Friday, September 30, 2011

How the Wheel Turns for Me

There's a debate currently going 'round the Pagan blogsphere about whether 'real' witches celebrate Halloween or Samhain. The argument being if you are serious about your religion then you call it Samhain.

I call it Halloween. I don't think this makes me less of a witch.

Sometimes words are really important. Sometimes changing the name changes the thing. Hold on a minute while my Inner English Teacher comes out:

A woman without her man is nothing.

Now let's give those same words a more feminist slant-

A woman- without her, man is nothing.

Same exact words. Two completely different meanings.

To me there are two halloweens. There is halloween the cheap which children love because of all the sugar handed out with reckless abandon. Halloween the cheap runs from tacky to a bit scary, but is all fun. Then there is Real Halloween when the veil between the worlds is thinnest. During Real Halloween the world comes to an end and is reborn. Real Halloween is scary because it forces us to really look at our lives. Real Halloween reminds us of our own demise. Real Halloween asks us if we have truly been living.

The two halloweens are flip sides of the same coin. I can sit on my porch handing out candy, and I love trick-o-treaters because no one really does it anymore, which I think is the saddest thing on earth, but I can't ignore Halloween has a dark side. And I think sometimes we need to be scared. Fear gives rise to courage. Sometimes after a scary thing is over we realize it wasn't as bad as we feared and then we have the confidence to move forward, to tackle other thorny issues, to face other shadows.

Part of the debate is that Pagans should acknowledge their Celtic roots, thus we can only call the holiday Samhain. I disagree because I'm not Celtic. Don't get me wrong, I started out studying the Celtic pantheon. My first Goddess was Brighid. I love the mythology. I want to visit the United Kingdom one day and see all those standing stones for myself.

But I live in America. I find myself moved by the forces of this place. There is no Stonehenge here. We have wild boars, but no wise salmon. If I followed a strictly Celtic path, there would be no place for Coyote. And even living in America doesn't mean all American Witches practice the same. Right now it's still warm enough for me to have rituals outside because I live in the subtropical South. Northern Witches are bringing their potted plants in at night. What would I be doing if I lived in Mexico? Would I celebrate one day of the dead (Dia de los Muertos) or would I party for a whole week (Dias de los Muertos)? If I was a Mexican Witch would I be considered less for only celebrating one day? (There's a debate there, too. I remember my professor talking about permanent and temporary conditions. The words change to show the state of the condition. On the one hand, a person was alive then died, so they haven't always been dead. On the other hand, once you're dead you can't come back to life. Wondering if death is permanent or temporary puts a whole new spin on the afterlife.)

I just celebrated Mabon. I like the sound of the word Mabon. But in six months I'll be celebrating Spring, not Oestara or Easter. I celebrate Summer Solstice, not Midsummer because to me it's not the middle of anything. I have a quiet Yule for myself and Christmas with friends and family. Sometimes I have to do three or four Christmases because I can't fit everyone in at the same time, our schedules don't allow it. I hate Christmas. I hate the mass commercialism, the mad spending, the stuffy parties, and the overly rich food. But I suffer through it because my family loves it.

That's really what it all boils down to- you can celebrate anything you want, and call it by any name you like, but please don't take my celebration from me.

Thursday, September 29, 2011

What We Have Here Is a Failure to Communicate

Okay, I despise the movie Cool Hand Luke because I think it's a pointless guy movie about nothing, but the quote I'm using for my post title does sum it all up.

I love Mr. Dragon's body. I love his broad shoulders, narrow hips, and long legs. He is just so well made! We were sitting side by side tonight, talking. Without even thinking about it, I brushed my fingertips down the nape of his neck. I want to kiss his neck. It is really hard to be so close to him and not touch. He leaned forward, taking his neck out of my reach.

Sometimes he lets me touch and sometimes he doesn't.

Sometimes he reaches for my hand. And sometimes he stays just far enough away that I can't reach for him without looking like a grasping fool.

I think he liked it. I think maybe he liked it a little too much so he leaned forward before we got carried away at work. I think. I could be wrong.

Because what we have here is a failure to communicate openly and honestly.

Tuesday, September 27, 2011

The Family Tree Project

I saw a cool idea on the Internet- a tree painted on a wall with family pictures hung on the tree. I loved it. But my landlord probably won't like me painting the wall, so I am painting on foam board.
I picked black foam board because that was the color Target had the most of, just in case I want to expand later. And I figured silver looks good on black. I debated for a long, long time about what kind of tree to draw, but the silver settled things nicely. It's a dead tree. I love finding branches striped of bark, smooth and silver. And I love the look of gnarled limbs reaching for the sky. I love old trees. I like to wonder how long the tree's been around and what it might have witnessed. There's something very magickal about a really old tree. And since this is a magick tree, it doesn't have to be a certain kind. It's not a willow, oak, or dogwood, it's unique just like my family.

Here's a bit of Norse mythology. I just had to have a dragon. He gnaws on a tree root whenever he gets hungry.

I have four pieces of foam board taped to the wall and further reinforced with nickel upholstery tacks. The foam board will allow me to pin photographs up. When I move, I can take my tree. I was going to use black and white photos, but I want to use some color pictures that I don't think will translate well to black and white. I'm thinking about putting some kind of border around each picture for unity and to hold the picture in place without causing damage from pushpins.

