Category: Practical Pagan Matters


Okay, ethics of me. I’m not sure why it’s taken me so long to answer this question, but I believe it has something to do with finally sitting down and figuring out what I stand for. I’m 25 – before, I could have shrugged and said something about the fleeting nature of youth and how I was not ready to figure out what my ethics were. Now I have to, and I find it’s almost uncomfortable because I am both trying to figure out what the “right” answer is (i.e., the answer “YOU” want to hear) while at the same time saying to myself that really, it’s MY decision. So now I have to cowboy up and make a stand, and I’ve found that actually, some things are really important to me, and some things I could care less about. Which is, in itself, a kind of relief – I’ve given myself permission to believe and not be so danged tolerant all the time – which is exhausting, really.

I also had a battle picking a small number of ethics to go for. Simplicity is a good thing, and I did not really want to end up with a 10-point bulletin list of ethics. I think when there’s too many ethics to follow it can be easy to slip up. I don’t really want myself to say it’s okay when I slip up, because I have 20 other ethical values to choose from.

Virtues I Stand For:

  1. Truth and being honest. This is important to me. At the core of myself I really, really dislike people who are not honest (although I seem to have made a distinction between liars and people who don’t know better). I dislike false advertising claims, people who will avoid mentioning the elephant in the room because they don’t want to offend anyone, and people who will tell you that you’re really not THAT fat, even though you’re on a diet to lose about 20 dress sizes. Flattery is… dishonest, in some ways. I’d rather have someone tell me upfront that they don’t like me, and they never will, because I’m too loud or whatever, than to pretend to my face that they like me. (That said, I don’t do subtlety well – hit me with the 2×4, please!)
  2. Having said that, compassion is important for me. I don’t think that you need to be brutally, hurtfully honest just as an excuse to be mean – Dr. House on House, M.D. is such a jerk, even though he’s 100% honest. Work towards honesty, I guess, but keep in mind that some people react better than others to complete honesty. There’s ways you can word things to get your point across without being nasty about it. You can be honest and tolerant at the same time.
  3. A focus on the environment, and environmental sustainability is also important. One of the things I have noticed with watching the sunrises and sunsets is that my awareness of the world has increased. I feel more awake to things, and I think that one thing Paganism in general have to offer the rest of the world is this awareness and understanding that we are as much part of nature as a sea cucumber is. So for me, a very large part of my faith is going to be focused on environmentally sustainable practices.
  4. Freedom and responsibility of personal choice are also good values. I like being able to make decisions for myself, but it’s also important to be responsible and stand up for what I have chosen. If my word is to be honest, and to be considered my law, then I must hold myself bound and accountable to it. Otherwise that makes my word about as useful as a gum on a shoe.
  5. Balance is a virtue that I liked, but I have to admit that it is one that I am not particularly aware of or following. I am not very healthy at the moment, nor do I have a good work-life balance. I didn’t really care about it before, but in recent weeks it has come to a head (I contracted flu, although not H1N1) and I have been sick. As I laid in bed, wishing someone would come along and put me out of my misery, I also realized some things. Namely, I’m a bit young to be a candidate for a heart attack, but if I don’t shape up and get myself, my stress levels, and my work life in balance – well, I could have a heart attack. Or a serious health issue. I need to take care of me, if I expect to take care of others.

I noticed that my ethics list didn’t really include the words “harm none”. That’s because I figure that if I’m going to be stupid enough to cause harm, then by my own code of ethics I’ll need to own up to it and work to fix or balance the harmful act.

I also noticed that I had no really Wiccan or magically-focused ethics in my list. That would be because for me (at least, right now) I believe that magic is kind of…. not needed? Kind of hokey? I’m Scully-ing on this. This is likely because when I hear the word “magic” I tend to see in my mind things like spellcraft and myself, alone, waving my arms and stamping about a Circle. In my head it feels stupid. I’d rather pray and work physically towards my goals. It makes more logic sense to me to do that.

It finally snowed. It started late last night, and by the time I woke up at 7 this morning the world had changed. Seven centimeters of pure, lush sticky wet powder, perfect for snowballs and snowmen alike. And it kept snowing.

