Enough already!

Remembrance Day poppy, photo from the Guardian

At his preschool, my son made a poppy to wear for Remembrance Day, the British Equivalent of Veterans Day. He quite liked his poppy and made sure he was very careful with it. He wore his proudly in the middle of his shirt all day long. Until he asked why we wore poppies on this day.

I’m not sure what the preschool told him. I explained that the poppy flower symbolized remembering and today we were remembering the dead that had fought in wars. I explained that while war was a terrible thing, we needed to honor those that had fought for our freedoms. It was a way of honoring the dead of war, as well.

I think he’s a little burnt out on honoring the dead! After several days around Samhain and nearly nightly candle offerings to the Ancestors and Mighty Dead of our household, and now this, I think Son had decided he’d had enough. ‘I don’t want to remember the Dead! I don’t want to remember! I don’t want remember them! I don’t want to wear this poppy!’ he yelled. So we took it off. And then he proceeded to carry it around for the rest of the evening, being very careful with it.

Is any one else feeling worn out from two straight weeks honoring the Ancestors? For those of you with children, how do you talk to your children about the Dead?

———————–

Full moon

In other news, I have been fighting a virus for a couple of weeks now. I think it has morphed into a low-grade ear infection. This has sapped my energy levels. I had hoped to finish up a tarot reading for a friend over the incredible full moon that just passed. I tend to feel less magical on full moons – I prefer the dark moon. But on a clear night with the moon shining bright I can’t help but want to go outside or get up to something. I’m hoping this illness will pass. I don’t feel I have a lot of energy for anything more than reading or breathing meditation. That makes for dull blogging, but there it is.

 

 

What sort of mischief or magic did you get up to during the full moon?

Ancestors

(Part three of three)

The Samhain season is at last over for me. Four straight days! The kids’ party, a ritual, our family dumb supper, and singing for All Souls’ Day at the local Anglican church. While the first and second activities tapped into the spirit of mischief and frolic of the season, and activities two and three capitalized on the ‘thinness of the veils between the worlds’, only items three and four were explicitly about the Ancestors and Mighty Dead, two very important parts of the Samhain season.

The last few years I’ve established a dumb supper as a family tradition. It’s called ‘dumb’ in the older sense of the word: no talking. The idea is to set a place at the table, full plate of food and all, for the Ancestors. We eat by candle light and ideally, after toasting the Dead, we’re silent through the meal. However, with a three-year old, nothing is very silent. For this meal we had Welsh sausages and stwmp naw rhyw, or nine mash, a traditional Welsh mash made up of nine ingredients (potatoes, carrots, peas, leek, salt, pepper, milk, butter, and swede, for which I substituted parsnip).

My Samhain altar, glass of whisky to be added later in the evening, poppy for remembrance

This year was more chaotic than most. My husband was upstairs trying to put the baby to sleep when son came to the table. We talked about the meal and the Ancestors and finally started in so our food wouldn’t get cold. The baby didn’t go down, so later, I sat her on my lap and talked to the people in the pictures on my altar, while husband put our son to bed. I talked to my maternal grandmother and told her about some stuff going on my family and asked for her assistance. I talked to Victor and Cora Anderson, thanking them for all they’d given, and asked for their blessings on my work.

It was rather an underwhelming event, if I’m honest. I find that having children makes everything so unpredictable. Holidays and spiritual practice and all of everything – even this blog – cannot be counted on to be uninterrupted. If my aim is perfectionism I would need to give up right now. Instead, I chose to DO, and roll with what comes up. I’d like all the traditions to be Meaningful and Awesome. Just like I’d like this blog to be more consistent and with better writing! But if I wait for the time to make everything Just So, it’ll never happen. In some ways, this is a blessing I’ve gained since becoming a parent.

The Sun, from the deck I use

After I’d cleaned up dinner I sat in the candlelight and did a tarot reading for myself for the dark half of the year. It gave me some great information. Then I did another reading, this one for a friend.

But back to the Ancestors. The more I practice paganism the more I come to honor my ancestors and my elders in general. As a child I couldn’t wait to be a grandparent. I really loved the idea of grandparents. I think it was because I was so disappointed in my own experience of them. This raises an interesting question: what do you do if you don’t like your ancestors? What if you don’t know them? I try to honor them in attitude, seeking out their positive qualities. But, for example, my paternal grandfather was not a nice man. He was cantankerous and I have no positive memories of him. I do not want him on my ancestor altar, so I leave him off. I can speak of qualities he’s passed down the line that I am grateful for, but I don’t think I need to get cozy with him in the spirit world.

The Mighty Dead refers to those whose memories we honor and whose lives and work are the ancestors in spirit of our lives and work. Honoring them is just as important. Perhaps we can call this group our family of choice, rather than our blood kin. This is why I feel it is important to have Victor and Cora’s picture on my altar.

