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Editor's Note
Welcome to the March edition of Spiral Dance News, a monthly ezine published byThe Femi9 Lodge.
Happy Birthday to all who are born in this month of March.
I know that this issue is coming to you a little later than usual and I ask your forgiveness, but as you know, things in life happen sometimes to cause delays. Then again, all things are always in Divine Order, so this issue is actually right on time.*smile*
As you may well know, this is the month that we celebrate Women’s History Month. During this month, one should give honor to those women that have made an impact upon their lives.
You might want to take that special woman out to dinner or honor her with a crowning of some kind. Give her a gift that shows her how much you appreciate the influence that she had upon your life. I'm sure that she will love you all the more for recognizing her contribution to your life.
Another event that takes place this month is the Spring Equinox. The New Year celebrated by those who align themselves with new life being born by the Great Earth Mother.
Celebrations abound. Enjoy it all. Walk in nature. Breathe in Her essence. Become one with all things and celebrate all aspects of life for they all have their purpose.
Let us continue on our path of the Divine Femi9, with a light and joyous heart.
May all of your lessons come with grace and may your blessings be abundant!
Sending love and (((((hugs))))) to all of you and thanks for your continued support.
Enjoy the articles, the music and the loving vibrations that are being sent to you all.
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Honoring My Mother
My Mother was a wonderful, kind-hearted, beautiful, energetic woman…but she had a pained life.
Marjorie Catherine Whindleton was born in Albemarle County, Virginia on June 21, 1929. She was raised there and went to New York at the age of eighteen, where she lived out the rest of her life with my father, James Alexander Freeman, whom she married on March 2, 1946.
Mom birthed three children. I was the first born, followed by my brother James Jr. and another brother, Alexander.
When I was a little girl, growing up, my mom used to sing a lot. We would dance and sing as she walked me to school every week day morning. It was a wonderful time. I was an only child until the age of six.
My brother, James Jr. was born right after my sixth birthday, but not without complications. Serious complications. During labor, mom's appendix burst and for some odd reason the doctor thought she was in labor for thirty three hours! A little too long for a second birth in my opinion.
Because of the appendix bursting, oxygen was cut off to my brother’s brain and he was born with complete brain damage. He and my mom were in the hospital for a long time. She was there for three months and he longer.
After coming home, she could not rest for she would go to the hospital twice a day to feed my brother because the nurses didn’t want to take the time to deal with such a challenge. He couldn’t swallow by himself. He couldn’t do anything, except cry. My mother had to work his jaws in order for him to swallow his milk. It was quite sad and it changed our household tremendously.
Mom felt extreme guilt for having birthed such a child. My brother Jr. was the first born son, a handsome boy, but quite handicapped. She never forgave herself for not having a perfectly functioning child.
She did her best.
For three years my brother lived and cried most of the time. Mom dealt with this pain of an imperfect and demanding child with every ounce of her strength. There was a time when he almost died in the house, and my father suggested that he be placed in a facility that was better equipped to handle him. It was off to a hospital on Staten Island where he died after a few months.
Drinking became the norm for my mother after that - trying to drown her sorrows in a bottle of scotch or vodka. Those were her two favorites. It didn’t help. Escapism never does.
When mom was sober, she was one heck of a woman. A lively little lady she was. Laughing, playing pranks, telling jokes, helping others, being the near perfect mom. Yeah, she was some kinda wonderful when she was sober.
Now mind you, even when she was drinking, she would still make sure that the dinner was cooked, the house was cleaned and the family well taken care of, before she went to bed to sleep off her latest episode with that bottle of scotch or vodka.
There were months when she didn’t drink at all, and of course those were the best. She was not abusive when she drank, just sorrowful. She released some of her pain and anguish through tears.
We would talk about things sometimes, mostly superficial - the pain was so great in her heart that it affected us as a Mother and Daughter team. We didn't talk about the pain. We didn‘t know how.
I loved my mom's energy and her Spirit. She had a strength at times that was awesome! A certain strength in Spirit. Yet she was weak from the birth of her first born son. She never got over that.
There were those times when we'd bake cookies and cakes together and I'd lick the bowl clean. She taught me how to cook and to respect my Elders. She enrolled me in Girl Scouts, dancing school and charm school. The relationship we had was good, but it lacked the closeness that is so very important between Mothers and Daughters.
I’ll always remember the time when I had become a militant and a vegetarian at the age of fifteen, and the poetry I wrote reflected that. My mother couldn’t understand how her nice, middle class daughter could revert to such things - and when I cut my shoulder length hair into a short afro, she had a fit. I stayed with another family for a couple of weeks until my actions were explained to her by another Elder. It was the year 1965 and black awareness was on the rise.
Those were some interesting times.
Since she didn’t like the poetry that I had written back then, she did not hestitate in throwing them out. Needless to say we were both truly upset with one another.
…but I loved my mom. She had a way about her.
My mother even with her challenges, was the type of mom that recognized all holidays. We celebrated often. Every major holiday, we had the works - big dinners, homemade desserts, creatively made punch, family members and friends to share in the celebrations - all this whether she was drinking or not.
I wished I could have helped her to understand her feelings of guilt, but I didn’t know then what I know now. The agreement that she made before coming to this planet could have been no other. She was balancing her karma.
Marjorie Catherine, better known as Kathleen Marjorie was the kind of woman who would run into a burning building to save a child. She sewed a lot and knitted a little, attended PTA meetings, was involved in whatever church she was a member of at the time, as well as other organizations, helped whomever she could, whenever she could. My mother was well liked by a lot of folk, she had that type of personality.
Mom had done some professional dancing as well. She loved dancing and when we danced together, I'd learn some new/old moves. She taught me how to do “Around the World and the Shimmy" with a flair that is ingrained in my being to this day. I loved hearing about her dancing exploits - letting me know that as a young woman her body moved 'like a fish with no bones' - sharing with me how she would slither down and around her partner's body in some exotic dance routine. You go girl!
We didn't know about the healing power of 'moving like your mother told you not to.' It may have helped her to really heal if she had been taught the secrets of the Ancestral Mothers.
Whenever we danced together, we’d turn up the music and the world was ours. That was exactly how we felt, alone in the world, dancing to the sounds of Aretha Franklin, James Brown and so many others. We were two women doing our 'thang'.
Mama Kathleen helped to raise my daughter after my first husband and I separated. Her granddaughter, had nine years of knowing this awesome but troubled woman. The ups and the downs. The good times and the not so good times. My mother and my daughter, they were some pair.
I was thirty one years of age when my mother made transition. She was sixty and she was tired. Tired of searching for the right church. Tired of feeling guilty. Just plain ole’ “sick and tired of being sick and tired.”
On Sept. 24, 1982 Kathleen Marjorie Freeman, as she was known to the world, passed from this earthly existence. She was home in her bed when she made the journey. That was the way she wanted it.
It hurt me that I hadn't mailed off her birthday card. Remember, her birthday was in June. I had wanted to say something really meaningful and special - searching for the right words to express just how much she meant to me - especially since she was quite instrumental in helping to raise her granddaughter, with my father's help.
My brother, Alexander called to tell me of her death. I was stunned. I couldn't believe it. Not mom, she was the strength of the family, no matter what. She was the one who kept everyone together, no matter what.
I rode out to Queens, not aware of anything around me - upon arriving at the house, I walked up the stairs to her room where she was lying in her bed covered from head to toe with a pink and blue crotched blanket. I cried and laughed all at the same time. I was in shock. My mom was dead. She was gone. Her Spirit had left her body.
