My New Year’s wish for us all…

On our path of personal growth, we’re always challenging our growing edge.  The growing edge is the place where things are uncomfortable and difficult, because they are new.  Behaviors maybe, or thoughts… habits, or skills…  Usually we embrace our growing edge only after trying to ignore it and getting our asses kicked.  The shadow stuff that keeps us fearful and small and under-actualized, if given free reign, will take every single joy and spin it into a not-good-enough moment.  After enough of these not-good-enough moments, we surrender. We realize we’re going to have to let go of the old, probably before the new is ready for us.  We’re going to have to evolve beyond the limits of who we thought we were, into the homecoming of who we’re meant to be.

It shouldn’t be hard to grow.  We’re built to do it effortlessly.  But most of us were also trained to handsdoubt, and to fear… to grasp, resist, ignore…  Our good intentions are nothing compared to our ego’s massive fondness for control and the illusion of safety.  But at such a cost!

My New Year’s wish for us all comes in a song by Melissa Etheridge, called “Heal me”.  May we all be healed.  May we all be whole.  May we all be free from suffering.  May we all be witnesses to each others resurrections.  Happy homecoming!

Click title to play song, or right click to open in new tab so that you can read the words below while listening….

Heal Me – (Melissa Etheridge – Skin)

Ain’t it crazy
For a moment there
This felt just like dying
But now I see that something inside
Is coming alive
Ain’t it crazy

No use running from a revolution
I just surrender to this evolution

Heal me lift me
Take me to the other side
Amazing grace
Has touched my face
And the sweet sound doesn’t lie

Ain’t it crazy
For a moment there
I just gave up trying
But now I see
You can let the light in
You can begin again
Ain’t it crazy
I lay me down in this sweet perfection
I am a witness to my resurrection

Heal me lift me
Take me to the waterside
Drop me in let me swim
Let everyone know
I’ll be coming home again

Make no mistake
I’m wide-awake
Ain’t it crazy

Heal me lift me
Take me to the other side
I’ll take what I’ve earned
These lessons I’ve learned
I’m ready for the ride
Heal me lift me
Take me and my soul will fly
My battered heart will make a new start
Let everyone know
I’ll be coming home again
Heal me lift me
Take me to the waterside
Drop me in
Come on and watch me swim
Let everyone know
I’ll be coming home again

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , | Comments Off on My New Year’s wish for us all…

The Power of Vulnerability

At the end of this post, there is a link to a TED Talk.  TED Talks are some of the best and brightest lectures on various topics, delivered in stimulating and captivating ways that engage the audience.

This talk is about the power of being vulnerable, and how it leads to a recognition of oneself as enough.  I have been trying to teach this forever.  This “I am enough” – it solves most troubles…

Here is a piece of original poetry I wrote when I realized I was enough.  Follow it up with the TED Talk at the end….

Woke Up – by Betz King

…and suddenly, after years of small “a” awake,  I Awake.  On my couch.

Before me, the mantle above the fireplace.  A dozen roses hang drying, and above them –

the most glorious expressions of Divinity I can imagine…

Shakti dancing in silver next to the Buddha with his small secretive smile.

Pan, eyes closed, playing his nature pipes, while Krishna and Radha hold hands.

Gaia sitting solid and pregnant and ripe, near Michael slaying the dragon.

Jesus smiling, his arms raised high.  My friend sits at His feet, flashing the peace sign.

The stone fountain trickles, the pagan tree stands tall, adorned now in dried flowers and shining suns, and scattered throughout – the green of plants, the colors of cut flowers…

To my right, books.  So many books!  Their colorful spines are the faces of my dearest friends.

A whole shelf devoted to understanding the Self.

Another shelf for writing, and another for methods of spiritual inquiry.

They lean in tall-short lines, are piled atop one another, await homes on the floor near by…

On the walls, pictures tell stories of God and love and of going on when it seems impossible to do so.

A Priestess knighting her devoted defender, Mary – pregnant, Venus in her sexual splendor, African mothers dancing, and me – Divine Feminine in my own right… my own rite…

“How did I get here?” I sing the Talking Heads refrain.

I look in wonder, at this den, this Temple, I see it all as if for the first time.

Surely I have been building this all along?  Surely I hung these pictures?

I collected these expressions of Divinity?

I chose these colors, painted these walls, bought this couch with my husband now gone?

Surely today is not the beginning?  And yet, today is the beginning.

Today I Awake.  To the here.  To the now.

To the “I am enough” and the “my life is enough”.

I shake my head and blink my eyes.  I pinch my thigh, older than it has ever been, and tap my own cheek.  “Wake up little elf” I say, in my kindest voice.  “Be here now”….

Apparently I have been nesting.

Apparently I have been, like Christ says in the 23rd Psalm, preparing a table for mine enemies…  for those unclaimed and unloved parts of myself.

Apparently, this is what it looks like.

David Whyte’s “House of Belonging” calls to me from across the room.

Pulling book off shelf, stepping over purring cat, I read….

This is the bright home in which I live.  This is where I ask my friends to come.  This is where I want to love all the things it has taken me so long to learn to love.  This is the temple of my adult aloneness, and I belong to that aloneness as I belong to my life.  There is no house  like the house of belonging.”

Closing the book, my heart bursts open with the power of words understanding me.

Yes.

I am enough, and my life is enough, and I never ever thought I would arrive and I am here.

I smile.

I write it all down.

[youtube]http://youtu.be/iCvmsMzlF7o[/youtube]

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , | Comments Off on The Power of Vulnerability

In Memoriam: Patricia Monaghan – February 15, 1946 – November 11, 2012

Patricia – Goddess -scholar, women’s spirituality pioneer, poet and author – took a chance on me & my dissertation (which she called “groundbreaking”). She mentored me into publishing for the first time (and 2nd time & 3rd time). She gave me the coveted role of straw-boy at her wedding, invited me to share her home and holidays and loved my husband and dog.

Patricia shared my mission to overthrow the Patriarchy and bring credibility to the first-person research voice.  She knew that ritual and writing are the most powerful forms of magic.  I am heartbroken. I will carry on the work of Goddess scholar in her honor. Brigit grant her safe passage. Brigit comfort Michael. Brigit help us all. So mote it be.

Dirge without Music
by Edna St. Vincent Millay

I am not resigned to the shutting away of loving hearts in the hard ground.
So it is, and so it will be, for so it has been, time out of mind:
Into the darkness they go, the wise and the lovely. Crowned
With lilies and with laurel they go; but I am not resigned.

