Post dinner and wine in a Los Angeles living room, I listened to some works in progress by pianist Dana Reason. She sat at the holiday card covered piano with pages and pages of scores in front of her and played. I was startled by the brilliance of both the compositions and the playing itself, as well as by the fact that she was willing to share uncompleted work with us... and it was good. Very, very, very good.
After the impromptu performance, several of us discussed the difficulties of being a female (and blond!) jazz composer while the shouts of children, banished to another area of the house, rose and fell in counterpoint. Dana has been training since age 3. She is taking a risk right now, experimenting more and more with form - with what I teach in my own work as guideposts or anchors to the processes of intuitive connection - in the midst of which she can fly. Through all of this talk of study, of composition, of challenges with sexism, industry expectations, and of risking with a shift into a new mode of expression were two threads twining tightly around each other. These were the threads of remaining true to self, and of following desire.
How do we continue to follow desire, even when huge obstacles arise? How do we remain true to ourselves, and take the risk of setting down the small cup in favor of the larger? What keeps us going? And what undermines us?
For someone like Dana Reason, I would hazard to guess, what she desires is also her True Will, the work of her God, leaving her little choice but to follow along in hot pursuit. But what about for the rest of us who may not have tapped into that yet? How do we approach desire? This is a large subject, of course, and one that will not be plumbed in this one entry. But let us take one facet and begin examination.
Desiring is like falling in love. Or perhaps falling in love is the kindling of desire. There is an object and a subject that are seeking to become one thing, like a woman at her piano, making music from the mind and soul. We are overcome with desire and what then? We need to make a decision whether or not we will pursue or thwart desire, whether it will be relegated to the realms of fantasy or we will enact will and move toward daring.
People who follow desire, who feel the first rush and then enact their intention around it, are the people who create art over and over, who start humanitarian organizations, who do great things, whether in the public eye or through reaching one being at a time. One definition of desire is to follow a star. To set off on a journey with uncertain end. To risk safety for the unknown. To follow the beating of your own heart’s rhythm, regardless of what others may think of the song.
We do want to communicate. We do want to share. But genius always includes the element of the unexpected in it. Surprise is at the core of innovation. Do we really want to create the same things over and over? Is all we really want, some comfort? I don’t think so, or why would desire keep occurring, at the most inconvenient moments, calling us to someplace new? Even the best map cannot tell us what we will encounter on our journey, and the best journeys may begin with a charted course, but always veer off into the unknown.
I heard desire both in the piano notes and the conversation that followed, and I liked the music it made.
Are we willing to surprise ourselves?
I just have a few small items to share this Sunday before we gear up for the year-end count-downs and retrospectives, starting with SF Gate columnist Mark Morford, who argues that all the discussions about pantheism in “Avatar” are besides the point, what it’s really about is “alien porn”.
“But wait, we haven’t hit the best part yet. Because in this movie, you don’t merely get to fantasize about the Other from afar or even just indulge in interspecies sex. You get to literally become one of them … Behold, the ultimate in guilty colonialist fetish fantasy epic porn filmmaking, ever. Flawed, broken white man can, with his righteous modern technology, fuse his DNA with super-hot exotic sexually flawless alien species and become the Other and save the world and then score the hot chick from Star Trek.”
Somehow, I don’t think this new angle is going to please Ross Douthat and other conservative commentators much more than the “Hollywood is pantheist” one. For that matter, I doubt it will please the folks who’ve seen “Avatar” and found it to be a deeply transcendent/meaningful experience. As an aside, since we’re talking about movies, I saw “Sherlock Holmes” last night, and was surprised that the entire plot centered on a Freemason/Golden Dawn-ish occult order. By “centered on”, I mean it provided some sort of plot when things weren’t blowing up. It was quite the romp if you turn your expectations down a few notches.
The clinically obsessed folks at the Christian Civic League of Maine continue to stalk Rita Moran, Chair of the Kennebec County Democratic Committee, who was one of two openly Pagan delegates at the Democratic National Convention. Not content with trespassing on private property, or trying to make her book store sound sinister by listing titles found at any Barnes & Noble, they are now engaging in their own sad form of “deep background” looking for some sort of controversy. First it was misquoting a podcast interview she did in 2007, now they are combing through her past involvement with the EarthTides Pagan Network.
