Yvonne Aburrow's Blog, page 65

May 24, 2018

The Night Journey – ebook version

The ebook of The Night Journey: witchcraft as transformation is now available from Lulu.

Many, many thanks to the friend who helped by fixing the formatting of the Word document so it could be converted to an ePub. I can’t tell you how many hours I spent trying to fix the darn thing. You are an absolute star!

[image error]This book is aimed at witches who want to deepen their engagement with their Craft. It explores modes and types of ritual; how rituals work; the uses of sound and silence in ritual; the...

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Published on May 24, 2018 01:53

May 18, 2018

Talking about the body

I wish there were more spaces where we could talk about the body and its changes and processes in an inclusive way. That is to say, in a way that includes trans, genderqueer, and non-binary people, and people of all ages, and doesn’t create an essentialist account of what bodily functions mean.

I am currently experiencing menopausal symptoms. I don’t feel that this puts me on the threshold of being a crone, and nor do I feel that menarche, menstruation, childbirth, and menopause are defining...

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Published on May 18, 2018 04:15

April 19, 2018

Lost bears

I’ve just seen this thread on Twitter, with many lovely kind people replying and offering new bears.

My beautiful boy has lost his favourite thing in the world known simply as Bear. Jack is autistic and this scruffy bear has been his best friend and companion. He is completely devastated and would be so grateful to find him again. Twickenham, Teddington and local area. Pls RT pic.twitter.com/Rv45Cft0s9

— Matt Barnfield (@mattbarnfield1) April 13, 2018

It reminded me of a story I made up when...

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Published on April 19, 2018 02:25

April 15, 2018

Beltane fires and maypoles

Beltane is coming, and with it, the celebration of love. Spare a thought for those who are left out of all the joyous coupling, and those who are marginalised by less inclusive ways of celebrating love.

Fertility can be re-purposed into a theme of caring for the environment, or of general creativity. And as Doreen Valiente wrote in The Charge of the Goddess, “All acts of love and pleasure are My rituals”.

The Maypole

It is a bit difficult to make the maypole more inclusive, as it’s rather bi...

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Published on April 15, 2018 01:00

April 1, 2018

Saganism

A new Pagan tradition was launched today, based on the ideas of Carl Sagan. Many Pagans value and respect the ideas of Carl Sagan and his evocative descriptions of the universe and our place in it. Sagan also wrote, “We are a way for the universe to know itself.”

This idea was expanded upon by J Michael Straczynski in Babylon 5, where the character Delenn says:

The Universe itself is conscious in a way we can never truly understand. It is
engaged in a search for meaning, so it breaks itself a...

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Published on April 01, 2018 01:00

March 22, 2018

The God-shaped Hole

Some psychologists have suggested the existence of a “god-shaped hole” in the mind — a set of psychological functions that evolved for some other purpose (like detecting predators sneaking up behind us), but which predispose us to believe in gods, or in God, or the supernatural, or the preternatural, or something out there other than ourselves.

[image error]

Fractal by insspirito on Pixabay. [Public Domain]

Christian apologists would have you believe that there’s an aching void located in the heart that ca...

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Published on March 22, 2018 01:00

March 15, 2018

Spring Equinox

After several years of excellent research by Adrian Bott, we now know the following things. Spring Equinox was not actually celebrated by ancient pagans in the British Isles; nor was it a fertility festival. There was probably a festival at the fourth full moon of the year, at which cattle were sacrificed. Eostre was most probably a goddess local to Kent, although her name is cognate with various other goddesses of dawn and light, such as Austriahenea and Ausrine.

Various animals are associat...

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Published on March 15, 2018 01:14

March 8, 2018

Fictional and constructed religions

What can fictional religions tell us about real religions? Are constructed religions just as valid as ancient ones? What about real-world religions based on fictional ones? One impetus for creating constructed religions is for use in jurisdictions where religious activity is imposed by the authorities – but people often find that their joke religion then takes on a life of its own.

Fictional religions

Three of my favourite fictional religions were invented by Ursula le Guin: The Telling, the...

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Published on March 08, 2018 00:30

March 1, 2018

First thoughts, second thoughts, and third thoughts

I’ve often said that Terry Pratchett was one of the greatest Pagan theologians, although he wasn’t a Pagan. In his books Small Gods, Pyramids, and the series about the witches, he often explored ideas about how gods might might come into being, and how they interact with the world. He was also, in a quiet and humorous way, a passionate advocate of thinking about things more deeply, looking beyond the surface of things, and being compassionate. (If you missed that about his writing, read it ag...

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Published on March 01, 2018 00:00

February 25, 2018

Totalising systems

A totalising system is one that seeks to subsume all other paradigms within its paradigm, rather than accepting that other paradigms exist alongside it. It regards itself as a complete and universal system which can explain all experience and needs no supplemental systems.

A non-totalising or pluralist system recognises its particularity to its local culture and sees that different philosophies emerge out of different cultural contexts and local histories. A totalising system ignores local co...

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Published on February 25, 2018 01:00