Lovers and thinkers, into the earth with you.
Be one with the dull, the indiscriminate dust.
A fragment of what you felt, of what you knew,
A formula, a phrase remains, — but the best is lost.

The answers quick & keen, the honest look, the laughter, the love,
They are gone. They have gone to feed the roses. Elegant and curled
Is the blossom. Fragrant is the blossom. I know. But I do not approve.
More precious was the light in your eyes than all the roses in the world.

Down, down, down into the darkness of the grave
Gently they go, the beautiful, the tender, the kind;
Quietly they go, the intelligent, the witty, the brave.
I know. But I do not approve. And I am not resigned.

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , | Comments Off on In Memoriam: Patricia Monaghan – February 15, 1946 – November 11, 2012

Inspiration and invocation: Creating a ritual with the triple-goddess Brigid.

 

 

 

 

 

 

(This piece is from the soon to be published “Brigit: Sun of Womanhood”
by Goddess Ink Press – http://www.goddess-ink.com/brigitsunofwomanhood.html 

There is no need to invent a Brigid ritual; many a fine one already exists.  But rituals that are created (rather than inherited) offer a personalized embodied experience of the Goddess in a way that following someone else’s “ritual-recipe” can’t compete with.  Since one of the faces Brigid wears is that of the patroness of the arts; surely she would bless the creation of a ritual seeking her council.

From the Latin  rituilis – rite or ceremony, rituals have been present since the beginning of time and across all cultures as an integral part of religious, spiritual, political, social and family life.  Rituals help us to embody symbolic expressions of our inner life and search for meaning.  What need is greater than the need to make meaning of life?  This search for meaning has been expressed over and over in the mythologies of humankind. prompting Dr. Radha Parker of Old Dominion University to call myth and ritual “the vehicles through which the value-impregnated beliefs and ideals that we live by, and live for, are preserved and transmitted.”  Rituals, like homing beacons, help us to find our way home.  They provide many psychological benefits as well.  A comprehensive review of 50 years of research on the psychological use and importance of ritual by Dr. Barbara Fiese and her colleagues at Syracuse University finds rituals to be “…powerful organizers of family life, supporting its stability, and increasing both personal identity and marital satisfaction.”   What a noble role ritual can play, protecting and nurturing a group of people, helping each member to self-actualize and to learn to love deeply!  Sadly, many powerful rituals have been claimed as the property of various religions, and those that are leftover are often so watered down that their original magical intentions are too weak to be effective.  Personalized rites based on the composition and need of the members return them to their more powerful origins.

Rituals follow a very simple recipe.  They have an opening, a verb/intention and a closing.  The opening generally serves to create sacred or liminal space, and to raise some energy that will be directed toward the verb/intention.  The verb/intention is the most important part, as it is the place where the action and magic of the ritual occurs.  The closing generally serves as a time for gratitude, disillusion of any energies still present, and a return to regular non-sacred space.

Clarity regarding the intention of the ritual will help with the choice of the ritual verb.  Imber-Black and Roberts have studied rituals for much of their career, and suggest five common ritual verbs: relating, changing, healing, believing and celebrating.  These broad categories of rituals may include rites of blessing, cursing, worshiping, invoking, banishing, pacifying, energizing, imbuing, consecrating, and transforming to name but a few.   Psychodrama teachers such as Adam Blatner caution that a good ritual must combine “hypnosis and drama… effectively evoking images memories and ideas that are most appropriate for the experience”.  The stimulation of all five senses is encouraged whenever possible, as each of our senses follows it’s own path back to the archetypal experiences of our ancestors.  This allows for the use of music, incense, food, fabrics and special altar items.  Once the ritual intention is chosen, it must be made manifest within the ritual.  For example, the ritual intention of banishing would be made symbolically by letting a helium balloon float away.  The ritual intention must have a concrete physical expression in the ritual; it is the climax of the ritual and the focal point of the energies that are raised in the opening portion of the ceremony.

A ritual accessing the goddess Brigid begins like any other ritual – with the choosing of the ritual intention.  Her own feast day – Imbolc  – (or Candlemas, post Christian conversion) – falling on February 2nd, celebrates the awakening of spring and is a good time to seek blessings for new pursuits, but this is not the only time Brigid can be invoked.  As a triple Goddess of healing, smithery and creativity, Brigid has many powers to choose from; they can all be considered transformative energies.  She can be called on to help a woman become a mother, calibrate a magical tool or inspire a work of art.    Baby showers are a very watered down version of a Brigid blessing ritual, the ritual verb/intention being to bless the new life.  New students of the magical arts often take their vows on Brigid’s feast day, with the ritual intention of transforming their egoic personalities into  soulful tools of healing for the world.   This author dedicated a weekend campsite to Brigid while writing this article, creating and hanging an eye of the goddess above the writing table, and writing only while the campfire (of inspiration) was burning.

For purposes of this article, let’s work with the first example, a blessing ritual (sometimes called a ‘blessingway’) for a pregnant first time mother-to-be.  The intention, to bless the woman’s transformation, must be made tangible.  Brigid’s symbols can be used throughout the ritual to physically, psychologically and spiritually express this transformational blessing.  Symbols are the oldest form of communication known to human kind, and allow something small and simple to represent something quite epic.  Symbolism is key to the creation of a good ritual.  Perhaps the simplest yet most powerful symbol associated with Brigid is the element of fire.  Her name translates as “bright one”, and in ancient times she was worshiped as a fire goddess at her sacred shine in Kildare.   Brigid blesses the fires of the home hearth, the fires of the forge and the fires of creative inspiration.  Water is another of Brigid’s symbols, as she has long been associated with sacred wells and the waters of inspiration and healing.  The image of an eye, also attributed to Brigid, offers wonderful symbolism related to clear-vision and being watched over or protected. It can be represented by Brigid’s iconic straw crosses or by colorful yarn wrapped crosses known as “eyes of the goddess”.  Each of these symbols lend themselves beautifully to a blessingway ritual.

Ritual symbols are often displayed on an altar of some sort, often in the center of a real or imaginary circle, which will be designated as sacred space during the opening of the ritual  Candles and a lovely chalice full of mountain or mineral water would lend themselves well to an alter for Brigid.

