211 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
211 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
[This artical was submitted by p.edwards@open.ac.uk-- Amythyst]
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[My only problems with this article are a) the statement that
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paganism is a religion instead of a category of different religions
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and b) that all neo-pagan religions are feminist oriented. I think
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that a stronger emphasis on either feminine or masculine principle
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is equally destructive of spirituality -- Amythyst]
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Here's an article I thought you might want to add to your archive.
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It's from:
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New Internationalist no 237/November 1992 Issue title "Magical Mystery Tour"
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Nina Silver explains how she started talking to particles of light - and
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offers a feminist analysis of our relationship with the spirit world.
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Have you ever been awakened by your own voice reassuring you about the
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next day's ordeals - where you hear the words, know your lips are
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moving, yet at the same time feel strongly that it is not you speaking ?
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Today, we understand this phenomenon as trance mediumship or
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channeling. But in 1979, I had to try and explain this you/not-you
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dichotomy. A psychology graduate, I divided the two-way conversation
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into the personae of the 'child' and the comforting 'adult' - an idea
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derived from 'transactional analysis'. But the tremendous amount of love
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I received from the 'adult' was unlike anything I'd ever felt before.
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With no frame of reference for such energy, I reluctantly called the
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inspired message a 'religious experience' - even though I didn't believe
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in God - because that came closest to describing the phenomenon.
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One week later, on the threshold of sleep, my mouth again started
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moving. Trembling, I turned on my cassette recorder and my career as a
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professional trance medium began.
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At first, speaking to spirit is was frightening. After all, someone
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invisible is borrowing your vocal cords - in effect doing physical
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therapy on you from the inside - and it took time for me to feel
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comfortable with being out of control. But I always got myself back,
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never having 'lost' myself to begin with. Channeling meant sharing,
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rather than abdicating, my space, and I enjoyed the company. Besides,
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the communion of channeling felt familiar, like the experiences of
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precognition and telepathy I'd routinely had throughout my life.
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Communing with humans proved infinitely harder. During a routine
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conversation when the inevitable 'And what do you do for a living?' came
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up, I told the truth, and people otherwise comfortable with paranormal
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matters retreated when I mentioned mediumship. Talking to spirits was
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considered dangerous and unevolved, and the fear surrounding spirit
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communication often escalated into hysteria. Assuming the worst about my
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line of work, they envisioned voodoo and black magic.
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When finally, to my relief, I found people who would talk to me about
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it, I encountered another roadblock. The acceptance of spirits didn't
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provide insurance against misinformation. Well-meaning friends cautioned
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me not to give the spirits too much rein lest they 'possess' me. Others
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smugly advised that eventually I'd be able to do readings on my own
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without depending on an altered state which, they implied, was really me
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anyway. Long-time psychics declared they had no need to channel
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low-level astral beings, as they received information straight from Big
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Daddy himself. Healers insisted that they dispensed loving cosmic
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frequencies, not the cheap and paltry energy of disembodied entities.
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And still other mediums were suspicious of my approach. They would
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channel only after drawing the shades, chanting 'Kumbayah' and praying
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to God for protection.
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I never conducted such rites, eschewing them as formalities. Nor did
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I require much time to 'tune in' to the proper vibrations because for me
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the connection was always present. It was not a matter of turning on the
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radio as much as increasing the volume and selecting the desired
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channel. My methodology, according to many channelers, contained too
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much science and not enough religion.
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Most channelers claimed that their guides, when in body, had been
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celebrated doctors, scholars or writers. This smacked of 'my guide is
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better than yours' - in other words 'male' and 'with a higher score in
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the psychic book of records'. As soon as I became skilled enough to
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mentally (clairaudiently) receive input from my guide, the first thing I
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asked was, 'Who the hell are you ?' I hoped it wouldn't be a Native
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American medicine man or Egyptian king. I had encountered enough of
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those, and didn't want to be part of another male-dominated trend
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conferring importance by association.
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'I am a particle of gold light,' came the astounding, quantum-physics
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sounding reply. This is certainly different, I thought. 'Many people
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need to regard us as human in order to feel less afraid, but I assure
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you that I am an astral particle who also possesses a wave form.'
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My golden buddy decided to take the name of Ia because - and I would
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hear this being explained to others many times during readings
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'when I speak, you must perceive me through Nina. Because we are so
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harmonious in personality and values, I feel I am very much a part
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of her. So I took the vowels in her name.' Obviously, a particle of
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light has no sex, but to make life simpler we agreed on the mutually
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preferred pronoun 'she'. This delighted me. I was tired of all those
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'hes' channeling through mediums and felt that an intelligent and vocal
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'she' would help rebalance the patriarchal scales.
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My feminist outlook on the world - and the fact that my particle
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friend was an equally committed feminist! - elicited some raised
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eyebrows among my colleagues. But soon after, it was my turn to raise
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my eyebrows. I began tackling the metaphysical literature and
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discovered that even those philosophies which affirmed the existence
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of spirits nevertheless catalogued the world according to hierarchy:
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novice or knowledgeable, lowly or evolved, worthless or worthy. This
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included the structure of the spiritual realms. Any spiritual ideology,
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after all, could only mirror the patriarchal system that produced it.
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Any system that explains our relationship to the cosmos in
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hierarchical terms will question one that does not. It will likewise
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condemn whoever communes with the life force without the sanction of
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churches and other establishment institutions. Since I abhorred
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doctrine and said so, I was perceived by other psychics and mediums
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as a bad girl, disrespectful of the mystical realms. I was supposed
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to acknowledge how much more significant spiritual matters were than
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mundane human affairs and how much more saintly spirits were than
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people - at least the evolved spirits, usually 'hes' and often called
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angels. Instead, disliking barriers, I had dubbed my astral companions
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'pols' (plural for the acronym 'particle of light'), and called them
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by their first names, generally ignoring titles of royalty, scholarship
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or yogihood.
