Messages In This Digest (11 Messages)
- 1.1.
- Elder's Meditation of the Day From: Lady Nightshayde
- 2.
- To Rid Your Home of Negative Energy From: Lady Nightshayde
- 3a.
- Myth of Cailleach From: Lady Nightshayde
- 4a.
- Tips for Attending a Pagan Ritual From: Lady Nightshayde
- 5a.
- The Law of Attraction From: Lady Nightshayde
- 6a.
- Set a Positive Emotional Climate From: Lady Nightshayde
- 7.1.
- Thought for the Day From: Lady Nightshayde
- 8a.
- October Magick From: Lady Nightshayde
- 9.1.
- Humor From: Lady Nightshayde
- 10.
- Moonrise From: Lady Nightshayde
- 11.
- Humor/Lady Nightshayde From: Guamella Pellegrin
Messages
- 1.1.
-
Elder's Meditation of the Day
Posted by: "Lady Nightshayde" LadyNightshayde9@aol.com nightshayde99
Fri Sep 30, 2011 11:04 pm (PDT)
Elder's Meditation of the Day
"If a child hasn't been given spiritual values within the family setting, they have no familiarity with the values that are necessary for the just and peaceful functioning in society."
-- Eunice Baumann-Nelson, Ph.D, PENOBSCOT
When we are born, we start with a beautiful empty mind ready to be given our beliefs, attitudes, habits and expectations. Most of our true learning comes from watching the actions of others. As we watch our family or relatives, whatever their actions and values are, so will be the children's values and acts. If we see our families living a just and peaceful way of life, so then will the children. If we see our family shouting, arguing, and hateful, so will it be for the children. The cycle of life - baby, youth, adult and Elder is all connected. If the older ones have good values, it will be connected to the children.
Oh my Creator, if there are values I have missed, it is not too late. I can get them from You. Teach me today Your spiritual values. Respect, trust, giving, honesty, wisdom - teach me these.
from www.whitebison.org
The light of a hundred stars cannot equal the light of the Moon.
Love Each Day,
Lady Nightshayde
http://groups.yahoo.com/ group/13Witches/
http://groups.yahoo.com/ group/Whispering Witches/
http://groups.yahoo.com/ group/MagickalMe als/
http://groups.yahoo/group/ NightshaydesNews
- 2.
-
To Rid Your Home of Negative Energy
Posted by: "Lady Nightshayde" LadyNightshayde9@aol.com nightshayde99
Fri Sep 30, 2011 11:05 pm (PDT)
To Rid your Home of Negative Energy
It's best to do this spell on the first day of a waning moon.
You will need:
* 1 old brick
* angelica shavings
* a chalice of cold water
Place the brick in a hot oven for a few minutes until warmed through and hot to the touch. Take the brick out, using oven gloves or similar, and place the shredded angelica on top with the salt. Using the chalice, sprinkle the cold water over the top of the brick until steam rises and chant 7 times,
'I call on the Eye of Horus to protect this home, invasion of evil be gone to none'.
When the brick has cooled, place it in front of your house and leave it there as a warning to any other unhappy or negative energy that thinks about coming in.
The light of a hundred stars cannot equal the light of the Moon.
Love Each Day,
Lady Nightshayde
http://groups.yahoo.com/ group/13Witches/
http://groups.yahoo.com/ group/Whispering Witches/
http://groups.yahoo.com/ group/MagickalMe als/
http://groups.yahoo/group/ NightshaydesNews
- 3a.
-
Myth of Cailleach
Posted by: "Lady Nightshayde" LadyNightshayde9@aol.com nightshayde99
Fri Sep 30, 2011 11:05 pm (PDT)
Myth of Cailleach
Place names from Scotland to Wales, Ireland, and the Isle of Man recall the pre-Celtic goddess, Cailleach, whose name means "veiled one." Neither invasions to these lands by other cultures nor conversion to Christianity of people can erase our awareness of her presence here. After all, it was she that dropped huge boulders from her apron as she passed through the countryside, so forming the local cairns and mountains.
