Issue
#1 - September's Full Moon
Welcome
to LunaZine, a free ezine on mythology, archetypal psychology, goddesses,
soulwork & related topics. I want to thank you for subscribing to this
'zine. This is my first issue & I have been happily putting it together.
I hope you enjoy it. I am completely open to any comments and/or suggestions
- or submissions. Please just email me at
kewoodworth@hotmail.com
There's
a featured:
Website
Quote
Book Review
Update on Mythica Art & Vision
Essay
Website of the Month: The
Art of Tibet
Thangkas - Tibetan paintings - have been
kept a virtual secret for hundreds of years. Housed in private & museum
collections, most are kept in storage & are unavailable for study
or enjoyment. The Art of Tibet is a beautifully designed website that
showcases thangkas for everyone. You can zoom in 7x on any part of the
thangkas with increasing levels of resolution, enjoy contemporary &
historical photos of Tibet, or delight in Nepalese paintings. It
isn't necessary to have Flash installed to enjoy The Art of Tibet, but
do install it for a richer, multimedia experience.
Quote of the Month:
"When you have cut down all of the trees,
And killed off all the buffalo,
And taken the last fish from the river,
Then I hope you can eat all your money."
- Mohawk woman to Teddy Roosevelt
Book
of the Month:
The Women's Encyclopedia of Myths & Secrets
by Barbara G. Walker
Did you know that:
Little Red Riding Hood was based on the virgin aspect of the goddess
Diana?
Kris Kringle meant "Christ of the Wheel," which was the
name of the Norse sun god who was born on the winter solstice?
The word Seraphim originally meant "divine fiery serpent,"
but later translated into the word "angel" in Judeo-Christian
literature?
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Despite
the title, this encyclopedia is not necessarily for women. This book reveals
an incredible amount of information about myths, symbols, gods, goddesses,
fairy tales and religious motifs from a feminist-historian perspective.
The Women's Encyclopedia has aided me in countless occasions for research
- but the book is so plentiful with historical anecdotes & the threads
that brought about contemporary symbols that I often get lost amidst its
propensity. The information within is interesting & rarely found elsewhere.
Walker certainly did her research. This book is worth every penny.
Click
here to buy this book or read more reviews.
Updates on Mythica
Art & Vision
I've
added some text to the Water
Dragon painting, and the layout & design is different on
the entrance page. The top banners and links have also changed their "look."
I've likewise added content to the What's
New? page & the shamelessly promotional Link
to Us page. When viewing on the PC and on IE 4 or higher, the
pages have a sprinkling-fade effect when browsing from one page to another.
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Featured
Essay: Putting a Price on the Priceless - Our Wounded Feeling Function
About a month ago, a man who is a long distance
MLM (multilevel marketing) representative posted this at Bulletinboard.net:
"My grandmother lives out near Palm Springs (a very hot & dry desert resort
town in Southern California) and has a habit of always moving in the month
of August. It wasn't until I called her to remind her that I was the one
that had helped her move 3 times in the 115 degree Palm Springs weather
and that if she didn't become my customer again, next time she could call
her AT&T representative to help her move....She's been my customer now
for more than 10 years."
I personally knew a woman who was involved in another very popular, multinational
MLM business. She was a very shy woman who worked long hours at her labor-intensive
home-based business. Her MLM business motivated her to become friendly
and outgoing, even making small talk in the grocery line, something she
had never done before. Although her stint with this MLM business had some
positive effects (helping her challenge her fears & lack of self-confidence
in talking to strangers), she approached everyone with the ulterior motive
of finding "downlines" and ultimately "making a buck." Those
"uplines" who had approached her and gotten her involved in the business
likewise displayed a self-confident & friendly front to her. Once involved
with this MLM she was accepted into a ready-made "family" and supported
by a circle of "friends." But their only interest in her was in the potential
dollar signs they saw when they looked at her. So, of course, when she
left the MLM circle, she was outcast from her "friends".
Although both MLM examples are extreme, how many times do we put a price
on what is priceless? How many times do we sacrifice that much-needed
time for solitude at the beach or in the woods? How many times do we put
off time with a loved-one in order to do more work, bring in a larger
income, or numb-out by watching television? How much are we cherishing
our relationships and friendships, time for ourselves and our spirits?
This phenomena is symbolically addressed by an old fairy tale, The Handless
Maiden. The story begins with a miller who grinds his grain in the ancient
way - laboriously turning the millstone by hand. The devil appears and
offers to speed the process up, with much less effort required on the
miller's part. All he wants is a small fee - whatever stands behind the
mill. Thinking it is just the oak tree that grows behind it, the miller
readily agrees. The devil then transforms his mill into a mechanized one,
complete with millstones that grind grain more thoroughly than the miller
had ever done, using water as its source of energy. The miller is ecstatic
& relieved - he no longer has to "earn his bread" so laboriously.
The miller has to pay the devil, so he grabs his axe in preparation for
cutting the tree down, but the miller's daughter was what was standing
behind the mill. The miller begs the devil to take something else. The
devil offers to turn the mill back to what it was and call the deal off,
but the miller is unwilling to give up his newfound freedom. The devil
takes the axe, chops off the daughter's hands, and carries them away.
"A most terrible thing has happened! A mechanical advance has been
won at the expense of the young feminine. This bargain is made many times
a day by modern people. We buy a practical advance at the cost of a feeling
value every time we give up our trip to the gym, some weekend camping,
or agree to more commuting on the freeway, in exchange for some practical
goal....We are from a long line of millers and the infection is deep.
Many times a day in a modern life the young feminine pays the price, a
further amputation, when one makes a devil's bargain and believes one
can get something for nothing." (Robert Johnson from The
Fisher King & The Handless Maiden)
My mother raised me with the constant underlying message of the necessity
of my needing to earn an income. Not just earning an income in a 9 to
5 sort of way, but she was anxious unless I was working hard at something
that was definitely profitable, and I needed to be working at it 24/7.
I could hear disapproval between her words whenever I'd recount that I
was working at a job, holding down classes. The only time I perceived
she felt "satisfied" with how I was living my life was when I was holding
3 jobs and taking 7 classes. My writing was discouraged because she didn't
know how anyone could "make a living" off of it. To this day, I've fought
off a subconscious guilt while doing anything that promotes my spiritual
& emotional well-being.
That much "productivity" is counterproductive. I had always valued friendships,
art, writing, nature, spirit, daydreaming. Suffice it to say, I couldn't
hold up the "type A" lifestyle and I am more fortunate for it. Many workaholics
and financially wealthy people usually end up on their deathbeds wondering
what was the meaning of it all. For, without the "young feminine" at the
center of our lives, there is no meaning to any of it. There is no reason
to go to the deep end of striving for material comforts and status when
we end up empty and hollow inside. We gain the world, but lose the soul.
I
write this after spending a couple of hours with my significant other
meandering along a trail that winds through coastal cliffs. We could have
kept working - he was behind in some online work & I had to finish
this 'zine, but the day was unusually sunny & I chose to honor the
sacred in life. My life wasn't always like this - in the past, I felt
incredible guilt for cherishing inner moments. Over the past few years,
I've made resolutions to myself to put down the work, shut off the computer,
walk (as opposed to driving the car), play with my cats, rather than "keeping
my nose to the grindstone." I have to admit, I don't always heed
my own advice. I often relapse, spending countless hours in front of the
computer - endlessly doing - instead of taking a break and just being.
It is impossible & imbalanced to pay homage exclusively to the "young
feminine," but since this is society's shadow, it is easy to get
caught up in societal expectations and to shrug this off ourselves. Remember
to honor yourself, your loved ones and what is sacred to you today.
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