If you are a little smarter than me, you will do all your drawing/painting BEFORE hanging the board on the wall so your arm doesn't ache from being held at an awkward angle.

This is the quote I will hang on the tree trunk.

I'm going to add some leaves. I decided on purple and copper. I bought scrapbook paper from my local craft store to make the leaves. I decided to use a sweet gum leaf as my pattern. I adore sweet gum trees. I may be the only person on the planet who likes them. Sweet gums are the first trees to change colors in the fall. Sometimes the leaves are the most wonderful shade of midnight magick purple. I can't think of any other tree with purple leaves. I even love sweet gum balls. They make fine ingredients for protection spells.

Every day, I color in a few branches. I have three of the four panels done. Today, my Goddess spoke to me. Why don't you draw anymore?

Hmm, good question! I used to draw/doodle all the time, especially in the high school. I drew lots of circles and swirls. I drew and colored. Sometimes I would close my eyes, let the pencil wander around the paper, then open my eyes and look for familiar shapes. Why did I stop? It was brain exercise. I think it's time to invest in a sketch book.

Monday, September 26, 2011

The Menu ('Bout Time!)

Okay, okay, I promise in the future to be a better kitchen witch and to post weekly menus. Or, I promise to do my best, because, let's face it- I've been late my whole life. I was even born late. But I have good intentions. Hmm, isn't there a road to somewhere paved with those?

The first thing I made today was coffee- for tomorrow. I am never awake enough to manage the task and by the time my eyes come unglued I don't need coffee. I have a stove top percolator. Everyone urges me to come out of the 'dark ages' and buy a coffeemaker. People insist a coffeemaker is better because they have timers and the coffee is ready as soon as you roll out of bed. But still, someone must make the coffee the night before and set the timer. I don't see how that's much different from what I'm doing now, except that when the power goes out I can still make coffee on my gas stove. So phhhiiiffffffttttttt!

Next, I made sandwiches- for Monday and Tuesday. It's a lot easier to toss a ready made sandwich in the cooler than to scramble around slapping together mustard and turkey at the last minute.

I fried some ham. Some of it I saved, and some of it I used on a wrap with a fried egg and cheese. Wraps are as easy as sandwiches, but they will hold messier ingredients. I use plain ol' flour tortillas. The tortilla is my favorite versatile food- burritos, wraps, casadias, Mexican pizza pie, and in a pinch, nachos.

Finally, I made veggie beef soup. I've posted about this before. This time I used a package of stew meat (always brown the meat first!), two sweet potatoes, a can of mushrooms, frozen broccoli, carrots, and green beans, two small tomatoes from my garden, and a box of beef broth. I cooked it in the slow cooker. It made five bowls. I froze two, saved two for later, and ate the last with hot sauce. It was awesome!

And no, I didn't eat all this food back to back. The wrap was around 5pm and the soup at 3am. Night shift, remember?

I still have a little more cooking to do. I plan on making hamburger helper (I can alternate between helper and soup so I don't get bored) and if I scramble some eggs to go with the sausage I bought today, I'll have breakfast, too. I'll probably make a pan of biscuits because I think soup needs bread.

So here's this week's menu:
Monday-
breakfast: scrambled eggs, fried sausage
lunch: hamburger helper, biscuit, peas
supper: sandwich, chips

Tuesday-
breakfast: waffle, fried ham
lunch: veggie beef soup, biscuit
supper: sandwich, chips

Wednesday-
breakfast: scrambled eggs, ham or sausage
lunch: hamburger helper, biscuit, broccoli
supper: sandwich, chips

Thursday and Friday will be repeats of Monday and Tuesday. At this point, I will probably need to cook more breakfast food. I might eat the last of the biscuits. Thursday is payday. I like to have enough food to get through the money. I realize sometimes I might be a little short, which is why I froze some of my soup. I could also make breakfast wraps and freeze them. Or I could take my tortillas and make casadias. I try to leave openings in my menus because I know if it can go wrong it will- one day I'll work late and won't feel like cooking, I might have a low sugar and need to grab something from the vending machine. I could get invited out to lunch with co-workers, or I might forget to bring my cooler. So if I know something will go wrong, why do I plan what to eat? Because it helps me track my carbs. If my sugar is high on Monday, I know to leave off the biscuit. If I wake up with a low sugar on Wednesday, I can trade eggs for a waffle. Tuesday looks like the most carbs, so that would be a good day to take a long walk. A diabetic who wants to live a long time does not mindlessly eat.

Actually, now that I look at it, I have too many carbs on the menu. I think I'll forgo biscuits for wheat bread. A homemade biscuit is around 30 carbs. One slice of Nature's Own is 10 carbs. If I don't eat any bread, my only carbs in the soup will be from the potatoes and the green beans.

I plan to get more detailed with the menus- carbs, alternate ideas, ways to stretch the dollar, eating what's in season, and ways to make it witchy.

Today I'm just glad I wrote the post.

Sunday, September 25, 2011

Mabon 2011

Today, I finally got around to celebrating Mabon.
First, I cleaned my altar. Here is a rather blurry shot:
I like to make some spells, like gris-gris bags and powders, ahead of time so they are ready when I need them. I discovered the only powder I currently have is banishing powder. Hopefully over the next few weeks I can share my powder recipes.

