Month: June 2009

  • Midsummer’s Eve

    “Solstice” is derived from “sol,” meaning sun, and “sistere,” to stand still. As the summer solstice approaches, the noonday sun rises higher and higher in the sky on each successive day, but on the day of the solstice, it rises an imperceptible amount compared to the day before, and so it is said to stand still. In some languages solstices and equinoxes begin or separate the seasons; in others, they are the center points. This is so with the Summer Solstice, also known as Midsummer. The exact date and time of the Summer solstice varies every year, occurring on or about the 21st of June when the Sun enters zero degrees Cancer. This year solstice occurs today (June 21st) at 12:45 AM EST. Due to the Celtic tradition of counting days from sundown to sundown, it is customary to begin feasting the night before the holiday. In the Christian religion, June 23rd is St John’s Eve, commemorating the birthday of St John the Baptist. He is the only saint remembered for his birth day rather than the day of his death, but this date was adopted by early Christian clergy in an effort to attract more parishioners just as the date of Christmas was adopted to detract from Yule.

    Summer Solstice or Midsummer’s Eve is the longest day of the year and the shortest night. There are many other names for this holy day however. Midsummer’s Eve is only one of the most common. The name of Litha is a fairly recent appellation based on a Saxon word simply meaning opposite Yule. Alban Hefin, Alben Heruin “Light of the Shore”, All-couples day, Feast of Epona, Feill-sheathain, Gathering Day, Johannistag, Mean Samhraidh, Sonnwend, and Thing-Tide are other names. In Spain, this night is called “Night of the Verbena (vervain).”

    In England, large bonfires are lit after sundown which serve the double purpose of illuminating the revelers and warding off evil sprites. Next to Samhain, Midsummer’s Eve is one of the favored times of the “Other Folk.” One can assume that the bonfires, also called the “Fire’s of Heaven,” were originally meant to strengthen the sun, whose time in the sky begins to diminish now as the days pass. Such bonfires are also referred to as Need-Fire, Living-Fire, and Wild-Fire. Kindled with fern and pine needles, a combination of nine woods combine to make the fire. These include hazel, oak, apple, alder, birch, holly, willow, aspen, and ash. Other traditions like the flaming wheel and swinging a burning tar barrel may also be seen as an attempt to strengthen the dying sun.

    The practice of lighting the Midsummer’s Eve bonfires was referred to as “setting the watch,” and people would leap over the flames for luck. In many cultures, it is customary to burn a straw effigy over the fires. This may be emblematic of the funerary rights held for Balder and other dying gods of the season. In Norway, the bonfires were called Balder’s Balefires. Herds of cattle are driven through the ashes to bless them and keep them free from harm. Later, the cold ashes from the bonfires were scattered over the fields to ensure their continued health and future productivity. A procession of people known as the “marching watch” carrying cressets (pivoting lanterns atop poles) and accompanied by Morris Dancers, six hobby horse riders, and other players dressed as a unicorn and a dragon would wind from bonfire to bonfire.

    At this time of year, it is customary to gather certain herbs for drying. Many can benefit from being dried over the Midsummer’s Eve bonfire or at least being passed through its smoke. Birch, fennel, St John’s wort, and white lilies are traditional decorations used in the warding of the home against evil, and they are best hung over the door. Five plants are thought to be most powerful if gathered Midsummer’s Eve. These are roses, rue, St John’s wort, vervain, and trefoil. Mistletoe is also of special import at this time. As the instrument of Baldur’s death, the Norse god of summer, Mistletoe is most powerful at Midsummer, the day of his death. Other powerful herbs are chamomile, chickweed, chicory, cinquefoil, figwort, heartsease, hemp, lavender, meadowsweet, and mugwort. It was typical to dry nine herbs over the Midsummer’s Eve fires, and these could be selected from the herbs above.

    This is also one of the best times of the year to collect a variety of magickal paraphernalia. The June full moon is called the Honey Moon because this is one of the most appropriate times to collect the bees’ gold. Sound familiar? June is named for Juno, goddess of weddings (among other things). The Honey Moon was typically the time for newly weds to celebrate, drinking mead as an aphrodisiac. Mead is brewed from the collected honey at this time (about 10 days before the solstice) and drunk during the celebration. Honey can also be kept on the alter during June rituals, and you may use it to dip your cakes.

