Thursday, December 31, 2009

The Story of Sophia

A Story To Guide The Species

"A myth is essentially a guide; it tells us what we must do in order to live more richly. If we do not apply it to our own situation and make the myth a reality in our own lives, it will remain an incomprehensible and remote as the rules of a board game, which often seem confusing and boring until we start to play." (Karen Armstrong, A Short History of Myth).


In his book, Not In His Image, and his writings on the website www.metahistory.com, John Lash shows how we have departed from the proper course of our evolution as a species. We have been torn out of a primal connection with Gaia, the living planet. He further points out that “our connection to the living earth is not merely a matter of survival, it is essential to our way of knowing ourselves, defining who we are as a species.”


The story of Sophia, preserved by the prechristian Gnostics, is a sacred story about the origins of humanity, how the earth evolved, and how we as a species are uniquely involved with the planetary intelligence. It is a story to inspire and guide us on our way to understanding our role in Gaia’s cosmic activities.


Sophia is central to the Gnostic Mystery Schools that were destroyed by the rise of Christianity (see previous blog 11/24). The Gnostics were not attempting to promote a belief system involving an off-planet higher power but taught techniques for experiencing our connection to the divine power that is here, fully earthbound and accessible to all.


The initiates of the Mysteries, after intensive training, learned to perceive a marvelous light, which they describe as pure opalescent currents of organic, life giving, light. This light was their teacher filling them with a primordial wisdom, which is Sophia.


As teachers of the Mysteries, the purpose of the Gnostics was to nurture and guide human potential one person at a time. Students of the mysteries are given a deep understanding of what it means to be instruments for co-evolution consecrated to Gaia/Sophia. Students need a narrative framework, a guiding story, a myth, in order to find their own direct line to the planetary intelligence. This is the story of Sophia. [Told here based mostly on Lash’s DVD Sophia Returning, www.sacredmysteries.com]

Before she became the Earth, Sophia lived at the Galactic Center, the source of life, with others like herself called Aeons. The Aeon’s create the worlds, not as a craftsperson, but they seed worlds like an over flowing fountain. Their power of creation comes from their imagination. They imagine or dream different worlds and project them into being.


One of the Aeons often takes the lead in imagining something new and it was Sophia who first imagined the human species. She imagined a playful species with a unique capacity for novelty and consequently the capacity for error.


With all the Aeons supporting her, Sophia projected a template of her imagined species into the Universe. All the other Aeons stepped back to watch, as was usual, but Sophia stepped to the edge of the Galactic perimeter, fascinated by her creation. Her love, passion, and interest in this new species caused an unusual event to happen.

Sophia was so passionate and fascinated by her creation that she desired to be involved with it and plunged out from the Galactic Center. She erupted as a plumb of opalescent light falling into the chaos of dead matter. This had never happened before, no Aeon had ever left the Center, Sophia’s fall was an anomalous event, a novelty in the universe, a singularity.

This surge of divine energy into the chaos of inorganic matter had fantastic repercussions which Sophia herself could not predict. One of the amazing things that happened was the creation of the world of an inorganic species called the Archons. This is one of the most confusing aspects of the story, a science fiction element, and I’m not sure what to make of it. I say more about the Archons below.


Next the story comes down to earth evolution. The plumb of organic opalescent light that was Sophia began to curl on itself. This is the involution of a divine consciousness made of pure light into sensory existence. Sophia turned into the planet earth bringing the template of human potential with her.


What makes this planet unique is that we inhabit the actual Dreaming of the goddess who invented us. This is an interactive myth. As long as we interact with her in her Dreaming this planet is our paradise, a place for us to play and learn, to experience love, to exchange wisdom, to experiment with technology, tools, our senses, our species interacting with the planet.


The story of Sophia is the ultimate ecofeminist myth and the ultimate healing myth for our species. Sophia got involved because of her intense attraction to us. She saw that it was a very big risk she was taking in inventing a species with as much latitude as we have with the ability to make mistakes and to deviate from the path of our evolution.


It could be said that Sophia herself deviated by leaving the Galactic Center and plunging into the chaos of inorganic matter creating a freak species of inorganic beings, the Archons, who interact with humanity.


The Archons, (what we call E.T.s) according to the Gnostics, are not a harmless side effect of Sophia’s plunge into the universe, they are a serious threat because they envy us, because we can play and they can’t. We have a living environment and they are a robotic, mechanical species. The Archons do not have the capacity of intention; they cannot create but only simulate reality.


