Monday, December 23, 2013
Joy to the World: The Pagans Sing!
Joy to the World , the Lord is come!
Monday, December 2, 2013
Gratitude & Generosity
As parents, we try to invoke in our children a sense of gratitude and generosity. We ask them to say thank you. We coerce them into sharing. And we do so because we know that they could have it worse.
At the same time, we work on keeping that knowledge from the kids. We don't share with them the stress and efforts that go into providing them with a good life. We ask them to be grateful on faith, because we say so.
How do we help our children to understand, thereby giving them the belief that they should be grateful and generous? How do we make their sharing more then an empty gesture?
My exploration of Heathenry includes the study of the modern interpretation of Heathen values, the Nine Noble Virtues. One of these is the virtue of hospitality.
Hospitality is the concept of opening your home to those who need/ask it. But unlike the Christian concept of charity, Heathens believe that receiving this generosity invokes a debt of honor and reciprocation.
It was not unusual for a host to ask a favor of his/her guest, such as aid in a building project, hunting, killing a human or animal menace, and more. The host was expected to only ask for that which the guest was capable of providing, while the guest was expected to fulfill the request without hesitation. Beowulf is actually the story of such a request.
But why would this be acceptable, to demand a boon from a guest?
It all comes down to resources. Hosting a guest requires the provision of foods, bathing items, bedding and entertainment. To be able to host a guest, one has to have these things in reserve, that is, in addition to what one needs for the family to survive.
To be a guest is to strain anothers' resources. But it isn't just the use of resources and the cost of the disposables that a guest uses.
To be a host, one doesn't just provide food, but also the plates and utensils to eat and serve the food, the kitchen, pots and pans to cook the food. It isn't just the pork, but the salting to have preserved it. It isn't just carrots, but the herbs to flavor it. Add in the years of experience to develop cooking technique, and a simple meal can have a huge investment by the host. An overnight guest requires an extra space and bedding which the host must acquire and maintain.
So generosity isn't just about the resources consumed, it's also about developing and maintaining the ability to be a host. All of these are taken into account when considering the debt of a guest.
Now, it isn't as though they walked around with a ledger. It was about the spirit of that. They also took into account that a host may someday find themselves a guest. In the cold, harsh northern climate, this could easily be a matter of survival. So, the spirit of generosity to others became about a social debt that everyone owed each other for survivals' sake.
But how does this apply to teaching children?
We can talk to our children about the efforts required to get things. Talk to them about how paying the electric bill let's us charge handheld games, and the cable & internet bills give us tv and that website we love to visit.
Talk to children about how paying our bills allows us to share those benefits with their friends when they visit, and how they share it with us when we visit.
Talk to children about money (it's important to let them experience that knowledge... before they are dropped into the world of paying their own bills) and time, paychecks and bills. How much time does mom and dad have to spend at work to pay for the internet the kids use every day? How much time & money would they save if they spent x amount of time without the lights on?
If kids get an allowance, talk to them about how much time they spend earning it, and talk to them about how much they use on top of that.
You don't have to be accusatory or call them lazy mooches. Just show them the facts, bit by bit, and they will begin to understand the work and effort that they would have to do to get that thing you bought them.
And then, maybe, they will be truly grateful.
Sunday, September 29, 2013
Grownup Children: Teaching adults
We may have made a mistake.
We allowed the brother of my partner to move in. The idea was to help him get on his feet, teach him some beginner stuff, and take advantage of an extra pair of adult hands. It hasn't exactly worked out that way.
He is defensive of the way "he has always done it", even while admitting it doesn't work. Then he asks why he should change it, cuz he's "still alive" and isn't that good enough?
He doesn't listen when I tell him how to do things... Like move everything to clean the floor when a bag of tomatoes was found rotting. He didn't. There was rotten tomato zombie juice on the floor.
Instead of helping to clean out the garage, he asks the ones cleaning to show him where stuff is to build chairs.
His common sense is almost nonexistent. His ability to prioritize needs serious work. His concept of having a better life is vague. And his refusal to change is driving me nuts.
Now, to be clear, this is not my first rodeo. I help people like this all the time. It frustrates me that I have to spend so much time getting them to understand the need to grow and change. But this is a whole new level.
