Monthly Archives: December 2014

2014 in Reflection

By Amanda Moreno

I’m in the process of reflecting on the incredible year that has been 2014, and I have to say I’m hesitant to put things into words at this point. Although I’ve been writing about much of the restructuring and growth in this forum, it still feels too tender to be concretized by words.

Photo by graywacke/A Landing a Day

Photo by graywacke/A Landing a Day

I’ve spent time this week going through my journals from this year, specifically the 40 or so pages from my five weeks spent immersed in ‘the work’ while in Florida. These reflections as well as a whole bunch of synchronicities and the cards in my new tarot deck (side note: after four months of searching, I finally found a deck that gave me that love-at-first-sight glow of knowing!) have been echoing one theme: major rebirth. An entirely new cycle beginning. Resolution and purification of some very old core complexes.

This year has been a monumental one in my life at all levels, and I’m happy to be getting positive affirmation and reinforcement, even if there are still parts of me that doubt that I’ve really changed any patterns at all. Perhaps that doubt will keep me humble and honest? I hope so.

Long-held narratives surrounding relationships of all kinds, the anticipation of trauma, and what it means to be of service while having strong boundaries have broken open to more hope and possibility. The resulting upsurge of encounters with my vulnerability and insecurity has helped me to understand just how sensitive I am — and what a blessing that can be, even as I fumble through getting to know myself as an emotional being. I feel like a child in so many ways.

I’ve been blessed in the past year to finally begin to experience the true merging of career and personal path. Vocation in its true form — as Jung used it, mainly as the path towards individuation — is being realized. I can remember specific moments this year when I claimed the labels “astrologer” and, dare I say it, “writer.” I’m so hesitant to claim labels other than my name, so these moments were breakthroughs for me. Creating a sustainable way to live my calling is an adventure I just can’t turn down.

I wrote the above, and then found myself in a many-hours-long plunge into a well of emotions. It felt like all of the old stuff rushing to the surface, like a greatest hits sample-platter of all the things I thought I cleared and healed this year.

This emotional plunge led to a fitful night of moving between sleeping and dreaming and crying. To find comfort and stop some unnecessary mind-fucking, I pulled out Caitlin Matthews’ book on Sophia.

During my time in Florida, I was enchanted by a mega-swarm of synchronicities that kept showing me that Sophianic mythology is of huge importance to my path. I gained more understanding of what I’m here to do and came into contact with the heart of my lineage. This feeling of homecoming happened so frequently this year. It seems to be something that happens as consciousness becomes aware of what the soul knows, tapping into ancient memory.

As lie in my bed, the emotions continued to build. I did my best not to assign meaning and words, but to instead let the emotions come out. At first they trickled slowly, but then gushed out in a torrent. I kept in mind the knowing so supported by my lessons in divine wisdom, courtesy of my run-ins with Sophia: I am here to anchor love. Love is really all there is.

I could feel a particularly insidious old pattern arising: a pattern of amping up drama until someone noticed (they rarely ever do, I’ve come to find out). As the grief intensified I was reminded of my new narrative, that I am someone who asks for, receives and gives support. I managed to find my words, and said out loud to my sweetie (at 4:00 am): “Too much sadness.”

I felt his arms around me (oh, how long I’ve waited for someone to hold me during these times — thank you, 2014!) and the instinct to run and hide and cry in private overwhelmed me so much that I started to crawl to the edge of the bed.

And then I stopped, that I could receive the comfort I had asked for, and he curled himself around my sitting form, and I just let it flow without understanding why.

Finally, words came: I don’t want anyone to suffer anymore. I could feel all around me the acuity of the suffering in the world, the acuity of the suffering in the various lines and lineages I’m a part of, my heart open and tapped in and grieving.

I heard myself saying, “Nothing ever changes,” even as I had an awareness that it felt like I was saying goodbye to something. A swarm of negative thinking, beauty and pain melding to create tension on the heart, and the resulting catharsis. The realization that so much of my personal ‘anchor love and light here’ mantra is based in my ability to open my heart and feel what is going on with my loved ones and in the world.