    Birds of all sort, especially water birds, are sacred as solar symbols, as are stags, oxen, and horses. Water as a healing elixir is also a solar symbol, carrying the energy of the sun for those who need it. In ancient times, offerings of glass, pottery, coins, stones, wooden figures, and gold charms were given at sacred springs, lakes, and wells, and their accompanying sacred trees were decorated with flowers and ribbons while people danced and feasted. These sacred waters were used for divination as well as healing, and the water was gathered to sprinkle over the fields and gardens for the blessing of rain and health. If you don’t have access to sacred springs, ocean water is one source of magickal water which can be used on your altar. Rain water can be collected if you are not near the sea. The more electrical energy in the storm, the more powerful the water will be. (NOTE -Keep your water in a glass or porcelain jar (avoid metal), and store it on a shelf. Keeping it on the floor will ground it and make it useless for your purposes.) Adding shells, rocks from the sea, and other non-perishable sea items will keep the energy in the water higher longer.

    Spells to divine your future mate are typical for Midsummer’s Night. One of the simplest spells involves wearing goldenrod during the waxing of the June moon. You will glimpse your future love the following day. To divine more about your future lover, you might try twisting off the stem of an apple while reciting the alphabet. When the stem finally breaks, the letter you end on is the first letter of your true love’s name. Dipping an article of clothing in “fair water” (very clear or rose water) is another way to receive a vision of your future mate. Turn it inside out and lay it on a chair in front of a fire. Place some wine and a bit of salt near the fireplace. If you remain silent, eventually the image of your true love will appear to turn your clothes around and drink a toast to you. Men, don’t feel left out. At midnight, a man may go to a churchyard or holy place with a sword. Circling the area nine times (presumably clockwise though my references don’t specify), he must say, “Here’s the sword; where’s the sheath?” On the ninth turn, his beloved is said to appear and steal a kiss.

    Another tradition at this time of year was to attempt to make vigil for this, the shortest night of the year. Success was a mixed blessing. Death was one possibility, madness another, but poetic inspiration was the ultimate goal, some might say a form of divine madness all its own. Keeping vigil in an ancient stone ring was often recommended for such an undertaking, but drawing a circle to sit in could work as well.

    Snakes were particularly active at this time. In ancient Britain, it was said that as they gathered to mate, they would roll themselves into a tight ball, and a ball of hardened foam was the result. Called the glain naidr “serpent’s glass,” “serpent’s egg,” or “druid’s egg,” it is very powerful, allowing its owner to gain access to kings and win lawsuits. In the reign of Claudius Caesar, a Roman citizen was put to death for carrying such a charm to court. Obtaining the charm was no easy matter however. The snakes did not give it willingly. As they writhed, they would throw the ball into the air. The prepared observer could catch the ball in his cloak before it had a chance to shatter, but he had to be fleet of feet. The snakes would quickly turn on him. Only running water would bar their path. Pliny described the serpent’s egg as about the size of an apple, “with cartilaginous skin covered with discs.” Many folklorists and scholars consider this a fossil echinus (sea urchin), which has been found in many Gaelic tombs and which may indicate a snake cult of some kind. Rings or beads of glass found in Wales, Cornwall, and the Highlands have also been called “serpent’s glass” and were thought to have been formed in the same way. These along with ancient spindle-whorls called “adder stones” were said to have the ability to ward off snake attacks.

    Along with snakes, the fay folk were very active on this night. In order to see them, you could gather fern seed (pollen) at midnight to rub on your eyelids. Rue carried in your pocket would protect you from their tricks and being “pixie-led.” Turning your jacket inside out was another way to protect yourself. Keeping to the ley lines or crossing living (running) water also protected against malevolent spirits. In Norway, a type of toadstool was thrown into the bonfires by the spectators in order to protect against trolls. If any trolls are nearby, the toadstools will reveal them.