“The identities of the members of these organizations are often kept secret. Moran is active in the EarthTides Pagan Network under the pseudonym “Arwen Evenstar.” Under this pseudonym, Moran has written a book review column in the group’s newsletter for the past several years.”
This situation is so sad and pathological, all in an attempt to ruin Moran’s standing with local Democrats.
“It is a sad commentary on politics in Maine that the highest levels of the Democrat Party rely on an occultist whose political prudence consists of Tarot Card reading and crystal-ball gazing; and whose leadership effectiveness is a matter of casting the right spell.”
This one-man “staff” of the Christian Civic League really needs to get a life. It just goes to show you how bothered some Christians get when any other religious perspective dares to seek political power instead of staying silently in the shadows. They try to make sinister activities that would be seen as sanctified and proper if done in a Christian context. This strife only underlines how important our involvement in the public sphere is, and why the “broom closet” must become a thing of the past.
In a final note, the Pagans at the Parliament project seems to be winding down. The last of the video and audio has been posted to the blog, and we have had several post-Parliament missives from attendees, including a statement from Angie Buchanan, one of the Pagan Executive Board members of the Council for a Parliament of the World’s Religions. Buchanan addresses the recent flurry of discussion and controversy regarding definitions, and what was (and wasn’t ) said and done in Paganism’s name at the Parliament.
“In my personal participation and my observation of what happened at the Parliament, there was no attempt to “legitimize” anything, nor was there an effort to ostracize anything. There were many very successful attempts to explain concepts, terms and belief structures in ways and using vocabulary understood by those either unfamiliar with or frightened by our practices — by providing them with a frame of reference.”
Despite the flare-up over definition, and who said what at the Parliament, a situation that I take some responsibility in spreading, I do think this event will be seen as pivotal in modern Paganism’s history. Never before have we been so visible and vocal on the world stage, and I believe some paradigm-shifting happened that may greatly benefit all modern Pagans in the long run. I genuinely thank all the Pagans who took the time and effort to be involved with this event, and made our varied voices and viewpoints heard in the context of the global interfaith movement. What happened was important, I believe that we will ultimately experience more signal than noise as we process our involvement there in the coming year.
That’s all I have for now, have a great day!
- 07:34 Now leaving the land of no cell service, happy to have visited, and grateful to return. #
leorathesane and I had a splendiforous time in the Windy City last week. We traveled in by train, which, to my mind, is the best way to go. It makes the journey part of the trip, rather than something you have to endure before you can start the trip.
We were HQed at The Silversmith in the Loop, a hotel which I would recommend to anyone that-way bound. It's a lovely place, and the staff took excellent care of us.
Possessing no automotive means of transit, we explored à pied. I love doing this. We might not have seen as much of the city, but what we did see, we saw deeply. Intimately. We unabashedly traversed the requisite "tourist things": the Art Institute, the Field Museum, the Museum of Contemporary Photography, Cloud Gate (hey, Chicagoans - it's a giant bean. Wherefore art it "Cloud Gate"?), Sears Tower (which no one will ever call anything else). We peeked in the Macy's display windows. We ate fish and chips at Elephant and Castle and deep dish butter crust pizza at Lou Malnati's (courtesy of the nefarious Loungeboy). We listened to the Jimmy Burns Band smoke it at Buddy Guy's Legends. We trekked several times to consume the foodgasmic wonder that is churros and hot chocolate at Xoco, devoured the breakfast menu at Artists Cafe, and found a restaurant called Thai Spoon (not to be confused with the one called Spoon Thai) that reminded me of the Frogtown restaurants I frequented with Anne and Liz, back in the day (and let me say that few words are sweeter, after you've been seated in a restaurant, than your server saying, "Last call for half-price maki").
I'm sure the taller half will have pictures available on her blog eventually. Right now we're still in post-vacation laundry-and-bliss mode. This was our first real vacation since our honeymoon, and we savored it well. I just hope we don't have to wait three and a half more years to do it again.
- Music:Sam Cooke - "Nothing Can Change This Love"
United, the airline that breaks guitars, is receiving some more bad publicity, this time from within the Pagan community. A Pagan boycott of the company is being suggested after they seriously bungled the aftermath of an altercation between a zealous Christian subcontractor and a wheelchair-bound Pagan veteran.
