cedar_grove: (Spirituality 2)
 The morning was filled with trying to be patient and accepting. Church is 'redoing' the nursery to make it more appealing to the little ones and their families, and that meant that the children's minister was in the room most of the time. I have expressed before that I have... no, I am uncomfortable with the energies the woman gives off. So there was that... Then the sad news in the afternoon, news I was expecting, but not ready for, and in the end, it just made for a sorrowful day.
cedar_grove: (Default)
 Saturday was one of those days that was super busy, very productive, but where I didn't feel like I had done anything much by the end of the day. It's not true, I did a lot, and there were a lot of errands to run and they all got done too, but my stuff? Didn't get to it until it was way too late, and I was too tired to make anything useful out of the time I had. Just frustrating.
cedar_grove: (Butterfly)
 
Very thankful that the damage wasn't as bad as was first thought, and happy that it means that we got a new carpet laid and everything. Really feel good about all the work in the bedroom, even though the aches are still SO bad that I could have cried at one point.
cedar_grove: (Default)
 Exhausted, but it's a good kind of exhaustion... Spent the day moving and cleaning and packing and preparing to have the floor fixed in the bedroom. Loud music, doing, dusting, cleaning. Didn't really have a moment to stop because there wasn't time, and you know what? After it was all done, in spite of feeling exhausted and a little bit 'busted up' (aching and sore from all the work), I felt good! I felt proud of myself and happy. The only disappointment of the day came in not being able to watch ST:DSC until Sunday... but the sleep was a good thing!
cedar_grove: (Default)
 I really would like that, but it was a damn crazy day. Work? Nuts... running off to Tutoring? Nuts. Dashing home and making dinner, reading for a meeting? I say nuts, it was just busy. I mean it was better in as much as I didn't have a headache, that part was good, but I just felt like I was running in place to stand still.

I got cranky when I discovered I'd have less than maybe 5 or 6 hours to do something that I was planning on taking my time over, on the weekend, cranky yes, but I wasn't freaking out like I got told I was. Yes it needs to be done, just... wanted to be able to go at my own pace for once.

I feel that a lot... that I don't get to to things at my own pace, and then I rebel and end up not doing a lot of things that I probably should. I'm bloody minded that way.
cedar_grove: (Spirituality 2)
 If ever there was a shit day, it was Tuesday. Started off the day with a bad headache that meant I needed to do most things in a darkened room. The headache persisted all day, in spite of medication, and if there's anything guaranteed to bring your mood down, it's a F***ing headache like that! Add to that all the 'you' statements, tiredness from still adjusting to a 12 hour day spent with kids, and in general feeling underappreciated... it made for a less than perfect day, and a mood to match - sue me.
cedar_grove: (Default)
 The title of the post kind of sums it all up. I went through the day feeling very 'mild'- quite calm, which considering the way some things went, is quite the miracle. I was either suffering from apathy, or genuinely not rising to anything that happened. It wasn't any kind of emotional detachment though, so I would say it wasn't apathy. It was just... acceptance. Things happened, whatever reaction, emotionally speaking, I acknowledged and then just... sent it on its way. Mindfulness in action.

Funniest part of the day was when one of the students I work with had a meltdown, and called me a, "Stupid, crooked toothed Brit." I was impressed there was no F word, but OMG did I have a hard time keeping a straight face!
cedar_grove: (Spirituality 2)
 Actually quite the opposite of what happened during that episode... (Kudos to anyone who understands the reference.)
 
I need to find a way to get around the agitation on Sundays.  It's ridiculous really but I get worked up about what I can't/won't get done because of other things getting done instead (like going to work for two hours).  Yesterday was extreme for me I guess, because of the discovery of the problems with the floor in the bedroom and associated cleaning up, then we had errands, then dinner to make, and in the back of my head I'm wondering 'when am I going to get to do my dailies?'  In the end I got all but 2 or 3 of them done, so why did I worry, or spend the entire day in a state of agitation?  I think maybe it has to do with 'writing' - because on both Saturday and Sunday that was one of the dailies (things I have on a list to do every day), that was one of the things that got missed.
 