    June 20th


    On Midsummer’s Eve, there is feasting, fires, songs, and dances. Bonfires are kindled on high hills to commemorate the high point of the year. The barrier between the living and the dead is very thin at this time. Fire was used to ward off evil spirits and St.John’s wort would also drive evil specters away. Fern seeds protected from evil witchcraft, but also allowed young women to divine their future mates. Scattering the seeds at midnight, a woman was instructed to peek over her shoulder to catch a glimpse of her future husband.

    This is the longest day of the year and a time of sanctity. Alban Hefin is sacred to the Mother Goddess, personified as Cerridwen. The Litha celebration includes fires lit to allow the smoke to waft over everything it is meant to bless. Burning sunwheels, blazing brands spun in circles from chains, and flaming tar barrels sent down the hill were once common before the introduction of fire works. Burning torches can be carried around buildings, gardens, and fields to endure their good fortune.




    Among the Asatru, Balder the beautiful and Thor and his wife Sif are honored on the solstice.




    The eve of the summer’s solstice also marks the martyrdom of Iron Skegge. He was tortured on the orders of the Christian king Olaf Tryggvason but refused to give up his faith in the gods.




    The solstice is known as Geshi in Japan. Prayers are offered as protection and purification from the heat and disease of Summer.




    The day of All Heras honors women’s mysteries. It honors those who have achieved full communion with the Mother of All Things. A hera was often the guardian of a Temple, community, or village.




  • WCFQ 51b: How *Not* to Survive a Robot Uprising

    Are you an Alien or a Robot?
    An alien being someone who
    goes their own way,
    not being afraid of being unique;
    A robot being someone who follows
    and likes what other people like
    due to popularity.

    DengKeeevvin


    I’ve always been an alien. No doubt about it. I have my own thoughts and am pretty indifferent as to whether they mesh with the status quo. I only conform to the practical things, such as being employed and maintaining the skills it takes to be employable, or obeying the laws of my country (ie not dismantling or reprogramming the more ignorant robots I must deal with in my day to day life).

    Conformity does serve a purpose. In some circumstances, it can save you from becoming a victim. On the other hand, nothing was ever changed by hiding out in the shadows. I don’t believe in conforming if it means betraying my beliefs or morals. I’m sure lots of people could agree with that principle, but putting it into practice is another thing entirely. I’ve been told that I was born too late or too soon. I have old fashioned ethics, coupled with a liberal openness to new concepts and ideas. I don’t follow rules, per se, rather I feel my way along, examining my motives and the impact my actions will have on others.

    With respect to morality and openness of heart – values usually regarded as something to which religion contributes – a literal approach seems unable to foster one’s development as a moral human being.  I think this is because when the world is made up of rules and commands that take their force from Higher Authority, one never has to think deeply about the impact of what one does so long as the letter of the law is obeyed.  This is very sad.

    On the other hand, when the rules are less certain, or are simply principles, they require that we think about the larger context of what we do… The result is to push us to examine our own motives and the impact of what we do on others. (Spirituality and Empathy)


    In the end, I am my own person, conforming to those aspects of society which serve my will but which are not always convenient. It is certainly not convenient in today’s society to be asexual or a Pagan, yet I choose to maintain both world views because that is who I am. It would be more convenient to be a robot and conform to society’s standards of sexuality and religion, but it would not be satisfying to be someone I am not.





    June 19th


    In ancient Rome, the Day of All Heras began tonight in honor of the Goddess within as well as all wise women.




  • WCFQ 51a: Your Death is Your Own

    Should euthanasia be legalized?
    i_heart_concussions


    I don’t see the purpose in prolonging a person’s life past a certain point. Health-wise, I don’t recall ever hearing of someone who lived long enough with a terminal illness for a cure to be found. What we really have to ask ourselves is, at what point does quality of life make living not worth it? How many machines do you need to be hooked up to and how many drugs do you have to take before letting nature take its course sounds like a good idea?

