KEEPING OUR SENSE OF WONDER ALIVE © by Lady Raven ArianaIn Lewis Carroll’s
“Through the Looking Glass”, in the 5th chapter, Alice has a chat with the White Queen. She expresses to the White Queen her inability to believe in what she, Alice, feels is the impossible. The Queen schools her on opening her mind and participating in the adventures that Alice is experiencing. This is their exchange:
"... Alice laughed. `There's no use trying,' she said `one can’t believe impossible things.'
`I daresay you haven't had much practice,' said the Queen. `When I was your age, I always did it for half-an-hour a day. Why, sometimes I've believed as many as six impossible things before breakfast. There goes the shawl again!'" (
Through the Looking Glass, Chapter 5: Wool and Water)
Imbolc, also known as Bride, or the Feast of St. Brigid, happens on February 1st or 2nd and celebrates the Irish Celtic Goddess of Healing, Smithcraft, and Poetry. She is known to be patroness to healers, shamans, craftspeople, and artists of all types. For many years a sacred fire was tended by an order of nuns in Kildare when Ireland converted to Celtic Catholicsm. This practice has been revived by a spiritual order of women. Bride is also connected to many healing wells in Ireland.
At this time of the year, when the light increases and the night is still long, Brigit, Bride, Brighid, however you say/spell her name, offers us healing and protects us so that we may connect with our sacred creativity. Creativity is our way of connecting to the sacred Cauldron, the Goddess’s womb. The Cauldron is viewed as a wellspring of life and transformation according to many Celtic myths in Ireland, Scotland, and Wales. Many believe that the archetype of the Cauldron transformed into the myth of the Holy Grail when the British Isles where converted to Christianity. The Cauldron and Holy Grail are seen as being a source of healing, transformation, and direct connection to Spirit.
In modern industrialized times many if not most of us live disconnected from direct connection to Spirit and are disenfranchised from our creativity. Many of us suffer illnesses, or diseases (dis-ease), and do not feel comfortable with ourselves in body, mind, passion, emotion, and/or Spirit. Many of us are disconnected from the Earth and the basic Web of All Life. We are taught that being a creative person is limited to those sometimes half-crazed and many times wounded individuals labeled by our societies as “artists”.
Further disenfranchisement is the active disempowerment that happens in our daily lives about what our potentials are, what is “real”, what is possible, and how much power we have to change our lives and tap into our creativity. From an early age many of us are discouraged to use our imaginations, be excited about the potential adventures of life, have direct spiritual experiences, feel wonder and awe at the world, and maybe even talk to and hear and understand the voices of the beings that share the world around us.
Instead we are taught fear and disconnection. Sometimes we are reprimanded or even punished for expressing imagination, wonder, joy, engagements with adventure, and creativity. We are encouraged to be “realistic”, “practical”, and make life choices that focus on the stereotypes allowed us in our culture. If we persist in our expressing what we, ourselves, see that others do not, it is possible we might be labeled as having overactive imaginations, hysterical personalities, disordered personalities, being attention seekers, or simply liars. This makes it difficult, or impossible, to remain an actively creative person.
Bride is also called “the Bright Arrow”. She protects and shines light on situations and shows us the way. The way is a path through difficulty, pain, and despair. She is the Goddess of Healing. Candles are often lit on this holiday to honor her and to celebrate the increasing of the light. I find it interesting that the Queen that speaks to Alice in the opening quote for this article from
“Through the Looking Glass” is the White Queen who offers Alice enlightenment on how to “believe in impossible things”. These are important words for anyone who has been indoctrinated into a culture of limits, impossibilities, and constricting stereotypes.
If you can’t believe that it is possible to heal, be creative, connect with Spirit, or transform your life, then you won’t even have the space within your own mind and beliefs to begin the process of reigniting the wonder, joy, adventure, imagination, and creativity in engaging the mystery that is part of your life’s experiences. First one must make room to “believe in impossible things”.
If you think about and research the word “inspire” you discover that it comes from the meaning to “breathe in”. When we breathe with intention, awareness, quiet, and focus, the action of breathing allows us to still the mind and make room for new thoughts or “inspiration”. This is also called meditating. It is interesting that the White Queen “practiced” believing impossible things “a half hour a day”. In other words, she meditated with focus and intention, half an hour a day. This “practice” allowed her mind to expand enough to believe
"six impossible things before breakfast”. She was also adept enough to tell Alice that,
"I daresay you haven't had much practice." The White Queen’s advice to Alice is to “practice”, to spend half an hour a day with the intention of opening her mind to believing in the impossible and to remain open to the adventures that Alice was experiencing.
How can we begin a practice of reversing cultural programming that limits our creativity and potential? We must first give our minds room to allow and imagine alternatives. A daily meditation is a good beginning. We can get a white candle, light it, and just focus on our breathing for 5-10 minutes a day. When we light our candle we can ask St. Brigit (if you are comfortable) to join us and add her protection and inspiration. After our meditation, we can record our experiences in a journal dedicated to this special meditative time. There are also many other ways to meditate and quiet the mind. Feel free to ask Tira or you may forward questions to me through her.
Another powerful transformational tool that I feel works well with Bride’s energy and White Queen meditations is an Art Journal. This would be art quality paper bound in spiral or hard-back form with blank pages you can write on, draw on, collage on, color, paint, and use any other visual media to express yourself (glitter, stickers, etc.). You could use colored pencils, ink, glue photos or magazine pictures or other art that you create, use crayon, pastels, etc. This would be for your own private transformation.
You can ask yourself questions and then answer them using images, creations, and if desired words. “Who am I?” What do I want?” “How do I limit myself?” “I’m happy when…?”, “Who am I connected to?”, etc. are queries to get started. You could do your meditation and focus your intention for a question. You could ask Bride to help provide inspiration for a question. You could open your heart and just create. Add where you want to go, who you hope to be, and the love you want to manifest in your life with no impossibilities and no limits. You do not have to be labeled an “artist” to do your own personal Art Journal. You might consider setting time aside each day to practice.
If you feel afraid to get started, get a big box of new crayolas and make your first title page that indicates that this is “YOUR” art journal. Add some stick-on “stars, moons, earths, and happy faces”, glue on some glitter, draw some pictures with your crayons, and have fun! There is no right or wrong way. Sometimes it helps to scuff up a new journal so that you remove any idea that it has to be pristine or perfect. Read
“Through the Looking Glass” and
“Alice In Wonderland”. Follow through with visually recording your reactions and questions. Does the White Rabbit make you crazy or the smile of the Cheshire Cat? Would you have liked to join in the Mad Hatter’s tea party? The point here is to reignite or keep alive your sense of wonder, imagination, adventure, and your willingness to participate in the strange experiences life has to offer. Remember to soak in the fun and revel in the play. Blessed be!