On the plus side for Sunday, I went to the library.  Haven't been for a long long time, and I miss going.  I didn't get any books for myself, perhaps another day I can go and spend the hours and hours I love to look at books, but it was a nice reminder of the place and the books and everything... Just call me Belle. LOL
cedar_grove: (Spirituality 2)
 I feel an incredible sense of peace after Saturday afternoon. It was the first time I had seen two very good friends in far too long. We spent the afternoon just chilling out, sharing news, catching up. We shouldn't leave it so long next time. That followed a morning conversation with Mum who asked if I wanted to have a pendant with some of Dad's ashes. The answer was immediate and obvious. I know that kind of thing probably freaks out a lot of people, but not me. It was something else that helped me to feel a sense of peace.  I didn't get all of the things done that I wanted to once we got home, but I wouldn't change anything else of the day.
cedar_grove: (Spirituality 2)
 I write these in the morning of the following day because I spend the time reflecting as I'm settling down to end the day and let it drift away into the next... So yesterday:
 
Stupid crazy busy at work, which is not a new thing, but I think because it was the end of the quarter and all the reports etc were due, the frenetic energies of the entire building (not to mention the frayed tempers) were very prevalent, but I managed to raise myself above it for the most part, and to not become too affected by those energies.  It was a weird atmosphere (weather wise) when I got home and brought the dogs to run in the fenced off area - the wind had picked up and the sky looked cloudy and stormy, though there was no storm. I think I like that... it feels transitional, the energy, which makes sense because we're heading back into cold temperatures after having had 70s for several days.
cedar_grove: (Spirituality 2)
Besides the fact that I put up with entirely too much BS, from myself, from others, from life in general... I think I managed to be very patient yesterday in the face of 'teen' stuff at work. At trying to balance time when staying a little longer to talk to someone in need, and meeting 'deadlines'at home. Though honesty/openness was hard I made myself keep it up. Need to Wii more... remembered how much fun it was, and being more active will be good.
cedar_grove: (Spirituality 2)
Wow… that’s the first thought that comes to mind when reading the meditation for March 2nd in, Mark Nepo’s The Book of Awakening: Having the life you want by being present in the life you have. Seriously if you haven’t taken a look at this book, I think it’s an amazing book of very thought provoking daily meditations - for which I must again thank my wonderful guy. It was a gift many years ago, and I loved using it then, just as I love the opportunity to begin using it again in my daily ‘me’ journey.

Originally, the word power meant ‘able to be.’ In time, it was contracted to mean ‘to be able.’ We suffer the difference.

As if that opening weren’t thought provoking enough, there are many more profound sentiments shared throughout the essay.

Language changes all the time. It must. Language changes or it dies. You only have to look at the Brittonic language (such as Welsh and Cornish) to realize that. The Welsh language has embraced new words in order to creep into the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, and though still endangered, has not yet been declared an extinct language, like Cornish, which was declared extinct by the UN in February of 2009.

However, as can be seen above, the change is not always an entirely positive one. In the above change, power becomes more about worldly power than inner ability, further widening the disconnect between ourselves and our inner landscapes - our mental, emotional and spiritual health. It is that emotional and spiritual disconnect that has led us along our current path to the dis-ease, and general unrest in which we find society at large today. The important question then becomes, what can we do about it?

...Those at the top can be so enslave by guarding their position that they rarely enjoy the view.

The key to effecting change, and to bringing about healing in our fractured world is for each individual to begin to acknowledge and accept themselves for who they truly are, and to embrace their personal power - using it to guide their steps along the path of day to day living.

A word of caution, however, is given in the quotation from the essay, given above. It is a manifestation of the difference between Power over, and Power with.

Google, “power over vs power with,” and you will be given access to a good many articles and explanations of what this means and what the difference is, but for me, my personal experience of the different (and of the very damaging) use of power over came through my involvement with the Pagan Network in the UK during the 90s, and the Wiccan Covens with which I have worked over the years. Put simply, power over is using one’s authority or position, one’s knowledge and skills in order to control other people or groups of people. Power with, on the other hand, is the embodiment of ‘first among equals,’ where no one individual is considered more important than the others, everyone’s skills and knowledge are honored and added to the melting pot - one might say, cauldron, and applied in times of the necessity of problem solving.

