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bay witch musings

~ thoughts on parenting, paganism, science, books, witchcraft, nature, feminism, unitarian universalism, herbalism, cooking, conservation, crafting, the state of humanity, and life by the sea

bay witch musings

Tag Archives: mermaids

Wednesday Musings

25 Wednesday Mar 2015

Posted by thalassa in paganism

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

books, breathing, chakras, earthseed, elements, gardening, herbs, jacqueline carey, meditation, memoir, mermaids, mindfulness, Naamah, octavia butler, tea

Whats in my teapot: Mint Magic by Celestial Seasons. Its one of the few commercial blends I like (I also like Moroccoan Mint Green Tea by Stash, Zen by Tzao, and Constant Comment by Bigelow).

Quote of the Day:

…It’s true.
Each prayer is caught by seaweed on the floor
and anchors itself deep beneath the sand.
The mermaids dig them up to use as bricks
and laugh at humans’ meaningless demands.

From the poem Taking a Mermaid to Church by Sarah Fletcher

A time to pull up what is planted…

“If you plant green beans in the spring, you won’t be pullin’ up turnips come tomorrow,” she said.  “Sometimes you gotta shout at them clouds til they tremble at yer voice and rain just to shut you up.  Sometimes you cry because the sky stays blue after blue with not a cloud in sight.  That’s when you know you got a bad harvest coming in the fall.  Or maybe buggies are gnawing your field.  Seems something always happens to crops when you need ’em to grow.  But when you just want to give it all up, the rain falls and those little shoots pop up like you’ve never seen before.”  She stopped and considered her garden, “Sometimes they don’t though.  You always reap what you sow, you just never know how much your crop might be worth at the end.”

All I know about a backyard garden I learned from a neighbor.  To my nine-year-old self, she was pretty old.  Ancient.  She’d been born during WWI and the first third of her life on a farm before moving “into town” in the WWII era neighborhood where I would later arrive.  Wrinkly like creased paper and brown from the sun like old leather. Hunched over and wrapped in worn wool sweaters over vintage style dresses, her tiny feet encased in giant rubber boots.   But she never let that stop her.  Her kitchen smelled like cookies and violets, and she always had a pitcher of lemonade or iced tea ready.  In the spring time, her widow sills and counters and shelves were covered in egg cartons of dirt with little seedlings popping up.  Too many to plant in her postage stamp yard.  The best looking seedlings would find a new home from her stack of pots that she stored on her porch though the winter.  Some were carefully selected for the neighbors, based on what went with their yard.  The rest were destined for her yard after the last frost.  And the seedlings that didn’t make the cut got relegated to the “kitchen scrap pile” (compost pile) out back.

Mrs. Bloom (her real name) mourned the loss of “the little sprouts”, but she also understood that some of those plants just weren’t going to make it.  Not every sprout can find a home in the garden.  Sometimes “you just gotta pluck out the unlucky ones little girl, and hope you made the right choice.” Its not quite time yet, but soon before the growing season is truly upon us, we’ll have to pull up some of what has been planted so the rest can grow.

Things to do with herbs this growing season:
DIY Smudge Sticks
Simmer pots
Infused Water 
Infusing alcohols

 Moment of Zen: Breathing

The chestnut sidled and pranced beneath me. I soothed him once more, and forced myself to cycle through the Five Styles of Breathing.

The Breath of the Pulse of the Earth, drawn into the pit of the belly and the depths of the groin, inhaled and exhaled through the mouth.

The Breath of Ocean’s Rolling Waves, drawn in through the nostrils to the middle belly, out through the mouth.

The Breath of Trees Growing, circulating energy to the limbs, trading nourishment with the world.

The Breath of Embers Glowing, in and out through parted lips, quickening the heart and warming the blood.

The Breath of Wind’s Sigh, pulled and expelled through the nostrils into the space between my eyes, making my head light.