Next, I put out a few Halloween decorations.

This is Bubba, my newest skeleton. Bob and Billy are on the front porch. I put a flying witch in the kitchen window and a Halloween wreath on the mailbox. Guess I should have taken some pics of those. While I was at the mailbox, I did a spell to receive good news in the mail and to protect myself from junk mail. I used to have a similar spell on the house phone; I tied a silver cord to the phone line for clear communication and for protection from telemarketers. I've also used butterflies. I used feathers on the mailbox. Anything you associate with air will work.

This is Kevin's old grill. I use it as a fire pit. I believe in having fires on holidays. It's still a bit warm, so I won't light my small fire until tonight.

I've been sitting in my chair with my notebook questioning myself about what kind of witch I am, how I can be a better witch, what are my Goddesses asking of me, and trying to figure out what kinds of totem animals I can use in rituals. I'm trying to only use animals found in Tallapossa County.

I also want to start my fall garden today. I have a little day light left, so I need to pull up spent tomato vines and give serious thought to the mint garden I've been planning.

Happy Mabon!

Wednesday, September 21, 2011

:SHIVER: Rattlesnake!

Sophie barked non-stop while I tried to sleep. I yelled at her, banged on the window, and yelled again. Bark, bark, bark, BARK! Finally, I went outside to see what all the fuss was about. A rattlesnake as big as my arm was curled up in the dog pen. I was nervous about shooting in the pen with the dogs and since the snake was right by the gate, I wasn't going over there. I called my landlord. The snake died of a single shotgun blast to the head.

Ick.

Damn, Wednesday Already

I'll get to the menu when I can. I just worked a 12 hour shift for the second day in a row. Monday I got up early to run errands, then got to work and found out we were having visitors the next day, so we worked our regular shift then an extra four hours to clean the plant. Tonight, or rather, Tuesday when the shift started, we started out on 9 hours, then it gradually increased until I got off work at sunrise. Now it's Wednesday and my feet hurt so bad they are burning. My landlord is supposed to come over and fix the toilet today, so my sleep will be interrupted again. And I was supposed to cut grass, but it's been raining, and I really, really, really don't feel like doing yard work so maybe I'll get out of it. Maybe. Supposedly, production orders have increased and I will be doing a lot of overtime. Right now I'm looking at 60 hour weeks. I need the money (Celtic knot spell!) but I feel tired just thinking about it. Any suggestions on how to spend my extra pay?

Monday, September 19, 2011

An Afternoon in the Mini Rose Garden


 
I swear there's a rose bed among all this grass.
Is this bare ground I see?























That's better.










I even planted 2 more mini roses.





Sunday, September 18, 2011

Talkie Sunday Post- Tight Jeans Rock!

No, it's not me- I can't figure out a good way to take a pic of my own butt. The point is, I wore the same tight jeans to work again last night and Mr. Dragon came around THREE times just to talk to me. I might need to upgrade all my clothes to a smaller size.

This weekend is the last weekend of summer so I hope you have been enjoying yourself. Next weekend we will be under the rule of fall, my favorite season! For Mabon I plan on working in my garden. I love gardening in the fall. It's cool enough to actually dig in the dirt without breaking a sweat as soon as I grab a shovel. Spring always seems frantic to me. Fall is unhurried.

Mabon is also when I start putting up Halloween decorations. Of course, this year I started a little early with my gourds. I have more gourds to carve, I'm definitely putting a cemetery in the front yard, and I have skeletons to buy. I've got to turn my bottle tree into a ghost tree. I think I need a new Halloween wreath, too.

Today is my only day off. I am chomping at the bit to tend my roses. I already washed dishes, made the bed, and started a load of laundry. Tomorrow I should have a menu post. One thing you can do to plan your meals, and track what you are eating, is to write down everything you eat for a week. That is your menu. After you get your food on paper, you can easily see where changes should be made. I suggest changing things slowly. Diets generally don't work because your body freaks out when it doesn't get the food it is accustomed to. On a diet, you're eating less and you're eating radically different food. It's not a lack of willpower, it's your body rebelling- that's why you're hungry and irritable. Feel better now?

Since I will be staying up all night, I will probably do another post later today/tonight. See you then.

Saturday, September 17, 2011

hot/cold/hot/cold

Yesterday, Mr. Dragon didn't want to talk to me.

Today, Mr. Dragon watched me. All night. Everywhere I went, there he was.

I saw him peering around the corner at me.

Then he deliberately walked by and waved.

My friend Nene said it was my tight jeans that did the trick.

See why I'm confused?

But I am so wearing tight jeans tomorrow!

Friday, September 16, 2011

Turn Him Loose

I've given up on Mr. Dragon. First he wants me, then he ignores me. He's sweet, then he's aloof. He calls, then he's busy. Last night I approached him before lunch and he coldly informed me that he had to get in the break room because the night before he didn't have time to warm up his food. WTF? That really pissed me off, he didn't know what I was going to say. Maybe I caught him on  a bad day, but I don't think he should treat me like a doormat. I am open and honest all the time and I expect everyone else to be that way too. The man confuses me and I don't want to be confused. I really, really like him but I can't deal with hot and cold.