    The thing is, as those who read my views on the afterlife will be aware, I don’t see any need to fear death. No one is exempt from death and we’re not designed to live forever. As I am fond of saying, it’s only life; it’s not like it’s permanent. Physically we break down and can’t be repaired past a certain point. We are finite beings and our flaws are part of the design. People who attempt to prolong their lives are fearful of death. I’m not. And so I think people who want to die should be permitted to do so because obviously any fear they have of death is outweighed by weight of their lives.

    Your death is the only thing you truly own. It’s yours and no one else’s. When people force another to live well past the time that their body would have given up, then their lives are no longer their own. Their lives become someone else’s property. Forcing someone to live in pain is selfishness, not love.  We euthanize our pets when their lives become unbearable. Shouldn’t our loved ones have access to the same dignity?





    June 18th


    In ancient Rome, the goddess Anna was honored with an annual religious festival.



    Church of All Worlds chartered with the IRS in 1970.



    Min appears on the 5th day of Mesore.





  • WCFQ 51e: Looking the Part

    Do you think a person’s looks
    affect his or her success in the job market?

    WondersCafe


    Say you had to hire someone for a job. You had two candidates. One had a clear complexion, clean hair, lack of body odor, clean cut nails, well kept cloths, etc. The other had dirt under their ragged nails, hair at odd angles, an unidentifiable foul odor, ragged cloths, greasy, pimply skin, etc.

    Which would you hire? Unless the unhygienic candidate had unbelievable skills in whatever position they hoped to fill, you’d probably hire the person who took the time to dress for the interview. If nothing else, the clean cut applicant shows that they’re willing to be professional in their appearance, whereas the other candidate is at best indifferent to possible employment.

    Physical attractiveness is more than skin deep. Bad hygiene can make even the most attractive person repulsive and vice versa. If you want the job, you need to dress the part. Dress and behave like a slob and the job will go to the person with the most professional attitude. Getting a job is about being qualified, and self confidence is a qualification that employers look for. If you don’t want the job, they can tell and one of the easiest ways to tell is by the ugliness that comes of indifferent hygiene. Ripped up clothes, inappropriate hair, dirty skin… unless you’re applying to be a roadie, a garbageman, or a dishwasher, in which case no one cares what you look like, you’re not going to get the job.





    June 17th


    In the Japanese city of Nara, thousands of lilies are collected from a nearby mountain and taken to a temple. Blessed by seven young women in white robes, a Shinto priest lays a large bouquet of the lilies at the altar. A dance using the lilies is performed by the women to drive away the evils of the rainy season.




    Eurydice (a tree nymph who was transformed into an Underworld goddess after dying from a serpent bite) was honored annually in ancient Greece. The marriage of Orpheus and Eurydice is celebrated.




    The Ludi Piscatari was celebrated by Roman fishermen.




    In ancient Egypt, this night was known as Leyleten-Nuktah, “the night of the drop.” A miraculous drop was believed to fall into the Nile causing it to rise.




    Gwyl o Bardd is a Festival of the Bards beginning at sundown and continuing through June 22nd.




  • Poem: [untitled]

    her life’s blood adrift in dark seas
    galaxies coagulating
    dark waters of infinity
    lit by fading embers of life
    deep sea vents illuminate the
    curdled darkness of ancient space

    newborn hungry minds glut on light

    consuming inspiration
    and consumed

    look up
    look outward

    see the infinite within

    salty water moving

    in the mirror of a sweet sea

    I’m not sure of a title for this. I am thinking Tiamat… or possibly Kali-ma?





    June 16th


    On Silver Chalice Day, Wiccan friends and coven members gather together in a circle to rejoice and share a traditional silver chalice of wing (or fruit juice) consecrated in the names of the Goddess and Her consort, the Horned God. Many Pagan handfastings and Wiccanings are performed by coven priestesses around this time of the month.



    On the 3rd day of Mesore, a Feast of Raet, and Feast of Hathor as Sirius occurred.