We have all been through so much during this Uranus-Pluto square. Understatement of the year, I know. And really, it’s not limited to just this small blink in time, as the epic of our collective time on this Earth ripples out in a sphere. We’re nearing the ‘end’ of this one little transformative passage, and I wonder all the time what we will do with what we’ve learned. I wonder if the depths of the Plutonian underworld will be able to integrate the sudden barrages of Uranian lightning bolts. It’s a line of thinking that is something along the lines of: if the soil is not ready, the seed will not take.

And so the prioritization of inner work and the spiritual path continues, even as I grapple with understanding just what that means. I have so much gratitude for getting to participate in the world stage at such a difficult, tumultuous, inspirational and magical time.

Thanks for reading.

Planet Waves Daily Oracle for Sunday, Dec. 28, 2014

Today’s Oracle takes us to the Taurus weekly for Sept. 15, 2006

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When you sense the fear that making a particular choice is risky, pause and ask yourself just what you stand to lose — and though it may not occur to you, what you might gain. Being conscious this way will help you avoid secret fears running your life, and at the moment that’s a possibility. But there is power, as in strength and creative potential, wrapped up in that fear. This association is why so often we feel that it’s a huge risk to express ourselves in some creative way, and why, in the end, putting creativity into action is such a dare. Family Focus: Anger is not always inappropriate, we just need to know where the line is. I propose that line is when it’s used as a weapon to instigate guilt in someone.

The Daily Oracle offers a horoscope selected randomly by our Intelligent Archive Oracle program, unique to Planet Waves. It’s also a database of my horoscopes going back to the late 1990s. You can use the Intelligent Archive Oracle to answer questions and give you ideas for how to handle problems and situations you cannot see through. This feature is available to our All Access and Core Community members. See this link for more information.

The Relationship Review

We’re in the last week of 2014 — which means lots of “year in review” articles all over the place. Using the theme of “review” a little differently, Joshua Levin offers a simple check-in template at deepeningrelationships.com as a way to consciously reconnect in your relationships and strengthen intimacy throughout the year. — Amanda

Years ago I became clear about prioritizing my relationships—not only my primary partnership but my close friends and family as well.

Joshua Levin

Joshua Levin

I wanted to honor the connection, joy, support, love, and learning that these relationships provided. And I also wanted to keep them thriving by giving them regular attention and making any needed adjustments. It seemed all too common to take relationships for granted, to forget that the “we” space needs an occasional input of nourishment in order to keep giving nourishment out. It also seemed all too easy to get stuck in a rut of complacency, to half-heartedly maintain connections that were only half-way satisfying.

I came up with the idea of doing semi-annual “relationship reviews” with all the close people in my life. I was very excited! Just about everyone was willing to give it a try, but most either felt the format was too artificial or didn’t see the process as necessary in the first place. I persisted for a while but dropped it when my enthusiasm wasn’t reciprocated.

Lately, there’s been momentum building in my community around bringing more awareness and authenticity to our relationships. There’s a blooming eagerness to say more, to listen more, to learn more, to risk more. An increasing number of us are seeing how much we have to offer each other, how much is possible when we don’t waste so much time indulging in holding ourselves back, or being afraid of each other, or thinking we don’t need each other.

We do need each other — especially now, during these times of big changes, surging energies, and tumultuous personal transformation. And we need to hone our skills of creating and maintaining honest, full, real connection with each other. We need efficient templates that can help us do this, even if they seem artificial or contrived at first. We only need them to help break the ice, to free up our brains, hearts, and guts to the point where we can be more creative, fluid, and organic with the work and play of actively tending the gardens of our relationships.

So, I’m offering this relationship review process as one possible template to help us stay clear, connected, open, and engaged. Give it a try if you resonate with what I’m saying here. It may be useful as it is, or you may want to tweak it some.

Note: Many of us need help expressing our “withholds” — the judgments or reactions that we don’t share. It’s also true that many of us hold back from sharing our appreciations of each other. I initiated a process in my men’s group of sharing this second type of withhold and named them “golden withholds.” It was amazing to hear all the sincere praise we had for each other that we hadn’t given voice to. No matter the content, sharing withholds can liberate a tremendous amount of energy. New possibilities for fun, growth, creativity, and synergy arise that were previously out of reach and, often, entirely out of view.

