The Bard's Grove

"There are times when people need stories more than they need nourishment, because the stories feed something deeper than the needs of the body."
Charles DeLint, The Onion Girl


Wednesday, January 27, 2021

Re-mythologizing the World: St. Brigit's Day -- February 1st - 4th, 2021

 Re-Storying the World: Imbolc

 



St. Brigit’s Day/Candlemas/Imbolc – February 1 – 4


Perhaps it’s time to ‘re-story’ the world. So much of our American culture is new and cutting edge that we’ve lost touch with the old, ancient meaning of the important things in life.

Like the seasons, for one thing.

Do you know that we are about to enter the second phase of Winter, the time when the light will grow quickly now?

We keep a remnant of the old beliefs about this time of year in our celebration of Groundhog’s Day, when the groundhog peeks out of his hole and determines if Spring is on its way.

What is actually happening is that the Sun, on its journey back North, has reached a point where it can now bring more light to the northern hemisphere.

There were many ancient festivals celebrating this fact.


In ancient Rome, February was the month to clean out your inner and outer living space, letting go of the old year to make space for a new beginning in your life.

 


 

In the Celtic Wheel of the Year, this is the celebration of Imbolc, one of the four cross-quarter fire holidays that occur halfway between the solstices and equinoxes at 15* of the fixed, power signs of Aquarius, Taurus, Leo and Scorpio.

Imbolc or St. Brigit’s Day, signals the first signs of Spring and the return of light and life. It is the quickening of the year, the time of pregnancy and expectancy of life which is still hidden but just beginning to be seen. It’s the promise of renewal and the awakening of Earth’s life-force. It is also a time of prophecy and vision – the groundhog looking for his shadow!

St. Brigit/Bridget/Bride was the ancient Irish Mother Goddess, who was so beloved that the Catholic Church turned her into a saint. She is the Triple Goddess, but at Imbolc she is in her Maiden aspect. She is a Goddess of healing, poetry and smithcraft. She is a Goddess of Fire, of the Sun and of the Hearth. She brings fertility to the land and its people and is closely connected to midwives and new-born babies.

Finally the Catholic Church called this festival Candlemas, celebrating the purification of Mary, the Lightbearer. This is the time when the Church blesses all the candles they use during the year in ritual, and they have a ritual where they bless people’s throats to protect them from colds during the late winter months.

 

 



Brigit/Brigid/Bride

Brigid, the Celtic goddess of the fires of the forge and the hearth, of poetry, healing, childbirth, and unity, is celebrated in many European countries. She is known by many names, including that of Saint Brigid who is, perhaps, the most powerful religious figure in Irish history. Her cult was so powerful that the Celtic Christian Church had to adopt her as a Saint, and the Roman Catholic Church followed suit, for her people would not abandon her. Along with St. Patrick, she is the patron Saint of Ireland. St. Brigid is often referred to as Muire na nGael ‘Mary of the Gael’. The name Brigit itself means either ‘Fiery Arrow’, ‘Bright One’, or ‘High One’ in the ancient Celtic language, referring to her solar aspect, as she is a goddess of Light and Flame.

Brigid, Brigit or Brighid (pronounced Breed) is an important Celtic Triple goddess, changing form from Maiden to Mother to Crone. She is the patroness of poetry, healing and smithcraft, all different forms of using the creative fires of life with practical and inspired wisdom. As a solar deity Her attributes are light, inspiration and all skills associated with fire. Although She might not be identified with the physical Sun, She is certainly the benefactress of inner healing and vital energy.

 

Robert Graves calls her 'the White Goddess' but she's not all sweetness and light—she has her dark side, especially if we don't hold up our part of the bargain. She is a Muse that inspires, but can also be fickle if we prove unworthy of her gift. We must do something with that gift of creativity or we will lose it.

Brigid is a goddess of natural springs, those magical places on the Earth where sacred and life-giving waters suddenly flow out of the Earth. A gift of Life from Mother Earth. Ireland is full of springs and wells named after the goddess Brigid. As Water deity, Brigid is the patroness of healers, with many healing springs and wells dedicated to Her throughout the British Isles. Symbolically, water is a portal to the Otherworld and a source of wisdom and healing. Water is also associated with psychic ability, music, and poetry. Natural bodies of water were also sacred to her, particularly where three streams join together. There is a saying that Brigid rewards any offering to her, so offerings of coins were tossed into her wells...the forerunner of the modern custom of throwing a penny into a fountain while you make a wish.

