
The rituals of the eight solar holidays, the Sabbats, are derived from
the myth of the Wheel of the Year. The Goddess reveals her threefold
aspects: As Maiden, She is the virgin patroness of birth and initiation;
as Nymph, She is the sexual temptress, lover, siren, seductress; as
Crone, She is the dark face of life, which demands death and sacrifice.
The God is son, brother, lover, who becomes his own father: the eternal
sacrifice eternally reborn into new life.
Sir James Frazer, in The Golden Bough, traces many variations of this
myth. Most, like the version expounded by Robert Graves in The White
Goddess, present the God as split into rival Twins embodying his two
aspects.
The Star Son, Lord of the Waxing Year, vies with his brother the Serpent
for the love of the Goddess. On the Summer Solstice, they battle, and
the Dark Serpent defeats the Light and supplants Him in the Goddess's
favor, only to be Himself defeated at Midwinter, when the Waxing year is
reborn.
This variation is not, in essence, different: from the variation we have
presented, as long as the Dark and Light Twins are clearly understood to
be aspects of the same divinity. But when we see the God as split, we
run the risk of suffering a split within ourselves: of identifying
totally with the Light and ascribing the Dark to an agent of evil. Star
Son and Serpent too easily become Christ-Satan figures. In Witchcraft,
the dark,, waning aspect of the God is not evil-it is a vital part of
the natural cycle.
The essential teaching of the myth is connected with the concept of
sacrifice. To Witches, as to other peoples who live close to nature, all
things- plants, animals, stones, and stars-are alive, are on some level
conscious beings. All things are divine, are manifestations of the
Goddess. The death of the grain in the harvest, or the death of a deer
in the hunt, was considered a divine sacrifice, freely made out of love.
Ritualistic and mythical identification with the sacrificing God honors
the life spark, even in death, and prepares us to give way gracefully to
new life, when the time comes for each of us to die. Waxing and waning,
birth and death, take place within the human psyche and life cycle. Each
is to be welcomed in its proper time and season, because life is a
process of constant change.
The God chooses to sacrifice in order to. remain within the orbit of the
Goddess, within the cycle of the natural world, and within the ecstatic,
primal union that creates the world. Were He to cling to any point on
the wheel and refuse to give way to change, the cycle would stop; He
would fall out of orbit and lose all. Harmony would be destroyed; union
would be broken. He would not be preserving Himself; He would be denying
his true self, his deepest passion, his very nature.
It is vitally important not to confuse this conception of sacrifice with
the masochistic self-sacrifice that is so often preached as the ideal by
patriarchal religions. In the Craft, the sacrifice of one's nature or
individuality is never demanded. Instead, one sacrifices to nature.
There is no conflict, in Witchcraft, between the spiritual and the
material; we do not have to give up one to gain the other. The spirit
manifests in matter: The Goddess is seen as giving us abundance. But the
most abundant summer is followed by winter, as the longest day ends in
night.
Only when one gives way to the other can life go on.
In Witchcraft, sacrifice is most definitely not the submission to
external power held by another person or institution. Nor does it mean
giving up one's will or self-respect. Its emotional tone is not
self-pity, but pride: it is the sacrifice of Mettus Curtius, who, when
told by the augurs that the bottomless crack that had suddenly opened in
the Forum was a sign that the Gods demanded the sacrifice of Rome's
finest, unhesitatingly leapt into the chasm on horseback, fully armed.
He had not a moment's doubt as to his own self-worth; he knew what
"Rome's finest" must be, and acted accordingly, out of an inner sense of
what was right.
Witchcraft does not demand poverty, chastity, or obedience, but it is
not a "looking out for Number One" philosophy, either. It developed in a
close-knit clan society, where resources were shared and land held in
common. "Charity" was an unknown concept, because sharing was an
integral part of society, a basic expectation. "Number One" existed only
within the fabric of society and within the web of all life. Witchcraft
recognizes that we are all interdependent, and even the most avid member
of the "me generation" must ultimately serve the life force, if only as
compost.** The sacrifice of the God was represented in human society by
the "Sacred King" or priest, who served as consort to the High
Priestess, religious leader, and at times, war leader for the clan.
Since Frazer compiled The Golden Bough, his classic work of folklore and
anthropology first published in 1900, writers on the subject of
"primitive" religions, especially those oriented toward a Goddess, have
generally accepted his thesis that human sacrifice was a vital and
regular institution in matrifocal culture. Even well-meaning, sensitive,
and thinking men-including Robert Graves,* who has probably been the
greatest force for revival of interest in the Goddess in this
century-perpetuate the myths. Joseph Campbell, author of the fine series
The Masks of God, goes so far as to say that "human sacrifice ... is
everywhere characteristic of the worship of the Goddess." Craft
tradition and archaeological evidence do not support this picture of
Goddess worship as bloody and barbaric. The many Paleolithic sites
associated with Goddess figures-Laussel, Angles-Sur-Anglin, Cogul, La
Magdaleine, Malta, to name just a few-show no evidence of human
sacrifice. In the Neolithic, Catal Huyuk is one of the earliest (circa
6500-5700 BC) and most clearly matriarchal sites excavated. The many
shrines decorated with figures of the Mother Goddess and her
son-paramour have no provisions for either human or animal sacrifice; no
altars, no pits for blood, and no caches of bones. Nor do the Goddess
temples of Malta and Sardinia, the passage graves and stone circles of
the megalith builders, or the excavated sites of Crete show any evidence
that human beings were ever ritually murdered. Where human sacrifice is
clearly evident-for example, in the Royal Tombs of the Sumerian city Ur,
where entire courts followed the king into death-it is associated with
cultures that have already made the shift to patriarchy.
Reconstructing culture from buried bones and artifacts is, of course,
difficult; reconstruction from surviving folk customs, which Frazer
often attempts, is just as liable to error. If peasants burn corn
dollies in the harvest fire, it does not necessarily follow that they
once burned living men. To Younger Self, a corn dollie is a perfectly
effective symbol of the God's sacrifice; a live victim is not required.
Historical reports of matrifocal cultures most often come from their
enemies and conquerors, who are likely to paint a negative picture of
the religious customs of their foes. If our knowledge of medieval
Judaism was limited to historical reports by Catholic Churchmen, we
would be bound to conclude that the blood of Christians was needed to
bake the ritual matzohs. Today we recognize this fiction for the libel
that it was, but slurs against matrifocal religions have become deeply
embedded in religion and mythology and are often hard to identify. For
example, the Greek myth of Theseus and the Minotaur was believed to
represent Cretan sacrifice of captives to their bull God. But frescoes
excavated in the Palace of Minos reveal, instead, the practice of
bull-leaping: no doubt a dangerous sport, but one that could hardly be
called human sacrifice any more than its modern descendent,
bullfighting.
In the Faery tradition, oral teachings say that in early times the
Sacred King or Priest held office for nine years, after which he
underwent a ritual mock death, abdicated, and joined the Council of
Elders.** Ritual mock death may be the origin of many folk customs
involving symbolic sacrifices. In times of great need or disaster, a
king might, if his inner being prompted, sacrifice himself. The
willingness to give over one's personal existence to serve the people
was the true test of kingship, and this requirement lessened the
attraction of power for corrupt and selfish individuals. Kingship was
not originally an opportunity to make a killing in the bronze market or
collect personal slaves; it was a ritual, mystical identification with
the underlying forces of death and life.
Women were never sacrificed in Witchcraft. Women shed their own blood
monthly and risk death in service to the life force with every pregnancy
and birth. For this reason, their bodies were considered sacred, and
held inviolate.
Unfortunately, newspapers, motion pictures, and television today
continue to perpetuate the association of Witchcraft and Goddess
religion with horror and human sacrifice. Every Manson-like murderer is
called a "witch," Outright psychopaths claim to be practicing Witchcraft
with degraded rites, and may at times mislead gullible people into
believing them. Witchcraft as a religion may not have a universal creed
or set liturgy, but on some points there is unanimity. No true Witches
today practice human sacrifice, torture, or any form of ritual murder.
Anyone who does is not a Witch, but a psychopath.** The world view of
Witchcraft is, above all, one that values life. The cosmos is a
polarized field of forces that are constantly in the process of swirling
into form and dissolving back into pure energy. Polarity, which we call
Goddess and God, creates the cycle that underlies the movements of the
stars and the changing of the seasons, the harmony of the natural world
and the evolution within our human lives. We perceive the interplay of
forces in two basic modes, the holistic, intuitive "starlight" mode of
the right hemisphere and the unconscious; and the linear, analytic,
conscious mode of the left hemisphere. Communication between conscious
and unconscious, between Talking Self and Younger Self, and through the
latter to the Deep Self, the spirit, depends on an openness to both
modes of awareness. Verbal concepts must be translated into symbols and
images; unconscious images must be brought to the light of
consciousness. Through open communication, we can become attuned to the
cycles of nature, to the primal, ecstatic union that is the force of
creation. Attunement requires sacrifice, the willingness to change, to
let go of any point on the Wheel and move on. But sacrifice is not
suffering, and life in all its aspects, light and dark, growing and
decaying, is a great gift. In a world where the endlessly transforming,
erotic dance of God and Goddess weaves radiant through all things, we
who step to their rhythm are enraptured with the wonder and mystery of
being.
Between the Worlds
"We met tonight in the rented storefront. For a long time, we just
talked--about our fears and doubts about magic and ourselves: that it
isn't real, that it is real, that it will stop, that it's an ego-trip,
that we're crazy, that what we really want is power, that we'll lose our
sense of humor and become pompous about it, that we won't be able to
take it seriously, that it won't work, that it will work. . .
At one point, we all took hands, and started breathing together.
Suddenly we realized that a circle had been cast.
We passed around the oil, for anointing, and kissed. Someone began a low
humming, and Pat started tapping out a rhythm on the drum. And we were
all chanting, interweaving voices and melodies, as if different words
were coming through each of us:
Isis . . . Astarte . . . Ishtar
Dawn and darkness . . . dawn and darkness . . .
Moo-oo-oon, Crescent Moo-oo-oon ... ;
Pour out your light and your radiance upon us
Shine! Shine! Shine! Shine! Shine!
and through it and behind it all, Beth was wailing on her kazoo, and it
sounded like some strange, Arabian oud, or a sobbing jazz saxophone, but
we were smiling at the humor of it.
At the same moment, we all fell silent. Then we shared fruit, laughed,
and talked about humor. We were dunking about a coven name, and someone
suggested Compost. It was perfect! Earthy, organic, nurturing-and
discouraging to self-inflation.
We are now the Compost coven!
The ritual worked. Whatever magic brings, it will not take away our
ability to laugh at ourselves. And those fears grow less and less all
the time." From my Book of Shadows The coven is a Witch's support group,
consciousness-raising group, psychic study center, clergy-training
program, College of Mysteries, surrogate clan, and religious
congregation all rolled into one. In a strong coven, the bond is, by
tradition, "closer than family": a sharing of spirits, emotions,
imaginations. "Perfect love and perfect trust" are the goal.
The coven structure makes the organization of Witchcraft very different
from that of most other religions. The Craft is not based on large,
amorphous masses who are only superficially acquainted; nor is it based
on individual gurus with their devotees and disciples. There is no
hierarchical authority, no Dalai Lama, no Pope.
The structure of Witchcraft is cellular, based on small circles whose
members share a deep commitment to each other and the Craft.
Witchcraft tends to attract people who, by nature, do not like to join
groups. The coven structure makes it possible for rabid individualists
to experience a deep sense of community without losing their
independence of spirit. The secret is its small size. A coven (usually
pronounced so as to rhyme with oven), by tradition, never contains more
than thirteen members. In such a small group, each person's presence or
absence affects the rest.
The group is colored by every individual's likes, dislikes, beliefs, and
tastes.
At the same time, the coven becomes an entity in itself, with a
personality of its own. It generates a raith form/ an energy swirl that
exists over and beyond its membership. There is a quality of synergy
about a strong coven.
It is more than the sum of its parts; it is an energy pool on which its
members can draw.
To become a member of a coven, a Witch must be initiated, must undergo a
ritual of commitment, in which the inner teachings and secrets of the
group are revealed. Initiation follows a long training period, during
which trust and group security are slowly built. When properly timed,
the ritual also becomes a rite of passage that marks a new stage in
personal growth. Witchcraft grows slowly; it can never be a mass-market
religion, peddled on streetcorners or between flights at the airport.
Witches do not proselytize. Prospective members are expected to seek out
covens and demonstrate a deep level of interest. The strength of the
Craft is felt to be in quality, not quantity. Originally, coveners were
the teachers and priestesses/priests of a large Pagan population of
noninitiates. They were the councils of elders within each clan, the
wise women and wise men who delved beneath the surface of their rites
and sought the deeper meanings. At the large solar festivals, the
Sabbats, they led the rituals, organized the gatherings, and expounded
the meanings of the ceremonies. Each coven had its own territory, which
by tradition extended for a league. Neighboring covens might join for
the great Sabbats, in order to share knowledge, herbs, spells, and, of
course, gossip. Federations of covens were sometimes linked together
under a Witch "Queen," or Grandmaster. On full moons, covens met alone
for Esbats, when they studied the inner teachings and practiced magic.
During the Burning Times, the great festivals were stamped out or
Christianized. Persecution was most strongly directed against coven
members, because they were seen as the true perpetuators of the
religion. The strictest secrecy became necessary. Any member of a coven
could betray the rest to torture and death, so "perfect love and perfect
trust" were more than empty words. Covens were isolated from one
another, and traditions became fragmented, teachings forgotten.
Today, there is a growing effort throughout the Craft to reestablish
communication between covens and share knowledge. But many individual
Witches still cannot afford to "come out of the broom closet." Public
recognition may mean the loss of their jobs and livelihoods. Known
Witches are easy targets for violent crackpots: A Southern California
couple were firebombed out of their home after appearing on a television
talk show. Other Witches face harassment by the authorities for
traditional practices such as divination, or become scapegoats for local
crimes. Unfortunately, prejudice is still widespread. Sensitive people
never identify anyone as a Witch without first asking permission
privately. In this book, my own friends and coveners have generally been
referred to by coven names in order to protect their privacy.
Every coven is autonomous. Each functions as its own authority in
matters of ritual, thealogy, and training.
Groups of covens that follow the same rites may consider themselves part
of the same tradition. To ensure legal protection for their members,
many covens band together and incorporate as a church, but the rights of
separate covens are always jealously guarded.
Covens usually develop a specific orientation and focus. There are
covens that concentrate on healing or teaching; others may lean toward
psychic work, trance states, social action, or creativity and
inspiration. Some simply seem to throw good parties; after all, "all
acts of love and pleasure" are rituals of the Goddess. Covens may
include both men and women or be limited to women only. (There are very
few all-male covens, for reasons to be discussed in Chapter Six.)
A coven is a group of peers, but it is not a "leaderless group."
Authority and power, however, are based on a very different principle
from that which holds sway in the world at large. Power, in a coven, is
never power over another. It is the power that comes from within.
In Witchcraft, power is another word for energy, the subtle current of
forces that shape reality. A powerful person is one who draws energy
into the group. The ability to channel power depends on personal
integrity, courage, and wholeness. It cannot be assumed, inherited,
appointed, or taken for granted, and it does not confer the right to
control another. Power-from-within develops from the ability to control
ourselves, to face our own fears and limitations, to keep commitments,
and to be honest. The sources of inner power are unlimited. One person's
power does not diminish another's; instead, as each covener comes into
her own power, the power of the group grows stronger.
Ideally, a coven serves as the training ground in which each member
develops her or his personal power. The support and security of the
group reinforce each member's belief in herself. Psychic training opens
new awarenesses and abilities, and feedback from the group becomes the
ever-present mirror in which we "see ourselves as others see us." The
goal of a coven is not to do away with leaders, but to train every Witch
to be a leader, a Priestess, or a Priest.
The issue of leadership has plagued the feminist movement and the New
Left. Exemplars of power-from-within are sadly lacking on the American
political scene. Power-over-others is correctly seen to be oppressive,
but too often the "collective ideal" is misused, to tear down the strong
instead of to build strength in the weak. Powerful women are attacked
instead of supported: "Am I a traitor? They ought to shoot me. Made me
into a leader. We're not supposed to have leaders. I will be executed in
some underground paper, my character assassinated subterraneously."1 The
concept of power-from-within encourages healthy pride, not self-effacing
anonymity; joy in one's strength, not shame and guilt. In Witchcraft,
authority means responsibility. The coven leader must have the inner
power and sensitivity to channel the group's energy, to start and stop
each phase of the ritual, adjusting the timing to the mood of the
circle. A ritual, like a theater production, needs a director.
In practice, leadership is passed from one covener to another in a fully
developed group. The wand representing the authority of the leader may
be passed to each covener in turn. Different sections of the ritual may
be led by different people.
For example, our last Fall Equinox ritual was inspired by Alan, who is
an apprentice but not yet an initiate of Compost coven. Alan is very
much involved with the men's liberation movement and wanted a ritual
centered around changing the sex-role conditioning we have each
received. Eight of us, from Compost, from Honeysuckle, my women's coven,
and from Alan's men's group, planned the ritual together. Here is my
account:
A hot night. Seventeen of us met at Guidot's, nine women and eight men.
After some socializing, we went upstairs to the ritual room.
Alan, aided by Guidot and Paul, cast the circle, using beautiful
invocations, which I think he improvised on the spot. Three or four of
us had explained the ritual to the rest, so they were ready. I led the
invocation to the Goddess, using the Kore Chant. I began speaking it,
and as I switched into the sung chant, it was as if something came in
from behind and lifted me out of myself. My voice physically changed,
became a low, deep throbbing, with power pouring through into the
circle, and then, as everyone picked up the chant, pouring through all
of us- the dark moaning wail of summer's passing, sad but beautiful...
Change is ... touch is ...
Touch us ... change us ...
Alan, Paul, and Guidot invoked the God, Alan calling Him as the Gentle
Brother, the Rape Fighter. He wrote a powerful invocation (included in
Chapter Six).
We began a banishing dance, widdershins around the circle. As we moved,
one person would throw out a phrase-the group took it up and repeated
it, chanted it rhythmically, building it, shrieking it, then letting it
die away until its power to control us faded with it. Alan began it:
"You must be successful!" "You must be successful!" "You must be
successful!" "Must be! Must be! Must be!" "Must!" "Nice girls don't do
that!" "Nice girls don't do that!" "Big boys don't cry!" "You're not a
real woman!" "Sissy!
Sissy! Sissy!" Sixteen howling echoes took up every cry, frenzied,
mocking voices that became, in the dim light, the pursuing Furies of our
own minds, taunting, laughing, screaming-then vanishing, like wisps of
smoke. By the end we were stamping, shouting-seventeen stark-naked
adults, jumping up and down, yelling "No! No! No! No! No!" Younger Self
was awake in its full, primal glory, all right.
Val has come into her own, her power as the Crone. She performed the
Mystery (which is secret), aided, I think, by Alan and Paul. I never
saw. Laurel, Brook, and I led the trance, a soft, whispered,
three-voiced induction:
Your fingers are dissolving into ...
Dream deep, and sleep the magic sleep ...
Dissolving into water, and your toes are ...
Valerie awakened us. We formed into two groups, for the male and female
Mysteries. The men took a long time-I think they got involved in a
historical discussion of the rites of Dionysus.
When they finished, we one by one moved back into the circle, sitting
man and woman alternately. We went around the circle, each saying how we
become strong.
"I become strong through facing my fears."
"I become strong through my friends."
"I become strong through making mistakes."
"I become strong through taking a stand."
"I become strong through dreaming."
Then we chanted, raising power to actualize the visions we had seen in
trance, of our true, free selves. The chant went on and on, it was so
physically pleasurable, feeling the flow of power, the low resonance of
the deep male voices, the high, bell-like notes of the women-it swirled
around us like a great, warm wave.
After, Alan and I blessed the wine and cakes. As the cup went around the
circle, we each said what we were thankful for. The cup went around many
times. Then we relaxed, ate, laughed, talked as usual. Alan ended the
ritual and : opened the circle.
Afterward, I was amazed at how smoothly it all went, with everyone
taking different parts. It feels good to be able to step back and let
other people take the center, to see them developing their power.
At the present time, both Compost and the women's coven, called
Honeysuckle, are covens of elders. and Each initiate is capable of
leading rituals, directing the energy, and training newcomers. The
process of development in each group, however, was very different.
Compost was typical of many of the new, self-initiatory covens that are
springing up today without benefit of formal Craft training. I had been
taught by Witches many years previously, when I was a college student,
but never actually initiated. Most of my knowledge came from dream
figures and trance experiences. I had been unable to find a coven I felt
was right for me, and for many years I had worked alone. Finally, I
decided to see if I could start my own coven, whether or not I was
"authorized" to do so. I began teaching a class in Witchcraft through
the Bay Area Center for Alternative Education.
Within a few weeks, a group of interested individuals began meeting
weekly. Our rituals were collective and spontaneous, like the one
described at the opening of this chapter. We resisted set forms and set
words.
After a few months had passed, a strong core group developed, and we
performed a formal initiation. Our rituals had also taken on a regular
pattern, and we decided to set the structure of the rites so that we
would have a collective framework, within which we could all be
spontaneous and open. Before, the leader-usually me-had decided what was
going to happen at any given moment, and everyone else had followed
along.
We met many Witches from other covens, and I began studying with a
teacher from the Faery tradition. I began to come into a sense of my own
power. As a group, we also realized that the energies we were raising
were real, not merely symbolic. The group felt a need for an
acknowledged leader; at the same time, I felt the need to have my
newfound inner power recognized. The coven confirmed me as Priestess.
Like most people whose sense of inner strength is developing quickly, I
occasionally went to extremes. From being a collectivist nonleader, I
became a rather heavy-handed Priestess at times. There are days when my
records of rituals read quite differently from either of the two
presented in this chapter: "I cast the circle ... I invoked the
Goddess... I led the chant... I directed the Cone of Power ..."
Fortunately, my coveners were both tolerant enough to let me make
mistakes and honest enough to tell me when they didn't like what I was
doing.
We began sharing responsibilities: One covener would bring the salt and
water and purify the circle, another would bring the incense and charge
the space. The men invoked the Horned God, and we took turns invoking
the Goddess and directing the cone of power. I became more relaxed in
the role of leader.
As other coveners developed their own strengths, we decided to "pass the
wand." Diane, a tremendously warm individual, who radiates a sense of
caring, was our unanimous choice. She had always liked our simple,
spontaneous rituals best, and under her leadership we let go of a lot of
structure and experimented. "I don't feel like formally casting the
circle tonight," she might say, "let's just tap the four walls, and
chant. Why don't we chant each other's names?" And so we would
chant-sometimes for hours, in the process developing one of the simplest
and most beautiful rituals we use today.
Diane left for the summer, and we passed the wand to Amber, the youngest
member of our coven. Diane warmed the circle with a steady glow; Amber
lit it up with skyrockets, fireworks, and colored flames. Talented,
charming, lovable, and unsteady, she is a fine musician with an operatic
singing voice and a flair for drama. She inspired us to the creation of
more theatrical rituals, like many of those presented in Chapter Twelve.
But Amber had difficulty functioning at the high level of responsibility
that coven leadership demands. She was going through a tense period in
her personal life, and, while she usually carried through her
commitments, doing so caused her a lot of anxiety and stress. In
retrospect, we did her a disservice by not allowing her a longer period
of training.
Honeysuckle underwent a different process of formation. It began as a
class in the Great Goddess, at a time when I had been Priestess of
Compost for many months, and was already an initiate of the Faery
tradition. I was coming from a much stronger position as a leader, and
it took a much longer time before anyone questioned my authority. I was
determined not to rush the training of this group, and it was almost a
year before I so much as mentioned the word initiation. When each woman
in turn felt ready to take on more responsibility, was able to question
my authority, and was willing to move out from the role of student, she
was initiated. A new ritual was created for each member, and each rite
crystallized a period of growth.
Finding a coven to join can be difficult. Witches are not listed in the
Yellow Pages, although today groups can easily be found on the World
Wide Web (see Resources). Often, however, they do give classes through
Open Universities or metaphysical bookstores. Some universities sponsor
Pagan student groups. Occult shops sometimes also furnish leads and
Unitarian churches may have CUUPs chapters (see Resources). The best
route, of course, is through personal contacts. Witches feel that when a
person is internally ready to join the Craft she will be drawn to the
right people.
Unfortunately, a lot of people claim to be Witches who are merely
unsavory characters. When you meet someone who calls herself a Witch,
listen carefully to your underlying feelings and intuitions. The rituals
of many covens are secret, but you should be told or shown enough about
them to form a fairly clear picture of what goes on. A true coven will
never ask you to do something you feel is wrong for you. Any form of
force, coercion, or high-pressure sales tactics is contrary to the
spirit of Witchcraft. Real Witches will let you take the initiative in
seeking them out.
Witchcraft is not for sale. There are no fees for initiation, and it is
considered a breach of ethics to charge money for coven training. Of
course, Witches who teach public classes or work as psychic counselors
are allowed to charge a fair fee for their time and labor. They will
not, however, sell you "blessed" candles for large sums of money or ask
you to hand over your life savings in order to remove a curse: Those are
favorite dodges of the con artists who prey on the gullible public. A
coven may charge dues to cover candles, incense, and other expenses, but
the Priestess will not be driving a Mercedes bought by the contributions
of her faithful followers.
In a strong coven, members will feel close to each other and turn
naturally to each other in times of stress. They generally spend time
together socially outside of group meetings and enjoy each other's
company. But they also have varied and interesting outside friends and
lives and do not spend all of their time together. A coven should not be
a retreat from the world, but a supportive structure that helps each
member function in the world more fully.
At the present time, there are far more people who want to join covens
than there are groups capable of taking in newcomers. If you cannot find
a congenial coven, you can either practice the Craft alone or start your
own coven.
Working alone is not ideal. Opening up the starlight vision is much more
difficult without the support of a group.
Those who travel the uncharted pathways of the mind alone run more risk
of being caught in subjectivity. Also, working with other people is much
more fun.
But, as one Witch who has practiced the Craft by herself for many years
says, "Working alone has its good points as well as bad. Your training
is rather erratic-but then it is in a lot of covens, anyway. The
advantage is that you learn to depend on yourself and learn your
limitations. When you do join a coven, you know what you want and what
works best for you." Solitary meditation and visualization practice are
part of every Witch's training. Most of the exercises in this book can
be done alone, and even the rituals can be adapted. Solitary worship is
far preferable to joining the wrong group.
You do not have to be a hereditary or even an initiated Witch in order
to start your own coven. Naturally, training helps. But the school of
trial and error is also a very fine one.
When a group of interested but inexperienced people come together, the
first task is to establish a feeling of security. Openness and trust
develop slowly, through both verbal and nonverbal sharing. People need
time to socialize, as well as work magic. I often start groups with a
potluck dinner, so that everyone can share a very tangible form of
energy: food. Consciousness-raising techniques can also be very
effective. We may go around the circle, letting each person tell why she
or he came to the group and what she or he hopes to get out of it.
Everyone is allowed to speak for a limited period of time without
interruptions, so that quieter people are encouraged to express
themselves and more voluble individuals do not dominate the
conversation. Questions and comments come after everyone has had a turn
to speak.
Nonverbal sharing is also important in creating group trust. The
following exercises teach the sensing and sharing of energy, which is
the basis of Craft rituals. They can be done, singly or flow into a
smooth sequence. I have written down what I say when leading a group
through the exercise. In guiding a group, the actual words spoken are
less important than the rhythm of your voice and the timing of pauses.
The only way to learn this is by practice. Read through the exercises,
become familiar with them, and then improvise in your own natural speech
patterns.
"The energy we talk about in Witchcraft is real, a subtle force that we
can all learn to perceive. Right now, as we are sitting in the circe, be
aware of the energy level in the group. Do you feel alert? Aware?
Excited? Calm or anxious? Tense, or relaxed? (Pause.)
"Energy travels up and down your spine. Now sit up, as erect as you can
without straining. Good. Notice how the energy level has changed. Do you
feel more alert? More aware? (Pause.)
"Your breath moves energy in and out of your body. It wakens your body's
centers of power. So take a deep breath. Breathe deep . . . breathe all
the way down. Breathe from your diaphragm . . . from your belly . . .
from your womb. Your stomach should push in and out as you breathe . . .
loosen your pants if you need to. Fill your belly with breath. Feel
yourself relaxing, recharging. Now notice how the energy of the group
has changed.
(Pause.)
"Now let's reach out and take hands, inking ourselves together around
the circe. Continue to breathe deeply. Feel the energy move around the
circle. It may seem like a subtle tingling, or a low heat, or even a
sensation of cold.
We may all perceive it differently. Some of us may see it-dancing like
sparks in the center of the circe. (Long pause.)
(To end here:) "Now take a deep breath, and suck in the power, as if you
were sucking through a straw. Feel it travel down your spine, and flow
into the earth. Relax." (Or go on to the next exercise.)
(To begin here, say:) "Let's take hands around the circe and sit (or
stand) up straight.
"And now, cosing your eyes, let's breathe together-breathing the deep
breath of the belly, of the womb.
Inhale . . . (slowly), exhale . . . inhale . . . exhale . . . inhale . .
. exhale . . . feel yourself relax, as you breathe. Feel yourself become
strong with each breath . . . become refreshed . . . with each breath .
. . feel your worries floating away . . . with each breath . . . become
revitalized ... as we breathe together . . . inhale . . . exhale . . .
inhale . . . exhale . . .
"And feel our breath as it meets in the center of the circle ... as we
breathe as one breathing one breath . . .
inhale . . . exhale breathing one circle . . . breathing one, living
organism . . . with each breath . . . becoming one circle . . . with
each breath . . . becoming one . . ." (long pause). (End as in Exercise
3, or go on.)
When everyone is si ent, allow a quiet time of relaxation. Before the
group has time to get restless, earth the power as in Exercise 7.)