This template is simply a series of prompts. Each person takes a turn speaking the prompts while the other listens without interrupting. You can go thru the whole list at once or alternate back and forth. You can also ask for a brief response at each step (if you’ve shared a lot) or wait till the end.

This process can be used when there is a strong need for clearing or repair in a relationship (at these times, a more reflective template such as Imago’s couple’s dialogue can also be very helpful). It can also be used, as I’ve suggested here, on a regular basis even if it doesn’t seem that there is a pressing need for it. You might be surprised by what you find when you commit to the process and go slowly.

1. Opening. Begin by saying that the reason you’re doing this is because this person and this relationship is important to you.

2. Appreciation. What I appreciate about you is….

3. Appreciation. What I appreciate about our relationship is…..

4. Withhold. What I’m resenting/judging about you is….

5. Feelings. I’ve been feeling angry/hurt/scared because you….

6. Ownership. These feelings were stirred/triggered by you, but they were not caused by you. They live in me as…. (share how they connect to long-standing patterns or beliefs you carry.)

7. Request for Change. How I want our relationship to be different is…

8. Request for Response. Ask for response to what you’ve shared (if you haven’t already been getting that) or whatever else you need to feel complete for now.

——————

In addition to being a “seeker of truth and inner freedom” from a young age (he writes, “I was six years old when I asked my mother, ‘What are we all doing here?’ Seriously.”), Joshua Levin has joined Jayson Gaddis, MA, LPC, CGT in facilitating Men’s Leadership Trainings through the Integral Center in Boulder, Colorado.

Planet Waves Daily Oracle for Saturday, Dec. 27, 2014

Today’s Oracle takes us to the Pisces weekly for Nov. 15, 2007

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Whatever you must do to forget your old sense of limitation, or to trick yourself out of thinking that it matters, do it now. Plan outrageous things, and dare to start doing them; imagine your greatest success and dare to think that it’s possible at this moment rather than far off in the future. As these weeks of your life develop, there are many surprises in store, and one of them is the peculiar way that the ceiling of your life ceases to be something that you can see through but not actually penetrate. In psychological terms, this would be about admitting and respecting your own need for success and achievement. Go beyond why you would deserve this (and by default, your fear that others do not). Go past the fact that you’ve never quite had these opportunities in the past. Go past thinking, and invoke cosmic passion — and let it seize your life, your heart, your soul.

The Daily Oracle offers a horoscope selected randomly by our Intelligent Archive Oracle program, unique to Planet Waves. It’s also a database of my horoscopes going back to the late 1990s. You can use the Intelligent Archive Oracle to answer questions and give you ideas for how to handle problems and situations you cannot see through. This feature is available to our All Access and Core Community members. See this link for more information.

The Year Of Thinking Dangerously

Hard to believe how quickly this year has passed. So much for the “time speeding up” theory being all in our heads. Or not. Maybe the fact that each day is jam packed with so much noise and news and mayhem that our brains are bedazzled, spilling over with a glut of information, accounts for why we can’t recall the details from yesterday’s breakfast or even the telephone call we got ten minutes ago. That can create the illusion that life is one endless stream of crises, requiring ingestion of at least one Emergn-C® (the equivalent vitamins of 10 oranges without any of the pleasure of eating them) a day to boost our immune system.

275+Judith_Gayle

You can’t contemplate a new year without taking a scan of the old one, jotting down a few notes, and this year was packed full of all manner of dire speculations and dangerous thinking, infecting the whole of our conversation. We had ISIS and Putin and Clive Bundy and Ferguson. We had missing airliners and erupting volcanoes and an annexed Crimea. We had the Clippers and Syria and McCutcheon vs. the Fed and Hobby Lobby. We had Palestine and Israel, the XL Pipeline and fracking. We had Ukraine and any number of school shootings and Ebola.

We had EPA changes by presidential authority, hundreds of thousands of political commercials, and a mid-term election that proved, without a doubt, that the average citizen does not understand politics. Now we have the Attorney General and Secretary of Defense resigned with no replacements in sight; we have Obama determined to use executive power to close Gitmo even if the Republicans swallow their tongue over prisoner placement, and that’s if they even notice, now that they’re busy suing over both Affordable Care and immigration. We have a lovely mess, indeed.

