Join me Western North Carolina (lovely Sylva) to kick off the U.S. Suffrage Centennial celebration!
June 4, 2019
May 19, 2019
{A Gracious Year of Kindness}
Also, a link to the "Sussex Royal" Instagram account where the couple shared never-released photos from the May 19th wedding! xoxo
April 29, 2019
{Happy Anniversary...with Love}
In
honor of Prince William and Duchess Catherine's wedding anniversary—they married eight years ago today—Vogue is
highlighting “A
Look Back at Prince William and Kate Middleton’s Royal Romance”….enjoy their
story and slideshow!
April 14, 2019
{Goddess Journey} Part Two
Sharing another section from the “Goddess Journey” chapter of my book-in-progress, A Memory of Love: The Spiritual Mission of a Princess.
The Reappearing Goddess
“In the middle of the 1970s,” a
decade before most of the world became aware of Lady Diana Spencer—and before
she added her own ‘goddess’ essence to modern culture—“a paradigm shift took
place, partly inspired by the rapid development of the women’s movement,” wrote
Lanier Graham. The author of Goddesses
told of various books of the time that “revolutionized how people looked at the
roots of their spiritual heritage.”
Before books like The Goddesses and Gods of Old Europe by
archaeologist Marija Gimbutas and When
God Was a Woman by art historian Merlin Stone, then later in 1987, a heralded
game-changer, The Chalice and the Blade
by Riane Eisler, “history textbooks had been stating or implying that the male
had always been dominant in Western theology.” The consciousness-shifting winds
of the more open-minded Aquarian Age were blowing through—energies we saw in
the social upheavals of the 1960s and ‘70s—and a truer history of women was
being revealed. “Western culture had been dominated by the male-oriented values
of Indo-European culture for so long that it took a social revolution—the
women’s movement—to start to bring it into balance,” explained Graham.
Discoveries in archaeology, studies
in mythology, scholars of social history and linguistics were finding that
“goddess cultures tended to be egalitarian, earth-centered, and nonviolent,”
and these findings were then being taught in colleges and universities. “The
image of the earth as sacred and society as balanced between male and female,”
Graham wrote in 1997, “has become a powerful inspiration to people in the
women’s movement, the ecology movement, and many other new ways of thinking.”
Joseph Campbell reminded us: “The
goddess represents nature. The god represents society. And when you have a
mythology that accents a god over a goddess you have a religion that accents
society over nature. Then with the Fall, nature itself is cursed.” As we felt these goddess nudges in the first years of the twenty-first century,
it was only natural that women and family issues of health and well-being and
concerns about the environment were in the headlines. (Our Mother Earth, after
all, is metaphorically represented by women’s bodies.) “There is something
coming up in our own consciousness now, with the ecology movement,” Campbell
wrote over fifty years ago, “recognizing that by violating the environment in
which we are living, we are really cutting off the energy and the source of our
own living.” It is this “sense of accord” that is so disrupted today. No
wonder humans are so out-of-sorts; they have not been in accord with
themselves, their very nature, since this break in consciousness. No wonder
with the power of this reappearing goddess energy that so much fear-based,
women-bashing backlash has been stirred up!
I had a real-life experience of this
years ago, and a reflection of the hateful conflicts now on the rise today. In
the late 1990s, a friend and I went on a day-long road trip from Atlanta to
Huntsville, Alabama, to see an exhibit at the Space Center, where neither of us
had ever visited. We turned off the expressway and while driving through the
rural countryside, I saw a sign with huge, hand-painted letters; it was like a
punch in the gut similar to what I felt on November 9, 2016. The message read:
“FATHER CHURCH, YES. MOTHER NATURE, NO.”
That seems to sum up this violent
backlash coming at us today, as I sit here writing in 2018—with the toxic masculine and
the dark feminine trying to destroy the “mother” in all of us, the nurturing
spirit of humanity, the health and well-being of our life-sustaining home, our sacred
mother, our “Mother Earth.”
Lanier Graham gives us this history,
writing at the end of the twentieth century:
...a few thousand years ago many
goddess-oriented civilizations were destroyed by extremely aggressive
Indo-European tribes. They demolished the old cities and then reconfigured
civilization throughout most of the settled world from Greece to India. These
barbarians worshipped aggressive sky gods and had scant room in their theology
for goddesses; to them, women were little more than property and sexual
objects. Not only did male gods become supreme, but females lost their
sacredness, in a dramatic turning-around in human history that my friend Joseph
Campbell called the ‘patriarchal inversion.’ It was even argued by some fathers
of the early Christian Church in Rome that women had no souls.
