Wednesday, April 24, 2019

Blood Right

Right Blood
By
Haipule

Strains of the haunting chant, ‘Returning…returning to the mother of us all’[1] could be heard through the door, decorated with a colorful life size collage of images and words that spiraled from an expectant womb and explored the key phases of womanhood in ever widening circles. Both mother and daughter were dressed in red. Shandra put her arm around her daughter, Nalani:

“ Ready to join the circle?”

Nalani nodded. They entered the room. Women of all ages also dressed in shades of red, sat on pillows strewn with red throws of varying hues and textures. They smiled as Nalani sat down between her mother and grandmother.

As the chant came to a close, there was a brief pause before the deep unwavering voice of Nalani’s grandmother, affectionately known as Nanna, invited:

 “Let’s close our eyes and focus on our inner worlds. With gratitude we breathe together – in and out – feel the breath energize our hearts and the blood it circulates and purifies. The same breath sustains us all, and energizes our blood. Energizes our hearts. Imagine cutting the threads of any stories from the past that do not respect, honor and celebrate menstruation: a time of letting go.   Let go of concerns for the future - it is only by being fully present right now that we breath life into stories that can circulate …can remind us who we are and why we are here. Stories that sustain. Today we gather to celebrate Nalani’s transition from girl to wo-moon. I use the word wo-moon deliberately.  Today we reclaim that it is we whose bodies follow the cycle of the moon that birth both men and wemoon. [2] We come from a long and rich heritage of bleeders that bless the world. At ceremonies like today we remember the etymology of bless[3] is ‘bledsian’ or blood. Let’s take a few minutes to sit in silence and remember the wemoon that came before us, and to whom we owe our lives literally- for without them and their ability to conceive and nurture life, no one would be here.”

In the center of the circle was a low table draped with a deep red velvet cloth. On it stood a large round wooden box, carved with the phases of the moon. Surrounding it were the voluptuous Venus of Willendorf, symbol of fertility; the compassionate Kwan Yin, and photographs of Nalani’s grandmothers: Nanna and Granny.

Shandra spoke: “Thank you for coming – for taking the time to welcome my daughter into the circle of life. As mentioned in my invitation: each of you has a gift -  your wisdom – something you now know, that you wished you had known when you first became a woman. While your physical gifts may be too large for the box, let’s imagine your wisdom and dreams filling that box. I hope each of you has had time to create a card or write a note of blessing to go into that box. ”

Nalani’s godmnother, Aunty Stelle began. She smiled at Nalani, made eye contact with the wemoon in the circle and said: “I wish for you a culture that acknowledges and supports the rhythms of nature. I invite you to enjoy quiet, alone time so that you can honor the sweet secrets your monthly visitor can bring. Thousands of years ago, and even in some cultures today, wemoon go to a separate gathering place to support each other, sing, share and be reminded that it is up to us to treat our bodies as sacred. I have printed out an article published in The Guardian in 2017 to place in your box. It shares about the Yurok and Kalasha People and about ‘balashas’ – communal gathering places for wemoon. [4] Remember that we are connected to the greater cycles and wisdom of the moon, the oceans, and the seasons and that your intuition is stronger at this time: to hear it, you need to make space for it. My gift to you is a journal and various art supplies. Truth can be spoken in a gentle- perhaps even artful way, when it isn’t bottled up and has to burst out.”

Kimbo asked if she could play Dominique Christina’s spoken  ‘The Period Poem’[5]. The circle listened as this mother of a young girl answered a tweet to a young boy reminding us how bodies have mysterious intelligence, can sync to each other, can conceive and birth life and that letting go is a vital part of cycles. Kimbo envisioned Nalani living a life that honored her passage through the various cycles and stages. Her Wemoon calendar gift allowed Nalani’s to ‘know thyself’ as she tracked her monthly cycle: know when she was fertile or when she might want to retreat and be more inward focused. In conclusion Kimbo reminded all: “ Informed, grounded womoon, who honor cycles- not just ours- but the greater cycles- restore much needed balance and create healthy communities that remember we are part of a much larger web of life”.