Cailleach has been known as the Old Woman, Daughter of the Moon, Daughter of the Winter Sun, the Hag of Beare, and even the Queen of the Faeries in Limerick. There is a story that she may have originally been a Spanish princess named Beara. Cailleach was a goddess of weather and winter. She raised and calmed the winds. In many tales, it was she that threw the thunderbolts. Her magic branch, also seen as a wand, staff, or hammer, brought snow and frost whenever it touched the land. This wand was so powerful that countless humans attempted to gain it through trickery or steal it outright. None were successful. Normally described as a crone or hag goddess, Cailleach is often pictured as a fearsome old woman with blue or blue-black skin, one eye, and sometimes red fangs. In Scotland, she was seen as a hag with bear's teeth and boar's tusks. Always dressed in gray, she was known to wear a plaid shawl over her matted hair. However, in time she has come to embody the Celtic triple goddess in stories that tell of her transformation into the bride at Imbolc.
Scottish folklore tells us that she hid her staff under a holly tree each Beltane and turned into a gray stone. It is said that if Imbolc is fair, she emerges to gather sticks for the fire that will warm her through a cold winter. If it is cold and wet, she stays in until Samhain and allows the summer to be warm. Some legends hold that instead of turning into stone, she becomes a beautiful maid at winter's end.
Cailleach was the original spirit of Samhain. As an immortal being, she renewed her youth each Samhain. When all has been harvested, the remainder of the fields belongs to Cailleach. The last sheaf of harvested corn is crafted into a dolly, called the cailleach. This doll was shown publicly in some areas. In others, it was placed in an honored spot in a farmer's home for the protection of the community and ensure a fruitful harvest in the year to come. Alternate traditions fill the apron of the cailleach with bread, cheese, and a sickle, or feed her to livestock.
In Irish folklore, there were three great "ages": that of the yew, of the eagle, and of the Hag of Beare. She was older than the oldest of animals, and she loved countless human men who would die of old age even as she became revitalized in an endless cycle, like Earth itself.
It is interesting to note that this ugly hag goddess is strongly associated with sexuality. In one story, she arrives at a home, begging to warm herself before the fire and is refused. A man named Diarmid took up her cause and persuaded them to allow her in. Later, she climbed into his bed, and he allowed her to do so merely folding the blanket between their bodies. To his shock, she transformed into the most beautiful woman he had ever seen.
The hag is known to hold, and grant, power of rulership as well. In the story of the nine hostages, Fergus kisses the hag and is rewarded with sovereignty over Ireland just before she again turns into a beautiful young woman. In a story of the sons of Eochaid Mugmedn, five brothers set out on a manhood quest. They get lost and one is sent to find drinking water. What he finds is a frightening black hag guarding a well. She promises to give him water if he will kiss her. He refuses, as do all his brothers except Niall. Niall gives her a big hug and kiss. When he looks again, she has turned into an astoundingly beautiful woman that calls him King of Tara and vows that his descendants will rule after him.
As Mother of All, Cailleach was guardian to a host of wild creatures, including wolves, pigs, goats, wild cattle, snakes, and birds of prey. She tended her special flock of deer along the rough and rocky coasts. With this herd, she showed great tenderness and nurturing bringing them fish and seaweed with her own hands when food was scarce. She guarded them against predators, both animal and human. In turn, they provided milk for her.
As the Mistress of the Wild Beasts, she is a shapeshifting goddess. In Scotland, she manifested as a crane carrying sticks in its mouth to forecast storms. She is commonly known to take the shape of an eagle, a cormorant, a gray mare, and a great gray stone. She is so deeply associated with the Earth that she may inhabit any boulder or mountain. She is similarly associated with water and wells. In a story from Argyll, she watched over a well at the summit of Ben Cruachan. Each night, she stanched its flow and prevented it from overflowing by placing a boulder over it. One night, she fell asleep and neglected to place the boulder. The well overflowed, flooding the valley, and killing everyone and everything in its path. The valley became Loch Awe and Cailleach felt her guilt so strongly that she turned into a stone.
Cailleach may be seen as the bean sidhe, the fairy woman that is the Washer at the Ford, though this image is also connected with Morrigan. Cailleach was reputed to wash her cloak in a whirlpool at the end of summer. In this aspect, she is associated with the cycles of death, rebirth, and transformation as she washes the clothes of one that is about to die. One of her Gaelic names is the cailleach-oidhche, meaning "crone of the night."