Mom used to always tell me that when she died, she wanted to be buried in her orange dress. Per her request, I did just that. One must do what is requested of them, so that the soul of the dearly departed can rest knowing that their desire was fulfilled.
As she lay there in the funeral chapel, surrounded by friends and family, the look on her face was one of complete peace. It appeared as if she had a smile on her face. She was finally resting, free from guilt and pain. She was ready for the next stage of her evolution.
I didn't know exactly how many friends my Mom had until she made transition. They all came to see her off. It was a beautiful sight to see and a beautiful day as well. The sun shined brightly that day. A calm breeze was blowing. It was a perfect send off.
I have a Mommy Memorial Basket that I put certain things in, her many citations and awards, some of her favorite jewelry, her sexy long gloves, the flowers from the funeral, a piece of the dress that she was wearing on the day she was given back to The Great Earth Mother, pictures of the family, letters that I’ve written to her since her passing and the birthday card I never mailed.
Mom if you are reading this, I want you to know that I miss your earthly presence, but I understand why it had to be the way it was. You have helped me to be the person that I am today. The love and the strength of conviction that you gave me was food for my soul. I pass it on. Thank you for being the Sacred Womb Vessel for my journey to this planet.
You are the woman whom I honor during Women’s History Month. Love you Ma!
Dr. Tonya Metaphysical Minister - Motivator
Affectionately Known as Mama Monifa
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| Wise Woman's Way
by Linda Savage

THE WISE WOMAN’S WAY
In the Native American tradition, a woman is not fully grown until she reaches the age of 52. Many women have gained that honor and some are still looking forward to it.
A portion of the current generation of postmenopausal women is consciously aware that they are Wise Women. For many others, the idea is just dawning, just under the surface of awareness and the message of my new book will serve as another push to awaken. I encourage you to claim that honor.
We are the Wise Women.
We can learn from what it meant in ancient times, in societies where women were honored and given important roles as healers and keepers of the words of power of their clans. Shaman believe that women carry the void and that their wisdom comes from the womb. When they stopped having a monthly blood flow, they retained their blood and it made them wise. We can learn to harness that power through visualization and guided meditation, which taps into our deepest source of our wisdom.
Ancient Wisdom
You may be aware that there is a great revival going on, around the globe. People of every ethnic background are reclaiming their spiritual roots and learning from the ancient ways of their ancestors. As women, the cultures of the Great Goddess and their wisdom are our roots. For those of you that are new to the Goddess information, there are cultures that existed for more than 30,000 years, until around 5 to 8000 years ago, that honored the Divine Feminine and were women-centered. There is a worldwide sisterhood of Shaman women who have come forward to teach the ways of the sacred feminine in this new millennium. They are also sharing their knowledge of the powers of wise women. The baton is being passed to our generation of wise women. It is our legacy, and our privilege to carry and enhance this knowledge in this period of transformation.
There is evidence that wise women of the past continued to explore and enjoy the special gift of feminine sexuality. The earth honoring societies understood the awesome creative potential that is inherent in sexuality. In the Ancient Goddess Cultures, women’s sexual desire, was considered an active, powerful erotic drive. Their view of sexual energy was far more life affirming then the repressive and distorted patriarchal messages about sex that have prevailed in the last two thousand years. The wisdom of ancient cultures is that sexual desire is a sacred gift of the Great Mother. In these cultures women were raised to feel plenty of permission to explore their unique pleasure, without judgment, and in a worldview that integrated sexuality with spirituality.
Ancient Roles
The ancient wise women were the healers of their people-both physical and psychological. They were the midwives for both birth and death. They were the visionaries whose dreams were heeded as important messages for their people. Decisions that would affect the lives of their entire clan were made based upon a consensus interpretation of these visions. They were the teachers of the sacred traditions and grounded the energy for ceremonies. They called the animals for the hunt. They called on the ancestors and also heard the voices of spirit. Because of their special gifts, Wise Women became the intercessors between those living and the world of spirit-the ancestors, guardians, and all the divine entities (as their people understood them).
I’d like to give you some specific examples.
The ancient wise women were the keepers of the sacred words of their tribes. In pre-dynastic Egypt, the matriarch of the village was called the Heq. The Heq was a wise woman who commanded the hekau or "Words of Power." When the tribe gathered, she would speak the words that formed the intent and protected the gathering. In other words, the wise woman, or Heq, held the sacred space. The name of the ancient goddess Hecate, or Heket in Egypt, is derived from this word for the tribal wise woman.
Native American wise women were called the Grandmothers and they held positions of great power. In the Cherokee Nation, the Grandmothers sat on the war council. It was they who decided whether the tribe would go to war. The tradition evolved from the wisdom that these women knew the sacrifice of giving birth and would not make a rash choice to snuff out lives unless it was absolutely critical to the survival of their people.
Wise women were not simply sweet old ladies dispensing advice to their heirs, but were women of power, passion and action, and they were essential to their communities.
What does it means to be a wise woman in our time? A very large number of our current generation of wise women have had their attitudes shaped by the women’s movement, either directly by having been involved in various women’s groups or indirectly by benefiting from the increased opportunities. Never before in the last several thousand years have we had so many competent women with the experience and the resources to make a difference. These are the women who are reaching the final third of their lives, and discovering an awesome power.
Their numbers are part of their strength but there is so much more: the powerful potential is caused by physiological (menopausal zest), social (women gathering) and Crone Stage developmental factors. Their wisdom and fearless zest are resources badly needed in this time of global economic, environmental and social problems. In this stage of life these women are empowered by a state of awareness of their internal strengths of emotional capacity, strong will, and an acknowledgement of the wisdom gained from their lives.
However, many women carry vestiges of a broken vessel, the result of several thousand years of fear and repression and we often don’t acknowledge just how powerful we can be, and it feels dangerous. In the height of patriarchal times it was dangerous, (roughly from about 500 years BCE to the late 20th century). Especially during the dark ages and Renaissance, there was an active campaign to demonize any of the powers that were special to women, such as divination, astrology, herbal healing, midwives, mediumship (communicating to loved ones or guides in the unseen worlds), oracle predictions, soul travel and anything else associated with women’s intuition.
Until we make a shift from within, the legacy of women and their role as protectors of our planet and its children are at risk. Collectively, we have a job to do-to protect our Mother Earth and to reclaim the honor of the Divine Feminine. Individually, each of you has a path of power, which will revitalize your energy in this third stage of life.
So let’s look at some ways that we can make that shift from within and tap into our awesome womb power, the power of the void. A central question is, how do we gain and maintain the vision for our path of power?
Jamie Sams, author of Medicine Cards, offers a glimpse into the traditional Healing Quest that a Native American woman would take when seeking her vision.
According to Sams, women did not need to fast and deprive themselves out in the wilderness as men did to seek their Vision Quest. In her book, The 13 Original Clan Mothers, she explains that it was necessary for men to suffer such deprivations to get out of their intellect and reach their inner feminine, from where their visions emerge. Visions come naturally for women, from their wombspace and they must nurture themselves during their Quest to protect their bodies as nurturers of others. They don’t even have to be still and sit for hours trying to quiet the mind because that is the way of men.
Jamie Sams is of Wolf Clan Teaching Lodge. She has spent over 20 years learning from her female elders and she has gone on 17 such quests herself.
She tells us the Woman’s Way has been taught in the Black Lodges of women and in Women’s Medicine Circles for hundreds of years.