I'm just chillin' for now. Eventually, a good man will come along. I made a list of Important Qualities for my future mate. In no particular order, they are:

1. Single (I've met a lot of men with wives/girlfriends who think they can still have a relationship with me. No, you can't)
2. Honest
3. Kind
4. Handsome
5. Strong (I like 'em big, rugged, and manly!)

6. Smells good (with the right cologne, you can talk me into almost anything)
7. Intelligent (I need someone to talk to)

8. Beautiful eyes (I'm a sucker for pretty eyes and a slow grin)
9. Loves me
10. Easy-going
11. Sense of humor
12. Great in bed (I won't lie, sex is very important to me)
13. Thoughtful and generous

14. Romantic
15. Likes to work with his hands (Profession is not important here. I just see creativity as a sign of an active, healthy mind. And it's useful to have a guy who can fix stuff)
16. Confident (A secure man is a sexy man)
17. Open-minded
18. Hard working
19. Passionate
20. Really turns me on.
21. Should be my age or older (35 to 45). I don't fool with young guys.

In short, I need a simple man I can't resist. Maybe I can find a hot state trooper. I love men in uniform!

In other news, last night I bought a Halloween mask! :squeal!: I haven't own a mask since I was a kid. My glasses always got in the way. But now I have contacts and I can pretend like I'm not blind as a bat.

It's a cheap Wally World Mask. Surprisingly, Wal-Mart had real Halloween stuff- skulls, witches, monsters, and the like. I went in to cash my paycheck and to buy nail polish, then I walked down the wrong aisle and boom! there was a Halloween display right out of my childhood. I wandered around black pumpkins for half an hour or so, thoroughly enchanted.

Next week, I'll have some menus. Hopefully I'll get a day off this weekend and I'll have time to blog. I've been working a lot of overtime and when I do get out of prison, er, I mean work, all I feel like doing is sitting on the porch.

Tuesday, September 13, 2011

The Radical Rejection: Everything I've Been Told About Diabetes is Wrong

This is the book I'm currently reading:
http://www.amazon.com/Sugar-Nation-Hidden-Americas-Deadliest/dp/1401323448/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1315942041&sr=1-1
I freely admitt I haven't read the whole thing. I finished up the chapter on all the ways diabetes can kill a person and I was so depressed I had to read two werewolf novels to get my head back to normal.

The book is mainly about type 2 diabetes. I'm a type 1 diabetic. But still, it's full of useful information. The author, Jeff O'Connell is prediabetic. He maintains diet and exercise goes a long way in controlling the disease. In fact, he says those two simple things work better than any insulin or pill.

Of course, I was told I needed to eat right and exercise. I was given some guidelines set by the American Diabetic Association. I am allowed 15 grams of carbs in a serving and 45 grams of carbs in a meal. I was told as long as I stuck to this plan I would be healthy.

O'Connell eats less than 80 grams of carbs per day!

It seemed too little. I was told men need more carbs than women, thus the ADA allows men 20 carbs per serving and 60 carbs per meal. Wouldn't my sugar be too low?

I decided to experiment.

Stashing food in my purse just in case I had an emergency, I dramatically cut my carbs. And yes, my sugar did drop, but it was always before meals, in other words, about the time it would drop anyway. And how did I feel after a meal? Just fine.

Oh yeah, and I didn't need fast acting insulin for three days.

It's the lack of insulin shots that has me most excited. I've gotten used to jabbing myself with needle but I'd still rather not do it. You know, the whole freak thing- I don't like being reminded I am different.

If the diet was not the best thing for me, what else is wrong?

I was encouraged to attend the Diabetic Center near the hospital. My insurance paid for three classes dealing with the subject of diabetes. Afterwards, I went every two weeks to be counseled by nurses and dietitians.

I quit the counseling sessions.

It went like this- each time I saw someone different. Each person had a slightly different idea of what I needed to control my illness. Every two weeks, one of them would make a change in my insulin dosage.

Insulin is not something to fuck with. At least, not for me. Maybe other diabetics don't have this problem. But if I don't take the same dose at the same time every day I get sick as a dog. My stomach churns and I want to throw up so bad I don't know what to do. But I never vomit. I just feel nausea rolling up my throat and down again. It sometimes takes around, oh, say two weeks, for me to adjust. At which time another well-meaning nurse would urge me to up the dose.

Maybe the Diabetic Center would have worked for if I had seen the same person every time. As it was, I only liked one nurse and she had once been obese and had gestational diabetes. She understood the struggle with food, glucose testing, and low sugars. I'd like to think she looked at me and saw a person. Every one else saw a patient and some of them were giving me information 10 years out of date.

The book talks about how the medical profession is not prepared to deal with diabetes. In my personal experience, this is very true. My doctor's nurse and a Diabetic Center dietitian utterly forgot I was on two different kinds of insulin, and wanted me to take an excessive amount of NovoLog which lead to many a low sugar. The first emergency room doctor to discover I was diabetic diagnosed me as a type 2 based on my age. It was not until AFTER I got out of the hospital that my personal physician realized I was a type 1. The two types might have the same effects, but they are treated differently. In fact, there is a 'new type' of diabetes in which type 2's have the same problems as type 1's. I don't think there's a new type at all, I think a bunch of adults are being labeled wrong because even doctors forget type 1 is INSULIN DEPENDENT and type 2 is insulin RESISTANT.

