125 lines
7.5 KiB
Plaintext
125 lines
7.5 KiB
Plaintext
This is an article I wrote for PROTEAN SYNTHESIS, a semi-private
|
|
newsletter after it was solicited by the editor:
|
|
|
|
DIANISM IN A NUIT-SHELL
|
|
|
|
Recently, I got back in touch with my teacher after nearly two
|
|
years and dropped a couple of bombshells on her: I had changed gender
|
|
identity and had come together with two other women to form a Dianic
|
|
coven. When the initial shock wore off, Rita sent me a complete run
|
|
of Protean Synthesis and a solicitation for this article.
|
|
Several years ago I subscribed to several stereotypes regarding
|
|
"those peculiar Dianics". They were thealogically unbalanced, they
|
|
hated men, they denied that men had souls, they were all lesbians,
|
|
they couldn't spell (in the orthographic sense; no one has yet accused
|
|
Dianics of inability to work magick), etc. etc. When I came together
|
|
with my covensisters, I realized that these notions were at most
|
|
partially true and some cases were patently false.
|
|
I believe there are only three valid generalizations that can be
|
|
made about Dianics: 1) We are all feminists. 2) We all look to the
|
|
Goddess(es) far more than to the God(s). 3) We are all eclectics.
|
|
Note well that there are plenty of non-Dianic feminist Witches,
|
|
non-Dianic eclectics, and non- Dianics who are primarily
|
|
Goddess-oriented. There are also doubtless a good many feminist,
|
|
Goddess-oriented eclectics who do not choose to call themselves
|
|
Dianic. In my own case I use the "If it quacks like a duck, it
|
|
probably is a duck" argument, as well as the fact that my HPS learned
|
|
the Craft as a Dianic and runs Dianic rituals.
|
|
Some of the stereotypical generalizations I can dismiss out of
|
|
hand. I don't know of a single Dianic who denies that men have souls.
|
|
Even Z Budapest doesn't believe that piece of tripe anymore! It is
|
|
true that Dianism is particularly attractive to separatists, and many
|
|
separatists actually hate men. Many Dianics are lesbians. Some
|
|
misspell words like "woman", women", "egalitarian", and "holistic" on
|
|
purpose. Not all fit these, however, and I think that Z Budapest in
|
|
her younger, or spiritual bomb-throwing, days represents an extreme
|
|
and a small minority. There are a number of males involved in
|
|
Dianism, and some of those are men [NB: I use the terms "man" and
|
|
"woman" to indicate gender identity, that is, how one's heart, mind,
|
|
and/or soul are configured. I use "male" and "female" to indicate
|
|
physical sex, that is, how one's plumbing is configured. I hope this
|
|
dispels confusion.].
|
|
Thealogical and magickal imbalance is not so easily dismissed and
|
|
needs to be addressed further, as that is the most valid objection
|
|
that thoughtful Witches have to Dianism. The apparent imbalance comes
|
|
from the Dianic emphasis on Goddess-worship, often to the complete
|
|
exclusion of God-worship. This upsets many Witches' sense of polarity
|
|
balance. The resolution of this apparent imbalance lies in the
|
|
consideration of other polarities than sexual and/or gender as the
|
|
primary polarity. There are indeed many other polarities to consider:
|
|
true-false, life-death, dark-light, rational- mystical,
|
|
creation-destruction, order-chaos, and good-evil, to name but a few.
|
|
One problem with the masculine-feminine polarity is that there is a
|
|
strong tendency to express all other polarities in terms of it. The
|
|
Chinese were particularly fond of this, and mapped everything they
|
|
liked into the yang side, and everything they disliked or feared into
|
|
the yin side, the patriarchal no-accounts!
|
|
One thing I have discovered is that if you look hard enough, you
|
|
can find goddesses to fit both ends of most polarities. Some even
|
|
occupy both ends simultaneously. Inanna, my matron goddess, is a good
|
|
case in point. She is the Sumerian goddess of love, war, wisdom
|
|
(which she won in a drinking bout!), adventure, the heavens, the
|
|
earth, and even of death (in the guise of her dark aspect,
|
|
Ereshkigal). A very busy lady indeed is Inanna. At this point it
|
|
becomes largely a matter of personal preference rather than of
|
|
polarity, whether one chooses a god or a goddess to occupy a
|
|
particular place in a ritual.