  • Writers Choice Featured Questions Week 51

    Writing prompts for discerning writers with more to say
    than Xanga’s Featured Questions gives them credit for.

    five questions for this week

    Should euthanasia be legalized?
    i_heart_concussions

    Are you an Alien or a Robot? An alien being someone who goes their own way, not being afraid of being unique; A robot being someone who follows and likes what other people like due to popularity.
    DengKeeevvin

    What is your favorite genre of music? Why?
    Oceans_Beautiful_View

    Who do you look up to and why?
    BabyGenie

    Do you think a person’s looks affect his or her success in the job market?
    WondersCafe


    Answer any one or all of these questions in the coming week. I try to mix the whimsical with the serious here, so hopefully there is at least one question here for everyone.

    Next week will mark the 52nd post of WCFQ, one full year of stolen Featured Questions with not a single acknowledgment from the Supreme Xangan Overlords. Should next week be the last WCFQ or should I start a separate Xanga Blog just for them?

    Do me a favor… if you like the WCFQ, click the little recommend button every Sunday or whenever you get to them. Maybe that will make whoever is in charge of the regular featured questions notice.





    June 13th
    (yesterday)


    Gerald Gardner, founder of the Gardnerian branch of witchcraft was born on this day in 1884. Born in Lancashire, England, he was nicknamed King of the Witches and became a famous and well-respected Wiccan author. He died on February 12th, 1964.



    Irish poet and ceremonial magician William Butler Yeats was also born on this date in the year 1865.



    Athena represents the harmonious blending of power and wisdom. She is patroness of both practical and aesthetic arts honored today. This is the first day of the Lesser Quinquatrus in honor of Minerva/Athena. The festival lasted three days and was celebrated by the guild of flute-players, an instrument she invented. They honored in a masked processions through the city, meeting at her temple. A banquet was held in the temple of Jupiter of the Capitol.



    The Nativity of the Muses, Natalis Musarum, is celebrated. According to Hesiod the Muses are the daughters of Mnemosyne (Memory) by Zeus. Their names and attributes are Calliope (epics), Clio (history), Euterpe (lyrical song), Thalia (comedy), Melpomene (tragedy), Terpsichore (dance), Erato (erotic poetry), Polymnia or Polyhymnia (hymns), and Urania (astronomy).



    This is All Souls’ Day in Tibet.





    June 14th
    (today)


    The Festival of Jagannath is celebrated by Hindus who flock to the city of Puri on India’s eastern coast. Jagannath is a benevolent incarnation of Vishnu, lord of creation. The day before the festival, three huge statues of the god, his brother, and his sister, are adorned with crowns of flowers and golden robes before being transported to three floats. The following morning the floats are pulled to a building called Jagannath’s garden house. Helping to pull the god’s float brings his blessings to the faithful. The statues remain in the garden house for seven days while pilgrims feast and dance. On the eighth day, the statues are returned to the floats and pulled back to the temple.



    This day is sacred to Vidar, son of Odin and god of forests. Leather workers should put aside all their scraps for his boot which will enable him to successfully fight the wolf Fenris during Ragnarok.



    Rain today meant rainy weather for the next thirty days.



    In ancient Rome, the goddess Minerva (patroness of wisdom and the arts, and a deity of battle) was honored annually on this date at her sacred festival, the Lesser Quinquatrus of Minerva.



    This is the 1st day of Mesore according to the Egyptian calendar. Ma’at unites as one with all the Netjeru of the heavens.





    June 15th
    (tomorrow)


    Vesta was honored with the first fruits, and the Penus of the Temple of Vesta was swept out and closed today for another year. This is the third and last day of the Lesser Quinquatrus in honor of Minerva.



    In the year 1648, Margaret Jones of Charlestown, Massachusetts, was executed in Boston for practicing Witchcraft and magickal healing. This was the first pre-Salem Witch execution to be officially recorded in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts.




  • WCFQ 50e: Life After Life

    What is your belief of the afterlife?
    Jolteus33


    I’m a pantheist. My own take on “god” is that in creating existence out of itself, the act of expansion and the act of giving creation freewill meant separating its individual aspects and making them true individuals with barriers between consciences. Thus “god” discorporated into reality and allowed all life to follow its own path. We are all contained within the original “God,” but all things have a spirit, both organic and inorganic matter from plant, animals, and rocks to planets and stars. This entity left greater and lesser spirits, essentially more powerful, more aware pieces of itself, in charge of things while it’s continuously pregnant with and giving birth to reality. If we aren’t aware of them on a daily basis, it probably means they’re doing their jobs properly without too much grandstanding.

