I love this! Brought chills as I read it, as I felt guided to create a poem, a call to Isis, on the 18th of June: http://thedailyerasure.com/2014/06/18/isis-2/
THE RETURN OF ISIS – HOW IT WILL AFFECT YOU AND WHERE YOU CAN FIND HER.
I love this! Brought chills as I read it, as I felt guided to create a poem, a call to Isis, on the 18th of June: http://thedailyerasure.com/2014/06/18/isis-2/
THE RETURN OF ISIS – HOW IT WILL AFFECT YOU AND WHERE YOU CAN FIND HER.
I love photographing nature, perhaps more than I love writing, because the muse of Nature never leaves. It was a beautiful day today, and I couldn’t help taking out the camera and walking through my gardens. I hope these images of Nature’s beauty lift your spirit, as they lifted mine.
Another wonderful channeled post by Anna. I am so happy I’ve discovered her site:
~ANDROMEDA – EQUITARIAN SHIP – CURRENT STATE OF HUMAN AFFAIRS ~.
Another great post about narcissistic behavior:

Start on a cloudless morning when the sky is the color of Truth, it provides an ideal backdrop. When one is constantly stretching the neck open, you can’t ask for a better way to welcome in the energy of blue.

Aside from the obvious: paint, brush and a wet cloth to catch the drips, you’ll want to bring along a the phone so you don’t trip down the stairs, forgetting to wipe your hands on the wet cloth along the way, only to have the answering machine beat you to the last ring. A water bottled with a nice capped lid is also handy to avoid that unquenchable thirst for unpainted water. Then there’s the camera. Instead of photographing your progress, why not use it as an excuse to peer out those open windows that are keep you from passing out from the VOCs you’re inhaling in your open mouth (Which brings me to another important tip – the tilted head has a natural tendency to cause the mouth to hang open. This is no good. Remember, keep it clamped shut, least you want to drink the VOCs too. If you need to breathe, use your nose!).
Do bring along a companion or two, they’ll keep you company and cheer you along (in some cases telepathically) when the fire burning the back of your neck makes you want to throw the brush out the window and jump into the welcoming hot tub below – don’t do it! It’s only a delusion of your chemically-influenced mind. The fall to the dirt below will likely break your neck and that’s not the ending you want.
Remember to listen to your bladder and your stomach. This will save you from having an unfortunate accident before your masterpiece is completed. Speaking of masterpieces, only one of us (at the most) has been lucky enough to be reincarnate as Michelangelo (not me!), it behooves the rest of us to remember that a couple drips and lumps along the way add character. At least that’s the story I’m going with, although I did discover a day late this handy tip: When you’re painting a 9 1/2 foot ceiling and happen to add one of those unfortunate lumps of dried paint to your roller, the edge of the roller provides a nice scraper. I now understand the logic behind popcorn ceilings, but I’m keeping my fingers crossed that crystal dust will do the trick!

Keep telling yourself, it will all be over soon, and if you’er lucky, the inside will look as lovely as the outside.