(This is one of the most important meditations, which is practiced
individually, as well as in the group. In solitary practice, begin by
sitting or standing erect, and breathing deeply and rhythmically.)
"And as we breathe, remember to sit erect, and as your spine
straightens, feel the energy rising . . . (pause).
"Now imagine that your spine is the trunk of a tree . . . and from its
base roots extend deep into the earth. . . into the center of the earth
Herself . . . (pause).
"And you can draw up power from the earth, with each breath . . . feel
the energy rising like sap rising through a tree trunk...
"And feel the power rise up your spine . . . feel yourself becoming more
alive . . . with each breath . . .
"And from the crown of your head, you have branches that sweep up and
back down to touch the earth . . . and feel the power burst from the
crown of your head . . . and feel it sweep through the branches until it
touches the earth again making a circle . . . making a circuit. . .
returning to its source . . .
(In a group:) "And breathing deeply, feel how all our branches
intertwine . . . and the power weaves through them . . . and dances
among them, like the wind . . . feel it moving ..." (long pause).
(End as in Exercise 3, or go on.)
(This should always begin with a Group Breath -Exercise 4.)
"Now let your breath become sound . . . any sound that you like ... a
moan . . a sigh ... a giggle ... a low hum ... a howl ... a melody . . .
chant the wordless sounds of the vowes ..." (Wait. In a new group, there
may be silence for a moment. Slowly, someone will begin to sigh, or hum
very quietly. Others will gradually join in. The chant may develop into
a strong hum, or a swelling wave of open- throated notes. People may
begin to chortle, bark, or howl like animals, if they feel so inclined.
The chant may peak suddenly, and drop to silence, or it may rise and
fall in several tides of power. Let it direct itself.
(Also called grounding, earthing power is one of the basic techniques of
magic. Power must be earthed every time it is raised. Otherwise, the
force we feel as vitalizing energy degenerates into nervous tension and
irritability. In the earlier exercises, we grounded the energy by
sucking it in and letting it flow through us into the earth. That
technique is often useful when working alone.)
"Now sink to the ground and relax. Place your palms flat on the ground,
or lie flat. Let the power sink through you into the earth." (Even if
you are meeting in a penthouse fifteen floors above the earth, visualize
the energy flowing down to the actual ground.) "Relax, and let the force
flow through you ... let it flow deep into the earth . . . where it will
be cleansed and renewed. Relax and let yourself drift peacefully." These
five exercises contain the essence of a Craft ritual. The circle is cast
by taking hands; power is raised, shared, and earthed. Sharing of drink
and food generally follows-magic is hungry work! As the cup is passed
around, toasts are made and people express thanks to the Goddess for
good things that have come to them. This part of the meeting is relaxed
and informal, a good time for sharing impressions and discussing what
has gone on. People may move out of the circle at this time, but the
meeting must be formally ended before anyone goes home. Meetings that
dribble off at the end leave people without a sense of closure and
completion. If magic has been worked, the energy absorbed then tends to
turn into anxiety and irritation, instead of peace and vitality. A
meeting can be ended quite simply by having everyone take hands and say
together:
The circle is open, but unbroken,
May the peace of the Goddess go in our hearts;
Merry meet, and merry part.
And merry meet again. Blessed be.
A kiss is then passed around the circle (clockwise).
Sharing poems, songs, stories, pictures, and creative work in the circle
also helps build a feeling of closeness. In Honeysuckle, when we are
taking in a group of new members we devote an evening to sharing our
life stories in the circle. We also jog together regularly and have gone
backpacking as a group. Compost occasionally makes "excursions"-for
example, to the Chinese Moon Festival parade. We devoted one meeting to
watching The Wizard ofOz on television and to skipping down the street
singing "Follow the Yellow Brick Road." As the group grows more unified,
certain interpersonal conflicts will inevitably arise. and The very
cohesiveness of the group itself will make some members feel left out.
Each person is part of the whole, but also an individual, partly
separated from the rest. Some people tend to see the group as a solid
entity that completely enfolds everyone else, while they alone are
partly left out. Sexual attraction often arises between coveners, and,
while the first bright flush of love will draw power into the group, a
quarreling couple will cause disruption. If the two break up, and no
longer feel they can work in the group together, a real problem arises.
A coven leader who is strong and charismatic often becomes the focus of
other members' projections. She may be seen as the all-giving earth
mother, the eternally-desirable-yet-unattainable woman, or the all-wise
prophetess. It is always tempting for her to believe these flattering
images and psychically feed on the energy charge they contain, but if
she does she stunts her own growth as a real human being. Sooner or
later, she will fumble and the image will be shattered; the results can
be explosive.
A certain amount of group time and energy spent on resolving
interpersonal conflicts is necessary and desirable, part of the growth
process that goes on in a healthy coven. But it is all too easy for a
group to degenerate into a sort of amateur encounter session or shouting
match. A coven cannot function as a therapy group. Problems between
members can sometimes be solved more effectively by using magic than by
endless discussion. For example, instead of verbally reassuring an
insecure covener, place her in the center of the circle and chant her
name. If two members cannot work together, but neither wants to leave,
the group may need to cast lots; leaving the decision up to the Goddess.
And if a Priestess seems in danger of being seduced by her own public
relations campaign, the less star-struck members of the group should
gently tell her so. Objective, constructive criticism is one of the
great benefits of the coven structure.
A coven becomes a safe space in which members feel free to release their
inhibitions: laugh, dance, act silly, burst into song, chant spontaneous
poetry, make bad puns, and let Younger Self come out and play. Only then
can the higher states of awareness be reached. Many techniques have been
developed to drop the "censor" of Talking Self and to let the inner
voice speak freely.
Nudity is one such technique. When we take off our clothes, we drop our
social masks, our carefully groomed self-images. We become open. The
mystical meaning of the naked human body is "truth." Different people
need different levels of private space; while some romp happily on nude
beaches, others cannot feel comfortable naked until trust has been built
over a long period of time. In our covens, public rituals are always
clothed. If guests invited to private "sky-clad" ceremonies feel
uncomfortable disrobing, they are welcome to wear whatever they like.
Vulnerability cannot be forced on anyone, except destructively.
Here is one of the exercises we use to begin opening the inner voice and
releasing the blocks to expression:
(Everyone should lie down and position themselves comfortably. Turn off
the lights. Begin with a Group Breath -Exercise 4. When everyone is
relaxed, proceed:)
"Now we're going to go around the circle, clockwise. I'll start by
saying a word, and the next person will say the first word that pops
into her mind, Then the person after that will respond to her word, and
so on, around the circle. Don't think about the word, just relax,
breathe deep, and let it come." (Start. The sequence might go like
this:)
"Green/Pea/Soup/Hot/Cold/lce/Snow/White/Black/Bird/Fly/Sky/Starry/
Night/Dark." (After a few rounds:)
"Now we're each going to repeat the last person's word before we add our
own." (The sequence might go like this:)
"Dark Cave/Cave Bury/Bury Deep/Deep Sea/Sea Wave/Wave Flag/Flag
Star/Star Light/Light Ray/Ray Sun." (After a few rounds:)
"Now we're each going to repeat the last two words before adding our
own." (Now the sequence might run like this:)
"Ray Sun Shine/Sun Shine Day/Shine Day Forever/Day Forever Night/Forever
Night Sky/Night Sky Star/Sky Star Light." (This is an actual invocation
we use, which was created by a group during this exercise. As the trance
continues, words become entities in themselves. The combinations form
constantly shifting scenes, which flash vividly before the inner eye.
Gradually, the cycle may die away, and people simply describe what they
see)
see a dark sky, dotted with a million stars-one of them shoots across
the sky . . ."
"I see a blazing comet, with a golden tail trailing behind ..."
"I see a trailing peacock's tail with iridescent eyes ..."
"I see an eye looking at me . . ."
"I see a face, the dark face of a beautiful woman ..."
(Descriptions may be elaborate or simple. Some may obtain striking
visions, others hear sounds or voices, or fee new sensations. A few
people may drift off to sleep. After a time, the group will fall silent,
each member floating in her own vision. Allow time for everyone to fully
experience her inner world, then say:)
"Now breathe deeply and say farewell to your visions. In a moment, we're
going to open our eyes and awaken, fully and completely, feeling
refreshed and renewed. When I count to three, we will open our eyes and
wake up.
Now take a deep breath . . . inhale . . . exhale . . . one . . . two . .
. three Open your eyes, and awaken, refreshed and renewed." It is
extremely important to bring everyone fully back into ordinary
consciousness. Turn on the lights and change the atmosphere completely.
Share food and drink (but not alcohol); move around and talk. Otherwise,
participants may remain slightly entranced, a condition that becomes
draining and depressing.
This is especially good for opening up the creative imagination and
could be used in art or writing classes as well as in covens.
Ritual is partly a matter of performance, of theater. Some people
delight in this aspect of Witchcraft; others become shy and frozen in
front of a group. The quieter coveners, however, may channel power in
other ways.
Brook, for example, rarely wants to cast the circle or invoke the
Goddess, but when she chants, her voice, ordinarily pleasant but
unremarkable, becomes an eerie, more-than-human channel for power.
Magical training varies greatly from coven to coven, but its purpose is
always the same: to open up the starlight consciousness, the
other-way-of-knowing that belongs to the right hemisphere and allows us
to make contact with the Divine within. The beginner must develop four
basic abilities: relaxation, concentration, visualization, and
projection.
Relaxation is important because any form of tension blocks energy.
Muscular tension is felt as mental and emotional stress, and emotional
stresses cause physical and muscular tension and di's-ease. Power trying
to move through a tense body is like an electric current trying to force
its way through a line of resistors. Most of the juice is lost along the
way. Physical relaxation also seems to change brain wave patterns and
activate centers that aren't ordinarily used.
(This can be done in a group, alone, or with a partner. Begin by lying
down on your back. Do not cross your limbs. Loosen any tight clothing.)
"In order to know how relaxation feels, we must first experience
tension. We are going to tense all the muscles of the body, one by one,
and keep them tense until we relax our entire bodies with one breath.
Don't cench the musces so they cramp, just tense them lightly.
"Start with your toes. Tense the toes in your right foot . . . and now
your left foot. Tense your right foot . . . and your left foot. Your
right ankle . . . and your left ankle … (Continue throughout the whole
body, part by part. From time to time, remind the group to tense any
muse es that they have let slack.)
"Now tense your scalp. Your whole body is tense . . . feel the tension
in every part. Tense any muscles that have gone slack. Now take a deep
breath . . . inhale . . . (pause) . . . exhale . . . and relax!
Relax completely. You are completely and totally relaxed." (In a
sing-song tone:) "Your fingers are relaxed, and your toes are relaxed.
Your hands are relaxed, and your feet are relaxed. Your wrists are
relaxed, and your ankles are relaxed." (And so on, throughout the entire
body. Periodically pause and say:)
You are completely and totally relaxed. Completely and totally relaxed.
Your body is light; it feels like water, like it is melting into the
earth.
Allow yourself to drift and float peacefully in your state of
relaxation. If any worries or anxieties disturb your peace, imagine they
drain from your body like water and melt into the earth. Feel yourself
being healed and renewed." (Remain in deep relaxation for ten to fifteen
minutes. It is good to practice this exercise daily, until you can relax
completely simply by lying down and letting go, without needing to go
through the entire process. People who have difficulty sleeping will
find this extremely helpful. However, do not allow yourself to drift off
into seep.
You are training your mind to remain in a relaxed but alert state.
Later, you will use this state for trance work, which will be much more
difficult if you are not in the habit of staying awake. If you practice
this at night before sleeping, sit up, open your eyes, and consciously
end the exercise before dozing.
Many of the other exercises can be most effectively practiced in a state
of deep relaxation. Experiment to find what works best for you.)
Visualization is the ability to see, hear, feel, touch, and taste with
the inner senses. Our physical eyes do not see; they merely transmit
nerve impulses touched off by light stimuli to the brain. It is the
brain that sees, and it can see inner images as clearly as those in the
outer world. In dreams, all five senses are vivid. With practice, most
people can develop the ability to use the inner senses vividly while
awake.
Some people naturally see images; others may hear or feel impressions. A
few people find it difficult or impossible to visualize, but most find
the facility will improve with exercise.
Visualization is important because it is through internal images and
sensations that we communicate with Younger Self and the Deep Self. When
the inner senses are fully awake, we may see visions of extraordinary
beauty, smell the blossoms of the Isle of Apples, taste ambrosia, and
hear the songs of the Gods.
Before beginning visualization practice, we should ground and center
ourselves. This is again one of the basic techniques of magica work.
Grounding means to establish an energy connection with the earth. The
Tree of Life exercise is one method of grounding. Another is to
visualize a cord or pole extending from the base of your spine into the
center of the earth. Center yourself by aligning your body along its
center of gravity. Breathe from your center-from your diaphragm and
abdomen. Feel energy flow up from the earth and fill you.
Grounding is important because it allows you to draw on the earth's
vitality, rather than depleting your own.
When channeling energy, it serves as a psychic lightning rod-forces run
through you into the earth, rather than "burning out" your mind and
body.
This exercise is for those of you who have difficulty visualizing.
Ground and center. Close your eyes, and imagine that you are looking at
a white wall or a blank screen. Practice visualizing simple geometric
forms: a line, a dot, a circle, a triangle, an ellipse, and so on.
When you are able to see the forms clearly, visualize the screen in ñî
or: red, yellow, blue, orange, green, violet, and black in turn. It may
help to look at a colored object with your eyes open, first-then close
your eyes and mentally see the ñî or.
Finally, practice visualizing the geometric forms in various coors.
Change the coors and forms until you can mentally picture them at will.
Visualize an apple. Hold it in your hands; turn it around; feel it. Feel
the shape, the size, the weight, the texture.
Notice the color, the reflection of light on its skin. Bring it up to
your nose and smell it. Bite into it, taste it; hear the crunch as your
teeth sink in. Eat the apple; feel it side down your throat. See it grow
smaller. When you have eaten it down to the core, let it disappear.
Repeat with other foods. Ice cream cones are also excellent subjects.
Visualize a line of flickering blue flame, like a gas flame from a
Bunsen burner. Now mentally draw a pentacle, a five-pointed star with
one point up, in the invoking direction, starting at the top and moving
down to the left.
Watch it form out of the blue flame. Hold the image in your mind for a
few moments.
Now retrace it in the banishing direction, starting at the lower
left-hand corner and moving up. As you do so, watch it disappear.
Practice until it comes to you easily. This visualization is part of
casting a circle.
Visualize yourself tying a knot-any knot you can tie easily in reality.
Try not to see a mental picture of yourself from outside; instead, put
yourself in the picture. See your hands moving, and feel the string.
Feel every movement you would make, then draw the knot closed, and feel
the string pull taut. This visualization is used to bind spells.
More complex visualizations are given in later chapters.
Concentration is the ability to focus on an image, thought, or task, to
narrow one's field of awareness and shut out distractions. Like a
muscle, it grows stronger with exercise.
Many people today practice forms of Eastern meditation-yoga, Zen,
Transcendental Meditation-which are excellent for developing
concentration. The more you practice the visualizations, the easier it
is to concentrate on the images. The following three exercises will help
improve your inner focus:
In a quiet, darkened room, light a candle. Ground and center, and gaze
quietly at the candle. Breathe deeply, and let yourself feel warmed by
the light of the candle. Let its peaceful radiance fill you completely.
As thoughts surface in your mind, experience them as if they came from
outside. Do not let the flame split into a double image: keep your eyes
focused. Remain for at least five to ten minutes, then relax.
Projection is the ability to send out energy. It comes quite naturally
to most people, once they are aware of its "feel." Projection is also
used in another sense to mean the ability to travel "out-of-body": That
form of projection will be discussed in Chapter Nine. In the Tree of
Life exercise and during the Group Breath and Power Chant, we have
already experienced what it feels like to send out energy. Here are two
other exercises:
Again, light a candle in a dim, quiet room. Ground and center. Gaze at
the candle, and visualize a diamond in the center of your forehead,
between and just above your eyebrows. The diamond reflects the light of
the candle, and the candle reflects the light of the diamond. Feel the
reverberation of energy. Hold for at least five to ten minutes, then
relax.
Ground and center. In a mirror, gaze into your own eyes. Focus your
attention on the space between them.
Repeat your own name to yourself, over and over. Again, as thoughts
surface, experience them as if they were outside you. After five to ten
minutes, relax.
Ground and center. Imagine that you are standing on the seashore,
looking out over the waves. In your strongest hand, you hold a heavy
rock. Pick it up, inhale, and as you exhale, let it fly! Watch it splash
into the sea just below the horizon.
Now look up again. Realize that you can see a horizon twice as far away.
Mentally stretch to see it. In your hand, you hold a rock twice as large
as the first. Again, take a deep breath, and, as you exhale, throw with
all your might. Watch it splash into the far waves.
Once again, look up and realize that you can see a horizon twice as far
away again. In your hand, you hold a rock twice as heavy. Take one more
deep breath, and as you exhale, throw hard! Watch it splash.
Practice this exercise until you can feel the release of power that goes
with the rock.
Ground and center. Visualize a heavy hammer in your hand. A stubborn
nail is sticking out of a board in front of you. With all your strength,
drive the nail into the board. Repeat, doing it three times in all.
Covens have many different ways of taking on new members. Some hold open
classes or study groups. We prefer to have initiates take on individual
apprentices. Each newcomer gets individualized instruction, tailored to
her particular needs. And each coven member has a chance to be an
authority, and is forced to conceptualize her own knowledge of the Craft
in order to teach it. Apprentices and their teachers develop a strong
bond, so each newcomer feels she has a special relationship to one group
member. Apprentices also develop a bond with each other as a group. They
attend rituals together, so that nobody has to be the "only new kid on
the block." When I train an apprentice, I think of myself as being
somewhat like a dance teacher. I suggest a regular discipline, including
many of the exercises in this chapter, the "basic barre-work" of magic.
Also, I try to identify areas of weakness and imbalance, and prescribe
corrective exercises. For example, for one student whose mind
continually wanders I might suggest concentration practice. For Paul, on
the other hand, who studied for years with a sect of Buddhists and can,
in his own words, "bore holes through walls," I suggested daily jogging.
During rituals, apprentices have a chance to combine skills learned in
solitary practice into an intricate dance of power with the coven and
each other.
As a basic, daily discipline, and I recommend three things. The first is
regular physical exercise. The importance of this cannot be
overstressed. Unfortunately, it is one of the hardest things to get
people to do. The Craft tends to attract mental and spiritual types
rather than brawny athletes. But magic and psychic work require
tremendous vitality-literally, the energy of the raith, of Younger Self.
That vitality is replenished and renewed by physical activity-much as
the motion of an automobile's wheels turns the generator, which
recharges the batteries. Too much mental and spiritual work that is not
balanced by physical exercise drains our etheric batteries. Yoga is
sometimes good, but it is usually taught as a spiritual discipline that
opens the psychic centers, rather than increasing physical vitality. For
our purposes, jogging, swimming, bicycling, tennis, or roller-skating
are better- something active and enjoyable that gets us out into the
elements. Witches who are physically disabled can find a regime
appropriate to their needs and abilities. If you can spend some time
each day outdoors, on the grass or under a tree where you can soak up
elemental energies, you will reap many of the same benefits as the
marathon runners.
The second thing I recommend for students is daily relaxation practice
and a daily meditation, visualization, or concentration exercise. These
often change as the student develops. Some people practice several at
once, but one is enough. Too many are cumbersome. At one point in my own
training, I woke up in the morning and did a trance exercise at my
typewriter for up to an hour, then twenty minutes of yoga, including
meditations on the four elements and the Circle Visualization in Chapter
Four. Later in the day I practiced deep relaxation and a lying-down
trance. At night, I did a candle-gazing, a water purification, and a
variety of personal spells.
Unfortunately, I had very little time left for actually living. After a
few weeks, I decided that moderation was the essence of wisdom, in
magic, as in other things.
The third practice I suggest is the keeping of a magical diary, called a
Book of Shadows. Traditionally, this was the "recipe book" of rituals,
spells, chants, and incantations, hand-copied by each Witch from her
teacher. Today, although I blush to admit it, such information is
generally xeroxed for coven distribution. The Book of Shadows is more of
a personal journal. It may include descriptions of rituals, records of
dreams, reactions to exercises, poems, stories, and trance journeys.
Solitary Witches can use their Book of Shadows to develop some of the
objectivity that generally comes from working in a coven. Trances and
meditations can be written out in the journal. Tristine Rainer, in The
New Diary, even describes techniques for using journal writing to
remember past lives.
Womb, support group, magical training college, and community of
friends-the coven is the heart of the Craft.
Within the circle, each Witch is trained to develop her inner power; her
integrity of mind, body, and spirit. Like families, covens sometimes
have their squabbles. But whenever the circle is cast, whenever they
raise the cone and call on the Gods together, they recognize in each
other the Goddess, the God, the life spirit of all. And so, when every
initiate is challenged at the gate to the circle, she speaks the only
password: "Perfect love and perfect trust."
Between the Worlds
The room is lit only by flickering candles at each of the cardinal
points. The coveners stand in a circle, their hands linked. With her
athame, her consecrated knife, unsheathed, the Priestess steps to the
altar and salutes sky and earth. She turns and walks to the Eastern
corner, followed by two coveners, one bearing the chalice of salt water,
the other the smoldering incense. They face the East. The Priestess
raises her knife and calls out:
Hail, Guardians of the Watchtowers of the East,
Powers of Air!
We invoke you and call you,
Golden Eagle of the Dawn,
Star-seeker,
Whirlwind,
Rising Sun,
Come!
By the air that is Her breath,
Send forth your tight,
Be here now!
For literary convenience, I have designated the Priestess as casting the
circle. But any qualified covener, female or male, may take her role.
As she speaks, she traces the invoking pentagram in the air with her
knife. She sees it, glowing with a pale blue flame, and through it feels
a great onrush of wind, sweeping across a high plain lit by the first
rays of dawn. She breathes deeply, drawing in the power, then earths it
through her knife, which she points to the ground.
As she sprinkles water three times, the first covener cries out, "With
salt and water, I purify the East!" The second covener draws the
invoking pentagram with incense, saying, "With fire and air, I charge
the East!" The Priestess, knife held outward, traces the boundaries of
the circle. She sees it take shape in her mind's eye as they continue to
each of the four directions, repeating the invocation, the purification,
and the charging:
Hail, Guardians of the Watchtowers of the South, Powers of Fire!
We invoke you and call you, Red Lion of the noon heat, Flaming One!
Summer's warmth, Spark of life, Come!
By the fire that is Her spirit, Send forth your flame, Be here now!
Hail, Guardians of the Watchtowers of the West, Powers of Water!
We invoke you and call you, Serpent of the watery abyss, Rainmaker,
Gray-robed Twilight, Evening Star!
By the waters of Her living womb, Send forth your flow, Be here now!
Hail, Guardians of the Watchtowers of the North, Powers of Earth,
Cornerstone of all Power.
We invoke you and call you, Lady of the Outer Darkness, Black Bull of
Midnight, North Star, Center of the whirling sky.
Stone, Mountain, Fertile Field, Come!
By the earth that is her body, Send forth your strength, Be here now!
The Priestess traces the last link of the circle, ending in the East.
Again she salutes sky and earth, turns and touches the tip of her athame
to the central cauldron, and says, The circle is cast.
We are between the worlds, Beyond the bounds of time, Where night and
day, Birth and death, Joy and sorrow, Meet as one.
The second covener takes a taper to the South point candle and with it
lights candles in the central cauldron and on the altar, saying,
The fire is lit, The ritual is begun.
They return to the circle. The first covener smiles at the person on her
left, and kisses her or him, saying, "In perfect love and perfect
trust." The kiss is passed around the circle.
"The unfolding of God . . . involves the creation of new space, in which
women are free to become who we are Its center is on the boundary of
patriarchal institutions . . . its center is the lives of women who
begin to liberate themselves toward wholeness." "Entry into the new
space . . . also involves entry into new time The center of the new time
is on the boundary of patriarchal time It is our life' time. It is
whenever we are living out of our own sense of reality, refusing to be
possessed, conquered, and alienated by the linear, measured-out,
quantitative time of the patriarchal system. " Mary Daly In Witchcraft,
we define a new space and a new time whenever we cast a circle to begin
a ritual. The circle exists on the boundaries of ordinary space and
time; it is "between the worlds" of the seen and unseen, of flashlight
and starlight consciousness, a space in which alternate realities meet,
in which the past and future are open to us.
Time is no longer measured out; it becomes elastic, fluid, a swirling
pool in which we dive and swim. The restrictions and distinctions of our
socially defined roles no longer apply; only the rule of nature holds
sway, the rule of Isis who says, "What I have made law can be dissolved
by no man."4 Within the circle, the powers within us, the Goddess and
the Old Gods, are revealed.
Casting the circle is an enacted meditation. Each gesture we make, each
tool we use, each power we invoke, resonates through layers of meaning
to awaken an aspect of ourselves. The outer forms are a cloak for inner
visualizations, so that the circle becomes a living mandala, in which we
are centered.
When we cast a circle, we create an energy form, a boundary that limits
and contains the movements of subtle forces. In Witchcraft, the function
of the circle is not so much to keep out negative energies as to keep in
power so that it can rise to a peak. You cannot boil water without
putting it in a pot, and you cannot raise power effectively unless it is
also contained. Leaving the circle during the ritual is discouraged
because it tends to dissipate the energy, although cats and very small
children seem to pass across without disturbing the force field.
Adults usually cut a "gate" in pantomime with an athame, should they
need to leave the circle before the ritual is ended.
The casting of the circle is the formal beginning of the ritual, the
complex "cue" that tells us to switch our awareness into a deeper mode.
In ritual, we "suspend disbelief just as we do when watching a play: We
allow the critical and analytical functions of Talking Self to relax so
that Younger Self may respond fully and emotionally to what happens.
Younger Self, as we have seen, responds best to actions, symbols,
tangibles-so this change in consciousness is actedput, using a rich
array of tools and symbols.
In the permanent stone circles of the Megalithic era, where rituals were
enacted for hundreds of years, great reservoirs of power were built up.
Because the stones defined the sacred space, there was no need to draw
out the circle as we do. The form of circle casting most Witches use
today probably originated during the Burning Times, when meetings were
held secretly, indoors, and it became necessary to create a temple in a
simple hut.
Witches may have taken over some forms from Cabalists. It is said that
Witches often harbored Jews from Christian persecution and that they
exchanged knowledge. (I must admit that, while Witches in general like
to believe this is true, Jews don't seem to have heard of it-or, if they
have, aren't advertising the fact.)
Before any ritual there is always a period of purification, during which
participants can clear away worries, concerns, and anxieties that may
hamper their concentration. Some covens simply aspurge (sprinkle) each
member with salt water while casting the circle. At very large rituals,
this is the only practical method. But for small groups and important
workings, we use a more intense meditative exercise called the
Salt-Water Purification.
Salt and water are both cleansing elements. Water, of course, washes
clean. Salt preserves from decay and is a natural disinfectant. The
ocean, the womb of life, is salt water, and so are tears, which help us
purify the heart of sorrow.
(This is one of the basic individual meditations that should be
practiced regularly. During periods of high anxiety or depression or
when undertaking heavy responsibilities, it is helpful to practice this
daily.)
Fill a cup with water. (Use your ritual chalice, if you have one.) With
your athame (or other implement), add three mounds of salt, and stir
counterclockwise.
Sit with the cup in your lap. Let your fears, worries, doubts, hatreds,
and disappointments surface in your mind.
See them as a muddy stream, which flows out of you as you breathe and is
dissolved by the salt water in the cup.
Allow yourself time to feel deeply cleansed.
Now hold up the cup. Breathe deeply, and feel yourself drawing up power
from the earth (as in the Tree of Life exercise). Let the power flow
into the salt water, until you can visualize it glowing with light.
Sip the water. As you feel it on your tongue, know that you have taken
in the power of cleansing, of healing.
Fear and unhappiness have become transformed into the power of change.
Empty the leftover water into a running stream. (Alas, in these decadent
times the nearest stream is usually running out of the kitchen faucet
and down the drain.)
Coveners assemble in a circle, with incense and point candles lit. The
Priestess goes to the altar, grounds and centers herself. She takes the
cup of water in her right hand, saying, "Blessed be, thou creature of
water." She takes the dish of salt in her left hand, and says, "Blessed
be, thou creature of earth." She holds them both up to the sky with arms
outstretched, and lets power flow into them, saying,
Salt and water,
Inner and outer,
Soul and body,
Be cleansed!
Cast out all that is harmful!
Take in all that is good and healing!
By the powers of life, death, and rebirth
So mote it be!
She sets them down on the altar, and takes her athame in her strongest
hand, saying, "Blessed be, thou creature of art." She spills three
mounds of salt into the water and stirs it counterclockwise, saying, May
this athame be purified, And may these tools and this altar be purified,
as she shakes a few drops over the altar, then salutes sky and earth:
In the names of Life and Death, so mote it be!
She then holds the cup to her heart and charges the water with power.
When she can feel it glowing, she returns to the circe. The cup is sent
around, and each person performs her or his private purification. Others
may sing softly as the cup goes around. In a large group, three or four
cups of water are charged at the same time; otherwise the cup may take
hours to go around the circle.
When the cup returns to the Priestess, she sends a kiss around the
circe. Then she begins the casting of the circe.
If the meeting space is felt to need special cleansing, the following
Banishing can be performed.
'"So mote it be" means "So must it be" and is traditional for ending a
spell or magical working in the Craft.
After the purification, the Priestess takes the sword or athame and goes
to the center of the circe. She points the blade to earth and sky, and
says, forcefully,
Spirits of evil,
Unfriendly beings,
Unwanted guests,
Begone!
Leave us, leave this place, leave this circle,
That the Gods may enter.