2014 was, essentially, Year Two of the new Era, the first to allow our chronic problems to break the surface, catching our eye like half-buried diamonds waiting for someone to notice their sparkle. Racism, sexism, classism — they glitter brightly. This current year seemed to bring everything up for our careful attention, while seeming to have no agreement about what, if anything, to do about them. The Republicans, for their part, didn’t even try, but the Democratic attempt to break through their stonewall was so puny as to be embarrassing.

This was a political year with little political movement, essentially, but all the big themes were there, exposed and glittering dangerously, for us to examine. It’s taken us awhile to get the full picture but now we see pretty clearly, don’t we? Now it’s up to us to decide what to pick up, what to lay down, what to mend and carry forward into the future.

I read an AP article this week that startled me. I had to stop and think about how the dots connected to our global challenges, because clearly — they did. The article was titled “How Torture Physically Changes The Brain Forever”:

At times, waterboarding rendered al-Qaida terror suspect Abu Zubaydah hysterical. But later, a message to CIA headquarters described an interrogator merely lifting his eyebrow and snapping his fingers, leading Zubaydah to “slowly (walk) on his own to the water table” to lie down.

The Senate torture report released earlier this month describes how the CIA’s harsh interrogation program sought to make detainees passive and powerless to resist, using techniques from sleep deprivation to stress positions to waterboarding to induce a state that psychologists call “learned helplessness.” ”Compliant” was the interrogators’ description of Zubaydah.

While this article describes the result of pure torture — the kind we peek at through our fingers in war movies — there are all kinds of torture in the world. I’ve seen interviews with those who have survived physical torture, and you can see it like a shadow behind their eyes, a presence within them they will carry forever. And yet, I’ve seen fundamental Christians similarly afraid of their own thoughts and the snapping fingers that control them.

I know that some of us are held prisoner in financial situations that make it near to impossible to refuse to do jobs that seems torturous to us, and many of us have been stripped of dignity by loss of income, health, relationship or opportunity. Even self-doubt, inflicted upon ourselves, is a kind of emotional cruelty that stops us from being all we can be. There are many kinds of torture in the world, and all of them leave a mark of learned helplessness and compliance.

Still, forever is a long time, and we’ve faced down demons before. On the other side of these emotional bombshells, when we discover we’ve not only lived through our suffering but learned how to make the best of it, there is a renewed sense of self available to us. We can overcome much of what frightens us with the help of those who have already gone through it. We can begin to get a sense of our self, unafraid of those who seek to control us, when we know we don’t stand alone. I think this is the year that those who are willing to awaken will look for an outstretched hand to take — will yours be one of them?

I have great hopes for 2015. We accomplished a good deal this year under ridiculously constricted circumstances. We made great strides in matters of same-sex marriage and transgender issues, and although we are facing an emergency regarding women’s right to choose, feminism seems to be recreating itself. We’ve reconsidered the War on Drugs, decriminalized weed in many places and legalized it in others. We’re examining civil liberties, something we’ve taken at face value as “done” since the last Pluto/Uranus dust-up.

We’re kicking up the diamonds of racism, sexism, fiscal corruption and warped political influence. We’re rethinking everything, attempting to meet the needs of citizens on local levels, influencing from the bottom up, and learning how to take care of one another. We’re finally growing into ourselves.

The planets have moved into position, over and over again, to give us an opportunity to heal ourselves. They will continue to amp up the energy for our transformation as we approach the last of the 2012 squares that have shaken us to our roots and shown us so dramatically what no longer works for humanity. The finger-snappers of the world are losing their power because those who have sleep-walked through these generations are finally awakening to the pain and the possibilities.

We’re entering the third year of the New Era. We have our work cut out for us, but then — we’re cut out for the work. With open hearts, there isn’t much we can’t accomplish. With a dangerous year behind us — a year of sorrow that brought those ancient, diamond-hard problems of hatred and mind-control into stark relief so we could say we’d finally seen them, awake and aware — the fireworks ahead of us should be less fearful. Perhaps we can even find them exciting, knowing them as we do and newly knowing ourselves.