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If my human associates disapproved, my pol pals didn't mind. They told
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jokes and played word games with me to lighten up discussions about
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existential loneliness and humanity's fear of loving. Ia became a
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beloved friend and an integral part of my life - although of course
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she functioned differently from a human. Having neither a discernible
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physical body nor worries about keeping it fed and safe from muggers, Ia
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could effortlessly express her love and joy. Most people found her energy
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healing.
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Ia could also be downright raunchy at times. I had initially thought
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her earthiness and so-close-to-being-human humanity would be welcomed,
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since it offered an alternative to those dry ancient teachings, but the
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mixed reactions of my clients proved otherwise. It seemed many people
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were not looking for an understanding ally as much as an authority
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figure. They voiced their preferences for yogis and 'name' archangels,
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religion-certified masters who would tell them in lofty language what
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to do. The desire for absolution was strong.
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Eventually it became clear to me that the psychic and spiritual were
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not the same. 'Everything, including spirituality, is a product of its
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culture,' was what all but the most rigid and patriarchal spirit guides
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said to me; and I heartily agreed. Accepting the premise that astral
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beings have been mortal, it's unrealistic to assume that they
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suddenly become omniscient - or more open-minded - once they change
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form. Be wary, I told my clients, if a channeled message claims to
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deliver Truth from God's very mouth: this smacked suspiciously of
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patriarchal elitism to me 'Astral' didn't mean 'accurate', 'better',
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or 'spiritual' just because the message was flowery or the delivery
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fancy.
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It also made sense that just as people attract each other to fulfill
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their needs, a particle of light is drawn to a human who has compatible
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qualities - and vice versa. An egotistical medium might relate to an
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equally self-serving particle; a puritanical medium to a spirit with
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a repressive morality.
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What a blessing Ia felt as I did. At the beginning of our relationship,
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I'd lapsed into the patriarchal point system myself, inducing Ia to
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lecture me numerous times that she was not Goddess or God. I soon
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realized that a feminist approach to enlightenment was crucial.
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Spirituality steeped in male supremacist values was not spirituality
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at all, but a form of mass control. It disenfranchised people by
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subordinating them to a supposedly greater force rather than empowering
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them with a sense of their own wholeness and ability to connect to
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the Life Force themselves. I despaired of ever finding an already
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existing spiritual philosophy I could salute.
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Then I discovered Paganism, the Old Religion of Europe. The season's
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cycles were celebrated; the Earth honored instead of exploited; and
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humans, as part of Nature, celebrated themselves through the
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enjoyment and pleasure of sex. I could relate to this.
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As a sworn atheist, I couldn't relate to the Goddess and her consort
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Gods as actual figures the way some people did, although I recognized
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the attempt at balance that was being made through the worship of both
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male and female deities. I instead saw the deities as symbols to help
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one tune in to Self, Others, Nature and Cosmos. Pagans were of the heath,
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the hearth - the organic center of one's life which a punitive,
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moralistic church could never be. Pagans embrace matriarchal values
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that other traditions ignored, trivialised or pretended had never
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existed in the Earth's history. Because the credo 'Do as you will,
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but harm none' encouraged people to perceive their own divinity,
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Paganism never became a hierarchical institution. It allowed for change
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and growth in a world that is never static.
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Accepting the body's natural cycles of sex, birth and death leads us
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to communing with the non-material or spiritual world. The more life-
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affirming the spiritual tradition - as Native cultures tend to be - the
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more ordinary its proponents regard astral-physical plane communication,
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whatever its form. When Christianity dominated Europe, consigning to sin
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and eternal damnation those who asserted their own connection to the
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spiritual source, this notion of 'sin' was reinforced by putting the
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Pagans and Celts to death. Once people became separated from their own
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source of strength and were forced to rely on something external to do
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their thinking and feeling for them, terror at being 'possessed' by
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uncontrollable forces became rampant. Thus was mediumship, part of the
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old Pagan tradition, vilified.
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Neo-paganism, an Earth-centered, feminist consciousness, recognizes
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not only the interconnectedness and sanctity of all life, but the
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importance of a non-hierarchical way of dealing with relationships.
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People concerned about transforming the prevalent dominant/submissive
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pathology of our culture must understand that our perceptions of the
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psychic realms must ultimately be transformed as well. It does little
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good to rediscover or invent a new paradigm of spirituality if we still
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harbor a fear of Other - which includes spirits - taught us long ago
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by patriarchy.
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The fear of mediumship that possesses many people today conveniently
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upholds the church and other establishment institutions which claim a
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monopoly on answers to the secrets of life. This fear of communion with
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non-human sources is insidious, whether it comes from fundamentalist
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Christians or New Agers. 'Non-human' includes animals, minerals, plants,
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quantum energies. How can we as a species survive if we insist on
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remaining exclusive, so disconnected to Life ?
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The most valuable guidance you can receive from a spiritual source is
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to trust your own centre. In her readings, Ia always emphasizes the
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belief in self:
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'I experience the universe as a loving force. Beauty and transcendental
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ways of being are integral parts of both the cosmos and ourselves. There
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are many levels of existence, I being one speck of sand in a billion
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deserts - and I am sure there are more I cannot perceive.'
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'The line between self and other should be remembered - not so we feel
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isolated, but to understand that even as we each are part of a larger,
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loving force, we are also unique individuals in whatever stage of evolution,
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consciousness or form.
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'Follow your heart. There are as many paths to truth as there are
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beings to create and follow those paths.'
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NINA SILVER is a therapist, singer, composer and writer. She is
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currently working on a book of essays called _The Visionary Feminist_.
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