Whatever the legends of Cailleach may have been based on, it is clear that her power and memory are as immortal as she is reputed to be. The land holds her name and spirit for us, just as the inevitable cycles of life do. Through her, we can come to terms with death and rebirth, remembering that we do not end with the death of this body. She reminds us that we each hold strength and magic, no matter our age. She is a key to the beauty and power of Elderhood, something that has been largely lost to us in modern society.
by Kristin Madden,
copyright 2002
The light of a hundred stars cannot equal the light of the Moon.
Love Each Day,
Lady Nightshayde
http://groups.yahoo.com/ group/13Witches/
http://groups.yahoo.com/ group/Whispering Witches/
http://groups.yahoo.com/ group/MagickalMe als/
http://groups.yahoo/group/ NightshaydesNews
- 4a.
-
Tips for Attending a Pagan Ritual
Posted by: "Lady Nightshayde" LadyNightshayde9@aol.com nightshayde99
Fri Sep 30, 2011 11:08 pm (PDT)
Tips for Attending a Pagan Ritual
Perhaps you're not Wiccan or Pagan, but you've been invited by your friend to join in her coven's next circle. You want to participate, but have no idea how Wiccans and Pagans behave, or what the proper protocol is for a non-Wiccan attending a ceremony. Or perhaps you are a Pagan, and you've been invited to attend a ritual with a group that's brand new to you. So now what do you do?
Believe it or not, most rules of common sense and courtesy apply here, just as they would apply to you attending any other religious service. For starters, it's important to be respectful. For a non-member to be invited to a coven's ritual -- which are typically members only -- is a privilege and an honor. Part of that is showing up on time. Although you may hear jokes about "Pagan Standard Time," which is the practice of showing up twenty minutes late for everything, be punctual. Typically, there's an arrival time when everyone shows up, and then another time designated for when ritual will start. If you arrive too late, you might find the doors locked and no one answering your knock.
When you do arrive, you may see people who look different or downright unusual. If you see someone wearing Ren-Faire garb, Spock ears, or even nothing at all, don't stare. Try not to make assumptions about people based on what they're wearing (or, as the case may be, not wearing). You should ask the person who has invited you what the proper attireis for the ceremony beforehand. You may be welcome to show up in sweatpants and a t-shirt, or it may be more formal than that. Ask in advance, and react accordingly. It's a good idea, also, to ask if there's something you should bring. You may be invited to make an offering, or contribute food for people to eat after ritual.
When you enter the ceremonial area, you may be anointed with oil or smudged with sage. It's also possible that the High Priestess (HPS) or some other member of the group will welcome you with the words, "How do you enter the circle?" The proper answer is nearly always, "In perfect love and perfect trust." You may wish to check with the friend who invited you to be sure there's not some other answer used by the group. Once you are in the ritual space, walk in a clockwise direction unless otherwise directed.
Bear in mind that an open circle is not a Wicca 101 class. In other words, there's going to be stuff done and said that you may not understand -- but the middle of ritual is not the time to ask for explanations. If there's something you're unfamiliar with or would like more information on, wait until after the ceremony has concluded to ask your questions. Don't raise your hand in the middle of things and say, "Hey, why are you waving that knife around?"
If things are happening that are making you feel uncomfortable -- whether it's the words being spoken or just the general energy of the circle -- ask someone to cut you out of the circle. This is a formal way of you exiting the circle without disrupting the energy for everyone else.
If you've never attended a Wiccan or Pagan ceremony before, try to remember that for many Pagan traditions, joy and laughter is often a part of ceremony. While Wiccans and Pagans do indeed honor their gods and goddesses, they also understand that a little levity is good for the soul. While in many religions, solemnity and somberness is the rule, in Wicca you may find it's the exception. Wiccans and Pagans typically will tell you that the universe has a sense of humor, so if someone drops an athame or sets their robe on fire, it's all just part of the ritual experience, and it's okay to find it amusing.
A few things to remember here -- again, all matters of common courtesy. First, don't touch anything on the altar unless you are invited to. Second, don't handle anyone else's tools without permission -- what may look like just a plain old rock to you may be a crystal that another individual has charged with their energy. Remember the basic rule of kindergarten: don't touch things that aren't yours.