    There’s only a small portion of your “consciousness” in this incarnation. Life is our caterpillar stage, and we only reach maturity with death. Sometimes people become confused at death and get stuck in their cocoons, become ghosts, though most ghosts are just echoes IMO. Most people pass on to whatever afterlife they expect. Death is rebirth into a new existence.

    In the afterlife, you pretty much get what you expect. So if you expect to be punished for your “wrong doing, ” then you get “hell.” It’s all in your “head, ” except when you’re dead, you haven’t got a head. lol So your perception is based on your belief/expectation. There is basically no place where god is absent (all of reality is god’s body), even hell because hell is “in your head.” You get out of hell when you learn to forgive yourself, but the Xtians have got it backwards and wait for god to forgive them. If god’s in you and me, an intrinsic part of us, then one can expect forgiveness to come from within coupled with determination not to do “wrong” any more, in other words, to make amends. It’s also up to you how to make amends to yourself, because once you realize everyone is part of the same being, you realize you’ve wronged yourself. Wrong becomes completely perceptual. The only wrong thing is not respecting yourself or your reality (ie, all the various bits and pieces of god).

    You can be anything you want in the afterlife. Your image of self is dependent upon your attention. If you don’t pay attention to yourself for a couple eons, you could safely be said to not exist until you remember yourself. You can touch on any being you’ve been in any incarnation and be that entity. When you are dead, you are not the person you are right now. You are a collection of all your experiences, and focusing on memories from one life or another will cause you to be more like the person you were in that life.

    The difficulty with discussion of what goes on between lives arises from the fact that spiritual existence is so alien to our current existence. We don’t perceive things the way we do here. Our goals are entirely different. We’re more aware of things that we barely consider here. Between lives, we are simply a collection of thoughts, reflecting on and digesting our experiences, and considering what we would like to do next. Come back, join with the creator-soul, putz around the afterlife for a couple centuries… the only thing that forces us to come back to this realm is ourselves.

    The purpose of life and death is to gain experience and reunite the various pieces of god into a new being, basically all souls and matter rejoining into whatever form It held before the Big Bang. I think black holes are the efforts of the universe to return all matter to its origins and some theories of universal demise do center on massive black holes swallowing everything. According to Mayan and Hindu belief, “the world” has ended several times already and been reborn from the ruin of the previous one. There’s no reason to believe that it couldn’t have happened an infinite number of times, and every time the reformed god and its subsequent new universe is slightly different. The life span of the universe is like a giant mobius strip.

    The term “life span” is subjective, as is “infinity.” Since the life span of a universe is stretched out over a period of time that belies contemplation, there’s no reason to rejoin the reforming god prematurely since it would take the collection of all matter and (soul) energy in the universe for the process to begin again. But every end is a new beginning, so nothing ever truly ends; it’s just revised. This universe, the universe with which we are familiar, will end, but another will spring up in its place at the very instant this one ends, so existence is infinite, but our perception is finite, especially as we’re only temporary parts of a larger whole.

    Every being which joins the creator-soul adds its unique perspectives and experiences back to the whole. But new souls are periodically created from this evolving soul matrix because the universe is a long way away from coming to an end. Individuals can also choose not to rejoin the creator-soul, and that’s what reincarnation is all about. Sometimes they’re not ready and sometimes they want to continue their development in a new role. Sometimes they come back to teach others, as with Bodhisattvas. There are even such things as group-souls and soul families which I feel can form mini-collectives, coalescing into one soul and being born as one being. Reincarnation is a personal decision though and has nothing to do with karma (as it is understood in western philosophy) or punishments.

    Just as souls in a soul family or soul group can merge and become one soul, an individual soul can also divide, much like a single celled organism. One soul can divide to become two, with one being born and one remaining in the afterlife, or one soul can become many souls and all incarnate together as a soul family. They may have memories of their shared past or simply be drawn to each other or to similar ideas. A soul is like a seed which grows through the soil of our bodies to blossom into a new entity. Each incarnation changes us subtly in the afterlife so we are never exactly what we were before our incarnations.