Jacqueline Carey, Naamah’s Curse

People, like all animals, need to breathe. Its necessary for cellular respiration–brings in oxygen and rids the body of carbon dioxide. Inhalation brings in air (and filters it using cilia and mucousal membranes), and exhalation takes it back out. Biomechanically speaking, breath travels in through our nose (or mouth), through our larynx (voice box), into the trachea, the bronchi, bronchioles, and into the aveoli (special blood vessels in the aveoli exchange carbon dioxide and oxygen in the blood cells). But when we focus on our breath meditatively, we can feel it traveling through out our body, beyond just our lungs. Anapanasati is a Buddhist meditative technique centered on the mindfulness of breathing. The goal is to feel the sensation of breath through the body as one breathes. To do this, I’ve adapted the Five Styles of Breathing from Jacqueline Carey’s Naamah series.

  • 1) Breath of Ocean’s Rolling Waves–Breathe with a light but long inhale through the nose as the breath flows in and slides down along the central axis of the body (corresponding with the nadi for those familiar with chakra work) to the area of the solar plexus chakra, where it pools briefly before flowing back up and out through the throat with the mouth open in a way that feels almost like making the sound “huh”. Focus on clearing your self of burdensome emotions. Repeat until you feel calm and still (or as calm and still as you get).
  • Breath of the Pulse of the Earth–Breath in slowly and deeply through the mouth, down through the belly, and into the groin. Circulate the breath between the Sacral and Root chakras and allow it to ground you, connecting you to the earth. As you exhale, purse your lips and slowly but strongly blow out your air. Repeat until you feel solid and seated in the earth.
  • 3) Breath of Embers Glowing–Breathe with a naturally paced breath in and out through parted lips as if blowing on the embers of a fire to get it to relight. Allow your breath to ignite in the area of your heart chakra, warming the blood and spreading that warmth to the body as it travels into your muscles and organs. Focus on kindling your compassion until it permeates your entire being. Repeat until you have acknowledged and released any excess ego.
  • 4) Breath of Tree’s Growing–Breathe in deeply but swiftly through the nose, holding the breath before exhaling through the mouth. Push your breath outwards on the exhale, down your limbs and past your fingers and toes, and draw it back along the same path, exchanging nourishment with the world. Focus on building the web of connections between you and the world. Repeat until you feel renewed.
  • 5) Breath of Wind’s Sigh–Breathe swiftly and lightly in and out through the nose, up into the space between the eyes into the top of the head (the area of the Third Eye and Crown chakras). Focus it filling the space like a balloon and expanding your brain, your mind, your very thoughts. Repeat until you feel expansive and embracing.

What I’m reading now:
A (long) while back, I started reading a book called Shaman, Sorcerers, and Saints: A Prehistory of Religion by Brian Hayden.  I never got to finish it because it was a library book, and it was when we were in transition between Virginia to Illinois and back again, but I finally managed to snag a used copy online at a decent price. I’m also reading a newer book (via Kindle) called The Horse, the Wheel, and Language: How Bronze Age Riders from the Eurasian Steppes Shaped the Modern World by David W. Anthony. I’m pretty sure I’m going to be adding both to my big list of Recommended Reading for Paganism.

Parting thought (a quote from Octavia Butler’s Earthseed books):

“All that you touch
You Change.

All that you Change
Changes you.

The only lasting truth
is Change.

God
is Change.”

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Saturday Musings

05 Saturday Jan 2013

Posted by thalassa in blogging, children, herbs, paganism, parenting

≈ 8 Comments

Tags

#firstthirtyone, bioregion, blog award, hibiscus, mermaids, oysters, photos, resolutions, typo fairies

Warning: Today’s musings are completely random!

Awesome Quote & Parenting Tip of the Week:

If a child lives with criticism, he learns to condemn
If a child lives with hostility, he learns to fight
If a child lives with ridicule, he learns to be shy
If a child lives with shame, he learns to feel guilty
If a child lives with tolerance, he learns to be patient
If a child lives with encouragement, he learns to be  confident
If a child lives with praise, he learns to appreciate
If a child lives with fairness, he learns to value justice
If a child lives with security, he learns to have faith
If a child lives with approval, he learns to like himself
If a child lives with acceptance and friendship, he learns to find love and hope in the world.