There will be challenges, and we’re up to them. There will be sorrows, and we will come together to heal them. Ultimately, there will be progress because we can’t do without it. There is no question of “if.” The question is “when,” and only we can answer. If we choose, we can put the end to finger snapping and mind control, to media bullshit and political nonsense. We must have the courage to simply face it down, every time it seeks to intrude. Once we become proficient at that, demons chastened and chased away, our healing is sure and our future bright.

2015 looms, coming up quickly. It has a nice ring to it, don’t you think? Make it everything you want it to be.

Planet Waves Daily Oracle for Friday, Dec. 26, 2014

Today’s Oracle takes us to the Leo daily for May 2, 2006

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You are truly in tune with an inner world that most people deny. Leo is often regarded as an outgoing sign that radiates heat and light like the Sun. The other side of Leo is a deeply instinctual quality that pours through your emotions and guides your every step – or at times, leads you to hesitate in ways even you cannot explain. Today, that intuitive sphere is pulsing with energy, with messages, and with a solution to a certain problem you had not even given words to. The little space in your heart that once seemed the most timid is about to become the boldest it’s been in a long time.

The Daily Oracle offers a horoscope selected randomly by our Intelligent Archive Oracle program, unique to Planet Waves. It’s also a database of my horoscopes going back to the late 1990s. You can use the Intelligent Archive Oracle to answer questions and give you ideas for how to handle problems and situations you cannot see through. This feature is available to our All Access and Core Community members. See this link for more information.

Saturn in Sagittarius: Take Aim and Use Your Tools

Solstice and Hanukkah are behind us and Christmas is nearly done (whether you celebrate one or more of those holidays or not), which means the turn of a new year is right around the corner. For some, this weekend is a chance to catch a breath before burning the candle at both ends Dec. 31 and setting resolutions for the next 12 months.

Photo by Amanda Painter.

Photo by Amanda Painter.

For others, not so much.

If you put yourself in the first camp (or would like to start), you have Saturn on your side. Saturn entered Sagittarius Dec. 23.

The single-pointed arrow of Sagittarius combined with the authoritarian (ahem, responsible) nature of Saturn says: Get serious about your goals! Take aim, focus your energy, and get disciplined.

Overall, Saturn’s move from Scorpio to Sagittarius is going to open up some breathing room, allowing your sense of self-authority a more fearless confidence. If Saturn in Scorpio was about dredging out our more secretive emotional waterways, Saturn in Sagittarius is able to own it — both the shadows and the space that’s been cleared — with a little detachment and a sense of the bigger picture.

That said, the days right after Christmas can be emotionally difficult, just as the days leading up to it can be. For some, losing the distraction of holiday hype only reinforces any sense of alienation or loss exacerbated by this time of year. Or perhaps in between facing family dynamics for a few days and facing the end of yet another year, you might find yourself feeling a little “out there” and lonely, not sure where you truly belong now, given all the changes you’ve been through in 2014.

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A Holiday Message from Planet Waves

Editor’s note: The following article was written by Judith Gayle in 2006.

Holiday market at Grand Place, the central square of Brussels. Photo by Eric Francis.

The day that I made my gingerpersons and other holiday goodies, I invited my son’s new girlfriend over. She wanted to help. She is a very sharp cookie [no pun] spiritually, despite the fact that she’s surrounded by Fundamentalist relatives and, due to her living circumstance, is forced to participate in Evangelical church-going. I admire her ability to cheerfully keep a foot in both worlds … it’s harder now than it used to be. Which is the topic of this message.

When I gave up “drama queen-ness,” which is a [sometimes subtle, sometimes not] bid for attention, I gave up telling my personal history unless to illustrate some point. What I learned, and quickly, is that without that tell-all tale you become enigmatic to others, or semi-invisible. Boring to some, I’d suppose — mysterious, though. The “story” that you tell are the lessons you took away with you, not how you got them — and you tell them by living them.

But in new relationships, some historical exchange is required. So — cutting out cookies and listening to Christmas carols, my new friend said that the one thing she’d never done, but would like to, is to go caroling. She asked if I had.