Driving, of course, is a challenge. But we carry on anyway. I happened to return to Edmonton today with Sandy and her Little Man, Tara, TW, and Betty. It was all our days off, so we went in, right through the snowstorm.  Some amazing driving skills by Sandy… I am impressed with her ability to keep cool in the face of some of the worst of Edmonton’s drivers.

I don’t know. For someone who’s been in and out and in and out and all right bloody around the Great Big City I can safely say I am getting sick and tired of it. But there’s shopping to be done, and I like the company of the others, so I went.

On the way home, though (after Sandy dropped me off at the corner – don’t worry, Mom picked me up) I was able to drive slow through the snow. There won’t be a plow out here for a while, at least.

And then, under the stark ice moonlight, and the starry skies, I saw them. They were in my neighbours field, at the crossroads, searching the snow for some food. There must have been about fourty of them: a herd of glorious, shaggy, graceful elk.

During the time I was staring at the elk, I should have been watching the road. Luckily, I turned my gaze back at the right moment to shout “deer!”. Mom deftly braked and skidded to a stop.

The pair of does were crossing the road. One had made it across and was standing in the ditch, watching the other one bound across. Younger deer slipped as she came into the ditch, and fell on her butt. She stood up, unsteady, and older doe (I am assuming on their ages, here) reached out and they touched noses.

It was quiet, and fleeting, but even through the fogged-up-windshield you could clearly read concern and affection into the “kiss.” It is a moment I will not forget, either the elk herd or the deer.

Later, as I was waxing enthusiastic about it all, my Dad sort of ruined the moment by saying:

“You were able to sense they cared a lot for each other, and that was just the one deer falling down. Imagine the pain they feel when their fellows are shot down, or slaughtered on the highway by careless humans.”

It really made me think. Then it made me cry, even though I’m aware that crying is not helping anything. Then I went out and made extra piles of hay for the deer, even though I wouldn’t normally, as hay is not cheap to come by. That eased my mind, some. I wish there was more I could do, but unfortunately, it’s illegal to go about hunting and killing rednecks  – although some days, you find it an almost comforting thought.

I’m quieter now, writing and relaxing. The wind is softly blowing the chimes about, and behind me is the soft crackle of the fire winding itself down.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

I know I’ve been pretty quiet lately in general. That’s because I’m over at The Pagan Online Campus, working my way through a beginner’s Wicca course. I have to take this one and another one before getting to the good stuff. (Which I gather is similar to actual college.) So I’m working my way through the assignments, and I’ll likely post some of my notes from the class here. I’m finding I’ve started to reexamine some basic parts of my thinking, as you’ll see in my next post on ethics.

Until then, take care. Drive safe. Your life – and perhaps, some one else’s – depends on it.

Hello.

It’s been a little while since I last wrote but I have to say that I’ve been super!busy! with real life things. I spent some time at the second supervisory training course I attend with a coworker. I’ve learned some great tools but the best one, I have to say, was what the instructor called force field analysis. It’s basically a way to helpyou solve problems. You state the problem, the ideal solution (what you want to happen), driving forces/motivators, resisting forces/barriers, and from the barriers you then take your three most important ones and develop a strategy to get around each. It’s kind of neat.

We also talked a bit about the whole Law of Attration/The Secret. I have to admit I was hard-pressed not to laugh when the instructor started raving about how new this is and how it works…. which has been around forever. I wanted to laugh and tell her that, but some people just seem to really like their own ideas, so I just kind of left it alone. But she did cover some of what she felt the science behind it all to be.

Your mind is split into two “consciousnesses”. The alert side (the part that runs your life and thinks “OMG! Taylor Lautner is so hot!!!” and then remembers he’s like seventeen and you’re 25 and therefore your love is Doomed to Squick) and the subsconscious side – what can be called alternatively the id, the Sticky  One, the Dictator, the instinct, etc.

The alert side communicates to you via the brain. You think it, you do it. You wake up one morning and think “oh, laundry needs to be done because I HAVE NOTHING TO WEAR!!” and then you go and do laundry. Or you think “god I’ve got to go see New Moon” and then before you know it you’ve not only organized your friends into a mass costume-wearing movie-attending party, but somewhere along the way you have also started an after-party, and somehow you got the idea that little red apple invitations were totally the way to go. But I digress.