Dorothy Law Neite

First tea of the day: Hibiscus and orange with ginger

A thought while drinking my first tea of the day… For how “safe” transporting is, there sure are a lot of transporting accidents in the Star Trek.

The Pagan Blog Project:  I mentioned before that I was planning to do the Pagan Blog Project this year…but as usual, I’m running behind schedule–I’ll probably do my post tomorrow (yay, real life!).  I have a tentative plan for the year (which includes only doing one post per letter), though I’m fairly sure it will change up a bit…

a is for animism (or maybe altar)
b is for bioregionalism
c is for consciousness
d is for Divine
e is for exorcise (or maybe elements)
f is for fate & free will (or flora and fauna)
g is for gods
h is for hearth
i is for intuition (or maybe immanence)
j is for justice
k is for kind (and not kind=nice definition)
l is for liminal (or maybe labyrinth…though a labyrinth can be liminal)
m is for magesteria…or maybe magic
n is for numina (or nemeton)
o is for omnipresence
p is for polythetic
q is for quicksilver (or maybe quest)
r is for rooted
s is for spiral (or maybe spirit)
t is for transformation
u is for unknowing
v is for vision (or maybe veritas or vitality)
w is for weaving
x is for xenia
y is for you
z is for zeal without zealotry

Herb of the Week: Hibiscus

The genus Hibiscus is a group of over two hundred species common to warmer areas of the world.   Grown in a garden hibiscus attracts bees, butterflies and other pollinators, including hummingbirds.  Hibiscus is edible and a commonly (though not exclusively) enjoyed as a tea–different cultures enjoy a variety of preparations.

Different species of hibiscus species are used globally, but Hibiscus sabdariffa is the most common commercially used hibiscus.  It has a history of use in alternative medicine as a diuretic and laxative, and for cardiac and nervous complaints.  Some studies have indicated that hibiscus can help lower blood pressure and blood cholesterol.  Hibiscus is high in vitamin C and other antioxidants.  Magically,  hibiscus can be used in spells and rituals for love and passion, in divination and dream working, and to foster peace and balance.

A Blog Award!!!

Whee!!  I got a BLOG AWARD!!  I totally love blog awards!

Thanks so much to Poppy at Book of Shadows and Blessings!  

And…for the rules of the award,

1.the bloggers have to have 200 or less followers.

2.there is a list of questions to answer from your nominator as well as having to come up with a list of questions for your own nominees. you can either use the same questions as was asked of you or make up new ones for your nominees.

3.copy/paste the award logo into your post. you can add it to your blog sidebar or footer if you wish.

4. notify your nominees of the nomination.

Also…nominees have to answer whatever questions the person that nominates them asks…so here goes!

  • Which art form offers you the truest expression for yourself?  Oh gosh…this one is so hard. Ummmmm…. Probably writing.  And maybe photography, cooking…if cooking can be considered an art form.  I enjoy a variety of art forms, but I’m not terribly skilled artist in any medium.  I like to sing, I enjoy dancing…but I sort of suck at both.  I’m mediocre at painting and the like.
  • In that art form, what is your most honest piece of expression? I have no idea.
  • What always makes you laugh? My kids–they do the darndest things.  The Hubby too.  And off the wall, totally inappropriate humor.
  • What always makes you cry? Nothing *always* makes me cry, though poingnant stuff does the trick pretty well from time to time.
  • What is one thing that you can’t do that you’d love to be able to do? Surf
  • What is your favorite book? Why does it affect you so? Hmmm…I’m not sure I can limit myself to just one book.  Though, right now, I think the best books I’ve read in a while are the first two installations of the All Souls trilogy by Deborah Harkness.
  • What is your favorite movie or play? Why does it affect you so? Last of the Mohicans.  Its been my fave since I was a kid.  
  • If you were given the opportunity to spend one more day with a friend or family member who has passed away, what would you do? I would spend the day with my paternal grandparents…I wish I had more time to hear the stories of my family.  Or maybe The Hubby’s dad…he passed away when The Hubby was a kid, and I would have liked to meet him.
  • If you had won the $580 million Power Ball jackpot, what would you be doing today? The same thing I am doing now, but in a beach side rental in the Keys for the winter.