Women seeking spiritual inspiration would set up a sacred space to spend the required three-days for a Healing Quest. After finding a safe and secluded spot out in nature, the woman formed a wide circle of stones that become the perimeter of her sacred space and build a lean to, or pitch a tent in which she would sleep during the day. The woman would bring plenty of pure fresh water and simple food, such as whole grain cakes or bread so that she would have plenty of nourishment. Water was especially important because it hydrated her womb and supported her body so it would be fertile for her dreams.
During the three nights of the Healing Quest, the woman would feed the flames of the fire, burning in an inner sacred circle of stones. She would stay up all night, visualizing the opening of her womb to visions and dreams. She would also chant, sing, create simple crafts or artwork, anything that utilized the right brain and helped her tap into her intuitive sense. During the day she would sleep and dream. [For modern women, I would add a notebook and pen to her side, in order to record her visions and dreams, or a sketching pad with colored pencils]. Meanwhile, back at camp (in the Native tradition) the women of her circle would chant, sending her energy for her Quest to be successful. The support of other women was an integral component for this experience.
All of the preparation, support and intention represent a major commitment to Self that the woman makes that would ensure a powerful outcome. I tell you this story not to imply that we all need to go out and set up such a Healing Quest but to make three important points that will help you think about empowering your Self as Wise Woman.
(1). Go within, (2). Nourish the self and (3). Give birth your visions through action.
First: Go Within
The Goddess cultures of the past viewed the divine as immanent, which means that spirit was within and all around us. The Native American tradition believed that women held their visions inside of themselves in this womb space. I have a guided meditation, called Womb Wisdom that I will be happy to email you if you contact me at lindasavagephd@goddesstherapy.com
Second: Nourish the Self
Body Wisdom
Body wisdom, has its origins in the special experience of women: the three blood mysteries. Listening to your body wisdom is a powerful source of what is called “women’s intuition.” Women’s intuition is anchored in internal, physical, embodied awareness. The initiations of first blood, childbirth, and menopause focus women on their body sensations. They are uniquely feminine encounters. So also is the monthly ebb and flow of the powerful mix of female hormones. When women attend to the messages of their bodies, as they must with these natural processes, they develop a connection to their body wisdom. The more we pay attention, the more we learn. We have been taught to ignore it most of the time, but every woman has physical signs that compel her to pay attention to the process within.
This is the source of body wisdom. It is our wise inner guidance, connected to the universal pulse of life. The physical initiations of the blood mysteries represent gateways leading to new spiritual awareness. The message of the traditional Native American Women’s Way is to nourish the self and the body.
Sexuality-Spiritual Sex
One of the most important ways to nourish the self is one we often neglect, that is replenishing our body/mind with sexual energy. According to Toltec Teachings, our feminine sexual energy is essential to healing (self and others) and renewing our creativity. When our sexuality is dormant and we are not orgasmic, our serpent energy ceases to move upwards through our bodies. Merilyn Tunneshende, in Don Juan and the Art of Sexual Energy, tells us that her teachers refer to this as a “broken vessel.”
Modern wise women can become inspired to reclaim the sexual fires within even if they seem to have gone dormant. You may want to build the creative fires of your sexuality and celebrate its creative expression throughout your life. The following meditation was adapted from several sources, including Merilyn Tunneshende’s book and The Magdalene Manuscripts.
Serpent Energy Meditation
A simple way to begin moving this serpent energy (Kundalini) is to practice the fire breath, which is taught in every major spiritual sex tradition that I have researched. Begin by breathing slowly and deeply, allowing your body to completely relax. Once again, move your awareness to the area behind your eyes, down to the throat, to the heart, the belly and finally into your pelvis. As you move your awareness into your pelvic area, focus on your breathing and become more and more deeply relaxed.
As you continue to breathe deeply, imagine the energy of your breath filling every part of your pelvis, stirring the life force energy that is cradled in this area. As you inhale, feel the energy build and intensify as you continue to focus in your pelvic area. Now, as you inhale, squeeze your thighs and the Kegel/PC muscles and feel the energy moving up the back of your spine. As you exhale, imagine a fountain of energy flowing down your front and sides.
So as you inhale, feel the energy build in the pelvis and as you exhale, move the energy up your spine. Allow yourself to focus on the inhalation and exhalation for a few moments. Building the energy with your inhale and moving it up with your exhale.
Now, imagine that you are sending two streams of energy up either side of your body with each exhalation. Imagine the color gold streaming up the right side of your body and imagine the color black streaming up the left side of your body. The Black stream is your feminine energy that follows the lunar path on the left. It is connected with the darkness of the void.
The Gold stream is your male energy that rises through the solar path on the right. It is connected with the light of the sun. Begin to imagine that at each of your energy centers, these two streams, the Gold and the Black, will cross, creating a powerful alchemy in your body.
Now breathe deeply, focusing on the energy building in your pelvis. With your next exhalation, begin with visualizing the two streams of energy crossing in your pelvis, at area behind your pubic bone. Simply imagine two energy streams crossing through the generative energy center as you exhale.
Next, take a deep breath in, building the energy deep in your pelvis and with your next exhalation, focus your energy in your belly. Imagine the Black energy stream crossing the Gold energy just below your belly. With each inhale build the energy in your pelvis and with each exhale, move the energy up and visualize it crossing just below the belly.
Now with your next exhalation, focus your energy on your heart and imagine the black energy stream crossing over the gold energy stream in your heart center. Continue to breathe and relax, feeling this wonderful energy pulsing through your body, crossing at the heart.
And now, as you exhale, focus your energy on your throat and again imagine the black energy stream crossing the gold energy stream in the throat center. So as you inhale, build the energy in your pelvis and as you exhale, send the energy streams, Black and Gold, crossing in the throat chakra.
With your next exhalation, focus your energy on the area behind your eyes and see the energy streams crossing in your third eye center. Just breathe and stay completely relaxed as you visualize the Black and the Gold pulsing through your body, crossing behind your eyes.
Finally, on your next exhalation, imagine the two energies merging at the top of your head. For the next few moments, just allow yourself to sense this movement of the two energy streams, Black and Gold, running up the body and crossing at each energy center with your exhaled breath. Breathing in and building energy, breathing out and crossing: behind the pubic bone, in the belly, the heart, the throat, behind the eyes, and finally merging at the top of your head. Just allow yourself to enjoy the sensation of the Black and Gold energies streaming and writhing like gentle serpents, energizing each energy center as they cross
When you are ready, begin to bring your awareness to the room and feel your body supported by the chair and please open your eyes.
Spiritual Sex
It is my commitment to offer this special wisdom that all too often is hidden, glossed over or simply deleted when we talk about consciousness and spiritual work.
How many of you have had any experience with something you might have called sexual ecstasy or spiritual sex? You are in good company. Sex researcher and therapist Gina Ogden launched a study in cooperation with New Woman Magazine in 1999. More than 1,400 women responded. She found that 91% of women over 40 said that they had experienced sexual ecstasy or spiritual sex.
They described experiences such as “feelings of oneness with the universe during orgasm,” having out of body travel while making love, weeping with the joy of sexual bliss, being enveloped with a loving light, and touching souls with the partner. My own spiritual sex experience was a most compelling direct encounter with universal healing energy, and there were moments of boundless, timeless existence in “light/energy.”
Clearly, many women are having such experiences and are willing to talk about them. The descriptions of sexual ecstasy sound quite similar to near death experiences in some ways. There are many pathways of spiritual discovery and sexuality is one.
It is an ancient knowledge.