Go, or be cast into the outer darkness!
Go, or be drowned in the watery abyss!
Go, or be burned in the flames!
Go, or be torn by the whirlwind!
By the powers of life, death, and rebirth, All the coven together
shouts:
We banish you! We banish you! We banish you!
Begone!
All scream, shout, clap hands, ring bells, and make noise to frighten
away negative forces.
Bath water can be "charged," and a few salt crystals added, and coveners
can take a ritual bath before entering the circle. This is more fully
described in Chapter Ten, on Initiation. Due to the limitations of time
and hot water, it is best done at home.
To magically "charge" an object means to imbue it with energy.
The concept of the quartered circle is basic to Witchcraft, as it is to
many cultures and religions. The four directions and the fifth, the
center, each correspond and resonate to a quality of the self, to an
element, a time of day and year, to tools of the Craft, symbolic
animals, and forms of personal power. Constant visualization of these
connections creates deep internal links, so that physical actions
trigger inner states. The action of casting the circle then awakens all
parts of the self, and puts us in touch with mind, energy, emotions,
body, and spirit, so that we are constantly made whole.
The "Guardians of the Watchtowers" are energy forms, the raiths or
spirits of the four elements. They bring the elemental energy of earth,
air, fire, and water into the circle, to augment our human power. The
vortex of power created when we invoke the four directions guards the
circle from intrusions, and draws in the higher powers of the Goddess
and God.
Each movement in a ritual has meaning. When we move "sunwise" or
clockwise, "deosil," we follow the direction the sun appears to move in
the Northern Hemisphere, and draw in power. Deosil is the direction of
increase, of fortune, favor, and blessing. When we move "widdershins" or
counterclockwise, we are going against the sun, and this direction is
used for decrease and banishings.
The tools, the physical objects we use in Witchcraft, are the tangible
representatives of unseen forces. The mind works magic, and no
elaborately forged knife or elegant wand can do any more than augment
the power of a trained mind. The tools are simply aids in communicating
with Younger Self, who responds much better to tangibles than to
abstracts.
There are two basic schools of thought about tools in the Craft: the
ceremonial Magic school and what I call the kitchen magic school.
Ceremonialists are purists, who feel that magical tools should never be
handled by others or used for any but ritual purposes. Objects can
become reservoirs of psychic power, which may be dissipated by, for
example, slicing fruit with your athame. Kitchen magic Witches, on the
other hand, feel that the Goddess is manifest in ordinary tasks as well
as magic circles. When you slice fruit with your athame, you consecrate
the fruit, and a kitchen chore becomes a sacred task. Whichever school
of thought you follow, it is a breach of manners to handle another
Witch's tools without asking permission.
Tools may be bought, hand-made yourself, given as gifts, or found,
sometimes in unusual circumstances. Mother Moth of Compost found her
athame lying on the white line in the middle of the freeway when she was
driving home late one night. A set of tools are sometimes given to a new
initiate by the coven. When buying magical tools, never haggle over the
price.
Correspondences may differ in varying traditions, and interpretations of
symbolism may not always agree. The following are the correspondences
used in the Faery tradition (complete tables are given beginning on page
283).
The East The East corresponds to the element Air, to the mind, dawn,
spring, to pale, airy colors, white and violet, to the eagle and
high-flying birds, and the power to know. Its tools are the athame and
the sword, which are used interchangeably. The athame is traditionally a
double-bladed, black-handled knife, but people use anything from kitchen
knives to Swiss Army knives complete with corkscrew, so indispensable
for opening ritual wine. Many Witches do not own a sword; they are
dramatic at large, open rituals but awkward in close quarters.
Face East. Ground and center. Breathe deep, and be conscious of the air
as it flows in and out of your lungs. Feel it as the breath of the
Goddess, and take in the life force, the inspiration, of the universe.
Let your own breath merge with the winds, the clouds, the great currents
that sweep over land and ocean with the turning of the earth.
Say, "Hail, Arida, Bright Lady of the Air!"
Ground and center. Hold your athame or sword in your strongest hand.
Breathe deeply and take in the power-of Air, the power of the mind. The
power of this tool is that of discrimination, of drawing lines, setting
limits, making choices, and carrying them out. Remember choices you have
made and carried through in spite of difficulties. Feel the power of
your mind to influence others and the strength of your responsibility
not to misuse that power. You have the force to act ethically, in accord
with what you believe is right. Let the power of your intelligence, your
knowledge, your moral courage, flow into your tool.
The South corresponds to the element Fire, to energy or spirit, to noon,
summer, fiery reds and oranges, to the solar lion and the quality of
will. Its tool is the wand, which may be a slender branch of hazel, a
stout oak staff, or a magically shaped piece of driftwood. The wand is
used to channel energy, to direct a cone of power, and to invoke God or
Goddess.
Face South. Ground and center. Be conscious of the electric spark within
each nerve as pulses jump from synapse to synapse. Be aware of the
combustion within each cell, as food burns to release energy. Let your
own fire become one with candle flame, bonfire, hearth fire, lightning,
starlight, and sunlight, one with the bright spirit of the Goddess. Say,
"Hail, Tana, Goddess of Fire!"
Ground and center. Hold your wand in your strongest hand. Breathe
deeply, and feel the power of Fire, of energy. Be aware of yourself as a
channel of energy. You can change spirit into matter, idea to reality,
concept into form. Feel your own power to create, to do, to be an agent
of change. Be in touch with your will-your power to do what you must, to
set a goal and work toward it. Let your will flow into your wand.
The West corresponds to the element Water, to emotions, to twilight,
autumn, to blues, grays, deep purples, and sea greens, to sea serpents,
dolphins, fish, to the power to dare. From the West comes the courage to
face our deepest feelings. Its tool is the cup or chalice, which holds
the salt water or ritual drink.
Face West. Ground and center. Feel the blood flowing through the rivers
of your veins, the liquid tides within each cell of your body. You are
fluid, one drop congealed out of the primal ocean that is the womb of
the Great Mother. Find the calm pools of tranquility within you, the
rivers of feeling, the tides of power. Sink deep into the well of the
inner mind, below consciousness. Say, "Hail, Tiamat, Serpent of the
Watery Abyss!" EXERCISE 28: CUP MEDITATION Ground and center. Hold your
cup cradled in both hands. Breathe deep, and feel the power of Water, of
feeling and emotion. Be in touch with the flow of your own emotions:
love, anger, sorrow, joy. The cup is the symbol of nurturing, the
overflowing breast of the Goddess that nourishes all life. Be aware of
how you are nurtured, of how you nurture others. The power to feel is
the power to be human, to be real, to be whole. Let the strength of your
emotions flood the cup.
The North is considered the most powerful direction. Because the sun
nevei reaches the Northern Hemisphere, it is the direction of Mystery,
of the unseen. The North Star is the center, around which the skies
revolve. Altars face North in the Craft. North corresponds to Earth, to
the body, to midnight winter, brown, black, and the green of vegetation.
From the North comes the power to keep silent, to listen as well as
speak, to keep secrets, to know what not to say. The Goddess as Dark
Maiden, the new moon that is not yet visible, and the God as Sacred Bull
are the totems of the North, and its tool is the pentacle, the prime
symbol of the Craft. A five-pointed star with one point up, set within
the circle of the full moon, the pentacle can be engraved on a plate,
glazed on a ceramic platter, or molded out of "baker's clay"-bread dough
and salt. It is used for grounding energy or as a platter for serving
the sacred cakes.
Face North. Ground and center. Feel your bones, your skeleton, the
solidity of your body. Be aware of your flesh, of all that can be
touched and felt. Feel the pull of gravity, your own weight, your
attraction to the earth that is the body of the Goddess. You are a
natural feature, a moving mountain. Merge with all that comes from the
earth: grass, trees, grains, fruits, flowers, beasts, metals, and
precious stones. Return to dust, to compost, to mud. Say, "Hail, Belili,
Mother of Mountains!"
Ground and center. Hold your pentacle in both hands. Breathe deep, and
feel the power of earth, of the body. The pentacle is your own body,
four limbs and head. It is the five senses, both inner and outer. Be in
touch with your own power to see, to hear, to smell, to taste, to touch.
The pentacle is the four elements plus the fifth - essence.
And it is the five stages of life, each an aspect of the Goddess:
1. Birth: the beginning, the time of coming into being
2. Initiation: adolescence, the time of individuation
3. Love Ripening: the time of union with another, of full adulthood,
sexuality, responsibility, and love
4. Reflection: the time of advancing age, of repose, integration, wisdom
5. Death: the time of ending, of letting go, of moving on toward rebirth
Look at your pentacle, or draw one on a sheet of paper. Label the five
stations, going clockwise around the points, and experience each stage
in turn, as it occurs in a life span and within the span of each new
activity or relationship. Trace the interlocking lines and reflect on
their meanings. Love is linked to Birth and Death. Death is linked to
Love and Initiation.
In the Goidelic Tree alphabet, each of the five stages was symbolized by
a tree, whose name began with one of the five vowels:
A: Birth - ailm, silver fir
O: Initiation - onn, gorse or furze
U: Love-ura, heather
E: Repose- eadha, the aspen
I: Death - idha, the yew
Chant the sounds of the vowels and feel the power of each stage in turn.
Touch your pentacle to your body, and let the life force of your own
flesh flow into it.
the Brythonic Celts (Welsh, Cornish, and Bretons).
(A pentagram is a drawn or written pentacle. This is a meditative tool
of the Faery tradition and an important training exercise.)
Ground and center. In your Book of Shadows, draw a pentacle with
interlocking lines and label the points, in order, clockwise: "Sex,"
"Self," "Passion," "Pride," and "Power." Sex is the manifestation of the
driving life force energy of the universe. It is polarity, the
attraction of God and Goddess, the on-off pulse that sustains the
universe, the orgasmic, ecstatic harmony that sings within each being.
Self Is identity, individuality. Each of us is a unique manifestation of
the Goddess, and that individuality is highly valued in the Craft.
Self-love is the foundation of all love. "Celebrate yourself, and you
will see that Self is everywhere." Passion is the force of emotion that
gives color and depth and vitality to life. Joy, sorrow, ecstasy, anger,
fear, pain, love-the Goddess manifests in all human emotions. We cannot
feel any of them in their full intensity unless we are willing to face
them all.
Pride encourages us to create, to do, to share, to grow, and to enjoy
the rightful fruits of our achievements. True pride is not based on
comparisons or competition; it is an absolute sense of one's inner
worth. Pride carries with it the responsibility of acting in accordance
with one's self-respect and respect for Self in others.
Power is energy, inner power, not power over others. When the five
points are in balance, the life force flows freely, filling us with
vitality. Power is integrity, creativity, courage: the mark of a person
who is whole.
Meditate on each of the points in turn, and then explore the links and
connections: "Sex-Passion," "Self-Pride," "Passion - Power," and so on.
Lie down with your arms and legs outstretched so that you form a star.
Let your head and each of your limbs be a point on the pentacle. When
you are "on the points," they will all be in balance.
If some points feel weak, work on developing those qualities. Absorb the
strength of the Iron Pentagram.
The Pentagram of Pearl is a meditative tool, like the Iron Pentagram.
Its points are Love, Wisdom, Knowledge, Law, and Power.
Begin as for the Iron Pentagram.
Love is the moving ebergy of life. It is both blindy erotic and deeply
personal, a passionate, prideful, powerful caring for oneself and
others. It is the law of the Goddess and the essence of magic.
Wisdom and Kowledge can best be understood together. Knowledge is
learning, the power of the mind to understand and describe the universe.
Wisdom is knowing how to apply knowledge - and how not to apply it.
Knowledge is knowing what to say; wisdom is knowing wheter or not to say
it. Knowledge gives answersl wisdom asks questions. Knowledge can be
taught; wisdom grows out of experience, out of making mistakes.
Law is natural law, not human law. When we break natural laws, we suffer
the consequences as a natural result of our actions, not as a
punishment. If you break the law of gravity, you will fall. Magic
functions within natural law, not outside of it. But natura law may be
broader and more complex than we realize.
Power, again, is the power that comes from within, when love, knowledge,
wisdom, and law are united. Power, rooted in love and tempered by
knowledge, law, and wisdom, brings growth and healing.
Again, meditate on the points and the links between them. Lie in the
pentacle position, feel the points as part of yourself, and become aware
of your own imbalances. Absorb the beauty of the Pentagram of Pearl.
Center The center of the circle is the point of transformation. It
corresponds to pure essence, to timelessness, to transparent light, to
the power to go, to move, change, transform. Its magical tool is the
cauldron, which may be the traditional three-legged cast iron pot, or a
clay or metal bowl. The cauldron holds fire: a candle, incense,
smoldering herbs, or a bonfire. It may also be a cooking pot, in which
fire transforms the food we will eat.
Love is the moving energy of life. It is both blindly erotic and deeply
personal, a passionate, prideful, powerful caring for oneself and
others. It is the law of the Goddess and the essence of magic.
Wisdom and Knowledge can best be understood together. Knowledge is
learning, the power of the mind to understand and describe the universe.
Wisdom is knowing how to apply knowledge-and how not to apply it.
Knowledge is knowing what to say; wisdom is knowing whether or not to
say it. Knowledge gives answers; wisdom asks questions. Knowledge can be
taught; wisdom grows out of experience, out of making mistakes.
Ground and center. Whisper softly, over and over, "She changes
everything She touches, and everything She touches, changes." Feel the
constant processes of change within yourself, in your body, your ideas
and emotions, your work and relationships. Within every unmoving stone,
atoms are in constant flux. Feel the changes all around you, changes you
have made, are about to make. Even ending the meditation is part of the
process of change that is life. Say, "Hai, Kore, whose name cannot be
spoken, the Ever-Changing One!"
Ground and center. Hold the cauldron in both hands. Breathe deep, and
feel the power of transformation. You hold the Cauldron of Ceridwen,
where the dead come to life. You hold the cauldron in which was brewed
the broth that imparts all knowledge and understanding. The cauldron is
the womb of the Goddess, the gestation ground of all birth. Think of the
transformations you undergo every day. In a moment, you die and are
reborn a thousand times. Feel your power to end and begin anew, your
ability to gestate, to create, to give birth to new things, and let that
power flow into your cauldron.
Meditations on the elements are part of the training of every Witch.
After experiencing the energy of each magical element separately, the
apprentice is taught to combine them, in preparation for learning to
cast a circle.
(You may lie down, sit comfortably, or get up and enact this exercise.
Face each direction either physically or mentally.)
Ground and center. Face East. Visualize your athame in your strongest
hand, and draw an Invoking Pentacle (as in Exercise 1 3). See it burning
with a pale, blue flame. Say, "Hail, Guardians of the Watchtowers of the
East, Powers of Air." Walk through the pentode, and see a great wind
sweeping across a vast plain of waving grass. Breathe deeply, and feel
the air on your face, in your lungs, through your hair. The sun is
rising, and in its rays a golden eagle shines as it flies toward you.
When you are filled with the power of air, say, "Hail and farewell,
Shining Ones." Walk back through the pentacle.
Turn and face the South. Again, draw the Invoking Pentacle. Say, "Hail,
Guardians of the Watchtowers of the South, Powers of Fire." Walk through
the pentacle. You are on a blazing veldt under the hot sun. It is high
noon. Feel the sun's fire on your skin and absorb its power. In the
distance, red-gold lions sun themselves. When you feel attuned to fire,
say, "Hail and farewell, Radiant Ones." Walk back through the pentacle.
Turn and face the West, and again draw the pentacle. Say, "Hail,
Guardians of the Watchtowers of the West, Powers of Water." Walk through
the pentacle. You are on a cliff above a pounding sea. Feel the spray
and the force of the waves. It is twilight, and the blue-green waves are
edged with violet as the sun disappears. Dolphins and sea serpents dive
and play in the foam. When you feel attuned to the power of water, say,
"Hail and farewell, Flowing Ones" and walk through the pentacle.
Turn and face North. Draw the pentace, and say, "Hail, Guardians of the
Watchtowers of the North, Powers of Earth." Walk through the pentacle.
You are in the midst of a lush, fertile landscape, on the slopes of a
mountain. Around you are green, growing herbs nourished by fresh
springs, and tall, silent trees fed by the minerals and nutrients in the
earth. In the distance, grain is waving in the fertile fields. Wild
goats cling to the craggy heights above you, while below, herds of wild
cattle thunder across the plain. It is midnight; the moon is hidden but
the stars are bright. The Great Bear and Little Bear circle the North
Star, the still center point of the whirling wheel of the sky. Say,
"Hail and farewell, Silent Ones." Visualize all four pentacles around
you in a circle of blue flame. Above your head is an eight-rayed star.
Breathe deep, and draw in power from the star. Let it fill you; feel it
flood every cell of your body with ight, a cone of light that extends
deep into the earth around you. Thank the star, and let the light return
to its source. Open the circe by visualizing the pentacles flying off
into space.
Additional tools and used in most covens include a cord, a necklace, a
censer, and a Book of Shadows, which has been discussed in Chapter
Three. The cord is the symbol of binding, of belonging to a particular
coven. In some traditions, the color of the cord reflects the degree of
advancement in the Craft of its bearer. The censer is used to hold the
incense, and is identified with either the East or the South, Air or
Fire. The necklace is the circle of rebirth, the sign of the Goddess. It
can be of any design that is personally pleasing.
Of course, candles, herbs, oils, and incenses are also used in
Witchcraft. Unfortunately, I don't have space to go into a detailed
discussion of their uses and correspondences, especially as that
information is given in the Tables of Correspondences and is available
from other sources.6 In general, a Witch depends less on traditional
associations of herbs, odors, and colors than on her own intuition. If
the "proper" materials aren't available, we improvise.
The tools are usually kept on an altar, which may be anything from a
hand-carved antique chest to a box covered with a cloth. When used for
regular meditation and magical practice, the altar becomes charged with
energy, a vortex of power. Generally, a Witch's altar faces north, and
the tools are placed in their corresponding directions.
Images of the Goddess and God- statues, shells, seeds, flowers, or a
minor-take a central position.
(Tools can be charged -imbued with psychic energy-and consecrated4within
a group ritua , during an initiation, or individually. I will describe
the rite for an athame: for other tools, simply make the necessary
adjustments.)
Set up the altar as you want it, and light the candles and incense.
Perform the Salt-Water Purification, and cast a circle by doing the
Circle Visualization. Ask the Goddess to be with you.
Hold your athame in your strongest hand, saying, "Blessed be, thou
creature of art." Do the Athame or Sword Meditation.
Touch it to the symbols of each of the four elements in turn: incense
for Air, the wand for Fire, the cup for Water, and the pentacle for
Earth. Meditate on the power of each element, and visualize that power
flowing into the athame. Say, "May you be charged with the power of
(Air, Fire, etc.) and serve me well in the (East, South, etc.), between
the worlds, in all the worlds. So mote it be." Pass your athame through
the candle flame, and touch it to the central cauldron. Visualize white
light filling and charging it. Say, "May you be charged from the center
of all, above and below, throughout and about, within and without, to
serve me well between the worlds, in all the worlds. So mote it be."
Draw or inscribe your own personal symbols on the blade or hilt. Trace
over them with your own saliva, sweat, menstrual blood, or other
secretions, to create the link with your tool. Breathe on it, and
imagine your own personal power flowing into it.
Touch it to your heart, and your lips. Raise it to sky, and point it to
earth. Wrap your cord around it (or imagine it, if you don't have a
cord) and visualize a shield of light binding the power. Say, "Cord go
round, power be bound, light revealed, now be sealed." Earth the power,
thank the Goddess, and open the circle by thanking each of the
directions and visualizing the pentodes dissolving.
In casting a circle, the outer forms used are less important than the
strength of the inner visualization. When the Priestess calls the
Guardians of the East, for example, she feels the wind and sees the sun
rising with her inner sight. She is also visualizing the flaming
pentacles and the circle of light surrounding the coven. In a strong
coven, one person may perform the outward actions, but all will be
internally visualizing the circle and attuning themselves to the
elements.
The outer forms can be very simple. Alone, it may be enough to simply
visualize a ring of white light around the room, or turn to each
direction in turn and tap the wall. A group may join hands and picture
the circle, or one member may walk around the others. The circle may be
marked out ahead of time with chalk, stones, string, flowers, leaves, or
shells, or drawn invisibly with the athame as it is cast.
This chapter opens with a description of a formal circle casting. At
first, trying to remember the words and actions, visualize the elements,
and feel the power will be far more difficult than trying to pat your
head and rub your stomach at the same time. But with practice your
concentration will improve until the entire sequence flows easily and
naturally. You may wish to create your own invocations, instead of using
the ones given. Here are other examples:
hail guardians of the watchtower of the east, powers of air:
blow the staleness away, fill our lungs.
help us bring freshness into our lives.
let there be clear skies, clear minds for us to see our way.
let our words create a safe space.
blessed be.
hail guardians of the watchtower of the south, powers of fire:
come into our hearts, warm us.
help us emerge from hibernation, isolation, to greet each other.
let passion glow on our birthright as we fight injustice.
let our emotions out from all their hiding places.
blessed be.
hail guardians of the watchtower of the west, powers of water:
rain on us, quench our thirst.
help us remember the ocean womb from which we come.
now let all of us be connected.
let our moods be flowing back & forth until all is one.
let the drought of separation be over.
blessed be.
hail guardians of the watchtower of the north/powers of earth:
strengthen our resolve, keep us centered.
help us be here, now.
let our bodies be strong for loving each other.
let the dizziness of the workday pass, & all of us find ourselves
together on one planet.
because of our struggles & magic may a greater circle be cast of love &
social harmony.
blessed be.
East:
Quicksilver messenger Master of the crossroads Springtime step lightly
Into my mind Golden One whisper Airy ferryman Sail from the East on the
wings of the wind.
South:
Desert flower, flaming will Crackle with energy under my skin Red lion
roaring Pulses racing Roaming the South I am open: come in.
West:
Pearl-gray warrior Ghostly quest Prince of Twilight Sailing West
Intuition, sundown lady Ancient serpent of the Sea Pearly Queen of
twilight waters Silverfoot come silently.
North:
Mother of mountains, mother of trees, Mother of midnight, mother of
earth.
Root and leaf and flower and thorn, Come to us, come to us, out of the
North.
[With these, begin in the North]
Earth my bone, my body, Mountain my breast Green grass and leafy tree My
trailing hair, Rich dark dust, oozing mud Seed sending white root deep,
Carpet of molding leaves, Be our bed!
By the earth that is Her body, Powers of the North send forth your
strength.
Air, my breath, breeze of morning, Stallion of the dawn star, Whirlwind,
bearing all that soars in flight, Bee and bird, Sweet fragrance, Wailing
storm's voice, Carry us!
By the air that is Her breath, Powers of the East send forth your light.
Fire my heart, burn bright!
My spirit is a flame, My eye misses nothing.
A blaze leaps from nerve to nerve Spark of the solar fire!
An answering heat rises, unbearable delight!
The flames sing, consume us!
By the fire that is Her spirit, Powers of the South, send forth your
flame.
Water my womb, my blood, Wash over us, cool us.
Waves sweep ashore on white wings, The rush, hiss, the rumble of stones
As the tide recedes, That rhythm, my pulse, Flood, gushing fountain, We
pour ourselves out, Sweep us away!
By the waters of Her living womb, Powers of the West, send forth your
flow.
The energy field created by a circle can also be used for protection.
This can be done very simply:
Visualize a circle or bubble of white light around yourself, with the
energy running clockwise. Tell yourself it is an impenetrable barrier no
harmful forces can cross. If you have time, perform the Circle
Visualization or quickly call each of the four elements in turn.
(A permanent circle of protection can be established around your home or
place of work. The following ritual can be done alone, or in a group
with each person carrying one of the objects.)
Ground and center. Go around the house widdershins with a bell, a broom,
and charged salt water. Ring the bell to scare away negative energies.
Sweep away unwanted forces with the broom-or use a wand to wave them
out.
Sprinkle each entrance-each window, door, mirror, and major water
outlets-with salt water. Also sprinkle the corners of every room. If
necessary, perform a Banishing as in Exercise 22. Do the Salt-Water
Purification.
Now go around the house clockwise, with salt water, athame, and incense.
Draw an invoking pentode at each entrance with the athame, and then with
salt water. Concentrate on forming a seal of protection that cannot be
broken. Finally, with the incense, charge each entrance and corner,
inviting good forces to enter. Say, Salt and sea, Of ill stay free, Fire
and air, Draw all that is fair.
Around and around, The circe is bound.
Formally cast a circle in the room you will use for rituals. Chant and
raise power to fill the house with protection.
Then thank the Goddess, earth the power, and open the circle.
You can reinforce a protective circle by visualizing it. Do so before
magical work or sleep.
The circle is cast; the ritual is begun. We have created the sacred
space, a space fit for the Gods to enter. We have cleansed ourselves and
centered ourselves; our mental bonds have dropped away. Free from fear,
we can open to the starlight. In perfect love, and perfect trust, we are
prepared to invoke the Goddess.
Between the Worlds
Listen to the words of the Great Mother, who of old was called Artemis,
Astarte, Dione, Melusine, Aphrodite, Ceridwen, Diana, Arionrhod, Brigid,
and by many other names:
"Whenever you have need of anything, once in the month, and better it be
when the moon is full, you shall assemble in some secret place and adore
the spirit of Me who is Queen of all the Wise. You shall be free from
slavery, and as a sign that you be free you shall be naked in your
rites. Sing, feast, dance, make music and love, all in My presence, for
Mine is the ecstasy of the spirit and Mine also is joy on earth. For My
law is love unto all beings. Mine is the secret that opens upon the door
of youth, and Mine is the cup of wine of life that is the Cauldron of
Ceridwen that is the holy grail of immortality. I give the knowledge of
the spirit eternal and beyond death 1 give peace and freedom and reunion
with those that have gone before. Nor do I demand aught of sacrifice,
for behold, I am the mother of all things and My love is poured upon the
earth." Hear the words of the Star Goddess, the dust of whose feet are
the hosts of heaven, whose body encircles the universe:
"I who am the beauty of the green earth and the white moon among the
stars and the mysteries of the waters, I call upon your soul to arise
and come unto me. For 1 am the soul of nature that gives life to the
universe. From Me all things proceed and unto Me they must return. Let
My worship be in the heart that rejoices, for behold- all acts of love
and pleasure are My rituals. Let there be beauty and strength, power and
compassion, honor and humility, mirth and reverence within you. And you
who seek to know Me, know that your seeking and yearning will avail you
not, unless you know the Mystery: for if that which you seek, you find
not within yourself, you will never find it without. For behold, 1 have
been with you from the beginning, and I am that which is attained at the
end of desire." (Adapted by Starhawk from Doreen Valiente)
The symbolism of the Goddess has taken on an electrifying power for
modern women. The rediscovery of the ancient matrifocal civilizations
has given us a deep sense of pride in woman's ability to create and
sustain culture. It has exposed the falsehoods of patriarchal history,
and given us models of female strength and authority. Once again in
today's world, we recognize the Goddess-ancient and primeval; the first
of deities; patroness of the Stone Age hunt and of the first sowers of
seeds; under whose guidance the herds were tamed, the healing herbs
first discovered; in whose image the first works of art were created;
for whom the standing stones were raised; who was the inspiration of
song and poetry. She is the bridge, on which we can cross the chasms
within ourselves, which were created by our social conditioning, and
reconnect with our lost potentials.
She is the ship, on which we sail the waters of the Deep Self, exploring
the uncharted seas within. She is the door, through which we pass into
the future. She is the cauldron, in which we who have been wrenched
apart simmer until we again become whole. She is the vaginal passage,
through which we are reborn.
A historical and/or cross-cultural overview of the Goddess and her
symbols would itself require several volumes, and I will not attempt it
in the limited space of this book, especially as much good material is
already available.
Instead, I will limit myself to discussing the Goddess as seen through
Witchcraft, and focus on her function and meaning for women and men
today.
People often ask me if I believe in the Goddess. I reply, "Do you
believe in rocks?" It is extremely difficult for most Westerners to
grasp the concept of a manifest deity. The phrase "believe in" itself
implies that we cannot know the Goddess, that She is somehow intangible,
incomprehensible. But we do not believe in rocks-we may see them, touch
them, dig them out of our gardens, or stop small children from throwing
them at each other. We know them; we connect with them. In the Craft, we
do not believe in the Goddess-we connect with Her; through the moon, the
stars, the ocean, the earth, through trees, animals, through other human
beings, through ourselves.
She is here. She is within us all. She is the full circle: earth, air,
fire, water, and essence- body, mind, spirit, emotions, change.
The Goddess is first of all earth, the dark, nurturing mother who brings
forth all life. She is the power of fertility and generation; the womb,
and also the receptive tomb, the power of death. All proceeds from Her;
all returns to Her. As earth, She is also plant life; trees, the herbs
and grains that sustain life. She is the body, and the body is sacred.
Womb, breast, belly, mouth, vagina, penis, bone, and blood-no part of
the body is unclean, no aspect of the life processes is stained by any
concept of sin. Birth, death, and decay are equally sacred parts of the
cycle.
Whether we are eating, sleeping, making love, or eliminating body
wastes, we are manifesting the Goddess.
The Earth Goddess is also air and sky, the celestial Queen of Heaven,
the Star Goddess, ruler of things felt but not seen: of knowledge, mind,
and intuition. She is the Muse, who awakens all creations of the human
spirit. She is the cosmic lover, the morning and evening star, Venus,
who appears at the times of lovemaking. Beautiful and glittering, She
can never be grasped or penetrated; the mind is drawn ever further in
the drive to know the unknowable, to speak the inexpressible. She is the
inspiration that comes with an indrawn breath.
The celestial Goddess is seen as the moon, who is linked to women's
monthly cycles of bleeding and fertility.
