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Goddessing: A Goddess / Pagan Blog

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


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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)
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  • 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....


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    Friday, November 04, 2005

    Floating 


    I am floating. Not untethered, but floating. No wait. Floating is too passive. I'm swimming in air.

    Weather and landscape are golden, wild, seductive. I can't stay inside.

    I'm being mentored in the mysteries of the staff, and a young oak does the happy dance and says "Work with me! Me! Me! Me!" every time I'm out her way.

    The Samhain Issue of MatriFocus is online, and so many exciting things are happening, MatriFocus-wise.

    A new writer's group has been birthed! Three of us decided on this adventure at the New Oracle Institute party a couple of weekends ago and had our first weekly session yesterday. I had 1000 words from my NaNoWriMo project to offer, and they were well received. Hmmm. Maybe I can write fiction. The question still remains: Will I?

    The kindling stack has been laid for tomorrow's mega leaf-burn, and the tree guy comes next week to clear the thicket of the buckthorns, mulberries, hackberries, and black locusts that are in the way of both the oaks and maples and also our view of the lake through it all -- a joint project with our neighbor who owns most of the land on which grows the thicket. It will still be wild space, but the view will be fabulous and the habitat better for the hardwoods (and no doubt for the swamp buttercups, the wood anemone and wild geraniums, and my beloved mayapple). A few of the black cherries will come out, too -- the ones that are too dwarfed, crowded, and shaded by others to grow to a healthy maturity.

    And a new adventure in living -- a Cat Temple and Craft Room being created in our home this week and next. Not something we planned to do, but something the Cat Goddess dropped in our laps and said "Make it happen, now." (OK, that's pretty cryptic and mystical, but the story's just too long for a day like today when my work is done and it's time to get back outside and glory in the gold.) Good friends are coming over tomorrow to move eight tall bookshelves and several thousand books, and to break bread with us a time or two!

    And it's the season of endings: graduation from the Spiral Door, a four-year spiritual journey undertaken in magical partnership with my beloved; the final season of Womonsong (Madison's feminist choir) -- a 13-year relationship for her and a 5-year experience for me; the departure of beloved friend and confidant, Sarah Bebhinn, for graduate school adventures and a new life in Iowa.

    And likewise, a season of newest beginnings: the dark of the year, germination and dream time; time and space opening for heart-, hearth-, creative-, imaginal-, social-, and priestess work from the void the ending activities offer up.


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