Also, don't be alarmed or surprised if you begin to feel a little strange -- some people new to a circle may feel dizzy, lightheaded, or even a bit jittery. If this happens to you, don't panic -- a lot of energy can be raised within the circle, and if you're not familiar with the experience, it can feel pretty weird. Let someone know how you're feeling -- without leaving the circle -- and they'll help you get "grounded" and back to normal.
Once the ritual is over, there are often refreshments and drinks. In many traditions, the High Priestess takes the first bite before anyone else may eat or drink -- be sure to watch and see what everyone else is doing before shoveling any food in your mouth.
Finally, be sure to thank your host for allowing you to attend their ritual. If you're interested in learning more about the group and their practices, this is a good time to mention it. If the High Priestess invites you back, consider it a great honor indeed!
By Patti Wigington, About.com Guide
The light of a hundred stars cannot equal the light of the Moon.
Love Each Day,
Lady Nightshayde
http://groups.yahoo.com/ group/13Witches/
http://groups.yahoo.com/ group/Whispering Witches/
http://groups.yahoo.com/ group/MagickalMe als/
http://groups.yahoo/group/ NightshaydesNews
- 5a.
-
The Law of Attraction
Posted by: "Lady Nightshayde" LadyNightshayde9@aol.com nightshayde99
Fri Sep 30, 2011 11:15 pm (PDT)
The Law of Attraction
Every thought vibrates, every thought radiates a signal, and every thought attracts a matching signal back. We call that process the Law of Attraction. The Law of Attraction says: That which is like unto itself is drawn. And so, you might see the powerful Law of Attraction as a sort of Universal Manager that sees to it that all thoughts that match one another line up.
To what are you giving your attention? Find out why the way you give your attention matters.
You understand this principle when you turn on your radio and deliberately tune your receiver to match a signal from a broadcasting tower. You do not expect to hear music that is being broadcast on the radio frequency of 101FM to be received on your tuner when it is set at 98.6FM. You understand that radio vibrational frequencies must match, and the Law of Attraction agrees with you.
So, as your experience causes you to launch vibrational rockets of desires, you must then find ways of holding yourself consistently in vibrational harmony with those desires in order to receive their manifestation.
If there is something you desire and you put your attention to it, it will come to you. On the other hand if there is something you desire and you focus on the fact that you do not have it, then the Law of Attraction will continue to match your not having it vibration.
Inspired by Ask and It Is Given by Esther and Jerry Hicks (Hay House, 2004).
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The light of a hundred stars cannot equal the light of the Moon.
Love Each Day,
Lady Nightshayde
http://groups.yahoo.com/ group/13Witches/
http://groups.yahoo.com/ group/Whispering Witches/
http://groups.yahoo.com/ group/MagickalMe als/
http://groups.yahoo/group/ NightshaydesNews
- 6a.
-
Set a Positive Emotional Climate
Posted by: "Lady Nightshayde" LadyNightshayde9@aol.com nightshayde99
Fri Sep 30, 2011 11:18 pm (PDT)
Set A Positive Emotional Climate
Just like a garden that flourishes best under certain conditions, your home operates more smoothly when the emotional climate is well thought out. Rather than simply reacting to each crisis and circumstance as it arises, setting an emotional climate gives you a head start in fending off potential sources of stress and conflict. It helps you respond to life rather than react to it.
When trying to determine the ideal emotional environment for yourself and/or your family, there are several important questions to ask yourself. What type of person are you? What type of environment do you enjoy and thrive in? Do you wish your home were more peaceful? These types of questions are critical in order to set the optimal emotional climate.
The creation of an emotional climate has more to do with your inner preferences than your external environment. For example, the placement of your furniture or the colors of your walls or carpet can contribute to the emotional environment but are not the most critical ingredients. Your emotional environment is primarily made up of things like noise levels, the speed of activity (is everyone rushing around like a chicken with its head cut off?), the respect of one another, and the willingness (or lack of willingness) to sit still and listen.
In our home, for example, we have determined that our goal is to create and maintain an environment of relative calm. Although we often fall short of our goal, we do take steps to put the odds in our favor. For example, although we all love spending time together, and we very often do, each of us also enjoys spending time alone in our home. The simple recognition that being alone is thought of as positive, rather than as negative, makes it easier for all of us to be sensitive to the noise, activity, and chaos levels that are occurring at any given moment. We have learned to sense when one of us needs a quieter environment or the space to be alone.