Think of the image of King Arthur’s round table… where the knights of Camelot all gathered at a circular table so that there was no head, because each knight was considered equal in status and importance to the realm, even the king.

It is a far more community oriented model of living and of walking the day to day path of life between the secular and the spiritual. One in which an individual is not afraid to seek the advice of a friend or mentor, and who is also free to act on that advice or not, according to their own thoughts and needs; their own sense of personal power. It is also a model in which no one person is ever thought of as ridiculous or ‘wrong’ (for want of a better/clearer word), because everyone’s voice is equally heard, and accepted or rejected as ‘good advice’ by each other individual, before a general consensus is reached. Under such a set of expectations, no one is ever afraid to speak or to seek to be heard.

That part of the text accompanying the entry struck me quite profoundly when I further realized that, in recent years - and quite disturbingly - I have allowed myself to become subjected to others’ negative power-seeking behaviors, and thus to be harmed. Many people, whether consciously or unconsciously, strive to exert power over others… often such people are those who feel the most power-less in their personal lives, using this as a way to take back some sense of that. However, such a strategy is isolating, and accrues negative feedback, negative energy, negative Karma, and leaves such people wondering why they are so lonely and unhappy in their apparent position of power. Nepo expresses this thought as follows:

But now, as a tired adult, when I feel alone and powerless atop whatever small hill I’ve managed to climb, I secretly long for anyone to join me. Now I”m ready to believe there’s more power here together

And I can’t think of a better way to put it.
cedar_grove: (Storm)
I have spent several weeks in contemplation of when, for me, the new year should begin, or perhaps has already begun. I tell myself this, and not that it is procrastination against the beginning of an undertaking, or perhaps the opposite, a wish for a precipitous beginning of said undertaking. The fact remains, I have questioned, and still question when a new year begins for an individual. When does it begin for me?

As a Wiccan, should my new year have begun in November, as Samhain passed us into the gathering season of winter, or did my new year begin almost a month later with the start of a journey that has led me to the threshold upon which I now stand – or may even have unknowingly passed beyond already? Did my personal new year begin as a new year of my life began with my birthday on December 11th or with the new solar year, and returning light at Yule? Or should I simply do as most folk seem to do and say my new undertaking will begin with the new calendar year as 2016 gives way to 2017?

There are so many conventions that we follow, cultural and religious, and some that fall into both categories. The notion of the ‘New Year’s Resolutions’ have never appealed to me, and not just because many (if not most of the people I personally know) give up on those resolutions soon after making them – myself included in the past. Perhaps that’s why, through this soul searching, I have shied away from that option, and why I questioned in the first place.

Through my introspection, not just of recent days, but of many months, perhaps even years – and extrospection (though Google tells me that even though technically this is the anonym of introspection, it is rarely used), I have discovered a thing or two. This is the point at which I feel I must type the disclaimer that, if you think this part of my journal entry is about you, well… that’s your prerogative, I suppose, but this is my journal, and these are my observations. However, as the saying goes, if the cap fits… or the shoe fits, then… be Cinderella if you must.

There are too many people out there who can’t, or perhaps worse, refuse to see past the end of their own garden path. Such people trap themselves in their own misery, and as prisoners lash out at those around them, transferring their misery and negativity to people who are merely trying to help them realize their own state of being. I’ve been an enabler of such behaviors for the sake of a quiet life, because the gods know that when I’ve tried to do otherwise, all holy hell has broken loose.

Loyalty, like charity, must begin at home. Blind loyalty to other people or beliefs or any other thing that one can be loyal to is often self-destructive. Loyalty to someone or something that reinforces or promotes self-deprecation or a negative self-image, no matter who or what that someone or something is; what part that person or something else plays in your life, is an act of cowardice, not loyalty, and ultimately damaging for you and for others in your life.  As with love, if you cannot love yourself, you cannot properly love others – if you cannot be loyal to yourself, then your loyalty to others is misguided at best.

Ignoring the wise words of good friends and loved ones is just plain stupid and can only lead to trouble and pain. You might think your reasons for arguing the point (inwardly or outwardly) are good and valid reasons, but experience and hindsight will always come around like a two-headed dog to bite you on the ass. When that happens, you know the people that had your best interests at heart when they spoke the advice because, while they might remind you of what they said, they’ll never say, “I told you so,” and will just be there in quiet support while you find your feet after being knocked on your smarting backside.