The simplest ritual opening might involve a formal procession into the room followed by a prayer invoking Brigid’s presence, or a song with a similar intention.  Other common ritual openings include the verbal invocation of the four directions, four elements, or 4 facets of the Goddess – maiden, mother, queen and crone perhaps – done by an officiating high priestess, or by other ritual participants.   Ritual cleansing of the space and or participants may be done with incense or sprinkled water at this time as well.

Once sacred space has been established, Brigid can be invoked and invited in.  Poetic invocations are often used because they are easy to remember, and can be recited with increasing speed and volume (usually thee times) as a method of raising the energy in the room.  They need not rhyme.  In Tbe Goddess Path, Patricia Monaghan offers the perfect invocation for a Brigid blessingway:

Brigid, gold-red woman

Brigid, flame and honeycomb,

Brigid, sun of womanhood

                                                             Brigid, lead me home

Another invocation might draw on references to fire and water:

Brigid, keeper of the flame

transform the dark to light;

Brigid, keeper of the well

Wash our fears away

  • or to Brigid’s areas of specialty:

Brigid, healer, blacksmith, muse…

The most important ingrediant in an invocation is its enthusiasm; it has to feel right.

Once sacred space has been created and Brigid has been invoked, the ritual intention of transforming the mother-to-be can take place.  A simple and powerful way to make the mother’s transformational intention concrete might involve the use of candles that will remain lit in some format until the after the mother’s labor.  Guests might be asked to write possible obstacles to a peaceful labor and birth on magician’s flash paper, and then offer them for transformation into Brigid’s flames.  Or each guest might hold the chalice of healing water from the altar, and put wishes and blessings into it.  The mother-to-be might drink the water during the ceremony, or save it until she is in labor.  The gathering community could make colorful goddess-eyes and Brigid’s crosses to hang in the delivery room, so that the goddess can watch over her delivery.  Beads that are strung on a necklace could represent blessings.  All who attend the rite could be woven together with yarn around their wrists, each vowing to wear the yarn until after labor is complete, and each vowing to lend the mother and child strength, peace and courage during the time of transformation.  Climax of the ritual, this is where creativity enters, and as the realm of creativity also belongs to Brigid there are no shortage of expressions.  The only requirement for this part of the ritual is that it make sense to the mother-to-be, and that she has something tangible to take with her from the ritual and into her labor.

The closing of the ritual is often very similar to the opening.  It’s time to say goodbye to Brigid for now. But not to worry,  she is never far away.  Prayers of thanksgiving might be made, and any energies invoked should be released with gratitude and reverence.  It is also good to eat something to assist with the return to normal consciousness, which allows for further less formal feasting and celebration in Brigid’s name.

Writing a ritual with an opening, a verb/intention and a closing is not difficult.  Ritual is the ballroom in which we dance with the gods and goddesses.  When Brigid is called into the room via a personally inspired and designed ritual, she comes ready to dance.  Then the goddess is alive and magic is afoot.

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , | Comments Off on Inspiration and invocation: Creating a ritual with the triple-goddess Brigid.

How to be happier

When my clients “get better”, they don’t just fix the issue they came in to address.  They change their way of being in the world on many, many levels.  This little article by The Purpose Fairy captures these changes just beautifully.  Check it out, print it out, try it out!

15 Powerful Things Happy People Do Differently – www.purposefairy.com

 

 

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , | Comments Off on How to be happier

The ABCZ of Betz

Apples or oranges? Honey Crisp apples.

Bedding: 1000 thread count sheets & duvet cover (over down duvet) – pure heaven.

Charlevoix or Traverse City? Charlevoix – went to school there K-7.

three dog dayDogs or cats?  Both:  Minerva the black cat, Paisley the Yellow Labrador, and Morgaine & Willow the Spanadors 

 

Education: Minister of Divine Healing 1992, BA Psyc U of M 1996, MA Psyc Center for Humanistic Studies 1998, Psychology Specialist, Mich School of Professional Psychology 2004, Doctorate of Psychology, Michigan School of Professional Psychology, 2006.

Favorite season of the year: the season when they’re changing from one to the next.

Gold or silver: silver

Heels or hiking shoes:   If Teva made a high heel….

Instrument you play: Djembe, lap-dulcimer, acoustic guitar, recorder, voice

Job: Psychologist (Teacher and psychotherapist), writer.  (Secret job:  Overthrowing the Patriarchy by educating people to think for themselves).

Kids: See Cat & Dogs above.

Lunges or squats:  Squats. Lunges just make me sad.

 

Favorite Movie:  Mary Poppins – women’s suffrage, critique of capitalism, love story, fun soundtrack and that fabulous lamp producing carpet bag!

 

Nickname:  Just after high school there were a few folks who called me Beets, but that’s about it.

Overseas?  Stonehenge & Ireland.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Pet Peeve:  when they don’t wipe their muddy feet before coming inside.

Quote:  “Become who you are” – Nietzsche

Religion:  I’ll claim membership in the ever growing category of Spiritual But Not Religious (SBNR).  I’ve found that organized religion can cause cognitive dissonance (an internal fight between two opposing views, usually dogmatic and personal) and the only way out is to ignore one’s teachings, or ignore one’s conscience.  This makes for a house divided.  Spirituality lets me keep what works and discard what doesn’t.  I like the Pagan seasonal celebrations & Buddhist teachings and am a Priestess in the Western Mystery Tradition.

Siblings: 1 brother a year older.  He’s an ASL interpreter and runs a video-relay-call-center.  Fabulous sister-in-law and 2 nephews too. They are ferocious cyclers.

 

 

 

 

 

Tonsils?  Still in there.

Ultrasound before abortion? No thanks, my body = my decisions.

Vacation favorites?  Drummond Island Jeep Jamboree, Biking Ireland, Cancun Honeymoon, various Pagan hoedowns at Brigit’s Rest.

What makes you mad? (Fill-in-the-blank) Intolerance and the fall-out it causes all around the world.

Xrays you’ve had: Most interesting?  Big toe, after a bottle of wine fell off the top of the fridge and smashed it.

Yummy food that you make:  Sunday soup.  Different pot each week.  This week it was “this stuff is about to go bad and I don’t have time to chop it up all pretty so let’s call it stew”.

Zoo animal: I feel sad at zoos, so I don’t go unless someone is having a party I want to attend.  It’s not my idea of a nice day.

Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off on The ABCZ of Betz

Dragons in the almost-21st Century (previously published 1998)

Clothed in a simple robe I sit, next to a pond filled with moonlight.  Reflected on the surface are images… the High King and Queen of the land… the wise benevolent Merlin…. a fire breathing dragon.  The fate of a nation is shrouded in mist; it clouds the surface of the pond.  I stand and invoke the Great Goddess, Mother of all things.  She fills me with her power.  Suddenly, the phone rings.  I snap back into my body.

Astral travel?  No, I am simply reading  Mists of Avalon for the 7th time.  I can finish the last page and go right back to the first. It is the story of King Arthur and his knights, told from the perspective of the Priestesses of the magical land of Avalon.  These powerful women used their magic to put Arthur on the throne, so that he would defend the Old Religion, where God and Goddess were equal.

Perhaps I use the story as an escape, hiding in it.  I identify with the main character, Morgaine of the Fairies.  She is a powerful priestess of Avalon, and sister to King Arthur.  As a priestess,  Morgaine’s life is just so much more interesting than mine.  Spending an hour or two in her company makes it difficult to return to my life, here in the almost 21st century.

Morgaine makes herbs into medicines and charms, she spins, weaves and dyes her own robes.  I buy my herbs on sale at the health food store, and my clothes from Value Village.  Morgaine is so in touch with her intuition.  She calls it the “Sight,” and can access it at will in vision quests.  It rarely fails her.  Although I am an ordained minister of energetic healing, my college internship requires that I work in inpatient psychiatry.  There, people who hear voices or see visions are considered  potentially dangerous.  As for my intuition, well…I’m certain it’d be easier to access near a moonlit pond than in a traffic jam, which is another point Morgaine doesn’t contend with.  She rides a horse through beautiful forests, with plenty of time to contemplate her destination and connection to the earth.  I, in my trusty Honda with 220,000 miles, am propelled through time and space at 55 miles per hour.  I am frequently late.  Contemplate my destination?  Feel the earth?  This is the Motor City, not Avalon.

Morgaine fasts frequently and eats sparingly of animal foods.  She drinks only the water of the sacred well of Avalon.   While primarily a vegetarian, I have developed a bizarre fondness for Gatorade of all things, not to mention chocolate!

Morgaine has a blue crescent tattoo on her forehead, the “kiss of the Goddess,”  and is deeply respected as a result.  I have a pentacle on my left arm, symbol of the element of earth and the protection of the Goddess.  Yet I have been called everything from a witch to a devil worshipper because of it.

And what about religious worship?  Morgaine has the forest, the sacred well, and the moon in all its phases.  I have a small alter in the spare bedroom, optimistically called my “temple”.

So I retreat, time and again, to the pages…to the mists… of Avalon.  And I sulk.  Why am I not afforded the opportunity to slay a dragon, or assist in the birth of a baby?  Why can’t I feel the tides of the moon in my blood?  I want to be a priestess, not a “minister of divine healing” disguised as a “graduate student of psychology.”  Where are my vision quests?

In The Mists of Avalon, Morgaine warns the High Queen Gwenhwfar to be careful what she wishes for, as she just might get it.  And so it happened recently, visualizing all that longing for the days of old, that I got exactly what I asked for.  Dragons and everything.

I tried to buy a house.  A noble ambition.  I rode into the unknown land of mortgages, building inspections and purchase agreements with simply my faith to protect me.   When I left that forest, a short month later, it was as one re-born.  I had found the Priestess Within.

In 1997, dragons live disguised.  My dragons were disguised as Legally Binding Contracts. The mortgage verification process triggered a strange chain of events with my human resource department at work.  Suddenly, my seemingly safe and secure position became “temporary and at will.”   Next, the sellers tried to roof the house with an unlicensed roofing company to save money, and threatened to sue me if I did not agree. The irony was not lost on me.  In my search for the safety and security that home-owning represented to me, I now stood to lose both job and life savings!

Meanwhile, back in my “temple,” a candle burned.  Underneath it was all pertinent paperwork, and it was surrounded by symbols of the four elements.  It was not invested in any particular outcome, but simply invoked the Greatest Good For All Involved.  Sort of a “Not my will, but Thine” kind of a thing.  During my crash course in Litigation, Arbitration and Legally Binding Contracts,  I would pause and look at that candle.  Surrounded by the clutter of my life, it would comfort me.

As for intuition or vision quests, I soon realized I had little time for much else. Things moved so rapidly, I quickly found my gut to be my best indication of which way toproceed.  I dreamt one night of running barefoot through the deep rich dirt of my childhood home.  The next morning the lawsuit was canceled and my offer accepted.

I brushed off my rusty herb lore.  Valerian, skullcap and hops calmed my anxieties.  When I couldn’t feel confident,  I dressed in colors and styles representative of the image I wished to convey, acting “as if” it were true.  Driving became a pleasure as it was the only place I could not be reached by phone with the latest threat or red tape.  I played Van Morrison tapes and breathed deeply at each red light.  On the scariest day, I went to the zoo and connected with animal energies and the beautiful landscaping.  I breathed some more.

The entire process took less than a month.  As I lived it, I did not think “now I am behaving as Morgaine would.”  These realizations have come to me only in retrospect.  Yet, I was behaving as Morgaine would have.  I was accessing my God and Goddess.  I was using intuition, herb lore, breathwork, earth energies and ritual.

Whether a horse or a car, a forest or Woodward Avenue, vision quests still present themselves, and magic is still a viable response.  In buying a house, negotiating my job and facing a lawsuit, I have been given a great gift:  the ability to recognize the ancient tests of faith.  They are simply disguised in attire of the almost 21st century.

I am now a very proud, first-time home owner.  It is still strangely possible that I may lose my job as a result.  I will defeat that dragon if it comes.  Upon close inspection, dragons have not changed so much.  They still wear the face of fear.  Many are the philosophies that teach of the choice between fear and love.  They are teaching how to avoid  dragons altogether.

The first 6 times I read Mists of Avalon I grieved that I could not live that life.  This last time through may really be my last time through.  No longer must I envy Morgaine of the Fairies,  or the life she lives in Avalon.  For I am not so different than she, nor is Royal Oak so different than Avalon.  And all women wear the face of the Goddess.

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , | Comments Off on Dragons in the almost-21st Century (previously published 1998)

A Wobbly Bard at Imbolc (previously published 1998)

I am a bard.  I remind myself of this as I sit and wish for words to come.  The topic is Imbolc, and the deadline is soon.  I have been feeding the fires of my inspiration with symbolism and correspondences, lore and legends… waiting for the birth of my own synthesis.  I have been waiting for quite awhile.