Your subconscious, though, the little sneaker, bypasses the thinking brain entirely on its way to communicate. It sends it’s little directions direct (ha. awkward sentence) to the body. Kind of like a giant fuck you to the brain, if you ask me, since the subconscious is to the conscious like a CRAY supercomputer  is to, well, the recycled computer you got for Grandmother to play bridge online and send guilt-inspiring emails to the grand kids with.

Okay, getting back on track. According to my instructor you CAN learn to communicate with your brain. The example she gave was golfing. Let’s say you’re planning to shoot the ball (I’m not a golfer, so bear with me here) and you don’t want to hit the water. So you think to yourself “Okay now, don’t hit the water. DO NOT HIT THE WATER!”. However, because the subconscious has ears like my Dad it only hears the very last word. So to it, all you’re saying is “WATER!” and of course you then sink your ball right into the middle of the big giant puddle.

Communication improves, my instructor said, when you learn how to code what you want so your brain- both sides of it- starts to work together. An example would be losing weight. That’s my goal. I’ve always wanted to lose weight, and it’s never happened for me. According to what I have learned it is because I’m phrasing this goal (also an affirmation) wrong. I need to switch the language around so that instead of saying what I don’t want, I instead say what I DO want.

So I need to say “I want to be thin” or “I want to be healthy” instead of “I want to lose weight”, because the only part that gets through is the last part. Kind of cool, when you think about it.

 

 

This is the end, beautiful friend,

This is the end, my only friend

The end of our elaborate plans,

The end of everything that stands,

The end, no safety no surprise,

The end, I’ll never look into your eyes again.

~ from “The End” by The Doors ~

And so the Wheel spins, ever turning, and we move from the light into the darkness. God is dead, may he be reborn. The Goddess retreats, enters the underworld, and is lost to us in her mourning. Darkness, the God of Winter and of all endings, breaks free to lead the Wild Hunt, and the shadow roams the world.

The Dead are returned, and will Feast with us. Honour those who have gone before us, and say your goodbyes to them. You will not meet again for some time.

Reflect on your year, the time you have spent, and the goals you have set. How did you do? Has your year been good, or not? What have you learned?

My year has been overwhelmingly good. I was promoted, and now am in a middle-management position at the group home. It’s where I want to be right now: decent pay, some responsibility, but I can still run away whenever I want. I thought about applying to be the Team Leader (deadline was tonight) but decided not to, the main reason being is that I’m stressed out enough. I don’t really need additional stress.

Alas, poor Melvin, ye served me well. Back in January the car died. I was able, with a cosigner (thanks, Dad) to secure financing for a brand-spanking new Hyundai Tuscon. It has been an unimaginable relief to drive a stable vehicle that isn’t falling apart. Or on fire. Or is 20 years old.

With the new car and the new job came new confidence. This year has definitely been the year of stand-up-for-myself. People who were friendly and hung out with me only because I had a vehicle, disappeared when I didn’t have one, and when I got one again, reappeared…. to find out I was ignoring them.

My grandmother who wanted me to move and become a nurse, was told in no uncertain terms that when I do return to college it will be as a Woman’s Studies major. And if she doesn’t like it, too bad.

(On a sadder note, Tim Horton’s also officially stops selling their pumpkin spiced muffins of goodness. I need to learn to make a pumpkin-spiced cream-filled muffin.)

Forging ahead. Look forward to the year to come. What plans shall you make?

Confession time, and I have a good one.

My name is Jaelle, and I live off of plastic food. What’s that? you ask.

Well, I reply, it means I don’t know much about cooking, but if it’s at least halfway microwaveable then I’ve probably eaten it. And if it comes at Tim Hortons, then I’ve eaten it at least once. And I run off of iced cappuccinos. And there’s been more than one day when I look up and realize that all I’ve eaten was an ice cap, and a sucker.

But…. you say…. witch? Healthy living? Harm none, and all that jazz? And I say, yeah. I know. Hence the reason for the change.