There’s great sadness in the realization that sometimes, people will – by their own thoughts and actions – disqualify themselves from certain parts they have played in your life, and you can fight and flail all you like to keep them there because you want them there, but if that want isn’t truly and unconditionally matched, there’s little you can do but create a negative and toxic situation for the both of you that is ultimately damaging. Conversely, people can sometimes surprise you. When you least expect it, with a single word, or a short message, people you might have once been close to, that you didn’t even realize you missed, can give you a boost when you’re at your lowest ebb, and remind you that they’re still there.

In all of the above, I’m drawn to, and feel the need to also share a story that was given to me as a ‘lesson’ by one of those wise friends many, many years ago - a wonderful man by the name of Alawn Tickhill - who told me the Story of the Sparrow – and you can find it here.

So… anyway, the conclusion I came to, is that really and ultimately, when and why I start the undertaking is entirely up to me. Also, it’s no big secret what the undertaking is.  It’s just that I’ve been wanting to do more journal writing for a very long time now, and I thought, well, with a new year, it might be time to start this journaling journey.  I’d like to say I’ll write every day. Even though that might be my intent, I know that sometimes life is going to get in the way. I also know that’s perfectly fine.

What I write, how often I write, and why I write – well, those things are my prerogative and my responsibility too.
cedar_grove: (Eirian with a smile)

I don't like schedules. They deny spontaneity and stifle flexibility if you stick to them, and if you don't,  what’s the point of having one? The other problem I have with schedules is that it's rare that life, the universe in particular, rarely respects the orderly progression of tasks that you’ve so carefully laid out so that everything gets done in a timely manner. This can manifest in things not working out the way you intended, or other people asking things of you that mean adjustments be made, and if you’re anything like me you’ll put whatever it is that has been asked of you ahead of your schedule, ahead of the things you’ve planned (read want) to do after you’re done with the chores on your list of things that must be done.

Inevitably, those desired activities/tasks remain unfulfilled, initiating a stress response, leading into a spiral of negativity and resentment - unless you’re able to embrace true selflessness… a fully enlightened state of being that few of us, myself included, reach in our lifetime.

So what’s the solution? What are  the answers or the steps to strive for at the beginning of our golden solar path? I believe it’s a matter of learning how and when to say, “no” or, “not right now,” and not being afraid to take care of self while adhering to the schedule you made; recognizing when you need a moment of and for you, and not feeling guilty for doing so.

cedar_grove: (Eirian with a smile)
As I sit here, trying to think how I should begin, to find the start of my path for the coming solar year, the rain outside is soaking the ground, the sky overhead is grumbling with thunder. The saying over here is that if there is thunder in the winter time, there will be snow a Tenday later, yet we are currently 'enjoying' record temperatures. There is something wrong with that – it's called Climate Change, and yes, it does exist.

Day before yesterday was the Winter Solstice. Mir and I were travelling on that day, back from New York City where we'd been visiting with good friends, and stopped in on the National Museum of the Marine Corp on the way back to visit the statue of Sergeant Reckless. We were surprised also to see a piece of the WTC that we'd seen transported to the museum along the New Jersey Turnpike a long while past now… and remembered the Firefighters on the bridges paying their respects as it passed. To lay my hand upon the concrete and steel was a profound moment… one right for the introspection the Solstice and winter season invokes into a life.

Perhaps that's where my coming journey begins… like a seed, buried in the dark earth, sheltered from the cold and the wet and the external pressures latent in the unfolding year, held together by the protective pressures of my own internal thoughts, like the arms of Mother, holding Her child, who has wandered.
cedar_grove: (Eirian in silver 3)
The first time I felt this way, and had the very same thought, I was standing in the shower watching the snow fall down outside the frosted glass of the bathroom window; the second also in the shower, though this time the sun was shining - or trying to shine - outside. This third time I am once again in the shower, but this time it is dark, the temperature of the shower is far too high, and rather than watching the distorted world through the bathroom window's frosted glass, I am watching the steam obscuring my view, the condensation settling on the window, shrouding the frosted glass and the symbolism of it finally penetrates my brain as the question surfaces again: Why have I not been blogging? Why do I not post my status on Facebook? Do I truly have nothing to say?

