Mother’s Death

The day my mother died I wrote in my journal, “A serious misfortune of my life has arrived.” I suffered for more than one year after the passing away of my mother. But one night, in the highlands of Vietnam, I was sleeping in the hut in my hermitage. I dreamed of my mother. I saw myself sitting with her, and we were having a wonderful talk. She looked young and beautiful, her hair flowing down. It was so pleasant to sit there and talk to her as if she had never died. When I woke up it was about two in the morning, and I felt very strongly that I had never lost my mother. The impression that my mother was still with me was very clear. I understood then that the idea of having lost my mother was just an idea. It was obvious in that moment that my mother is always alive in me.

I opened the door and went outside. The entire hillside was bathed in moonlight. It was a hill covered with tea plants, and my hut was set behind the temple halfway up. Walking slowly in the moonlight through the rows of tea plants, I noticed my mother was still with me. She was the moonlight caressing me as she had done so often, very tender, very sweet… wonderful! Each time my feet touched the earth I knew my mother was there with me. I knew this body was not mine but a living continuation of my mother and my father and my grandparents and great-grandparents. Of all my ancestors. Those feet that I saw as “my” feet were actually “our” feet. Together my mother and I were leaving footprints in the damp soil.

From that moment on, the idea that I had lost my mother no longer existed. All I had to do was look at the palm of my hand, feel the breeze on my face or the earth under my feet to remember that my mother is always with me, available at any time. ~Thich Nhat Hanh

(Book: No Death, No Fear: Comforting Wisdom for Life [ad] https://amzn.to/40Mj7So)

(Art: Photograph by Nell Dorr)

Energy update

“The Emerging New Enlightenment”
By Owen Waters

The long-awaited quantum leap in human consciousness has arrived and we have emerged into the light of a whole new era of inspiring cosmic energies. The (Northern Hemisphere) summer of 2023 was a major turning point in the evolution of humanity. The cosmic energies reaching Earth have taken a significant step higher.

From here on, the energies available to us will be in a new and positive building mode despite the efforts of power-seeking warmongers to distract people from the new light. Because of this higher supply of cosmic energy, you can now count on one very significant fact…

Everything positive that you create now will unfold more easily.

The time has come to embrace the next stage of your unfoldment as a spiritual being. Once you finish leaving Old Reality thinking behind and become accustomed to functioning in higher heart-centered consciousness, you are ready to learn the secret to rapid spiritual development.

At first, this secret might seem like a paradox. Here it is: It isn’t what you do to develop yourself that counts so much as what you do to help others. That is where the frequency of consciousness of the New Enlightenment starts. Spiritual service to others creates an immediate reflection from the ever-present mirror of life and causes you to advance automatically in a balanced and graceful manner.

The same principle applies to both physical and spiritual service. Physical prosperity comes as the reaction from physically serving others in better ways and spiritual development comes as the reaction from helping others in spiritual ways. Fortunately, with the knowledge and insights we now have available to us, spiritual service to humanity has never been easier.

The world cries out to be helped and healed in countless ways. Ignorance, conflict, needless suffering and strife are all symptoms of the remaining Old Reality consciousness. It is by spiritual teaching and healing that we help others and also raise the frequency of the global mind atmosphere.

Spiritual service goes beyond just receiving light and inspiration as a product of daily meditations. By giving those energies out as well, you cause a self-replenishing effect which builds up and results in you becoming evermore inspired.

http://www.infinitebeing.com

Wise Woman

As the Heroine moves on through her life and through whatever new Journeys may come, the time will come to work on becoming Elder. The word ‘elder’, of course, can mean many things. The Elder may be fierce, eccentric, wild; she may be the Trickster energy that sets about disrupting the status quo. She may also (or later) repesent the deep, restful dark; the slow sinking back into the quietness within that is arguably one of the greatest gifts of extreme old age. To a woman of the Celtic nations, to become Elder is above all to become Cailleach: to represent the integrity and health of the wild places and creatures of this world. To become Elder is to become strong – strong as the white old bones of the earth, strong enough to endure the long, lonely vigil until the end of the world. To become Elder is to hold the power, stay the course. Above all, to become Elder is to become the ‘bean feasa’, the Wise Woman; the one who knows the secrets and speaks the languages of the land, who speaks with moral authority of the Otherworld, who weaves the dreaming of the world.