“In August I filed a complaint against an employee of United Airlines who verbally attacked me for my religious beliefs. To date United Airlines and their subcontractor Airserve Corporation, have not made any efforts to alleviate the pain and humiliation I experienced. I had been traveling through Chicago on my way home to California when this incident occurred. I was waiting for a wheelchair to preboard my plane, but the attendant arrived too late to preboard me, despite the fact that I had asked him several times to ensure he returned for me on time. He then got another attendant who asked me to pray with him and give up my burdens to god. I am not a Christian and I informed him that I am the minister of a Druid congregation and then asked to change the topic. At this point he became confrontational and got down in my face; he began to quote scriptures at me and was so vehement that he sprayed spit in my face. He told me I would go to hell, quoted scriptures about false idols and told me that I would be a better person with his god in my life.”
After the humiliating incident, Rev. Jessie “Medb” Olson, Senior Druid for Feather River Grove, ADF, complained to United, and after some research, the subcontractor who employed the attendant. While Airserve Corporation (the subcontractor) did eventually fire the crusading individual, neither company has issued a formal apology for the incident, or refunded her ticket.
“…neither United nor the contractor, Airserve corp, has offered any restitution for the humiliation I experienced. United claims to have sent me a certificate for a new flight (no amount has been indicated) but I have NEVER received it and wouldn’t fly with them again if my life depended on it. All I want is my ticket refunded, a small price to pay for the horrendous treatment I received. I want to send a very clear message that United can not allow its employees to harass customers, no matter their religion, particularly helpless ones that can not remove themselves from the situation.”
Olson is calling for the Pagan community and its allies to boycott United and its subcontractors until this matter has been made right. I think the very least they can do is refund her ticket and issue a formal apology. Whether they do so remains to be seen, modern airline travel seems to be fraught with horrible customer service, and few step up and do the right thing without intense public pressure. You can contact United’s customer relations department, here, if you’d like to make your displeasure known. Perhaps the entire ADF and other large Pagan organizations can send a joint statement? I’ll keep you posted as things develop.
Today, going to visit biofamily which is a bit nervewracking, but I hope it will go well. Nothing particularly clever to say right now, but it shall do.
- 10:44 was mistaken for a hairstylist by someone who *hadn't* seen her tattoo. #
Merry Christmas and a Happy Yule to all my LJ Droogs. I hope everyone has a safe and happy holiday.
Due to family obligations I won’t be blogging today, but I’ll be back tomorrow with my regular daily dose of modern Pagan-related news and commentary. In the meantime I wish a very happy holiday season to you all, and a very happy birthday to Jesus of Nazareth, Mithras, Carlos Castenada, Sol Invictus, Robert Ripley, and Annie Lennox among many others.

Sol Invictus
Happy Holidays! Back tomorrow.
The sacred fish swims deep in sacred pool. The holly berries ripen on the bush.
Gaudete. We are born. Every moment. Every day.
Christus est Natus. That means you.
Right now.
Sunday December 27th, Nathan and I will be through town, and we plan to have dinner at Andies at Montrose and Clark (just west of Clark, with blue awning) at 7 PM
Hoping to see you, please let me know, ok? Bring you and yours and pass this on to anyone you think I would like to see that I might not have contact info for!
let me know!
Robin
- Mood:
hopeful
Top Story: Pop-culture critics have been seemingly too distracted by the 3-D CGI spectacular that is “Avatar” to give much attention to the latest Disney 2-D hand-drawn “princess” movie. Luckily, Religion Dispatches delivers us temporarily from discussions about Hollywood’s pantheism to instead talk about presentations of New Orleans Voodoo in “The Princess and the Frog”. According to Michelle Gonzalez Maldonado, assistant professor of religious studies at the University of Miami, the film gives a “prejudiced and misinformed” reading of the often misunderstood religion.
