Wild Forests

27 March, 2006

Dreams

An older Witches Weekly question:-

"Do you believe dreams are ever symbolic? 
How do you interpret dreams? Do you feel some are scenes from past lives? Future premonitons? Hidden thoughts and feelings?
What do you feel was your most symbolic/meaningful dream?"

I do strongly believe that dreams are symbolic - in fact, I think dreams could be defined as symbolic.  They're the way our subconscious/Younger Self interprets the world. 

I have a lot of trouble interpreting my own dreams.  The only time I can interpret them is when they're obviously a simple stress dream - for example, if I'm worried about work, and I then dream about being at work, and things going wrong.  On a reasonably regular basis, I have dreams that exist in entirely new worlds, which I find quite strange.   Some of these seem so real, I wonder if they are some sort of message, or past/future life, or whether these places actually exist.  And sometimes I just wonder at the endless creativity of my mind when my body sleeps.

I went through a disciplined stage of writing down all the dreams I remembered in the morning, and reading back over those is quite fascinating (although not particularly enlightening, in terms of symbolism).  I would like to begin to do that again - I think looking back at the dreams of five years ago could be a very valuable exercise, in terms of seeing how my subconscious preoccupations have, or have not, changed.

25 March, 2006

The Ideal Newbie Book

Witches Weekly asks "If you had to buy a book to give to someone that had no clue about paganism and wished to learn, what book would you pick and why?"

I guess this question is aimed at recommending books for a beginner, rather than someone who wants to know more about what paganism is for information's sake.

One of the first books I recommend is The Spiral Dance by Starhawk. It's a book that's very relevant to my variety of paganism (and I guess I'd be recommending with a bias towards my own practice - I can't really recommend books that don't resonate with me). I'd give the usual "ignore the history, read the footnotes" spiel, referring to the 20th anniversary edition, and then let them go from there. It's an excellent book that covers the basics but also has the potential for much deeper practice, and it does so with an eclectic approach rather than a strictly Wiccan approach. It's easy and absorbing to read, has plenty of exercises and personal anecdotes, and the footnotes that examine and elaborate on the way Starhawk's own beliefs have changed are great for a beginner to read.

If a beginner was interested in druid practices, or had Celtic leanings, I'd send them in the direction of Emma Restall Orr's Ritual. It's a book with a very broad basis - it can be reading from an atheist's perspective, which I think is good for beginners, as it doesn't assume certain beliefs. I came from an atheist upbringing into paganism, so I enjoy books that discuss aspects of belief and deity, which Ritual does. It's also a fascinating and deeper look at a main practice of most pagans - ritual itself. The ritualistic practices of paganism, and the reasons behind them, are a very useful point for a beginner to start.

Both of the above books assume a certain fascinated interest in paganism. If a beginner is looking for a very basic, "this is what's what" guide, then I would recommend some of the books published by Thorsons, like Paganism (Vivianne Crowley), Thorsons Way of Wicca (Vivianne Crowley), and Druidry (Emma Restall Orr). These are all good basic beginners books that don't go too deeply into aspects a beginner may not be interested in, but also don't skim over the top of important issues.

18 March, 2006

March Full Moon

Daily temperatures remain in the high 20s to early 30s - I travelled to Melbourne during the waxing moon, and enjoyed their cooler weather, and the luxury of wearing long sleeved tops. It rained for several days while I was away, but generally there has been plenty of sun.

With the onset of autumn, the days are becoming noticibly shorter as we move towards Mabon - at 6.30pm, it is very firmly dusk, and there's not enough light to read by when walking home from the train station. After Mabon, I will begin getting home in the dark, and when we get closer to Yule, leaving home in the dark as well. While I enjoy the cooler temperatures, seeing no sunshine at home during the week is wearying.

Everything in the garden continues to grow with great vigour - the herbs are doing well, and I have planned to do some garden maintenance this weekend, including some much needed mulching as grass and weeds are growing up around the bases of our trees.

I have been somewhat preoccupied with work during this moon, although the full moon came during the midst of what I hope is a lifestyle change - an exercise routine which I've been sticking to, and a healthier diet. Let's hope I stick with it.

16 March, 2006

Welsh myth

I'm reading Evangeline Walton's Mabinogion Tetralogy, which is a fictional retelling of the Welsh epic, The Mabinogion. It's fantastic - I find original epics rather hard to read - that style of "So-and-so did this. Then he killed this person. Then he wept rivers of tears, and turned into a goat." It's a little hard to connect with the characters. Walton's version is written like a novel, yet (as far as I can tell) remains close to the original material. Wonderful - I wish more people would re-write myths and legends this way. I enjoy modernised and altered re-tellings as well, but versions that stick close to the original, yet read like a modern novel, are fantastic.

I am fascinated by Welsh and Irish gods and goddesses, and have been reading and enjoying Pwyll's encounter with Arawn, Lord of Annwn, and Rhiannon. Unfortunately, this version doesn't have a pronunciation guide, which is annoying. I do like to make sure I'm reading correctly, and I rarely am. "Pwyll", for example, seems not to be pronounced "pwill", as I have been doing so, but rather "pwith". Now I'm off to find a pronunciation guide for all those other words with no vowels.

(I take that back. More sources seem to go with versions like "pwill", "pooeelh", or "pool". Some guides to Welsh pronunciation are here, here, and here.)