235 lines
15 KiB
Plaintext
235 lines
15 KiB
Plaintext
CONCEPTS OF WICCA
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by
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- Jehana Silverwing -
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(Written 1988 -- Disseminate freely)
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The elements/concepts of Witchcraft or Wicca that I've roughly dissected
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out below should be interweaved in order to form a whole. Keep in mind that
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there may well be variances on the "specifics" mentioned. This began life as
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a series of mail messages on CompuServe.
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CONCEPTS
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-The balancing of the individual is seen as a part of the balancing of
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the world that surrounds the individual. A sense of balance is also relevant
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to a Pagan or Wiccan approach to the environment. People, ideally, are seen
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as being in balance between two or more outwardly-antithetical aspects. These
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aspects (ie night and day; generous & stingy, etc.) are not really
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antithetical -- each, as exemplified in the symbology of yin/yang, contains
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elements of the other. Individuals learn to explore their own particular
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balance, and try to harmonize and deal with things which may be out of kilter.
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(Being in balance doesn't mean being static, or stuck right in the middle,
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either. People are expected to evolve, albeit at their own pace and general
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direction.) Because of this approach, shades of grey are important.
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-The microcosm = the macrocosm. A very important concept. This is one
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which allows us to see that concepts such as the balance between night and
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day, for instance, may have value in our own lives. Wicca is a religion rife
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with symbolism. (Words are symbols, themselves.) On other levels, this
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expression means that what goes on in the world around us affects us; and what
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we do affects it.
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-The concept of God/Goddess(es): Deity is seen as immanent, a part of
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the here-and now; not transcendent (as in other-worldly). God/dess(es) is seen
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in every tree, leaf, star, planet, person and animal. Wiccans walk in balance
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with nature and the world for this reason. (Some don't see God/dess(es) in
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man-made objects like skyscrapers -- I disagree.) A reading of Jung will help
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one understand the important archetypal aspects we find in Deity. Individual
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Gods are expressed in many aspects -- they are seldom if ever fully omnipotent
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(usually an unimportant concept for Wiccans) and seldom aloof to our concerns.
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They may have lessons to teach and not all lessons are sweetness and light.
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("Beware of asking for Wisdom -- you may get it.") The feminine aspect(s) of
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Deity are very important in all perspectives. While some groups do not
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consider the masculine aspects of Deity to be important, many of us give
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respect to all faces of Deity.
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-Grounding and centering. Grounding is a way of "channelling" energy flow
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back into the Earth, much as a lightning rod dispells electricity. These
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concepts are more than semantics -- they are very useful in dealing with
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stress, as well as occurences which may be considered more "metaphysical" than
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physical. As for centering:
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-Centering: It is that which, while drawing upon the pathways and
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energies one uses to deal with the world, is the face one presents to one's
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Inner Self and to Deity (God/dess(es)). Centering, from a purely physical
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approach, involves finding one's center of gravity. Centering, from a mental
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approach, involves finding one's center of awareness -- perhaps synthesizing
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the right-brain/left-brain dicotomy in thought. Centering, from an emotional
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approach, involves finding the central point(s) of one's emotional balance
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(refer back to the Concept of Balance). And centering, from the spiritual
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angle, involves finding the center of that interconnecting web which makes up
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a person's whole being -- right where it intersects with Deity. This sort of
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Centering involves finding the "rightness" of Deity --it is a place where it
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does not matter at all if Goddess is "merely" an archetype or if Goddess
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really and tangibly exists --(YES on both counts!) This sort of Centering
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involves being fully aware of both self and Deity in a manner which is
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terribly hard to put into adequate words. No, it does not seem to be something
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which people can be constantly aware of every moment of their waking lives (at
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least not to its fullest extent) --but it is something that a trained (and
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sometimes an untrained) person can reach into or call upon, when needed. It is
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more than a tool to contact Deity. It is more than a tool, period, although
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this Centering is useful as such, when working to develop the spiritual
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aspects of self.
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-"An it harm none, Do what thou Wilt" -- the Wiccan Rede. This is more
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than an excuse for licence. It contains several concepts discussed below
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(ethics, Will, among others).
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-Ethics: Not seen as being imposed from "outside", from external dogma.