In the hospital, I was put on a liquid diet. My first meal was Sprite, Jello, and a Popsicle. All loaded with sugar. I ate it and threw up. I didn't know any better but the hospital should have. My next tray was Sprite Zero, sugar-free Jello, and beef broth. Which wasn't much healthier. Why is a hospital serving soda and processed food? They gave me orange juice in the hospital. Orange juice is liquid sugar and a no-no for diabetics.

No one has told me how certain food will react with my body. No one has said if it is better to eat simple or complex carbs. I got a poster with meal suggestions, six meals in all. That's it? Shouldn't I have gotten a diabetic cookbook and a month's worth of menus?

No one has told me the long term effects of taking too much insulin. I know my body still produces some insulin on its own, but I don't know how much. I don't know if taking insulin every day will eventually cause my body to stop making its own insulin or not. If the whole problem is my body cannot produce enough, why aren't we trying to figure out how to increase my own natural insulin production?

This is the problem as I see it-

1. There is no one cause of diabetes. Like cancer, many factors COULD cause the illness. No one knows how many of the factors must come into play before disaster strikes.

2. There are simple steps to take to manage the illness. But diabetes is a full time job I didn't ask for, don't want, and can't quit. The disease is my whole life and I cannot forget about it. Ever.

3. Diabetes has time on its side. It works slowly, killing you for most of your life before you notice.

4. Type 1 is an autoimmune illness. There is no possible way to defend my body from itself. And it's just a little creepy knowing your own body is trying to kill you.

Those are just the problems with the illness itself. Some other problems are overworked doctors assuming you have brains enough to eat healthy, but not telling you what healthy eating is. Ditto with telling you to exercise, but not telling you what kinds of exercise to do. Information is lacking. One of the first things I learned was my sugar will skyrocket the day before my period. I tried to figure out why and if I should do something about it. I scoured the Internet and could not find one study about diabetic women and menstruation. There's plenty of information about pregnancy and diabetes, but nothing about the daily affects of diabetes on hormones. Nor did I find anything about a woman's sex drive and diabetes. And let me tell you, just prior to going into the hospital, I didn't want sex at all. Poor Kevin thought I was about to kick him to the curb; he was sure I'd found someone else. I guess the medical profession is still squeamish when it comes to talking openly about vaginas.

Actually, they don't seem to be talking about anything at all. No one told my emotions would go wild during a low sugar, that I could become irrational, terrified, or violent. No one said I'd feel tense and angry when my sugar goes too high. No one told me hungry doesn't mean low sugar. In fact, for me, low sugar means NOT hungry. No one told me my sugar will change in accordance with the weather. No one mentioned the headaches. No one warned me about waking up in the middle of the night with my heart pounding, dripping sweat, and not caring if I died, just wanting to go back to sleep.

If you think you can avoid my fate, think again. Diabetes has reached epidemic levels. I've heard everything from 7% to 12% of the American population is diabetic. Chances are, you know a diabetic.

Most people blame the food. We eat junk then lay around and watch tv. I don't think food is the sole cause, but I do know we could all benefit from changing our diets and getting off our asses. So, if you are interested, I will start posting menus each week. I'm poor, so my meals won't be expensive, another benefit to you. I try to eat seasonally, so there's a benefit for the earth-friendly minded. And if you want to know how I keep my flat stomach, I'll post that too.

Monday, September 12, 2011

We Now Return to the Unimportant Stuff

I finished the fridge. Here are my new Celtic knots-
This one is for money. I seem to be chronically short of funds. I used green, of course, and gold. The circles look like coins to me, which was why I picked this design. I placed a magnet in the middle to help attract money to me. Every time I see this knot, I will say, I have plenty of money. Eventually this will become true.

This is for my health spell. If you look carefully, you will see this designs makes three times three answer to seven. Three triple spirals making seven circles. I chose this knot because my a1c has to be 7%.

Finally, the love protection spell. I want to nurture and protect my growing relationship with Mr. Dragon. This knot is based on threes- two joining to make one. It's perfect for relationships. It looks very feminine to me (as in pubic hair shape) I used fire colors because I want the spark of passion to grow into a steady flame, but I also used purples because I want a rich, full relationship. The yellow background is for happiness.

So how do you make a Celtic Knot spell? Begin with a knot design that appeals to you. The knot should have some personal meaning to you. Look carefully at how it is put together. In my love spell, the triangle overlaps the circles symbolizing growth beyond the expected bounds.

Next, think about colors. What are you trying to attract? Dark colors tend to be more closed and light colors are more open.

Try to figure out the numbers. Remember why I chose the knot for my health spell. The money knot is based on four, which to me means having all your bases covered- the four directions, four seasons, four walls of a house.

Color the design. It helps if you can speak your intent while coloring. I suggest making several copies to color. I like to work slowly, coloring each part of the design individually so I can see how the knots intertwine. Sometimes what looks like one strand can be two. Finding a hidden element in your knot means there is more going on in your life than you realize.