The ancient Goddess cultures held the view that sexuality was both a healing energy and a pathway to raising the consciousness. The ancients believed that ecstatic union with the Source of the Life Force was the ultimate expression of sexuality.
There were priestesses who were initiated into the truth about this mystery of sexual energy. These women were able to use sex for sacred purposes in the temples of the Goddess. How many of you have heard of so-called “temple Prostitutes?” The temple priestesses were called the sacred virgins. Those who served the Great Mother were “women unto themselves” free of marital bonds. These women were practicing healing and initiating others into the sexual pathway towards a more expanded consciousness.
The Sacred Virgins practiced Sexual Mastery, which is the conscious development of the spiritual sex as a sacred path. Spiritual sex may be experienced as extraordinary light, luminous colors, and feeling a loss of the sense of a physical body and even described the sense of merging with universal energy.
Clearly spiritual sex encompasses sexual energy that goes beyond physical sensations of pleasure. It incorporates the deeply loving connection of sexual communion and it also includes additional aspects of sexuality. Such experiences as:
Healing the body-mind-spirit,
Projecting visual imagery,
Divining visions and
Balancing the genders through joining with universal energy.
Third: Give birth to your visions through action
This is the action step
How you apply this life force energy impacts what you do, how you connect with others, and the impeccability of your spirit. That is why I have chosen to write about sexuality in the Wise Woman Stage of life. It is that vital.
When we take action and nurture our sexuality, we have the energy to pursue our Path of Power. It is the power that fuels your life’s work, whether it is as a healer, seer, prayer intercessor, mentor, or planetary change maker.
CHOOSE YOUR PATH OF POWER
The time comes in our lives when we turn from our previous paths of care taking, of simply doing our jobs, and of searching for ourselves. It is clear that the manner in which we live our lives, especially this last third of our lives, affects everything, including the way we pass on. It is not that we are completely done with the past or with the roles that we played, but we are now able to turn our life experience (both the wounds and the triumphs) into wisdom. We are ready to make our contribution, our special calling. This is the path of power.
This is the true purpose of the Wise Woman Stage. It is this time that we can master the powerful force of our intention. The ancient practice of shaping our lives through intention is returning as a deep understanding sometimes called the Noetic sciences, thought field therapy, or energy psychology. It is very similar to ancient practices.
According to Dr. Christiane Northrup, in The Wisdom of Menopause, the gonadrotrophin releasing hormones, FSH and LSH, which are actually brain stimulants, elevate at menopause and remain elevated for the rest of a woman’s life. This is the hallmark of the stage of the wise woman. The elevated releasing hormones offer a physiological explanation of the increase of “psychic” abilities that arises in many older women.
For several millennia, women’s powers were forced to go underground, where it became extremely dangerous to even meet together in a circle. The traditional Shamanic ways to access wisdom were replaced by the worship of laws (made by those in power) and the written word, (which could be controlled). The legacy of women’s wisdom was all but lost. Our generation of Wise Women is returning to the old ways. Our interest in methods of tuning into Divine Source such as Tarot, Astrology, Palmistry, Mediumship, Healing Touch, Creative Song, Dance. The miracle is that we have come nearly full circle and the ancient arts are back with many men as well as women practicing, studying and even proving the efficacy of these traditions with western ways of experimental methods.
So it is time for us to pursue our path and nourish it and ourselves every day.
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Linda E. Savage, Ph.D. is a licensed psychologist and sex therapist who has been exploring the mysteries of sexual healing for over 25 years. Dr. Savage is the author of Reclaiming Goddess Sexuality: The Power of the Feminine Way, which presents a view of women’s sexuality that blends the ancient wisdom of the Goddess cultures with current clinical knowledge. Visit Linda at
Goddess Therapy
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Weedwalk with Susun Weed
Copyright by Susun Weed

One of my first, and still one of my favorite, reasons for learning about plants was to become more in tune with my environment: the weather, the flows of water, the places of special energy, Mother Nature herself. The woods are lovely and deep, and there are many mysterious and powerful plants there, but they are special allies for special times. (Speaking of which, the Russian government, I am told, in desperation this February, went to consult with the witch Baba Mat, The Wise Old Woman Who Lives In The Land Of Many Tall Trees Beyond The Black Mountains. She is rumored to be an excellent herbalist and the only one who can save Mother Russia.) And while I like to walk in the woods, the plants I find myself using on a daily basis are the weeds right under my feet - in gardens, yards, driveways, playgrounds, hospitals, fence rows, institutions, and campuses. These ordinary plants have abilities that seem miraculous to me.
Shepherds's purse (Capsella bursa pastoris) is an annual in the mustard family. Cut the top half of the plant when it has formed its little heart-shaped "purses" and make a tincture to stop bleeding. Midwives dealing with postpartum hemorrhage and menopausal women who bleed heavily praise the prompt effectiveness of dropperful doses (1ml).
Cleavers (Gallium aparine) is a persistent, sticky plant which grows profusely in abandoned lots. To strengthen lymphatic activity cut the top two-thirds of each plant while it is in flower (or setting seeds) and tincture it in 100 proof vodka. I find it unsurpassed for easing tender, swollen breasts, PMS symptoms, and mild lymphedema. It is also reduces allergic reactions. I use 15-25 drops (0.5 - 1 ml) as often as every half-hour for 4-5 hours or as needed.
Chickweed (Stellaria media) has secret fiddolving powers. Ovarian cysts, dermoid cysts, lumps in the breast and elsewhere can't hold their own against her slippery ways when a dropperful (1 ml), is taken 4-5 times a day, persistently, for many months. And have you tried chickweed pesto? It vibrates with antioxidant power!
Dandelion (Taraxacum officinalis) is a persistent perennial of lawns and gardens and one of the best-known medicinal herbs in the world. All parts - the root, the leaves, the flowers, even the flower stalk - strengthen the liver. A dose of 10-20 drops of the tincture (0.5-1 ml) relieves gas, heartburn, and indigestion, as well as promoting healthy bowel movements. A tablespoon of the vinegar works well, too. More importantly, taken before meals, dandelion increases the production of hydrochloric acid in the stomach, thus increasing bio-availability of many nutrients, especially calcium. And the oil of the flowers is an important massage balm for maintaining healthy breasts. (There's lots more information on dandelion in Healing Wise.)
Dock, also called yellow dock, curly dock, and broad dock is a perennial plant, which my Native American grandmothers use for "all women's problems". I dig the yellow roots of Rumex crispus or R. obtusifolius and tincture them; I also harvest the leaves and/or seeds throughout the growing season to increase blood-levels of iron, reduce menstrual flooding and cramping, and correct hormone levels.
Groundsel (Senecio vulgaris) and Ragwort (Senecio jacobea) are some of the world's most ancient healing plants, having been found in a grave 60,000 years old. You can use the flowering tops and leaves to make a tincture which acts slowly to tonify the reproductive organs, ease PMS, and stop severe menstrual pain. A dose is 5-10 drops (0.2-0.5 ml) per day; used only once a day, but for at least 3 months. (A larger dose is used to speed up labor.)
Mallows (Malva neglecta, M. parviflora, M. sylvestres) are surprisingly deep-rooted. The flowers, leaves, stalks, seeds, and roots are rich in sticky mucilage which is best extracted by soaking the fresh plant in cold water overnight or by making a medicinal vinegar. The starch is extraordinarily soothing internally (easing sore throats, upset tummies, heart burn, irritable bowel, colic, and constipation) and externally (relieving bug bites, burns, sprains, and sore eyes).