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They are integral, however, because they are based on common sense and respect
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for others (see microcosm = macrocosm), including the environment around us.
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Ethics respects the need for others to make their own choices in life, though
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we may provide guidance. Ethics means not hurting others unnecessarily, or for
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what we percieve as "their own good". The Golden Rule applies. Manipulative,
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cohersive magic has no part to play in a responsible, respectful approach to
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the Craft.
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-Will: The concept of doing YOUR magical "Will" involves finding out
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exactly what it is -- one of the things Wiccan exercises help for. Just any
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passing fancy is not necessarily your "Will". Needing to dominate or decide
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for others is also not, in this sense, an expression of Will. Many times,
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what may be mistaken for Will turns out to be in actuality a knee-jerk
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counterreaction to something (for instance, a vengeful counterreaction). In
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one important sense, however, Will is finding that thing (or things); that
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mode of being, which "centers" you -- and living it.
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-The loss of a sense of guilt: A sense of guilt implies being made to
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feel blame for something within. Guilt tends to be self-generated, although
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one's environment may magnify a disposition to it. The ideal is that we
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should live a guilt-free life -- but as with all things in human nature,
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people often end up feeling guilty over feeling guilty, which doesn't address
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the issue. (There should be no "shoulds" in the Craft -- Did you catch that??)
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Therefore, accepting that one may feel guilt can be important, in order to
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work through it. A Wiccan works to know who he or she _is_ -- and, once
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knowing, needs no guilt to justify staying on the "straight and narrow".
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However, besides our recognition of ideals, in a practical sense we must
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recognize and understand the existence of guilty feelings. Guilt is not seen
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as a method for control within the Craft. You don't do something just to
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assauge it -- rather, you try to understand its roots and deal with that.
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There is no "original sin" in this religion.
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-An acceptance of magic: In the most metaphorical sense, this is a belief
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that one can transform and be transformed. That one's own actions and the help
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of the energies one can call upon for aid -- whether they be seen by the
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individual as gods, goddesses, unnamed forces of nature, elemental energies,
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personal inner fields of strength, archetypes, or etc. -- can result in the
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transformation of either the self or the macrocosm at large (Wiccans are their
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own priests and priestesses in this regard.)
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-Dedication -- there is a sense of internal goal-setting. Things don't
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all come easy, and the barriers along the way can be learned from -- indeed,
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it is important to do so. The Wiccan is dedicated both to her personal growth,
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and in co-operation with others, to the goals of the coven (if he/she is IN a
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coven), which she quite often has input in creating and developing. Mutual and
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uncohersed cooperation is an ideal signpost of whatever goals the Wiccan seeks
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to acheive. A corollary to this aspect of Wicca is a developing sense of
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responsibility. This responsibility taps in in a living mode to the other
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concepts of Witchcraft I have mentioned, as well as in to our day-to-day
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"mundane" dealings with people. No, we can't make ourselves responsible for
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everything that happens (that way lies burn-out), but we do aim to invoke
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responsibility in a balanced, loving, and intelligent manner (which may differ
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from person to person).
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-Caring, support, love. Self-explanatory, I hope. These are the
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underpinnings of what we hope to achieve. Without these, the rest is just
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hollow form.
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-Karma: At its worst, a "it happened, so you must have gotten what you
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deserved" reaction is no better than a New Age substitute for guilt, and is a
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terrible attitude. At its best, karma is a realization that no action occurs
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in a vacuum, that "what goes around comes around". Karmic action need not be
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seen as a simple one-on-one action/re-action. Nor is every sickness or
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unpleasant thing that happens to us a karmic debt we are paying off.
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-Purpose: Many Witches feel that they are embued with a sense of purpose.
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This purpose, for which they are here/doing what they are doing/ etc., differs
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for different Wiccans. This idea relates to the concept of involvement with
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and in this world. As has been noted, Eastern philosophies tend to study many
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of the same things as do we -- but Wicca is more western-oriented in that it
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finds an active role and a sense of involvement in the material plane for its
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participants. Witchcraft is not as detached in focus. This idea of a purpose
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for existence in the here and now is very integral. Often I have run into
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Wiccans who have quite evidently found their purpose or purposes -- at other
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times Wiccans feel strongly aware that they do have a special purpose they are
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here to achieve -- they just haven't figured out quite what it is, yet. (As
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well as there being a mixture of both types of awarenesses in some Wiccans,
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also!)
