"Loki's Brood" (1905) by Emil Doepler.

Tuesday, February 28, 2012

Feeling wolfy in New Mexico


Coyote_in_the_Afternoon.jpg

art by Carolyn Schmitz, Prescott AZ  www.desertdada.com



The Other Howl

one long persistent howl
from somewhere on the mountain,
then another howl from the hills,
then another howl from the forest

once again,
the wolf vaults 
are open wide

-John Grey



Friday, February 17, 2012

Stalking the Intrudor

Bluebeard/The Natural Predator


We must be able to stand what we see. We must go into the dark, but not be trapped, captured, or killed en route.  As we shine the light into the dark of the psyche, the shadows grow even darker.

The "animus" is the term for the female's internal masculine energy. A strong animus manifests creative work.

Take what you need from the predator, and transform the energy into power you can use.

Be brave enough to ask yourself:

What is not as it appears?

What of me has been killed, or lays dying?

What do I know deeply that I wish I did not know?

Tuesday, February 14, 2012

Start what needs starting. Finish what needs finishing.


Just because the road ahead is long, is no reason to slow down. Just because there is much work to be done, is no reason to get discouraged. It is a reason to get started, to grow, to find new ways, to reach within yourself and discover strength, commitment, determination, discipline. The road ahead is long and difficult, and filled with opportunity at every turn. Start what needs starting. Finish what needs finishing. Get on the road. Stay on the road. Get on with the work. Right now you’re at the beginning of the journey. What a great place to be! Just imagine all the things you’ll learn, all the people you’ll meet, all the experiences you’ll have. Be thankful that the road is long and challenging, because that is where you’ll find the best that life has to offer.


— Ralph Marston

Monday, February 13, 2012

Happy V-Day!

From Gloria Steinem: 
"Happy Valentine's Day! I'm pretty sure the heart shape is not really the physical heart - which is very lopsided & not symmetrical at all - but the yoni, the female genital symbol. The lingam is the male symbol & both meant power & regeneration - until patriarchal cultures reduced the heart to powerless romance. So when little girls are attracted to the heart - even dot their i's with it - maybe it's cellular memory!"
 