The world we live in can be divided into 1) what human beings have made in association with Sophia and 2) What the Archons lead us to do by their simulations. The Archons use their ability to reproduce things so that we can’t tell the reproduction from the original thing. We also have the capacity to use simulation. If we use simulation in Sophia’s way we get bio-mimicry – we learn how to mimic nature and create “supernature” – sustainable systems and technology. But if we lose a sense of what the original thing copied was, we are lost.


In order to correct we have to go back to the original. Archons are external entities that invade our minds through suggestion and simulation. They slip in when we lose the distinction between the copy and the real thing.


Lash says this began as long ago as 4500 BCE with what we now call “channeling.” This is how the Archons first got into the human mind. Archons channeled false information the most damaging being idea of the male godhead – the patriarchal lie. This created a domino effect leading to maladaptive, non-sustainable behavior. The first really maladaptive behavior is male dominance.


The Archon component points out how the human species deviated – if we know how we deviated we can correct it. They really have no power over us but cause us to deviate by making us believe that what we desire is a replica, not the original.


Organic light is the substance body of Sophia. We will dance in her light when the simulation falls away. The Archons create a virtual world. If I live in this world I don’t know what I desire, I desire what others desire and go along with the status quo. We are self-generating cells within the body of Sophia.


The Archon or E.T. phenomenon is not independent of human imagination, it is the part of our imagination that we need to master and go beyond if we are going to get back on track with Sophia.


Wednesday, December 16, 2009

Women On The Edge Of Evolution

I am attending a free teleseminar called, “Women of the Edge of Evolution: Awakening to the power to co-create our lives and shape our collective future.” There are a total of fourteen sessions, one a week, which consist of a conversation with women described as “fourteen of the world’s leading female spiritual luminaries, thinkers and agents of change.” I am really inspired by the series, which is about half over now, but you can listen to all of the conversations and questions from participants on-line or download them to your mp3 player or ipod. Register at www.womenontheedgeofevolution.com


Here are some notes I took listening to the conversation with Barbara Marx Hubbard. Barbara, who is 80 years old, is an inspiration for me (I’m 71). She is a truly wise Crone who has been living on the edge of evolution for a long time and doesn’t seem to be slowing down a bit. She speaks from her own experience about the profound changes of aging, “After 50, when you have no more eggs, you become the egg. The egg of the authentic female self has not been fully expressed on this planet for many many thousands of years and never in an information rich society like the one we are now in. Women are at the edge of evolution wherever we step forward as a group and say ‘yes’ to our deeper potential, ‘yes’ to our life purpose.”


The “authentic female self” has not been fully expressed on the planet since before history and the development of patriarchy. In order to become evolutionary women, or co-creators, and participate in our own evolution and the evolution of our planet and society women are called to discover, remember, or invent our ancient authentic self and indigenous genius.


Barbara describes the evolutionary woman as one who is incarnating the cosmic creative impulsive, and when she gets awakened to that it feels like a spiritual awakening, which leads to creative action. Women who are living at the edge are finding a deeper life purpose or are yearning to find one. A co-creative woman as she awakens and says “yes” begins to grow in an unprecedented way.

When a woman expresses her true-self in the world through creative action, she is what Barbara calls “suprasexually creative and attractive. Suprasex is the sexual drive become a creative drive. This doesn’t exclude sex but expands it. A woman who is suprasexually aroused by her own creativity and the development of herself and her life is the most attractive force on earth. The co-creative woman attracts that which she sees within her that needs to be created.


In the Women’s Movement of the 60’s and 70’s women were waking up on mass to our true situation as women in patriarchy. We joined together in groups for a common purpose. First we tried to be equal to men in a dysfunctional world, then we woke up to the fact that we are facing a planetary crisis and we may not be able to make it, and then we started to wake up to the fact that inside the female is a passion for love, community, creativity, and coherence.


Discovering their passion, co-creative women fall in love with what they do, with their work, with the giving of themselves in service to others and the planet. Barbara, examining her own experience says, “I love the expression of the divine aspect of myself when it feels connected and in service with others. It feels so rewarding, self-rewarding in the doing.”

This lead into a discussion of the fact that many women become so passionate and involved in the work they love, generously giving of themselves, that they become overwhelmed and experience “burn out.” This topic has come up often in the series. I liked the perspective of Sofia Diaz in her teleseminar.