“I do not know where to begin my comments on how this film perpetuates offensive stereotypes about Voodoo. The loas are represented as evil spirits full of greed and anger … The terms Voodoo, Hoodoo, and conjuring are used interchangeably throughout. In the end one is presented with an evil religion that will ultimately fail. I did not expect critical race analysis or a sophisticated presentation of Voodoo when I walked into the theater. It is, after all, Disney. I did not expect such a blatant, racist, and misinformed presentation of Voodoo, however. The reduction of religion to magic is also reaffirmed in the curious absence of Catholicism in the film. My son is correct, Disney Voodoo is bad magic; it just doesn’t have anything to do with the authentic African Diaspora religion.”
In addition to getting New Orleans/Louisiana Voodoo horribly wrong, it seems the film gets New Orleans itself all wrong. In another Religion Dispatches piece, Anthea Butler, associate professor of religion at the University of Pennsylvania, says the film is a big desecrating “lump of coal” that “picks up where Katrina left off”.
“I’m going to go all out and say that the entire movie is a wholesale desecration of New Orleans, Creole culture, Cajun Culture, religion, zydeco music, the Evangeline story, and Louis Armstrong (I’ll get to that in a minute.) Rolled up, Disney hates the South, period … I know it’s only a movie, but movies shape how people, especially children, view the world. In the case of New Orleans and the myriad of cultures it holds, to stint on all of the facets that make New Orleans and Louisiana the wonderful, complex, and sometimes exasperating place that it is is a crime. Disney’s princesses, once again, may have big beautiful eyes, but while kids are enjoying the view, Disney’s hack job of deconstructing history by making it “cute” is just as destructive as a category 5 hurricane. Fun and truth do not have to be mutually exclusive to sell a movie, unless of course you’re just bankrupt of ideas.”
Of course, Disney has a long history of acquiring and terraforming pieces of culture, transforming them to a point where most people think the Disney version is the original. There’s a reason why “disneyfication” is a pejorative term. So you get a Disney New Orleans where the Voodoo is bad, Catholicism is absent, tradition is ignored, and history is mangled. In the end, it’s more about extending the Princess brand, than doing something creative or original.
In Other News: The Pierce County Herald spotlights Circle Sanctuary’s efforts to send holiday care packages to troops in Iraq.
“The Circle Sanctuary in Barneveld is also remembering soldiers at Fort Hood Texas – where a Wisconsin unit lost three of its members in last month’s shooting rampage. Selena Fox, a senior minister of the Wiccan Church, said the Circle group sent packages to about 50 active duty personnel at Fort Hood to show extra support. They’ve also provided counseling for the Pagan soldiers at the base – and they sent holiday cheer to 150 Pagan troops in Iraq and Afghanistan.”
I’m sure it’s still not too late to donate, and help them in their efforts.
NPR reports on the rise of sorcery and witchcraft-related arrests and sentencing in Saudi Arabia, and talks to an expert who posits that the recent increase is a reaction to the government trying to curb the influence of the religious police.
“Saudi political analyst Tawfiq al-Saif says religious authorities truly believe they are helping society by discouraging faith in the supernatural. But, he says, there is also a political reason for the recent rise in sorcery cases. In the past few years, the government has tried to curb the influence of the religious establishment by sacking key religious figures, pushing for reform in the courts and criticizing the religious police. “One time, I met the head of the Hey’a [the religious police] and he was really sorry because in the past he was saying that they were free to do whatever they like to enforce the Sharia laws — even, he said, in the public buses, in the train, in the airports,” Saif says. But now that they are under pressure, the religious police are trying to flex their muscles in the few ways they still can, including looking for people who practice magic or who don’t pray five times a day, and for women who don’t properly cover their hair, Saif says.”
Does this mean that the plight of people like Fawza Falih Muhammad Ali and Ali Sibat are due to the last grasps at control by a shrinking power in the country? Or has the “muscle flexing” by the religious police shifted matters to their liking, and we’ll only see more madness and death in the near future? I suppose it remains to be seen, but I worry that any long-term solution to this anti-sorcery madness will come too late for the unlucky caught in this cultural crossfire.
For a somewhat different take on the problem of sorcery in the Middle East, The Epoch Times looks at Dubai, who have far more liberal laws concerning sorcery, but who also deal with rampant fraud and scam-artists.