Oh, certainly, I might share a whole bunch of photographs or inspirational quotations from other pages that I find meaningful or poignant, and sometimes I might even do more than just hit the share button, and post a word or two about why I have shared them, but little more.

I've known for some time I've been censoring myself; editing myself so that the frames come together to tell the story in another way, because... well.. frankly it's just easier that way - far less conflict.

Except inside myself.

So I said, on several occasions, that I wasn't going to do it any more, and yet here I am still doing it... and frustrating myself in that. I have ended up feeling like I have (or worse yet, should have) no voice, no opinion and certainly no feelings. The upshot of which has further hampered any sense of creativity and life that was all but stifled - as if with a pillow over the face - by a year long sojourn in Egypt.

Happily I'm out of that situation now. Still not where I truly want to be, but... what can I say? Some countries and some of her peoples are certainly backwards in their own sense of egality and in following the literal, and the meaning in spirit, of their own founding principles. So much so, that they shroud any route toward said egality in so much thorny red tape that even their own citizens do not know and cannot understand all the ins and outs of navigating it in order to gain admittance. I hate politics... and that's one thing you probably won't find me blogging about any time soon, (more than I have done just here anyway).

So what's to say, and what's to do, and definitely what's to write when all that was creative in my soul has been somehow deadened to the point where, yes - I will latch on to anything that is in the remotest bit a resuscitation, a work around, or even a leg up and over the dreaded wall of 'writer's block' that has been plaguing me for the last eighteen months or so?

The Use'ara cycle was coming along nicely, getting the Nano treatment but then was interrupted by the move to Cairo. Similarly the Life After series ground to an unceremonious halt. I turned to fandom to keep some shred of creativity alive, and managed at least to finish the 13th story of a series I had been working on before the block caught up even there.

But I digress...

As far as Facebook is concerned, I feel... uncomfortable, that's a nice gentle word, let's use that one, posting about what's going on and how I feel about it. I know I shouldn't, but sometimes, some of the posts I read on my news feed seem so much like people just airing their dirty linen in public, as it were. Do I really want to do that? Maybe it's just my overly conservative (note the small c) British nature that causes that. Should I adopt a more bolshy, forthright approach like other world citizens and just... tell it like it is, warts and all? Maybe I should try it for a while and see or feel the results for myself.

As for blogging, well, I find that the trouble with a lot of blogging is that in many cases, it tends toward political comments. I've already stated I don't really do politics. Oh, I live with them, like everyone has to because they're a sad fact of life. I have an opinion on political matters too, but in most cases that is my own and not for sharing. The trouble with political blogging is that, at least to me, it seems always to be hateful and angry. There is much to be said for exercising the option not to say anything at all, and to allow that to speak for your opinion and feelings on a matter. Is that not the basis of the advice your mother always told you: If you can't say anything nice, don't say anything at all? Other types of blogging require... well... something to happen to inspire it. Stuck in my little hamster-wheel I usually end up feeling like the most boring person on the face of the planet. Who wants to read over and over again about the traffic on my way to wherever, and the kids (Whether hellions or angels) that I meet and work with?

Oh, I know there's more to it than that, and yes, I'm probably making excuses because - as happened very recently - when I do open my yap about something or another, it rarely ends up with me feeling any better about things and/or myself. But, since discourse is generally thought of as good, and because I have to do something to unlock this door, or take a wrecking ball to the wall that is standing between me and the creativity, which I know has to be on the other side of the wall, let this be a public affirmation of the permission to at least try... and feel free to poke me - but gently - with reminders to comply with my own wishes.

(A/N: As an demonstration of what I mean through all of this - it has taken me 3 months to write this.)
cedar_grove: (Default)

The value of a worthy woman is far beyond pearls. She obtains wool and flax and makes cloth with skillful hands. She rises while it is still night, and distributes food to her household. She picks out a field to purchage; out of her earnings, she plants a vineyard. She is girt about with strength and sturdy are her arms. She enjoys the success of her dealings; at night her lamp is undimmed. She puts her hands to the distaff and her finers to ply the spindle. She reaches out her hands to the poor, and extends her arms to the needy. She fears not the snow for her household; everyone is warmly clothed; She makes her own coverlets; fine linen and purple are her clothing. She is clothed with strength and dignity, and she laughs at the days to come. She opens her mouth in wisdom, and on her tongue is kindly counsel.