~ Sharon Blackie https://sharonblackie.net/

[Art: Alexandra Dvornikova @allyouneediswall ]

Sisterhood

“Sisterhood is the phenomenon that occurs when women quit seeing each other as mirrors, or reflections of themselves, and start seeing each other as one-of-a-kind works of art.

Sisterhood happens when women view each other as deep wells of support and inspiration — as teammates — instead of competitors.

Sisterhood happens between women who are secure enough to stop being afraid of each other; who do not feel that another woman’s different life choices are a judgment of her own choices.

Sisterhood happens when we become curious instead of defensive about our differences.

Sisterhood does not require the same beliefs or thoughts or political parties or churches. Peace is not about becoming the same; it’s about becoming okay with being different.

There is so much untapped power in sisterhood.”

~ Glennon Doyle

Glennon Doyle

Art: Kimberly Rodriguez

Poeta Goddess

@poetagoddess

http://www.linktr.ee/poetagoddess

#SacredSistersFullMoonCircle #Spirituality #WomensWisdom #WomensEmpowerment #RedTent #SacredFeminine #Goddess #GoddessCircle #GoddessStudies #CyclicalLiving #WheeloftheYear #Mythology #Magic #Folklore #FolkTradition #Sisterhood

Happy Single Women Are Closer To Finding Their Soulmates

Oh, the single life. Sometimes, let’s be honest here, it totally sucks. It feels like the plague. It feels like your V has completely dried up. The dating scene feels like a really bad comedy show with a two-drink minimum when all you want to do is…
— Read on www.elitedaily.com/dating/single-women-closer-to-finding-soulmates/1841467

Depression shows – Sad no one acknowledged this for Vincent

A diffident look 🖼️ During July 1889, Vincent suffered a severe psychotic episode – and this portrait is the only one that he painted during a psychosis.

Van Gogh’s expression is lifeless and depressed, emphasized by the brown-green paint of the work. Van Gogh painted himself as a mentally ill person, characterized by his diffident, sideways glance, which is often seen in people suffering from depression or a psychosis.

Knowing the state Vincent was in when he painted this self-portrait, does it change the experience you have when looking at it?

‘Self-Portrait’, 1889. In the collection of Nasjonalmuseet

Starry Starry Night, by Don Mc Lean

https://youtu.be/oxHnRfhDmrk?si=SsF1VfW-QUf2sBiG

Enriched

“The years have touched her only to enrich her; the flower of her youth had not faded; it only hung more quietly on its stem.”

Henry James – The Portrait of a Lady, 1880’s.

Miriam Escofet – An Angel at My Table (portrait of the artist’s mother), Winner of the BP Portrait Award 2018.

Beauty

When she was a little girl
they told her she was beautiful
but it had no meaning
in her world of bicycles
and pigtails
and adventures in make-believe.

Later, she hoped she was beautiful
as boys started taking notice
of her friends
and phones rang for
Saturday night dates.

She felt beautiful on her wedding day,
hopeful with her
new life partner by her side
but, later,
when her children called
her beautiful,
she was often exhausted,
her hair messily tied back,
no make up,
wide in the waist
where it used to be narrow;
she just couldn’t take it in.

Over the years, as she tried,
in fits and starts,
to look beautiful,
she found other things
to take priority,
like bills
and meals,
as she and her life partner
worked hard
to make a family,
to make ends meet,
to make children into adults,
to make a life.

Now,
she sat.
Alone.
Her children grown,
her partner flown,
and she couldn’t remember
the last time
she was called beautiful.

But she was.

It was in every line on her face,
in the strength of her arthritic hands,
the ampleness that had
a million hugs imprinted
on its very skin,
and in the jiggly thighs and
thickened ankles
that had run her race for her.

She had lived her life with a loving
and generous heart,
had wrapped her arms
around so many to
to give them comfort and peace.
Her ears had
heard both terrible news
and lovely songs,
and her eyes
had brimmed with,
oh, so many tears,
they were now bright
even as they dimmed.

She had lived and she was.
And because she was,
she was made beautiful.

Author: Suzanne Reynolds, © 2019

Photo credit: Nina Djaerff
Model: Marit Rannveig Haslestad