2001
 Dubya In
 January 20
       
Dubya Ticker
 
2009 
Dubya Out 
January 20 

Goddessing: A Goddess / Pagan Blog

cosmology, consciousness, contrariness: the down to earth musings of a Goddess Mystic


Home
Archives
About Me
Site Feed
Blogroll Me!
Search My Site
Reciprocating Blogs
What is Goddessing?
Blogs, Sites, Resources


If you landed here while looking for the international goddess research newspaper, Goddessing aka Goddessing Regenerated and Goddess Network News), please let me direct you to it. My blog has no affiliation, other than affinity, with this fabulous publication.

About Me
I have come to call myself Sage Starwalker, a name that's both a mouthful and a challenge to live up to, but when you ask for a name, and the Goddess gives you one .... I started the Goddess Mystic web site as a record of my early priestess studies. I'm in my last year of Temple of Diana's Spiral Door program. I'm an eternal student and have no plans to change that. I've accepted the identifier "disabled," but fibromyalgia and osteoarthritis haven't completely stopped me. I have a home-based web design business. My ministry consists of publishing MatriFocus Cross-Quarterly (a zine); developing Matrifocus [dot] Net to bring voices of the Goddess Movement to the blogosphere; teaching; peer counseling; dream interpretation; performing rites of passage and doing divination work for community members; Saturn and Chiron Return chart casting and interpretation; and web activism. My personal practice consists of contemplative arts and natural magic within Goddess, Pagan, Women's Mysteries, and Dianic Wiccan frameworks. I'm a member of the Goddess Scholars Group, the Conflict Transformation Group, and Womonsong. I'm looking to find more time for crochet, beading, and other art-making. Want to know more? Read 100 Things About Me

What is Goddessing?
Goddessing is a recent contribution to Goddess vocabulary, following on from Mary Daly's suggestion that Deity is too dynamic, too much in process, changing continually, to be a noun, and should better be spoken as a Verb (following Buckminster Fuller's "God is a verb"). We can refer to goddessing meaning Goddess culture, Goddess way of life, Goddess practice, or 'my goddessing' as in my individual interpretation and experience of Goddess. (Wikipedia)
See also:

Suggested Reads at Goddessing

Archives






AIR AMERICA RADIO



13 Guidelines for Getting Healthy Now:

A Public Service Announcement from Rayne Today

Diagnose a Stroke with Three Questions.

1. Ask the individual to SMILE.
2. Ask her/him to RAISE BOTH ARMS.
3. Ask the person to SPEAK A SIMPLE SENTENCE (Coherently)

If s/he has difficulty with any of these, call 911. Treatment within five hours of a stroke can reverse almost all the damage!

Anti-abortion Ideologues Beware:

I'm promoting objective, factual information on:

Roe v. Wade

  • abortion

    You can too. Join me in Bombing for Choice.


    Home
    Archives
    About Me
    Site Feed
    Blogroll Me!
    Search My Site
    Reciprocating Blogs
    What is Goddessing?
    Blogs, Sites, Resources


  • Tuesday, November 15, 2005

    Goddess Amaterasu in the News 


    Japanese royalty traditionally marry in shrines dedicated to the goddess Amaterasu, whom legend identifies as the mother of the country's first emperor. (Princess confronts commoner culture shock)




    As Her Imperial Highness Princess Sayako of Japan is marrying a commoner today, there will be several breaks from a traditional royal wedding. She'll be married at a hotel instead of a shrine, for example. The chosen hotel has an in-house shrine, but it's dedicated to another deity. There have been reports that the hotel has scrambled to transport a sacred mirror representing the goddess from the Japanese imperial palace to the hotel. Clearly, some traditions are worth upholding....


    Haloscan: . Blogger: .
    Comments: Goddessing.... lovely new word to be introduced to! I'm finding lots to investigate at your blog site.
    Blessed Be.
     
    Thank you for pointing this article out. I forgot to mention CONGA-RATS on graduation from Spiral Door! I hope to someday enter the spiral myself ... Perhaps very soon.

    And the Tassajara Bread Book ... My fave. I use it always. Did you enjoy "The Visitor"?
     
    Hello you two.

    Sorry to be so inconsistent in responding. Thanks both for visiting my site.

    dyke, I didn't enjoy the Visitor, really. I appreciated many parts of it, and I love Tepper in general, but this was one of her darker ones. My partner says the books she wrote while in great physical pain tend to be darker. Makes sense to me. And I hope you'll find the Spiral Door to be a great learning experience. It was that for me (and still is, post-graduation.)
    # posted by Sage : 7:48 AM
      Post a Comment