Woman is the earthly moon; the moon is the celestial egg, drifting in
the sky womb, whose menstrual blood is the fertilizing rain and the cool
dew; who rules the tides of the oceans, the first womb of life on earth.
So the moon is also Mistress of Waters: the waves of the sea, streams,
springs, the rivers that are the arteries of Mother Earth; of lakes,
deep wells, and hidden pools, and of feelings and emotions, which wash
over us like waves.
The Moon Goddess has three aspects: As She waxes, She is the Maiden;
full, She is the Mother; as She wanes, She is the Crone. Part of the
training of every initiate involves periods of meditation on the Goddess
in her many aspects. I don't have space to include all of these, but I
will share with you the meditations on the three aspects of the moon:
Ground and center. Visualize a silver crescent moon, curving to the
right. She is the power of beginning, of growth and generation. She is
wild and untamed, like ideas and plans before they are tempered by
reality. She is the blank page, the unplowed field. Feel your own hidden
possibilities and latent potentials; your power to begin and grow. See
her as a silver-haired girl running freely through the forest under the
slim moon. She is Virgin, eternally unpenetrated, belonging to no one
but herself. Call her name "Nimue!" and feel her power within you.
Ground and center, and visualize a round full moon. She is the Mother,
the power of fruition and of all aspects of creativity. She nourishes
what the New Moon has begun. See her open arms, her full breasts, her
womb burgeoning with life. Feel your own power to nurture, to give, to
make manifest what is possible. She is the sexual woman; her pleasure in
union is the moving force that sustains all life. Feel the power in your
own pleasure, in orgasm. Her color is the red of blood, which is life.
Call her name "Mari!" and feel your own ability to love.
Ground and center. Visualize a waning crescent, curving to the left,
surrounded by a black sky. She is the Old Woman, the Crone who has
passed menopause, the power of ending, of death. All things must end to
fulfill their beginnings. The grain that was planted must be cut down.
The blank page must be destroyed, for the work to be written. Life feeds
on death-death leads on to life, and in that knowledge ies wisdom. The
Crone is the Wise Woman, infinitely old. Feel your own age, the wisdom
of evolution stored in every cell of your body. Know your own power to
end, to lose as well as gain, to destroy what is stagnant and decayed.
See the Crone cloaked in black under the waning moon; call her name
"Anu!" and feel her power in your own death.
The triad of the moon becomes the pentad, the fivefold star of birth,
initiation, ripening, reflection, and death.
The Goddess is manifest in the entire life cycle. Women are valued and
respected in old age, as well as youth.
Birth and childhood, of course, are common to all cultures. But our
society has not, until recently, conceptualized the stage of initiation,
of personal exploration and self-discovery, as necessary for women.
Girls were expected to pass directly from childhood to marriage and
motherhood-from control by their fathers to control by their husbands.
An initiation demands courage and self-reliance, traits that girls were
not encouraged to develop. Today, the stage of initiation may involve
establishing a career, exploring relationships, or developing one's
creativity. Women who have missed this stage in their youth often find
it necessary to go back to it later in life. The later stages of life
can only fully be experienced after the initiation is completed and an
individualized self has been formed.
The stage of ripening is also called consummation, and it is the stage
of full creativity. Relationships deepen and take on a sense of
commitment.A woman may choose to mother children or to nurture a career,
a project, or a cause. An artist or writer reaches her mature style.
Creations, whether they are children, poems, or organizations, take on a
life of their own. As they become independent, and their demands
diminish, the stage of reflection is reached. With age comes a new
initiation, this one less physically active but deepened by the insights
of experience. Old age, in Witchcraft, is seen very positively, as the
time when activity has evolved into wisdom. It brings about the final
initiation, which is death.
These five stages are embodied in our lives, but they can also be seen
within every new enterprise or creative project. Each book, each
painting, each new job is born first as an idea. It undergoes an
initiatory period of exploration, which is frightening at times, because
we are forced to learn new things. As we grow comfortable with a new
skill or concept, the project can be consummated. It exists
independently; as we let go, other people read the book, view the
painting, eat the food, or apply the knowledge we have taught. Finally,
it is over; it dies, and we go on to something new.
The pentacle, all five-lobed leaves, and five-petaled flowers are sacred
to the Goddess as pentad. The apple is especially her emblem, because,
when it is sliced crosswise, the embedded seeds form a pentacle.
The nature of the Goddess is never single. Wherever She appears, she
embodies both poles of duality-life in death, death in life. She has a
thousand names, a thousand aspects. She is the milk cow, the weaving
spider, the honeybee with its piercing sting. She is the bird of the
spirit and the sow that eats its own young. The snake that sheds its
skin and is renewed; the cat that sees in the dark; the dog that sings
to the moon-all are Her. She is the light and the darkness, the
patroness of love and death, who makes manifest all possibilities. She
brings both comfort and pain.
It is easy to respond to the concept of Goddess as Muse or Mother, to
inspiration, nurturing, and healing power.
It is more difficult to understand the Goddess as Destroyer.
Judeo-Christian dualism has conditioned us to think of destruction as
synonymous with evil. (Although, Goddess knows, the Jehovah of the Old
Testament was far from all sweetness and light.) Most of us live removed
from nature, cut off from the experiences that constantly remind more
"primitive" people that every act of creation is an act of aggression.
To plant a garden, you must dig out the weeds, crush the snails, thin
the seedlings as they reach toward the light. To write a book, you must
destroy draft after draft of your own work, cutting apart paragraphs and
striking out words and sentences.
Creation postulates change; and any change destroys what went before.
The Creatrix-Destroyer is manifest in fire, which destroys all it feeds
on in order to create warmth and light. Fire is the nurturing hearth,
the creative fire of the forge, the joyous bonfire of celebration. But
the Goddess is also the raging fire of anger.
The power of anger is difficult to face. We identify anger with
violence, and women have been conditioned to feel that our anger is
wrong and unacceptable. Yet anger is a manifestation of the life force.
It is a survival emotion, a warning signal that something in our
environment is threatening. Danger triggers a physical, psychic, and
emotional response that mobilizes our energy to change the situation.
Being human, we respond to verbal and emotional attacks as threats,
which arouse anger. But when we cannot admit our own anger, instead of
recognizing the threat in the environment, we experience ourselves as
wrong. Instead of flowing outward to change the environment, our energy
becomes locked into internal efforts at repression and control.
The Goddess liberates the energy of our anger. It is seen as sacred, and
its power is purified. Like a forest fire in undisturbed wilderness, it
sweeps away the underbrush so that the seedlings of our creativity can
receive the nourishing sunlight. We control our actions; we do not
attempt to control îò feelings. Anger becomes a connecting force that
spurs honest confrontations and communications with others.
I have spoken of the Goddess as psychological symbol and also as
manifest reality. She is both. She exists, and we create Her. The
symbols and attributes associated with the Goddess speak to Younger Self
and, through it, to the Deep Self. They engage us emotionally. We know
the Goddess is not the moon-but we still thrill to its light glinting
through branches. We know the Goddess is not a woman, but we respond
with love as if She were, and so connect emotionally with all the
abstract qualities behind the symbol.
Many shapes and symbols represent the Goddess. Eyes, which schematically
are also breasts, symbolize her nurturing powers and the gift of inner
sight. The crescent represents the moon: a waxing and waning crescent,
back to back, becomes the labrys or double ax, the weapon of Goddess
cultures. Triangles, ovals, and lozenges, the shapes of the female
genitals, are her symbols, as well. As part of an initiate's training,
she is taught to visualize symbols, to meditate on them and play with
them in her imagination until they reveal their meaning directly. Any
symbol or aspect of the Goddess can be a basis for meditation, but as I
have space for only one example, I will choose the double spiral:
Ground and center. Visualize a double spiral. When you see it clearly,
let it grow until you stand within it, and follow it inward, moving
counterclockwise. It becomes a maze of high, clipped hedges, then a
labyrinth of stone walls; its winding turns are the passageway to a
hidden secret. As you move through the spiral, the world dissolves, form
dissolves, until you are in the hidden heart where birth and death are
one. The center of the spiral shines; it is the North Star, and the arms
of the spiral are the Milky Way, a myriad of stars slowly revolving
around the still center point. You are in Spiral Castle, at the back of
the North Wind. Explore it in your imagination. See who you meet, what
you learn. You are in the womb of the Goddess, floating free. Now feel
yourself pushed and squeezed, moving out through the spiral, which is
now the vagina passage of rebirth. Move clockwise through the double
spiral of your DNA. Now it becomes a whirlwind-fly with it. Let it
become the twining tendril of a plant-a crystal-a shell-an orbiting
eectron. Time is a spiral-the cycles endlessly repeating, yet always
moving. Know the spiral as the underlying form of all energy. As you
emerge, let it return to its small, abstract, symbolic form. Thank it,
and let it disappear.
The Charge of the Goddess, at the opening of this chapter, reflects the
Craft understanding of the Goddess. It begins with a long list of
Goddess names, drawn from many cultures. These are not seen as separate
beings but, rather, as different aspects of the same Being that is all
beings. The names used may change with the seasons or preferences of the
speaker: for example, the Goddess might be named Kore in the spring,
after the Maiden aspect of the Greek Goddess. A Witch of Jewish heritage
might call on the ancient Hebrew Goddess as Ashimah or Asherah; an
Afro-American Witch might prefer Yemaya, the West African Goddess of the
sea and love. In most traditions of the Craft, the inner name of the
Goddess is recognized to embody great power, and so is kept secret,
revealed only to initiates. The outer names often used are Diana, for
the Goddess of the moon, and Aradia, her daughter, whom legends say was
sent to earth to liberate people by teaching them the arts of magic.
"Need of anything" refers to both spiritual and material needs. In
Witchcraft, there is no separation. The Goddess is manifest in the food
we eat, the people we love, the work we do, the homes in which we live.
It is not considered ignoble to ask for needed goods and comforts. "Work
for yourself, and you will see that Self is everywhere," is a saying of
the Faery tradition. It is through the material world that we open
ourselves to the Goddess. But Witchcraft also recognizes that when
material needs are satisfied deeper needs and longings may remain. These
can only be satisfied by connection with the nurturing, life-giving
forces within, which we call Goddess.
The coven meets at the full moon, in honor of the Goddess at the height
of her glory. The tides of subtle power are considered to be strongest
when the moon is full. The Goddess is identified with the fructifying
lunar energy that illumines the secret dark; the feminine, tidal,
pulsating power that waxes and wanes in harmony with woman's menstrual
flow. The sun is identified with her male, polar self, the God, whose
festivals are celebrated at eight points of power in the solar cycle.
The Goddess is the liberator, and it has been said that "Her service is
perfect freedom."5 She is the liberator because She is manifest in our
deepest drives and emotions, which always and inevitably threaten the
systems designed to contain them. She is love and anger, which refuse to
fit comfortably into the social order. To be "free from slavery" once
meant that, within the ritual circle, all were equal, whether they were
peasant, serf, or noble in the outside world. Slavery, today, can be
mental and emotional as well as physical: the slavery of fixed
perceptions, of conditioned ideas, of blind beliefs, of fear. Witchcraft
demands intellectual freedom and the courage to confront our own
assumptions. It is not a belief system; it is a constantly self-renewed
attitude of joy and wonder to the world.
The naked body represents truth, the truth that goes deeper than social
custom. Witches worship naked for several reasons: as a way of
establishing closeness and dropping social masks, because power is most
easily raised that way, and because the human body is itself sacred.
Nakedness is a sign that a Witch's loyalty is to the truth before any
ideology or any comforting illusions.
Rituals are joyful and pleasurable. Witches sing, feast, dance, laugh,
joke, and have fun in the course of rituals.
Witchcraft is serious-but not pompous or solemn. As in Hasidic Judaism
or Bhakti Yoga, joy and ecstasy are seen as the pathways to the Divine.
The "ecstasy of the spirit" is not separate from "joy on earth." One
leads to the other-and neither can truly be realized without the other.
Earthly joys, unconnected with the deep, feeling power of the Goddess,
become mechanical, meaningless-mere sensations that soon lose their
appeal. But spiritual ecstasies that attempt to escape the senses and
the body become equally arid and rootless, draining vitality instead of
nourishing it.
The law of the Goddess is love: passionate sexual love, the warm
affection of friends, the fierce protective love of mother for child,
the deep comradeship of the coven. There is nothing amorphous or
superficial about love in Goddess religion; it is always specific,
directed toward real individuals, not vague concepts of humanity. Love
includes animals, plants, the earth itself-"all beings," not just human
beings. It includes ourselves and all our fallible human qualities.
Ceridwen is one of the forms of the Celtic Goddess, and her cauldron is
the womb-cauldron of rebirth and inspiration. In early Celtic myth, the
cauldron of the Goddess restored slain warriors to life. It was stolen
away to the Underworld, and the heroes who warred for its return were
the originals of King Arthur and his Knights, who quested for its later
incarnation, the Holy Grail. The Celtic afterworld is called the Land of
Youth, and the secret that opens its door is found in the cauldron: The
secret of immortality lies in seeing death as an integral part of the
cycle of life. Nothing is ever lost from the universe: Rebirth can be
seen in life itself, where every ending brings a new beginning. Most
Witches do believe in some form of reincarnation. This is not so much a
doctrine as a gut feeling growing out of a world view that sees all
events as continuing processes. Death is seen as a point on an
ever-turning wheel, not as a final end. We are continually renewed and
reborn whenever we drink fully and fearlessly from "the cup of wine of
life." The love of the Goddess is unconditional. She does not ask for
sacrifice- whether human or animal-nor does She want us to sacrifice our
normal human needs and desires. Witchcraft is a religion of
self-celebration, not self- abnegation. Sacrifice is inherent in life,
in constant change that brings constant losses. Offerings: A poem, a
painting, a pinch of grain may express our thankfulness for her gifts,
but only when they are made freely, not from a sense of obligation.
In the Star Goddess passage, we see the imagery of the celestial
encircler, the moon, the waters, the green earth from which all proceeds
and to which all must return. She is the "soul of nature," which
vivifies all things.
Any act based on love and pleasure is a ritual of the Goddess. Her
worship can take any form and occur anywhere; it requires no liturgy, no
cathedrals, no confessions. Its essence is the recognition, in the midst
of pleasure, of its deepest source. Pleasure, then, is not superficial
but becomes a profound expression of the life force; a connecting power
linking us to others, not the mere sensation of satisfying our own
isolated needs.
Witchcraft recognizes that any virtue becomes a vice unless it is
balanced by its own opposite. Beauty, when unsustained by strength, is
vapid, lifeless. Power is insufferable when untempered by compassion.
Honor, unless balanced by humility, becomes arrogance; and mirth, when
not deepened by reverence, becomes mere superficiality.
Finally we learn the Mystery-that unless we find the Goddess within
ourselves we will never find Her without.
She is both internal and external; as solid as a rock, as changeable as
our own internal image of Her. She is manifest within each of us-so
where else should we look?
The Goddess is "the end of desire," its goal and its completion. In
Witchcraft, desire is itself seen as a manifestation of the Goddess. We
do not seek to conquer or escape from our desires-we seek to fulfill
them.
Desire is the glue of the universe; it binds the electron to the
nucleus, the planet to the sun- and so creates form, creates the world.
To follow desire to its end is to unite with that which is desired, to
become one with it, with the Goddess. We are already one with the
Goddess-She has been with us from the beginning. So fulfillment becomes,
not a matter of self-indulgence, but of self-awareness.
For women, the Goddess is the symbol of the inmost self, and the
beneficent, nurturing, liberating power within woman. The cosmos is
modeled on the female body, which is sacred. All phases of life are
sacred: Age is a blessing, not a curse. The Goddess does not limit women
to the body; She awakens the mind and spirit and emotions. Through Her,
we can know the power of our anger and aggression, as well as the power
of our love.
For a man, the Goddess, as well as being the universal life force, is
his own, hidden, female self. She embodies all the qualities society
teaches him not to recognize in himself. His first experience of Her may
therefore seem somewhat stereotyped; She will be the cosmic lover, the
gentle nurturer, the eternally desired Other, the Muse, all that he is
not. As he becomes more whole and becomes aware of his own "female"
qualities, She seems to change, to show him a new face, always holding
up the mirror that shows what to him is still ungraspable. He may chase
Her forever, and She will elude him, but through the attempt he will
grow, until he too learns to find Her within.
To invoke the Goddess is to awaken the Goddess within, to become, for a
time, that aspect we invoke. An invocation channels power through a
visualized image of Divinity. In some covens, one Priestess is chosen to
represent the manifest Goddess to the rest. In our covens, She is
invoked into each member of the circle.
An invocation can be a set piece of poetry or music, sung or spoken by
an individual or the group. In our covens, we usually chant as a group,
sometimes wordlessly and spontaneously, sometimes using a set phrase
that is repeated over and over again. A multivoiced chant will sometimes
involve one Priestess repeating a simple "bass" line-"All That Is Wild
and Free," for example- while another chants a repeating cycle-"Green
Bud Leaf/Bud Leaf Bright," and so on (see below)-and a third chanting a
long poetic piece, while the entire coven softly chants the vowel
sounds. It is impossible to reproduce the effect on the printed page,
unfortunately, but the bare words follow. When you use the invocations
given here, please play with them, experiment with melodies and
plain-song incantings, rearrange them, combine them, interweave them,
change them, and take inspiration from them to make your own:
REPEATING CHANTS (TO THE GODDESS)
MOON Mother Bright Light Of All Earth Sky We CALL You.
LUNA Momma Shiny Shine COME.
HAIL Old Moon Secret WISE One HAIL Old Moon Secret WISE One.
She SHINES For All She FLOWS Through All. All That Is WILD And Free All
That Is WILD And Free.
Take, Drink, This is My Blood The emptied Cup shall be Refilled' .,, ..
(This developed out of a Word Association Trance, as in Exercise 8.
Words should be stressed evenly, with no breaks between groups, which
are separated for ease of memorization. The entire cycle repeats over
and over.)
Green Bud Leaf/Bud Leaf Bright/Leaf Bright Flower/ Bright Flower
Grow/Flower Grow Fruit/Grow Fruit Ripe/ Fruit Ripe Seed/Ripe Seed
Die/Seed Die Earth/ Die Earth Dark/Earth Dark Waken/Dark Waken Green/
Waken Green Bud .. .
(Half-sung on two or three notes-repeat entire chant.)
NAMmu NAMmu O NamMU AE EE AE EE O NamMU NINmah NINmah ONinMAH AE EE AE
EE O NinMAH MAmi MAmi O MaMI AE EE AE EE O MaMI MAma MAma O MaMA AE EE
AE EE O MaMA MAH MAH O MAH MAH AE EE AE EE O MAH MAH
INVOCATION TO THE DEWY ONE All-dewy Sky-sailing Pregnant Moon Who shines
for all, Who flows through all.
Light of the world which is yourself.
Maiden, Mother, Crone, The Weaver The Green One Isis Astarte Ishtar
Aradia Diana Cybele Kore Ceridwen Levanah Luna Mari Anna Rhiannon Selena
Demeter Mah See with our eyes, Hear with our ears, Touch with our hands,
Breathe with our nostrils, Kiss with our lips, Open our hearts, Come
into us!
Touch us, Change us, Make us whole.
IMMEASURABLE ONE, & TO THE MAIDEN by Karen Lynd Cushen
Take, Eat, This is My Body Which shall Rise in You & Be Made Whole'
Take, Drink, This is My Blood The emtied Cup shall be Refilled' Goddess
of the Harvest, the fruit of Whose joy in the return of Your Daughter,
sustains us even as You make bleak the earth at Her leaving The earth is
rent & Persephone the Maiden Whose name may not be spoken is swallowed
by the land of the dead She will come again, in Whose footfalls spring
the flowers & the grain carrying up with Her dark memories of whence She
came Demeter Near in our grief because yearly we see Your own sorrow
ravage the face of earth & Your Daughter Close at the hour of our death
because yearly death claims Her We know hope because we remember again &
again Persephone healing Herself &. You with Her, rising Demeter, Mother
We who have lain on Your knees & slept in Your arms, give You honor,
Anoint us & place us at night in the red heart of Your fire; we shall
not flinch & let none in terror snatch us from that hearth.
Anneal us at unspeakable heat & give us a slow cooling that pliant we
may return evergreen with the spring We Your holy grain honor You not in
slaughter but as we plow, plant our feet, scatter Your seed in Your
Daughter's returning footsteps & reap We the threshing floor Ground of
Your Being where you stand smiling with sheaves & poppies in Your hand
watching the winnowing In the heat of the morning we wake our parched
throats thirsty for the cup of Eleusis cooling draught of the reaper ,
Our limbs longing to sway again in the wind in Your ancient dances Out
of our dreams, our myths, our nursery tales those ghettoes in which
survive Your memory, we behold the Ear of Corn we know the song You
sung, Song of the Sacred Body Yours & Our Own & honor You, Lady of Many
Names, Maiden & Immeasurable One.
KORE CHANT: SPRING AND FALL EQUINOX Her name cannot be spoken, Her face
was not forgotten, Her power is to open, Her promise can never be
broken.
(Spring)
All sleeping seeds She wakens, The rainbow is Her token, Now winter's
power is taken, In love, all chains are broken.
(Fall)
All seeds She deeply buries, She weaves the thread of seasons.
Her secret, darkness carries, She loves beyond all reason.
She changes everything She touches, and Everything She touches, changes.
[Repeat-chant.]
Change is, touch is; Touch is, change is.
Change us! Touch us! Touch us! Change us!
Everything lost is found again, In a new form, In a new way.
Everything hurt is healed again, In a new life, In a new day.
[Repeat any and all verses.]
Mama!
From my heart, From my blood, Mama I call you . . .
My heart of your heat Limb of your Northwind Water of your Water Cunt of
your Hillside Cock of your Springtime Eyes of Your Stars, Mama Eyes of
your sun, Mama Of your Sol, Mama My soul of your Sol Mama Come Mama!
Come into our circle Our womb Be with us now, Mama Be with us now!
i am your child of innocence your natural born no laws but yours can
tame me no love but your own everlasting everchanging thousand formed
your eyes are ducks on the wing your foot is dancing foam i am your
dancer you are the dance song without limit drummer and tune a whole
orchestra of your love i could walk your golden path straight to the sun
two-step my way to your heart o send me away let me swing on your star
inconstant ripple stream lake pond ocean whirlpool crashing great one
earthsucker the one and only true love you leave treasure everywhere
sand dollars smooth stone your edible green hair this is our life mama
yours and mine all the flickering powers all the shimmering lights
currents alternate and direct i might hold the cork but you are the flow
the circuit the breaker the spare dry cell insanity at midnight prayers
at dawn ecstasy in the noon heat mirage that points to the real splendor
gold and saffron ruby and red sunrise moonset the single song of all
that is was and ever shall be Blessed be.
Queen of Summer Queen Bee Sweet-smelling Flowering One Honey Nectar
Overflowing fountain Full-blown rose Intoxicating dancer Whispering wind
Singer Spell-binder Blossom and thorn Rhiannon Arianrhod Aphrodite
Ishtar Cybele Come into us Carry us off!
Between the Worlds
The Priest steps into the center of the circle and picks up the drum.
Beating a strong, pounding rhythm, he begins the chant:
Seed sower, grain reborn, Homed One Come!
Other voices join his. Hands clap out the rhythm on bare thighs; feet
stamp the floor. There is one great shout:
"lo! Evohe!"
Silence. A soft tenor begins to sing:
Bright sun, Dark death, Lord of winds, Lord of the dance, Sun child,
Winter-born king, Hanged One, Untamed! Untamed!
Stag and stallion, Goat and bull, Sailor of the last sea, Guardian of
the gate, Lord of the two lands, Ever-dying, Ever-living, Radiance!
Dionysus, Osiris, Pan, Dumuzi, Arthur, Robin, Janicot, Hou!
Move us! Touch us! Shake us!
Bring us through!
All is quiet. The Priest sets down the drum, and says simply, "He is
here." The coven echoes, "He is here!" "Blessed be." I grow old, I grow
old, I shall wear the bottoms of my trousers rolled.
Shall I part my hair behind? Do I dare to eat a peach?
I shall wear white flannel trousers, and walk upon the beach.
I have heard the mermaids singing, each to each.
I do not think that they will sing to me.
T. S. Eliot
"It is very much in style today to urge men to feel. However, this
urging is partially reminiscent of taunting a crippled man to run." Herb
Goldberg The image of the Horned God in Witchcraft is radically
different from any other image of masculinity in our culture. He is
difficult to understand, because He does not fit into any of the
expected stereotypes, neither those of the "macho" male nor the
reverse-images of those who deliberately seek effeminacy. He is gentle,
tender, and comforting, but He is also the Hunter. He is the Dying
God-but his death is always in the service of the life force.
He is untamed sexuality-but sexuality as a deep, holy, connecting power.
He is the power of feeling, and the image of what men could be if they
were liberated from the constraints of patriarchal culture.
The image of the Horned God was deliberately perverted by the medieval
Church into the image of the Christian Devil. Witches do not believe in
or worship the Devil-they consider it a concept peculiar to
Christianity. The God of the Witches is sexual-but sexuality is seen as
sacred, not as obscene or blasphemous. Our God wears horns-but they are
the waxing and waning crescents of the Goddess Moon, and the symbol of
animal vitality. In some aspects, He is black, not because He is
dreadful or fearful, but because darkness and the night are times of
power, and part of the cycles of time.
There have always been traditions of the Craft in which the God is given
little recognition. In the Craft, separate Women's Mysteries and
separate Men's Mysteries may be performed. But in most Witch traditions
the God is seen as the other-half of the Goddess, and many of the rites
and holidays are devoted to Him as well as to Her.
In the medieval Witch cult, the God may have obtained prominence over
the Goddess for a time. Most Witch confessions speak of "the devil," as
the Christian priests transcribed the Witches' words for their
non-Christian God. Fewer mention the Goddess, who is usually called "The
Queen of Elphame." However, the interrogators of Witches were looking
for evidence of Devil worship, not Goddess worship. They recorded
evidence that supported their accusations of Satanism and ignored or
twisted other evidence. Tortured suspects who reached the end of their
endurance were often given already prepared statements to sign, which
expressed what the Christian Priests wished to believe, rather than the
truth.
A common practice in the medieval Craft was for the Priest and Priestess
to enact the parts of God and Goddess, who were believed to be
physically incarnate in the rites. and One old account cited by Margaret
Murray expresses the importance of this custom to illiterate peasants,
for whom seeing was believing: The Priest mocked those "who offered to
trust in God who left them miserable in the world, and neither he nor
his son Jesus Christ ever appeared to them when they called on him, as
he had, who would not cheat them," For most Witches, "that earthly
Sabbath was to her the true Paradise, where there was more pleasure than
she could express, and she believed also that the joy which she took in
it was but the prelude to a much greater glory, for her god so held her
heart that no other desire could enter in." In the women's movement,
Dianic/separatist Witchcraft has become the fashion, and some women may
have difficulty understanding why a feminist would bother with the
Horned God at all Yet there are few if any women whose lives are not
bound up with men, if not sexually and emotionally, then economically.
The Horned God represents powerful, positive male qualities that derive
from deeper sources than the stereotypes and the violence and emotional
crippling of men in our society. If man had been created in the Horned
God's image, he would be free to be wild without being cruel, angry
without being violent, sexual without being coercive, spiritual without
being unsexed, and able to truly love. The mermaids, who are the
Goddess, would sing to him.
The Goddess is the Encircler, the Ground of Being; the God is
That-Which-Is-Brought-Forth, her mirror image, her other pole. She is
the earth; He is the grain. She is the all-encompassing sky; He is the
sun, her fireball. She is the Wheel; He is the Traveler. His is the
sacrifice of life to death that life may go on. She is Mother and
Destroyer; He is all that is born and is destroyed.
For men, the God is the image of inner power and of a potency that is
more than merely sexual. He is the undivided Self, in which mind is not
split from body, nor spirit from flesh. United, both can function at the
peak of creative and emotional power.
In our culture, men are taught that masculinity demands a lack of
feeling. They are conditioned to function in a military mode; to cut off
their emotions and ignore the messages of their bodies; to deny physical
discomfort, pain, and fear, in order to fight and conquer most
efficiently. This holds true whether the field of conquest is the
battlefield, the bedroom, or the business office.
It has become something of a cliche to say that men have been trained to
be aggressive and dominant and women have been taught to be passive and
submissive, that men are allowed to be angry and women are not. In
patriarchal culture, both women and men learn to function within a
hierarchy, in which those at the top dominate those below. One aspect of
that dominance is the privilege of expressing anger. The general chews
out the sergeant; the private cannot. The boss is free to blow his
stack, but not his assistant. The boss's wife yells at her maid, not
vice versa. Because women have usually been at the bottom of
hierarchies, from the business world to the traditional family, they
have borne the brunt of a great deal of male anger, and been the
ultimate victims of violence. Anger can be seen as a response to an
attack; very few men are in positions where they can afford to directly
confront their attackers.
Men's anger, then, becomes twisted and perverted. It is threatening to
recognize the true source of his rage, because he would then be forced
to recognize the helplessness, powerlessness, and humiliation of his
position.
Instead, he may turn his anger on safer targets-women, children, or
still less powerful men. Or his anger may turn to self-destruction:
disease, depression, alcoholism, or any of a smorgasbord of readily
available addictions.
Patriarchy literally means "rale of the fathers," but in a patriarchy,
very few men are allowed to enact the role of "father" outside the
limited family sphere. The structure of hierarchical institutions is
pyramidal: One man at the top controls many below. Men compete for money
and power over others; the majority, who do not reach the top of the
chain of command, are forced to remain immature, enacting the roles of
either dutiful or rebel sons. The good sons eternally seek to please the
father by obedience; the bad sons seek to overthrow him and take his
place. Either way, they are cut off from their own true desires and
feelings.