Saturday, February 11, 2012

A little Yoko-spiration

http://imaginepeace.com/archives/2565

THE FEMINIZATION OF SOCIETY

by Yoko Ono, February 1972


The aim of the feminist movement should not just end with getting more jobs in the existing society, though we should definitely work on that as well. We have to keep on going until the whole of the female race is freed.
How are we going to go about this? This society is the very society that killed female freedom: the society that was built on female slavery. If we try to achieve our freedom within the framework of the existing social set-up, men, who run the society, will continue to make a token gesture of giving us a place in their world. Some of us will succeed in moving into elitist jobs, kicking our sisters on the way up. Others will resort to producing babies, or being conned into thinking that joining male perversions and madness is what equality is about: “join the army” “join the sexist trip,” etc.
The major change in the contemporary woman’s revolution is the issue of lesbianism. Lesbianism, to many, is a means of expressing rebellion toward the existing society through sexual freedom. It helps women realize that they don’t necessarily have to rely on men for relationships. They have an alternative to spending 90% of their lives waiting for, finding and living for men. But if the alternative to that is finding a woman to replace the man in her life, and then build her life around another female or females, it isn’t very liberating. Some sisters have learned to love women more deeply through lesbianism, but others have simply gone after their sisters in the same manner that the male chauvinists have.
The ultimate goal of female liberation is not just to escape from male oppression. How about liberating ourselves from our various mind trips such as ignorance, greed, masochism, fear of God and social conventions? It’s hard to so easily dismiss the importance of paternal influence in this society, at this time. Since we face the reality that, in this global village, there is very little choice but to coexist with men, we might as well find a way to do it and do it well.
We definitely need more positive participation by men in the care of our children. But how are we going to do this? We have to demand it. James Baldwin has said of this problem, “I can’t give a performance all day in the office and come back and give a performance at home.” He’s right. How can we expect men to share the responsibility of childcare in the present social conditions where his job in the office is, to him, a mere “performance” and where he cannot relate to the role of childcare except as yet another “performance”? Contemporary men must go through major changes in their thinking before they volunteer to look after children, and before they even start to want to care.
Childcare is the most important issue for the future of our generation. It is no longer a pleasure for the majority of men and women in our society, because the whole society is geared towards living up to a Hollywood-cum-Madison Avenue image of men and women, and a way of life that has nothing to do with childcare. We are in a serious identity crisis. This society is driven by neurotic speed and force accelerated by greed, and frustration of not being able to live up to the image of men and women we have created for ourselves; the image has nothing to do with the reality of people. How could we be an eternal James Bond or Twiggy (false eyelashes, the never-had-a-baby-or-a-full-meal look) and raise three kids on the side? In such an image-driven culture, a piece of reality, such as a child, becomes a direct threat to our false existence.
The only game we play together with our children is star-chasing; sadly, not the stars in the sky, but the “STARS” who we think have achieved the standard of the dream image we have imposed on the human race. We cannot trust ourselves anymore, because we know that we are, well…too real. We are forever apologetic for being real. Excuse me for farting, excuse me for making love and smelling like a human being, instead of that odorless celluloid prince and princess image up there on the screen.
Most of us, as women, hope that we can achieve our freedom within the existing social set-up, thinking that, somewhere, there must be a happy medium for men and women to share freedom and responsibility. But if we just took the time to observe the very function of our society, the greed-power-frustration syndrome, we would soon see that there is no happy medium to be achieved. We can, of course, aim to play the same game that men have played for centuries, and inch by inch, take over all the best jobs and eventually conquer the whole world, leaving an extremely bitter male stud-cum-slave class moaning and groaning underneath us. This is alright for an afternoon dream, but in reality, it would obviously be a drag.
Just as the blacks have in the past, women are going through an initial stage of revolution now. We are now at a stage where we are eager to compete with men on all levels. But women will inevitably arrive at the next stage, and realize the futility of trying to be like men. Women will realize themselves as they are, and not as beings comparative to or in response to men. As a result, the feminist revolution will take a more positive step in the society by offering a feminine direction.
In their past two thousand years of effort, men have shown us their failure in their method of running the world. Instead of falling into the same trap that men fell into, women can offer something that the society never had before because of male dominance. That is the feminine direction. What we can do is to take the current society, which contains both masculine and feminine characteristics, and bring out its’ feminine nature rather than its’ masculine force which is now at work. We must make more positive usage of the feminine tendencies of the society which, up to now, have been either suppressed or dismissed as something harmful, impractical, irrelevant and ultimately shameful.
I am proposing the feminization of society; the use of feminine nature as a positive force to change the world. We can change ourselves with feminine intelligence and awareness, into a basically organic, noncompetitive society that is based on love, rather than reasoning. The result will be a society of balance, peace and contentment. We can evolve rather than revolt, come together, rather than claim independence, and feel rather than think. These are characteristics that are considered feminine; characteristics that men despise in women. But have men really done so well by avoiding the development of these characteristics within themselves?
Already, as I catch a glimpse of the new world, I see feminine wisdom working as a positive force. I refer to the feminine wisdom and awareness which is based on reality, intuition and empirical thinking, rather than logistics and ideologies. The entire youth generation, their idiom and their dreams, are headed in a feminine direction. A more advanced field of communication, such as telepathy, is also a phenomenon which can only be developed in a highly feminine climate. The problem is that feminine tendency in the society has never been given a chance to blossom, whereas masculine tendency overwhelms it.
What we need now is the patience and natural wisdom of a pregnant woman, an awareness and acceptance of our natural resources, or what is left of them. Let’s not kid ourselves and think of ourselves as an old and matured civilisation. We are by no means mature. But that is alright. That is beautiful. Let’s slow down and try to grow as organically, and healthfully as a newborn infant. The aim of the female revolution will have to be a total one, eventually making it a revolution for the whole world. As mothers of the tribe, we share the guilt of the male chauvinists, and our faces are their mirrors as well. It’s good to start now, since it’s never too late to start from the start.