Last, the design must be awakened. You can burn a candle over it, charge it under the moon, enchant it, or tap out sound as you trace the design. The knot can also be burned, buried, or thrown into living water, and all these are good for banishing, but I don't like to destroy anything that was a lot of work to create.

My knot spells generally last a few months. When you feel the design no longer has a power, depose of it. I usually tear mine up.

Sunday, September 11, 2011

Surreal

Ten years ago on this day, I was half asleep, dreading going to class when my father told me 'they've bombed the World Trade Center and the PENTAGON'

His words didn't make any sense.

Who would attack us? We are the all powerful United States and a mere look from us will render lesser countries powerless.

I think my generation was always under the mistaken impression no one would dare attack us. Sure, stuff happens elsewhere in the world, but not here on home soil. Not with oceans to the east and west. We have no quarrel with Canada or Mexico. And anyway, if an army came sailing up to our coast, we have a Navy, Coast Guard, Marines, AND the Army and the Air Force.

Perfectly safe.

But we're not. We have defense against armies, we have no defense against a handful of madmen.

And still don't, ten years later.

My father watched television nearly 24 hours straight. I was unable to escape the sight of planes crashing into the towers. Finally, I told him to turn the tv off and go to bed. He got really angry with me. History is occurring right before our eyes. We are entering a new era. My father was born in 1932. He remembers his uncles coming home from World War II changed by the torture they endured, the lives they took. His grandfather fought in World War I. My father fought in Korea. He watched the Vietnam War with interest, compared it to the combat he knew and the stories he'd heard from other men. There is a bit of solider in every man and my father the solider wanted to know his enemy. He had already loaded his guns and checked all the windows in the house.

It was not that I didn't care. It was that I was suffering from sensory overload. Evidently my mother was too, because she sided with me and the television was glaringly silent.

What I remember most about that time was duct tape. People rushed down the the local hardware store to buy duct tape and plastic sheeting. Everyone was sealing up their houses against bio-chemical warfare. Which was stupid. If you sealed up your house so no airborne pathogens or chemicals could get in, then you couldn't get out. What were people going to do, just sit at home and wait to die? How long are you going to sit there? A day? A week? A month? How much food and water do you have? Did you remember extra water for bathing? Do you have animals? Are they out or in? It was madness and I couldn't take it. I boldly went on with my life, still taking daily walks and leaving the windows open at night to catch a breeze.

I begin to have nightmares. In all of them, I hear the drone of a plane. I scream at my parents to go in the house. For some reason my dog is way off at the back of the property. I cannot bear the thought of leaving such a loyal creature to die. I run across the fields to get him. The plane is circling. I pick the dog up. He is very heavy and I am running back to the house in slow motion. The plane drops a bomb which is also moving slowly, tumbling lazily through the air. I know the bomb contains poison chemicals. The bomb hits the ground before I reach the house. Still holding the dog, I dive under the car. I hear the hiss of gas...

I would wake up drenched in sweat. I would force myself to lay back down. I had the overwhelming urge to run, hide, take my family to safety. I would lay in the dark and wonder if I had been screaming. I hope I didn't wake anybody. I would tell myself it was unlikely terrorists would attack Alabama, but then, I used to think no one would attack Americans in their own country. Suddenly I saw the duct tape for what it was- an attempt to keep the public from panicking. Listen to the soothing voice of the government official telling you how to be safe. Don't worry about a thing. Yeah, it was stupid, but what else could they tell us?

I don't have nightmares anymore, but I might if I turn on the television today. So I'm not watching the news and I'm not flying a flag or hanging up ribbons. I can think of a thousand faceless people dying for no reason and I can get angry about it. But if I hear their names my heart begins to break. I can understand soldiers meeting face to face on the battlefield, but I cannot understand killing people while they live their lives just because they are American. I cannot understand, and I see no honor in, an unprovoked attack on civilians.

September 11th is the day I can't forget, the time we slipped into a parallel universe of horror. It's a time when nothing was ever right with the world again. I can't process it, can't deal with it, can't think on it too much or fear overtakes me. And for me, peace of mind is being able to sleep with the windows wide open.

Saturday, September 10, 2011

Cleaned Off

I kept the little deer thermometer, he's useful. Later, I'll get an outside thermometer because I like knowing useless information. And no, I do not care to watch the weather channel. I'm much more interested in what is happening at my house than at the weather station. Maybe I should make a windsock. Knowing which wind is blowing can be useful for spells.
I took down all the Celtic knots except for King Arthur. Who can resist a king? Arthur's noble nature and good heart remind me of Mr. Dragon. The magnetic bottle opener is more useful than my thermometer and I might go back to the meat store, so I kept their card. That's my broom hanging on the wall, the mundane one, not the witch's broom.

The only thing I kept from the side of the fridge was the map. I put the coupons in my purse, the cards in my wallet, and the recipes in my cookbook. I put the dogs' certificates in page protectors and hung them on a clipboard on the porch beside the door. That way when the deputy comes around to make sure everyone is following the law, he won't need to wake me up.

I started coloring new Celtic knot art, but I haven't finished them yet. I may forgo a Silent Sunday post in favor of knot spells. I'm doing 3- a money spell, a health spell, and a love protection spell.