And so our religions reflect a cosmos in which Father God exhorts his
"children" to obey the rules and do what they are told, lest they align
them-selves with the Great Rebel. Our psychology is one of war between
sons and fathers who eternally vie for exclusive possession of the
mother, who, like all women under patriarchy, is the ultimate prize for
success. And progressive politics are reduced to alignments of rebel
sons, who overthrow the father only to institute their own hierarchies.
The Horned God, however, is born of a Virgin mother. He is a model of
male power that is free from father-son rivalry or oedipal conflicts. He
has no father; He is his own father and as He grows and passes through
his changes on the Wheel, He remains in relationship to the prime
nurturing force. His power is drawn directly from the Goddess: He
participates in Her.
The God embodies the power of feeling. His animal horns represent the
truth of undisguised emotion, which seeks to please no masters. He is
untamed. But untamed feelings are very different from enacted violence.
The God is the life force, the life cycle. He remains within the orbit
of the Goddess; his power is always directed toward the service of life.
The God of the Witches is the God of love. This love includes sexuality,
which is also wild and untamed as well as gentle and tender. His
sexuality is fully felt, in a context in which sexual desire is sacred,
not only because it is the means by which life is procreated but also
because it is the means by which our own lives are most deeply and
ecstatically realized. In Witchcraft, sex is a sacrament, an outward
sign of an inward grace. That grace is the deep connection and
recognition of the wholeness of another person. In its essence, it is
not limited to the physical act-it is an exchange of energy, of subtle
nourishment, between people. Through connection with another, we connect
with all.
In the Craft, the male body, like the female body, is held sacred, not
to be violated. It is a violation of the male body to use it as a
weapon, just as it is a violation of the female body to use it as an
object or a proving ground for male virility. To feign desire when it is
absent violates the body's truth, as does repression of desire, which
can be fully felt even when it cannot be satisfied. But to feel desire
and longing is to admit need, which is threatening to many men in our
culture.
Under patriarchy, men, while encouraged to expect a great deal of
nurturing care from women, are taught not to admit their need for
nurturing, their need to be passive at times, to be weak, to lean on
another. The God, in Witchcraft, embodies longing and desire for union
with the prime, nurturing force. Instead of seeking unlimited mothering
from actual, living women, men in Witchcraft are encouraged to identify
with the God and, through Him, to attain union with the Goddess, whose
mother-love knows no bounds. The Goddess is both an external and an
internal force: When her image is taken into a man's mind and heart, She
becomes part of him. He can connect with his own nurturing qualities,
with the inner Muse who is a source of unfading inspiration.
The God is Eros, but He is also Logos, the power of the mind. In
Witchcraft, there is no opposition between the two. The bodily desire
for union and the emotional desire for connection are transmuted into
the intellectual desire for knowledge, which is also a form of union.
Knowledge can be both analytic and synthetic; can take things apart and
look at differences, or form a pattern from unintegrated parts and see
the whole.
For women raised in our culture, the God begins as a symbol of all those
qualities that have been identified as male and that we have not been
encouraged to own. The symbol of the God, like that of the Goddess, is
both internal and external. Through meditation and ritual, a woman who
invokes the God creates his image within herself and connects with those
qualities she lacks. As her understanding moves beyond culturally
imposed limitations, her image of the God changes, deepens. He is the
Creation, which is not simply a replica of oneself, but something
different, of a different order. True creation implies separation, as
the very act of birth is a relinquishment, a letting go. Through the
God, the woman knows this power in herself. His love and desire stretch
across the abyss of separation, taut as a harpstring, humming one note
which becomes the single song, the universe, of all. That vibration is
energy, the true source of power-from-within. And so the God, like the
Goddess, empowers woman.
For both women and men, the God is also the Dying God. As such, He
represents the giving over that sustains life: Death in the service of
the life force. Life is characterized by many losses, and, unless the
pain of each one is fully felt and worked through, it remains buried in
the psyche, where, like a festering sore that never fully heals, it
exudes emotional poison. The Dying God embodies the concept of loss. In
rituals, as we enact his death over and over again, we release the
emotions surrounding our own losses, lance the wounds, and win through
to the healing promised by his rebirth. This psychological purging was
the true purpose of dramatic tragedy, which originated, in Greece, out
of the rites of the dying God Dionysus.
In Witchcraft, death is always followed by rebirth, loss by restitution.
After the dark of the moon, the new crescent appears. Spring follows
winter; day follows night. Not all Witches believe in literal
reincarnation; many, like Robin Morgan, view it as "a metaphor for that
mystically cellular transition in which the dancers DNA and RNA
immortally twine themselves."" But in a world view that sees everything
as cyclical, death itself cannot be a final ending, but rather some
unknown transformation to some new form of being. In enacting and
reenacting the death of the God, we prepare ourselves to face that
transformation, to live out the last stage of life.
The God becomes the Comforter and Consoler of Hearts, who teaches us to
understand death through his example. He embodies the warmth,
tenderness, and compassion that are the true complement of male
aggression.
The Dying God puts on horns and becomes the Hunter, who metes out death
as well as suffering it. Few of us today directly participate in life
processes; we no longer raise or hunt our own meat, but get it
plastic-wrapped at the supermarket. It is difficult for us to understand
the concept of the Divine Hunter. But in a culture of hunters the hunt
meant life, and the hunter was the life giver of the tribe. The tribe
identified with its food animals; hunting involved tremendous skill and
knowledge of the habits and psychology of the prey. Animals were never
killed needlessly, and no parts of the kill were wasted. Life was never
taken without recognition and reverence for the spirit of the prey.
Today, the only thing most of us hunt for regularly is parking places.
But the Hunter has another aspect: that of searching, of seeking. He
embodies all quests, whether physical, spiritual, artistic, scientific,
or social. His image is poemagogic: It both symbolizes and sparks the
creative process, which is itself a Quest. The God seeks for the
Goddess, as King Arthur seeks for the Grail, as each of us seeks for
that which we have lost and for all that has never yet been found.
Like the Goddess, the God unifies all opposites. As in the invocation
that opens this chapter, He is both the bright sun, the light-giving,
energizing force, and the darkness of night and death. The two aspects,
as I have said before, are complementary, not contradictory. They cannot
be identified as "good" and "evil": both are part of the cycle, the
necessary balance of life.
As Lord of Winds, the God is identified with the elements and the
natural world. As Lord of the Dance, He symbolizes the spiral dance of
life, the whirling energies that bind existence in eternal motion. He
embodies movement and change.
The Sun Child is born at the Winter Solstice, when, after the triumph of
darkness throughout the year's longest night, the sun rises again. In
Witchcraft, the celebrations of the Goddess are lunar; those of the God
follow the mythological pattern of the Wheel of the Year.
At the Winter Solstice, he is born as the embodiment of innocence and
joy, of a childlike delight in all things.
His is the triumph of the returning light. At Brigid or Candlemas
(February 2) his growth is celebrated, as the days grow visibly longer.
At the Spring Equinox, He is the green, flourishing youth who dances
with the Goddess in her Maiden aspect. On Beltane (May 1), their
marriage is celebrated with Maypoles and bonfires, and on the Summer
Solstice it is consummated, in a union so complete it becomes a death.
He is named Summer-Crowned King instead of Winter-Born, and the crown is
of roses: the bloom of culmination coupled with the stab of the thorn.
He is mourned at Lughnasad (August 1), and at the Fall Equinox He sleeps
in the womb of the Goddess, sailing over the sunless sea that is her
womb. At Samhain (Halloween, October 31), He arrives at the Land of
Youth, the Shining Land in which the souls of the dead grow young again,
as they wait to be reborn. He opens the gates that they may return and
visit their loved ones, and rules in the Dreamworld as He too grows
young, until at the Winter Solstice He is again reborn.
This is the myth: the poetic statement of a process that is seasonal,
celestial, and psychological. Enacting the myth in ritual, we enact our
own transformations, the constant birth, growth, culmination, and
passing of our ideas, plans, work, relationships. Each loss, each
change, even a happy one, turns life upside down. We each become the
Hanged One: the herb hung up to dry, the carcass hung to cure, the
Hanged Man of the Tarot, whose meaning is the sacrifice that allows one
to move on to a new level of being.
The association of love and death is a strong one in the mythology of
many cultures. In Witchcraft, love is never associated with actual
physical violence, and nothing could be more antithetical to the spirit
of the Craft than the current rash of violent pornography. The God does
not perpetrate acts of sadomasochism on the Goddess or preach to Her the
"power of sexual surrender." It is He that surrenders, to the power of
his own feeling. Nowhere but in love do we live so completely in the
all-consuming present; and at no time but when we are in love are we so
searingly conscious of our own mortality. For even if love lasts-and
both popular songs and personal experience assure us it does not-or
metamorphoses into a sweeter and deeper, if less fiery form, sooner or
later one lover will die and the other will be left alone. The Craft
does not try to resolve that dilemma, but to intensify it, because only
through that bittersweet realization, through the embrace of Pan whose
hairy thighs rub us raw even as they bring us ecstasy, can we learn to
be fully alive.
And so the God is the proud stag who haunts the heart of the deepest
forest, that of the Self. He is the stallion, swift as thought, whose
crescent hooves leave lunar marks even as they strike sparks of solar
fire. He is the goat- Pan, lust and fear, the animal emotions that are
also the fostering powers of human life; and He is the moon-bull, with
its crescent horns, its strength, and its hooves that thunder over the
earth. These are only a few of his animal aspects.
Yet He is untamed. He is all that within us that will never be
domesticated, that refuses to be compromised, diluted, made safe,
molded, or tampered with. He is free.
As God of the waning year, He sails the Last Sea for the Dreamland, the
Otherworld, the internal space in which creativity is generated. The
mythic Shining Isle is our own internal source of inspiration. He is the
Self voyaging the dark waters of the unconscious mind. The gates He
guards are the threshold that divides the unconscious from the
conscious, the gates of night and day through which we pass to go beyond
the illusion of duality, the gates of form through which we pass in and
out of life.
While He is ever-dying, He is also ever-reborn, ever-living. In the
moment of his transformation, He becomes immortal, as love is immortal
although its objects may fade. He glows with the radiance that sparks
life.
The God, like the Goddess, has many names. He appears, linked with Her,
throughout time, from the Paleolithic caves to the bulls of ancient
Crete to the medieval tales of Robin Hood and his merry men. Any of his
names or aspects can be used as a focus for meditation.
Although there are many men in modern Witchcraft, in general they are
less immediately attracted to the Craft than women. No matter how
simplistically or superstitiously the Craft is understood, it offers
women a model of female strength and creative power; in that, it has
remarkably little competition from other religions. But for men, it
demands a giving up of traditional forms of power and traditional
concepts of religion. What it offers men is more subtle and not always
easy to comprehend.
Men are not subservient or relegated to second-class spiritual
citizenship in Witchcraft. But neither are they automatically elevated
to a higher status than women, as they are in other religions. Men in
the Craft must interact with strong, empowered women who do not pretend
to be anything less than what they are. Many men find the prospect
disconcerting.
The Craft also demands a new relationship to the female body. No longer
can it be seen as an object or vilified as something dirty. A woman's
body, its odors, secretions, and menstrual blood, are sacred, are worthy
of reverence and celebration. Women's bodies belong to themselves alone;
no spiritual authority will back a man's attempt to possess or control
her.
The body is not to be celebrated in isolation. Men in the Craft must
come to terms with woman's power: the power of a whole woman, a
completed woman, whose mind and spirit and emotions are fully awakened.
A man must also know and accept the power of his own, inner, female
self; to generate a source of nurturing and inspiration within, rather
than demanding it exclusively from without.
Witchcraft also means losing the "Great Man" model of spirituality.
Jesus, Buddha, Krishna, Moses, and the whole horde of preachers,
prophets, gurus, and group leaders who claim to teach in their names, or
the names of secular descendents, lose their halos. In Witchcraft, there
are no comforting, all-knowing father figures who promise answers for
everything at the price of one's personal autonomy. The Craft calls on
each of us to be our own authority, and that can be an uncomfortable
position.
In fact, there is no more God the Father. In the Craft, the cosmos is no
longer modeled on external male control.
The hierarchy is dissolved; the heavenly chain of command is broken; the
divinely revealed texts are seen as poetry, not truth. Instead, a man
must connect with the Goddess, who is immanent in the world, in nature,
in woman, in his own feelings-in all that childhood religions taught him
needed to be overcome, transcended, conquered, in order to be loved by
God.
But the very aspects of Witchcraft that seem threatening also hold out
to men a new and vibrant spiritual possibility: that of wholeness,
connection, and freedom. Men of courage find relationships with strong,
powerful women exhilarating. They welcome the chance to know the Female
within, to grow beyond their culturally imposed limitations and become
whole.
Attempts to live out the model of God-father isolate men in emotionally
frozen life situations. Many men welcome release from the eternal
son-father conflict of patriarchy. They delight in a model of male power
that is nonhierarchical, that is neither slave nor master. While
individuals may not escape external authority in their own lives, they
see it for what it is: an arbitrary set of rules to a complex game. They
may play or withdraw, but their identities and self-esteem no longer
depend on their place in the power pyramid.
In the Craft, the split between mind and body, flesh and spirit, is
healed. Men are free to be spiritual without being unsexed, because God
and Goddess embody the deeply moving force of passionately felt
sexuality. They can connect with their own true feelings, their needs,
their weaknesses as well as strengths. Rituals are active, physical,
energetic, and cathartic. Ecstasy and wild, untamed energy are given a
spiritual value, not relegated to the football field or the corner bar.
It is uncomfortable to be one's own authority, but it is the only
condition under which true personal power can develop. Men and women are
no longer content to be tame dogs or whipping boys: to place
life-and-death decisions in the hands of a "fearless leader," a Pope, or
a Jim Jones. Personal authority demands integrity and responsibility,
but without it we cannot be free.
Within covens, men can experience group support and the affection of
other men, as well as women. They can interact in situations that are
not competitive or antagonistic. Men in covens can become friends with
other men.
Finally, Witchcraft is fun. It offers men a chance to play, to act
silly, to let the inner child come out. There are no fronts to uphold,
no masculine dignity that must remain unbreached. Out of foolishness and
play, creativity is born.
The God is within and without. Like the Goddess, He is invoked in many
ways: singing, chanting, drumming, dancing, a whispered poem, a wild
shout. However we call Him, He awakens within us:
REPEATING CHANTS (TO THE GOD)
SEED Sower GRAIN Reborn HORNED ONE COME!
BRIGHT Sun DARK Death Lord Of the Winds COME HAR HAR HOU HOU DANCE Ici
DANCE La!
JOUE Ici JOUE La!
HAR HAR HOU HOU!
DANCE Here DANCE There!
PLAY Here PLAY There!
The SUN Child The Winter-Born KING [or] The SUN Child The Summer-Crowned
KING IO! EVOHEIO! EVOHE!
[Pronounced Yoh! Ay-VOH-hay!]
Evohe is one of the names of the God, derived from an ancient name of
Dionysus, and cited as a Witches' cry in accounts of the Burning Times.
REPEATING CYCLE
Sun Shine Day/Shine Day Forever/Day Forever Night/ Forever Night
Sky/Night Sky Star/Sky Star Light/ Star Light Sun/Light Sun Shine/
horned god, tamed by love, fierce with passion join us now gentle one,
sharer, one without possessions be here now lover to men as well as
women, little child, old man join us now strong in struggle, proud of
earth from which you spring, and to which you fall be here now loyal
son, caring father, loving brother, rape fighter join us now rebel, seed
sower, sissy, one who gives support to us, we need your energy, we call
for your presence be here now
Lord of the colors of day Untamed Awakener of Hearts Comforter of
sorrows The namer Clear-sighted dancer Morning's son Vine-ripened Seed
Many-jeweled one Hunter Wild beast Guide Come to us!
You are dry Drink of us!
We are the dew-filled flowers That open To your golden shaft INVOCATION
TO THE GODDESS AND GOD by Valerie Kouros seedsower, Kore underground
Leaflight, bloodroot, grain reborn Turning the Wheel we keep you in
mind, Lovelight, spermshine, flower & thorn.
Spinning the web we call you forth, Turning the Wheel with ageless love.
Earth Her body, Air Her breath, Fire Her spirit, Water Her flow,
Transformed in the halls of Death, Life on life we come and go.
Spinning the Web we call you forth, Turning the Wheel with ageless love.
Kouros Horned One, Kore above, Starlight, heart's joy, ancient mirth,
Spinning the Web we call you forth, Turning the Wheel with ageless love.
Nameless One Eternal Who is found nowhere Beyond Timeless Unknowable
mystery Lord of the dance, Be radiant within us, of many names and
ever-changing One but appears everywhere and within all.
circle of the seasons, known by all.
Mother of all life, Engulf us with your love, See with our eyes, Hear
with our ears, Breathe with our nostrils, Touch with our hands, Kiss
with our lips, Open our hearts!
That we may live free at last Joyful in the single song Of all that is,
was, or ever shall be!
Should the raven catch your hair And sear a king of scarlet Upon the
heart's steep stair Then, oh, the sights will you see there - A breaking
of the crystal Under a dark green glare Upon the heart's steep stair
Then, oh, the sights will you see there Under a dark green glare.
A dark green glare, from eyes on fire, From pools of deepest amber -
Circle your castle round with briar, Still Pan will find your chamber.
Fill it to burn, don't say when, Drink your fill and drink again, Hear
the ocean roaring.
Fill it to the brim, don't say when, It's Pan that keeps on pouring.
Walnut hands, the eyes of a bear - He who seeks his sorrows out May find
the lion's share.
With self-same breath He tempts and warns - The fire that keeps the
chill at bay Is the very flame that burns.
The flame that burns, the song that slays, When you hear what it is
saying - Let Pan chase us through the maze, But Pan is only playing.
Fill it to the brim, don't say when, Drink your fill and drink again,
Hear the ocean roaring.
Fill it to the brim, don't say when, It's Pan that keeps on pouring.
Dark watcher with tangled brows Puts his finger to his lips, let's hear
no more of vows, Of promises we'll never keep, Nor of the secret dream
That slips away as we rise from sleep.
As we rise from sleep, As we rub our eyes, To set the salt tears
falling, You can cover your ears to drawn his cries - Yet Pan just keeps
on calling.
Between the Worlds
i/mage mag/ic magician imagination mage mag/net imagic imagnetic
imagenetic imagenesis Imagic-the image is the heart of magic which is
made by imagination-what we see in the mind's eye makes magic-makes us
magic-the mage-who costs the net-the magenet-magic magnet-net of subtle
power dipping into the life-stream-glowing in the dark-a web that
surrounds the earth Her body-magnetic field-imagnetic- how we are
attracted to magic-it draws us in-we are fish caught in a magic net-
imagenetic-because our genes remember, our cells remember, the source,
the origin, the beginning-imagenesis-creation out of image-creation of
the image--from the image all is bom-all is magic-imagnosis-this,
through what we imagine, we know.
Smooth stone with a hole in the center I candles of blue, green,
gold/musk/silver/a round mirror/myrrh/seven- pointed star/silk
cord/eight-spoked wheel/the number of increase/the red
cord/silk/gold/lead/the planetary symbols/drums/the shapes of
letters/the shapes of eyes/the shape of a heart/the shape of a sound/the
shape of magic.
"Do you know the old language?
- I do not know the old language.
- Do you know the language of the old belief?" (Robert Duncan)
"Do you believe in an invisible reality behind appearances?" (Dion
Fortune)
"No ideas, but in things." (William Carlos Williams )
"White magic is poetry, black magic is anything that actually works."
(Victor Anderson (Priest of the Faery tradition)
"Black is beautiful." (Aphorism of the Black Power Movement)
"It's our limitations that keep us sane." Dr. Bertha Simos (Starhawk's
mother)
Magic is the craft of Witchcraft, and few things are at once so
appealing, so frightening, and so misunderstood.
To work magic is to weave the unseen forces into form; to soar beyond
sight; to explore the uncharted dream realm of the hidden reality; to
infuse life with color, motion, and strange scents that intoxicate; to
leap beyond imagination into that space between the worlds where fantasy
becomes real; to be at once animal and god. Magic is the craft of
shaping, the craft of the wise, exhilarating, dangerous-the ultimate
adventure.
The power of magic should not be underestimated. It works, often in ways
that are unexpected and difficult to control. But neither should the
power of magic be overestimated. It does not work simply, or
effortlessly; it does not confer omnipotence. "The art of changing
consciousness at will" is a demanding one, requiring a long and
disciplined apprenticeship. Merely waving a wand, lighting a candle, and
crooning a rhymed incantation do nothing in and of themselves. But when
the force of a trained awareness is behind them, they are far more than
empty gestures.
Learning to work magic is a process of neurological repatterning, of
changing the way we use our brains. So, for that matter, is learning to
play the piano-both processes involve the development of new pathways
for neurons to follow, both require practice and take time, and both,
when mastered, can be emotional and spiritual channels for great beauty.
Magic requires first the development and then the integration of
right-hemisphere, spatial, intuitive, holistic, patterning awareness. It
opens the gates between the unconscious and the conscious minds, between
the starlight and flashlight vision. In so doing, it deeply influences
an individual's growth, creativity, and personality.
The language of the old belief, the language of magic, is expressed in
symbols and images. Images bridge the gap between the verbal and
nonverbal modes of awareness; they allow the two sides of the brain to
communicate, arousing the emotions as well as the intellect. Poetry,
itself a form of magic, is imagic speech.
Spells and charms worked by Witches are truly concrete poetry.
A spell is a symbolic act done in an altered state of consciousness, in
order to cause a desired change. To cast a spell is to project energy
through a symbol. But the symbols are too often mistaken for the spell.
"Burn a green candle to attract money," we are told. The candle itself,
however, does nothing-it is merely a lens, an object of focus, a
mnemonic device, the "thing" that embodies our idea. Props may be
useful, but it is the mind that works magic.
Particular objects, shapes, colors, scents, and images do work better
than others to embody particular ideas.
Correspondences between colors, planets, metals, numbers, plants, and
minerals make up a great body of magical lore. I have included some sets
of correspondences beginning on page 283. But the most powerful spells
are often improvised, out of materials that feel right or that simply
happen to come to hand.
Spells are an important aspect of magical training. They require the
combined faculties of relaxation, visualization, concentration, and
projection (see the exercises in Chapter Three), and so they provide
practice in coordinating these skills and developing them further.
Spell casting also forces us to come to terms with the material world.
Many people who are attracted to the spiritual path of Witchcraft find
themselves uneasy with the idea of using magic for practical ends or
toward material goals. Somehow it seems wrong to work for oneself, to
want things and to get things. But this attitude is a holdover of the
world view that sees spirit and matter as separate and that identifies
matter with evil and corruption. In Witchcraft, the flesh and the
material world are not sundered from the Goddess; they are the
manifestation of the divine. Union with the Goddess comes through
embracing the material world. In Witchcraft, we do not fight
self-interest; we follow it, but with an awareness that transmutes it
into something sacred.
"Work for yourself, and soon you will see that Self is everywhere," is a
saying of the Faery tradition. The paradox is that in spell casting we
may start with the personal self, but in order to work the magic we are
forced to expand and recognize the Self that moves through all beings.
Magic involves a deliberate self-identification with other objects and
people. To do a healing, we must become the healer, the one who is
healed, and the energy of healing. To attract love, we must become love.
Spell casting is the lesser, not the greater, magic; but the greater
magic builds on the less. Spells are extremely sophisticated
psychological tools that have subtle but important effects on a person's
inner growth.
A spell may highlight otherwise hidden complexes. A person who has
conflicts about success, for example, will find great difficulty in
concentrating on a money spell. Practical results may be far less
important than psychological insights that arise during the magical
working. Discovering our inner blocks and fears is the first step in
overcoming them.
Spells also go one step further than most forms of psychotherapy. They
allow us not only to listen to and interpret the unconscious but also to
speak to it, in the language it understands. Symbols, images, and
objects used in spells communicate directly with Younger Self, who is
the seat of our emotions and who is barely touched by the intellect. We
often understand our feelings and behavior but find ourselves unable to
change them. Through spells, we can attain the most important power-the
power to change ourselves.
The practice of magic also demands the development of what is called the
magical will. Will is very much akin to what Victorian schoolmasters
called "character": honesty, self-discipline, commitment, and
conviction.
Those who would practice magic must be scrupulously honest in their
personal lives. In one sense, magic works on the principle that "it is
so because I say it is so." A bag of herbs acquires the power to heal
because I say it does. For my word to take on such force, I must be
deeply and completely convinced that it is identified with truth as I
know it. If I habitually lie to my lovers, steal from my boss, pilfer
from supermarkets, or simply renege on my promises, I cannot have that
conviction.
Unless I have enough personal power to keep commitments in my daily
life, I will be unable to wield magical power. To work magic, I need a
basic belief in my ability to do things and cause things to happen. That
belief is generated and sustained by my daily actions. If I say I will
finish a report by Thursday and I do so, I have strengthened my
knowledge that I am a person who can do what I say I will do. If I let
the report go until a week from next Monday, I have undermined that
belief. Of course, life is full of mistakes and miscalculations. But to
a person who practices honesty and keeps commitments, "As I will, so
mote it be" is not just a pretty phrase; it is a statement of fact.
Spells work in two basic ways. The first, which even the most confirmed
skeptics will have no trouble accepting, is through suggestion. Symbols
and images implant certain ideas in Younger Self, in the unconscious
mind. We are then influenced to actualize those ideas. Obviously,
psychological spells and many healing spells work on this principle. It
functions in other spells, too. For example, a woman casts a spell to
get a job. Afterward, she is filled with new self-confidence, approaches
her interviewer with assurance, and creates such a good impression that
she is hired.
However, spells can also influence the external world. Perhaps the job
hunter "just happens" to walk into the right office at the right time.
The cancer patient, without knowing that a healing spell was cast, has a
spontaneous remission. This aspect of magic is more difficult to accept.
The theoretical model that Witches use to explain the workings of magic
is a clear one and coincides in many ways with the "new" physics. But I
do not offer it as "proof that magic works-nor do I wish to convince
anyone to drop their doubts. (Skeptics make better magicians.) It is
simply an elaborate-but extremely useful-metaphor.
That metaphor is based on the world view that sees things not as fixed
objects, but as swirls of energy. The physical world is formed by that
energy as stalactites are formed by dropping water. If we cause a change
in the energy patterns, they in turn will cause a change in the physical
world-just as, if we change the course of an underground river, new
series of stalagtites will be formed in new veins of rock.
When our own energy is concentrated and channeled, it can move the
broader energy currents. The images and objects used in spells are the
channels, the vessels through which our power is poured and by which it
is shaped.
When energy is directed into the images we visualize, it gradually
manifests physical form and takes shape in the material world.
Directing energy is not a matter of simply emoting. It is fashionable in
some occult circles to proclaim piously that "thoughts are things, and
therefore we should think only positive thoughts, because the negative
things we think will come to pass." It is hard to imagine a philosophy
that could more swiftly produce extreme paranoia.
Were it true, the death rate would rise phenomenally. Overpopulation
would be the least of our worries-and no elected politicians would
survive long enough to be inaugurated. If thoughts and emotions alone
could cause things to happen, thousands of my contemporaries would have
married the Beatles in 1964- And I would not be writing at this desk-I
would be sunning myself in Tahiti, where the crowds would undoubtedly be
fierce.
Emotion is a strobe light; directed energy is a laser beam.* No matter
how much hate, envy, and rage we direct at tailgaters, business
competitors, ex-lovers, and close relations, we will not esoterically
affect either their physical or their mental health-although we may
affect our own.
Even concentrated power is a small stream compared with the vast surges
of energy that surround us. The most adept Witch cannot be successful in
all her spells; the opposing currents are often too strong. As John C.
Lilly says, "It is all too easy to preach 'go with the flow.' The main
problem is identifying what the flow is, here and now." Witchcraft
teaches us first to identify the flow and then to decide whether or not
it is going where we want to go. If not, we can try to deflect it, or we
may have to change our course.
To twist our metaphor slightly, casting a spell is like sailing a boat.
We must take into account the currents- which are our own unconscious
motivations, our desires and emotions, our patterns of actions, and the
cumulative results of all our past actions. The currents are also the
broader social, economic, and political forces that surround us. The
winds that fill our sails are the forces of time and climate and season;
the tides of the planets, the moon, and the sun. Sometimes all the
forces are with us; we simply open our sail and run before the wind. At
other times, the wind may run against the current, or both run counter
to our direction, and we may be forced to tack back and forth, or furl
the sail and wait.
Sensing the energy climate is a matter of intuition and experience. Some
Witches make a detailed study of astrology in an effort to plan their
magical workings at the optimum times. Personally, I prefer simply to
work when I feel the time is right. Of all the planets, the moon's
influence on subtle energies is the strongest.** Subtle power increases
as the moon waxes, so the time of the waxing moon is best for spells
involving growth or increase, such as money spells. The power peaks when
the moon is full, and that is the best time for workings of culmination
and love. During the waning moon, power subsides and turns inward: the
waning period is used for banishing, binding, and discovering hidden
secrets.
Spells can be adjusted to fit the time. For example, if you are obsessed
with the need to do a money spell on the waning moon, focus on banishing
poverty. A friend of mine whose business had been limping along for two
years did precisely that and realized soon afterward that most of his
problems stemmed from his partner's miscalculations and lack of
management. At the same time, his partner decided to quit. The waning
moon had done its work. By the next full moon, the business had begun to
turn around.
Energy pursues the path of least resistance. Material results are more
easily achieved through physical actions than through magical workings.
It is simpler to lock your door than to protect your house with psychic
seals. No magic spell is going to bring results unless channels are open
in the material world. A job spell is useless unless you also go out and
look for a job. A healing spell is no substitute for medical care.
The visualization we create in a spell should be that of the desired
end - not necessarily the means by which it will come about. We picture
the accident victim running on the beach-not the bones knitting. We keep
our focus on our destination, without attempting to chart every movement
we will make on the way. Spells usually work in unexpected ways. In
order to assure that the power does not inadvertently cause harm, we
bind the spell.