Getting back to the why-I-don’t-cook-excuse I have to say I grew up cooking dinner for the family. Every Saturday, us girls would band together, clean the kitchen, cook dinner, and wash dishes for Mum. It was just a thing we did, and, being the one that universally hated cleaning of any kind (still do) I always volunteered to cook. The other two usually let me.

Having said that, I freely admit I was a horrible cook. I excelled at making food that, a day later, looked like unrecognizable mush. Because Dad can’t handle spicy food (although he does insist on using pepper, salt, and HP sauce, so I personally always felt that was a crock of bull) it was usually tasteless. The exception to this rule is stew. I make a decent beef stew.

That’s about it, though. In all other aspects I was a novice cook, and I learned pretty much on my own. I did phone Grandma a couple of times to ask for help, but after about the seventh “isn’t she teaching you anything?” question I kinda gave up and just started throwing random shit together. That’s how I ended up with the Soup Of Doom. To this day I have no idea how it turned from good-tasting to tastes-like-rotten-fish, but I *do* know that several hefty tablespoons of peanut butter later it was actually pretty good. (And I wasn’t the only one who said that, although I suppose Dad could have just been making nice.)

A cookbook! A COOKBOOK! You scream at me. Yep. I know about cookbooks. I even know how to (in theory) use one. Have I ever looked at one? Yeah, I love looking at them when I’m hungry. Cooked out of one…. that’s a different answer (and that answer is a resounding no).

So my major goal for the new year is to learn how to eat. Properly, regularly, healthily, and on time. It fits in with the wannabe-vegetarian, Spark-People-using, ex-Wiccan person(a) that I am now. Contradiction, it’s not just a tacky smelling perfume.

Or, “How I Spent My Summer, an Essay of Adventure”, by Jaelle.

The day I was assaulted by an arachnid was not marked by any ominous signs. Sure, there was a horde of crows I spotted on the way into town – roadkill deer, a common occurrence when you mix highways, nighttime, and drunken rednecks. I remember very little from that day in the way of crazy Signs From The Apocalypse. I can only assume that either I’ve blocked it all completely – or it was really, just a day like any other.

I don’t remember being bitten. I do remember going to a friend’s very-religious-themed wedding, so it may have happened in church. I was wearing a dress with nylons. I remember these two details because neither occur with any frequency. I’ve been known to actively play sick to avoid both Church and dresses. So I believe, looking back, that clearly God either doesn’t approve of me in Church, or me in a dress, or perhaps even both.

What I do remember clearly is the fact that halfway home I had to pull over because my left leg below the knee was burning-itchy. Must be the nylons, I thought. I hardly ever wear nylons, because they don’t come in a 5X unless I hit a specialty store, and I don’t often travel the two hours to the Big City to go and get some. Yes! I thought as I parked, jumped out and rolled down my nylons, finally I am freeeee!

Glancing down at my leg, I failed to connect the two small red bumps with anything to do with the itching burn that now was beginning to waver in and out. I just gave my leg a quick rub, considered the possibility of a bad shave job (I hardly ever shave, either, since I have faint, thin, blond hair which you can hardly see at 3 inches with a magnifier, let alone at thirty paces), and drove the rest of the way home with my dress ricked up around my hips.

Life continued as normal in it’s routine of work-work, farm-work, family, and sleeping. My leg lost the burning sensation and occasionally itched. I kept a casual eye on it, glancing down every fourth day or so, but for the most part I largely ignored my leg, as it in turn ignored me.

Then one day I woke up and decided to wear a pair of capris. It was my day off, and plus 30 C, so I said “screw it, I don’t care that on me these look like harem balloon pants” and put them on. Then I went upstairs to eat breakfast and visit with the family. I hadn’t seen them for a few days.

My mother took one look at my leg and FREAKED. “What the hell happened!??!” She sipped her coffee and sorted through her financial papers.

Mouth full of cereal, I looked down at the offender in question and tried not to choke. Somehow, overnight, or else wise without my notice, those two tiny red bumps had become two large purple bruises, with blisters on top. I gently prodded one and nearly swooned as the itching burn returned. Absence apparently made the heart grow fonder, as I had to control the seriously demanding urge to scratch my skin off. Preferably with a knife.

“Um… mosquito bite gone wrong?”