Aunt Faye’s gift was a diva or menstrual cup and The WomanCode by Vitti. She suggested that instead of using tampons, Nalani learn to ‘read’ her blood: the color gives information about the balance in our hormones. She also shared that returning menstrual blood to the soil is not only more environmentally friendly, but that it replenishes the soil.

Debra’s gift included Judy Grahn’s  book: Blood, Bread and Roses: How Menstruation Created the World.” and The Wild Genie: The Healing Power of Menstruation by Alexandra Pope. These evoked much discussion and laughter, and Shandra thanked all for the gifts and dreams of how we can create and tell stories that support and empower wemoon and their essence.

Many more gifts and wise words were shared, before Shandra invited Nell, the last person to share.

Nell, Nalani’s caftan clad, great aunt said, “I wish I’d known Marianne Williamson’s quote about how our playing small doesn’t serve anyone – the more wonderful, the more you give others permission to be wonderful.  I see a woman that finds her own style and is not tortured by fads and fashion.   My gift is a mirror inscribed with these words: Relish your multi-faceted unfolding at all stages of life

In closing, while Shandra placed a halo of fragrant red roses and pikake in Nalani’s hair, and the song isn’t she lovely began to play softly, Nalani said, “Dad also gave me a gift to mark becoming a woman.”  

Everyone looked at Nalani. She pointed to the anklet. Dangling from it were two small charms: a yin/yang and a crescent moon. Nalani smiled and said “He took me to lunch to celebrate my becoming a woman.”

She looked at Shandra and said, “He said you two spoke about this, and that the charms might make even more sense after today. When he asked me if I knew what they might mean, I knew the moon linked to how our cycle is like the moon’s 28 day cycle. Nanna calls us wo-moon, so that charm makes even more sense now…and the other one …Dad said it was to remind me that both men and wemooon are critical to create balance?”

Shandra put her arm around Nalani and added” Hopefully after today- now that you’ve been welcomed into the circle of wemoon, you have more information and when you share your story – or speak about your period, and what being a woman brings- you can create more respect – harmony- balance- about the equal but different roles men and wemoon have. ”

The conversation and sharing continued over a potluck where wemoon enjoyed various red eats like beet salad, stuffed red peppers, seared ahi, pomegranates, strawberries, cherries and so many more, while they drank cherry juice, pink champagne or red wine.







[1] Jennifer Berezan https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=83GoT3l0CgM

[2] The word "menstruation" is etymologically related to "moon". The terms "menstruation" and "menses" are derived from the Latin mensis (month), which in turn relates to the Greek mene (moon) and to the roots of the English words month and moon

[3] Old English blēdsian, blētsian, based on blōd ‘blood’ (i.e. originally perhaps ‘mark or consecrate with blood’). The meaning was influenced by its being used to translate Latin benedicere ‘to praise, worship’, and later by association with bliss.

[4] https://www.theguardian.com/society/2017/feb/11/if-the-body-isnt-sacred-nothing-is-why-menstrual-taboos-matter

Thursday, July 7, 2011

New chapters need new words...

A poem of sorts on maturing into greater depths of who we are constantly becoming...

Seasons, stories, cycles
Beginnings, unfoldings, conclusions
Climaxes
Death

But wait…

Uranus discovered seventeen eighty one
Now Earthlings have an archetype
That breaks Chronus's chains of
Our once allotted time and roles

Now comes revolutions, breakthroughs
Prometheus is unbound
Rewires a resurgence
Regenerating new possibilities

And Neptune dreams new visions
Dissolution of the old
While Phoenix empowered Pluto
Takes us to new depths

A more inclusive, expansive
Interconnected mission
So many new chapters - new roles
To this unfolding story behold!


This was written after a discussion about how baby becomes toddler, becomes child becomes tween and then teenager before young adult.  Then after we have our Saturn return at 29 we become adults, and middle age happens somewhere in our forties. Every five to ten years words denote a new stage of development.