My award nominees… My friends V over at her new photo blog, Deb at Small House, Big Picture , and A E Goddard @ Upholding Ma’at.  Now I just need to go inform everyone!

First 31 Photo Challenge:

So, I’m totally doing this…

But I’ve been awful about uploading and posting my pics, lol!

I did make posting #2, because I was already posting about trees that day…but I still have to post 1, 2, 4…and now 5, to be caught up with today.

So here goes!

Resolutions-1We don't do "resolutions" so much as we do "goals" in our home--more like a bucket list with a sharpie than something doomed to fail, if you will.  And one of our family goals for the year is to be more in tune with our bioregion,  and oysters are a critical part of our bioregion's health!

Resolutions-1

We don’t do “resolutions” so much as we do “goals” in our home–more like a bucket list with a sharpie than something doomed to fail, if you will. And one of our family goals for the year is to be more in tune with our bioregion, and oysters are a critical part of our bioregion’s health!

113_6696

Returns-3

I admit, I cheated a little bit here. I had another pic I would have liked to have used…but I forgot to ask the person in the photo’s permission, and I just don’t think its right to post a pic of someone without their permission. So…I happened to have taken this one when I took today’s! Sharkbait is “returning” Mama O’shen some of her shells and things that washed up in the tide…

Something New-4

Something New-4

Chickadee & her newest mermaid for her mermaid collection. My daughter is mermaid obsessed.  I’ll have today’s pic posted later (or maybe tomorrow!)…

Where typos come from (in case you don’t read post comments regularly): There are invisible little fairies that live in the keyboards of computers and typing is an aphrodisiac for them–the more you use your keyboard, the more excited you get, and the less precise they are at transmitting your key selection to the computer.

And now…its time to actually get dressed, get the house picked up and get the kids out to run around before they drive the grown ups nuts!!

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A Yuletide Maxim Monday: Praise Hope

17 Monday Dec 2012

Posted by thalassa in family, wisdom

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

delphic maxim blogging party, Delphic Maxims, hope, maxim monday, mermaids, yule

“Hope” is the thing with feathers—
That perches in the soul—
And sings the tune without the words—
And never stops—at all—

And sweetest—in the Gale—is heard—
And sore must be the storm—
That could abash the little Bird
That kept so many warm—

I’ve heard it in the chillest land—
And on the strangest Sea—
Yet, never, in Extremity,
It asked a crumb—of Me.

~~Emily Dickinson~~

delphic maxim 61

A warm and brightly lit winter night is a modern invention. Its fairly easily forgotten by us, in our place of technological privilege, but before the inventions of the gas heater (1856), the electric heater (1883), and a modern central air style-heater (1919), winters could be quite perilous. Combined with the uncertainty of a community or farmstead’s food supply, of medical care in case of illness, and other hardships, it should be of little surprise that people from many cultures have chosen the time of the solstice for celebration in their own ways.  The Longest Night comes at the apex of winter, a celebration that the sun will strengthen and return prosperity.  We celebrate this time as a time of hope.  Hope is the gift of life.

Hope is not your typical form of positivity. Most positive emotions arise when we feel safe and satiated. Hope is the exception. It comes into play when our circumstances are dire – things are not going well or at least there’s considerable uncertainty about how things will turn out. Hope arises precisely within those moments when fear, hopelessness or despair seem just as likely.

Hope literally opens us up. It removes the blinders of fear and despair and allows us to see the big picture. We become creative, unleashing our dreams for the future.  This is because deep within the core of hope is the belief that things can change. No matter how awful or uncertain they are at the moment, things can turn out for the better. Possibilities exist. Belief in this better future sustains us. It keeps us from collapsing in despair. It infuses our bodies with the healing rhythms of positivity. It motivates us to tap into our signature capabilities and inventiveness to turn things around. It inspires us to build a better future.