We "set" the form we have created, so that the energy becomes fixed in
the pattern we desire.
When you have finished casting a spell, visualize yourself tying a knot
in a cord wrapped around the symbol or image on which you have focused.
Tell yourself you are setting the form of the spell, as a clay pot is
set when it is fired. Say,
By all the power Of three times three, This spell bound around Shall be.
To cause no harm, Nor return on me.
As I do will, So mote it be!
Spells that influence another person depend on a psychic link. Power
pours through you toward another-but in order for the connection to be
made you must be at least partly identified with that other person. You
become the other, as well as becoming the energy you send. For this
reason, "What you send returns on you, three times over." The energy you
project to another affects you even more strongly than the other
person-because you have generated it, you have become it, and you have
become its object. If you send out healing energy, you are healed in
turn. If you hex or curse, you yourself are cursed.
Witches, therefore, are extremely reluctant to hex anybody.4 Some
traditions expressly forbid hexing, cursing, or even healing another
without their consent. Other Witches feel strongly that "a Witch who
cannot hex, cannot heal." By that they mean that to use magic for
destruction is not synonymous with using it for evil. Cancer must be
destroyed for healing to take place. A person who threatens the safety
of others must be stopped. This is most safely done with a binding
spell, focused on the image of preventing him or her from doing harm.
The returning energy, then, will be basically protective. If you bind a
rapist, you may find yourself prevented from committing rape, but if
that interferes with your daily activities you have no business
practicing Witchcraft anyway. The spell may work itself out in many
different ways: The rapist may be caught and convicted, or he could
become impotent or even undergo a religious conversion. How it works is
not your concern, as long as it accomplishes your goal.
Even binding spells should never be undertaken lightly. It is best to
discuss them thoroughly in the coven, and proceed only when everyone is
in agreement. Never hex someone just because they annoy you, because you
dislike them or they cause you inconvenience, or in order to profit at
their expense.
Such misuses of magic are demeaning, dangerous, and self-defeating. They
will do far more harm to you than to anybody else.
Magic should not be used to gain power over others-it should be seen as
part of the discipline of developing "power-from-within." Spells that
attempt to control another person should be avoided. This particularly
applies to love spells focused on a specific person. More than any other
form of spells, these work far more strongly on the person who casts
them than they do on the intended object. They inevitably backfire,
complicating one's life beyond belief. Of course, if you feel you have
grown too emotionally complacent, and need to be thoroughly shaken up
... go ahead. Look on it as a "learning experience." General spells to
attract love create fewer problems, although they tend to be more
effective for attracting sex than love per se. Love itself is a
discipline, requiring an internal readiness. Unless you yourself are
open to love, no spell will bring it into your life. It may, however,
bring you a lot of amusement.
People often worry about being attacked magically. Actually, psychic
attacks occur extremely rarely and are even more rarely effective.
Paranoia is a far more pressing danger than psychic warfare. However,
people can be attacked in many subtle ways. Envy and hostility need not
be focused in a spell to create an uncomfortable emotional climate.
Protective meditations and spells can be helpful in many mundane
situations (see Chapter Four). The following meditation is effective
whenever negative energy is being directed at you:
Ground and center. Visualize yourself surrounded by a net of glowing
white light. See it as a semiporous energy field. Any force that hits
this barrier is transmuted into pure creative energy. Whatever anger or
hostility is sent to you, it only feeds your own power. Take in that
power; absorb it; glow with it. Maintain the filter around yourself as
you go through the day.
In the following spells, raise power by breathing or chanting, as in the
exercises given previously. You can cast a circle formally or simply by
visualizing it. Don't forget to earth the power and open the circle at
the end. Names of materials used are given in capital letters, for ease
of reference.
Spell casting is the lesser magic, but imagery and symbols are also used
in the greater magic of rituals, where they become the keys to
self-transformation and the links that connect us to the divine, within
and without.
Visualize a circe of light around yourself.
Cup a BLACK STONE in your hands and raise it to your forehead.
Concentrate and project all your anger into the stone.
With all your might, hurl it out of the circle into a lake, stream,
river, or the ocean. Say:
With this stone Anger be gone.
Water bind it, No one find it.
Earth the power.
Release the circle.
(To be done alongside flowing water.)
(For self-acceptance when you've made a mistake or are filled with guilt
or regrets.)
Cast a circle.
Sit facing North, and light a BLACK or WHITE CANDLE.
Hold in both hands your CUP, filled with CLEAR WATER. You should have
before you an IMAGE OF THE GODDESS and a GREEN PLANT, in earth.
Visualize all the negative things you are feeling about yourself, the
mistakes you .' have made, the things you have done wrong. Talk to
yourself and admit you feel o bad. Tell yourself, out loud, exactly what
you have done wrong, and why. Let your emotion build energy, and project
it all into the cup. Breathe on the water.
Raise power.
Visualize the Goddess as forgiving Mother. Imagine her hands cover
yours. Hear Her say, I am the Mother of all things, My love is poured
out upon the earth.
I drink you in with perfect love, Be cleansed. Be healed. Be changed.
Pour out the water onto the plant, and feel your self-hate draining out
of you. (It is possible this ritual will kill the plant.)
Fill the CUP with MILK or JUICE.
Raise more power, and visualize yourself as you would like to be, free
of guilt and sorrow, changed so that you will not repeat the same
errors. Charge the cup with strength and the power to be the person you
want to be.
Again, visualize the Goddess. Her hands cover yours, and She says, Mine
the cup, and Mine the waters of life.
Drink deep!
Drink the juice or milk. Feel yourself filled with strength. Know that
you have changed, that you are, from that very moment, a new person, not
bound by the patterns and errors of the past.
Bind the spell.
Earth the power.
Open the circle.
Cast a circle.
Raise energy.
Sit facing North and light a GRAY CANDLE.
In a MORTAR AND PESTLE, grind a SHARK'S TOOTH (or other sharp bone) to
powder. Say, You have no bones and never sleep.
You swim always within me.
Allow loneliness to fill you and project it into the powder. Chant, Fire
take you!
Fire have you!
Fire free you!
Shout, "Now be gone!" and release the feeling into the powder.
Spit three times into the powder and burn it in a BRASS BOWL, with
ALOES, NETTLES, and THORNS.
Douse the fire with SALT WATER.
Earth the power.
Bind the spell.
Release the circle.
You will feel light of heart and free of loneliness.
On the first day of the dark of the moon, begin to sprout some seeds of
wheat, barley, rye, or alfalfa. Keep them in the dark three days, and
then three days in the light.
On the morning of the seventh day, rise at dawn and bathe in water
infused with CLOVER, BASIL, and ROSE PETALS.
Wear white, or go naked.
Cast a circle. Raise energy. Sit facing East, and light a WHITE CANDLE.
Say, As the grain grows, As the sun grows, As the moon grows.
Chant, I grow, I reap, I receive.
Visualize each stage concentrating and projecting the image into the
SPROUTS. Eat the sprouts. Say, Bud in me, Blossom in me, Fruit in me.
Say each line three times, visualizing and concentrating.
Save SEVEN SPROUTS and wrap in BLACK SILK.
Bind the spell.
Earth the power.
Release the circle.
That night, bury the sprouts with a SILVER COIN (a dime is OK).
(Can be done on a Sunday, Monday, or Friday.)
Cast a circle.
Raise energy.
Sit facing South, and light a GREEN, BLUE, or YELLOW CANDLE.
Hold in both hands a CUP of MILK mixed with SUGAR and SAFFRON.
Visualize, one after another, all the people and places who have made
you feel safe and secure. Concentrate and project the feeling into the
milk.
Raise the cup to your mouth and breathe the feeling of security into it.
Look at the candle flame and visualize three women, one dressed in
black, one in white, one in red. They more toward you and merge into one
figure. Imagine She places her hands over yours and lifts the cup to
your lips.
Say, "I have been with you from the beginning." Drink the milk.
Earth the power and feel the safe space within yourself.
Bind the spell.
Release the circle.
Cast a circle.
Sit facing south, and light a GREEN or BLUE CANDLE.
You should have a child's DOLL or STUFFED ANIMAL. Take it in your hands
and sprinkle it with SALT WATER.
Say "I name you ______________ ." (Use your own childhood name or
nickname.)
Hold it in your arms, croon to it, rock it, and talk to it. Tell it
everything you would have liked to hear as a child.
Let it talk to you, and tell you how it feels and what it wants. Let
your voice change. Play.
Raise energy, and visualize that you are pouring it into the doll, who
is your own child self. Create an image of your child self as you would
have liked to be, and project it into your doll. Continue until the doll
is glowing with white light and love.
Kiss the doll. Wrap it in WHITE CLOTH and lay it to rest on your altar.
Bind the spell.
Earth the power.
Open the circle.
(Repeat as often as you need or want to.)
(To be done on the first night of your menstruation. Especially helpful
for those women who suffer from cramps, or irregular or excessive
bleeding.)
Cast a Circle.
Light a RED CANDLE. Face South.
With the third finger of your left hand, rub a few drops of your
menstrual blood on the candle.
Raise power. Feel the blood's essence drawn into the flame. Let the
light warm you and fill you. Feel your own blood as the essence of the
life force.
Draw light from the candle into your womb. Let it fill you and spread
slowly through your entire body from your womb center, charging you with
energy and warmth.
Bind the spell.
Earth the power.
Open the circle.
Herbal charms, as I make them, are small bags filled with herbs and
other symbolic objects. They are made of a simple square or circle of
cloth of the proper color, tied with thread of the proper color, and
then charged with energy. They can be worn on the person or kept in the
house to attract what you desire. If you wish, they can be made of silk
or velvet and elaborately embroidered with symbols-or they can be simple
cotton tied with string.
You can create your own herbal charms tailored to your own needs. Here
are some suggested combinations:
Use a square of green cloth, filled with borage, lavender, High John the
Conqueror Root, and saffron (or any four appropriate herbs), a few
crystals of rock salt, and three silver coins. (Dimes, although no onger
solid silver, seem to work fine.) Tie with gold and silver thread in
eight knots.
Use a circle of rose-colored or red (for more sexually passionate love)
cloth. Fill it with acacia flowers, myrtle, rose petals or buds, jasmine
flowers, and lavender. Add a red felt heart and a copper coin or ring.
Tie it with blue thread or ribbon, in seven knots.
Use a circe of blue cloth, filled with All-Heal, Balm of Gilead buds,
feverfew, myrtle, and rose petals (white).
Take a white felt heart cut into two pieces, sew it together with blue
thread while charging the charm, and add it to the herbs. Add a copper
coin to draw new love. Tie it with white thread.
Use a circle of blue cloth, filled with nine protective herbs. Add a
silver coin, or better, a silver crescent moon (perhaps an earring). Tie
it with white or silver thread.
Use a square of green cloth. Fill it with bay laurel, lavender, and High
John the Conqueror Root. Add four other herbs governed by- Mercury- for
a job involving communications The Moon-for a job involving healing,
women's work or health, or psychology Jupiter-for a job involving
leadership and responsibility, or the law Mars-for a job requiring
aggressive, assertive action The Sun-for a job outdoors, in agriculture
or nature, or for an easygoing, enjoyable job Saturn-for architecture,
history, or any job where you will be limiting others' actions or
freedom (police work, for example)
Add a silver coin, for wealth, and pictures of any important tools you
may use in your work. Tie it with purple thread.
Use a square of royal purple cloth, filled with bay leaf, Dragon's
Blood, elder flowers, High John the Conqueror Root, rosemary, vervain,
oak leaf, holly leaf or berries, and mistletoe. Tie with blue thread,
and embroider or draw on your own personal symbol.
Assemble all your materials on your altar.
Cast a circle.
Light a CANDLE of an appropriate color. If you wish, burn INCENSE.
Raise energy.
In MORTAR and PESTLE, grind together all the herbs for your charm.
Visualize the image or emotion you desire, and project it into the herbs
as you grind them together. Draw or create any other symbols you may
wish.
Gather together the herbs and other objects into the cloth. Twist the
top around them and tie it once with thread.
Breathe on the charm and charge it with air.
Pass it through the candle flame, and charge it with fire.
Spinkle a few drops of WATER on it, and charge it with water.
Dip it into SALT, or touch it to your PENTACLE, and charge it with
earth.
Use a circe of yellow or iridescent cloth. Fill it with fennel, hazel,
mandrake, and valerian. Add a silver coin, and tie with orange and
violet thread.
Use a square of blue cloth, filled with bay laurel, High John the
Conqueror Root, St. John's Wort, and vervain. If you are being
persecuted by an enemy, add a pine nut or part of a cone, some tobacco,
and some mustard seed.
Put in a small picture of an open eye, so that justice will look
favorably on you. Tie with purple thread.
Feel free to improvise on these charms to add symbols of your own or to
try other combinations of herbs. What feels best to you will work best.
Hold it in your hands, breathe on it, and charge it fully with all the
energy you. raise, concentrating on your visualization.
Drop to the ground, relax, and earth the power. Bind the spell, tying it
as you do so.
Open the circle.
Create your poppet (a wax or cloth doll) to represent the person you
wish to help already completely healed and whole. Do not represent the
problem; rather, create the image of the so ution. Concentrate as you
make the poppet.
Cast a circle.
Light a BLUE CANDLE.
Sprinkle your POPPET with SALT WATER. Say, "Blessed be, thou creature
made by art. By art made, by art changed. Thou art not wax (cloth, wood,
etc.) but flesh and blood, I name thee ________ (name the person you
wish to heal). Thou art s(he), between the worlds, in all the worlds.
Blessed be." Hold the poppet in your hands. Breathe on it, and charge it
with energy. Visualize your friend completely healed, completely well.
Charge particular parts of the doll especially strongly to correspond
with the parts of your friend that are hurt or diseased.
Visualize your friend completely charged with white light, well, happy,
and filled with energy.
Bind the spell. Earth the power. Open the circe.
Keep the poppet on your altar unti your friend is healed. Then, cast
another circle, again take the poppet, sprinkle it with water, and say,
"Blessed be, child of light. By art changed, by art unmade. I take from
thee thy name ________ (your friend's name) and name thee poppet,
creature of wax (or cloth, or whatever). Between the worlds, in all the
worlds, so mote it be. The link is broken. Blessed be." Open the circle.
If the poppet contains physical links, burn it in an open fire. If not,
dispose of it any way you wish, or give it to your friend as a keepsake.
Hold the poppet in your "hands. Visualize a silver net falling over it,
and binding the person it represents.
Take RED RIBBON and wrap it around the poppet, tying it firmly, and
binding all parts of the body that could conceivably harm others. Charge
the binding with power.
Say,
By air and earth, By water and fire, So be you bound, As I desire.
By three and nine, Your power I bind.
By moon and sun, My will be done.
Sky and sea Keep harm from me.
Cord go round, Power be bound, Light revealed, Now be sealed.
Earth the power. Open the circle. Bury the poppet during a waning moon,
far from your house, under a heavy rock.
Cast a circle.
Light a BLACK CANDLE. Burn INCENSE of Saturn.
Sprinkle your POPPET with SALT WATER. Say, "Blessed be, thou creature
made by art. By art made, by art changed. Thou art not wax (cloth, etc.)
but flesh and blood. I name thee_______ (the person you are binding),
Thou art s(he), between the worlds, in all the worlds, So mote it be."
CHAPTER 8. Energy: The Cone of Power Between the Worlds The chant begins
as a low crooning, a deep vibration barely heard. One by one, voices
take it up:
"Aaaaaaaah " "Oooooooooh " "Eeeeeeeeee " It rises, an eerie nonharmony.
The air seems to thicken, to dance with ekctric sparks that begin to
fly, circle, spin, careen madly in the center of the circle.
"Eeeeeeeoooooooh " The air glows, a luminous cloud that pulsates,
burning with a black heat. The chant opens, full-throated, a ringing
chord...
The light begins to spin, a shining wheel of breath, turning and
turning. Voices rise higher. The light spirals upward, faster, faster,
as it narrows toward the top. The sound is indescribabk; the voices are
the shrieking wind, the howling of wolves, the high cries of tropical
birds, the swarming of bees, the sigh of receding waves. The cone builds
and builds a pulsing spiral, a unicorn's horn, rare and marvelous. Its
tip cannot be seen. It is flooded with color: red, blue, green,
sunlight, moonlight. It rises - "Now!" A voice cries out. A final
shriek. The cone flies off, an arrow loosed to do its work, sucking the
air clean. The coven collapses, timp dolls, sprawled on the floor.
They smile, deliciously relaxed.
"Four laws of ecology: (1) everything is connected to everything else,
(2) everything must go somewhere, (3) nature knows best, and (4) there
is no such thing as a free lunch." (Barry Commoner)
The primary principle of magic is connection. The universe is a fluid,
ever-changing energy pattern, not a collection of fixed and separate
things. What affects one thing affects, in some way, all things: All is
interwoven into the continuous fabric of being. Its warp and weft are
energy, which is the essence of magic.
Energy is ecstasy. When we drop the barriers and let power pour through,
it floods the body, pulsing through every nerve, arousing every artery,
coursing like a river that cleanses as it moves. In the eye of the
storm, we rise on the winds that roar through mind and body, throbbing a
liquid note as the voice pours out shimmering honey in waves of golden
light, that as they pass, leave peace. No drug can take us so high, no
thrill pierce us so deep because we have felt the essence of all
delight, the heart of joy, the end of desire. Energy is love, and love
is magic.
Of all the disciplines of magic, the art of moving energy is the
simplest and most natural. It comes as easily as breathing, as making
sound. Picture the power in motion, and it moves. Feel it flowing, and
it flows, cleansing, healing, renewing, and revitalizing as it passes.
Witches conceive of the subtle energies as being, to a trained
awareness, tangible, visible, and malleable. They are, as Dion Fortune
says, "more tangible than emotion-less tangible than protoplasm." We can
learn to sense them and mold them into form.
The laws of ecology are the laws of energy. Everything is
interconnected; every action, every movement of forces, changes the
universe. "You must not change one thing, one pebble, one grain of sand,
until you know what good and evil will follow on that act. The world is
in balance, in Equilibrium. A Wizard's power of changing and summoning
can shake the balance of the world. It is dangerous, that power. It is
most perilous. It must follow knowledge and serve need. To light a
candle is to cast a shadow." Yet the equilibrium of the universe is not
static, but dynamic. Energy is constantly in motion. It cannot be
stopped. Again, using water as our metaphor, when we block its flow it
becomes stagnant and foul. When it flows freely, it cleanses and
purifies. The rituals, spells, and meditations of the Craft center on
aiding energy to flow.
Energy flows in spirals. Its motion is always circular, cyclical,
wavelike. The spiral motion is revealed in the shape of galaxies,
shells, whirlpools, DNA. Sound, light, and radiation travel in
waves-which themselves are spirals viewed in a flat plane. The moon
waxes and wanes, as do the tides, the economy, and our own vitality.
The implications of the spiral model are many. Essentially, it means
that no form of energy can be exerted indefinitely in one direction
only. Always, it will reach a peak, a point of climax, and then turn. In
personal terms, activity is balanced by passivity. Exertion must be
followed by rest; creativity by quiescence. Men cannot live entirely in
the active mode, nor women in the passive-as patriarchal culture
expects-and be whole. No one can be constantly creative, constantly
sexual, constantly angry-or constantly anything that requires energy.
Recognizing this alternation can help us sustain a dynamic, healthy
balance.
Socially and politically, movement toward greater freedom is usually
followed by movement toward greater security. Expansion is followed by
contraction. The wise can learn to take advantage of this alternation,
instead of being buffeted by it and forfeiting gains during every period
of reaction. Freedom and security are not mutually exclusive goals.
Political actions could be more effective if they were consciously
understood to be energy workings. Power can move through a group as it
does through an individual, renewing and revitalizing group energy. An
important aspect of this movement is grounding the energy after it is
raised, consciously recognizing its fall as well as its peak, and
returning it to the earth, its elemental source. When energy is not
grounded, the group remains "charged"-like a room full of static
electricity, with what soon becomes felt as tension and anxiety. Instead
of generating a useful current, such groups short-circuit themselves,
and their members "burn out." Rallies, meetings, conferences, and
demonstrations raise power-but rarely do organizers think about
grounding it afterward. Grounding does not have to be elaborate-simply
remembering to formally end each working session will help earth the
power. Group members might simply take hands in a circle and sit quietly
for a moment.
Recently, there has been a growing tendency in the feminist movement to
incorporate ritual into conferences and demonstrations, for the express
purpose of grounding and channeling the power raised. The following is
an account of a ritual several women4 and I created in November 1978, as
part of a conference on violence and pornography, with the theme "Take
Back the Night!" The climax of the weekend was a march through the North
Beach section of San Francisco, the heart of the topless-bottomless and
massage parlor scene. The ritual took place in Washington Square Park,
at the end of the march.
The women pour in from the street. It takes so much longer than we
expected. I had no conception of three thousand women in a mass...
Witches, at the front of the march, aspurge North Beach with salt water.
They chant Laurel's couplet:
Wipe the slate clean, Dream a new dream!
At Broadway and Columbus, the artists create a mini-ritual around their
float. In the front, it is a giant, candle-lit Madonna; behind, slabs of
dead meat and pornographic magazines. A strong symbol of images that
squeeze women into narrow, hurtful roles. They bring out the float,
chant, tear the pornography into confetti. Holly Near sings.
We wait at the park, too nervous to leave and risk not getting back in
time. The Witches arrive at the entrance to the park, form a double
line, a birth canal. They hold lighted candles and incense and sprinkle
the women with salt water as they enter:
From a woman you were born into this world, By women you are born into
this circle.
We are onstage (the back of Anne's truck). Our backdrop is the lit
facade of the church: an irony. Lennie Schwendinger of Lighten Up has
created beautiful lighting for us-it is the first time I have done a
ritual so theatrical, where the bright lights cut us off from the crowd,
who become "audience." Our pool of light seems the only world-and I'm
not sure I like it. Behind us, in the trees, a woman's acrobatic troupe,
Fly By Night, perform a slow, aerial dance.
Nina leads the chant:
We're taking back the night, The night is ours!
The women are not dancing, as we had hoped. The audience-performer image
is too strong-they are watching us.
I feel awkward, unsure of what to do. The chant dies away-still, crowds
are flowing into the park Toni Marcus begins to play her violin. The
sound carries over the park, electric, magical.
We can put off starting no longer. I take the microphone, and say that
we should turn for a moment and look at each other, at how beautiful we
are, how real we are I say, "We have been taught that women's bodies are
unclean, that our sexuality degrades us, that we must be either Virgins
or whores. But we accept neither image! Instead we raise the banner of
the naked Goddess, whose body is truth, who is within us, in the human
spirit.
"We say that our bodies are sacred, because they bring forth life,
because they are life, because they give us pleasure, because with them
we make, build, think, laugh, create, and do." Lee and I lead the
responsive chant:
Our bodies are sacred, Our breasts are sacred, Our wombs are sacred, Our
hands are sacred...
It builds and builds.
Our voices are sacred, Our voices carry power!
The power to create!
The power to change the world!
Let go-let them become sound - Chant without words-let them be heard!
The voices roar into the night! Not a cone-it is too strong, too
amorphous-a tidal wave sweeping out of the park.
It stops. Quietly, I lead a soft, low chant. A humming-the buzz of two
thousand bees, a deep throb...
Over it, Hallie leads the meditation:
"Softly, softly now begin to feel the earth's energy beneath your feet
as She dances with us ...
"Close your eyes . . . feel your strength sparkling through your body
and women around you. This is the power generated by our marching, our
chanting, our dancing, our destruction of the symbols of violence Know
that each of us, and all of us together, have the power to change the
world. Feel the effects of your action rippling out into the world ...
reflect on how your life will be different "Open your eyes and look
around you ... see our strength in one another's face . . . know that we
are strong.
Know what the women of old knew . . . that the night must belong to us.
Know that we are women who take back the night. Know that the night is
ours!" Cheers, laughter, screams, kisses. Some of us touch the earth.
The women follow. The ritual is done.
Nature knows best. Magic is part of nature; it does not controvert
natural laws. It is through study and observation of nature, of the
visible, physical reality, that we can learn to understand the workings
of the underlying reality.
Magic teaches us to tap sources of energy that are unlimited, infinite.
Nevertheless, there is no "free lunch." To raise energy, we must expend
energy. We cannot get without giving. In working magic, we expend our
own physical and emotional energy and must take care to replenish it.
Magic is an art and a discipline, that demands work, practice, and
effort before it can be perfected. Every change brings consequences;
some seen and some unforeseen.
In coven rituals, energy raised is most often molded into the form of a
cone, the Cone of Power. The base of the cone is the circle of coveners;
its apex can focus on an individual, an object, or a collectively
visualized image.
At times, the cone is allowed to rise and fall naturally, as in the
power chant described in Chapter Three. It may also be sent off in a
burst of force, directed by one person, who may be part of the circle,
or may stand at its center. When a group is familiar with the exercises
given in Chapter Three, the following will prepare members for more
advanced energy workings:
All ground and center. Standing or sitting in a circle, take hands.
Begin with a Group Breath, and gradually build a wordless Power Chant.
As the energy builds, visualize it swirling clockwise around the circle.
See it as a blue-white light. It spirals up into a cone form-an upright
shell, a cornucopia. Hold the visualization until it glows.
The energy forms we build have a reality of their own. As the power
rises, people will intuitively sense the form that takes shape. As the
peak is reached, the chant becomes a focused tone. If you have an image
that represents your intent for the working, focus on it. Sometimes
words or phrases come through. Let the power move until it falls,
suddenly or gradually.
Let the energy go, fall to the ground, and relax completely, allowing
the cone to fly off to its objective. Breathe deeply, and let the
residue of power return to the earth, for her healing.
Rhythm, drums, hand claps, and dance movements may also be used in
building the cone. Covens should experiment, and feel free to try many
methods. Other words, names, Goddess or God names, or simple
incantations can be used to raise power. The energy can also be molded
into other forms: for example, a fountain, that rises and flows back on
the coveners, a wave form, or a glowing sphere. Possibilities are
infinite.
Lower hands as you speak, until they (the wand) touch the ground.
Exhale, and feel the power flow down.
(Coveners lie in a wheel, with heads at center, on their backs.)
Stretch out your arms and touch the womb of the person next to you. If
he is a man, place your hand on the spot where his womb would be, which
is the womb center of his energy body. Clasp hands on each other's
bellies.
Ground and center. Begin with a Group Breath and Power Chant. As you
breathe, imagine that you breathe through the womb. See it glow white,
ike the moon, as you inhale power. See it glow red with blood, with
creative fire. Feel the power of the womb to create-not the physical
womb only, but the inner womb where ideas and visions are generated. Let
your breath become a sound that resonates in the womb.
With each breath-feel its power-feel the woman or man next to you-feel
her power-feel how we are linked -how strong we are when we are linked
-breathe the power of vision -breathe the womb power of creation-and let
your voice carry that power The chant will build and die naturally.
Earth the power and end.
(This is for use in rituals and group workings.)
All clasp hands. If you wish, all take hold of the coven wand. Raise
them high, and visualize the power flowing downward through your hands.
Ground and center, and Leader gives the line, and coveners repeat:
Source to source Flow through me Above and below, Turn to return,
Clearly Fade to grow.
As I will, So it shall be.
Spell make it so!
Witches conceive of subtle energy as being of three basic types. Again,
this is meant as a conceptual model, not a doctrine. Each person is also
seen as an energy field, with subtle bodies that surround and
interpenetrate the physical body.
The first type of energy is "elemental" or raith energy, also called
etheric sub' stance and ectoplasm by some occultists. It is the subtle
force of the elements; earth, air, water, and fire, of plants and
animals. Elemental vitality sustains the physical body. We feed off of
it, and its movement through our bodies "primes the pump," so to speak,
drawing the higher forms of power.
The raith, the elemental energy body, is also called the etheric body
and the vital body, because through it we receive our vitality, our
physical and emotional energy. It is the body of Younger Self, and it
perceives through the starlight consciousness of the right hemisphere.
Its perceptions are often more accurate than our conscious
perceptions-but its ability to express them in words is limited. The
raith extends out from the physical body for only about a centimeter,
and appears to most psychics as a blue-gray glow.
Animals, plants, clean air and water, physical exercise, and sex
increase vital energy. When raith energy is low, people become
physically ill, tired, and emotionally depressed. Magic uses a great
deal of vital energy, and anyone who practices magic regularly must take
care not to become depleted. Regular physical exercise is one of the
best methods of increasing vital energy. Being outdoors, consciously
making contact with nature and the elements, also restores vitality.
Witches also traditionally keep special pets, "familiars," in part as a
source of elemental energy.
Grounding before every magical working or psychic exercise prevents us
from becoming depleted. Instead of draining our own vitality, we tap
directly into the unlimited sources of elemental energy in the earth.
Power flows through us, not out of us.
The second type of energy can be thought of as the energy of
consciousness, of thoughts, dreams, fantasies, mind-auric or astral
energy. The astral body, as it is called by occultists, can be thought
of as the body of Talking Self. It is the force that makes up the
"astral plane," the hidden reality behind appearances, the dream realm,
sometimes called the Overwork!, or the Other Side. The raith and astral
body together make up a person's aura,6 or energy field. The astral body
is less dense than the raith and extends out about nine inches from the
physical body. If the truth were known, I believe that every psychic
would see it somewhat differently. To me, it appears like a glowing,
misty cloud, sometimes obscuring a person's features. Colors, unlike any
seen with the physical eyes, shift and play within the aura. It is
strongest about the head and easiest to see in dim light, against a
plain background, especially when either I or the subject is in a light
trance.
The astral body can be projected away from the physical body.
Consciousness is not bound by the limitations of the physical senses.