And then there appears to be no accurate words that point to various rich and fertile chapters into which we breathe life post middle age?  I look at vibrant friends in my immediate community -Mechtild at eighty and Imogene at ninety - and think of how new businesses, travel, new skills and hobbies, and reinventing their lives happened in the period post forty.  

I think of futurist Barbara Marx Hubbard, tv icon Barbara Walters, actors Helen Mirren, Meryl Streep, Judy Dench; artist Georgia O'Keefe; Mother Theresa...and I know there are so many other inspiring wemoon who are redefining and breaking open the possibilities of what we can become in the thirty to fifty years post middle age. 

In asking others for words to describe our fifties, sixties, seventies, eighties and nineties I have heard suggestions like regenerators, luminaries, re-emergents, phoenixes, cougars, directors, conductors; or to use colors -copper, silver, gold, platinum…What suggestions - even new words can we conjure into being to better describe these new chapters?








Saturday, June 4, 2011

Gemini New Moon

What thoughts and perceptions cross your mind when you look at this photo? 
What connection does this image have to GEMINI?
I chose this image for our Gemini New Moon Oracle for two reasons:
1) The myth explains the origin of the twins, the symbol associated with Gemini, and
2)Gemini is also associated with an open, curious, versatile mind. Track your thoughts as you learn more about this image.
This photo illustrates the myth of Leda, Queen of Sparta, when seduced by  Zeus in the form of a swan.  Later twins are born: Pollux and Castor (males); and Helen and Clyteamnestra (females).  Pollux and Helen are immortal, while the other two are mortal. Gemini is associated with this and that thinking – black and white – male and female – mortal and immortal.  Perhaps your perception of the photo shifted with this information.
Eight of us met on Wednesday, 1 June 2011. Each had a question.  The energy of this Gemini new moon was used to shed light on these questions and issues.

Saturday, May 21, 2011

Why do I need the exact time I was born?

Often I am asked, "Why do you need the exact time I was born?"

It's like directions to a place...knowing the right day is like knowing the right neighborhood...knowing the hour, gets you to the street, and knowing the right minute and second gets you to the specific address...

This means knowing the date and place of your birth can open the storystrology book; and give broad hints as to what your unfolding story is going to be about but when you want to know about specifics like love, money, health or family the storystrologer needs to go to that particular chapter. To do this the time of your birth is important.

When you take that first breath your cells imprint with the energy of that moment. As C J Jung said, "We are born at a certain hour, at a certain place, and, just like the wine of a certain vintage, we carry the quality of that year and the season within us. That is what astrology claims, nothing more, nothing less"

Saturday, May 14, 2011

That 'C' word ...the Reality Police ... and Partnership


Commitment

That ‘C’ word. The realization that commitment brings responsible action.

When we make a choice we are saying YES to something.  

By making this choice we are saying that this is important and we want this ‘something’ in our life. It is worthy of our attention.  We harness our energy and focus.

What have you recently committed to doing?
How are you doing with your  ‘commitment’?

For a train to function effectively, it needs tracks or railway lines.  This is Saturn energy. The trick is to make sure that the tracks, the inner ‘shoulds’, rules and laws, are in sync with what we value. If we neglect to create tracks or rules that build the kind of world we want, we may unconsciously adopt ‘other people’s ‘ rules or society’s rules. This is when we may feel weighed down and limited with responsibility and judgment.

What do your commitments say about what you value?



This archetype in storystrology is Saturn, also known as ‘The Reality Police’. (See the collage of Saturn above for extra description)

Our
‘Inner Reality Police’ can keep us on target; can give us the energy to end that which has run its course and no longer serves us; can remind us what happened when we previously tried a similar thing – this is why Saturn is also associated with time and wisdom.

What is your relationship with Saturn?

How are you reaping the rewards for what you have sown, and nourished through concentrated effort and dedication?