Tuesday 22 February 2011

The Tears of Lord Siva are Rudraksha - the original Vedic Beads of Power worn by the Yogis of India and the Himalayas for thousands of years to maintain health and to gain self empowerment and fearless life on their path to Enlightenment and Liberation.
The many Devotees of Truth who deliberately live their lives according to Eternal Natural Law that is Sanatana Dharma Know that Rudraksha Beads are a Gift from The Almighty God and are a Natural Birth Right of the Mankind.
The Holy Rudraksha beads are based in the Absolute Field of Consciousness and they manifest in the Relative Field for the good of all concerned to help relieve sin and suffering and pain world wide.
Rudraksha beads have been used for thousands of years as an aid to Self Empowerment and the Fearless Life.



Hindu Japa malas are usually worn around the neck when not in use. Rudraksha are used to recite mantras, holding the mala with the right hand.




Hindu Style malas are usually made from Sandalwood or Rudraksha beads.






Rudraksha Malas natural seeds come from an Indian or Indonesian Himalayan Rudraksha Tree.



The beads called Rawa".
The beads are slightly rough to the touch.
A mala has 108 tigers eye markers and guru beads.





The word Rudra is the name of Lord Shiva and aksha means tears.
There was a demon called Tripura Sur who was gaining more and power and becoming invincible. Lord Brahma, Vishnu and other Gods and Goddess went to Lord Shiva for help. They asked him to control the devil and conquer him.
Lord Shiva used his most fierce fire weapon called ‘Aaghor’ to destroy the demon. But Lord Shiva knew about the devastating effect of this weapon and this brought tears to his eyes. When he opened his eyes, a few teardrops fell on the earth. Wherever his tears fell, trees grew and were named the Rudraksha trees meaning ‘Tears of Lord Shiva’.




rudraksha trees
rudraksha trees

rudraksha_med.jpg 

Monday 7 February 2011

How to make Holy Water

This is such an interesting posts

Read the article here:  http://networkedblogs.com/dZwDR (brilliant site)

Extract: 


"The rural people of the British Isles also believed in the power and sacredness of water and used holy water in many of their folk magic rites. Even though the British Isles have been Christianized for centuries, it is the farmers, fishermen, and housewives, men and women alike, who consecrate the holy water and not a Catholic priest. This goes against the teachings of the church as well as more modern Christian and Hoodoo superstitions that holy water can only be blessed by man of God. I believe the consecration and use of holy water in the British Isles is a remnant from Paganism as are the magical rites the water is used for."

Mythology: The Inner and Outer Hebrides off the western coast of Scotland

Read the full article here http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hebridean_Myths_and_Legends

Extract:

The Inner and Outer Hebrides off the western coast of Scotland are made up of a great number of large and small islands. These isolated and mostly uninhabited islands are the source of a number of Hebridean myths and legends. It is a part of Scotland which has always relied on the surrounding sea to sustain the small communities which have occupied parts of the islands for centuries, therefore, it is natural that these seas are a source for many of these legends.

Contents


[edit] Water Spirits

[edit] Kelpies

"Boy on white horse" by Theodor Kittelsen.
Kelpies were said to occupy several lochs, including one at Leurbost.

[edit] Blue Men

The Blue Men of the Minch (also known as storm kelpies), who occupy the stretch of water between Lewis and mainland Scotland, looking for sailors to drown and stricken boats to sink.

[edit] Seonaidh (Shonny)

Seonaidh - a water-spirit who had to be offered ale.

[edit] Merpeople

It has been claimed that there is a mermaid's grave in Benbecula, but the exact location is unknown. The mermaid was killed in the early nineteenth century after having been seen for a couple of days, before a teenage boy threw a rock at it, killing the entity. Accounts stated that the upper part of the creature was the size of an infant, while the bottom was like a salmon.

[edit] Water Monsters

[edit] Loch Monsters

Searrach Uisge - a monster who was said to occupy Loch Suainbhal. Resembling a capsized boat, this creature has been reported swimming around for one and a half centuries. Locals say lambs were once offered annually to the creature[1]. Other such creatures have been reported in several other lochs, including Loch Urubhal.
At Loch Duvat in Eriskay, while out looking for a horse that escaped his farm in the mist, a farmer saw what he thought was his missing beast in the loch. As he approached, he realised he was looking at a strange creature which gave an unearthly yell, sending the farmer running home.[1]

[edit] Sea Monsters

Various sea monsters have been reported off the shores of Lewis over the years, including a sighting reported in 1882 by a German ship off the Butt of Lewis. The ship, 15 kilometres off the coast, reported a sea serpent around 40 metres in length, several bumps protruding from the water, along its back. Sea serpents have also been reported at the southern side of the island.[1]

[edit] Werewolves

A German woodcut from 1722
A family of werewolves were said to occupy an island on Loch Langavat. Although long deceased, they promised to rise if their graves were disturbed.[1]