With an effort [these things fade] I recalled my childhood — my 18 years in the [not Southern] Baptist church, my musical family: my Mother’s expert touch on the piano and her rich alto, my Father’s hearty baritone and my bright, shiny soprano [ahhh … youth!]. I told her about the churches we visited across California to perform gospel music, the choir rehearsals every Wednesday night at our big Berkeley church, the oratorios and cantatas we’d participated in, the solos that came up for one or another of us on a weekly basis — and yes, the caroling. Sometimes memory is a good thing. I recalled the majik of all that, the pure, sweet joy of it.

I could see her confusion at the warmness of my recollection. That is not who she knows me to be. “Religion then wasn’t like it is today,” I assured her.

She was startled. “No?”

And that’s when I had to really work at the conversation. How do you give a person an experience they haven’t had; one so at odds with their own that they can’t get a grip on it? I had to tell her what church wasn’t, in the middle of the 20th century.

“No,” I said. “When I was a child, Pentecostalism hadn’t infected the churches yet. I wasn’t taught fear or hatred and I wasn’t given a concept of my ‘specialness’ as a Christian. I wasn’t told that Satan was staring back at me from my cereal bowl each morning, waiting to choke me, or that End Times were upon us. I wasn’t militarized to believe that saving souls was my purpose in life, or feel superior to others.”

“I didn’t leave the church because it was a hateful experience,” I finished. “I left because it had taught me that Love was unconditional … I left because I knew there had to be more. I went looking for it.”

I do remember when that all started though, that first step toward trouble. I was about ten — because of my Mother’s extraordinary musical ability, she was invited to participate in the newly-formed outreach of a young [Scorpio] Billy Graham. Whenever Billy came to the Bay Area, which was often, we would make the trek into San Francisco and participate in what had the feel of an old fashioned revival, only a lot bigger and much slicker.

The music was superb, the message mesmerizing … and I was introduced to a sudden sense of evangelical urgency. I watched in amazement as hundreds, sometimes thousands, of people flooded the aisles of an over-packed Cow Palace for an alter call — and even at so tender an age, I remember being a little nervous about the whole thing. Graham was, personally, as intense a man as he was a preacher — I believed him sincere then, as I do now. He has mellowed over the years but his stridency and passion to “save souls” has produced his son, Franklin, who continues in his fathers footsteps with a thunderous message of Heaven and Hell, homophobia, women-in-their-place and fear of Islam.

One of the great sorrows of these last years has been, for me, the morphing of the Christian church into a great hulking assault on the consciousness of the world — and the thing that has been “Left Behind” in all this is the actual message of the Christ. I don’t hear it, these days … maybe that’s because it’s a softer song than the Fundys sing. The churches who attempt to live it get nailed as “Lefty” movements … and that proves a point that most Christocrats don’t want to hear — Jesus [if he was an actual person and not several persons, as is historically speculated] was a liberal … a pacifist … a realist … a radical … a bloodless revolutionary … and the message he brought us is the very one we wrestle today — will we love, no matter the circumstances … or will we hate because of them?

The one thing I knew about myself early on was that I came into this incarnation with an anti-authoritarian streak a mile wide. And in the church I knew as a child, I was not uncomfortable … I was questioning, but I wasn’t kicking and screaming, and I didn’t leave it throwing the baby out with the bathwater. If the church has become a hateful thing, it’s because it’s people have become full of hate. If it’s become a fearful movement, it’s because it’s people have been taught to fear.

When I was in California earlier in the month, my family and I were following an erratic driver who had a fish sticker on his bumper. As we commented on it, my seven-year-old grandson piped up, a tone of disapproval in his voice, “Well … he’s a Christian.” That hit me like a sledgehammer — us, them. [Turns out various of Wyatt’s little friends at school won’t play with him because he’s not “one of them.” The churches in his area are organized, militant and highly visible. He’s too young for a nuanced explanation — that these children are being taught separation, exclusiveness and nothing of the Christ.] All I could say at that moment was, “So am I, darlin’ … and Christ taught love.”

I didn’t lie — I’m a Christian … and a Buddhist … and a Muslim … and a Wiccan … and a Mystic. We are all the philosophies that have contributed to our understanding — we are All .. we are One. And after all these years, I’m not a cynic, even though I’ve stood witness to some of the worst of man’s deeds … maybe that’s because I’ve seen some of their best, as well. I believe in God and Goddess and the Mystery of that … I believe in Nature and Divine Order and the organizing Principal of the Universe. I believe that all of this is a part of me … and part of you — happening WITHIN us and asking to out-picture in our daily words and deeds.