    June 12th


    Light gold-colored candles on your alter and wear oak leaves in your hair to honor the Greek God Zeus, who is traditionally honored on this day.




    In Korea, rice farmers wash their hair in a stream as part of an ancient ritual to dispel bad luck and ensure an abundant crop.




    The 29th Epipi is a Festival of Mut and also the Feeding of the Netjers.




    Gwyl o Epona is the Feast of Epona beginning at sundown.




  • WCFQ 50b: Looking Around in Our Own Backyard

    Is space exploration relevant to today’s society?
    whatever_fin


    Well… it’s not irrelevant, but how relevant it is remains to be seen. Space exploration could be the answer to our population and resource problems, or it could be a waste of our already dwindling resources.

    The fact remains that there are plenty of places that we have not yet explored on our own world without infesting another planet with our locust-like ways. There are in fact many places on Earth that through exploration would prepare us for the exploration of other locations within our solar system. Through exploration of these areas, we have discovered so-call extremophile organisms, giving us new insight into the ability of life to adapt to zones which your average life form would find deadly. This has allowed us to further speculate where life might exist on other celestial bodies.

    By further examining these extreme environments, we might be able to further adapt our technology to allowing closer human interaction with such areas. In other words, by manned probes to these areas first, we may better prepare for exploration of areas beyond our planet where search and rescue will not be an option. There is no denying that preparation for space exploration has reaped many technological benefits for humanity, but by preparing ourselves through thorough exploration of our extreme ecosystems we may not only discover new and unusual organisms, we will be taking the appropriate steps to provide our future explorers with the tools and the experience to safely and accurately evaluate extraterrestrial locations.

    As it stands, sending any kind of exploration vessel into space, manned or not, is currently a waste of resources. Before we can consider exploration of other worlds, we should consider how best to clean up the one we already inhabit. Though colonization may become increasingly important as the overall population and pollution of our world increases, lack of sufficient preparation would be nothing less than irresponsible. Space exploration will only become more relevant as time passes.





    June 11th


    This day honored Fortuna in her temple in Rome. Fortuna or Fors (Fors Fortuna) is an Italian goddess identified in classical times with Tyche. Her ancient temple was in the Forum Boarium at Rome. Concordia was honored by Livia.




    The Matralia, festival of mothers, honors Matuta or more usually Mater Matuta, an old Italian goddess of dawn and of birth. Also a goddess of harbors and of the sea, she was identified with the Greek Leucothea. A matron who had not been married before was allowed to place a wreath on the statue of the goddess. The women would first pray for the well-being of their nephews and nieces, and then for their own children. This custom came from the myth of Ino-Leucothea, who acted as foster-mother to Dionysus, the son of her sister Semele. She was left offerings of flowers and yellow cakes (saffron?) referred to as Testuacium ‘pot-cake’ because they were baked in a heated earthen testu pot.




    In 1912, spiritualist-medium Ruth Montgomery was born in Princeton, Indiana. Her interest in the world of the occult began in 1956, when she first began attending seances. She has written numerous best-selling occult books and is famous for her gift of communicating with spirit guides through automatic writing.




    In 1604, James I Witchcraft Act repealed Elizabeth I’s 1563 mandate to replace it with stricter laws.





  • WCFQ 50e: I am the Queen of TMI

    What do you feel the biggest difference
    is between being 100% honest
    and giving too much information ?

    Ezekiel36_33to36


    The biggest difference between complete honesty and TMI is the absolute mortification of whoever you are talking to, followed by the surreptitious glances of your companion to see whether or not you’ve been overheard by (dundundun) strangers. They may go a little red or a little pale… sometimes there’s a little twitch in the corner of one eye or their eyes glaze over as their brain shuts down in horror.

    From an early age, my mother has tactfully informed me that I lack tact. I speak too loudly of things which others might prefer spoken of a bit more quietly (or not at all). I tend to blurt out the first thing that comes to mind. I have been accused of having an unusual perspective. Apparently when I was five or six, I informed a bus full of people that my mommy and daddy smoked pot and that my daddy was in prison for selling it.