She fixed me with a gimlet stare. “That’s gone beyond “wrong”, Jaelle, and into “get thee to a doctor a.s.a.p.”

Taking the hint, I shot back, “So what you’re saying is that we’ll make an appointment today?”

“No. What I’m saying is that I’m leaving for town in half an hour, and you’re going to go to the hospital waiting room.”

Some days it’s easier to just go along with what Ma wants, so I gave up. Got dressed, cleaned, and was on the way into town. Making sure she knew I knew she meant business, Ma drove straight to the hospital, double-parked in the emergency area, and dragged me through the front doors. Thank Goddess it’s a small town, I recall thinking. Hopefully it’s a slow day at the hospital.

It was a slow day at the hospital (which really works as a Long-Term-Care facility with emergency services almost as an afterthought), which I remember being grateful for as Ma accosted the front desk nurse she knew. “Kellie!” She smiled. “Jaelle-”

“You know what, Ma?” I interject rudely, causing everyone to focus on me. “I think you need to go and re-park the car, I’ll talk to Kellie on my own.” I shove gently at her, and it is only with a hissed I’m an adult that she moves. I smile and half-shrug at Kellie as if to say, Mothers, right?

“I think she’s over-reacting, but…” and show the nurse in question my leg. She comes from behind the desk to inspect it closely. So do the other two nurses. A volunteer candy striper slows down on her way by for a look as well. Kellie deftly grabs my leg at the ankle and pulls it closer. I suddenly know how horses feel.

The three nurses (Fates? I wonder idly as I try to determine what they’re saying) speak in that Universal Medical Language. The only words I manage to hear are “infection” and “staph”. Oh, and something about “Prime Minister Chretien.”

Oh, shit. Nearly everybody under thirty knows that the Prime Minister in question is famous not for anything political, but for the fact that he contracted flesh-eating bacteria. I mentally start swearing/alternately praying.

They ask me all sorts of questions, like “when did this happen?” and “does it hurt?” and “why did you wait so long?” They don’t appear impressed when I reply with “I dunno”, “only when you touch it” and “it only got like this this week”. I vaguely hear the word “idiot” being whispered and pretend it’s my imagination. I could have offered better reasons, such as I’ve been working on a report that’s due, I’ve been busy, you’re busy enough, I didn’t want to bother anyone, or the popular theory on fat people who receive shitty health care. I could have reminded Kellie about the last time I was here at the hospital, after a week of menorraghea which ended in my fainting at work. I say nothing.

“Well, it looks like it’s infected” seems to be the general consensus, along with the fact that I’m an idiot. They tell me to go wait and that the visiting doc will see me as soon as she’s able. I pass by the good Doctor E on my way to the waiting area. We exchange “heys” and she asks me what I’m in for.

“Leg.” I grunt. “Bite, wound, infection, I dunno.”

“Hmm.” She says, sounding interested. “Well, come with me.”

I adjust course and follow the good doctor through a maze of paperwork and curtains, until she can get me up on an examining bed. I prop my leg up. She tells me that I’m the first person all day and that it looks like my bites have become infected.

“That’s the popular theory.” I reply, resisting the urge to add a “duh”. She seems to hear it anyway, shooting me a quick, assuring smile. She digs out a small scalpel and gently pokes the blister, which gives up and explodes. I stare at the resulting drainage: a mixture of dark, dying blood and pus. It doesn’t look good. I swipe a finger at it and sniff. It doesn’t smell good. “Infected.” I tell the doctor, who hands me some antibacterial wipes.

“Looks like it might be a recluse bite. Keep cleaning this.” She orders, and leaves. (I find out later she called some people to discuss recluse spider bites and what they look like. It’s not a common thing, apparently.)

I swab my draining leg, mentally ignoring all the horror stories I’ve heard about brown recluse spider bites. How they always start small like this. How eventually some people have to get entire body parts scraped out. Maggot treatments. I dab a little more frantically.

The good doctor returns. “I could take some samples.” She offers. “But it doesn’t sound like a recluse.”

“Oh thank Gods.” I mutter back. “I was getting a tad nervous back there.”

