EphemeralWhere you
live and how it shapes
you
Ah yes, another Tuesday. I'll skip the depression
talk this week around.
"I'll gladly pay you Tuesday for a hamburger today." I'll skip that one too, although I have been looking at the magickal ethics of eating meat. Don't hold your breath, that one is a long way from finished. Although I have been having fun with the rites of barbecue in the Southern tradition. They'll tell you it is Texas-style, but we were doing it in Louisiana and Missouri a long time before Texas did it. Ahem, sorry. Another time. What I want to talk about this Tuesday is that spot where you live, that window of experience and perception that defines you. The most disturbing thing about my arrest was when I realized that even though I should have known better, so much of my identity was tied up in things rather than ideas and practices. When I am thinking about my path, I'm used to being able to reach for a book or my notes or my handy dandy Palm. When I am feeling stressed, my fingers go for my pendent or my belt buckle (if I am wearing pants). There's nothing wrong with that, but that shouldn't be where I live. Caging a line from Lucas (who caged it himself), "Luminous beings are we, not this crude matter." Humans pride themselves on moving from one frame of reference to another, but the spot where we live should be where ideas meet spirit. That's the place that the travails of this world can't touch. That's where we find the spark that is our link to the Divine. In each of us, that's our constant. It's where I am and who I am and what I am. "I
am."
"I am where I am." "I am who I am." "I am what I am." "I yam what I yam." And you just thought the Popeye reference was idle free association. Yes it's silly, but I bet you remember it now. A gold star if you can figure out how it really ends. From the "normal" world, where we live is fleeting, ephemeral, barely touched. But we need to know the path back. So when we need it, that's where we live.
|
Pagan philosopher, libertarian, and part-time trouble maker, NeoWayland looks at keeping truths alive despite a wash of nonsense. But don't be surprised when he's doing the "nekkid Pagan guy" thing.
Most Recent Comments
Categories
Befores
January 2007
October 2007
October 2008
October 2009
Calendar
Archives
NeoLinks
Letter from Hardscrabble Creek Daily journal of a Lycian witch World Religions - Religious Forums Ontario Consultants on Religious Tolerance The Witches Sabbats by Mike Nichols
NeoBlogs
Books
Listmania - Eclectic Basic Pagan References
Listmania - Eclectic Introductory Practical Witchcraft
Listmania - Eclectic Intermediate Practical Witchcraft
XML/RSS Feed
LEGAL
and homepage.mac.com/ neowayland/iblog/index.html If your web browser does not show one of these addresses, then this page being used without permission of the author. Views expressed by NeoWayland are his own and do not represent any other enity. NeoWayland freely accepts individual and sole responsibility for his words and actions.
For the best Pagan information
Statistics
Total entries in this blog:
Published On: Apr 02, 2010 02:46 PM ![]() ![]() The Celtic Tree of Life is an original design by Welsh artist Jen Delyth ©1990 ketlicdesigns.com
Some textures provided by GRSites.com
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||