4/19/2024
Opening the Gate for BeltaneBeltane is only two weeks away. Who's excited? I'm utterly ecstatic! This year I will be doing the May Branch at Holly of the "Mother Moon" store's Goddess Grotto in Allegan. The event is called "Opening the Gate" and takes place from Saturday May 4th to Sunday May 5th. There is a small charge for admission. Please bring a dish to pass. It's utterly worth it, as there will be a bonfire, May Pole, several other classes, workshops and rituals, and good company in a lovely rural setting. The May Branch uses a poppet that represents Death and removes him, and winter, from our lives for six months. The old branch, and the death poppet, are burned. Then a May Queen brings back Life and ushers in Springtime, represented by the colorful flowers on a new branch. It's an older folkplay that our family has done for years. Here are some images of the ceremony: Left: "Death" is removed from the village. Right: "Life" is returned to the village with the May Queen. More Information: https://www.facebook.com/events/1467466783804446
4/4/2024
Solar EclipseOn Monday, 8 April, there will a nearly total solar eclipse visible across much of the American Midwest. People are already tweaking about it – keep pets indoors! Don’t let your kids go to school! Call out FEMA! None of this hyperbolic panic is necessary. Just don’t stare into the sun. We went to the best visible place for the August, 2017 eclipse, near Murphysboro, IL. Here are photos. In April, 2015, there was a near total lunar eclipse visible in the dawn hours over Lake MI. Here are photos. What you can expect from a total solar eclipse: *Crescent-shaped shadows on the ground beneath bushes and trees *Weird light – it almost resembles a Van Gogh painting *Sunset / sunrise 360 degrees, meaning all the way around the horizon *For it to get dark! *Yes, some animals might be confused. Nocturnal animals awaken. Birds begin to sing like it’s sunrise. Times for Michigan: Things you can do: *Look up the exact times that the eclipse begins, its peak, and its end. *Use a hole-punch to make a round hole in a piece of cardboard. Hold it over a second flat piece of white cardboard. You’ll be able to see the eclipse progress on the paper. *Take pictures! *Look at the eclipse through welders’ goggles. Or look at the surrounding area – NOT directly at the sun – with special eclipse glasses. *Enjoy, because it won't happen again for 21 years. *Use this occasion for working magick! This rite will take place at "A Day of Magic", sponsored by Goddess Grotto and Sanctuary of the Winds. Cost is $30 person for the whole day, classes, food, and eclipse viewing. Proceeds support the Grand Rapids Pagan Pride day on Sept. 21 in Richmond Park, GR. https://fb.me/e/5qmPONtsu copy and paste URL into your browser for info The rite: As the moon occludes the sun, visualize with intent the removal of undesirable conditions and unwanted situations. These can include your own faults – anger, fear, jealousy. It can mean getting rid of untenable things such as a binding or roadblock to your success. It is a good time to lift curses and cut unwanted ties. Word your request to eliminate baneful or difficult circumstances – NOT people – for example, “My annoying boss has no effect on my life, his irritating traits are nullified,” without doing harm to the person themselves. Write these undesired conditions down. Draw pictures, use sigils and images to represent the situation. Burn the paper while speaking your will into manifestation. Use words like banish, eliminate, remove, cleanse, cast out, change, expel, vanquish, eradicate, dismiss, draw away. Be very specific about what you want to remove. During the time the moon is moving away from the sun, and the light is revealed, write down desired situations and beneficial conditions to replace the things you just banished. Or, write down some brand new things you wish to summon. These can include traits within yourself: courage, tenacity, good health. They can be material things: Financial well-being, a new car. These desired conditions can also be things like friendship, doing well in school, happiness. No, it is NOT true that eclipse magic does the opposite of what you want. We have used it several times during the last three solar eclipses – finding these astronomical events to be very powerful! This is also a new moon, the time for beginnings, the inception point. Again, be specific in your working, and talk about how and when you want the conditions to improve. Speak in positive terms, such as “I want a new job that is perfect for me in every way.” Again, draw pictures, use sigils, make images to reflect the ideals you wish to manifest. Call upon magickal helpers such as deities, ancestors, the Sun himself. Use herbs representing the sun such as heliotrope, or burn “Sun” incense. Again, Visualize with intent what you want the desired conditions to look like. Keep this paper with you or in your sacred space / altar until the condition has manifested to your liking. Use words like invoke, manifest, call forth, bring into being, summon, activate, entreat, evoke, create, improve, bless. Ask nice and say please. Remember to thank helpers for their aid. Your rite should end before the sun is completely restored in the sky. Today for April Fool's Day I am reprinting my son Brandyn's article about the Fool. It's a good one. The image is Picasso's Fool. For Millennia, the fool has captured the attention, hearts, and minds, of the people of every country. From politics to playing cards, this character has been the role of many people, to play its part in politics, acting, and religion. The very word “fool” is derived from the Latin form of “follis”, meaning bag of wind, a reference to both the taunting jokes from his mouth, and the stinking odor from behind.