I have named my challenge in this writing assignment; I know where the block is coming from. I am writing about Imbolc, but I am living in a personal Samhain.  There is much ending and dying in my life right now, my marriage, my home, some friendships and some finances… there is much room for darkness and fear.  Yet Imbolc is a time of new beginnings and of faith restored.  A seeming polarity attends this block, how to write of faith when feeling fear.  Yet I know both the Universe and myself rarely offer only two options.  It has been my experience that when feeling trapped in polarity, it is helpful to combine the two poles into a third.  Combine the endings and the beginnings into a place of both – which is where I sit today at my computer.

On the wheel of the year Imbolc is a place to be visited not only on February 2nd, but anytime the vibration of hope is needed.  Can I take my Samhain self to my Sacred Grove and there bathe in the waters of Imbolc?

I break from the computer and enter my small temple… light some incense and make peace with my grove.  Settled into my usual nook, I am overcome with both the deep comfort of the woods, and the deep sorrow of my soul.  I am home, and I am sad.  Like a child I run home when I am hurting, and the woods minister to my wounds.  My back up against the huge Oak of the North, I pour out my story… my divorce, my fear, my excitement, my insecurities, my writers block and my embarrassment that my faith is not stronger.  I ask for the Grove to lend me its knowing of Imbolc, that I may not only connect with renewal but may write of it as well.

The Grove is still.  I am lulled by the wind in the trees, the sun on my face, the grounding of the Oak behind me.  A rustle in the Western quarter calls my attention to the small pond there.  A beautiful woman steps through the trees.  She is sky-clad, the breeze blowing her long hair around her.  She holds in her arms a swaddled babe and in her hand she carries a water pitcher.  She moves towards the pond and settles herself on a large sun bathed rock.  She offers a full ripe breast to the infant, who nurses with sounds of satisfaction.  The woman closes her eyes and lifts her face to the sun, a half smile on her lips.  She sings in a voice both gentle and strong:

“Come unto me my little Yule child, suckle my breasts full of love… come unto me in springtime so mild, suckle my breasts full of love”

She sings this way until the babe has finished eating, and then she rocks back and forth until the child is asleep.  She finds a sun-warmed spot among the roots of a tree, and nestles the sleeping infant there, returning to the pond.  She steps one foot into the pond and bends to fill her pitcher.  Turning back she offers some of the water to the earth.  Then bending, she pours the rest over her own hair.  Her hair is so long… it floats on the ripples she makes… she gathers the length of it and dunks completely under, swirling her head back and forth and emerging laughing.  Stepping from the water she wrings her hair out and faces East.  With a whispered word the winds pick up, and she combs her long tresses with her fingers as the wind lifts and dries them.  She checks for a moment on the sleeping child, then lays on the rock, clean beautiful tresses behind her, milk filled breasts skyward.  She hums the song to herself again, and I am suddenly very very tired.  I find myself wishing to be young again, wishing to be nursed by my all loving Mother, wishing to be warm and fed and sleeping in the sun.   I feel my back slip down the trunk of the Oak, am vaguely aware of laying down in the soft dirt.  I hum the song of the Mother and rock back and forth.  I remind myself that this Grove is now my Mother, and that I am free to nurse here anytime.  I remind myself that I am warm and fed and almost asleep in the sun… and that all I have to do is remember to show up.  Just remember.   Sleep overtakes me, and I wake to find myself in my Temple, curled up in the smallest ball, a half smile on my face.

Back down to the computer.  It frequently seems sacrilege to confine the experiences of the Inner Planes to the page, so much is lost… and yet I suspect I have brought back some kind of useful information to share with my companions on the path.  Something about milk… sheep maybe….

First off I notice that I am no longer afraid, or sad.  How did that happen?  I sat next to my favorite tree, which is always good.  Is the message simply to remember nature?  What about the milk memory?  Were there some sheep there… is the message that milk will be provided when necessary?  Why does it seem that one little lamb was taking first wobbly steps… was there a wobbly lamb in the grove?  Is the message that one must wobble before walking?  I am visited with advertising campaigns of past and present… “We Bards wobble but we don’t fall down” and “Got milk?”  I groan and keep typing.

Washing some thing… did I wash my feet maybe… is the message to remember that cleansing is a necessary step towards renewal?  I seem to remember feeling beautiful, did I do a naked dance perhaps, with my Grove Guides?  I do so love to dance naked, it would explain why I am no longer sad or afraid.

Hmmm.  So tie it all together now.  The living in Samhain and writing about Imbolc.  The divorce, the endings, the beginnings, the milk and the wobbling and the dance.

I am reminded of a birthday party that I attended last week, at a restaurant.  There was a small boy, just toddling, who had wandered a few feet away from his Mother.  He was thrilled with his freedom, but frequently looked back to make sure she was there.  I was sitting with a group of psychologists, and we commented on how perfectly he was expressing both the need to separate and the anxiety of separating.  His mother must have read a few books herself, for she allowed him his adventure, and smiled at him whenever he looked back for reassurance.

So it is for me at Imbolc… and I have often said that what is true for me it is likely true for others, for I am not so different from my companions…  We are once again toddling and wobbling in the New Year, all within us is yet potential to be actualized.  We are scared and excited.  We know we must proceed, around the wheel of the year, yet we wouldn’t mind just one more breast full of milk before we get on with it.  If we remember to look back we will see our Mother smiling her encouragement.  If we forget, we will feel lonely and scared, but nonetheless we will be fine, for She has fortified us for our journey.  We need only remember.  Just remember.

 

Betz King is a bard, psychotherapist, Priestess of the Western Mysteries  and humanistic journalist.  She wobbles but doesn’t fall down in Royal Oak Michigan.

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , | Comments Off on A Wobbly Bard at Imbolc (previously published 1998)

After the fire (Previously published in 2000).

I am a Jew, of the utmost reformed category. I grew up in a Jewish household. I went to synagogue on the High Holy Days. I went to Hebrew school until I made my Bar Mitzvah at 13, when I became a “man”.

The Lord and Lady never ask my approval. I serve them as Priestess, I do what they ask. I would not have chosen my co-worker Yitzhak, Izzy, as my mate for the Bealteinne fires. But the choice was made above and beyond me. To my credit – I surrendered.