    I have no inclination to be self-contained and apparently am not fit for polite company. I am not lady-like or demure. I do and say what I think and feel. I am 100% completely honest, much to the chagrin of family, friends, and coworkers.

    And really with as open as I have always been about all aspects of my life, it really makes you wonder what I keep under my hat, eh? I’ve got secrets. You’ve no idea.

    But that would be too much information, and I’d rather not end up in an asylum…





    June 10th


    In the year 1692, the persecution of “witches” began in Salem, Massachusetts with the hanging of Bridget Bishop. She was the first of nineteen men and women accused of witchcraft and murdered.



    This is the Persian Day of Anahita.




  • WCFQ 50c: The Children are the Future

    Are large stockpiles of sophisticated military
    weapons necessary to deter foreign aggression?

    WondersCafe


    As much as I would like to say that stockpiled weaponry is not necessary to deter foreign aggression, the more primitive the mentality of your opponent, the more this tactic will work. Smart people fight with their words; stupid people fight with their fists (or rakes and shovels and other implements of destruction… little Arlo Guthrie there for you, folks). People who can discuss their differences reasonably and make compromises do not need to resort to the threat of mutual annihilation. Threats of all kind are really a measure of maturity and as a group, humans are not so advanced as we’d like to believe.

    Of course, the threat of mutual annihilation only works if your opponent doesn’t have some unrealistic expectation of 72 virgins for suicide-bombing the infidels. If it seems I’m picking on Muslims, I’m not. Christians are just as guilty of brute tactics in service to their faith-biased ideals. What were the Crusades if not a means of beating down the competition? Or the actions of Nazi Germany in its quest to sanctify their belief in the super-race?

    War begets war and the inability of lower socio-economic classes in teaching their children that violence is not the answer ensures that even the peaceful need to have a means of defense against any unexpected attacks. It’s not that the lower classes are intrinsically violent, but the high cost of living ensures that they are unable to spend quality time with their children. While they are working to put food on their tables and keep a roof over their heads, their children are raised by interaction with other children. Schools are utter failures in teaching anything but the most basic information and set no kind of ethical or cultural expectations.

    In the end, if we choose not to invest in our children, we cannot expect world cultures to do anything but stockpile weapons. It takes a community to raise a child, but cultures across the world are increasingly isolationist and dogmatic in pursuit of their own cultural norms. We need to embrace the cultures around us, not look down on them as inferior. Children need to be taught the value of life, that all people and all sexes are equal no matter their culture of origin, and that violence is never the answer. Only then can we reduce and eradicate the need for stockpiles of weaponry. Only when the governments of the world see children as an important part of society, and not just another drain on their resources, will we have peace.





    June 9th


    In a ceremony called the Famadihana, “turning over the dead,” the Malagasy highlanders of Madagascar visit the tombs of their dead to exhume the bodies of those who have been buried three to five years. The dead are reverently wrapped in silk shrouds and paraded through the streets before being returned to their resting places. After this first visit, their dead with be visited at five, seven, or ten year intervals. Because they feel the dead continue to live, the Malagasy will call on them for help in times of need.


    This was a feast day of Vesta, goddess of hearth and fire. Banquets were prepared before the houses, and meat was sent to the Vestals to be offered to the gods. Matrons of the town walked barefooted in procession to Vesta’s temple to implore the blessing of the goddess for their households and to make food offerings in remembrance of the time when the hearth served generally for the baking of bread. The millers and bakers also kept holiday. Millstones were decked with garlands, and the beasts that turned them were led round the city covered with garlands and loaves suspended from their necks.



    In 1892, Grace Cook (a popular spiritualist medium and founder of the White Eagle Lodge) was born in London, England. Her first psychic vision of Indian Chief White Eagle and other Native American spirits occurred early in her childhood. With the aid of her spirit guide, she authored many books on healing and spiritual growth. She believed that after her death (which occurred on September 3, 1979), her spirit would be reincarnated in Egypt.