|
|
No Dianic I know of denies the existence of the God. Indeed, He
|
|
gets mentioned as the consort of the Goddess with some frequency in Z
|
|
Budapest's HOLY BOOK OF WOMEN'S MYSTERIES, which is close a thing as
|
|
there is to a Dianic version of the Gardnerian Book of Shadows. He is
|
|
there, and sometimes we will invoke Him, when it is appropriate. He
|
|
makes His own path, and we follow our own, and when they cross
|
|
naturally we honor Him and do not avoid Him. We also do not force the
|
|
paths to cross simply to lend an artificial balance to a ritual where
|
|
none is really needed.
|
|
Now that I have spilled a good deal of ink over what Dianism is
|
|
not, I should now say a few words about what it is: a movement of
|
|
feminist, eclectic, Goddess-oriented Witches.
|
|
Feminism: This covers a vast multitude of virtues and sins. I do
|
|
not think the stereotypical radical lesbian separatist is as common as
|
|
is believed. Moderate to liberal feminism is probably far more
|
|
common, even among Dianics. Certainly my own coven contains no
|
|
separatists! There are too many nice men out there, even though
|
|
surveys have shown that 70% or more of all men are potential rapists.
|
|
The nice ones are found among those who are not in that repulsive
|
|
majority; you just have to look to find them. One of the places you
|
|
might find such nice men is in Dianic covens! Some are mixed groups,
|
|
at least some of those of the branch founded by Morgan McFarland. My
|
|
own is something of a mixed up group, I suppose. While we do not
|
|
currently have any men in the coven, two of the three of us were born
|
|
male and still have original-equipment plumbing. The Goddess and our
|
|
HPS accept us unreservedly as women.
|
|
Eclecticism: If there is one dictum of Z Budapest's that bears
|
|
repeating to everyone in the Craft, and which gets followed by many,
|
|
it is "When in doubt, invent." Dianics tend toward creative ritual,
|
|
drawing from any and all possible sources. I have yet to see a Dianic
|
|
equivalent of the Gardnerian Book of Shadows, nor do I ever hope to
|
|
see one.
|
|
Goddess Orientation: I've discussed this at some length while
|
|
talking about polarity. There are some wags who have said that
|
|
Dianics are nothing but matriarchal monotheists. I tell you three
|
|
times: The Dianic Goddess is NOT Jehovah in drag! The Dianic Goddess
|
|
is NOT Jehovah in drag! The Dianic Goddess is NOT Jehovah in drag! A
|
|
much closer analogy would be that Dianics have taken the Classical
|
|
pantheon and reclaimed most of the roles. This, too, is
|
|
oversimplifying, but it is not nearly as wide of the mark as the usual
|
|
criticism. At some point I may write up a long exegesis on the Dianic
|
|
Goddess, but not here. My own personal involvement with Her comes
|
|
from a great feeling of comfort I do not find elsewhere. She feels
|
|
right. I have a great deal of difficulty accepting known rapists
|
|
(most of the Olympian males are this, especially Zeus, Hades, and
|
|
Pan!) into my personal pantheon. I also feel a personal vocation from
|
|
the Mother; it is rather incongruous to me to embrace a male deity
|
|
wholeheartedly when the Goddess comes to me and calls me Her daughter.
|
|
This goes doubled, redoubled, in pentacles, and vulnerable for lovers
|
|
of women.
|
|
I hope this little discussion of Dianism-in-a-Nuitshell has
|
|
proved enlightening to you. It is not a path for everyone, but it is
|
|
a valid path for some, and in considering it I hope that you can now
|
|
ignore the garbage that has been put forth in the past as "data"
|
|
regarding it.
|
|
|
|
Inanna Seastar
|
|
Birdsnest Coven
|