--Proverbs31: 10-31



Women's efforts at sustaining hearth and home are less rewarded now. When money is the measure of a task's worth, unpaid labor is devalued and even derided.

So sad, so true.. and the saddest and truest thing is that women ourselves believe this... and society upholds it, in many ways, and mostly in the name of feminism and equality.

Okay - let's start by saying first off that I'm not against feminism, and I'm not against equality... just that to me, equality does not necessarily mean men and women doing exactly the same work, for the same financial reward... and feminism is not all about burning one's bra and being militant for women's rights. Women's rights, like anything else (including the rights of men) must be earned.

So... having established I'm anti-female-establishment... let me explain myself. Men and women are equally valuable in the male/female balance within life = equality. They may do different jobs - they may choose to live their lives in different ways to the traditional/expected, but each has their own worth in their own ways. Equality. Sure if Dan and Danielle have the same job in a firm, perform the same tasks, with the same level of competence and qualification, then of course they should be compensated fairly - equally. It would not be equal if Dan got a greater level of compensation simply because he does not have breasts and does not have to sit down to pee (unless he's really drunk and just can't handle standing). Equally it is not equal if the firm practises 'positive' discrimination and rewards Danielle more simply because she does, and can... and lets face it, since when has any discrimination been positive?

Standing up with a clear voice to speak for all that it means to be female = feminism. It is certainly not about putting men down. Nor is it about bitching and moaning about the inequality shown to women. It happens. It will always happen. Get over it. It happens the other way around too. Did you know that as a male, you cannot be a daycare teacher and be alone with chidren? You cannot sit a child on your lap, or put your arm around a child to comfort them if they are crying in class... accept a hug from a child who is simply happy to see you in the morning - most inappropriate - NOT! So... let's not heap the pot'o'blame on men. Rather, actually, the 'blame' is our own if we really want to blame anyone at all....

But... I somewhat digress...

When did it suddenly become 'uncool' to be a 'housewife' and mother... even a working one? I mean whether it's the woman or the man that does the home-making, and whether they work as well or not, when did there cease to be honour and value in what is an essential part of protecting and nurturing a family.

During the summer, and at other times when I am in NC, I spend my days engaged in those domestic activities. Laundry, cooking, cleaning, sewing sometimes, shopping for groceries... and I find it very empowering. I don't feel devalued or derided by it at all, no matter what society might think. Empowered by the knowledge that I'm keeping the home, looking after my guy... it might sound small, but there's great energy and life in that... at least for me.

I wonder if society realises how much it is stifling itself, it's own creativity in destroying this balance... The balance of male and female energies within each individual, as well as within couples - whether they be heterosexual or not.
cedar_grove: (Default)

She was beautiful in appearance,
and had a very lovely face;
she had inherited gold and silver
and cattle and fields, and
she maintained her estate
well and made it flourish.
No one spoke ill of her.


--Book of Judith



For each of us, too, our daily lives are the seedbed for the moments when we are tested.

Being tested does not have to mean huge great problems that we wonder how in the world we are meant to deal with them... but it is what most of us will think about when we are presented with the concept of 'being tested' and I am no different.

And it is my thought just now that in thinking in such a way, we - I - miss those opportunities to recognise other times in which I have been tested and have 'passed' the 'test.' Small moments where there was the opportunity to deal with something in a manner that was full of grace, or to panic and flail and be less than decorous about some small thing that crossed my way.

In missing those things... in missing those moments, I feel I somehow lessen my own engagement with my inner state of grace, and that this is perhaps one of the things that is missing from the peace of my sense of self.

Someone somewhere once said, Don't sweat the small stuff. I had a calendar that was all about that one year - one of those ones that you tear off a page for each day - kind of miss having one of those again - and while we shouldn't sweat it, I most definitely agree - we shouldn't ignore it either.