Sofia Diaz (www.sofiayoga.com), is a Hatha Yoga, sacred movement, and feminine spiritual practices teacher. She agrees that women have an important and unique role, “Women hold the key to the evolution of consciousness and culture because of our capacity for compassion, our sensitivity for others pain and suffering, and deep caring.” This capacity, Sofia calls “feminine genius” and says that it is “a source of deep power that we are holding to evolve our world.” Yet many of us are feeling overwhelmed, almost victimized by our capacity to care.


It is important to realize how profound it is to have the capacity of care and the ability to relinquish self and output for the sake of others. This “is the highest pinnacle in all spiritual traditions, sought after by mystics and spiritual seekers.” Problems arise when it is unconscious, when you don’t realize you are extending one of the most generous gestures in this human universe, if your motives are fear, not being loved, insufficiency, fear of loss, then this is the catastrophe we find our selves in feeling overwhelmed and victimized.


We need to stop and ask why am I extending myself? But instead of answering this question with mental discrimination, we ask our body. First you have to be able to feel the parts of your body and then the information you get is the truth. Rather than answering the question with criticism of your character look to the genius of the feminine body this is where you find the deepest answers and the refinement of great questions. “When I ask myself what is my motivation and I look for tensions in my body, I always get an answer – perhaps I felt weak or hurt by a particular interaction or I’m afraid to extend myself in a way that feels risky. The answers are really detailed and come directly from the body.”


If you ask a deep question and let yourself feel it viscerally there is a relief and in that relief your heart actually relaxes, and if you find a relaxation in your heart and you take a deep breath into it, the biggest relief and the biggest answer to self-care is that you are loved.


Sofia has much to say about the genius of the feminine body as well as instructions on how to access that genius. You can listen to her Women on the Edge of Evolution teleseminar by registering at www.womenontheedgeofevolution.com

Tuesday, November 24, 2009

Study Group

My Study Group is currently reading Not In His Image: Gnostic Vision, Sacred Ecology, and the Future of Belief, by John Lamb Lash. The book begins with a description of the violent rise of Christianity and its campaign of genocide against the ancient Pagan peoples. The consequent development of patriarchy and the cultural adaptation to the dominance paradigm has taken humanity off course. Patriarchy is evolutionarily maladaptive. Lash believes that the Gnostic Myth of Sophia, woven together with contemporary deep ecology, provides a course of correction for the evolution of our species.


Lash describes history in terms of abuse bonding, what he calls the “victim-perpetrator syndrome.” A bond forms between abusers and those they abuse, between perpetrator and victim, and some of the abused become abusers in return. Even if they don’t become perpetrators, the victim tends to stay faithful to their abuser.

Lash argues that the ideology of Christian salvation is a pathological concept that serves as a cover-up for the victim-perpetrator syndrome repeated over generations - the genocide of the Pagans, the destruction of the Ancient Mysteries, the Crusades, the Inquisition, the conquering of the Americas. He does not blame all violence on Christian ideology. But he says, “Humans are capable of violence and oppression. When that tendency becomes legitimated by a grand religious belief system, then the violence takes on a superhuman dimension, going totally out of scale.”

A historical example is when the Europeans discovered America. They systematically perpetrated genocide on the Native Americans who they said were “savages” and required “saving.” They were “saving the natives” for redemption in heaven. Why did they do that when they could have made alliances with those people? Lash believes it is because the Europeans who came to the Americas in the 15th century had already been victims of genocide and violence through the imposition of Christianity. They were the abused who turned into abusers. Their ancestors were the Native Europeans, the Pagan Peoples, victims of genocide or forced conversion at the hands of Christians.

Lash believes that the path of deep ecology is a way back to what we had before the rise of salvationist patriarchal ideology. This is the path taking us back to Sophia, the goddess of wisdom, and to the Pagan Mysteries that were massacred by the rise of Christianity.


Next time: A Story to Guide the Species.

Saturday, July 4, 2009

Fourth of July Seed Thought

There is a peaceful transformation in the hearts and minds of the people of the United States of America and our government. We are all part of a world wide peace movement which is replacing fear with love.

Wednesday, July 1, 2009

You are the timeless presence in which everything arises and resolves. Everything is a pointer to your authentic ground of being or presence which is always awake and knows the perfect response to every situation.



I am awake

I am aware

and I welcome every perception as a messenger that is guiding me

home to my authentic ground of being.

--Yoga Nidra, Buddhist Meditation



Wisdom is found through the senses. She resides in our bodies and is fully present in matter. Her veils are lifted.