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-As Wicca is a religion based on the here and now, a concept similar to
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the Christian Heaven is not utilized. What Wiccans believe happens after death
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varies quite markedly among individuals. Some believe in reincarnation,
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feeling that they may come back in future lives after a visit to a Summerland
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in order to learn from the mistakes they made in this life. In other words,
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they will come back to work through the karma of past lives. Others, on
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another hand, are quite content to deal with karma as a concept with relevance
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to this life only -- in such a case, karma is not as heavily a controlling
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factor in the circumstances of their existence (ie, then in such cases it
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obviously doesn't determine one's birth circumstances); although the idea, as
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I have expressed it before, that nothing occurs in a vacuum, still holds sway.
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There are those who do not expressly believe in reincarnation. I for one do
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not expressly believe in it (but I don't fully disbelieve it, either!). I do
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think some part of my life force or energy continues on, but probably not in a
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form that I could strictly call "Me". This is why I think the things I do in
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this life are terribly important, and it works, for me.
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-"Blessed Be": We are all blessed. The "Be" signifies action here; it is
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not a passive condition. We are blessed, and we walk in sacred space. Here and
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now. It becomes a matter of growing aware of it.
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-Cycles; the concept of the Circle: The circle is a metaphor for all
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kinds of things. There is the moon cycle, the cycle of night and day, the life
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cycle. Cycles meet together to form the spiral of the "Spiral Dance"
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(Starhawk's book title). The elements form a circle/cycle. Refer back to the
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concept of the microcosm = the macrocosm. One can pinpoint cycles in one's own
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life. And, as in the concept of balance, this is also an evolving idea, not a
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static one.
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-Truth: There are many paths to Truth. There may or may not be one
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ultimate Truth out there, but whatever the case, it is seen by the Wiccan as
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being approachable by the routes laid open by many choices. This doesn't mean
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that there is no such thing as a wrong choice; it does mean that two people
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can find Truth by markedly different paths. (And if Capital T Truth is seen as
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one ultimate Truth, this doesn't mean that there aren't a whole slew of small
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t truths out there.) In the same way, we acknowledge that perception
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determines how we view reality; and hence, how we view those truths when we
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come upon them. The perception hurdle is out there for everyone -- it is how
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we deal with it on our searchings for Truth. As a corollary, it must be
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mentioned here that relativism when applied to ideas and ideals doesn't
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necessarily mean that every idea or ideal is equal to every other idea/ideal.
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They aren't.
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-Perfect Love and Perfect Trust: This is the relationship between the
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Wiccan and the concept of God/dess(es). You can concieve of it for
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simplicity's sake as an ultimate form of Centering (see above).
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-Keep in mind that the rules in Wicca are internal -- they are not dogma
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per se, imposed from outside. This is by and large an experiential religion
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-- although we do have some structure (some groups or traditions within Wicca
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more so than others). Rules that certain groups or traditions may encourage
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often have to do with 1) maintaining group identities (which can also help
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foster a sense of "familial" community -- important for growth as a group), 2)
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maintaining ethical standards (which will ideally come from within -- if you
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don't want to live it, it will be difficult for you to bridge that "psychic"
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gap that should connect you with the group, among other things) and 3) other
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practical considerations. Those sorts of expectations are not to be seen as
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restricting -- and if a seeker finds them constricting within a specific
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group, my advice is to look towards another group with another (perhaps more
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congenial) approach, or to practice solitary. Contrarywise, some people need
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or want a more structured approach. Not everyone looks for or needs the same
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type of environment to grow, even within the Craft -- that's why we've got the
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diversity we've got.
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-Symbols: While external symbols are hardly as important as that which
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one finds in the heart, one sometimes-misinterpreted symbol is the pentagram,
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either standing alone or drawn within a circle. It may be interpreted as a
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representation of the five elements (earth, air, fire, water, ether/spirit),
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or as a representation of Man. Another oft-misrepresented symbol is the
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athame, which is a tool used by many Witches as a representation of the
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sharpness of Will (see above) which may be dedicated as a tool of Fire
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(energy) or as a tool of Air (intellect), depending upon the system used.
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Blessed Be!
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