Out-of-body experiences may be vividly sensual, or they may simply
involve awareness without sight or sound. The region of travel may be
astral or material; purely subjective, purely objective, or a mixture of
both.
The third type of energy is that of the Deep Self, of the Gods. It is
the finest of vibrations, yet the most powerful.
When we invoke the Goddess and god in rituals, we connect with this
energy. That connection is the heart of the greater magic, of mystical
ecstasy.
Generally, Younger Self is far more aware of subtle energy than Talking
Self. We are all psychic, unconsciously.
The difficulty is in finding ways to translate that awareness into terms
the conscious mind can understand. Yogis and Eastern occultists talk
about opening "the third eye," the psychic center located in the pineal
gland, in the center of the forehead. For me, this is secondary to
opening the energy centers in the womb and solar plexus, which connect
directly with Younger Self. To put it less esoterically, when the
conscious and unconscious minds can communicate freely, in a healthy,
highly vital physical body, the higher consciousness will awaken
naturally, in its own time. A useful tool in establishing this
communication is a pendulum.
EXERCISE 49: SENSING THE AURA: PENDULUM METHOD (Two people are needed
for this exercise, a sender and a receiver. Both should be successful at
Exercise 48.)
Sender sits in a relaxed position, breathing deeply from the belly. The
receiver holds the pendulum so that it swings about two feet over the
sender's head. Both ground and center.
Slowly, the receiver lowers the pendulum, telling herself that it will
begin to swing when it hits the sender's aura.
Practice until you can feel the edge or corona of the aura. When the
pendulum reacts consistently, explore the outlines of the astral body.
Search out areas of tension, and note vortexes of energy.
Exchange positions and repeat.
Again, the sender sits in a relaxed position, breathing deeply. Both
ground and center. The receiver lowers her hand, palm toward the sender,
into the field of the aura. Stop when you can feel the outer, radiating
edge of the astral body. The "feel" will at first be extremely subtle-a
slight tingling, heat, an almost imperceptible difference, perhaps only
a sudden urge to stop. Scan the astral body with your hands - again
feeling for areas of tension, which may register as cold, as absence of
energy, or simply as uneasiness. Sense the body's power centers, as
well. Share your impressions with the sender, and compare results with
the pendulum method. Exchange positions and repeat.
(A pendulum can be a necklace, a ring, key, watch, or crystal on a
string or chain-anything that will swing freely and that is emotionally
appealing.)
Ground and center, and breathe deeply, from the diaphragm and belly.
Hold the pendulum lightly by the top of its chain, so that it hangs
about two inches above the open palm of your other hand.
Relax, and tell yourself that the pendu um will begin to swing sunwise,
reflecting the energy in your hand. Wait quietly. For most people, it
will soon begin to circle. (While it seems to move of its own volition,
actually involuntary movements of your own hand cause its motion. Don't
attempt to control it consciously-the purpose is to let your unconscious
speak to you through your own muscle movements, reflected in the
pendulum.
If it does not move, deliberately make it circle a few times, showing
Younger Self what you want. Wait. Some people will need several sessions
before the pendulum will work.)
The sender sits in a relaxed position. The receiver can use either the
pendulum or the direct method of sensing the aura.)
Ground and center. The receiver locates the sender's aura, above the
crown of her head. Ask the sender to do the Tree of Life Meditation,
and, as the energy rises, to visualize and feel it as a strong stream of
flowing water, bursting up from her head like a fountain. The receiver
observes the pendulum's swing become stronger and faster as the energy
increases-or feels the difference through her hand.
Ask the sender to damp the energy-visualize herself swathed in cotton
wool or smothered in mashed potatoes.
Feel the change-see the motion of the pendulum decrease.
Practice until the sender becomes adept at projecting and damping
energy, and the receiver becomes adept at sensing the change. Test
yourself by having the sender either damp or project power without first
telling the receiver, who should be able to feel which is happening.
Exchanging positions, and also practice projecting and damping energy
through other power centers you have discovered.
[This exercise is best practiced in a group. Each of the member can take
turns being the subject. All should first be proficient of sensing the
aura.]
Set up a plain background - a black cloth or a white sheet. The subject
should stand against it or lie down on it, and if possible, be nude.
Everyone should ground and center, and relax with one of the exercises
in Chapter Three, which will produce a light state of trance. The
lighting should be dim.
Breathe deeply, from your diaphragm, and let your eyes relax. Lightly
scan the space around the subject. You may see a thin, glowing line
around her body - the raith. Around it, look for the cloudlike astral
body, which may appear and blank out, shift, move, and change, but will
gradually become more stable as you accustiom yourself to astral vision.
The color in the aura have many interpretations. Rather than following a
set rule, 'feel-see' them for yourself. The quality of the color is most
illuminating - is it clear and bright, or muddy and dull? What does it
make you think of? Feel? Are you attracted or repelled by it? What
associations does it have? Share perceptions and feedback, and with time
and experience you will be able to interpret what you see.
The subject can practice projecting and damping energy, and the viewers
can learn to see the energy move. In later sessions, subjects can also
practice projecting colors and energy forms. The more group members
practice, the more acute their perceptions will become.
When you have learned to sense or see energy on individuals, you will be
more sensitive to the forms and levels of power in rituals. Inanimate
objects also can store a charge of subtle power. (See Chapter Four).
Examine your magical tools, and sense the aura of power.
Awareness of energy is awareness of the great dance of the universe.
Seemingly intangible, it underlies all that we can touch. It is the only
constant, although it is constant change, eternal flux. Awareness of
your own energy is the awareness that flesh and spirit are one, that
thou art Goddess, eternally linked, connected, at one with the moving
spirit of All.
Between the Worlds
I say, "Relax, breathe deep, and look into the well-the well beyond the
world's end Call up the shadow you saw in the dream." Valerie sinks
deeper into trance. Her aura glows-the face disappears beneath it. She
sighs; a shadow clouds the glow.
"She's here . . . now I see it - the same shadow Isaw months ago it's
the woman who appeared in my dream last night, and stole my work from
me." "What does she look like?" "Tall, icy - her face is made of knives,
clashing and revolving." "How do you feel?" "Afraid." "What must you
do?" "Fight her - defeat her." "Ask her name." We wait. The shadow grows
darker.
"She won't tell me." "Demand it." "I can't - can't get it." "What do you
need to get it?" "Power." "Where is power?" "In my wand." Quietly I
cross the room, take her wand from the altar, and place it in the limp
hand. Her fingers close around it.
Sparks from an inner battle dance around her head.
"Her name is anger," Valerie says softly.
"Who is she?" "Me." "What must you do?" "Become her, take her in." "How
do you feel?" "Afraid. The knives will cut me." "Yes." "I won't be
strong enough." "You are." "How can I be sure?" "Because you were able
to learn her name." She sucks in her breath. Her aura explodes in
fireworks of red and violet. Her body shakes; she sobs, screams, gasps.
"She's choking me." "Keep breathing - deep - relax." She pants. Her face
is sweating. Gently 1 wipe it off. There is a white flash over her
head-she sighs, relaxing.
Her face is clear again.
"I've done it. I've taken her in. She is me." "How do you feel?"
"Strong. At peace." "The seekers of new mind states - the mind control
devotees, encounter group enthusiasts, the drug takers, the psychics,
the meditators - all are on a journey into the interior universe trying
to burst the limits of the socially conditioned mind. Whether acceptable
or unacceptable, moral or immoral, wise or foolish, the mind of man is
stirring toward a new evolution." (Dr. Barbara Brown)
The universe is a dance of energy, a universe, a single song of
ever-changing rhythms and harmonies. Sustaining the melody of the
physical world is a rich interplay of counterpoint and descant. We see
only a fraction of the band of radiation that makes up the spectrum; we
hear only a small range of possible frequencies of sound.
Ordinarily, we are conscious of only one, isolated melody; we listen to
only the piccolo out of an infinite orchestra. To trance is to shift and
expand our awareness: to pick out the beat of the drum, the throbbing
violins, the cry of saxophones, to know the interwoven harmonies played
in new keys, to thrill to the soaring symphony itself.
Trance states, states of nonordinary consciousness, have been called by
many names: expanded awareness, meditation, hypnosis, "getting high."
Trance techniques are found in every culture and religion-from the
rhythmic chant of a Siberian shaman to free association on a Freudian
analyst's couch. The pull to burst beyond the limits of the socially
conditioned mind seems to be a deep-seated human need. There are an
infinite variety of possible states of trance. We all experience light
trance whenever we are daydreaming; concentrating deeply; watching a
play, film, or television show; turning attention inward; and forgetting
the sensory world. In deep states, we may have experiences such as John
C. Lilly describes:
"I moved into a region of strange life forms, neither above nor below
the human level, but strange beings, of strange shapes, metabolisms,
thought forms, and so forth. These beings reminded me of some of the
drawings I had seen of Tibetan gods and goddesses, of ancient Greek
portrayals of their gods and of some of the bug-eyed monsters of science
fiction." Deeper levels of trance may open up paranormal senses, psychic
awareness, precognition. We may empathize and connect with other beings
and life forms; in Balinese, the word for trance means "to become."
Occultists and metaphysicians delight in attempting to order, define,
and rank the various states of consciousness, a process somewhat like
attempting to measure a cloud with a ruler. I will not indulge in it
here, because I feel it creates an erroneous impression that we know
more than we do about these states. When we impose a left-brain, linear
order on a right-brain, complex pattern, we tend to feel that we have
gained control of the phenomenon- when we have done nothing more than
point out a few stars with the beam of our flashlight.
Classifying consciousness also encourages "higher than Thou" games of
one-upmanship. People waste energy defining which state they are in, as
if consciousness were a cosmic grammar school, in which third-graders
were entitled to look down on kindergartners. The point is not what
level we are on, but what we are learning.
Sharing and comparing trance experiences, and reading descriptions of
altered states of awareness, can, however, yield useful insights. One of
the most important realizations is that trance states are both
subjective and objective. There is a continuum of experience, part of
which is relevant only to the individual's interior world, and part of
which can be shared and agreed on by others. What begins in the
imagination becomes real-even though that reality is of a different
order than the reality of the physical senses. It is the reality of the
underlying energy currents that shape the universe.
Ordinary perception is a process of the physical senses. What we see,
hear, feel, smell, or taste is further conditioned by language, the set
of cultural symbols that allows us to name what we have perceived. The
name shapes an amorphous sensory stimulus into something recognizable
and familiar-and guides our response. But perception in the trance state
is not bound by the physical senses. "Astral colors" are not seen with
the physical eyes; sounds are "heard" only in our minds. The currents of
subtle energy fit no sensory modes. Our language does not name them or
contain words that adequately describe them.
Trance perception must be translated into the modes we know. In essence,
we construct an elaborate metaphor world, to represent the reality of
what is called the astral. If we are adept enough, we create metaphor
senses that "see," "hear," "feel," "smell," and "taste." Those
pseudosensory perceptions are then further interpreted in a symbolic
system that fits our expectations. For example, Lilly describes meeting
two helpful "guides," who "may be two aspects of my own functioning at
the supraself level. They may be entities in other spaces, other
universes than our consensus reality. They may be helpful constructs,
helpful concepts that I use for my own future evolution. They may be
representatives of an esoteric hidden school. They may be concepts
functioning in my own human biocomputer at the supraspecies level. They
may be members of a civilization a hundred thousand years or so ahead of
ours." A devout Christian, however, might call the same entities
"angels" or perhaps "Blessed saints," and "see" them with wings, harps,
haloes, and all the appropriate trappings. A Witch might call them the
two linked motes of consciousness within the Deep Self, and "see" them
in female and male human forms that glow blue.
Astral vision is always a mixture of the subjective and the objective.
Sensory forms and symbolic interpretations are subjective, the cloak of
objective energies and entities. Whether those entities are internal
forces or external beings depends on how one defines the self. It is
more romantic and exciting (and probably truer) to see them as at least
partly external; it is psychologically healthier and probably wiser to
see them as internal. A thing can be internal and still be objective,
still be real. A neurosis or conflict, for example, may be verified as
real by others even before it is perceived by the self. And nothing
external can be admitted into the psyche unless a corresponding internal
force admits it. No "entity" can possess a soul that denies it entrance.
Astral energies can be molded into forms that will last and be perceived
by more than one person. Collective beliefs and images also shape astral
energies and create "places" and beings. Heaven, hell, and the Land of
Youth all exist in the astral. The energy forms we collectively create,
in turn, shape us and the world we live in.
Astral forms can be "anchored" into physical objects. When ancient
people held that idols were their gods, they meant that the astral form
of the god was keyed into the statue. In Moon Magic, Dion Fortune
describes the anchoring of an energy form into a place of magical
working, which "has to have the astral temple built over it, and that is
the really important part; and this is how we do it-we sit down and
imagine it-nothing more-but-it is the imagination of a trained mind!
So we sat down, my friend and I ... and we pictured the temple of Isis
as we had known it near the Valley of the Kings in the great days of the
cult. We pictured it in its broad outline, and then we pictured it in
all its detail, describing what we saw till we made each other see it
more and more clearly. We pictured the approach through the avenue of
ram-headed sphinxes; the great pylon gate in the temenos wall; the court
with its lotus pool; shadowed colonnades, and the great hall with its
pillars. And as we did this, alternately watching and describing- the
phantasied scenes began to take on the semblance of objective reality
and we found ourselves in them-no longer looking at them with the mind's
eye, but walking about in them. After that there was no more effort of
concentration, for the astral vision took charge.
Consciousness can travel in the astral in many different ways. "Astral
projection," described by many occultists, involves the separation of
the astral body from its physical housing, retaining only a cord of
etheric energy as a connection. In other words, it is the creation of a
complete, vivid, sensory metaphor state, through which all perceptions
can be understood. The astral body may move through the physical
universe, although with difficulty. Most often, it remains within the
realm of energy and thought forms that is the astral.
It is also possible to project consciousness alone, without the
construction of a "body." Physical "sensation" is lessened, and a great
deal of practice may be required in order to achieve clarity and learn
to interpret perceptions, but this method is less draining of vitality
and less dangerous.
The astral body, when projected, "feeds" off of the raith, and the
practice can be devitalizing if it is engaged in too often. It is common
to return feeling extremely cold and ravenously hungry. When learning to
enter trance states, it is important to protect the health of the
physical body by eating well, sleeping sufficiently, and exercising
regularly.
Trance work of any kind should be conducted only in a safe, private
place, where you can remain undisturbed.
As trance temporarily lessens your perceptions of the outer world and
its dangers, city parks, public beaches, streets, and busses where you
may be mugged, robbed, or molested are not suitable locations. Cast a
protective circle around your body before leaving it, with either an
elaborate ritual or a simple visualization. This will create an energy
barrier, assuring safety on the astral as you have assured it in the
physical realm.
Trance states offer many possibilities besides astral projection. Trance
unlocks the tremendous potential inherent in our unused awareness. We
can augment our sensitivity, growth, and creativity.
In trance, we are more suggestible-a fact that underlies the most common
uses of hypnosis. Suggestibility can seem frightening if we see it as
opening people to control and exploitation by others. Actually, the self
overrides any suggestions that contradict deeply ingrained moral or
ethical principles or personal desires. Suggestion alone will not make
an honest person a thief, nor an unwilling person a murderer. The Craft
teaches the use of suggestion to help us consciously direct our own
minds, not the minds of others. As we increase our awareness of the
functioning of suggestion and learn to use it deliberately on ourselves,
our suggestibility to others seems to decrease. The unconscious is no
longer split off, but is in constant communication with the conscious
mind and can no longer be easily programmed without our conscious
consent.
We can use our own suggestibility for both physical and emotional
healing. Mind and body are linked, and our emotional state contributes
to disease, whether it is purely physical or psychosomatic. Suggestion
can aid learning, increase concentration, and further creativity. It can
also open up new forms of awareness and awaken the psychic senses.
Trance stimulates vision and imagination and opens up new sources of
creativity. When the barriers between the unconscious and the conscious
are crossed, ideas, images, plans, and solutions to problems arise
freely. As the right-hemisphere, holistic vision is awakened, it becomes
a rich source of insight, of new and original approaches to situations.
The psychic abilities also increase under trance. We are all psychic,
unconsciously. Younger Self is aware of energy flows, communicates
without words, senses the currents of the future, and knows how to
channel power.
In trance, we can become aware of that awareness and can perceive and
shape the currents that move our lives.
Finally, in trance we find revelation. We invoke and become Goddess and
God, linked to all that is. We experience union, ecstasy, openness. The
limits of our perception, the fixation on a single note of the song,
dissolve: We not only hear the music, but we dance the whirling,
exhilarating, spiral dance of existence.
Trance can be dangerous, however, for the same reason it can be
valuable- because it opens the gates to the unconscious mind. To pass
through the gates, we must confront what has been called by occultists
the Guardian, or the Shadow on the Threshold: the embodiment of all the
impulses and qualities we have thrust into the unconscious because the
conscious mind finds them unacceptable. All that we are and feel we
should not be- sexual, angry, hostile, vulnerable, masochistic,
self-hating, guilty, and even, perhaps, powerful or creative-squats in
the doorway between Younger Self and Talking Self, refusing to let us
pass TRANCE 173 until we have looked it in the face and acknowledged our
own essential humanness. No fear is stronger than our fear of our own
Shadow, and nothing is more destructive than the defenses we adopt in
order to avoid the confrontation.
The real dangers of magic stem not from the Guardian or Shadow itself,
nor from external entities or forces.
They stem from our own defense strategies, which can be intensified and
rigidified by trance and magic as they can by drugs or fanaticism. Magic
can also help us dissolve those strategies, confront the Guardian-a
process that is never as frightening in actuality as it is in
anticipation-and win clear. But unless people are willing to face fear,
and confront their own negative qualities, they will be defeated by what
Yaqui sorceror Don Juan calls "the first of his natural enemies: Fear! A
terrible enemy- treacherous, and difficult to overcome. It remains
concealed at every turn of the way, prowling, waiting."5 There are many
ways of running from the Shadow. Some people simply deny it and never
approach a confrontation. Others attempt to destroy the Shadow by
destroying themselves with drugs or alcohol.
A defense strategy favored by many "spiritual" people is an elaborate
form of denial, an assertion that the individual has "gone beyond" the
shadow qualities of sexuality, anger, passion, desire, and
self-interest. Many religions cater exclusively to this strategy.
Priests, ministers, gurus, and "enlightened masters" who adopt a posture
of transcendent superiority have great appeal to people with similar
defense systems, who are able to escape their personal confrontations by
identifying as members of an elite, "enlightened" group. Thus are cults
born and perpetuated.
But this strategy of avoidance is accompanied by tremendous anxiety.
However much we assert our transcendence and detachment, the Shadow
remains. We may attempt to be more than human-even achieve great
success, near miracles-but we remain fallible, vulnerable. That
vulnerability becomes terrifying and fascinating.
It may lead us to spurious acts of self-sacrifice and masochism, or
self-embraced martyrdom, as a desperate attempt to ourselves control
that shadow fear.
Victor Anderson, Faery Priest, tells the story that when he was a young
man beginning to study the Craft, he met two shining, beautiful guides
on the astral, who told him that he must make a choice. If he wanted
great magical power, he must give up the hope of a lasting love in his
life. His reply was, "Powers of evil, begone! Get you to the Outer
Darkness! I will have both power and love." "How did you know that they
were evil?" I asked him.
"No truly helpful being will demand that you give up something that is
natural and beautiful," he said.
"Evil spirits" are not necessarily outside entities: They may be
elements of the unconscious mind. Groups that reinforce feelings of
superiority, separation from the mainstream of human life, and removal
from ordinary frailties and fallibilities reinforce their members'
defenses and stunt their personal growth.
The flip side of the strategy of superiority is that of sickness and
weakness. Instead of denying or pretending to transcend the shadow
qualities, this type of person admits them, but interprets them as
physical or mental illness.
The seduction of sickness is that it absolves the individual from
responsibility and allows her or him to luxuriate in passivity. Too
often, self-definition of illness is fostered by therapists and "helping
professionals," who after all have a vested interest in seeing others as
sick.
Sickness as a defense is characterized by guilt. Such people often feel
responsible for things that are, in reality, not under their control.
Their shadow is their own, feared power, which they perceive in
inflated, omnipotent terms. This defense often masks, and can undermine,
great creativity and intelligence. If the practice of magic is misused
to reinforce feelings of omnipotence, it can be devastating to these
people.
Projection is another favorite strategy. When the negative qualities of
the Guardian are sensed, it is easy to simply propel them outward and
assign them to some other person or group. The special appeal of this
strategy is that projection creates conflict, which is dramatic,
exciting, and distracting. At its most extreme, however, it degenerates
into paranoia. Such people never feel completely safe or accepted.
Because their own anger and hostility are projected outward, they sense
hostility everywhere around them.
Of course, all of us use many strategies, but most of us favor a
particular mode. No one can be forced into a confrontation with the
Shadow, nor can the process by hurried. It must happen in its own good
time. As an example, the trance confrontation that opens this chapter is
the record of an actual session between myself and one of my coveners.
It was, however, the culmination of several months of work and training.
In earlier sessions, Valerie managed to call up the Shadow, but could
not get its name. She was not yet ready to confront and absorb it. Had
we tried to force the confrontation, it might have been extremely
destructive or simply useless. But when the timing was right, she found
herself capable of taking in the qualities that before had seemed so
threatening.
The process marked a deep integration in her personality, and a
flowering of her personal and creative power, to such an extent that I
was moved to "pass the wand" of the coven to her, and she is now
Priestess of Compost.
One of the functions of a coven is to support and guide each other
through the confrontation(s) with the Guardian. This is not always done
so directly as in the preceding example; in fact, untrained coveners
should not work with each other in this fashion, because it can be as
harmful as amateur psychoanalysis, Coveners help each other best simply
by not being seduced into each other's defense strategies.
"Transcenders" should never be idolized or placed on a pedestal (even if
they happen to be Priestesses). What they most need is to be loved for
their weaknesses, their mistakes, and their humanness as well as their
strengths.
Projectors sometimes have to literally fight out their confrontation
with another person. The process can shatter a coven unless it is
perceived correctly. Other members of the group should avoid taking
sides or focusing on the outward cause of the quarrel. It is equally
important to resist the temptation to toss one or both of them out of
the group, except as a last resort. In a true Shadow fight, emotions
will run far deeper than events seem to warrant. It is characterized by
statements such as "I can't stand the way she makes me feel" or "She
brings out the worst in me." The group should not accept the projections
of the embroiled parties. If they are committed to the group and to
their own growth, they will eventually come to confront the shadow of
their own anger. They need to be loved throughout the battle.
It is a great temptation to love, smother, and coddle those people who
define themselves as sick. It is also a temptation to lose patience with
them, to urge them to "buck up," quit whining, and start off each day
with a smile. Neither approach is helpful. Such people need to have
their power recognized for what it is, and need to have its limits also
recognized. They need support to struggle and function, not to retreat
into illness or crippling guilt. They need to be loved for their power.
In learning to trance, we are indeed learning to "change consciousness
at will," which implies control. Mind- altering drugs are not used in
magic (at least, not by the wise), because they destroy that control. No
drug can force a confrontation with the Guardian; it can at best strip
away a defense that may be all that stands between the self and stark
terror. More often, it simply reinforces existing defenses at a deeper
and more destructive level.
Superiority becomes a savior-complex; sickness may become psychosis;
projection may become true paranoia.
In traditional societies, where drugs are used to bring on mystical
visions and religious ecstasy, the experience is controlled and firmly
structured along mythological lines. Shamans and priestesses have a deep
understanding of the many states the mind may reach, and they know how
to guide people through those states. But we do not live in a
traditional society. We live in a society based on commodities, in which
even enlightenment can purportedly be encapsulated and bought and sold.
But what is bought and ingested is not really enlightenment, not really
magic. The work, training, and discipline of magic can lead to a sensual
trance similar to that produced by marijuana, and the goal of ritual is
the ecstatic vision and high sense of wonder like that found on the
highest LSD trips. But magic also opens up infinitely more subtle,
sublime states, and teaches us not only how to go forth through the gate
but also how to return. Consciousness is not, as Timothy Leary
proclaims, a chemical phenomenon. Chemistry is a phenomenon of
consciousness.
The best protection, when learning to trance-or learning anything else-
is a sense of humor. Nothing you can laugh at, whether it is a demon,
spirit, UFO, angel, guide, guru, teacher, vision, discorporate entity,
or aspect of yourself, can possess you. No one can be whole who is
incapable of laughing at him- or herself.
Expanded awareness begins with dreams. "This we call the Door Without a
Key, which is also the Door of Dreams; Freud found it, and he used it
for the coming forth by day; but we who are initiates use it for going
forth by night."6 Volumes have been written about the "coming forth by
day": the bringing into waking consciousness of dream material from the
unconscious. Here, I will restrict myself to pointing out aspects of
interpretation that pertain especially to magic.
Dreams, while our most direct line into the subjective processes of
Younger Self, may also contain objective elements. Some dreams reflect
in symbolic language a direct cognition of astral currents. They may
give insights into other people's motives, plans, or emotions, or given
information about external events. Dream figures are not always an
aspect of the individual: sometimes they are the person or thing they
seem to be, although generally there is something in the individual that
resonates with the external force.
Once we begin consciously working with magical symbols and mythology,
our dreams reflect those images and should be interpreted in that light.
To a Witch, for example, a snake is far more than a Freudian phallic
symbol:
It is a symbol of the Goddess, of renewal and regeneration.
Keeping a dream log, remembering dreams, sharing them in the coven, and
reentering them in trance or guided fantasy all are ways of opening the
door without a key. Learning to take active charge of our dreams, to
suggest subjects, to change dreams as they happen, to confront attackers
and defeat enemies, are ways of "going forth by night." There are many
methods of trance induction, but all seem to function on one or more of
four related principles:
relaxation, sensory restriction, rhythm, and boredom. Physical tension
blocks the trance state. Most inductions begin with deliberate
relaxation, as in Exercise 9. When trance follows exertion, as after
raising the Cone of Power, relaxation may occur naturally.
Sensory restriction has been explored in research described by Robert
Ornstein in The Psychology of Consciousness. When subjects stared at a
fixed image, after a time it seemed to disappear. At the same time,
alpha waves showed on their electroencephalograms. The alpha rhythm has
been shown to be characteristic of meditation and deep relaxation.
Ornstein concludes that "one consequence of the way our central nervous
system is structured seems to be that, if awareness is restricted to one
unchanging source of stimulation, a 'turning off of consciousness of the
external world follows. The common instructions for concentrative
meditation all underscore this." Not enough is known about the
neurophysiology of awareness. But the ancient techniques of trance and
scrying (crystal gazing) always involved restricting sensory awareness,
often to one unchanging source of stimulation: a candle flame, a crystal
ball, a black mirror, a dark bowl of water, or a bright sword.
Rhythm, whether experienced in motion, song, drumming, chanting, or
poetic meter, also induces a state of heightened awareness.*
Afro-American religions depend heavily on rhythmic drumming and dancing
to induce a trance state in which worshippers become "mounted" or
possessed by the orishas, the Gods and Goddesses. The metrical rhythm of
poetry, according to Robert Graves, induces a trance of heightened
sensitivity. In Craft tradition, it was believed that certain rhythms
could induce particular emotional states. Drummers originally
accompanied armies because their rhythms could make men fighting mad.
(This secret, as far as I can tell, has been lost to the military and
Witch covens alike, only to be rediscovered by the producers of disco
music.)
Spoken trance inductions are always soft, singsong, and rhythmic.
Boredom can also bring on trance-as generations of daydreaming
school-children have discovered. When we are not stimulated, sensorily,
emotionally, or mentally, awareness turns elsewhere. Repetition is
important in inducing trance-it creates a state of security and
familiarity. The mind "tunes out" the repeated stimulus and "tunes in"
on another channel.
The trance state is most easily learned in a group, with help from
others. Later, it is easy to lead yourself through the same exercises
alone. I will present the following exercises as if a leader were
speaking to a group. A circle should be cast before beginning, and
cautions should be repeated after everyone is relaxed:
"You are about to enter into a very deep, very comfortable state of
mind, where you will be perfectly safe and perfectly protected.
"You will be aware of any danger in the outer world and will awaken
immediately, perfectly alert, and able to react and function.
"You will remain lucid and conscious at all times, able to concentrate
fully. "You will remember everything you experience.
"At any time you should need to or want to, you can awaken fully and
completely. "When you awake, you will feel refreshed, renewed, and
filled with energy." Inductions vary widely. Use any set of imagery that
works for you: diving into water, descending in an elevator, going down
Alice's rabbit hole, walking down a spiral staircase, or whatever you
invent. Here is my favorite voice induction:
(Begin with the Exercise 9, Relaxation. Everyone should be lying down,
comfortably relaxed.)
"Breathe deep-you are floating down . . . down ... on a beautiful red
cloud, and your whole body is red-as you go drifting and floating . . .
rocking gently . . . deeper . . . and deeper . . . down ..." "(Repeat,
once each, with an orange yellow green blue and violet cloud.)" "Land
very gently . . . very softly ... in the center of a round, white pearl.
See it glowing, softly, gently..." "Now turn and face the East...
and then the South...
and then the West...
and now the North." "Open all of your inner senses".
The first trance exercise is to create an internal Place of Power, a
safe space that serves as "home base" for all trance journeys. After the
induction, continue:
"In a moment, you will enter into a new space, a place in which you are
completely safe and protected, where you are in complete control and in
touch with your deepest sources of strength. It may seem to be indoors
or outdoors-if may contain anything or anyone you like. It is completely
yours. Wherever you may be, whatever state of consciousness you may be
in, you can return to your Place of Power, simply by visualizing it.
"Now turn and face in the direction that feels most comfortable to you.
On the pearl's wall, draw an invoking pentode. If you like, you may use
a symbol of your own, that will be your own secret key into your Place
of Power. See the symbol glow with a deep blue flame. Take a deep
breath - inhale-exhale. See the wall open, and walk through into your
Place of Power.