Another thing we try to do is to keep unnecessary rushing around to a minimum. Even though our children are only eight and five years old, we have discussed this issue many times. As a family, we have agreed to work on this tendency as individuals as well as in our interactions together. For example, if I fall into my habit of rushing around, trying to do too many things at once, I've given my children permission to gently remind me to slow down. They know that keeping a sane pace is important to the quality of our life at home and they feel comfortable reminding me when I'm interfering with this goal.
Obviously, the ideal emotional environment is going to be different from home to home. However, I think you'll find that if you spend a little time reflecting on what type of environment you would most prefer, you'll see relatively simple changes that you can begin to implement. Be patient with this one. It may have taken many years to create your current emotional environment, so it may take a little time to create a new one. Over time, I'm fairly certain you'll find this strategy extremely rewarding.
by Richard Carlson, Ph. D.
Don't Sweat the Small Stuff With Your Family
The light of a hundred stars cannot equal the light of the Moon.
Love Each Day,
Lady Nightshayde
http://groups.yahoo.com/ group/13Witches/
http://groups.yahoo.com/ group/Whispering Witches/
http://groups.yahoo.com/ group/MagickalMe als/
http://groups.yahoo/group/ NightshaydesNews
- 7.1.
-
Thought for the Day
Posted by: "Lady Nightshayde" LadyNightshayde9@aol.com nightshayde99
Fri Sep 30, 2011 11:19 pm (PDT)
Here's a Thought for the Day:
Good judgment comes from experience, and a lot of that comes from bad judgment
The light of a hundred stars cannot equal the light of the Moon.
Love Each Day,
Lady Nightshayde
http://groups.yahoo.com/ group/13Witches/
http://groups.yahoo.com/ group/Whispering Witches/
http://groups.yahoo.com/ group/MagickalMe als/
http://groups.yahoo/group/ NightshaydesNews
- 8a.
-
October Magick
Posted by: "Lady Nightshayde" LadyNightshayde9@aol.com nightshayde99
Fri Sep 30, 2011 11:41 pm (PDT)
October Magick
October is the month of shadows; the time when the veil between the worlds thins; when the doorway to and from the Otherworld opens and the past merges with the present. There are two themes in Witchcraft commonly associated with October. The first is the return of the dead. The second theme is that of the labyrinth - the journey between the worlds. The symbol of the spiral is linked to each of these themes.
The word labyrinth is derived from the Greek word labyrinths and the Latin word labyrinths. As a maze-like structure, the labyrinth symbolizes the path of initiation and enlightenment, and is associated with the journey of the Sun through the seasons. The Sun's withering light and heat in winter, and its return to full strength in the spring, link it to themes of reincarnation.
The labyrinth is associated with the Great Mother goddess as a symbol of penetrating the mysteries concealed in her womb. Traditionally, the structure of the labyrinth is presided over by a woman, and a man traverses the pathways. At the center of the maze stands the lord of the labyrinth who is also known as the judge of the dead. Here lie the mysteries of descent into the Underworld, the return of the soul to the Great Goddess, and its rebirth through the womb gate to the world of the Sun.
The complex evolution of the spiral design associated with the labyrinth is likewise a sign of passage, a symbol of transformation. Spirals appear in ancient Neolithic tomb art from southern to northern Europe. In Neolithic times the spiral was a symbol of death and trance, the inner journey to the center of one's being.
The Spiral Dance
In some Witchcraft traditions there is a ceremonial dance known as the Spiral Dance. A number of people join together to form a spiral in this special dance. As the dance commences everyone is lead counterclockwise into an inward spiral. This is symbolic of the journey of the soul into the Underworld where the dark aspect of the Great Goddess awaits. Once encountered, the Goddess is seen in her light aspect in which she renews life. The dancers then expand outward in a clockwise spiral. The outward spiral is symbolic of the return to life from the Underworld.