I have never met someone so self-deluded, and yes, so broken. I have my work cut out for me. I'm just not sure I'm willing to pay the price for teaching this time.
Have you ever been in this situation? Share your story in the comments section.
Sunday, June 23, 2013
Pagan Parenting with Astrology
Little adults? Not so much... |
Today, however, I am focusing on the aspects of the child's personality, which can be broken into two segments: astrological/elemental and past life carry-over.
By taking into account your child's astrological and elemental aspects, you take into account the foundations of your child's personality. By understanding what motivates your child's behavior, you can encourage positive behavior and discourage negative behavior. (I will be talking in the more general elemental aspects regarding astrology; that is, fire = ares, leo & sagitarius, earth = taurus, virgo & capricorn, air = gemini, libra & aquarius, and water = cancer, scorpio & pisces.)
I am Scorpio... FEAR ME!! |
Sunday, June 9, 2013
A Question of Sustainability
The short answer is, “Yes.” We cannot continue to do what we are doing throughout the world. Sadly, this seems to be most extreme where I live: the United States.
There are so many things that people do, particularly in the States, that contribute to this wrong path. This includes the extreme resistance people have here towards anything that smacks of socialism. Unfortunately, socialism is often about combined effort for greater good. The U.S. has acted poorly on the Monsanto issue, the Gulf oil spill and all that goes with it, the Keystone XL pipeline, and so much more.
Additionally, the U.S. missed the opportunity some 25 years ago to push forward the relatively new technologies for solar energy collection (I’m mostly referring to President Carter’s installation of solar panels on the White House, which I believe could have set the stage for a different governmental attitude towards energy, had Reagan not been elected).
The U.S. cemented it’s stance of denial with the Kyoto Protocol. This constant elevation of capitalism (making money) over the future of humanity on this planet has turned the U.S. into something that I believe will lead to the U.S. becoming irrelevant to the world stage as anything other than a military force (if we aren’t already). We are seeing the start of this irrelevance as other countries take steps that the U.S. should have taken a long time ago. As Germany takes a lead in environmental policy, as Amsterdam initiates a public bike sharing program in the 1960s, as India takes a stand against Monsanto's lies.
This leads me to the long answer, which is “Yes, but that isn’t something that we can’t change.” As the Turkish proverb goes “No matter how far you've gone down the wrong road, turn back.”
It is never too late. The point of no return is the destruction of the planet (in regards to human life). Anything else can be fixed, or at least mitigated. We can change, and we can change now. The only thing we need to decide is, how much worse will we make it before we make it better? And when will you (the individual) begin to participate?
Each one of us can do even a small part, because those small parts, those tiny changes are magnified by the sheer numbers of the human population. If the populations of industrialized nations alone work towards sustainable living, participating in creating and supporting renewable energy resources, recycling programs, and personal resource conservation, we would see a huge change worldwide. Each of us has the power. The power to choose:
- to use cloth bags for shopping
- to use non-chemical cleaners
- to foster native plant systems on our properties
- to grow a garden
- to bike when possible
- to protest and educate people on chemicals and GMO foods
- to support those politicians and activists who take up these causes
- to raise our children with this knowledge and the mindset that we can make the difference
Sunday, June 2, 2013
Magickal Tools: If you use them, they will work...
The high chair tray is being put to good use! |
And this is just the stuff we make for sale, never mind the staffs, swords, wands, Tarot, and ritual jewelry and statuary on and around our altars.
Our side-by-side altars (pic taken in the wee-small hours of the night). |
The funny thing about this stuff being all over is that the kids ask about it.
"What is it for?" "Why do we have it?" "How does it work?"
Having the extra kids around, we also get the disbelief questions, also: "You can't REALLY cast spells with a staff... Can you?" To which (witch, haha) I gleefully respond, "Um, yeah, I can."
Or turn your brother into a pink bunny... |
I have to admit, one of my favorites is the periodically recurring "witches are evil" discussion. First of all, claiming that you are a witch to small children who are convinced that all witches are of the green-skinned, Wizard of Oz, gonna-getcha variety never fails to evoke a facial expression of epic hilarity.
Not a comfortable fit... Just sayin' |