I’ll be honest, I have mixed feelings about the Ancestors. It comes from my ambivalence around my family, living and dead. It comes from my own peripatetic lifestyle and lack of rootedness. I’m not someone who sees or hears the Dead, so I don’t feel like I have a deep relationship here. In a lot of ways, I’m just going through the motions out of an idea that It Is Good to do this. Although… as I’m typing this, I wonder if it wouldn’t be appropriate to have a picture of my hometown, Juneau, Alaska, on the altar. It’s as much a part of my family and my soul as any person. Hm, that’s an idea.

While singing at the church service last night I thought about how little experience with death I’ve had. I am grateful for that. I also felt the lack of community. When the list of ‘faithful’ who were ‘departed in the Lord’ was read, I knew none of them. It was a long list and the dead prayed for were all from the local Church of Wales community. I felt a bit of an interloper. But my recent ancestors were Christians so I lit candles for them and offered prayers for them, as well as for the dead who had no one to pray for them.

Now the holiday really does feel completed for the year. All the decorations are down. I will continue to honor the Ancestors and Mighty Dead through out my practice. I feel like any relationship, it takes time to develop and I have to learn to listen.

Samhain Ritual

(Part two of three)

Imagine a damp, grey evening, the last of twilight taking leave of the sky. You walk through a few wet, quiet streets, finally stepping off the pavement into a muddy track. Your feet squelch in the mud. If you hadn’t come this way once or twice in the daylight you might never know where the opening to the trail begins. You dip into the opening, a hollow between some branches. The branches slide over your face and grab at your hair and coat, and then you are through. The last of the light is gone and your eyes adjust to the shadows. Barely. It’s been a long time since you were last out at night. Dead leaves rustle and crunch under your muddy boots. An owl hoots overhead. A light rain patters onto your head now, onto the leaves next. Up ahead a ways you see a lit jack-o-lantern sitting on a rise at your right. You scramble up the embankment. Another jack-o-lantern lights the rickety stairway down into a gully. You stand and breathe. Listen. Feel. Adjust. Say hello under your breath to Ana and Arddu.

It’s time to begin, so you descend the stairway made of concrete blocks, tree roots, slopes of earth. A jack-o-lantern greets you at the bottom. A circle of low stone sits in the gully. Trees lace overhead, catching most, but not all, of the rain. A small fire glows in the middle of the circle. You step to the entrance. An owl hoots again. A figure looms in front of you – tall, draped in a hooded black cape, faceless. The fire lights it from the back and smoke billows out all around it. A sword touches your neck and startles you into recognizing a smaller figure, masked, standing directly in front of you. “How do you enter?” he asks.

Hell yes, this a promising start.

But let’s back up. The ritual began for me before I left the house. It’s not often I have the opportunity for some ritual. The baby was asleep, the boy occupied. I decide to prepare myself with a bath. Ritual cleansing is something that many religions observe – from the merest flick of holy water on the fingertips or forehead, to full-blown fasting and scrubbing. I decide to carve out some space for myself, cleanse myself within and without, and get myself into a sacred mindset. I gather my materials and start running the bath. I strip down and into my bathrobe.

Wait? Is mama in the bathroom? Well, then the three-year old must be in the bathroom too! ‘Watcha doin’ Mama? What’s that? Why? Why? Why?’ What’s the surest way to send my boy into apoplectic fits? Lock the bathroom door. He sits on the other side of the door, pounding, weeping, yelling. ‘Mama, MAMA, DON’T LOCK ME OUT!’ It’s two parts absurd, one part heart wrenching. I decide to get on with things.

I start by making kala. For this I need to raise some energy. One of things that I’ve learned to do in the last few months is use anything around me to help me raise energy. I have been sick for a week, only just starting to improve, so I don’t have much in my energy reserves. I listen to the running of the water. Breathe. I sit with my own breathe, knowing that all breath is energy, is life, even if it doesn’t feel particularly juicy. I listen to my son sobbing on the other side of the door and I breathe that powerful energy in. I complete the rite and say the Holy Mother prayer. I grab handfuls of epsom salts and bless them, dumping them into the water, by the earth which is her fertile body. I light some incense, for the air which is her vital breath. I light a candle in a red glass votive,  for the fire of her quickening spirit. I pour in the last of the water from St Non’s Well, sacred to Ana, by the waters of her teeming womb.  I say a prayer for cleansing and healing.

And then I open the door. A tear-stained, snot-smeared, blue-eyed little boy stumbles into the bathroom as if nothing was ever wrong. I let him throw the sugar skull bath bomb into the steaming water. I get into the bath and immerse myself. I look up to see my son, stripped down and ready to climb into the tub with me. I’m not annoyed at any of this. It’s sweet. He wants to know what everything is, but mostly he wants to sit on my lap in the waters and watch the fizzy bath bomb bubble.

Bubble, bubble, toil and trouble, indeed.