Have you ever noticed that each type of bee hums a different song? Yesterday, while photographing this bumblebee, I realized that the melody of its legs was playing alongside the unique tunes of a yellow jacket and a honey bee, who were also busy gathering nectar and pollen from the azalea blossoms.
The bumblebee, and the lore associated with its ability to defy gravity by using tiny wings to lift its over-large body, teaches us that anything is possible if we set our sights to achieve our dreams. Seemingly insurmountable obstacles are over-come if we allow doubt to disappear.
The bumblebee is also a curious and social insect. As I write this post, a bumblebee occasionally passes by the window, as if to check in on my progress. My daughter, when she was quite little, was fascinated with the soft form of the bumblebee, and would often hold them in her palm and gently pet them. Although bumblebees have the ability to sting (multiple times), they never stung my daughter, and unlike many of their relatives, are rarely bothered into aggressive action in the presence of humans. They’re bold, gentle giants in the family of bees.
All bees are important to the pollination of plants, reminding us how intricately we are woven with other organisms into the Web of Life. Perhaps now, more than ever in history, bees remind us of this important interdependency we share and how sacred and vital the bees are for the preservation of life. Bees show us the value of working together to preserve the nectar of life for all — that we are all important contributors and to be aware that the greed, or poison, of a few can causes the demise of many. Bees are in a state of decline, their survival as a species threatened due to the poisons in the form of pesticides we use on our plants. We have allowed the Web of Life to be stretched and torn, and whenever I see a bee, in any form, pollinating the untainted flowers of in my yard, I feel immense gratitude and love for these small, but vital beings. They are each a survivor against great odds.
Bees have been revered for thousands of years, and are often found as symbols in ancient civilizations. The honeybee builds a comb in the shape of a hexagon, an important symbol in sacred geometry associated with the sun and the heart. Hexagons appear frequently in nature and in human-made forms as important building blocks of matter. The shape is found in our DNA, snowflakes and crystals, and is sometimes referred to as the “primal crystal of life.”
When I flipped on the TV last night, I was taken back to the 12 weeks I spent at a local prison 4 and 1/2 years ago. Unlike the women on the television screen, my incarceration had been by deliberate choice, and only for a couple of hours once a week. I was in my third semester of graduate school, and had chosen to teach creative nonfiction and poetry to incarcerated women for my practicum requirement. Why I chose the women’s prison, I can’t say for sure. When the option presented itself, I simply knew I had to take it. I knew it would change my life, and, if I was lucky, the lives of a few women for at least 12 weeks.
People have asked me if I was ever afraid stepping through the locked gates and leaving my identity behind the bullet proof window of the reception desk. There was no camera mounted on the ceiling to monitor my safety, no button to push for help, yet I never felt afraid.
Driving to the prison each week, I noticed the graveyards — their gray walls with holes were difficult to miss — and began to count them. There were four. As the weeks of winter turned into spring I noted the widening patches of brown earth exposed from the melted snow, and one Saturday in early spring I was struck by the sudden appearance of color through the holes in the metal. Beside the gray headstones, the red and purple petals of flowers could be seen, their stiff green stalks stuffed into the centers of gray urns. The fake flowers made me think of the words spoken by one of my students on the first day of class, who while reading her writing exercise on “beginnings” remarked, “In here it is always Christmas,” in reference to the issued attire of the inmates. The artificial gaiety of the flowers behind the gray fences of the cemetery were symbolic to me of the irony reflected inside the prison walls.
The fences surrounding the red brick of the local women’s prison are tall and layered. Their tops curve into tangles of metal vines with thorns, keeping the inside in, the outside out. Once inside, the routine is the same for all visitors and volunteers. After you hang up your jacket, you slide your keys and license down the metal basin into the hands of the waiting guard behind the dark glass and sign the paper you receive in return. Next you must walk through the open doorway that scans your body for metal.
Each door inside the secured walls of the prison has a different metal knob, and each will not turn until someone hidden behind the dark glass recognizes and approves your presence. Some weeks I was allowed to walk the hallways alone, turning the knobs one at a time while I descended until I reached the locked door of the library where my class was held. This door was always unlocked by a key carried in the hands of an officer, who then turned and left me alone. Yet, I was never scared for my safety.
I was, I realized on my first day, in the presence of women more scared than I. Women who longed, no doubt, to switch places with me. What separated us was a mistake, or a series of them in some cases, that anyone could make. It was, for me, a constant reminder of the choices we make for freedom.
In her chapter, “Spirituality in Education,” in Teaching Community: A Pedagogy of Hope, Bell Hooks writes, “It is the love that I can generate within myself, as a light and send out, beam out, that can touch people. Love can bridge the sense of otherness. It takes practice to be vigilant, to beam love out. It takes work.”
I intuitively felt this desire, this need, while I taught. The women who entered the door each week to write and learn needed to feel welcome, to look beyond their red and green shirts and build a community where love and hope were present in order to write the words held, sometimes deeply, inside of them. I did my best each week to create this environment, with their help. There were days when, after the class was finished, I left feeling elated with this effort, and a few when I drove home exhausted by my attempts to maintain a “teaching community.”
As each woman was given the opportunity to speak during the first day of class, I noticed how important it was for her to be heard. Women who had sat hunched with heads down, began to straighten their bodies and lift their gazes as they projected their voices. The transformations continued through the weeks. We become our own little community built on a mutual, unspoken platform of respect and love.
One of the inmates, “Cat,” was released before the series of classes ended. Before she re-entered the world beyond locked gates, she thanked me. “Without this class I never would have written these words. Thank you for this gift,” she told me. In this moment, and in each moment I spent in the presence of these remarkable women, I was reminded of the power of voice — that each individual holds the words of her soul, and sometimes we have the humbling privilege of holding the key to unlock the truth she has kept tightly inside.
I was in the presence of women who had suffered silence in ways I would never know. May, who had endured mental, physical and sexual abuse by her parents during childhood, then abuse by her husband, emerged into a self-confident writer who rarely showed up to class without a smile. Melody, who looked young enough to be my daughter, and never revealed more than the dark shadows of her life story, gifted us with these haunting lyrics before I left:
Beneath my feet
Blades of grass
Sway evenly
Crisp, cool, air
Against my skin
Sun shining down
Tan color skin
Trees all around
Shadow’s cast
On the ground
I was lost
But now
I am found