There are many words for a fool, a clown, a jester, and all meaning extremely similar things, with a similar goal in mind: to entertain, to bring joy, and to demonstrate a message beneath. We can date oldest fools to around 2400 B.C, in the clowning of the Fifth dynasty of Egypt, the pantomimus in ancient Greece, as well as the shaman animal traits of Russia and North America, all of which have been fulfilled by religious leaders. Each of these has gone on to affect each kind of foolery we know today. The Clowning of Egypt has become the circus and rodeo clowns, the tom foolery of fairy tale, the makeup worn in theatre, and in storytelling, to show more closely the role the person is supposed to play. The Pantomimus became the French mimes, the improv, and the comedies we watch in the theatre, from plays to movies. The Shaman animal traits have developed into the court jester, from the motely garb they wear, to their ancient place in the courtroom. Because of their kind demeanor and honesty in the courts, this has often been some of the main elements for the fool, chastising peasant and king alike. In medieval courts there were two types of fool, that of the natural, and that of the licensed. The natural fools, often considered “touched by God,” were the disfigured, the mentally handicapped, or the insane; the licensed fools were those given permission by the courts. Both were given permission to mock and ridicule the royalty and their guests, as a form of advice and warning, and as entertainment to the others watching. Examples of historical, clown-like comedic performers have been the pantomimus in ancient Greece, the Lazzi of Commedia dell'Arte, buffoons, court jesters, as well as the French mime tradition. On top of this there are many non-European clowning traditions including clown-like figures in Japanese Kabuki theatre, and North American native shaman traditions to consider, which may or may not have influenced what we now think of as a clown in the Western world. However, fools set themselves aside from the clowns we think of today, in the fact they had an excuse for folly, and in the idea they did not commit the acts of tumbling, juggling, stumbling and etcetera, but to advise, provide an idea for free open thought, fully aware of the power held to influence, delivering information no one else would dare deliver, but the lack to commit proper action himself. A major example of such is in 1340, when the French fleet was destroyed at the Battle of Sluys by the English. Phillippe VI's jester, who told the king that the English sailors "...don't even have the guts to jump into the water like our brave French.” “That, of course, is the great secret of the successful fool – that he is no fool at all.” –Isaac Asimov Fools are often shown wearing a three-cornered hat, two corners being in the front and a third in the back; this was based upon the original hat of choice, a pair of donkey ears and tail, both to make an ass of the target of the fool, and “To make an ass of me”, in the words of William Shakespeare. Also in the bard’s words: “Motley is the only garb.” Fools would dress in motley during the reign of Elizabeth I, keeping the fool outside the social hierarchy and therefore not placed in a certain class, being outside sumptuary law, and able to speak more freely. Motley, meaning in most forms, a mix of varying things unrelated to each other and together relating to nothing at all, much as the fool’s social place was. During the holidays of Samhain, Yule, and Saturnalia, we see a shaping of the fool from different folk cultures, which Gerald Gardner incorporated into his Wicca, from the popular Loki, Pan and Puck, all effected during Roman expansion. These created the title of Lord of Misrule, who had precedence over all for the holiday. This position was a joyful one for the twelve days of Saturnalia, as the fool could make any person do as he pleased in the sense of good fun, but records show he was often sacrificed, in honor of Saturn’s own sacrifice. In Britain and France, the Feast of the Fool was held, in which a Lord of Misrule was chosen to preside over the drunken, and often rowdy festivities, and social precedence was postponed, forms of a silly switching of places were performed, servants and masters, men and women, all were fools to life, the festival made famous in America as a basis for Poe’s “The Cask of Amontillado.” In the Tarot, we can see many forms of the fool. In fact, the fool is not the only one to wear Motley. In the Middle Ages, Death was shown in Motley wear, because both humble all, but the last laugh is reserved for death. Often, in the decks before Waite-Smith, the Fool is almost always unnumbered. In the fifteenth century, the fool was numbered as a zero, an Arabic number, when all others were Roman; Charles Williams numbered the fool as "nought" in his book “Greater Trumps” These were both done in the presence of a sense of nothing being the opposite of an amount. As a final note, we can consider today, the role of the political fool still exists, in forms of shows which cordially make fun of recent politics, by political cartoonists, joke news reporters, and comedians alike. If one wishes to bring the elements of the old fool about, to incite in ritual or to study, some famous fools include: Harlequin, based upon a number of sources, essentially playing the character of a motley dressed, black masked man, chasing down the damned souls to end them to inferno. However, he rarely pursued them, being heavyset, although extremely nimble. He often chases a woman, Columbiana, caring only for food and fear of his master, often regarded as Death or some form of Satan, more than she. He is not considered an evil spirit, but care should be placed in invoking him, much like Loki, he is very mischievous. Richard Tarlton (died September 1588), an English Thespian, was most likely the famous clown of his era. Information of his early life is rare, working poor men’s hard labor. 1583, he is reported as one of the original members of the Queen's Men, and already an experienced actor. He was a major influence on Elizabethan fools and clowns, “he of clowns to learn still sought/ But now they learn of him they taught.” Tarlton studied natural fools and other simpletons to add knowledge to his characters. He combined the styles of the medieval, the professional minstrel, and the amateur Lord of Misrule. While on stage, he would match and provoke hecklers by responding with a creative, sometimes insulting rhyme. He would spend time after the play in a battle of wits with the audience. He worked with Queen Elizabeth's Men at the Curtain Theatre at the beginning of their career in 1583. The 1600 publication Tarlton’s Jests tells how Tarlton, upon his retirement, recommended Robert Armin take his place. Robert Armin, most likely the best Shakespearean actor to have ever lived, becoming so popular, the bard felt the need to write him out of Henry IV. In “A Nest of Ninnies”, Armin wrote about the difference between a natural and artificial fool. |
A.C. Fisher Aldag
Chronicler of Cymric Folklore, Granmother and grouch. Enjoyer of good food. Archives
October 2024
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Common Magick from Llewellyn Worldwide
Witches & Pagans # 38 & # 39 from BBI Llewellyn's Witches' Companion 2022, 2023 & 2034 from Llewellyn Worldwide Llewellyn's Spell-a-Day Almanac, 2025 from Llewellyn Worldwide |
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