What is a Jew? I asked myself that often. Yes, I’d read the textbooks. I knew the dates, the places, the prayers. But what did it mean to me? Where was my place? A fire was smoldering, but wouldn’t catch. It was the struggle of a fire going out. So when she introduced the idea of the Bealteinne fires, I was all ears. Where did this fire burn? Show me, Charlie.
The first Bealteinne we worked together we were very enthusiastic in teaching each other about our very different Traditions. We would walk on our lunch hour, and that first spring I got a very general education about Passover and Izzy got a very watered down description of Bealteinne – minus the fires altogether. A season later we were walking on very different ground during lunch. I knew enough to say “Shabbat Shalom” on Fridays, and when to bring unleavened bread to share at lunch, and Iz had learned enough to comment on the moon phases and at least wish me happy solstices and equinoxes.

And then she appeared, looking like an orphan with a backpack and a rumpled windbreaker on some early spring morning. “I like you” she said, with gigantic green eyes and red elfin hair. No words needed. Just those wonderful green eyes and lashes that summoned forth the shadows of some forbidden forest. Something sleeping awakened in me. Jung would’ve said it was my anima, my inner female. “I like you”, I returned with my broad shoulders, my long legs, and the stubble that darkened my chin. She was so alive, so passionate in her beliefs, her Pagan path… so reverent in her respect for all of life, from her clients to the bugs and butterflies of our never ending walks. Show me Charlie…

I tried not to complicate my workplace. I tried not to admit a physical attraction to a man who called my tattoo a “pen-tangle” and thought the four elements were “animal, vegetable mineral and synthetic”. Iz did everything he could to deny that he was being haunted by some past life version of himself, Priest at Avalon maybe, or Bard at the King’s court… noticing the tides of his blood ebbing and flowing with no Yiddish expressions to capture or explain it. What a rationalist. What a thinker. We walked day after day for over a year, celebrating every season. “Who can figure?” I said to myself, in my best Yiddish impersonation. I know now, after that night of the Bealteinne Fires, that we had been puppets all along, Lord and Lady pulling our strings for over a year before They, and we, joined together in the fields.

She thought I was brilliant. Quite an aphrodisiac for an insecure solitary soul. I always hampered my every move with a crass and scolding “You can do better Izzy, you can do better”. My father perhaps, talking. Or maybe my whole culture, chanting in unison: “Do better, do better , do better…we are the Chosen People and we must do better!”. Ah yes, the guilt at not having done good enough, my Alma Mater. A graduate from the University of Not Having Done Enough.

Macrocosmically, we were the chosen of the Lord and Lady. Microcosmically, our attraction to each other was harder to explain. Walk after walk, talk after talk, I felt a magnetic attraction to a process larger than our incompatibilities. I was newly sworn as Priestess, but unable to share that reality in my professional work as psychologist. Iz was the least likely to understand me. But it was his very unfamiliarity with my Tradition that allowed him to see me as Priestess. This, in turn, allowed me to see myself as Priestess. And as Priestess, I saw in him both Priest and man – maybe more man than Priest, to be honest: the pull of his deep brown eyes, the suggestion of muscles under his dress shirts, the knot of his tie against his Adam’s apple, and his swarthy 5:00 shadow at nine a.m. Around his masculinity, my femininity resonated like a tuning fork.

Every six weeks or so I explained the current Sabbat to him, and if there was also a Jewish holiday he would teach me. We combined them into lunchtime walk celebrations. We called our blended tradition “Hebragan”, and Iz pronounced it with such a perfect Irish accent that I laughed with delight every time. But he was sad… empty somehow. Iz went through the motions, but without any inner spark. When I tried to talk with him about it he was evasive, and would always turn the talk elsewhere. I let him be.

My car seemed to drive itself to the Temple of my youth. I used to talk to God here. It was dark, and I was reluctant to enter and visit the ghosts inside. I walked instead around the back, to the fields behind. I was lost, yes. Spiritually, soulfully lost – walking in the field behind the Temple of my youth. Without goals, without faith.

It was the field behind Temple Emmanuel where my spiritual crisis culminated. I was thinking of Charlie of course, of her crazy faith, her beliefs as alien to me as my own Judaism. Only difference was she chose hers – something I don’t do. I don’t choose. I default. Into being a Jew and back out again. Empty and aware of empty.

I do not recall a time when I felt so alone as I did that evening. It was as if a night of endless proportion, of infinity, was descending upon the fields. And the silence was so overwhelming, so daunting. Was I losing my mind?

Recently I’d joined a Druidic grove, to compliment my Kabalistic studies. We were seeking a place to celebrate Bealteinne and initiate new members. I made a few calls, and secured us permission to use the big field and small forest behind the Temple Emmanuel, and our celebration was consequently held there, on Jewish ground. “All Gods are one God, and all Goddesses one Goddess”, it didn’t matter to us. We were grateful for the little piece of wilderness within the metropolitan city.

After initiations of the new members, and the traditional Bealteinne rituals of the Maypole, and jumping the fires, there was much merry making in the warm spring night. Mead flowed like nectar from the Gods as people broke into smaller groups and lit smaller fires to talk and sing and dance around. I sat for awhile with some pipers, lending my feeble skills on my wooden recorder, then wandered, blessedly barefoot, to the guitars and dulcimers, strumming and singing their Gaelic tunes. The drumming circle eventually captivated me and pulled me to the edge of the woods, by the abandoned Maypole. Congas, bongos, djembes and medicine drums pounded into the night, the rhythm so hypnotic, the night air so crisp and filled with the smell of mud and smoke and new grass. It seemed to me the most joyful celebration of life possible – a newly sworn Bard, a Priestess in grateful celebration of Bel, the bright one, Lord of the Fires. The music took me like one of Pan’s nymphs. I found myself jumping the various fires, past pipers and drummers, to the edge of the woods where our Maypole still stood, like a giant phallus, guarding the deep dark forest behind.

Weary, and burdened by the weight of my own thoughts, I walked blindly into the great field behind the temple. With each step I heard my heartbeat, throbbing. But then the internal became external as I recognized the sounds to be rhythmic, ebbing and flowing, fading in and out, distant but then closer. Drumming? Yes, it was the sound of drumming. How peculiar. My curiosity piqued, I walked faster into the field.

Aglow in the field, the brilliant orbs of small fires burned. Smoke curled upward.. Sweet sounds trickled through the night air. A dulcimer? A mandolin? Was some sort of gypsy caravan performing behind my Temple?