"You are in your Place of Power. Turn and face the East. Notice what you
see and hear and feel and sense.
(Pause.)
"Turn and face the South. Notice what you see and hear and feel and
sense. (Pause.) o "Turn and face the West.
Notice what you see and hear and feel and sense. (Pause.)
"Turn and face the North. Notice what you see and hear and feel and
sense. (Pause.)
"Now take time to explore your Place of Power. (Allow at least five
minutes.)
"You are about ready to leave your Place of Power. Finish whatever you
need to complete.
"Now turn and face the East, and say goodbye. (Pause.)
"Turn and face the South, and say goodbye. (Pause.)
"Turn and face the West, and say goodbye. (Pause.)
"Turn and face the North, and say goodbye. (Pause.)
"Now look for your symbo . See it glow. See it open. Take a deep
breath-inhale-exhale-and walk through back into the pearl." "Now turn
and face the East then the South . . . then the West . . . then the
North. Take a deep breath . . . inhale . .
. exhale . . ." "You are floating up ... up ... on a beautifu violet
cloud, and your whole body is violet as you drift gently upward "On a
beautiful blue cloud ... up ... up ... and your whole body is blue and
you are beginning to awaken gently and you drift gently up ...
"On a beautiful green cloud . . . and your whole body is green ... as
you drift gently ... up ... up ...
"On a beautiful yellow cloud . . . getting more and more awake . . .
your whole body is yellow ... as you drift gently ... up ... up ...
"On a beautiful orange cloud . . . filled with energy and vitality . . .
your body is orange ... as you float up gently .
"On a beautiful red cloud . . . almost fully awake now . . . and your
whole body is red as you float gently . . .
remembering fully . . .
"And in a moment you will count to three and awaken fully and come to
feeling refreshed, renewed, and filled with energy . . . take a deep
breath . . . inhale . . . and exhale . . . one . . . two . . . three . .
.
"Open your eyes, and awake." Occasionally subjects do not come out of
trance. This is nothing to be alarmed about-it simply means they have
drifted from trance into sleep. Awaken them gently by touching them or
by calling their name.
Scrying involves concentrating on an object: a crystal ball, a bowl of
ink or a dark bowl filled with water, or a mirror with a black-painted
surface in order to see psychically.
Coming out of trance is equally as important as going in. Take time to
emerge slowly and gently, reversing every process of the induction.
Facing the directions is important because it forces you to orient
yourself in inner space- to be in the scenes, not just watch them like
movies. It also reinforces the protective circle, and the repetition,
with each trance, reinforces the depth of the state.
"In the pearl, prepare to awaken. When you awake, you will feel
refreshed, alert, renewed, and filled with energy. You will remember all
that you have experienced.
Cast a circle. Ground and center. Sit in a comfortable position, and
gaze at your crystal or focusing object. Some people prefer to have the
room completely dark; others light a candle. Lighting should never be
bright.
Relax, and wait peacefully. Do not force anything to come. Many people
feel fear and insecurity-"It won't work for me" - "I'm not doing it
right." Acknowledge the fears, relax into them, and let them dissolve.
After a time-and it may require regular practice over several
sessions-the surface of the crystal may "cloud over" with raith energy.
For some people, the couds clear, and images appear in the crystal.
Others find themselves closing their eyes, and seeing the images with
the inner eye. Both methods are valid-choose the one that comes most
easily.
To end, let the clouds return, then disperse. See the crystal as the
solid object it is. Cover it, and open the circ e.
Because suggestion works through Younger Self, it is most effective with
language of symbols and imagery.
Suggestion can be incorporated into trance. Instead of verbal
assertions, create a mental scene showing the results that you want. If
you want to overcome shyness, see yourself at a large party behaving
with poise and charm. If you want to be richer, see yourself earning
money. If you want to be healed, see yourself healthy and active.
Cast a circle, go into trance, and go into your Place of Power. Orient
yourself to the four directions.
Create your suggestion in your Place of Power. Make it as vivid, as
real, as sensual, as you can. Take as much time as you need to do so.
Leave your suggestion in your Place of Power. It will take root and
grow, and become your reality.
Bid farewell to the four directions, and come out of trance.
Cast a circle, go into trance, and orient yourself in your Place of
Power. Face in the direction that feels most comfortable to you.
In front of you, you see a path. Search for the path, and find it. Now
follow it, looking around you, noticing what you see and hear and feel
and sense. Follow it along, further and further.
The path leads over a ridge. Climb the ridge, and begin to descend,
going down . . . down . . . down . . . circling down the hillside.
On your way down, you will see the entrance to a cave that leads deep .
. . deep into the hill. Find the cave, and stand before the entrance.
Within the cave are all of your memories, from this life, and from all
previous lifetimes. In a moment, you will enter the cave. You will be
able to go as deep as you wish, to explore any branching tunnel, any
cavern that you wish. If you have a particular memory you want to
experience, hold it in your mind, and you will be led to the proper
place. If there is a memory you are not ready to face, the path to it
will be blocked.
Take a deep breath, inhale, exhale, and, as you count to three, enter
the cave of your memories. Take as much time as you need to explore.
(Allow at least ten minutes.)
Now prepare to come back from your memory. Take time to end it. Come
back to the entrance of the cave.
Take a deep breath - inhale, and as you exhale count to three and come
out of the cave. Exhale- count one, two, three.
Come out of the cave, and climb back up the hillside. Return up the
hill, over the ridge, following the path back to your own Place of
Power.
Bid farewell to the four directions, and come out of trance.
Cast a circle, go into trance, and orient yourself in your Place of
Power. Face in the direction that fees most comfortable to you.
You see a new path -a winding, secret path that leads down to a river.
Look for the path, and find it. Follow it.
Look around you, noticing what you see and hear and feel and sense along
the way.
Stop on the riverbank. Across the river is the dream realm. When you
enter it, you can expore or change your dreams at will. You can confront
and defeat your enemies, and can learn from your friends. Now picture
the dream you wish to enter, and see its landscape form across the
river.
Take a deep breath. Inhale. As you exhale, step down into the river.
Feel the cold water on your feet, and notice it moving and sparkling.
Take another deep breath. Inhale. As you exhale, wade across the river.
Feel the stones under your feet; hear the river.
Take another deep breath. Inhale. As you exhale, step up on the far
shore, into the dream realm. Exhale. Feel the firm ground under your
feet again.
You are now in the dream realm. Take as much time as you need to
explore, change, and discover your dreams.
Now prepare to leave the dream realm. Say farewell to any beings you
have met, and complete your exploration.
Come back to the river.
Again, taking three deep breaths, and three steps, cross the river. Step
down into it, wade across, and emerge on the other side. Feel the stones
under your feet; hear and see the water.
Follow the path back into your own Place of Power. Bid farewell to the
four directions, and come out of trance.
Dreams can also be explored through scrying. A group can visualize a
dream image in a crystal or water bowl and can explore it. For example,
here is a partial record of a group trance into an image from Holly's
dream, in which a group of old women were looking at a picture of a seal
in a newspaper, and one said, "The seal will bring perpetual youth." We
are on a beach-waves-faint music plays from a carnival merry-go-round-
Holly is in the lake-her father says she swims like a fish Now there is
a lighthouse-a foghorn, foam sprays on rocks-the sound of seals Holly is
in the water, her hair floating behind like a mermaid's hair-we are all
swimming under the rocks, the water is crystal blue-the rocks are made
of crystal.
There is a cave under the rocks-Valeric recognizes it from a dream she
had long ago-there were people who wanted to dive into the cave; she
warned them not to go, but they did. They couldn't get out. The cave is
filled with bones.
We move through it and emerge into a city of glass. Towers and turrets
of shining crystal rise under the sea ...
colored fish swim in the clear glass walls . . . we move down a long
corridor, through Gothic halls with clear arches...
The city is spinning-we are flung with it, spun around, spun back into
the cave.
In the cave is a seal. The seal guards a fountain. "The seal will bring
perpetual youth." We drink from the fountain.
Once you become familiar with trance techniques, you can create your own
imagery and use the trance state for many kinds of experience. You can
call up a negative part of yourself, as Valeric did at the opening of
this chapter, or you can call your Deep Self into your Place of Power
and receive help, teaching, and advice. You can search for answers to
questions, drink from the fountain of inspiration, die, and be reborn.
In rituals, all elements of trance induction (excepting, hopefully,
boredom) are present. The release of energy with the Cone of Power
creates relaxation. The space is dark, and attention can be focused on
candle flames or a central cauldron. Chants, invocations, and movements
are rhythmic and repetitive. Trance inductions are a natural and
beautiful element of the ritual itself. Often they involve multiple
voices, an effect difficult to reproduce on the printed page. In the
following, imagine the grouped lines read simultaneously, like a musical
score.
1st Voice: Your fingers are dissolving into water, and your
2nd Voice: (Pause) Your fingers are dissolving into
3rd Voice: Sle-eee-ee-eep Dee-ee-eee-ee-eep, and
1st Voice: toes are dissolving into water, and your wrists
2nd Voice: water, and your toes are dissolving into water,
3nd Voice: drea-ea-ea-earn of becoming,
1st Voice: are dissolving into water, and your ankles are
2nd Voice: and your wrists are dissolving into water, and
3rd Voice: drea-ea-earn deee-ee-ee-ee-eep,
1st Voice: dissolving into water, and your hands are dissolving
2nd Voice: your ankles are dissolving into water, and your
3rd Voice: and slee-eee-ee-ee-eep,
1st Voice: into water, and your feet are dissolving into water,
2nd Voice: hands are dissolving into water, and your feet are
3rd Voice: Slee-eee-eeee-ee-p dee-ee-ee-eep, and
1st Voice: and your forearms are dissolving into water, and
2nd Voice: dissolving into water, and your forearms are dissolving
3rd Voice: drea - ea-ea-eam of becoming,
1st Voice: your calves are dissolving into water, and your
2nd Voice: saving into water, and your caves are dissolving
3rd Voice: Brea-the dee-ee-ee-ee-p,
1st Voice: elbows are dissolving into water, and your knees
2nd Voice: into water, and your elbows are dissolving into
3nd Voice: and slee-ee-ee-ee-eep.
Continue on with this induction until the whole body is relaxed. Another
voice may then pick up and continue to guide the trance and later
reawaken members. When coveners are comfortable working together, the
guiding can also be shared by several members, who may each create part
of the imagery.
Mystery rituals, such as those of Witchcraft, follow a pattern of
induction and revelation. The Mysteries are teachings that cannot be
grasped by the intellect alone, but only by the deep mind made
accessible in trance.
They may be conveyed by an object-a shaft of wheat, as in the Eleusinian
Mysteries-by a key phrase, or symbol.
The secret itself may be meaningless when out of context: only within
the framework of the ritual does it take on its illuminating power.
Divination, through palmistry, Tarot cards, astrology, and reading
oracles, is another method of awakening the deep mind. I don't have
space to even begin a discussion that would do justice to such a vast
practice, except to point out that all divinatory techniques work
essentially to focus awareness and engage the heightened intuition and
perception that are possible in trance. Today, these techniques are used
not for "fortunetelling," but as methods of spiritual and psychological
counseling.
Feasting After trance, the process of returning to the world and ending
the ritual begins with the sharing of food. This may actually be
anything from juice and barley-flour crescents to cookies and milk.
Sometimes a full meal is shared; at other times a coven will prefer
organic fruit and apple juice, or champagne and caviar. The tastes and
resources of members are the only limitations.
The Priestess and Priest (or other members) hold up a plate of food and
a goblet, and say a blessing that is simple and often spontaneous:
All life is your own, All fruits of the earth Are fruits of your womb,
Your union, your dance.
Goddess (and God)
We thank you for blessings and abundance.
Join with us, Feast with us, Enjoy with us!
Blessed be.
A small libation may be poured into the fire or cauldron. The goblet is
passed around the circle, and each member gives thanks for good things
that have happened since the previous meeting. While eating, members
relax, laugh, joke, and socialize, or talk about the ritual and plan
future meetings. The social aspect of ritual is an integral part of
strengthening and maintaining the group bond. Sharing food is sharing a
tangible symbol of love and caring. It is important that this part of
the ritual be fun-a reward to Younger Self for undergoing all the
serious work of ritual and magic.
It is vitally important to formally end the meeting, and break the
circle. Having stepped between the worlds when we began the ritual, we
must deliberately and consciously step back out into ordinary space and
time. Only thus can we preserve the integrity of the ritual space and
time. People should never be allowed to drift away before the circle is
opened, and the transition back to ordinary consciousness is complete.
Farewell to the Goddess and God The power of the ritual should be
grounded, if this has not already been done. The Priestess (or whoever
performed the invocations) goes to the altar, and stands facing the
coven in pentacle position. She says, Goddess and God We thank you For
your presence, For your circle, For light and love, For night and
change, We ask for your blessing As you depart.
Hail and farewell! Blessed be.
Opening the Circle The Priestess goes to each of the four directions in
turn, and draws a Banishing Pentacle, saying, Guardians of the East
(South, West, North), Powers of Air (Fire, Water, Earth), we thank you
For joining in our circle And we ask for your blessing As you depart.
May there be peace between us Now and forever. Blessed be.
She raises her athame to the sky and touches it to the earth, then opens
her arms and says, The circle is open, but unbroken, May the peace of
the Goddess Go in our hearts, Merry meet, and merry part.
And merry meet again. Blessed be.
Between the Worlds
In this world, the Goddess is seen in the moon, the light that shines in
darkness, the rain bringer, mover of the tides, Mistress of mysteries.
And as the moon waxes and wanes, and walks three nights of its cycle in
darkness, so, it is said, the Goddess once spent three nights in the
Kingdom of Death.
For in love She ever seeks her other Self, and once, in the winter of
the year, when He had disappeared from the green earth, She followed Him
and came at last to the gates beyond which the living do not go.
The Guardian of the Gate challenged Her, and She stripped Herself of her
clothing and jewels, for nothing may be brought into that land. For
love, She was bound as all who enter there must be and brought before
Death Himself.
He loved Her, and knelt at her feet, laying before Her his sword and
crown, and gave Her the fivefold kiss, and said, "Do not return to the
living world, but stay here with Me, and have peace and rest and
comfort." But She answered, "Why do you cause all things I love and
delight in to die and wither away?" "Lady," He said, "it is the fate of
all that lives to die. Everything passes; all fades away. I bring
comfort and consolation to those who pass the gates, that they may grow
young again. But You are my heart's desire-return not, but stay here
with Me." And She remained with him three days and three nights, and at
the end of the third night She took up his crown, and it became a
circlet that She placed around her neck, saying:
"Here is the circle of rebirth. Through You all passes out of life, but
through Me all may be bom again. Every thing passes; every thing
changes. Even death is not eternal. Mine is the mystery of the womb,
that is the cauldron of rebirth. Enter into Me and know Me, and You will
be free of all fear. For as life is but a journey into death, so death
is but a passage back to life, and in Me the circle is ever turning." In
love, He entered into Her, and so was reborn into life. Yet is He known
as Lord of Shadows, the comforter and consoler, opener of the gates,
King of the Land of Youth, the giver of peace and rest. But She is the
gracious mother of all life; from Her all things proceed and to Her they
return again. In Her are the mysteries of death and birth; in Her is the
fulfillment of all love.
An initiation is a symbolic death and rebirth, a rite of passage that
transforms each person who experiences it. In the Craft, it marks
acceptance into a coven, and a deep, personal commitment to the Goddess.
It is a gift of power and love that coveners give each other: the
experience of those inner secrets that cannot be told because they go
beyond words. For the individual, it becomes a change that causes
revelation and understanding and sparks further growth and change.
The timing of an initiation is important. Traditionally, apprentice
Witches were required to study for "a year and a day" before they could
be initiated. This rule is not always followed in present-day covens,
but it is a good one.
Magical training cannot take place overnight. It is, as we have said, a
process of neurological repatterning, which requires time. Unless an
initiate can, at least to some extent, channel energy and move into
altered states of awareness, she will not benefit deeply from the
ritual.
There is another, more subtle aspect to timing. Initiation also means
"beginning," and what is begun is the process of confronting the
Guardian of the Threshold. A new initiate may not yet have faced the
Shadow, but she* must be committed to doing so. The Guardian's
injunction-"Better to fall upon my blade and perish than to make the
attempt with fear in thy heart"- does not mean she must be fearless, but
that she is willing, in spite of fear, to go on, not to run away, to
face her defenses even though the process may be painful. "Are you
willing to suffer to learn?" she is asked, because learning and growth
always involve pain.
use "she" inclusively to simplify questions of grammar.
When an apprentice is able to confront other people in the group, face
issues, take responsibility for her own feelings and actions, and both
expects and desires to influence the course of the group, she is
probably ready for initiation. She must ask for initiation, because she
is not ready until she realizes that she, and no one else, controls the
course of her progress in the Craft. An initiation creates a strong
emotional bond and a deep, astral tie between coven members, so consider
very carefully whom you initiate.
Death and rebirth are the theme of initiation. Death is the root of our
deepest fears, and the true face of the Shadow. It is the terror behind
vulnerability, the horror of annihilation that we fear our anger or our
power will provoke. As in the myth, what pulls us to risk that
confrontation is desire and longing, for those split-off parts of
ourselves that lie on the other side of the abyss, which alone can
complete us and free us to love. Because where there is no courage,
there is no love: Love demands honesty, which is frightening, or it is
only pretense. It demands vulnerability, or it is hollow. It engages our
deepest power, or it lacks force. It brings us to confront sorrow, loss,
and death.
And so we learn the Mystery: the feared Shadow, the Guardian of the
Threshold, is none other than the God, who is named Guardian of the
Gates, in his aspect of Death.
We must strip ourselves of our defenses, pretensions, masks, roles, of
our "clothing and jewels," all that we assume and put on, in order to
cross that threshold and enter the inner kingdom. The door opens only to
the naked body of truth, bound by the cords, our recognition of
mortality.
Death is seductive, for once the frightening threshold is crossed there
is no more fear. Fear and hope are both dissolved; all that is left are
rest, repose, relief, blessed nothingness, the void. But just as the
void, to physicists, is the "mother state," so the crown of death
becomes the circlet of rebirth, and the cords of binding become the
umbilical link to life. Death is subsumed to life, and we learn the
Great Mystery-not as a doctrine, not as a philosophy, but as an
experience: There is no annihilation.
Traditionally, initiation rituals are secret-if for no other reason than
to preserve the element of surprise. I have somewhat mixed feelings
about publishing one of our initiations, but I feel the book would not
be complete without it. I have omitted secret Faery material and
concentrated on many of the creative elements of the ritual, which we
generally write anew for each new member. The following should not be
seen as an unchangeable script, but as a blueprint for creating your own
rituals.
An initiation begins with a death cycle-an enacted dissolution, symbolic
annihilation, and purification. An element of testing is sometimes
involved. In the country, an apprentice might be taken to an unknown
path and told to find her way along it. At intervals, guides will reveal
secrets, or point out the direction. At the beach, a blindfolded
apprentice might be asked to find her way by scent, by sound, and
finally to let go of fear and walk trustingly into the waves, where
protective hands will pull her back. Indoors, an apprentice might be
told to keep solemn silence and lie quietly, while a plaster face-mask
is made, and then left to meditate while it dries. At Paul's initiation,
he was told to close his eyes and led into the garden. At intervals, he
was allowed to open his eyes; a light was flashed and revelations were
made; for example, he was shown an ear of corn, and told, "Behold Kore,
the Maiden." He was shown a rose, and told, "Feel the blossom and the
thorn." He was shown a lacy, insect-eaten leaf, and told, "See how life
feeds on life." He was then left to meditate on the sky, while the rest
of us went indoors, cast the circle, and prepared the ritual bath.
The ocean, or a running stream, is an ideal location for a ritual bath,
but most of them are held in an ordinary tub.
Coveners perform their Salt-Water Purification; salt is added to the
bath water and it is charged with the power to cleanse and make new.
Appropriate herbs and oils are added: I use rose petals, bay leaves,
mistletoe, vervain, rue, a few drops of Priestess or Goddess oil, and
Delphi water. Incense and candles are lit. The blindfolded apprentice is
helped into the tub, washed by other coveners, and chanted over. She is
told to meditate, purify herself, resolve any doubts, and look for a new
name. She is then left alone.
Coveners finish any last preparations for the ritual, and invoke the
Goddess, God, and Mighty Ones of the Craft.
One covener, who acts as the sponsor for the apprentice, returns to her,
dries her, and makes sure she is ready to enter the circle. She ties a
thin cotton cord loosely around the apprentice's wrists, saying, "And
She was bound as all living must be, who would enter the Kingdom of
Death." She ties the cord also around one ankle, saying, "Feet neither
bound nor free," recognizing that entrance into the Craft is a free
choice, but that once a person steps on the path, they have set in
motion currents that will impel them forward. The sponsor asks the
apprentice her new name and leads her to the circle, where a gate has
been cut in the east.
A covener chosen to be the Challenger steps forward with sword or athame
and says, "Who comes to the gate?" The apprentice, coached beforehand,
answers, "It is I, ________ (her new name), child of earth and starry
heaven." Challenger: "Who speaks for you?" Sponsor: "It is I, ________,
who vouches for her." The Challenger holds the point of the blade up to
the apprentice's heart, and says, "You are about to enter a vortex of
power, a place beyond imagining, where birth and death, dark and light,
joy and pain, meet and make one. You are about to step between the
worlds, beyond time, outside the realm of your human life.
"You who stand on the threshold of the dread Mighty Ones, have you the
courage to make the essay? For know that it is better to fall on my
blade and perish than to make the attempt with fear in thy heart!" The
apprentice answers, "I enter the circle with perfect love and perfect
trust." The Challenger grounds the point of her blade to earth, kisses
her, and draws her into the circle, saying, "Thus are all first brought
into the circle." The Priestess and/or Priest now lead the apprentice to
each of the four quarters, sunwise, saying:
"Hail, Guardians of the Watchtowers of the East (South, West, North) and
all the Mighty Ones of the Craft.
Behold ________ (new name), who will now be made Priestess and Witch."
The apprentice is brought back to the altar. The Priestess kneels, and
gives her the fivefold kiss, on the parts of the body named, saying:
Blessed are your feet, that have brought you in these ways.
Blessed are your knees, that kneel at the sacred altar.
Blessed is your sex, without which we would not be.
Blessed are your breasts, formed in strength and beauty.
Blessed are your lips, which shall speak the sacred names.
The apprentice is then measured with thin cord, from head to toe. The
cord is cut; she is measured around the head and chest. Knots are tied
to mark the measurements. The Priestess rolls up the cord, and asks the
apprentice, "Are you willing to swear the oath?"
Apprentice: "I am."
Priestess: "Are you willing to suffer to learn?"
Apprentice: "Yes."
The Priestess takes the apprentice's hand, and, with a needle properly
purified by fire and water (that is, sterilized), pricks her finger,
squeezing a few drops of blood onto the measure.
Priestess: "Repeat after me:
"I, ________, do of my own free will most solemnly swear to protect,
help, and defend my sisters and brothers of the Art." "I always will
keep secret all that must not be revealed." "This do I swear on my
mother's womb and my hopes of future lives, mindful that my measure has
been taken, and in the presence of the Mighty Ones." The apprentice is
then told to kneel, place one hand on her head and the other beneath her
heel; she says, "All between my two hands belongs to the Goddess."
Coven: "So mote it be!" Coven members grab her suddenly, lift her up (if
possible), and carry her three times around the circle, laughing and
shrieking. They lay her face down before the altar and press her into
the ground. Gradually, the pressing changes to stroking. They chant her
new name, raising a Cone of Power over her, giving her power to open her
awareness and work magic. The blindfold is removed, and she is told,
"Know that the hands that have touched you are the hands of love." The
Charge of the Goddess is spoken, and other myths, mysteries, and secrets
are revealed. Generally, the new initiate is given time to scry in a
crystal, to find her own personal sources of power and inspiration. She
is told the coven names of other members, the inner name and symbols of
the coven.
The sponsor consecrates her on breasts and forehead with oil, with a
coven symbol. The Priestess returns her measure, saying:
"In the Burning Times, when each member of the coven held the lives of
the others in her hand, this would have been kept, and used against you
should you endanger others. But in these more fortunate times, love and
trust prevail, so take this, keep it or burn it, and be free to go or
stay as your heart leads you." The new initiate is then given a set of
tools, which other coveners have made or collected for her. One by one,
they are handed to her, their use is explained, and they are consecrated
and charged. (See Exercise 36-although the process is often shortened
within the initiation ritual.)
Food and drink are shared, and coveners relax and party. An initiation
is a joyful occasion.
Before the circle is opened, the new initiate is taken around to the
four quarters for a final time. The Priestess says, "Guardians of the
East (South, West, North), and Mighty Ones of the Craft, behold ______,
who has now been made Priestess and Witch, and member of the
_________________ coven." Goddess, God, and Guardians are thanked and
dismissed, and the circle is opened.
Between the Worlds
The coven meets in moontime, new, full, or dark. The rituals are healing
rituals, magical workings, times of growth, inspiration, insight. They
change constantly, are never static. We make them anew, rewrite them,
re- create them, but always on the same pattern: the creation of the
sacred space, the invocations, the use of magical symbols, the raising
of the Cone of Power, trance, sharing of food and drink and laughter,
and the formal return to ordinary space and time. The ritual may be
formal or informal; scripted or spontaneous; structured or loose-as long
as it is alive. As long as it sings.
"The first and most important effect of a living mythological symbol is
to waken and give guidance to the energies of life." Joseph Campbell'
The rituals that follow in this chapter and the next are scripts meant
to be changed, reworked, improved on, or used as they are. If you use
written words, they should be memorized rather than read aloud. Speaking
memorized words may itself create a trance state; reading entraps us in
the left-brain, flashlight mind. If you cannot memorize, improvise.
Don't worry about literary quality- simply say what you feel. Or better
yet-let your rituals be wordless.
(To be performed after the first visible crescent has appeared.)
On the altar, place a bowl of seeds. Fill the central cauldron with
earth, and pace a candle in. the center.
When the coven gathers, begin with a breathing meditation. A Priestess
says, "This is the time of beginning, the seed time of creation, the
awakening after sleep. Now the moon emerges, a crescent out of the dark;
the Birthgiver returns from Death. The tide turns; all is transformed.
Tonight we are touched by the Maiden who yields to all and yet is
penetrated by none. She changes everything She touches; may She open us
to change and growth. Merry meet." Purify, cast the circle, and invoke
the Goddess and God.
A covener chosen to act as Seed Priestess takes the bowl of grain from
the altar, saying, "Blessed be, creature of earth, moon seed of change,
bright beginning of a new circle of time. Power to start, power to grow,
power to make new be in this seed. Blessed be." Going sunwise around the
circle, she offers the bowl to each person, asking, "What will you plant
with the moon?" Each person replies with what she plans to begin, or
hopes will grow, in the month to come. "The blessing of the new moon be
upon it," the Priestess answers.
Each person visualizes a clear image of what they want to grow, charging
the seeds with the image. One by one, they plant the seeds in the earth
in the central cauldron.
Together, they raise a Cone of Power to charge the seeds and earth with
energy, and empower the projects they represent. The Cone is grounded
into the cauldron.
Trance work or scrying may focus on clarity of vision for the projects
now begun.
Feast, and open the circle.
(To be performed on the eve of the Full Moon.)
The circle gathers, does a breathing meditation, and a Priestess says,
"This is the time of fullness, the flood tide of power, when the Lady in
full circe of brightness rides across the night sky, arising with the
corning of dark.
This is the time of the bearing of fruits, of change realized. The Great
Mother, Nurturer of the world, which is Herself, pours out her love and
her gifts in abundance. The Hunter draws near to the Brilliant One, She
who awakens yearning in the heart and who is the end of desire. We who
look on her shining face are filled with love.
Merry meet." Purify, cast the circle, and invoke the Goddess and God.
One covener moves into the center of the circle, and speaks her name.
The others repeat it, and chant it, raising a Cone of Power as they
touch her, earthing it into her and filling her with the power and light
of the moon. She returns to the circ e, and another covener takes her
place, until each in turn has been the focus of the power.
While chanting, other coveners come to recognize that each individual
is, in truth, Goddess/God.
A final Cone can be raised for the coven as a whole. Earth the power,
trance or scry, then feast and open the circe.
(To be performed on the waning moon. A gazing crystal or scrying bowl
should be placed in the center of the circe.)
Gather, and meditate on a group breath. A Priestess says, "This is the
ending before the beginning, the death before new life. Now on the ebb
tide the secrets of the shoreline are uncovered by the retreating waves.
The moon is hidden, but the faintest of stars are revealed and those who
have eyes to see may read the fates and know the mysteries. The Goddess,
whose name cannot be spoken, naked enters the Kingdom of Death. In the
most vast silence and stillness, all is possible. We meet in the time of
the Crone, to touch the deep power of the dark." Purify and cast the
circle, but do not ight the altar candle. Invoke the Goddess and God.
The leader begins an antipbon chant: a repeated bass line, with
spontaneous lines interjected between.
Leader: "She lies under al, She covers all." All: "She lies under all,
She covers all." (Repeat several times.)
Covener "She is the teacher of mysteries." All: "She lies under all, She
covers all." Covener: "She is the motion behind form." All: "She lies
under all, She covers all." Covener: (Improvised line)
All: "She lies under all, She covers all." Continue as long as there are
energy and inspiration. (This type of chanting requires sensitivity and
openness, both to personal inspiration and to others. While at first
there may be some hesitations, silences, and collisions, in a cohesive
group it will soon flow naturally. It is a powerful way of opening the
inner voice.)
Build into a wordless power chant, and earth the cone into the scrying
bowl gazing crystal. Scry together, sharing what you see. Feast, and
open the circle.