Plantain, also called ribwort, pig's ear, and the bandaid plant is a common weed of lawns, driveways, parks, and playgrounds. Identify it by the five parallel veins running the length of each leaf. Use it to make a healing poultice or a soothing oil widely regarded as one of the best wound healers around. Not only does plantain increase the speed of healing, it also relieves pain, stops bleeding, draws out foreign matter, stops itching, prevents and stops allergic reactions from bee stings, kills bacteria, and reduces swelling. A first-aid kit in a leaf! I use a generous application of plantain oil or ointment on sprains, cuts, insect bites, rashes, chafed skin, boils, bruises, chapped and cracked lips, rough or sore hands, baby's diaper area, and burns.
St. Joan's/John's wort (Hypericum perforatum) This beautiful perennial wildflower may be hated by sheep farmers, but herbalists adore it. The flowering tops are harvested after they begin to bloom (traditionally on Solstice, June 21) and prepared with alcohol, and with oil, to make two of the most useful remedies in my first aid kit. Tincture of St. Joan's wort not only lends one a sunny disposition, it reliably relieves muscle aches, is a powerful anti-viral, and is my first-choice treatment for those with shingles, sciatica, backpain, neuralgia, and headaches including migraines. The usual dose is 1 dropperful (1 ml) as frequently as needed. In extreme pain from a muscle spasm in my thigh, I used a dropperful every twenty minutes for two hours, or until the pain totally subsided. St. Joan's wort oil stops cold sores in their tracks and can even relieve genital herpes symptoms. I use it as a sunscreen. Contrary to popular belief, St. Joan's wort does not cause sun sensitivity - it prevents it. It even prevents burn from radiation therapy. Eases sore muscles, too.
Self heal (Prunella vulgaris) This scentless perennial mint is one of the great unsung healers of the world. The leaves and flowers contain more antioxidants - which prevent cancer and heart disease, among other healthy traits - than any other plant tested. And as part of the mint family, self heal is imbued with lots of minerals, especially calcium, making it an especially important ally for pregnant, nursing, menopausal, and post-menopausal women. I put self heal leaves in salads in the spring and fall, make a medicinal vinegar with the flowers during the summer, and cook the flowering tops (fresh or dried) in winter soups.
Yarrow (Achellia millefolium) This lovely perennial weed is grown in many herb gardens for it has a multitude of uses. Cut the flowering tops (use only white-flowering yarrow) and use your alcohol to make a strongly-scented tincture that you can take internally to prevent colds and the flu (a dose is 10-20 drops, or up to 1 ml). I carry a little spray bottle of yarrow tincture with me when I'm outside and wet my skin every hour or so. A United States Army study showed yarrow tincture to be more effective than DEET at repelling ticks, mosquitoes, and sand flies. You can also make a healing ointment with yarrow flower tops and your oil or fat. Yarrow oil is antibacterial, pain-relieving, and incredibly helpful in healing all types of wounds.
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Friends Help Us Heal, and Connect to Our Feminine Spiritby Rev. Laurie Sue Brockway

Good friends help us express our true selves and find our path in life. They hold up a mirror that shows us who we truly are … and they encourage us to be more than we think we can be!
A landmark UCLA study of female friendships confirms the healing power of women's friendships. "Female Responses To Stress: Tend and Befriend, Not Fight or Flight," published in Psychological Review in 2000, said gathering with friends in a nurturing way lowers the stress and strain of daily life. Rather that the typical "fight or flight" response believed to be triggered in people under stress, the study suggested women have a more expansive repertoire of behaviors. We release brain chemicals that urge us to gather with other women, as well as tend children (or others). The more time spent with friends, the more oxytocin is released -- not just counter acting stress but inspiring a sense of calm and well-being.
Safe Harbor in Friendship
When women find a safe harbor in friendship with others, it also helps us connect to the power of our feminine spirit in a profound and deeply life enhancing way.
In the nineties, when I was the editor-in-chief of a national magazine, I invited a group of girl friends who worked in media together for a night of spirituality and girl talk. They were each fascinating, spiritual woman with high-powered careers. It felt very natural to call the evening "A Gathering of Goddesses." Everyone loved the idea, because it made us connect immediately with the idea that we are Goddesses - beautiful, smart, powerful, able to effect change in our world. We so enjoyed each other's companionship and support that first night; we decided to turn it into a monthly event. For over two years, we gathered every month to schmooze and share our stories, ending each meeting with a sacred circle in which we each took turns lighting a candle, articulating our dreams and goals and saying a prayer. We would bear witness to one another's most pressing goals in life, and we would share the vision that all these dreams would come true. Indeed, many of them did.
Media Goddesses
Because we were journalists, radio personalities, performers, TV spokespeople and authors, I nick-named the group "Media Goddesses." It was in the course of facilitating these gatherings that I discovered my new calling as an interfaith minister, and I stepped onto a professional path of facilitating women's spiritual evolution. Having the chance to gather with other women in a loving and mutually supportive way changed all of our lives. We grew and empowered each other to grow more, and, six years later, we continue to share a lasting bond. We still love to get together and, although meetings are less frequent, they are no less sacred and meaningful.
When I began calling my fabulous female friends "goddesses" I never thought twice about there being an "actual" Goddess; and I knew nothing about goddess history. Yet the experience moved me to study and seek more information. I was amazed to find that in addition to goddesses of ancient times, there are so many cultures that actually continue to worship the feminine divine; and that the language of the feminine was hidden between the lines of traditional religion.
I began to see that viewing divinity as both masculine and feminine empowered women's self esteem -- we could see ourselves mirrored in the image of the Divine because there was a She that looked like us. And also, even though many of us were fairly assertive, hard working professional women who obviously called on both male and female energies to do our work in the world, there was so much inspiration stirred up in our little group I truly did feel we were connecting to a greater source and I interpreted that source as a divinely feminine spirit.
"The glory of friendship is not the outstretched hand, nor the kindly smile, nor the joy of companionship; it is the spiritual inspiration that comes to one when he discovers that someone else believes in him and is willing to trust him."
~ Ralph Waldo Emerson
My goddess friends brought the Divine Feminine to life for me. I learned to see the goddess in me because I was seeing it so clearly in the women I love and admire. I believe that celebrating the goddess in each other helped us all connect to the feminine power within. We were so empowered by the mutual support and spirit of the group that we all came to express ourselves more authentically … and to bring that energy out into the world in our daily lives and our work in media.
Having a special group of Goddesses in human form in my life made all the difference on my life journey. My media goddess sisters have been spiritual cheerleaders. They've continually reminded me of who I am. In our connection with one another, we have been privileged to share a scared bond that has helped us all do our part to bring healing to the world.
I made a declaration at one of our meetings that I would dedicate myself to empowering women to get to know the goddess within them, and inspire women to gather together in sacred circles to help change their lives, and do their part in changing the world. That dream began to truly reach fruition when my book A Goddess Is A Girl's Best Friend was published. At the book party (at The Muse Hotel in New York, no less!), my goddess group was there, cheering me on and helping to make the evening a divine success.
If there is any time in history that women, and our world, can benefit from gathering, it is now. Whether sharing a meal and some girl talk, a night out, or coming together to pray for peace, life will change in leaps and bounds the first day you call a bunch of friends together for "a gathering of goddesses."