I strolled closer, trying to look nonchalant among the people dressed in all manners of ways. My instinct was to hide, and observe, but out of nowhere a girl in a peasant dress grabbed my hand and pulled me towards a small fire crying “Come jump with me!” and she began to run, pulling me. I jumped over the small fire with her and she kissed my cheek and was gone. What strange sect was this? Who were these people?! I found a hiding spot behind a large Oak tree, where I could watch this surrealistic scene. I was both captivated and apprehensive. Suddenly, I recognized the sound of feet, quick stepping over last year’s leaves, and a voice, humming, singing, chirping and giggling. I peered around the trunk and through the smoke and night I barely made out the image, silhouetted before the burning fires.

Was it…? Could it be…? It couldn’t be…

Charlie. Swirling round and round a great pole hung with streamers. Eyes closed, a blissful smile on her face. Her tattoo, the one I’d only heard of, the one that would forever prohibit her burial in Jewish ground, was glistening and glorious. Her torso was wet with sweat. I inched closer to convince myself that I was not dreaming. Yes, it was Charlie, dancing round and round in time to the music. Some kind of pagan hoe-down? She told me she worshipped outside. She didn’t mention it was behind my Temple.

“Shekhinah”, I whispered without thought, the divine feminine in my tradition, why remember that now, after so many years of forgetting? She was almost too beautiful to look at, and my heart swelled at her brightness. “Why, she is Shekhinah, and she is fire… she is all that I am not, all that I am missing….” I began unbuttoning my shirt, smiling.

“A Maypole dance – too perfect!” I exclaimed. I hummed and giggled, eyes mostly closed as I focused on the mud between my toes and the cool breeze on my skin, dancing towards the Maypole. I grabbed a ribbon and began to twirl around the pole, ducking, turning in and out, very pagan, very ancient and very child like. Stumbling for a moment, I opened my eyes to catch my balance and realized someone was watching me. It took two seconds for my rational mind to blow a fuse and shut down, because it took two seconds to recognize the watcher as Izzy. His eyes were sparkling. The firelight illuminated him from behind, and he said simply “Shekhinah”.

Somewhere along my approach to her, as the tongue of flame licked us both, from our toes to the roots of our hair, language became non-functional, and thus void. The fire, the pounding of the conga, the dappling of the guitar notes, my own heartbeat, these became our language, hers and mine.

Show me the Light Charlie.

As she turned fully to me, her eyes melted.

Is this happening? Am I dreaming? Show me… show me!

Then she brought her gaze full up my body, so slowly, then up the slope of my neck, around my ears, over my chin and to my fully parted lips. I saw her eyes glaze over then, as if she was venturing to some far off place.

She held her ribbon out to me.

He approached me then, and took up the ribbon. If ever I doubted the existence of magic, or of the Lord and Lady , the doubt was extinguished in the dance that followed. Round and round the maypole, over and under the ribbons, braided together as we twirled somehow in perfect grace….

******************************************************************

After the fire… I started so many sentences in my mind that way, so many emails and letters to Izzy, all unsent… after the fire. The seasons have turned. Yitzhak took a new job months ago, and it’s been longer since we last talked. I spend my days at a much lonelier workplace now.

After the fire, I came back to myself, as if I had been in a drug induced black out, with only fragments of images to fill in the missing hours. In the shower that night, my muscles were sore, my body covered with mud and scratches, I had flashbacks, singular images and scenes… Izzy over me, me looking down upon him, the smell of smoke… Washing my face, I felt the sting of the soap where his stubble had rubbed me raw. I remember mud painted war stripes on his cheeks and chest, that bare chest revealed after so many months of wondering…shoulders so broad, hair so think and curly… I moaned and rested my cheek against the cool shower tile. “Oh Iz, what have we done?”

Clean then in my bathrobe, still stinging and sore, I sat before my altar. I lit a stick of Nag Champa and recited the Charge of the Goddess to sooth myself, much as I used to recite “Now I lay me down to sleep”…

“I who am the beauty of the green earth and the white moon among the stars and the mysteries of the waters, I call upon your soul to arise and come unto Me…”. I murmured the words, thought of my Grandmamma with her rosary… all Goddesses are one Goddess… “ For behold I have been with you from the beginning, and I am that which is attained at the end of desire.”

I lay my damp and throbbing head against the silk covered table and breathed deeply. What am I feeling? What am I feeling? I scanned my energy field and was immediately struck by an awareness of my own polarities, anima and amimus, combined into a third thing, pulsating and vibrant in my bloodstream. I shifted to my inner vision and saw that my aura was golden and radiant and huge, and that each chakra was wide open, a rainbow of frequencies harmoniously dancing. “Oh! This is a math thingy! The sum being bigger than it’s parts! Sin… Sinner… Synergistic!” I exclaimed to the empty room. Then I meditated in the warm glow of wholeness, late into the morning hours.

Faithful reader, whomever you may be and whatever drew you to this particular essay, I say: “ Believe in the Bealteinne Fires”! Again I repeat: “ Believe in the Bealteinne Fires!”

I could not then, nor can I now explain rationally the change that overtook me the night of the Bealteinne Fires. As Charlie told you, I was a thinker, a logician of sorts, rigid and well defended, forever stepping carefully and never on cracks.

I’d often wondered what attracted Charlie and I to each other. On paper, we were mismatched. But when you come within close contact to someone who is on fire, burning, you tend to follow, because slowly you remember that you are on fire as well. You smell the smoke and sometimes you see the glowing embers, and sometimes you hear the crackle. You learn that fire follows fire, and there isn’t a damn thing you can do about it. Charlie, the Elf, with the Green Eyes and red hair, was on fire, and I was too.

On the night of Bealteinne, we finally allowed our flames to touch. We saw the grandeur of our fires together, the Flame of Passion. We allowed its presence, and savored its glow. And in the divine moment of our flames blending, I realized Charlie was my teacher.

In the synagogue, the Torah is housed in the Ark. And hanging over the Ark, the Eternal Flame burns through the days and nights, always flickering, casting a pool of light. What does the eternal flame represent? In perhaps a personal interpretation, it is thus: God’s love is always present, and can never be extinguished. Throughout the ages, great Kingdoms of Evil have attempted to exterminate the Love, but repeatedly they have failed. But the other interpretation, gleaned from a night of reckless, wild, and wonderful union with flesh, soil, grass, and an enchanted field full of joyful Pagans, is that the fire burns within us. And we are free to burn alone, or with others. But the trick, dear reader, is to Burn. Remember: Burn!