She grins, and I remember why I like her. She’s got a sharp and fast sense of humor. “As long as you keep it drained,” she tells my Ma, who by this time has tracked me down, “She should be okay. Just keep it cleaned and draining. She shouldn’t lose her legs” She slaps on some kiddie bandages. I ask if losing a limb was an option. She doesn’t joke back, just reminds me to drain it. Keep it cleaned.

Gotcha. I can do that. Give me a Xacto knife and I’ll keep the sucker drained. I don’t want to lose my freaking limb.

So we leave, my leg freely oozing under the very girly Barbie band aids. As soon as I can I exchange the girly band aids for cooler tattoo-flash ones.

Life continues. I go home, and my sisters crack “Holy Amy Winehouse” jokes at me. It takes me a minute to connect that name with the song I use to teach rights at work. (“They tried to make me have a shower today/I said, “no, no, no”. They can’t discriminate against me, I say “no, no, no”.) Apparently the singer has been spotted dragging a rotten limb down a boardwalk.

Over the next few weeks, I watch my leg bites shrivel up and die. I am the butt of more zombie jokes than I care to shake a voodoo stick at. I even feel a bit like a rejected extra from Shaun of the Dead, as if I wasn’t “zombie enough” to be on camera. Throughout it all, I clean and scratch and drain, and accept the fact that I will have some serious scars on my leg, later. I don’t care, as long as I still have a leg.

Fast forward into October. I’m still scabbing. Still draining. I corner the good doctor again and explain how it’s not going away. She takes a quick look and tells me, yeah, it’s normal. It’s better. I’m fine, and definitely no longer in danger of losing anything but her respect.

And oddly enough, I have become attached to my rotting leg. I find excuses to wear shorter pants, even though it’s already snowed. I roll my pants up at team meetings to rudely inspect my bite. I tell everyone. People are largely mildly grossed out, although one person felt it was imperative to remind me that I’ll have “large, disfiguring scars for LIFE!” (She didn’t understand why I couldn’t care less about the scars.) I laugh more. “Hey, wanna see something disgusting?”

I use it as a shock tactic with my grandmother. “Hey, I know you want me to go to the U of A and be a nurse like my cousin, but LOOK AT MY LEG! And I’ve changed my major to Women’s Studies. I’m a feminist AND I have a rotting limb!” (Haven’t heard back from that one, yet. Color me disappointed. Happy.)

And I feel better. Not just about the leg, but about myself. I started walking at home more, figuring that it would help move the drainage along. It has, but I’ve also become addicted to walking. I now park my car away from work and walk to work. I encourage my clients to walk with me. I start doing monthly BSEs. (That’s regularly checking the ladies, for those who don’t know.)

I turn my report in late, figuring at the very least I have a handy (or leggy?) excuse. I tell people to fuck off more, and they chalk it up to “she’s dealing with the zombie disease.” I research spiders and wonder if somehow one got shipped from Korea in the Hyundai I bought in January. I get some time off and do some serious hibernating. I work at putting things into perspective. I tell myself “fuck fear!” and draw up a list of crazy, not-me shit to do before I turn 30.

See, it doesn’t matter that my report was late or that my employee was upset with my other employee or that the boss has resigned and will leave me in December. I don’t care anymore about that stuff. It’s work, whatever. I didn’t lose my leg.

My name is Jaelle. And I survived a wacky spider bite infection. And I didn’t lose my leg in the process.

Hello. Today’s post is brought to you via Mrs.B over @ Confessions of A Pagan Soccer Mom, which is this totally kickin’ website I’ve just stumbled upon. I know I haven’t been writing much, which is a combination of writer’s block (what do I say? What do I have to say that’s do darned important for me that everyone else can read it?) and also just pure laziness. It’s been a strange month. August 1st I was promoted from a key leader position (floor worker who also handles all the business work for one client as well as doing grunt work like ensuring they have a life and a clean healthy environment in which to live it) to a resource coordinator position. The basic difference between the two is that I am now a supervisor. I report directly to my team leader, and the Boss Lady, and others now can come to me for support and coaching. That’s it. More responsibility.