Twentieth-century men have at last started to realize that when males lost
their reverence for that which is female, they also lost something within
themselves.
The grasping, last-gasp obscenities of
this “patriarchal inversion” were on display in the dignified halls of the
United States Senate Building in Washington D.C. in the autumn of 2018 when leering,
screeching white men defended their outdated network of cruelty and cronyism—no
matter the cost or number of souls squandered—against one lone, brave woman
speaking her truth. (And whether anyone was aware or not, she was representing
the goddess spirit in us all.) This cowardly mischief was cheered on by a president
whose motto seems to come directly from Dr. Victor Frankenstein’s patched-together
monster, as written by Mary Shelley two-hundred years ago: “If I cannot inspire
love, I will cause fear.”
This is what happens when humanity
is disconnected from the “spiritual feminine,” Jim Fitzgerald wrote in “The
Death of the Heart,” his essay for When a
Princess Dies. “Since Reformation times, there has been a dearth of
religious imagery, particularly of women, through which both men and women
might maintain a connection to the spiritual feminine.” What imagery that
remained left “a divine King but no Queen” in both the consciousness and
unconsciousness of men and women. This created a split, according to
Fitzgerald, as the feminine spirit became an object of “the rational mind”—and
its profane opinions and deprived thoughts. “This split—of mind from matter, of
spirit from nature—has continued to the present.” However, when he wrote this
at the time of Diana’s death, near the end of a millennium, Fitzgerald was
among many who sensed things were changing. “The values of the heart, not those
of the mind, have begun to be sought after and appreciated. A new relationship
to the Earth and Nature is growing. We are witnessing a change of heart.”
The rise of Trumpery—and the hate it stands
for and the “loss of soul” it reveals—is a desperate strike against this new
heart energy. “I think it was this that Diana, as a woman of the times, equally
a sufferer from the ills and neuroses of modern life, it was this new heart
that she represented,” Fitzgerald added. And it is this “new heart”—a sacred
calling of the “spiritual feminine”—that Diana and Charles’ sons inherited and now
speak its message, as well as live its values, from their spot-lit world stage.
These are aware, awakening men—who attracted and married aware, awake women—and
they are rallying the “new heart” troops, encouraged along by the reemerging
goddess consciousness their mother helped crack open!
I think of Diana and her sons when I
read lines from a Sharon Olds’ poem about feeling less raw after experiencing such heartache,
“as if some goddess of humanness within us caressed us with a gush of
tenderness.”
[“Glorious Inanna,” third and final section of this goddess-focused chapter, posted soon.]
March 24, 2019
{Goddess Journey} - Part One
This is the first of three excerpts from the “Goddess
Journey” chapter of my book-in-progress (tentatively titled) A Memory of Love: The Spiritual Journey of a
Princess. Enjoy....xo
GODDESS JOURNEY
{Part One}
“Diana was an ascendant female,”
explained Jungian scholar Josephine Evetts-Secker, “who could flout both the
patriarchy and matriarchal order, fulfilling and negating feminist ideals;
lauded as independent woman by some and by others castigated as a Barbie-doll
princess.” Naturally charismatic with “star quality,” Diana attracted a variety of stars from the
entertainment world—Elton John, Pavarotti and Freddie Mercury (there’s a story of
Diana going clubbing, in disguise, with Queen's lead singer and his pals)—just as she befriended well-known people who were “aspirants to justice” like Nelson Mandela and Mother Teresa.
Writing in her essay “The People’s Princess,” Evett-Secker continued: “She
bridged the glittery world of fashion and the seat of Establishment power. She
was as much the female trickster as goddess; so seen, so mysterious, hiding
quixotically behind apparent transparency; unconsciously manipulating
concealment and revelations, echoing archaic mystery conventions.”
Like many scholars from the Jungian
school of thought, Evetts-Secker compared Diana to various goddess archetypes. To
Aphrodite, who “dissolved resistance” and inspired a dynamic of “an ancient
strategy, through love to power.” To “girlish Persephone” because of Diana’s
playfulness while tiptoeing around danger, and to Demeter as “the raging mother
protecting her sons from public assault by those who wanted to peddle their
images.”
As a daughter, sister, friend,
bride, princess, wife, mother, divorcée, lover, fashion-plate, healer and
ambassador, Diana’s life stages, her womanly rites of passages, were lived out
in a world arena for all to see. And since her life was and still is examined
like few others, its complexity offers an intriguing milieu, connecting the
spirit of all women. “Diana was a divided, unhappy and bewildered Princess,”
Evett-Secker added, “as well as an ebullient beauty, graceful, opulent and full
of vivid, if vulnerable and threatened, life.”