The meeting between the Underworld and the realm of the living is central to October - the month of the shadows - in the practices and beliefs of modern Wicca and Witchcraft. In Celtic Wicca this is the time of Samhain, and in Italian Witchcraft is called Shadowfest. Both cultural rituals focus on reunion with those who have gone before. The journey is not only related to those who cross back into the world of the living, but also allows us to reach through to the Otherworld and embrace the ancestral current. Food offerings were given to honor the dead through a feast of remembrance. Beans (particularly fava beans) were time-honored offerings to the dead.
Honoring the Ancestors
In Neolithic times the common dwelling had no doors, only a hole in the roof. A ladder allowed passage to and from the structure. In primitive belief both the living and the dead entered and exited the dwelling through the hole in the roof. From this evolved the chimney and the hearth connection to ancestor reverence. Shrines were often placed over the hearth, and later stockings were hung there for their symbolic link to weaving. Weaving is the domain of the fates, who themselves are associated with life and death. To place a stocking on the hearth is to invoke the ancestral spirit.
In Italy stockings are hung for Befana, who is the gift-giver Witch figure in Italian lore. She fills the stockings with fruit, nuts, and gifts for the children. This is an exchange of offerings, a covenant between the ancestral spirit (Befana) and the new generation (the children). In Tuscan lore Befana is one of the three fates along with Rododesa and Maratega. In the occult tradition of Italy, Befana is the personification of the ancestral spirit, just as the Lare, Clan spirits, once represented this concept in ancient Roman religion.
The belief that one's ancestors live on as spirits is rooted in the Neolithic cult of the dead. Ancestral shrines were often oriented to the east or west quarter, the region in which the Sun and moon rise from the Underworld and set again, returning each day in an endless cycle. Offerings were placed there in order to maintain peace between the living and the dead. In modern times sending flowers to the family of the departed has replaced the ancient act of laying offerings. The traditional meal held at the wake now serves as the offering of food to the dead.
By Raven Grimassi
The light of a hundred stars cannot equal the light of the Moon.
Love Each Day,
Lady Nightshayde
http://groups.yahoo.com/ group/13Witches/
http://groups.yahoo.com/ group/Whispering Witches/
http://groups.yahoo.com/ group/MagickalMe als/
http://groups.yahoo/group/ NightshaydesNews
- 9.1.
-
Humor
Posted by: "Lady Nightshayde" LadyNightshayde9@aol.com nightshayde99
Sat Oct 1, 2011 12:05 am (PDT)
A passenger in a taxi leaned over to ask the driver a question and
tapped him on the shoulder.The driver screamed, lost control of the cab,
nearly hit a bus, drove up over the curb, and stopped just inches from a
large plate glass window.
For a few moments everything was silent in the cab, and then the still
shaking driver said, "I'm sorry but you scared the daylights out of me."
The frightened passenger apologized to the driver and said he didn't
realize a mere tap on the shoulder could frighten him so much.
The driver replied, "No, no, I'm sorry, it's entirely my fault. Today is
my first day driving a cab. I've been driving a hearse for the last 25
years."
The light of a hundred stars cannot equal the light of the Moon.
Love Each Day,
Lady Nightshayde
http://groups.yahoo.com/ group/13Witches/
http://groups.yahoo.com/ group/Whispering Witches/
http://groups.yahoo.com/ group/MagickalMe als/
http://groups.yahoo/group/ NightshaydesNews
- 10.
-
Moonrise
Posted by: "Lady Nightshayde" LadyNightshayde9@aol.com nightshayde99
Sat Oct 1, 2011 12:10 am (PDT)
Moonrise
The NEW MOON always rises at sunrise,
And the FIRST QUARTER at noon.
The FULL MOON always rises at sunset,
And the LAST QUARTER at midnight.
The light of a hundred stars cannot equal the light of the Moon.
Love Each Day,
Lady Nightshayde
http://groups.yahoo.com/ group/13Witches/
http://groups.yahoo.com/ group/Whispering Witches/
http://groups.yahoo.com/ group/MagickalMe als/
http://groups.yahoo/group/ NightshaydesNews
- 11.
-
Humor/Lady Nightshayde
Posted by: "Guamella Pellegrin" glpellegrin@yahoo.com glpellegrin
Sat Oct 1, 2011 12:51 am (PDT)
ROFL, your joke is incredibly funny, Lady Nightshayde. Thank you for sharing it.
Misti
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