Carrie

I was playing more with the idea that this story is "a psychological and spiritual root story" that Estes' says is fundamental to human development.  Knowing that self exploration and 'finding ones own' is so difficult even for those of us who are aware we're searching, imagine how hard it is for young girls who don't have teachers or mothers who help them to explore their own uniqueness and personal power.  THEN, add the distorted messages from modern media into the picture and you've got a big fucking mess.  excuse my language.  but seriously, what a mess!

the woman who visited my class was working with these concepts, specifically about media's influence on girls self esteem, and wrote a childrens book called Zilly which has a story line echoing the ugly duckling in many ways.  Maybe some of you will find her work useful for your own relationship with media, or to help younger girls in your life explore how media influences their development.  (she also wrote some really great curriculum called Project Girl, that is great for middle school age and uses art as a way to play with these concepts in an explorative way) 


and last, i wanted to share some beautiful words which i'm sure many of you have heard before, but are worth reading a million times over.
enjoy!

with much love and gratitude,
Carrie  


First, about finding your pack, 

    "The time for the lone wolf is over.  Gather yourselves!  Banish the word struggle from you attitude and your vocabulary.  All that we do now must be done in a sacred manner and in celebration. 

    "We are the ones we've been waiting for."   -Hopi Elder

And second, about embracing your inner swan,


Our deepest fear is not that we are inadequate. Our deepest fear is that we are powerful beyond measure. It is our light, not our darkness that most frightens us. We ask ourselves, Who am I to be brilliant, gorgeous, talented, fabulous? Actually, who are you not to be? 
...... Your playing small does not serve the world. There is nothing enlightened about shrinking so that other people won't feel insecure around you. We are all meant to shine, as children do. We were born to make manifest the glory....that is within us. It's not just in some of us; it's in everyone. 
And as we let our own light shine, we unconsciously give other people permission to do the same. As we are liberated from our own fear, our presence automatically liberates others.”   -Marianne Williamson

Meeting 1/Chapter 5: Finding One's Pack

Neil Krug


Eleven beautiful women gathered near the end of a blizzard on a cold Wisconsin Friday night in January to meet and share food and foster the beginnings of what could be a new community of growlers.  That is, those who are daring to step into the forest of their souls and the collective unconscious and actively embrace the wilder, spirit-connectedness of themselves and those around them. After some wine and tea and roasted cauliflower, we sat down to share ourselves a little more deeply and reflect on the searching and hunting that we are all doing through the forests of our hearts.

Dr. Estés tells a grown-up version of The Ugly Duckling, with fear and lows and near-death trials endured by the little duckling.  This is not your children's fairy tale. He makes it through alive and discovers he has evolved into an elegant swan, at the same time finding his "pack" after being so alone for so long.

Like the duckling who feels eternally in solitude, I have lived most of my life almost never feeling as as though I belonged, that I knew the rules of the game, or that I was a desired member of the pack. Ms. Estés asserts that "ascertaining one's own psychic family is essential for vitality and belongingness," and I can attest that this search has played a predominant role in my own quest for happiness and contentment.

I had also not realized what an integral role one's mother plays in this psychic venture of belongingness, yet I can see now how my own upbringing and family shaped many of my feelings of isolation. Without a doubt, the ambivalent, collapsed, and unmothered mothers Ms. Estés discusses have a tremendous effect on their children's sense of groundedness and belonging for the rest of their lives.  If we're unmothered, our instincts aren't sharpened, and we won't always notice when we may be putting ourselves at risk amidst a less-than-welcoming community.  This isn't necessarily by any fault of our own mothers, but a result of the generations of ambivalent, collapsed, and unmothered before them. The rituals and bonding of mothers and motherhood have been so effectively eradicated that all that remains are meaningless games at baby showers, and bloggers showing us how to make Barbie doll cupcakes.

In the meantime, whilst searching for our community and pack, Ms. Estés reminds us to:
  • Hold on, hold out, for creative life
  • Do your work
  • Accept your beauty
  • Loosen your clutch on the survivor archetype if you've become attached to it.  Accept that you can be thriving instead.
  • Hold out for the right medicine--don't endure bad company
  • Appreciate the beauty brought to you by passing strangers
  • Embrace RITUAL
  • Don't listen to the tiny-hearted that may be around you!
Assignment for next month: 
Chapter 2: Stalking the Intruder/The tale of Bluebeard