“In the United Arab Emirates, and Dubai in particular, authorities take a more liberal stance. However, because of the large number of scam artists posing as sorcerers and exorcists in Dubai, police have set up a special task to crack down on so-called “magic-related crimes.” “Some people are just simple and anything will fool them,” Khaleel Al-Mansouri, the head of Dubai’s Criminal Investigation Department, told local newspaper seven days earlier this year. “It’s due to a lack of education, but also because the victims are greedy and are looking for a quick profit. “Our officers are highly skilled and they carry out special undercover patrols in shopping malls throughout Dubai looking for any sorcery crime that might be occurring.” In 2008 alone, fraudsters fleeced Dh130 million (US$35.5 billion) out of unsuspecting members of the public in sorcery scams.”
They also manage to interview a taxi driver, Hassan Hamadi, who also works as an exorcist. He claims he charges no money for his services, and lives in fear of being arrested by the sorcery task-force. However, despite the threat of arrest, because laws are more liberal (no death-penalty) places like Oman in the Persian Gulf has become, according to one journalist, a hotbed of “sorcerers and mystics”. Such is, I believe, the consequence of creating a legal gray area. They eliminate death-penalties and long prison terms for sorcery, but enough of a penalty remains to keep the practice criminal, underground, and unregulated. One wonders if they repealed all laws and dealt with fraud on a purely secular basis if a home-grown “neo-sorcery” would emerge, much like Wicca did in England. Maybe, maybe not, but arresting, and in the case of Saudi Arabia, killing, “witches” doesn’t seem to ever “solve” the problem.
In a final note, here’s a unique opinion essay at the American Thinker by Selwyn Duke that debunks the pagan origins of Christmas, while acknowledging the great debt we owe to “pagan” pre-Christian cultures.
“If we were to discard all things pagan, I should think we’d plunge ourselves back into the Stone Age. We walk on concrete, record our knowledge with letters, and designate our months with names originated/invented by the pagan Romans. We steer our boats with rudders invented by the pagan Chinese; make calculations with numbers invented by pagan Indians; and create computer graphics, medical imaging, and designs for buildings and bridges using geometry formalized by pagan Greeks. And much of our philosophy (and much of that drawn upon by early Christians, mind you) was generated by pagans such as Aristotle and Plato. Should we “go Taliban” and burn all their works — and other books thus influenced? A pious Christian must believe that pagans could not have had the whole Truth, but only an ignorant Christian would believe they had no Truth.”
I would happily concede Christmas as wholly Christian if those same culture-warriors would acknowledge that their foundation is built on the advances made by “pagans”. Heck, I’d even call it a “Christmas miracle”.
That’s all I have for now, have a great day!
remain at the office, how about some RWP?
Reading: In the homestretch for Tam Lin which I really
don’t want to end :( I’ve also looked at Wood Nymph Seeks
Centaur and for a pop romance book found it very, very nice (and
it included same-sex matches too! Most of the book was very
hetero-oriented, but I found including this to be great as well as
Block’s acknowledgement of fluid sexualities. )I wish more dating
books were like this.) I’ve also been dipping into Jeff Vandermeer’s
Booklife which gets mad props already for mentioning how to do
writing with a 40hr week job. Whoo hoo!
Writing: Submitted an article which I hope will run (fingers
crossed) (and whoo hoo, I finished and submitted something! Hear me
roar!), working on a writing plan for January, am working on some
poems.
Wearing Mint green cardigan, black skirt knee length, mint
green and brown striped knee highs over leggings and brown thermal
with a squid on it, also with Wyrding Studios necklace from Pirate
Rummage Sale and red lip gloss.
Planning: I suddenly have a LYS-the Yarn Spot in Wheaton. Would
anyone like to go check it out with me after New Year’s? (I still want
to check Fibre Space in Alexandria, but haven’t gotten to yet.)
Dancing on Monday. Having fun holiday stuff and dealing with seeing
the biofamily. Adventures.
How about you? What are you RWP?
(Note: Any initial can be anything and can vary by person so eg, if
you don’t write or wear, pick another word:) )
- 15:12 Every day at the office, I start sneezing after noonish. I think I am allergic to work. #
- 19:15 Having a winter wander through the city, a cocktail at whatever dive I happen into, and then a bus to the hinterland. It's like a novel. #
- 21:52 The holy shit crowded bus station full of pissed off holiday travelers whoses buses have been cancelled? Different kind of novel. #
- 00:56 On the road again... #
- 08:43 Overheard: "Forget that jerk. He's gonna be miserable, and we're gonna lose ten pounds." #
be a half day with a full day's pay.