Wednesday, May 20, 2009

Study Group

May 20,2009
About a year ago Sarah (picture on left) and I decided to study several of Karen Armstrong’s books. We began with The Great Transformation: The Beginning of Our Religious Traditions. We read the book chapter by chapter discussing each in bi-weekly phone conversations. We learned about the Axial Age (about 900 – 300 BCE), a time Armstrong claims, “is pivotal to the spiritual development of humanity”. It was an age of great spiritual transformation, the period of the Buddha, Socrates, Confucius, the Hebrew Prophets, and the mystics of the Upanishads. Judaism, Christianity, and Islam were all outgrowths of the original axial age. There has been nothing like it until, what Armstrong calls “The Great Western Transformation, which created our own scientific and technological modernity.”

For most of the axial age philosophers, doctrine and theology were of no interest. It did not matter what you thought about spirit or what you believed, but how you behaved. The only way you could encounter what they called “God,” “Nirvana,” “Brahman,” or “The Way” was to live a compassionate life. Karen Armstrong believes we must rediscover compassion. “In our global village, we can no longer afford a parochial or exclusive vision.” She calls for “a spiritual revolution that can keep abreast of our technological genius.” With her Charter for Compassion she is doing her part in creating such a revolution. ( http://charterforcompassion.com/)



I wonder what went wrong during the Axial Age, why didn’t the ethos introduced at this time get passed down to us? In the introduction to The Great Transformation, Karen Armstrong points out that “The Axial Age was not perfect. A major failing was an indifference to women.” Major indeed! How can spirituality be based in compassion and leave women out? There are no female axial sages. If we are not to repeat the same mistakes, this cannot be true of the “spiritual revolution” Armstrong is calling for. It must be grounded in women’s wisdom.

The next book Sarah and I read was Armstrong’s The Gospel According to Women: Christianity’s Creation of The Sex War in The West. This book is a scathing critique of the influence of Christianity on the lives of women throughout Western history. According to Armstrong, Western Christianity is the only major religion to hate and fear sex. Consequently it is only in the West that women are hated because we are sexual beings. In other cultures women are hated, dominated, and dismissed for a variety of other reasons, but not because they are sexual beings. This hatred of women and terror of sex created what Armstrong calls “the Christian sexual neurosis.” This neurosis, with its myths of virgin, martyr, mystic, witch, and later the myth of wife and mother, continues to oppress women and plague relationships between men and women today. Armstrong discusses each of these myths at length.

I was particularly interested in the section on female mystics who Armstrong says have something to teach women today. The mystic achieves liberation, not by achieving “equality” within the male world and participating in maintaining the status quo but by journeying outside this world altogether and finding her own truth and vision. This requires suspending rational processes and relying on intuition and the wisdom of the heart—modes of knowing associated, usually patronizingly, with women. Suspending habitual modes of reasoning and relating will be the basis for a spiritual revolution. (For examples of this mode of thinking see The Unknown She: Eight Faces of an Emerging Consciousness by Hilary Hart.)

The great mystical traditions are all adamant that after her enlightenment the mystic must return to the world. Although Armstrong gives several examples of Christian women mystics who got stuck and found mystical ecstasy another means of retreating from the world, others like Hildegaard of Bingen and Joan of Arc lived out their visions in the world. Armstrong compares the mystic to creative thinkers like Einstein and Darwin. “The mystic and the creative thinker are both journeying away from prejudice and already established categories toward something inconceivable and apparently incomprehensible.”

Joan of Arc was inspired to her actions to save France by internal mystical experiences, which were referred to as “her voices” in her trial. She was condemned to death for not merely hearing voices but for listening and acting on them. The second offence that led to her murder was that she wore men’s clothing. This may be hard to imagine today since so many women in “important positions” wear what could be considered men’s clothing. However, the Church Father’s proclamation that “cross-dressing” is a sin and not allowed is still alive in some quarters. I have had several experiences of being oppressed because I refused to wear a skirt. Fortunately they no longer burn women at the stake. I describe my experiences in my essay “Women in Pants” on my website.

When we got ready to read our third book by Armstrong, A Short History of Myth, four other women joined our little study group and we now meet on a conference call every two weeks. In this book Armstrong makes a distinction between mythos and logos. Logos is the logical, pragmatic and scientific mode of thought that enables us to function successfully in the world. Mythos serves to give meaning to events that may threaten to overwhelm and prevent action. When we experience ourselves involved in myth we are inspired to do great things. The world of myth is an imaginary world of sacred archetypes; it gives structure and meaning to life. In the pre-modern world people realized that myth and reason were complementary; each had its separate sphere, we need both these modes of thought.