One of the most popular tales of the goddess Brigid involved two lepers who appeared at her sacred well at Kildare and asked to be healed. She told them that they were to bathe each other until the skin healed. After the first one was healed, he felt only revulsion for the other and would not touch him to bathe him. Angered, Brigid caused his leprosy to return. Then she gently placed her mantle (cloak) around the other leper who was immediately healed.

The story of Brigid's birth says a lot about her powers of vision, hope and new life.

Born at the exact moment of daybreak, Brigid rose into the sky with the sun, rays of fire beaming from her head. She was the daughter of Dagda, the great 'father-god' of Ireland. Or perhaps in truth she was here before the Dagda and was his solar mother.

The infant goddess was fed with milk from a sacred cow from the Otherworld. Brigid also owned an apple orchard in the Otherworld and her bees would bring their magical nectar back to earth. It is said that wherever she walked, small flowers and shamrocks would appear. As a sun goddess her gifts are light (consciousness), inspiration, and the vital and healing energy of the sun.

At her most famous shrine Brigid taught humans how to gather and use herbs for their healing properties, how to care for their livestock, and how to forge iron into tools. As for this art of smithcraft, we need both the hottest fires and cooling waters to temper our swords and our plowshares. Both these elements spring from acting with Love. As a goddess of childbirth and protector of all children, she is the patroness of midwifery.

This shrine, near Kildare, was located near an ancient Oak that was considered to be sacred by the Druids, so sacred in fact that no one was allowed to bring a weapon there. The shrine is believed to have been an ancient college of priestesses who were committed to thirty years of service, after which they were free to leave and marry. During their first ten years they received training, the next ten were spent tending the sacred wells, groves and hills of the goddess Brigid, and the last decade was spent in teaching others. Nineteen priestesses were assigned to tend the perpetual flame of the sacred fire of Brigid. Each was assigned to keep the flames alive for one day. On the twentieth day, the goddess Brigid herself kept the fire burning brightly.

The Christian monastery eventually built upon the site of her sacred shrine continued this tradition and became known as a great European center of learning and culture. Indeed, it was instrumental in preserving much ancient learning and literature during the Dark Ages.

The goddess Brigid was also revered as the Irish goddess of poetry and song. Known for her hospitality to poets, musicians, and scholars, she is known as the Irish muse of poetry. So Brigid is the goddess of Bards, musicians and poets, the Muse who inspires. Brigid's fire and water nurtures our inspiration, our ability to 'breath in spirit' which helps us create poetry as well as healing. She is our Muse, who inspires our soul.

Brigit is patroness of poetry and bardic lore as well as bards themselves, who were the oral transmitters of the Celtic culture. This includes storytellers, folklorists, mythologists, balladeers, singers, composers, poets, musicians, particularly harpers, historians and clan genealogists. She provided the ‘fire in the head’ of poetic inspiration. The Bards are the surviving class of the Druids, keeping the ancient traditions alive until the present day. Bards were the honoured guests from cottage to castle, patronized and supported by a network of clientele. The word file – poet, is related to the word faicto see. Poets are inspired by the Other World, and have the gift of prophecy.

As the patroness of poetry and bardic lore, she is the primal retainer of culture and learning. The bansidhe and the filidh, Woman of the Fairy Hills and the class of Seer-poets, respectively, preserve the poetic function of Brigid by keeping the oral tradition alive. It is widely believed that those poets who have gone before inhabit the realms between the worlds, overlapping into ours so that the old songs and stories will be heard and repeated. Thus does Brigid fulfill the function of providing a continuity by inspiring and encouraging us.

 Ritual Celebration:

 If you want to start to ‘re-story’ your world, take time out this Imbolc to create a ritual to envision what your year will bring to you. Light a candle, take a journey to the goddess’ cauldron of life and let your creative imagination give you the clue to the next stage of your life.

Sunday, November 22, 2020

Enola Holmes: A Story of the emerging New Feminine Spirit

Enola Holmes: The Alone Girl

 


 

Sherlock Homes’ little sister.


Just as smart. Just as courageous. Just as curious. (but not as valued)


She’s a new type of girl, having to deal with an old-fashioned male mindset and a sexist society. (Sound familiar?)