Time winds down and I have to get going. Thankfully, it’s a dark outdoor ritual so fashion is unimportant. I throw on jeans, a top, my wooly Icelandic jumper, a black and silver scarf, some red lipstick, a rain coat, and my stripy wellies. I grab some dark chocolate in case we need offerings.

The ritual, as most public rituals tend to, erred more on dramatics than on magic. I’d heard some stupid drama that occurred just before the circle was prepared and I suspect that shifted the energy of the event some. While nothing deeply meaningful occurred, it was a pleasure to be out in the dark and the wet and the trees. It was a pleasure to absorb some myth and theatre. It was a blessing to say goodbye to all that happened over the past bright months. Part of Samhain is letting go. We have harvested the fruits of our efforts. The dark months are for rest and gestation of what is to come. I said goodbye to my PhD program. In another, earlier preparation for the holiday I had emailed my professors and formally withdrew from school. I said goodbye to the Virgin Mary, who has been the focus of my research. Because I am no longer in school my visa is forfeit, so I said goodbye to Wales. We leave this town on the 21st of December and the UK on the 28th.

My night was a blessing. Wales has been a blessing. How was your Samhain? What did you let go? What are you letting rest? What gestates within you?

Kids & Halloween

(Part one of three)

I love Halloween. I love the tip into the dark half of the year. I’m not very invested in all the trappings that come with mainstream Halloween stuff. I’m not super crafty, so the costume part isn’t that exciting for me. I try to avoid sugar as much as possible, so we go really easy on the candy. I don’t like a lot of cheap, plastic crap, so that narrows down the amount of stuff which with we decorate. But Halloween, as it is secularly practiced (did I just make up ‘secularly’?), is such a wonderful holiday for kids! Candy, costumes, play – facing the spooky things of the world – it’s all a wonderful treat for kids.

First jack-o-lanterns for the boy

My memories of Halloween as a kid involve carving pumpkins and dressing up for trick-or-treating. However, in South East Alaska, winter had already descended by the end of October and costumes were rarely awesome. Sometimes it had already started to snow, so you had to figure out a costume that would look good with a snow suit (not possible). If it hadn’t started snowing, it was likely the rain was blowing sideways and the temperatures were close to freezing, so what costume would look good with rain gear (not much)? As a female, it was hard to get too caught up in the Slutty X costumes, merely because staying warm and dry was a priority.

Halloween, or Samhain (sow-en), for the Celtic observers, is an important festival in the Pagan world. It marks the shifting of the year, from the light half to the dark half. Winter begins; the harvesting season is over. The ‘veils between the worlds’ is considered thin, meaning that we have more contact with the spirit realms, including the world of the dead. This is why we dress up – to confuse the evil spirits. In older times, dressing up and playing games was a way to throw off the respected cultural norms, allowing people the freedom to be something else. I think this is where the Sexy X costumes come from.

I refuse to link to any of the Sexy costumes, but you know what I’m referring to. I don’t know if they’ve gotten worse and more ubiquitous in the last decade (I suspect yes) or if I’m just getting old and happen to be a mother now (yes, to that too) that I find Halloween slightly more problematic. I certainly don’t want my daughter growing up thinking that it’s cool to be ‘Sexy Elmo’ (and yes, I’ve seen a picture of that costume). And then there’s the problem of all the sugar in a world already too disordered in its eating. Oh, it’s a parental conundrum.

Halloween spread

Here in Wales, and I think the greater United Kingdom, Halloween is not a Thing. Not many places decorate for it. Very few people dress up. Not many kids go trick-or-treating. Our first year here we had two knocks on the door! Last year we had about ten. I can appreciate this. However, my husband really wanted to have a little Halloween party for our son and a couple of families and their small children. So we decorated the house, laid out some food, and hosted 6 adults, two three-year olds, two two-year olds, a one-year old, and the 8 month old baby. Strangely enough, hardly any one touched the chocolate! I made warm apple cider (non-alcoholic), which must be an American specialty because this was the second party we’ve had where no one seems to know what it is!

Our three-year old boy dressed up as a witch. I was planning on dressing up as a man, with a tie and a moustache, but I have been sick for a week and didn’t have the energy to do much more than shower and show up. I even forgot to dress up the baby. No matter! She had fun on her own, playing with everyone else’s costume.

Baby girl with the stang

Halloween is a holiday that drapes over a few days. I think that traditionally in Celtic lands it lasted for three days. That suits me just fine. Sunday was the children’s party. Tonight I am attending a ritual, in the woods, with the local pagan society. Tuesday evening we will have a family dumb supper in honor of the dead. Wednesday I am singing with the local Church of Wales (Anglican/Episcopal) chapel in their service for All Souls Day.

May you have a festive All Hallow’s Eve, a blessed Samhain, and a happy Halloween! I hope you stay warm and dry!