It's the small stuff that makes all the difference.
cedar_grove: (Default)

Let us begin. Let us sing.
Singing of the small corn.
Singing of the Large corn.
Singing as the evening falls.
Singing as the light dawns.

The light dawns and finds us singing,
singing as the corn waves tassels at us.
The dark falls and finds us singing,
singing while the squash waves leaves at us.

The earth rumbles from the beating
of our basket drums.
The sky rumbles from the beating
of our basket drums.

The rain comes. The rain comes


--Pima rain-making song



When the weather thwarts our plans this summer, when weekends are rainy and evenings damp, let us recognize the rain's necessity and thank the goddess for her bounty. The lush green fields and full larders will be our rewards.

Elsewhere in the entry this talks about a balance of opposites being necessary for a healthy life - rest and activity, waking and sleeping, as well as sun and rain, and all of those things... it's a very overarching concept to me that was summed up in this meditation... that of 'disappointment' and how we behave when things don't quite go our way.

I'll be the first to admit, I'm a screaming haridan. I don't deal well with disappointment at all, on any level. I've admitted it here now, and here on several occasions in the past. I sulk like a child. I get sarcastic, I behave in a miserable way. At such times I'm horrible to be around... even when I try not to behave this way. There's a certain self-centredness embodied in this reaction and to check myself from behaving like the spoiled child that throws the teddy from the pram when things go wrong, there's a necessity to step away - outside of myself. To be self-less. I used to be much better at that than I am now, and I don't know what I've lost or what I feel I've had imposed on my that I obviously feel the need to protect sense of self...? I don't know, at this point I'm just letting my mind ramble down pathways towards answers.

So narrowing down to just the weather aspect of this, which is where it began - this summer, yes, I'm hoping for a balance of sun and rain... of all those things that are needed for a healthy world, but also in a way that does not scupper too many plans. Mir and I bought a tent to go camping and I'm very much looking forward to being able to use it - even if not a million miles away from our home... Campingpod One here we come!

On a different, but related note - I'm kind of a little bit worried about my preparedness for being back in England, even if only for a weekend. I have no raincoat - few things for colder weather at all as a matter of fact, and footwear is either trainers or flipflops, (albeit smart flipflops) - which might not be entirely appropriate for whilst wandering in some places. LOL How bizzare to move from the intellectual/spiritual considerations, to worries that are entirely practical.
cedar_grove: (Still life)

The forest is beyond my strength.
My rose is hidden far from me.
If the wood were less in length
My rose would be less far from me.

If I could have my precious rose,
I'd live in love forever.
If I knew what Shekinah knows
My exile would be shorter.


--Song of Rabbi Isaac of Laig



Like the rose-windows that shone in medieval cathedrals, the rose shines forth from spiritual poetry, embodying profound spiritual meaning.

I've always been attracted to roses, though not necessarily as a symbol of wisdom. I like the aesthetic shape of them, their scent... to think of them as a symbol of wisdom and to link them with spiritual poetry - that's new for me.

I suppose it shouldn't be, though I don't know why.

It may be because my experience of writing poetry has always been more of an emotional one than a 'spiritual' one. I've only written one with a specific spiritual bent, and that was a prose poem that I'm sure I've posted onto LJ before at some point... concerning the creation of life and the world through the love of the Lord and Lady of life. The rest of the time the poetry I've written has been an outlet for my emotions, and usually at a time when those emotions were stormy or intense

That is what feels 'normal' to me for the writing of poetry.. so am I sitting here now thinking that I should be writing poetry of a more spiritual bent? No, I don't think so. I just find it curious that I should have gone down this avenue of thought when beginning at the rose.

Taking the rose as a symbol of wisdom... deconstructing that symbol through meditation has been interesting - with the outer petals that are the simple, easy to access and understand wisdoms of every day life. They are soft, they are beautiful and we can smell the fragrance of the rose, but know instinctively that the greater scent and deeper wisdoms are coming from within... so we look harder, and we breath deeper, and the closer, more tightly budded petals of the mid and inner parts of the rose are revealed, slowy as the outer open to us, fall away for us to see - to understand the inner. This is the process by which we acquire our wisdom, through patience, watching and waiting, and living beyond the unfolded softness of those outer petals of the world.

We listen to... we see and seek, and breath the inner core of the rose.

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