Friday, September 9, 2011

Up Close and Personal- the Fridge

Let's move on and talk about something just for fun. I present MY REFRIGERATOR:

Here we have a thermometer (purchased solely because the deer reminded me of Kevin), some coupons, a magnetic bottle opener, and a recipe for a cherry pie I intended to cook for Kevin. I got a little Celtic knot artwork, some is just for show, but some of it is for spells. I did the dog one when Halona was fixed. The vet nicked one of her arteries, she started bleeding badly when I brought her home, and I had to rush her back. She spent several days in a cage at the vet's office looking miserable while she recovered. I visited her every day and I had to coax her to eat. I was really grateful when I finally got to bring her home.
On the other side of the freezer door, more art and a picture of Kevin.

Here is the side of the refrigerator. I have a soil test kit, a map of Tallapoosa County, a hand-written recipe, the dogs' rabies vaccination certificates, the vet's business card, and my current car insurance card. I also have a discount card to the local meat store; I think I've shopped there all of one time. There is nothing on the bottom door of the fridge because my dogs tend to knock things off.

I decided my fridge needs a make-over. I'm going to take everything off, wipe it down, and hopefully tomorrow I'll have something more interesting to show. I may demonstrate how I do my Celtic Knot spells. They're pretty easy and fun.




Wednesday, September 7, 2011

Where Do You Draw a Line?

I am sad today. I am losing my friend. I've lost too many friends. Air Witch says I've turned to a dark path. She's being having health problems and I was doing healing spells for her. She's asked me to stop, as if my energy is tainted and whatever I touch cannot be pure or good. That makes me angry. And very, very sad.

Air Witch is extremely uncomfortable with ghosts, spirits, and anything else that lies beyond the veil. I don't quite see it that way. I think if you fear death then you also fear life. I see the world in terms of cycles, beginning and endings. Some seeds need the cold of winter or they won't bloom in spring.

A few years ago, I was called to work with bones. I resisted at first. I don't think I could actually harvest a bone. All the bones I have are found. I can deal with a bone bleached by the sun, washed by the rain. I hold bones and feel the life that they once contained. Bones have much to say.

I began working with Oya, Goddess of cemeteries, the marketplace, storms, and beautiful cloth. All the things I work with anyway, save for the cemetery. That came later.

When I go to a cemetery, I ask Oya's permission to enter. I bring Her an offering. I listen to the bones. I might make rubbings of tombstones, but that's it. I don't cast spells, petition the dead, curse, hex, or anything else. I go in, touch the energy and leave.

Air Witch says this is satanic. I can't believe her thinking on this. I don't even believe in the devil. I would never hurt anyone. I cannot stand to see an animal suffer. Air Witch thinks dark things can follow me home, then there will be dark forces in my life.

I work several different kinds of magick. I view them all as separate. I touch ley lines. I hear the bones. I work with angels. I like runes. I use knot magick. I burn candles. I get in the kitchen with my herbs. If I light a candle does it matter if that spell came from a HooDoo source or a Wiccan source? If the spell is just lighting a candle and chanting, is there really a difference? At what point exactly, does magick become black?

Am I going dark? Because I don't think I am.

Monday, September 5, 2011

My Hair

My hair is perfectly straight without an ounce of body, wave, or curl. You would think perfectly straight hair would be easy to manage but you'd be sadly mistaken. My hair is a stringy mop, a lazy beast with a mind of its own.

My hair like to hang. Except when I put it up, then it likes to escape in little wisps which invade my eyes, ears, nose, and mouth. It clings uncomfortably to my neck and tickles my back. It refuses to lay smooth, preferring to part like the red sea down the middle of the head and when I blush the part blushes too, like a thermometer showing rising heat.

You might be wondering why I don't just cut off and be done. I had short hair as a child. My mother couldn't do anything with my hair either. She tried braiding, pony tails, barrettes, ribbons, and I don't know what all else. None of it worked. My hair is ultra fine. It simply does not hold a style for very long and is resistant to the stiffest of styling products. My mother would labor over my head for an hour and when we got wherever we were going I looked like a dingy mop. Practicality prevailed. She cut it.

Then the problem was I looked like a boy. Every time someone called me a boy, I would cry. Every time she took my to the salon, I would beg her not to cut my hair. My mother would say,"'But your face is so feminine! I don't see how anyone could mistake you for a boy!"  But mistake me they did and I would cry like the girl I didn't appear to be. This went on until I was physically able to resist a haircut. Then my father stepped in and said I could have my hair anyway I wanted it as long as I kept it neat and brushed.

You know those vain girls in high school who brush their hair all the time? That was me. Except my hair was awful looking.

I had long hair from the fifth grade on. I let it grow and grow and grow. By the time I was in my twenties, it reached past my waist.

I still couldn't do anything with it. So I stopped fighting it. I remember reading an article about Jackie Kennedy, about how she is not remembered in pillbox hats and suits, looking constrained, but is best remembered standing on her yacht, her hair tossed by ocean breezes. That idea struck a cord with me. I couldn't articulate it then, but I like the idea of hair as a symbol of wildness, of untamed female power. I was becoming a witch before I knew what witches were.