Western modernity is the child of logos and the death of mythology. The heroes of Western modernity would be technological or scientific geniuses of logos, not the spiritual geniuses inspired by mythos. This means that intuitive, mythical modes of thought are neglected in favor of the more pragmatic, logical spiritual scientific rationality. Armstrong suggests “It has been writers and artists, rather than religious leaders, who have stepped into the vacuum and attempted to reacquaint us with the mythological wisdom of the past.” In the end she poses the question: “Can a secular novel replicate traditional myth, with its gods and goddesses?”

In an effort to find out our study group decided, at Sherry’s suggestion, to read The Passion of Mary Magdalen by Elizabeth Cunningham next. Our first meeting is tonight.

Tuesday, May 12, 2009

Spring Garden

Spring has burst into the Ozarks on highwinds, thunderstorms and tornadoes. Although each storm downs trees, smashes houses, floods roadways and often kills people, when it clears everything feels cleansed and new growth appears sparkling in sunlight.



Our garden is thriving. We’ve lived here almost 20 years and each year the garden gets more beautiful. The perennial herbs and flowers come up first. Poppies and peonies are already blooming and the motherwort, astragalas, goldenseal, feverfew, echinacea, rue, elderberry, mint, lemon balm, st. john’s wort and comfrey are growing strong. The garlic planted last fall is tall and healthy and kale made it through the winter giving us fresh greens.

One of the reasons everything grows so well here is all the donkey manure I’ve spread on the beds over the years. In April Denslow organized our humongous manure pile, separating the old good stuff from the fresh donkey shit. Now most of the beds are rich with manure and mulched with straw ready for planting.

I love being in the garden, it is my special sacred place. For years I sat in meditation almost every morning but I gave that up and get out to the garden by dawn. My time weeding, planting, and tending the garden is my meditation. I feel like I am participating in the changes our beautiful planet is undergoing, tending her as she enters into what Paula Gunn Allen called “a great initiation."

In her essay The Woman I Love is a Planet; The Planet I Love Is A Tree, Allen says, “Our planet, my beloved, is in crisis; this, of course we all know. We, many of us, think that her crisis is caused by men, or White people, or capitalism, or industrialism, or loss of spiritual vision, or social turmoil, or war, or psychic disease. For the most part, we do not recognize that the reason for her state is that she is entering upon a great initiation—she is becoming someone else. Our planet, my darling, is gone coyote, heyoka, and it is our great honor to attend her passage rites."
http://www.nativewiki.org/Paula_Gunn_Allen

Thursday, May 7, 2009

Mindfulness


The constant chatter in my mind is exhausting. I can quiet it while sitting in meditation but the real challenge is to be present at each moment of the day. I exhaust myself mentally multitasking, attempting psychic gymnastics hour after hour. For example, this morning I went out to check on my rooster, he somehow sliced the tendon on the back of one of his legs. Instead of giving him all my attention, I rehearsed a conversation I hope to have with my vet about my donkey, I re-ran the details of a meeting I went to last night, I made a mental list of all the things I have to do today.

I’ve found that when I find myself in the midst of a psychic triathlon if I shift my attention to my body everything slows down. The rhythms of my body are much slower than those of my mind. They are meant to be part of the same song, the song of myself. Everything seems to be going so fast around me and in my head and if body tries to keep up it exhausts itself.

Wednesday, May 6, 2009

Jesus Myth

There is too much fuss about the crucifixion. Worshiping a dead man on a cross as if that’s the meaning of his life: to get a nailed to a cross at age 33. Jesus, like Joan d’Arc, was killed by frightened men. Jesus threatened the worldview that said we are all separate and God is far away. He said we are all gods and we are related in a bond of love.

The story of Jesus is a myth but the attempt to make the story a fact has killed the myth. A living myth gives meaning and zest to life. Myths are not made up of facts but symbols and images. Such stories can’t be factually verified. Fundamentalism is the result of insisting that the mythic is the factual. Thus, four example, Christian fundamentalists claim that the world was created in seven 24-hour days by an off-planet deity. And that man has dominion over the earth, which means that the earth is a resource to be used as man sees fit.

It's all a question of story. We are in trouble just now because we do not have a good story. We are in between stories. The old story, the account of how the world came to be and how we fit into it is no longer effective. Our challenge is to create a new sense of what it means to be human."

~Thomas Berry~


Tuesday, April 7, 2009

Welcome to my blog


Hi, Here's a photo of my grandson, Brodie. I'm just learning how to use Blogger. Come back in a week or so. Linda