I believe that the Higher Angels of mankind are just a choice away … and that Angelic presence can only speak to us if we’re willing to listen to the still, small Voice and not the loud, mindless Groupspeak of the world. I believe that if we stand in our power, be discerning with our thoughts and process them through our hearts, we can move the dense energy of a hateful, flawed religious signal into a dynamic spiritual understanding … raise a callous, self-obsessed mankind into a collaborative, respectful world-wide community. In fact, I count on it. My faith is in the Love that holds the Universe together like glue, the essential goodness within each of us and our ability to inhabit that. That’s Christ consciousness.

But we live in the Chinese curse, presently: interesting times. I wish they weren’t so damned interesting, sometimes, and I find myself left wishing, too often.

I wish we could still go out caroling and people would appreciate the music, the intent, even if they didn’t resonate to the message … or weren’t so lost in television and computer games that an actual event coming to their doorstep might be worth getting up for. Mostly, I wish we still felt safe to do it … and inclined.

I wish the Fundamentalist churches would return to their senses instead of making so many of us just plain miserable, day in, day out — that for once the Spirit of the message that was birthed in the Middle East all those many years ago would infuse those who say they follow it — and I wish my grandson didn’t think all Christians were wingnuts.

I wish that the Wiccans, should they choose, could put up a lighted pentacle in their front yard with as much freedom and pleasure as my son-in-law gave his children when he strung a gazillion lights on his house and plunked the illuminated reindeer in his front yard. I wish we had as much respect for each person’s belief as we do our own. And I wish Santa Claus didn’t have a credit card under each arm; that the Holidays held a little more spiritual impact and a lot less consumer angst.

I wish humankind had a better grasp on what we WANT rather than what we don’t want … and I wish we could just talk to one another, rather than scream at one another over the chasm that we’ve created to separate us. I wish we’d collectively intuit the difference between offering a hand or raising a fist … and understand that one is powerful for peace, the other murders opportunity.

Interesting times: they make it harder for us to find that still, small Voice that tells us we’re ok … That we’re all in the right place at the right time … and what we want so desperately will come to us eventually. And there’s some of us … the ones that remember … that are heartened by the new direction of many Christian churches who are policing their own attitudes and those of their brothers. It IS a matter of “values,” just not the restrictive, punitive ones that the Loudest of our brothers think it is. There is a populist movement birthing in this country, picking up speed … you’ll hear about it in many pulpits this year, as the old notions of charity and compassion and equality begin their ascent out of the darkness. I would like to see that happen … for Wyatt, and for us all.

I don’t know what spiritual tradition you embrace, if any — what your experience of religion has been — or what you think about all this, except that if you’re reading this you’re aware of the political implications of our current religious “wars.” I expect that you would agree with me that the institutions of religion have about broken this world apart … but the philosophies that prompted them are seldom served.

Whatever your traditions, I hope you FEEL them this year … a little heart-expansion to take you into the New Year … a moment of Lightness that brings you encouragement and hopefulness … a tenderness toward yourself and others as we plow through the heaviness of religious prejudice and judgment and bias, in order, I suppose, to firmly grasp what is NOT helpful and all that is, in fact, harmful. We will not progress unless we strip away the cynicism that prevents us from fully feeling — we will not usher in the Light until we open our hearts to receive it.

And so today, from a cold, bright Pea Patch, please accept my wish for your happy holiday and a Merry Christmas … and I hope it comes to you with a little music. The thing that’s pure and sweet and majikal about music is that the Heart hears … perhaps that’s why tears welled the other day when I heard this one.

I wish for the world what, according to those who penned the New Testament, Angels proclaimed for a world awaiting a new understanding of themselves — Peace on Earth, Good Will to men. We will have it when it’s more important to us than anything else … maybe that’s where these Interesting Times are designed to take us. But first we need to stop telling the story … and begin to live it.

May your days be merry and bright — and may all your Christmases be Light.