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Walking the Ways of the Summer Light Carolyn A. Cushing Soul Path Sanctuary [email protected]

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Page 1: Walking the Ways - Soul Path Sanctuarysoulpathsanctuary.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/04/walking...Walking the Ways of the Summer Light A seasonal or soul-need practice to flow with

Walking the Ways of the Summer Light

Carolyn A. Cushing Soul Path Sanctuary

[email protected]

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Walking the Ways of the Summer Light

A seasonal or soul-need practice to flow with essential energies of the summer sun: growth, movement, sensuality, creativity, delight.

Introduction

The sun rules the summer season and, like the plants, we humans respond to its exuberant invitations: reach for the light; grow to new heights; express ourselves and our delight; sing, dance, travel, paint (or what ever form your creativity takes); let our bodies love another or the earth upon which we walk. The explosive sun also invites us to release our anger, rise up against injustice, shake off our constraints.

If we take up the summer sun’s invitations, we can move beyond our current boundaries of body, mind, and spirit. While winter is the season for change through inner work, the summer gets us out and walking the ways for growth.

In the calendar of Celtic earth spirituality, summer begins with the festival of Beltane at the start of May in the Northern Hemisphere and November in the Southern. Celtic teacher Caitlín Matthews introduces us to the season in her Celtic Book of Days:

Beltane celebrates the bright half of the year and was warmly welcomed for it was the official beginning of summer when the over-wintered animals could be driven out into wider pasturing, and when scattered households would meet together and travel forth. … The festival, whose name means the ‘the fires of Bel’ is named after the Beli or Belenus, the shinning one, an archaic god for whom no legend remains. Several inscriptions remain to the Romano-Celtic Apollo Belenus, testifying to the solar and healing qualities of the original god.

Everything is in movement. You, too, are invited to move as we flow from spring into summer. Walking the Ways of the Summer Light, aligns with this energy, and invites you to make sacred journeys through the season.

Sacred Travel

Sacred travel takes varied forms in the many traditions that have developed it as spiritual practice. One of the five pillars of Islam is to make a pilgrimage to Mecca where pilgrims dress in the same simple clothes to show that all are equal before Allah. North American native peoples make medicine walks to seek healing in the natural world. Tibetan Buddhists circumambulate a holy mountain as a devotional practice.

For centuries, people have walked El Camino in Northern Spain toward the tomb of St. James to demonstrate their faith or seek forgiveness of their sins. Today, along with the

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Christian faithful, the secular and uncertain also walk The Way as seekers and adventurers. While Westerners have ascribed various purposes to the Aboriginal Walkabout, following the landscape guided by song and energetic connection are at the heart of this travel.

Early Celtic Christians – who retained connections to the earth spirituality of their ancestors – often set off to wander for God, leaving without a destination and, in one account, even without oars to row their boat. They trusted God to bring them to the right place. Steve Rabey describes the purpose of such wandering in In The House of Memory:

Christian Celts [sought] something they called ‘the place of one’s resurrection.’ A uniquely Celtic concept that combines a Christian theology of the afterlife with the Celts legendary love of the land, this belief that God called everyone to a specific geographic location where he or she could experience a deeper sense of spiritual presence.

In these stories of intentional journeys and wisdom wandering, we can see that sacred travel aids us to:

heal; tend our souls; connect with the Divine; find our way to be of service; align with a greater purpose; open us to a process or period of initiation; strengthen our love of, and devotion to, the land; shake up our usual patterns and remove us from our known roles; walk in the footsteps of our ancestors and fellow followers of a faith; or anchor us in our unique strengths by challenging us in unusual ways.

What calls you to undertake a sacred journey? Perhaps it is one of these reasons or a sensed but unarticulated longing. The invitation is to follow this energy into the possibility and mystery of the next unfolding of your life.

The Flow of the Season

The hinge of Walking the Ways is the Summer Solstice, the time of longest light and height of the sun’s shinning.

In the four weeks before the Solstice, we will wander toward this time of greatest light, taking weekly walks guided by elemental themes of first earth, then air, water, and, finally fire. These Wisdom Wanders will loosen the hold of our usual modes and roles

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over us. As we travel in a relaxed manner, we will be invited to listen, see, and feel in news ways. To flow with this idea of loosening, we seek not answers but questions thatcan ignite desire, serve growth, inspire transformation. We will also be invited to createmementos that serve as a visual reminder of the work or as an expression of gratitude for what was received. The mementos might take the form of art, doodles, earth altars, poems, stories, photos that you will have for further contemplation after the walk.