Today-today-my agency tells me that since we are contractors,
we are working a full day. We have followed the government in all
other things involving time and pay.
I am so angry because no one told any of us till now.
(I know I'm lucky to have a job, I do appreciate it...but damn, I'm
angry. Can't wait to get out of contracting, if that will ever
happen.)
Ah crud. Now I'm crying. It's just so stupidly unfair (and I do still
know I'm lucky.)
Damn.
Top Story: Hey, it happens to the best of us sometimes. Apparently around 300 Pagan revelers showed up to Stonehenge for the Winter Solstice a day early, under the mistaken assumption that the date is fixed on the calendar.
“A crowd of around 300 people, wearing traditional costume, met at the mystical stone circle on Monday morning to mark the rising of the sun on the shortest day of the year. But unfortunately their calculations were slightly out meaning they had in fact arrived 24 hours prematurely … A spokesman for English Heritage said: ‘About 300 people turned up a day early on Monday morning. We took pity on them and opened the stone circle so they could celebrate anyway. They were a day early but no doubt had a wonderful time as well.’”
While this has inspired some snark, it also provides a helpful reminder that the solstices (and equinoxes) are moving targets, and that you should always check before inviting 300 of your closest friends to frolic at the stones.
In Other News: Mistakenly early-bird Pagans weren’t the only bit of Pagan-oriented solstice coverage going on, the South Yorkshire Star interviews 82-year-old Wiccan Elder Patricia Crowther (one of, if not the, last living High Priestesses initiated directly by Gerald Gardner) for the holiday and finds her remarkably well-preserved.
“Patricia’s appearance – a full head of thick curls, barely wrinkled skin, and a razor-sharp mind – belies her years. “On my natal chart the moon is in Gemini, which is the sign of youth and the young-at-heart, and I know that has something to do with it,” she says. Her home is filled with unusual ornaments, most of which represent figures from mythology or the Goddess herself. There are also dozens of pictures of Patricia as a glamorous young woman. One particularly striking image is that of Patricia sitting naked on a stool for her initiation. “That’s what you have to do when you’re initiated – you go as you were born into life,” she explains. “There’s nothing dirty about it.” As with any qualification, becoming a High Priestess takes time and training.”
Crowther has a new book, “Covensense”, that was released this year. According to one review it contains some “narrow convictions” that will please some BTWs, and frustrate some of the more eclectic Wiccans out there. Personally, I think it’s wonderful that she’s still writing books, no matter how opinionated they might be.
Turning from Solstice-related stories for a moment, I want to quickly highlight two interviews with Pagan-friendly band Faith and the Muse, who’s latest Shinto-inspired album, “Ankoku Butoh”, was a top pick in my year-end best-of list. First Liz Ohanesian of the LA Weekly chats with them about the new album, then gets them to pick their favorite supernatural J-Horror films.
“Japan has one of the oldest traditions of ghost tales, even as far back as 1776, scholar and artist Toriyama Sekien attempted to categorize them in his illustrated series of collections of ghosts and spirits. But their origins can be found even earlier, and coincide with oral tales of Nature spirits – these are actually classic Goddess tales, found not only in Japanese Shinto belief, but in Celtic, Nordic and even Native American mythology – all the same foundation of the consequences that await when one messes with Nature. J-Horror has its very own Nature Mother, with snow-white skin and unbelievably long black hair, the vengeful spirit of the Woman Wronged.”
It’s an interesting-sounding round-up of films, especially for those who thought J-Horror began and ended with “Ringu”. For more Faith & The Muse goodness, and to order a copy of “Ankoku Butoh”, check out their official web site.
The Philadelphia Daily News has a cautionary tale about getting into arguments over religion. It seems that after two men had an argument over whose tradition of Santeria was better, one decided to end the argument permanently with a sawed-off shotgun.