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Copyright © 2003 Reverend Laurie Sue Brockway . All rights reserved. If you are interested in publishing this article, please email contact@selfhealingexpressions.com
Rev. Laurie Sue Brockway is an author, teacher and contemporary clergy person specializing in matters of the heart and soul. She is creator and instructor of Find Your Spiritual Soul Mate: Transforming Your Romantic Destiny with A Romantic Resumé an email course available exclusively at SelfhealingExpressions She is The Romance Reverend ~ Soulful Love columnist for SoulfulLiving
And author of A Goddess Is a Girl's Best Friend: A Divine Guide To Finding Love, Success and Happiness (Perigee Books, December 2002).
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The Vision of the Goddess TreeTHE POWER WITHIN THE GODDESS TREE (c) 1999 by Raven Heart Dutko

Come sit with me Old Priestesses of long ago....of NOW...of Tomorrow. Come...sit in the glade of pines, oaks, hickories and redwoods, and All of the trees that contain The Power...The Truth and...The Spirit of The Goddess....Come and join me in remembering The Way…
Long ago, we gathered around the Sacred Fire of Magic and Mystery, of Healing and Secrets, and of the Heart and Spirit. We are The Knowers and The Seers, The Healers and The Dreamers. We were the first footsteps of Creation of the Feminine and The Wise Interwoven. We were and are The Mother Incarnate. We are The Beginning and the End and The Way of Knowing. We are The Keeper of the Round Table.
Oh yes, The Round Table. The Round Table of Womyn who shape-shifted through the Inner Worlds. Womyn who carried with them the Sacred Codes of Creation and brought with them from beyond the veil the knowledge of Womyn and Goddess, Power and Love. We were womyn who revealed the secrets of the Sacred Mysteries and who carried stars in the palms of our hands.
How unafraid we were of the magic that unfolded within our hearts and the knowledge that we contained within the crystalline mindscape of our Higher Understanding. We stood tall and unweathered, magnetic and powerful, gentled with warmth,... devotion...and true Compassion.
We were The Pavers, The Wayshowers, The Light Within the Dream. Barefoot, we met beneath the stars when the world grew quiet and the trees and faeries, elfins and Earth would whisper to us The Knowledge of the World Within The World. Together, we were The Weavers of the Sacred Spiral: mystical, magical and filled with the deepest knowing of Heaven and Earth.
We knew our paths. We did not hesitate or live within the darkness of confusion. We were aligned within the power of Who We Were and we lived it valiantly and with discretion. Slowly, we have unwound ourselves from the tapestry of The Priestess Way. We have forgotten the stars within our hearts and the journey of The Goddess. We, as generations before us, turned our torch to the world of men, The Keeper of Our Souls, so that sleep could rest within our minds. It was Divine Planning to allow men the opportunity to rule, to know their own power with wo-men in the shadows beyond the clouds.
For 2,000 years men would rule this planet. We would know such dark times that even rainbows and stardust could not touch the Earth.
*Magic thus became the illusion rather than The Way.*
This was not bad nor was it good. It simply was the way it was called to BE by the hu-man heart.
Womyn would awaken towards the end of time shaking sleep from her bosom. Spirit and life would pour forth into womyn as she bore the light of creation once again. It would be a time of pain and crisis, turbulence and imbalance as womyn rose within and without. Both womyn and men would become angry, hurt and confused. They would lash out at one another in blame, in guilt and in fear. The truth so far buried in the rubble of all of our lives. Power was and is shifting seeking restoration and purposeful fulfillment.
*The crisis and the tears meet only at the depth of our slumber.*
It is inevitable that we would shake the Earth with our terrible cries of punishment, consequence and release.
Power Awakens. It is electrified by its long submergence. It quakes. It spins. It blows from the depths of our beings as it emerges from our wombs.
Is it so easy to give birth to a child? Is there not pain and tears involved in this holiest of events? Of course, and so, too, it is with the birth of power and freedom. Woman emerges in ebbs and flows restoring her soul unto the world. Man shakes in confusion. His identity threatened, his place in the world no longer a birthright by gender. No one knows just where things are Truly going ( Have we done this before, this way, this time? ) or how exactly we are going to get there. We just know that we're going to some place grander than this plane of existence has yet realized.
The Priestess. The Goddess. The Light is Rising. Man is not falling. He is only shifting. We will discover an equality once again where gender, color, nationality, creed, age, sexual preferences and so forth only add texture to the fabric of our world and is, once again, embraced in its own incredible beauty.
How do we get there? We come...we gather around The Sacred Fire like long ago and we allow the Truth and the Secrets and the Emergence of our Sacred Selves to Shine Forth Within and Beyond the Illusions. We, once again, reclaim ourSelves. We, once again, gather within The Sisterhood and Walk The Path of Beauty.
We, as womyn, reclaim all that we abandonned individually and collectively. We allow Truth and Love and Self-Revelation to prevail upon the lowest cord. It is time for the caterpillar to emerge fully winged and ready to fly beyond the moon.
WE ARE THE GODDESS TREE: strong, flexible, rooted and expansive. We hold The Sacred Fire of the Mystery Schools of past, present and future. We stand rooted within the world. We are the matrix, the core, the center branch. We carry the seeds of Life, of Creation, of Knowledge and Spirits Unfoldment. It is time NOW to gather, to remember, to embrace one another as our Selves and to emerge whole, powerful and very much alive.
AS THE GODDESSES.....WE EMERGE!
Blessed Be and Welcome!!!
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Raven Heart is a published writer, artist, intuitive and Pranic Healer who has led drumming circles, built and awakened Medicine Wheels and helped to awaken The Ghost Dance for the emergence of The Rainbow Tribe. She also moderates and online group
The Goddess Tree Unfolding and can be reached at circle_weaver@hotmail.com
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Spiritual Video Games
by Mysti/Fran Hafey

In this day and age, so many people are intrigued by video games played at home or in arcades.
There are many different kinds, from fighting to role playing.
When you play these games, you choose a character to represent you and your quest.
If you have never played this game, you may choose the novice setting or beginner.
As you continue to play you move up to different levels as you become more experienced.
You may have to fight creatures or demons and come up against many obstacles over and over again.
That's how life is. Especially a Spiritual life when you have chosen your path
and work hard to stay true to it. You start as a beginner, just awakening.
You may not be so sure of the game rules so you begin slow and cautious.
You're careful and make your way through the obstacles,
little by little.
As time passes you deal with many experiences and become wiser.
You begin to move up to higher levels of knowing and understanding.
You learn to use different weapons against your opponents and the darker things that try to defeat you. You learn that you "do" have many obstacles, but many are just illusions and are not as they seem.
You protect yourself by the light and in time, you can defeat the dark things in your life.
You can change!
With the many changes of vibrational energy all around us, we can often get sidetracked
and wonder if we are heading in the right direction or if we will ever figure out this maze called life.
You will my friend.
When you awaken and choose to become consciously aware of your choices
and make the ones that you feel from your heart, not your mind.
This battle we are waging, is not one of the mind, but of the heart. We cannot think our way through
things at this time.
We, meaning all of humanity have moved up a level or few and are not dealing with things just of this physical world, but that of the spiritual realm. Things of this realm are of the heart and spirit, not the mind. We must let our hearts lead.
So, pick up your sword or weapon of light and see your heart filled with light, love and peace
and know that you truly are on the right path. Your quest is not in vain,
but is of Spirit and the heart and not of the mind.
Shared with love and peace by,
~Mysti
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Mystickblue (c) 2003 All rights reserved.
This article may be freely published so long as the author's Bylines and resource box remain intact.
About the Author:
Fran Hafey is a Minister, Reiki Practioner, Writer, Healer, Spiritual Counselor and Teacher. She provides guidance and inspiration via her Website, groups and newsletter on the World Wide Web. To read more of her articles visit the Author's Website: http://Mystickblue.com or http://groups.yahoo.com/group/SpiritualPathways/join
She's currently working on publishing her own books about love, inspiration, magic and nature stories for Children of all ages.