The days around the Solstice will be for celebration, play, and maybe some fireworks to bring light even into the night. We will also review all the questions that have surfaced during the Wisdom Wanders to find the one that most speaks to our deep soul needs or fires our imagination in special ways.

We will move out from the Solstice with this illuminating question at the center of travel to and from a sacred place. We will undertake a pilgrimage. If you have weeks of time to go to a celebrated pilgrimage place, wonderful! But the power of intention can support you to create a pilgrimage experience in any amount of time that you have.

Our Ritual Tools and Supports

Our own bodies will be our greatest ritual tools as we move through the summer landscape.

We can also be aided by favorite Tarot decks and oracles. The Gaian, Minoan, and Shining Tribe Tarots along with the Oracle of Initiation have been my main inspirations for developing the rituals and activities.

To create your mementos your favorite creativity tools (pens, paints, cameras, etc.) can be part of your traveling ritual tool kit.

Wisdom Wander and Pilgrimage Flow

Wisdom Wander General Flow

The freedom in walking lies not in being anyone; for the walking body has no history;it is just an eddy in the stream of immemorial time.

Frederic Gros

There are no rules for a Wisdom Wander. This flow is offered as a jumping off point for your own designs. But remember to follow your feet, your heart, and where ever your senses lead you.

Selecting Your Place: You don’t have to go anywhere special for a Wisdom Wander. Your backyard might provide all the wonder you need. But to vary your views, you

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might seek out places that put you in touch the weekly elemental focus. A place where you can touch bare ground or stone for Earth. A hill or mountain top to feel the Air and be close to birds, and a windy urban avenue could do the same. If you can, traveling to a large body of water or the ocean in the Water week would be appropriate, or just wander on a rainy day. The Fire week comes during the period of longest days so anywhere on a sunny day will do, or build a bonfire to contemplate its flame.

Separating From the Everyday: You may want to enact a small ritual of leaving behind all your responsibilities, worries, and cares. You could visualize putting them into a box. If any critical voices start to speak, just assure them you’ll be back; you are only going for a walk. Can you leave your cell phone behind? Or at least put it into airplane mode.

Travel Light But Bring What You Need: Remember to take care of you body: water? sun screen? good shoes?. Remember any ritual or creativity needs: tiny notebook and pen? drawing materials? camera? And cards from your Tarot or oracle deck. Bring it allon one Wander. Bring nothing on another.

Set an Intention: An overall intention of these Wisdom Wanders is to seek out and be open to the questions that speak to our souls, that will focus the coming pilgrimage time.

Invite / Select / Welcome your Way Showers / Inquisitors / Guides for the Day’s Wandering: Because the language of nature and the elements is not immediately apparent to us humans, we can ask for help from the Tarot or oracles. You may have a relationship with a wisdom figure(s) represented on a card and want to select it. You may let who ever needs to come emerge from a face-down draw. Spend some time meeting the one(s) who emerge to travel with you. I often work with multiple guides / cards in a wander.

Wander:

Be open to whatever draws your attention and spend time there. Pause. Look. Listen.

If you would like to engage with an area or a plant, greet it, ask its permission to approach and receive its response. If allowed to approach, do so respectfully; engage your sense to receive the messages and questions offered.

You might select one of your guides – by chance or choice - to come and be with you in the places of pause and contemplation. Consider how the place and the guide fit together.

When you have finished, don’t forget to offer gratitude before you move on. You might leave a strand of your hair as a gift. Or perhaps you have planned ahead and brought a small natural object to leave as a sign of gratitude.

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Be Open to Creative Urges: The earth is busy creating in cooperation with the summer sun. How might you mimic this creativity to learn its magic? Bring out your notebook or artists tools. Gather loose elements of the earth (rocks, fallen petals, twigs, feathers) and arrange them into an earth altar. Your guides might like to be placed within your creation. You might want to document with a photo that becomes your memento… and then let all the elements return to lie on the earth as they were. Here area few examples from my 2015 Wisdom Wanders. Follow the links to read about my experiences as prompts (not rules!) for planning your own.

From the 2015 Earth Wisdom Wander.

From my 2015 Air Wisdom Wander.

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From the 2015 Water Wisdom Wander.

From the 2015 Fire Wisdom Wander.

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Return: Notice when and where you are passing from your place of wandering into themore human world. You might pause, offer some gratitude, or say a prayer at this point.