I stopped trying to smooth every hair in place. I clipped up and let that be it. Sometimes it fell artfully and sometimes it was still a mop. But it was beautiful. Part of what attracted Kevin to me was my hair. Every day I had my hair up and before I left I'd let it fall down my back in a cascade of coppery brown. Every day he followed me out the door, trying his best to talk to me.

Then one day, Kevin made me angry. I have never been so angry in all my life. A wisp of hair wrapped around the nape of my neck and I shouted, "That's it! I'm changing EVERYTHING!" I cut twelve inches off hair, looked in the mirror and cut a few more inches. When I had it to to shoulder length, I was done.

Right before I went into a diabetic coma, my hair began to fall out. I was in town one evening and I saw an old woman, who, for all intents and purposes, was bald. She had a little bit of thin hair teased all around her head, but you could plainly see her skull. She might have well been chrome-dome bald. Immediately I felt aching pity for her- she probably spent hours each day teasing her small bit of hair, gluing it in place with a gallon of hair spray, hating to look in the mirror, but needing to see how to fix her hair...and then she put on a brave face and went out in public, head held high, not a hair out of place like she was still young attractive, and not the least bald. I felt sorry for her, but I knew I didn't want to be her. I decided if I went bald I was buying a fucking wig. I went to the pharmacy to buy hair vitamins. They didn't do a damn bit of good.

Next I woke up in ICU and I didn't care about my hair or anything else for that matter. The worst part of the hospital stay was the nurses not letting me shower. I got sponge baths and dry shampoo. My hair was truly a mop then, a limp, greasy, stringy mess. I finally got moved to a private room and the day before I was released I was allowed to take a shower. I washed my hair three times.

After getting out of the hospital, I was too tired to brush my hair. I still had IV marks. Lifting up my arms made them ache miserably. My mother brushed my hair for me. I almost cried when I told her I wanted to cut my hair.

In a strange quirk of fate, the stylist and I kept missing each other. We played telephone tag. Eventually, life started returning to normal, or as normal as it can be after a diabetes diagnosis. A week after being released, I was sitting in my doctor's office asking about my poor, thinning hair. She told me my sugar had been so high nutrients couldn't get to my hair and that's why it start falling out. She assured me it would grown back when my sugar was under control.

And it did. I'm really glad I didn't cut it. It's still a bit past my shoulders, but it's the right thickness. Or as thick as my fine hair can be. Maybe I'll let it grow to my waist again. Maybe. I'm not mad anymore.

I have a new problem now- gray. Or more accurately, silver hair. I am 34 and gray comes early in my family so I've been pretty lucky. My poor aunt started going gray when she was just 16. I really shouldn't complain too much. It's just that the silver hair is unlike the rest of my hair. Gray hair is actually caused by air surrounding the hair shaft, making the hair appear lighter in color. Gray headed people are air heads. Really. I am not making this up. It would be unwise, however, to call them that. Because the hair is made thicker by the air, it won't lay flat. Not that my hair as ever lain the way it is supposed to. My silver hair stands up, waves, and shouts 'HERE I AM! LOOK AT ME! LOOK, LOOK, LOOK!'

I suppose I shouldn't complain too much about the color either. After all, my hair has its own mind and it can't decide on a color. I said earlier it was coppery brown. It is. Most of the time. I have three pictures of me, all taken minutes apart when I was 17. In one picture I have brown hair. In the next, I have blond hair. In the last, I have red hair. My hair is an unusual shade until I want someone to notice the color, then it is a flat, dull, unimaginative brown. I was a blond child. Sometimes I think about dying it. I've heard you can't go wrong with your baby color. But if it could go wrong, my hair would find a way to do it.

Every day I pull my hair into a ponytail, slap on my plain black cap and head to my welding job where the sparks fly everywhere. One day sparks landed in my hair. The lady next to me checked for burns, running her fingers through my ponytail. I had the overwhelming urge to bite her hand. I don't let people touch my hair. It is next to impossible to accept kindness about a subject I've been battling my entire life.

Today my hair has not seen much of the brush. What was supposed to be romantic and fun was ruined by miscommunication. Angry, I left the house just to get away, my hair limply hanging down my shoulders. It has been plastered to my head by wind, drizzling rain, and humidity. If you need a better visual, think of the Goddess Sedna at the bottom of the sea, her mangled hands unable to brush her hair. Think of Sedna becoming angry, the waves churning and rocking, her long, black hair wrapping around her head in a tangled mass of frustrated ire. That's me today, my hair as wild as my mood.


What can I say? I look like what I am- a witch. A witch with a mop of stringy hair, the forces of sun and moon and earth moving around her, through her, being her, the wind howling, the cauldron churning. You can't brush all that wild woman energy into place. Let the cauldron boil and bubble, toil and double. Let me run my fingers through my wild hair, I am the Witch of This Place, unyielding and unafraid, bold and reckless, a force to be reckoned with.

Sunday, September 4, 2011

Saturday, September 3, 2011

First

My first date with Mr. Dragon is Monday. I am so nervous and excited and eager and... oh my, everything!

Mr. Dragon has a dragon tattoo on his left arm, hence the name. I think it's yummy and sexy and I like tattoos, especially dragons. His is red and blue.

I'll tell you all about Mr. Dragon soon, I promise.