She’s a girl, raised by the wild and free feminine. (I know some of these wild maidens being raised by wild and free moms. They rock.)


And they’ll never get her to fit into their tidy little boxes. (Although capitalism has us buying things in boxes, which keeps us boxed in.)



I was so surprised at how much I enjoyed Enola Holmes. I hadn’t heard anything about this movie and just chose it out of curiosity. I always liked Sherlock’s stories. And the blurb said she solved mysteries.


I was pleasantly surprised because it was so much more than a mystery. This is a great story about the rise of Feminine Spirit and how it supports this young woman’s innate sense of freedom. (There are some early feminist story threads throughout it.)


The Goddess really made a comeback in the 1970’s but we lost sight of her a few decades later. Back then, the major thrust of the feminist movement was into the outer world, demanding gender equality.


In the past 10 years, though, more women are finding their way to the Goddess and to a reconnection to the Divine Feminine. They are taking the inner, heroine’s journey to reconnect to our lost gifts and wisdom. And now we are turning back out into the world with a new vision and a new wisdom.


A truly feminine wisdom. A triple Goddess type of wisdom.

 

 

Enola Holmes is the young Maiden, trained in feminine consciousness along with masculine intellect, and then left to face her initiation into womanhood.


Enola was raised by a single mom who taught Enola how to activate and integrate her body, mind and spirit. Her mom allowed Enola to explore how to find her way naturally, awakening her native intelligence. She let Enola’s curiosity and sense of fun steer her studies, whether in learning tennis or reading the house’s entire library. Science, learned in nature and in a lab, sparked her curiosity further. 

 

 Demeter & Persephone

Mother and daughter were as close as close can be. Very much like Demeter and Kore in ancient Greece. Bonded in love and mutual respect. But like that ancient myth, this idyllic life had to be broken.


On her 16th birthday, Enola wakes to find her mother gone from the house. Disappeared, leaving all her belongings behind, along with her daughter.


Enola, so much younger than her two older brothers, hasn’t seen them in years, but with her mother’s disappearance, they arrive to take care of the house as well as Enola’s life.

 


Sherlock, Mycroft and Enola

Sherlock is the brother Enola respects and emulates, collecting and studying any news story about the crimes he’s solved. Sherlock is amused and bemused, and intrigued by her wit. Watching to see who she is. Often sympathizing with her.


Mycroft is another matter. He’s a stereotype of patriarchy – fussy, dominating and sort of stupid. He becomes her guardian and is appalled by her apparent lack of civilized manners. He’s the one who plans to put her in a box, a girls’ finishing school, so she can be married off.


So here is patriarchy thrown in Enola’s face. What will she do? How will her upbringing help her?


One part of Elona’s initiation story is to find her lost mother. Through many adventures and narrow escapes, Enola travels to London seeking her.


The other part of her initiation story is to help a young man develop a spine and face his power. In following the clues and trusting her intuition and her logic, she proves herself the equal of Sherlock and the ban of Mycroft!


I’m sure there are lots of women and their daughters who will love this movie.


So many women today are teaching their daughters the magic of feminine nature and power – to let instinct guide, to learn through connection, to let curiosity lead the way – as well as the mastery of masculine logic and will.


At some point, these young women will be thrust into the world and have to face patriarchal rules and opinions. If they use their feminine wits, charm, grace and intelligence, as Enola did, they will maneuver quite well in the world.


They need to be fearless yet cautious. Smart yet willing to learn. Secretive yet open to help. They need a vision to follow into the world. And they have to deal with whatever adventures come their way as they follow their path. These are the fairy tale tests the hero or heroine must deal with on her way to her goal.


And of course, all women need training in martial arts – each of us needs to know how to defend ourselves if we get in scary situations.


Let’s recognize what feminine consciousness achieves. By Enola, the feminine, holding true to herself, she frees the young masculine lord and sets him on his course to do the right thing. Because he listens to her. Because he respects her.


She is the new feminine spirit at work in the world.


As Enola and her mom state, “Our future is up to us!”


Enola Holmes, based on a YA series by Nancy Springer, is on Netflix. I highly recommend it to women and girls. And the men who love them.

Monday, June 1, 2020

The Great Realisation: How 2020 changed our lives.

This is a wonderful little story.  About Us.  About the old world and the new one we're creating.

 Enjoy.