Reflect: You may want to just sit or to journal or draw. Let the experience seep into you. Let some insights emerge. Connect with your guide; have a chat about what you experienced together.

Gathering Questions: While on the Wander or just afterward, you might just blurt out or free write all the questions that surface. Spend some time with your guides listening with your imagination to the questions they would ask you if they could speak aloud. Contemplate mementos made or pictures taken as if it were a Tarot card and let it offering you questions. Sometime later in the week, you might want to hone and shift through your questions. This can be like the process of creating questions to take to a Tarot reading. Here are the prompts I send to people ahead of my Tarot consultations toget their questions percolating:

Questions that yield the most freedom and possibility most often include HOW and WHAT. For example: How can I ….? How have I ….? In what ways ….? What do I most need to pay attention to now? What will support me to …?

Questions that can be fruitful in specific circumstances often include WHY, WHERE, and WHO. For example: Where in my life have I ….? Who can best support me in doing …? Who is challenging me ….? [Be open to the answer not being a human that you know!] Why am I really doing this (i.e. what is underneath the surface)?

WHICH limits you to particular options already determined. If you are still in an early stage of decision making, it is probably too early for a WHICH question. If you have been working seeking an answer for a long time and feel clear that a decision rests between a set number of options, then WHICH may be fruitful.

YES / NO questions are not generative. But if you are burnt out on generating ideas and are ready to trust the message that comes through the cards, this just might be the kind of question that you need.

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Cultivate Patience: Each Wisdom Wander is an invitation to step out of the demands of time, and the whole flow toward the Solstice extends an invitation to be free of knowing the answers but instead opening to the questions. The words of the poet Rilke encourage us in this work:

Be patient toward all that is unsolvedin your heart and try to love the questions themselves

like locked rooms and like books that are writtenin a very foreign tongue.

Acknowledgements: This process is most directly influenced by my work with Joanna Powell Colbert and her Gaian Tarot and Mellissae Lucia and her Oracle of Initiation. James Wells’ wisdom on question generation inspired the question asking prompts.

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Pilgrimage Planning and Broad Flow

Where to Go

Pilgrimage is an imaginary road with real stones in it.Phil Cousineau

What place calls to your imagination? What stones have people of your tradition, your tribe, your profession/vocation walked before you? Where does the longing of your soul lead you?

These are questions to consider as you seek your place for a solitary journey of weeks, a sacred pause into a family vacation, or an afternoon set aside during a business trip.

With clear intention any place can be a place of pilgrimage, but the pilgrimage tradition invites you to go somewhere that others have also approached with reverence and havesought solace, counsel, and wisdom.

I offer these examples to spark your imagination (not to limit your thinking):

A site of longstanding and traditional pilgrimage: Santiago de Campostela in Spain,Angkor Wat in Cambodia, the pyramids in Egypt, Newgrange in Ireland, the Serpent Mounds of Ohio. Members of the Tarot Tribe might visit northern Italy, the birth place of the cards. To do some dreaming and research about such places can bean adventure in and of itself. You might also think of places closer to you that are echoes of these sites: a local basilica, retreat center, or site sacred to local native peoples. If selecting a site outside of your tradition, be sure to check if guests are welcomed.

A site where the wild is preserved. In North America, our national and provincial parks contain the natural cathedrals and shrines that have drawn people out of their everyday lives for an experience of wilderness. To hike to the end of the Skyline Trail in Cape Breton, find the Hidden Lake in Glacier National Park, or glimpse the Grand Prismatic in Yellowstone inspire awe and invite devotion. (Yes, there are all trips that I have taken and later realized I’d been on pilgrimage.) There might be a state park or local land trust that offers a similar experience.

A site where an ancestor from your profession or vocation lived. Writers and artist take journeys to soak in the landscape and objects of their heroes. Travel to Emily Dickenson’s house in Amherst, Massachusetts or hike in the desert of Abique, New Mexico to see what Georgia O’Keeffe saw.

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A place significant to your family or their country of origin. Descendants of 19th century immigrants to the United States visit Ellis Island to see where there ancestors first arrived in the United States. A journey of discovery back to their country of origin leads you even further back into your ancestral roots.

When to Go

When your ship, long moored in harbor, gives you the illusion of being a house ... put out to sea! Save your boat's journeying soul, and your own pilgrim soul,

cost what it may.Brazilian Archbishop Helder Camara

Your pilgrimage can happen at any time. You may want to pick a time of personal significance or may choose to align with a natural occurrence. Coordinating your pilgrimage with the moon phase, for example, might heighten your experience. To support a journey of release, healing, or initiation, for example, find time around the new moon. For journeys of devotion, celebration, or strengthening you might travel around the time of the full moon.