~~Barbara Frederickson 

It seems like we are living in a time where cynicism is now fashionable.  Just take a look at the TV or the internet for more than 5 minutes, it should be fairly obvious.  But I think, perhaps, the Greeks called it right on this one.  We should be praising hope, not making fun or condemning those that have it, even if we perceive the source of that hope, or what they hold hope in as foolish.  If you ask my daughter what she wants to be when she grows up, she will tell you that she wants to be a mermaid.  When I foolishly advised Chickadee that this might not be an wise choice in careers–or even a career at all, she responded with “But momma, you always told me that if I worked really hard and tried my best, I could be whatever I wanted to be when I grew up.”  Darn if she didn’t have me there.  Even better, the reason she wants to be a mermaid?  To teach people how to live in peace with Mama O’shen and her creatures.

I’m willing to bet that my Chickadee will find a way to be a mermaid.

And I hope that she can teach people to live in peace with Mama O’shen and her creatures.

https://i0.wp.com/3.bp.blogspot.com/-DEX6-p6W4pk/ULOmFyuFaaI/AAAAAAAACXY/Id4_vrF8Zf4/s320/YuleBlogParty.jpg

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Thurdsay Musings

28 Thursday Jun 2012

Posted by thalassa in blogging, paganism, parenting

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

homeschool, links, mermaids, psamathe, tarot

Random thought: Now that I am done with the Pagan Values Event blogs, I think I’m going to get back to blogging some of the Delphic Maxims…I think I might do a “Maxims Mondays” for a while, and maybe even move on to different sort of maxims once I’m done with the Delphic ones.

Another random thought: The hubby let me know that there is a possibility of his being sent to Georgia for three months for a job. I’m not entirely sure how thrilled about this I am (or am not), right after I started a new job. If my babysitter gets the job she just interviewed for, its likely that I might have some daycare issues to deal with a couple days of the week.

Love Where You Live Moment of the Week: So…if you are regular reader, you know that I feel strongly about the idea of loving where you live as an active devotion.  In that spirit, I’m going to try to feature either something that I love about where I live or something about someone else loving where they live as part of my weekly Musings post.
This video was done by some friends with another friend of theirs that recently got out of the Navy as his farewell to Norfolk.  Norfolk’s official mascot/icon/avatar/symbol is the mermaid…and I love mermaids.  I also love community based artwork…and Norfolk’s mermaids are the perfect example of both.

Oh yeah, and something that makes my day: The Affordable Care Act stands!!! Or, as I like to call it, RomneyCare.

Quote of the Day (literally, a statement made today regarding the above):
“Unitarian Universalists hold among our principles the affirmation of the inherent worth and dignity of every person. As people of faith, our principles call us to speak up for those who have been silenced, forgotten, or pushed aside in our society. Today, I am proud to say that we and our allies in social justice have been heard. Health care is not a luxury; it is a fundamental human right. And while we celebrate today’s decision, we also will continue to advocate for this fundamental human right until it is available to all who seek it.”

And something that bums me out: The Supreme Court decision I’m upset about…

Poem of the Week:
Sandra’s seen a leprechaun,
Eddie touched a troll,
Laurie danced with witches once,
Charlie found some goblin’s gold.
Donald heard a mermaid sing,
Susy spied an elf,
But all the magic I have known
I’ve had to make myself.
(“Magic” by Shel Silverstein, Where the Sidewalk Ends )

Deity of the Week:Psamathe (Ψάμαθη)
Psamathe is a Nereid, one of the sea nymphs of Greek mythology that were the daughters of Nereus (the oft named “Old Man of the Sea”) and Doris (an Oceanid), and allies of Poseidon. Psamathe, whose name means “sand goddess” is a deity of the beach. Psamathe is the mother of three children, a mortal son by the name of Phokos with the mortal Aiakos, and the sea nymph Eidothea as well as a son by the name of Theoclymenus with the Titan Proteus (a servant of Poseidon). One of the moons of Neptune is named for her.