Or as counselor Steffan Vanel stated
in his book, Charles and Diana, An Inside
Story: An Astrological-Karmic View: “Diana embodied a complexity of
contradictions which would enable virtually everyone to see and hear their own
story or agenda in her life.” Diana’s contradictions were indeed our own.
Ann Shearer, writing through a Jungian lens about her observances of Diana’s memorial service, noted the paradoxical images used about the late princess, from powerful goddess to helpless victim. “And here is a central paradox: the forces of unity that ‘Diana’ became grew the stronger for the very complexity of contradictions she contained. As we learned more of her real and fictitious selves,” Shearer continued in her “Tales of the Unfolding Feminine” essay, “and the legends around her grew, she carried for us an incontestable truth: that we humans must struggle with a mass of inconsistencies within ourselves and somehow learn to honour them.”
Ann Shearer, writing through a Jungian lens about her observances of Diana’s memorial service, noted the paradoxical images used about the late princess, from powerful goddess to helpless victim. “And here is a central paradox: the forces of unity that ‘Diana’ became grew the stronger for the very complexity of contradictions she contained. As we learned more of her real and fictitious selves,” Shearer continued in her “Tales of the Unfolding Feminine” essay, “and the legends around her grew, she carried for us an incontestable truth: that we humans must struggle with a mass of inconsistencies within ourselves and somehow learn to honour them.”
Another Jungian analyst, Ian Alister,
shared this take in his essay “Your Cheating Heart” from When A Princess Dies:
An extraordinary feature of Diana’s
life, from her engagement to her death, was the extent of public exposure,
providing many personal details and characteristics which could act as pegs for
our own individual projections. It had all the qualities of a soap opera except
that this was real. We could watch this drama which involved the suffering and
sacrifice of a person who carries a symbolic charge for most of us, whether
consciously or not. We can feel it, think about it, and try to relate it to
continuous psychological processes within us. To make sense of it in this way,
to give it meaning, is part of our struggle to make body and mind whole.
Perhaps that was a gift of Diana’s life, in support of both women and men, then and now, to “make sense of” and to honor our “whole”—body, mind and spirit. And, in turn, a deepening of soul. It’s an inner
journey calling forth our wise intuitive intelligence and a depth of feminine-grounded compassion, tapping into
mythological longings and long-ago legends that can reveal a magnificent
peeling-away-of-layers kind of journey. A journey where we all can hear the call of the goddess.
In the words of Rumi, the thirteenth-century Sufi
mystic: “There’s a voice that doesn’t use words. Listen to it, as the personal
self breaks open.” Such a break open of self holds the possibility of an
extraordinary rite of passage into an intimate journey, measured only by the
level of our courage, where we just might discover the authentic spirit of, for men, the empathetic side of masculinity, and for women, the authentic spirit of our womanliness, indeed, our own goddess nature. Not unlike one princess-swirled exploration in all its archetypal glory once upon a time.
[Part Two next time, “The Reappearing Goddess”...then Part Three, “Glorious Inanna”]
March 17, 2019
{Putting Love on the Ballot}
PUTTING LOVE ON THE BALLOT
I recently
attended a gathering in Greenville, South Carolina, where author, spiritual
teacher, and now candidate for president of the United States, Marianne
Williamson was speaking. I wanted to thank her in person for doing something
extremely radical: Putting love on
the ballot—squarely, unapologetically, powerfully, eloquently. “I am running
for president,” she declared, “in order to harness the political potential of
our love, our decency, and our compassion. That is who we are, and that is what
America should be.” Love is a topic in which Marianne is well-versed.
Her first
book, A Return to Love published in
1992, and the first of seven New York
Times’ bestsellers (all reflections on the principles of A Course in Miracles), proclaimed
simply: “Love is what we were born with. Fear is what we have learned here.”
Marianne writes almost as much about fear as love—given fear is a result of
hate, both opposites of love. “Fear unchecked grows exponentially. Love poured
forth has the power to remove it.”
Does the presence of love
really have that much life-changing power? Marianne adds: “...where love is
absent, fear sets in.” Just in case we need a real-life reminder: Fear is what elected
Donald Trump and powered the destructive growth of dog whistle politics, giving
a louder voice to hate-filled rhetoric spewed from the Senate floor to church
pulpits. (No halls so ‘hallowed’ as to escape the maliciousness of it
all.) “It’s not
the first time,” clarified Ken Burns, the creator of those movingly beautiful
American history documentaries. “Human beings are susceptible to politicians
that play to our baser instincts, our worst fears of ‘the other’ instead of, as
Lincoln said, ‘the better angels of our nature’.”
