Image from National Geographic. |
Another is the mantra, "Each person is responsible for their own action." This mantra is very important in defining my personal ethics and is very important in informing my understanding of not just the human world, but the natural and spiritual worlds as well. The following passage from Riding Windhorses expresses this mantra in a very well and in a way that makes a lot of sense to me. This is in the context of Northern Asian shamanism, primarily among the Siberian and Mongolian peoples.
"Shamanism is concern with personal power and bringing good fortune into one's life. In the context of the cosmology described above, one must remember the saying, 'Everyone has his own universe, everyone has his own path.' While every day brings an individual into contact with the personal worlds of others, the core issues of life lie within one's personal universe. In this individual aspect of the cosmos, a person stands at the perfect center of the universe, supported by Mother Earth and enveloped in the clear blue vastness of Father Heaven. At the center one's cosmic soul (suns) shines as a bright white star, and the body soul (ami) is a red point of light. One can fly freely within the vastness of space or travel upon the earth. Because one has his or her own path, one is ultimately responsible for his or her own actions."This also expresses a lot of other important concepts in my beliefs and practice. Present here is the concept of the Guardian of the Centre, and also of Witch Herself. Modern science and common belief says that it is pure ego to say the earth is the centre of the universe, and especially to say yourself is the centre. But who doesn't feel, at least subconsciously, that they are the centre? That doesn't mean no one else is important, or that all should serve and cater to you, or that it's all about you. But you relate to the world from your own person, not from the centre of the galaxy or solar system, nor even from the person you hold most dear. You relate to the world from your own person, so that is the centre of your world. You are the centre of the web, the weave. All the threads in your life radiate out from you, connecting you to the things and beings around you.
The Fable of Arachne by Velazquez, image from Hellenica. |
Horizontal Traditional Loom, Centre Cultural Alexandra David-Neel. |
The Norns |
O.E. wyrd "fate, destiny" (n.), lit. "that which comes," from P.Gmc. *wurthis (cf. O.S. wurd, O.H.G. wurt "fate," O.N. urðr "fate, one of the three Norns"), from PIE *wert- "to turn, wind," (cf. Ger. werden, O.E. weorðan "to become"), from base *wer- "to turn, bend" (see versus). For sense development from "turning" to "becoming," cf. phrase turn into "become." The modern sense of weird developed from M.E. use of weird sisters for the three fates or Norns (in Germanic mythology), the goddesses who controlled human destiny. They were usually portrayed as odd or frightening in appearance, as in "Macbeth," which led to the adj. meaning "odd-looking, uncanny," first recorded 1815. (http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?term=weird)
Frigg Weaving the Clouds |
Wyrd itself is Fate, the web of all things that were once whole. Orlog is the ever changing threads which are found in the athem. It is the fate of the individual itself. Orlog affects hamingja and vice versa. The hamingja bears the orlog in this life. By fulfilling and bettering the hamingja, one takes care of orlog. This in turn “feeds” the fetch, or spirit, by fulfilling fate and bringing the fetch one step closer to completing the true “Great Work.” So it would seem that Orlog is the transmitter of wyrd to the hamingja and that by improving hamingja one can create a better wyrd for the future. (http://artesmagicae.blogspot.com/2010/08/following-is-second-chapter-from-book.html)
The Athem is the spirit cord, divine spark or “breath of life” which flows through us. These cords, which all things possess are the “Threads of Fate” which tie all things together. It is when these “threads” cross that we become attached to another being or thing and thus generate more “fate” (understood by most modern cultures as karma.) It is the series of all athems which bind all things together in the great tapestry of Fate. It is both a completion and destruction of the tapestry, by resolving all fate that we shall finally achieve the Great Work as a universe and allow the Godhead to be whole again. Each athem by itself also binds together each part of the individual anthropos. It is through the athem that we make contact with entities of spirit and, indeed, our own spirits. This is because the athem is in constant contact with the spiritual forces of the universe. It is interesting that the Egyptians seem to have believed that life ended when the ka left the body, which seems to support our analysis here. (http://artesmagicae.blogspot.com/2010/08/following-is-second-chapter-from-book.html)
The fetch is the portion of the soul complex that truly lives on after we are no more. It is what truly carries wyrd from life to life. (http://artesmagicae.blogspot.com/2010/08/fetch-true-spirit-and-meaning-of-life.html)(Note that he is using the word fetch differently than I used above, much closer to what I mean by Godself. Read his whole articles to understand his use of it, which is Germanic in origin, whereas my usage comes from Feri.)
So, according to Dr. R.J. Thompson, we have the fetch (Godself) carrying wyrd between lifetimes, with the wyrd residing in the athem. These cords, the athem, the "Threads of Fate", is what I'm talking about here.
The Godself, the (Greater) Neshamah is made up of three parts in Kabbalah, the (lesser) neshamah, the chiah, and the yechidah. In the way I see these, the (lesser) neshamah contains our capacity for love, the chiah contains our True Will, and the yechidah our Divine Sparks, which are also the Threads of Fate. The yechidah is the athem Dr. Thompson talked about. It connects us with the Divine, to which all things are connected. The yechidah is our Soul Root, which grows in the soil of the Divine. Picture an upside down tree, with the roots in the ground above and the branches reaching for the sky below, which is our world, the World of Action.
These "Threads of Fate" are Neshamah's web. Just as Fetch's web, the aka threads, connect to all things she has touched, to the Fetch of others, just as Talker's web, our social network, connects to all beings we interact with, to their Talkers, Godself's web, the Threads of Fate, connect her to the Godself of all others, and to the Divine, which is the same thing. She, too, sits at the centre of her web, for only our own Fate, our own Destiny is relevant to us. Other's actions effect us, other's threads cross ours, but only our own Fate matters in the end.
The Lady of Shalott, by William Holman Hunt, 1905 |
I am the Guardian of the Centre. I am Witch. I loose and I bind. I spin, I measure, I cut. I weave the tapestry of my life. I am responsible for it, and I have Power over it. I am Human, but I am also Divine. I am Fey. I am God Herself. I am the Nagara. I am the Tvennr. I am the Grimr. I am the Vordr. I am the Heidr. I am all things. And I am nothing. It is my world, my universe. I am the Centre. I am the Circumference of all.
FFF,
~Muninn's Kiss
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