Basic Flow

The beauty of the Way is that there is no ‘way”Loy Ching-Yuen, The Book of the Heart

I worked with a wonderful group facilitator, Guadalupe Guajardo, who had a planning philosophy I took to heart: Maximum structure with maximum flexibility. A pilgrimageis a journey that is undertaken with planning, purpose, focus, and a specific destination.The structure supports the depth of work we seek to undertake. But once we begin the journey, we must be open to what is presented to us, not what we planned to see, hear, or feel. Our travels may be more or less than we imagined. Our destination may not be the culmination. The unanticipated might have us altering our plans. But we can flow with this uncertainty knowing we’ve done the best we can to prepare and trusting that what we most need know will flow to us.

With this preface as caution, the pilgrimage journey could be said to have this flow:

Preparation: Our Wisdom Walks provide four weeks of preparation and practice for stepping out of our everyday life and roles, awakening the senses, and finding the focusof a central question. If you are traveling, you’ll, of course, have to make logistical arrangements and might want to tend to these tasks with a soulful approach and make them a part of – rather than apart from – the pilgrimage process.

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At the Threshold: The time for departure arrives. To mark this moment as sacred and set the desired tone for the journey, you might:

Make sure that you have all you need to take care of your body: the right shoes, medicines, appropriate clothes. Thank your body for making this journey and pledge to listen to the messages it gives you. It may be doing a lot of hard work!

Say good-bye in a ritual way to the place and/or people you are leaving behind.

Write your central question out on a slip of paper, put it in a pocket close to your heart, and then forget about it.

Open yourself to returning changed. Perhaps this comes through a simple statement of intention or a prayer.

Ask a guide(s) to travel with you and support you. This could be your Tarot or oracle deck, a Deity with you have or want to cultivate a relationship with, and/or wisdom source such a book of poetry, nature guide, or scripture.

At the Threshold post on the blog.

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Journey: You move toward a destination, but journey is the pilgrimage’s heart. Let yourWisdom Wander practice of moving slowly, attending to what calls your attention, creating as you go, and tuning into your sense in new ways help you embrace the journey.

The Shining Tribe Tarot inspired the guidance offered for the Journey theme ofPilgrimage.

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At the Center: This is the place where we encounter with the Awesome, the Divine, Mystery. It can’t really be anticipated. We just travel open to Its appearance. We plan for it to happen at the destination of our journey, but we can’t know where and when the Center will open for us.

My Shining Tribe cards accompanied as I took the wisdom from the Center.

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Return: We do go home. The outer pilgrimage is bounded by time and place. But whenwe return home, we return changed. The inner pilgrimage continues as we walk once again into our roles and responsibilities, and bring to them the lessons, gifts, and heighted senses from the pilgrimage time. Pilgrim Phil Cousinea describes the return: The challenge is to learn how to carry over the quality of the journey into our everydaylife. The art of pilgrimage is the craft of taking time seriously, elegantly. What every traveler confronts sooner or later is that the way we spend each day of our travel is theway we spend our lives.

The Shining Tribe 10s helped to Return.

Note on Inspirations: These are the 2 books that I have been carrying around as I wandered to prepare this booklet and that you see most quoted above: Phil Cousineau’s The Art of Pilgrimage (Conari Press; 1989) and Frederic Gros’s A Philosophy of Walking (Verso; 2014).

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Final Words of Gratitude

I am grateful to Rachel Pollack, Ellen Lorenzi-Prince, Joanna Powell Colbert, and Mellissae Lucia not only for their beautiful and inspiring images, but also for the wisdom they bring into the world through their teaching, art work, and writing. My work is deeply influenced by theirs.

I am also grateful to those who offered support and feedback as well as engaged with the ideas and activities of this ritual through their participation in my 2014-2015 circle offerings: Jennifer Badot, Mimi Clemente, Michelle Crawford-Bewley, Brigit Esselmont, Linda Farmer, Jean Frances, Bernadette Giblin, Jezanna Gruber, Deborah Guy, the late Bev Haskins, Karen Karlovich, Irini Killian, Ellen LaFleche, Arwen Lynch, Judy Nathan,Mary Clare Powell, Wanda Rice, Michele Rapp, Mark Roessler, Julie Rosier, Shari Smith, Julie Theroux, and Hayley Wood.

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