We are
living in a world where it appears that fear is winning. “Without love, our
actions are hysterical. Without love, we have no wisdom.” (Marianne doesn’t
mince her words!) It’s time to get revolutionary about love. It’s time for a
miracle.
“We had a
miracle in this country in 1776,” Marianne announced when exploring a run for
the presidency last fall, “and we need another one!” (Keep in mind she holds a
‘miracle’ as ultimately a “shift in perception.”) She then gave a little
history lesson, since some may have forgotten what that miracle was nearly 250
years ago. Before this county was founded, all of Europe, under “the divine
right of kings,” was “run according to a manorial and aristocratic system.” In
other words, a king and/or queen and their pals (the aristocracy) were entitled
to the land, the wealth, the education—everything!
And the rest of the population, the vast majority, “was little more than serfs
to that small group.” However, Marianne continued, with the founding of this country, “we turned that entire
mindset on its ear.” And when declaring our independence, we declared that “all men are created equal, and that god
gave all men the inalienable rights
to life and to liberty and to the pursuit of happiness—and governments were instituted to secure those rights.”
Consequently, our new nation stumbled right out of the gate, and then stumbled
often, not always living up to those principles. And now we’re stumbling again
with a government, paraphrasing Abraham Lincoln, functioning only “of a few of the people, by a few of the people, and for a few of the people”—which means, as
Marianne explains, “we have subconsciously reverted to an aristocratic
paradigm.”
But we are a
nation of courageous “problem solvers who have risen up in their time. So yes,
we had slavery, but we also had abolition. We had the oppression of women, and we also had two major waves of
feminism and the women’s suffragette movement. We had institutionalized white
supremacy and segregation, and we
also had the Civil Rights Movement.” With that reminder, Marianne is delivering
a call to action for this country’s spiritual awakening, “Join the Evolution!”—it is now our turn to be the problem solvers! And
that’s where love comes back into it.
Neuroscientist
Richard J. Davidson—professor of psychology and psychiatry at the University of
Wisconsin-Madison and founder of the Center for Healthy Minds—considers the
next frontier for his field is the study of how the practice of love affects the brain and body,
believing there is a quality of love that breaks apart boundaries. Can we take
this as an affirmation that, in Marianne’s words, “love is a potent force”?
Film director Spike Lee, during his passionate Oscar acceptance speech at the
recent Academy Awards ceremony, urging us to vote, urging us to “do the right thing,” put it frankly: “Make the
moral choice between love versus hate.”
In calling
for a course-correction in this country and putting our democracy back on
track; for a resetting of our moral compass and putting the lives and
well-being of our children first, Marianne Williamson calls for a return to
what made the founding of this country so unique; she calls for nothing less
than a return to “an ethical center that is the true exceptionalism of the
American ideal.” She encourages us to be on the side of “our better angels” and
to “stick with love,” as another peacemaker shared. “We have before us,” Martin
Luther King, Jr. remarked—with hate staring him in the face—“the glorious
opportunity to inject a new dimension of love into the veins of our
civilization.”
It’s time
for, like in Lincoln’s day, “a new birth of freedom.” It’s time for some
old-fashioned love one another like a
day-in, day-out practice. Remembering that love is a show of strength, not
weakness, it’s time for a love revolution!
“Love taken seriously is a radical outlook, a major departure from the
psychological orientation that rules the world,” Marianne wrote in A Return to Love over two decades ago.
“It is threatening not because it is a small idea, but because it is so huge.”
When I shook Marianne’s
hand that afternoon in Greenville—a packed room of mostly women, women of all
stripes—thanking her for putting love on the ballot, she replied, “Yes! It’s
time to get radical with our love.”
Radical, like love as an “essential existential fact.” Radical, like love is
“our purpose on earth.” Radical, like your life depended on it! ~
.................................
AUTHOR’S NOTE:
With the success of her books and appearances on
Oprah Winfrey’s shows through the years, Marianne Williamson has been a
sought-after speaker on the personal transformation circuit. I’ve followed her
work, listened to her various recordings, quoted her in my articles and books,
and admired her beautiful and effectively intimate way with words. With
Marianne, you re-remember that words have power, that love powers all. “Love
requires a different kind of ‘seeing’ than we’re used to—a different kind of
knowing or thinking. Love is the intuitive knowledge of our hearts. It’s a
‘world beyond’ that we all secretly long for....”
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