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Laws of the Subconscious Mind
(c) Dr. Laura De Giorgio
For the sake of simplicity, I'll use the term "subconscious" mind to refer to that function of the mind, which takes care of all the processes that are occurring out of conscious awareness.
Other terms used in hypnosis to refer to this function are the "unconscious", and sometimes "other-than-conscious". Most hypnotists and hypnotherapist's skip the term "superconscious", either out of choice or because they are not quite familiar with it. On the other hand, some hypnotists and hypnotherapists use the term "subconscious" when referring both to the functions of the "subconscious" and "superconscious", at least to some extent.
In strictest terms, "subconscious mind" is that function of the mind that stores individual's past experiences, learnings, memories, emotions, and beliefs. In spiritual jargon the term used to refer to the subconscious is "soul". And you may be familiar with the saying "As a man thinks in his heart", which also refers to "soul" or the "subconscious", because the subconscious is the place where the emotions are stored. This should also give you a clue that one way to access the subconscious mind is through emotions.
The "superconscious mind" refers to the universal storehouse of knowledge from which the individual can draw as much information as his "subconscious mind" allows to filter through. The filters, the guardians at the gate of the subconscious, are the individually held beliefs (in the subconscious mind).
As I have mentioned earlier, the ideas become impressed upon the subconscious mind through your emotions. The more intense are the emotions associated with the idea, the deeper this idea becomes imprinted upon the subconscious. In the extreme situations, this leads to so called "one trial learnings", usually under the influence of shock - one significant experience which becomes deeply impressed upon the subconscious. An example of one trial learning is a person who gets bitten by a snake where this experience becomes deeply embedded.
Another way to impress ideas upon the subconscious mind is through repetition. That's the way we develop habits. Through repetition the behavior becomes habitual and unconscious.
The more intense emotions accompany your ideas, the less repetitions it takes to impress the ideas in your subconscious mind. If you're working with affirmations, they will not yield much results unless they are accompanied by emotions and they match the beliefs that are already in your subconscious.
Generally to change "beliefs" what is required is more information. Yet, even for this new information to become permanent, you need to have a new experience that validates this information.
When you have two conflicting beliefs, the one that will win is the one that is more deeply impressed upon your subconscious. When you're attempting to uproot the beliefs that don't serve you any longer, sometimes it's helpful to bring them out in the open (into your conscious awareness), to examine them and to invalidate them, before you work on installing new beliefs that are more useful to you.
Subconscious mind communicates through symbolic language. Symbolic images, music, metaphors - all work very well with the subconscious. You'll find a lot of symbolic imagery communicated from your subconscious in the dreams you dream while you sleep. Dreaming is very important as it provides an outlet for the release of inner tensions, and for processing of information you imprinted upon the subconscious during the day. You can learn a lot from your dreams, not by consulting some "dream dictionary", but by bringing the contents of your dreams into your conscious awareness and if you don't get the message you can have an imaginary dialogue with the characters in your dreams and simply by asking your mind to clarify the content for you. You're bound to emerge from this contemplation with some insights.
When impressing the ideas upon the subconscious, you may find it even easier if you listen to music - music that either helps you to remain in a relaxed state or music that helps you to elicit the desired feeling.
Your subconscious mind loves rhythm. One way to use rhythm is by listening to music - for example, listening to drumming is one of the proven ways to alter your brain waves and lead you into a trance state. You may also dance and experience the sensations you desire to imprint upon your subconscious throughout your body. One form of dancing you may consider is trance dancing, however depending on your purpose, any kind of dancing will do - as long as while you are dancing your mind is focused upon the idea you desire to impress upon your subconscious mind.
Metaphors can be verbal, as in story-telling. They work better when you are using them to impress the subconscious mind of another person, where the person's subconscious is to get the appropriate meaning. The purpose of these metaphors is to by-pass the conscious awareness, and if you are the one who consciously created the metaphor, there's not much chance that the metaphor would by-pass your subconscious. On the other hand, reading stories rich in symbolism (e.g. fables and fairy-tales) may result in a flash of insight.
Metaphors can be visual, as in alchemical emblems. Aside from the fact that they look very beautiful, studying them and contemplating them, sometimes for a very long time, leaves impressions upon the subconscious mind and results in flashes of insight, deeper insight than may be expressed through words.
You can also draw or create "treasure maps" by pasting pictures of the actual or symbolic images of ideas you desire to impress upon your subconscious mind and place it somewhere where it will be the last thing you see before you fall asleep.
Metaphors can be tangible. Here a physical item is used to communicate to the subconscious mind a desired idea. A person may put on a robe, signalling to his subconscious mind that it's time to get into a trance state. Or a person may get a "success suit" - signalling to his subconscious mind that he now wants to access the state of being a superstar salesman. Some people use candles to represent the idea the desire to impress upon the subconscious - they light the candle and communicate to their subconscious that by the time the candle has burned down, the idea will be firmly impressed.
Metaphors can also be expressed through symbolic action, as is usually done in rituals - which may be associated with esoteric practices or may be simply ritual actions. Some examples are taking a small stone, and using it as a metaphor for a particular problem and then tossing it in a river - a symbolic action that symbolizes getting rid of the problem (burden). Or, pouring out your heart's woes on a piece of paper in a form of a letter and then burning it - a symbolic action that is meant to transform the emotional state.
Subconscious mind is global (wholistic) in nature. One characteristic of this is timelessness - there is only NOW. To successfully imprint ideas upon the subconscious you must experience them as if they are happening NOW. The only time when you can truly experience the feelings and the sensations in your body is in the present moment . You may have an approximate recollection of how something happened in the past , but if you really follow that feeling to experience it to its full intensity (in your whole body), you'll discover that you have spontaneously regressed and are re-living the past - the experience from the past has become a NOW experience. You may anticipate how will something happen in the future, but in order to fully get into that experience (with your whole body), you'll find yourself progressed in the future moment.
Another characteristic of this global aspect is that your subconscious mind does not differentiate between what you perceive as happening only in your mind (as imagined) and what you perceive as being outside of you (as real) - for your subconscious, it's all the same. For your subconscious the "reality" is determined by your feelings.
Your subconscious mind also does not differentiate between how you perceive yourself and how you perceive others. For example, your judgment which may go along the lines that "you are good " and that "the person out there is bad" is simply that "if you were to do what that other person is doing, you'd consider yourself to be bad". Another aspect of this is that you may feel upset with another person, yet your subconscious registers this upset as if it were "with yourself" and activates the release of appropriate poisonous chemicals into your own bloodstream. Ultimately thinking lovely and beautiful thoughts for others has nothing to do with wanting to act saintly, it has everything to do with "self-love" and taking care of yourself.
On the positive side, if you wanted to impress some quality upon your subconscious mind that you'd like to experience in your own life, contemplating this quality in others to the point of identifying with it, works just as well as if you were contemplating it for yourself. So if you focus on prosperity and abundance in general, contemplating the wealth in the universe you'll open yourself to these blessings.
Check out how you can
"Unleash The Power of Your Mind"
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My Decision to Have an Unassisted Homebirth by Lisa J. Patton
During the early months of my third pregnancy, while under the care of my OB, I began questioning traditional medicine and hospital birth. I delivered my first two children in the hospital.