Oh, yeah. And a pay raise from 13.50 to 15.20 (CAD). Can’t really complain about that, right? I know! It’s awesome, if a bit overwhelming right now… the transition is hard for reasons I’ll expound upon later. Right now, though, I wanted to spend some quality relaxation time (QRT) journaling about the pagan side of me. So here we goes… (or I go, technically. You follow, and yeah, my grammar sucks and I tend to divert often from what I was talking about. Get used to it, that’s how my brain works…)

What brought you to the pagan path?

I have to say the real kicking point for me was astronomy. I had a telescope as a kid, and I remember spending many nights outside in the bed of dad’s pickup, looking at the stars and thinking about the pure awesomeness of the sky. I remember seeing shooting stars and comets, and even northern lights, and thinking…. there was something out there that made those stars fall at the exact moment I was watching them. It felt like a message, like at the same time The Thing that made the star had also given form and life to me (and it wasn’t just my mum).

I also had the extreme luck to grow up on a rural horse ranch, with parents who inherited a distrust of church and a love of both Neil Young and the Rockies, which are about two hours away from the farm. So I had a lot of exposure as a child to things like sunshine, peasant TV, using my imagination all day, and generally living a real, simple, connected life.

I always liked reading scary stories and watching scary movies as a child, so mostly my very first exposures to witches were strictly following the stereotype of hag/good witch. It wasn’t until I was older and The Craft came out that I learned about this crazy little thing called Wicca. That was back in grade seven or eight, and then I actually met a witch. Her name was Kaylin (her real name, not her pagan name – I don’t think she had one), and she was goth, and an outsider, and she carried around books like The Satanic Bible and The Complete Book of Witchcraft. She was the essence of cool to me, and I practically followed her everywhere.

It took me a few months to realize that she was like a witch as a rock is like a tree. I.e., not at all. She just liked the attention she got when she was carving pentacles on her school desk.

Do you feel that you were always on it, even before you knew what it was?

Yes, I think so. I never had a name for the thing that made me so out of touch with the rest of the kids at school. Back then, conformity was the key to social success. They would talk about boys and music, and I just wanted to talk about stars and trees and the beauty of watching a butterfly. So I really had this sense of being a freak and being different, and it was a huge relief to know there were other people out there who felt like I did.

Were you raised as a pagan? Did you know any pagans growing up?

Other than the aforementioned Kaylin? No, and after a few months of knowing her I realized that there was this new fangled thing called the internet, and witches abounded there, too. So I pretty much started with The Celtic Connection, and Witchvox, and worked my way outwards from there. I bought and read, in order:

Wicca by Cunningham

Broomstick by Silver Ravenwolf

True Magick by Amber K

Drawing Down the Moon by Adler

Complete Book of Witchcraft by Buckland

The Satanic Bible by LeVey

Book of Shadows by Kaylin

LivingWicca by Cunningham

The Sprial Dance by Starhawk

and so on from there….

So you can see I started as one of those gothy New Generation Witches, all spiky and dark and attention-seeking. It took me a while to realize the difference between saying I was a witch, and actually being a witch. Now I have moved away from fluffy book learning, and am concentrating on building a personal path for myself.

At what age did you finally consider yourself to be a pagan?

I can answer that! My official Dedication Ceremony occurred on Ostara, 1998. I held it in the hay loft in the barn, and apart from being very dusty it consisted of me praying a lot and trying not to knock any candles over or fall through the roof. Not the most auspicious of beginnings, but after that I really did feel different. I felt more committed.

What religion were you raised?

I really wasn’t raised to be any religion at all. My parents think of God as a beardy white guy, yes, but that’s generally as far as they go with it. My external family members on both sides are really fundamentalist in their own churches, so of course they don’t know and don’t talk to me much, anyway. But I still get to hear “Praise Jesus!” at Christmas, which used to be an argument for me. They’d praise Jesus for being born, and I’d be: “He didn’t do anything except slide out! Mary did all the work!” Family gatherings are always interesting for me. Always. That’s why I generally plan to be at work for most of them.

So there you have it! I guess these pagan prompts do really work! When I started I felt there wasn’t going to be a lot, and look how much I wrote!

My gratitude point for today is: I was driving home at 11 and almost ran over a porcupine. But I didn’t, and instead got to watch the little bugger amble down the gravel road and off into the bushes. It was pretty cool.

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