Crafty Coolness: Check out this cross-stitch of Lord Frederick Leighton’s Psamathe painting! I would love to have the patience to cross-stitch something like that! I might add that Lord Frederick Leighton is quite the painter, and should be better known!

Homeschooling Finds of the Week:
The COMPLETE SET of Magic School Bus episodes is going to be out on DVD soon!
Free & online–a 6 year math curriculum!
A bit about copywork…

Tarot Card of the Week:
“In meaning, this card is about a pinnacle in prosperity: a family home bought and paid for, a business that can be passed onto one’s children. It can indicate someone’s retirement, dealings with elderly relatives, genealogy, or inheritances-large or small. It can be about antiques and other old, valued things passed down through the generations.

On a simpler level, the card can indicate passing things on, like removing all those old clothes cluttering up the closet and giving them to the homeless, surrendering that collection of stuffed animals to a children’s hospital or clearing out books from the overflowing bookshelves and handing them over to a local library. Though similar to the Six of Pentacles, this is not so much about generosity as it is about using your abundance (wealth) to leave a legacy.” (from the Aeclectic Tarot)

(the card is from Vision Quest Tarot deck)

Parting thought: I am NOT looking forward to work tomorrow–its supposed to be a scorcher–at least 100 degrees…and I’m mostly outside (and when I’m inside, there’s no AC). So I’m headed for bed and as much sleep as possible!

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None is as free as one born on the wave, Born on the wave to the song of the sea; None can be brave until they are free, Free of all, but the call of the sea.

Month By Month

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About me

*Just an FYI: If you are wondering why there's not been a new post recently, new posts have been a bit slowed down by the new job...*

I am a (occasionally doting) wife, a damn proud momma of two adorable and brilliant children, a veteran of the United States Navy, beach addict, (American) Civil War reenactor and Victorian natural history aficionado, lover of steampunk, canoeing fanatic, science professional (and amateur in my preferred field), graduate student, and semi-erratic blogger.

If you have found this blog, you have also figured out that we are a Pagan family.  More aptly, I would describe my theological belief as a pragmatic sort of pantheism with a polytheistic practice and my religion as Unitarian Universalist Pagan.  I practice a bioregional witchery and herbalism (foraging ftw!), mainly working with domestic and elemental magics, and I have a thing for sea deities. For the most part, my blog covers a bit of all of these things, with a bit of randomness tossed in from time to time.

I enjoy playing with my kids, chillin with the hubster, swimming, being nerdy, the great outdoors, NCIS re-runs, chai tea--iced or hot, yoga, trashy romance novels, singing off key, kitchen experiments (of the culinary and non types), surfing the internet and painting.  I also like long walks on the beach and NPR's Science Friday and Neil deGrasse Tyson.  I love to read, sleep in on the weekend, and make the Halloween costumes for my kids every year. I am passionate about watershed ecology and local conservation efforts and vehemently anti-disposable plastics. But most of all...I'm just trying to take extravagant pleasure in the act of being alive.

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Tweeting Randomness

  • Spicy veggie pancakes with Greek yogurt (but made in the waffle iron), fried potatoes, and smoked tofu & zucchini s… twitter.com/i/web/status/1… 20 hours ago
  • RT @JacquelynGill: #MakeAPlanet I’m essential for life; rare in 🌎’s crust, but the most abundant element in our atmosphere. Eons ago, 🦠 evo… 22 hours ago
  • The best reminder... twitter.com/chelseakenna/s… 1 week ago
  • RT @carlhannah: @GrantGinder Via @stormygailart https://t.co/PcLNoWwEfz 1 week ago
  • Brendan Fraser was a favorite actor of mine...finding this out (a few years ago? Idk exactly when) was such a shock. twitter.com/ask_aubry/stat… 1 week ago

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Pagan Devotionals--seeking inspiration everywhere
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