With my first pregnancy I went into labor at 37.5 weeks. My water broke at 2:20 a.m. After laboring at home for four hours I headed to the hospital. I received a prostaglandin suppository and was told to walk. Four hours later, with hardly any progression, I was given another suppository, placed on a Pitocin drip, IV fluids, and was on an external fetal monitor. After laboring for 10 hours, I was not progressing quickly enough, so they performed artificial rupture of the membranes, placed me on a blood pressure monitor, gave me Demerol, and switched me to an internal fetal monitor. Being connected to so many machines, I could no longer walk or change positions. I was on my back, where I remained for the next 9 hours. After 19 hours of labor, I was given an epidural which only took on one side. I vomited, which helped me reach 9 cm, and was told to push. About 15 minutes later the baby was crowning. The doctor performed an episiotomy and the head emerged. He twisted and pulled, and my daughter slid out. Amber weighed 5 lbs., 11 ozs. CLEARLY there was no need for an episiotomy. I felt drugged for hours afterward.
With my second pregnancy I wanted the birth to go differently. I was three days past my due date when my water broke at 3:30 a.m. I put a towel under me and went back to sleep until 6:30. I got up, took my time showering and dressing, and arrived at the hospital at about 9:00. When they found out when my water had broken they immediately gave me a prostaglandin suppository and told me to walk. Determined to avoid Pitocin, I wanted to walk for as long as I could. At about 11:30 I had reached 5 cm and was given Demerol and continued to walk. I was still trying to walk at 7 cm but the contractions were so close that I resigned to the birthing stool. By the time I asked for another shot of Demerol, I was examined, and found to be 10 cm. I was told to push at 4:05 p.m. and was crowning by 4:19. I turned down the offer for an episiotomy, and ripped when my daughter's head emerged. She had not turned completely, and therefore developed a large contusion at the top of her head. Her quick descent did not allow time for her lungs to drain, so the nurse whisked her away to the nursery for suction, and placed her in an incubator. Jasmin was 8 lbs.
Surely, I thought, many of the unpleasantries of these two birth experiences could have been avoided. Why was such a natural process met with medical calamity?
In the early months of my third pregnancy, my husband, Aaron and I discussed having a home birth with a midwife. I really wanted an unassisted birth, but I knew he was uneasy with the idea. We spoke with several midwives, but were dismayed with the amount of intervention they each proposed. We wanted no outside intervention unless there was a problem. We finally decided an unassisted birth was the only way to have things the way WE wanted them. I searched the Internet for anything about home birth and unassisted birth. I was thrilled with the amount of information available. I read Laura Shanley's book, Unassisted Childbirth. I felt empowered. Throughout the remainder of my pregnancy I continued to read anything on homebirth that I laid eyes on. Aaron is a Certified Hypnotherapist, so we prepared for hypnobirthing with weekly sessions. I found a birthing supply company and ordered the supplies I felt would be needed. I purchased an infant scale at a local thrift store, and gathered some of the items I had in the house, like dark towels, washcloths, and a steel bowl for the placenta. I sterilized a pair of scissors and placed them in a zip lock bag. I was ready. I continued seeing my OB, but did not discuss my plan to have an unassisted birth with him or anyone I thought might dissuade me. My due date was January 23, and I was looking forward to the birth. During the week prior to the birth I had a couple of false alarms (convincing ones).
Nevertheless, I went into true labor at 1:20 a.m. on my due date. I had planned to include my two daughters in the birth, but they were both sick with the flu, so I sent them to my mother's around 7:00. I milled around the house in my robe, eating and drinking as I desired. Around noon things got more intense, so I sat down in the recliner. My husband helped me relax through each contraction as we had practiced. It was approaching 2:30 when I felt nauseous. After my next contraction I made my way to the bathroom and vomited. I knew I was in transition. Immediately after vomiting, I felt the pressure of the head descending. I told Aaron to turn the video camera on (it was on a tripod). I crawled into the bedroom where I had a disposable sheet spread on the floor. I laid a chux pad on top of that between my knees. Bearing down slightly with each contraction, I felt the baby descend naturally. I stayed on my knees.
As she crowned, I relaxed and breathed deeply, allowing my perineum time to stretch. With the next contraction my water broke and her head was out. My perineum remained intacted. Aaron looked on but did not interfere. He was very excited to see our baby's head; he said, "She's got a head full of hair!" I felt her body turn inside me. I felt her face with my hand. She was moving her mouth in an attempt to cry. She slid out (more like shot out) into my hands, and I placed her beneath me on the sheet. It was 2:47 p.m. She was calm - Aaron was laughing with excitement and taking photos. I talked gently to our new daughter, massaged her chest and back, and picked her up into my arms. She cried robustly. I gently slid my thumb and finger down the sides of her nose to clear out any fluid. We wrapped her in a towel and awaited the placenta, which arrived about half an hour later. We then clamped and cut the cord. I felt wonderful! I sat on the bed with a clean chux under me and held the baby, while Aaron wrapped up and threw away the soiled sheet and chux. We weighed and measured her at 7 lbs., 20 inches. I took a quick shower to rinse off, then got into bed. I nursed her and admired this new being I had delivered into my own hands. We named her LaVergerray, after his mother.
Our unassisted homebirth was the most peaceful, empowering experience I had ever had. It was the birth I had dreamed it could be.
Sharing birthing stories at The Labor of Love
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Dear Dr. Tonya,
My daughter was molested by a family member and has been acting as if she is possessed by a demon. She is fighting me at every turn. Has told me that she hates me and has even tried to stab me with a ball point pen.
What do you suggest that I do to help her become a whole young child again? She is ten years of age.
From a Very Upset Mother in Jamaica, Queens
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Goddess Blessings to a Very Upset Mother,
First of all, let me take a moment to (((((embrace))))) you and your daughter. I don't like to hear things like this at all but these things to happen.
After taking her to the doctor and determining the 'damage' that has been done to her physically and having him arrested, the next thing is to of course get professional help. I'm sure that the hospital and the police dept.will recommend that anyway.
As you are taking her to the psychologist for her mental state, I would also suggest that you give a try to Past Life Regression. Seek out a professional in that field. They can take her back to the point of trauma and help her to release that. This will help to make her a whole young woman again.
Another suggestion is that you get some lavender essential oil and mix it with olive oil. Because of her age, you will only want to use five drops per ounce of olive oil, extra virgin is preferred.
As you are mixing, infuse it with love and healing energy directly from your heart. You are her mother and your love for her is very strong. Give thanks that the healing is taking place as you mix the oils together.
Ask her permission to rub her down at night before she goes to sleep at night. If she feels violated in any way, stop.
I will send healing energy to you and your daughter as well as the family member who dared to molest her, for all of you are in need right now.
Be strong and know that you are not alone at this time.
Dr. Tonya
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Words of Wisdom
It's not who you are that holds you back, it's who you think you're
not. - Author Unknown -
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Upcoming Articles
"Keep a special look out for the upcoming articles by Rev. Goddess Charmaine on: Becoming a better lover with Tantra."
Looking forward to you sharing your poetry, birthing stories, comments and questions. Also, if you are interested in contributing an article to Spiral Dance News, please send an email to: truthseeker1950@yahoo.com Content may be edited.
Please support Spiral Dance News by purchasing your Yoniverse Products and thank you for being a subscriber to this growing publication. You are greatly appreciated. Oh, and don't forget about those free lemonade recipes that you can download. They're at the top in the editorial section.
Looking forward to sharing some more with you next month. Continue to be blessed all ways and always.
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Dr. Tonya K. Freeman
Editor, Spiral Dance News
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