We are alive.

Betz King is a bard, psychologist, Priestess of the Western Mysteries and humanistic journalist. She dances outside in Berkley, Michigan.

(Author’s note: any resemblance to persons either living or dead is the product of many lunchtime walks).

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , | Comments Off on After the fire (Previously published in 2000).

One soulful cup of coffee (Almost previously published, but cut at the last minute).

Body and soul is the topic. Next to my bed is every book written by Thomas Moore, James Hillman, Alice Bailey and Carl Jung. Soul as keeper of the Mysteries, as opponent of the personality, as archetypal shaping force, soul as proof of God/dess, soul as transcendent influence throughout eternity… Night after night I’ve been feeding the fires of my inspiration… I’ve been courting my muse for months, yet nothing has surfaced. In the bathroom, my daily meditation calendar suggested that body is experienced while awake, and soul while asleep. I noodled this about for a week or so… seemed like a good starting place to me… and yet again – nothing. Eventually I began to consider defeat, maybe I can’t speak to this topic, maybe there are no words for me.

I got honest with myself. Granted, I am a writer. However, I am going through a divorce, and the disintegration of my house and friends and finances. This does not leave me at my finest when I sit down to my computer late at night in my little one room efficiency. This does not inspire confidence. And so I surrendered to the possibility that perhaps, for now, I could not be terribly effective with words on paper. So many other ways of defining myself, as “wife, friend, financially safe, potential mother”, these ways were gone, and maybe “writer” was gone too. The idea made me very sad, a state I’ve been spending a lot of time in these days.

So I took my sad self to get my hair done last Saturday. I’m a therapist among other things, and I preach “fake it till you make it” at the top of my lungs with my clients. So I knew that a haircut, and a new color, was just what I needed to fake being ok, until I could really feel ok. I took my journal, as I knew I’d wait both in the waiting room, and again under the dryer with my new color. Sure enough, I waited in both places, and jotted down general and random thoughts.

While under the dryer, a new and empowered color baking into my hair, a color that would somehow propel me through the entire divorce and the loss of my friends and the financial challenges and all the fear and sadness, a SUPER color in other words, my hair-guy brought me a cup of coffee. It was good coffee, maybe French Roast, and had the vanilla international cream in it. He handed it to me with an “I’ll be back to check on you in a few…”

Now this is not an earth shattering event – a cup of coffee under a dryer. Yet given my situation, it was honestly one of the most unconditionally nurturing acts of kindness I’d received in weeks. He didn’t see the tears in my eyes as he walked away, I hid behind the current issue of George magazine. After he left, I analyzed my own tears. “What’s up Betz?” I asked myself, and journaled my reply.

It had to do with the coffee.

For several years now, I’ve kept a “soulful moments” log. I got the idea from Thomas Moore, who suggests that the soul will reveal itself through small and personal captivations, like a preference for Converse high tops, or blue ink pens, or black jack gum. I used to write my moments down each night before bed, but now I do them in my head, as a part of my gratitude prayers. I try to acknowledge 10 moments throughout the day that were soulful. I define a soulful moment as one which helps me capture a piece of my true essence, a moment of my capital T Truth, a knowing of my immortal being, or a feeling of peace, safety or joy. As I’ve been doing it for years, I’ve come to hate it when I can’t find 10 at the end of they day, and this has trained me to look for the moments as I go about my business. I collect them here and there, so that I’ll for sure have 10 at bedtime. Having participated in this same ritual over a thousand times, I’ve noticed that some moments make the list over and over. One of the most frequently cited soulful moments in my life is a cup of coffee.

Now it’s not lost on me that the body is a necessary part of experiencing the soul. When I take my first drink of coffee each morning, I really take my first drink of coffee. I hold the cup and feel the warmth. Then I inhale the smell of the roasted beans. Lastly, I take my first sip. I taste the explosion on my tongue, then feel the warmth travel down my throat and fill my stomach. The first hints of caffeine hit my bloodstream, I begin to wake up, and I salute the day.

I do this every morning of my life, come rain or shine. I have friends who call themselves “caffeine addicts”, and as a psychologist I acknowledge that this is a bona fide diagnosis. But I will not go there with myself and my soulful moment. For me, it is a small meditation. I use my body to experience my soul. My soul speaks to me through the daily ritual of coffee. It says, “I value ritual. I value warmth. I value richness and depth. I value being awake for my life. I value taking time for myself. I value nurturing myself. I value sharing with friends.” All of this comes from my 10 minute cup of coffee each morning. It is the equivalent of tea in England – not just a beverage, but a philosophy.

I shared this idea with my friend who is a guitar player, and he said the same is true for him and his guitar. The music he composes expresses his soul, but his body needs the instrument. In other words, he uses his body to express his soul. I began to look around for other examples and found no shortage. I started to make a list, thinking I could write about each modality. I listed the obvious first: musicians, artists, writers, athletes, spiritual leaders…. but then I realized that I could choose any profession, any philosophy, and what I would see was people using their bodies to express their souls.

From that thought it was just a hop and a skip to the realization that we are all just souls walking around in bodies. We have the choice to respond to one, the other, or both in our daily rounds. I toyed with this idea as I walked through a week or so. I let myself be surrounded with souls. I watched how they showed me their capital T True selves using their bodies. I watched how my body helped my explore my soul – largely through my 5 bodily senses. Eventually I came to the conclusion that they depend on one another to exist much as the yin and yang, the light and dark… there can be no knowing of one without the other.

I took my ragged journal, and the thoughts I captured under the dryer, and I promised myself I would only work on this article in the mornings, when I had my first cup of soul-coffee at the computer with me. And so it has been, that this article has written itself cup by cup. It has come through the soul, into the body, and then onto the page. As I bring it to its completion, I see that it was born, and nurtured by coffee. And I realize that the Universe offers free refills. I just need to show up with my empty cup and my gratitude. This realization will be number one on my list tonight, and my morning coffee will be number two. I’m certain the partnership of body and soul will help me capture the rest of the list.

Betz King is a psychotherapist, bard, spiritual minister, reiki practitioner, humanistic journalist and Priestess of the Western Mystery Tradition. She drinks coffee in Berkley Michigan.

Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off on One soulful cup of coffee (Almost previously published, but cut at the last minute).