“Hernandez, of Camac Street, North Philadelphia, shot Luis Freire, 55, because they had argued over whose version of the Afro-Caribbean religion Santeria was better, according to the statement, which the prosecution presented as evidence. “Unfortunately, in this day and age, it’s a sad commentary that killings happen over disputes ranging from heated arguments about religion to minor disputes over someone looking at someone the wrong way,” said Assistant District Attorney Brian M. Zarallo.”
Needless to say, Christian Hernandez’s strain of Santeria, whatever it was, won’t be well-served by having a convicted murderer in its ranks. It certainly makes the Internet flame-wars and rampant snark within the Pagan community seem sedate by comparison.
In a final note, the Suwanee, Georgia, school board is wrestling with how to handle public invocations after two substitute teachers, both Wiccans, asked for fair and equal treatment. This led to rumors that invocations would be eliminated entirely, an aim that was denied by the couple.
“Locals John and Rene Checkett addressed board members Tuesday and noted it was in no way their “aim or goal to remove prayer from our school system.” A story in last Friday’s Democrat quoted Rene Checkett to that effect, after rumors to the contrary drew a standing-room only crowd to a scheduled Dec. 15 board meeting. That meeting was canceled due to lack of public notice. The issue, Rene Checkett explained, was fair treatment for those with minority religious views. The couple, both Wiccans, met with Supt. Jerry Scarborough and board chair Jerry Taylor behind closed doors Friday to make their case for fair and equal treatment, particularly in regard to district policies. Both Checketts are substitute teachers. Taylor addressed a full crowd at the 6 p.m. meeting and made clear the district’s intent to handle the matter. “As a school district we need to adopt a policy that deals with religious activities in our school system that adheres to the rights of everyone based on the law of the land, which protects everyone,” Taylor said.”
The school board is going to be unveiling a new policy on public invocations in January, and it should be interesting to see how they address the concerns of religious minorities without causing an uproar with the local Christians.
That’s all I have for now, have a great day!
Change” . (I was 17 and on a People to People trip to what was then
the USSR and there are many more stories there-it was an amazing
trip.)
2. Smashed up my ankle when scrambling to hug the Dropkick Murphys. (I
slid on ice into a metal barrier-owie. I got my hug.)
3. Was on Real Sex.
4. Marched on Pink Saturday in the Castro. Amazing.
5. Was an extra in the indie film “Existo” while living in Nashville.
I had a purple bouffant and a glittery black and silver long dress. I
so miss that dress! Was upstaged by woman playing speculums like
castanets.
6. Have JPL in my phone book at my office, but sadly, no reason to call.
7. Danced on the Man Ray float in Boston Pride with other members of
the local bi pride chapter. It was delightful and we flung condoms at
people.
and one more
8. I own a necklace worn in the Firefly episode "Shindig". (only $15
so extra cool!)
(I may have mentioned some of these before, but if so, forgive my
addled memory.)
How about you? What surprising things have you done.
long slow and naturally easy separation
of the healthy flesh below from all encasing
it neither rushes in anticipation
you could have watched the heart, steady
unhurried pulsations, filling and shrinking from
this original, drying as paper to a stiff organ
nor is lazy, ignoring signs from some mystery
hidden passion, unnamable god, unthought
of desire to leave it behind, but nonchalant
emerges. Tender, susceptible. As it does, reaching
toward a Self so completely Itself that its form
still a locust, seems abundantly full of Identity
brimmingly poured, renewed, takes flight as an
obvious celebration, absent any necessity outside
being struck by sunlight, brooked by winds.
And we happen upon this tattwa, qelipoth, remainder
thinking it a lovely relic, of value, jewel glinting fascination...
Am I lost? Follow the living. Follow the living.
Look for Argos.
Why "Iron" pentacle? If we call ourselves Faery or Faerie or Feri, why is so much fundamental practice built around a concept, a tool, named for something that is in so many traditions completely anathema to faery beings? Simply the name of it, or rather the dissonance of the thought behind the name and what seems like a vast oversight to my unknowledgeable mind, is the one thing that has kept me from going further down the Feri rabbit hole by the Feri name. There must be some history to it, some explanation. In all the years of increasingly publicly available Feri knowledge and history, I haven't seen an answer. Can someone share an explanation (or more than one, this is Feri, after all), and put my mind at ease?