[edit] Will-o'-the-wisp

Wills-o'-the-wisp have been reported in the area of Sandwick. The lights that float around the area normally announce approaching death for a local. Some say the light belongs to an Irish merchant who was robbed and murdered on the island.[1]

[edit] Fairies

At Luskentyre in Harris, a hound has been known to leave oversized paw prints on the damp sand which vanish suddenly half way across the beach. It is alleged that this is a fairy hound.[1]. Then in South Uist, a woman walking with two friends in the pitch dark watched as a self-illuminating dog, the size of a collie but with a small head and no eyes, ran towards her. The creature vanished as it bounded past. On reaching home, she described what had happened to her aunt, the older woman told her it was a Cu Sìth, a fairy dog. One of the heirlooms of the chiefs of Clan Macleod is the Fairy Flag. Numerous traditions state that the flag originated as a gift from the fairies.

See also

References

Wednesday 2 February 2011

Hedgecrossing Ritual - have a look at this great site (Link below)

Hedgecrossing Ritual

This ritual is designed for 1-2 persons, but could be used by a group as well with one person acting as watcher. How one crosses the hedge differs from person to person as one technique doesn’t work for everyone. Due to this, there are many options presented within this ritual to customize it to your own preferences. The term “hedgecrossing” is modern in usage stemming from the Germanic term haegtessa meaning hedge witch. In the shamanic community this technique is called “shamanic journeying”. Hedgecrossing doesn’t necessarily mean flying out of body. Hedgecrossing is truly an altered state of consciousness commonly known as trance. When in this altered state certain persons can see, hear, and interact with gods and spirits, receive visions, as well as perform divinations as a seer or oracle.
First you’ll need to pick your stimulus. Your stimulus is what aids you to go into trance and it becomes a repetitive ritual action you do over and over so your body, mind, and soul know that now is the time to fall into trance. You could play a traditional trance-inducing instrument like a drum, rattle, or sistrum using fast beats and rhythms. Fast repetitive drumming has been scientifically proven to alter some people’s state of consciousness as much as an entheogen would, but it doesn’t work for everyone. Some find drumming distracting and prefer a more silent stimulus. Others may have trouble keeping up playing an instrument during trance and for this I recommend making a recording when starting out. If you make a recording it also allows you to set a time limit on your travels; when the music stops, it’s time to return.
Your stimulus could be an entheogen, but I wouldn’t recommend starting out with harsh ones as you wouldn’t know if your experience was real or if you were just hallucinating. If you choose this method use a milder entheogen like wormwood, mugwort, tobacco, or even alcohol and then work your way up to flying ointments if entheogens are part of your practice. Entheogens can be a tool in hedgecrossing, but they aren’t a requirement. If you choose to use an entheogen be aware that it can leave you open to possession or harm by spirits and protective talismans, a protector familiar, or a person acting as watcher are necessary to prevent this.
Other stimuli can include ecstatic trance postures, breathing techniques, a chant or rhyme, donning a ritual costume, ecstatic dancing, or even performing the rite somewhere in complete darkness like a cave, a room with no windows, or a blacked-out room. Such stimuli are aids to those with trouble and mental blocks when it comes to slipping into trance and letting go of normal consciousness. I recommend trying a few different stimuli when starting to find one that works best for you.
To perform this ritual you will need: a notebook and pen, a warm blanket, a pillow, a blindfold (optional), a musical instrument (optional), a stave (wand, stang, or staff), and incense or offerings for your gatekeeper deity and your familiar spirits. Now that you have chosen your trance cue and have gathered all your items needed, you can begin the ritual:
  1. Purify yourself with spring water and smoke – wipe or sprinkle your face, hands, and feet with the water and waft incense or smoke from smudge over your body with your hands.
  2. Cast a protective sphere around the space you’ll be using with whatever your chosen method is. I like to hold onto a wand or have my stang in the center of the ritual space when I cast a caim and hedgecross.
  3. Invoke a gatekeeper to open the door between worlds. If you worship gods call a psychopomp or messenger (i.e. Hekate, Hermes, Prometheus, Manannán mac Lir, Gwyn ap Nudd, Nicneven, Odin, Heimdall, Papa Legba, etc). Be sure to ask which door. It is best to start with the underworld or upperworld –avoid the middle world until you truly know what you are doing.
  4. If you are an animist, invoke a “crossroads” animal instead (owl, serpent, frog/toad, etc) or the great World Tree itself.
  5. Give offering to the gatekeeper, animal, or tree in thanks; incense, alcohol, tobacco, food –whatever their favourite offering is.
  6. Call your familiar spirits. You will need one protector to watch over your body and one guide to lead and protect you in the otherworld. If you use fetiches as spirit vessels for animal or ancestral familiars use your vessels to summon them. If the fetiche is something you can wear on your person, even better.
  7. If you need to, set a time limit. If you have a watcher, they can gently bring you back with a song, a musical instrument, or by burning incense when your time is up. If you’re alone set a “gentle” alarm. If you have the luxury of time you won’t need a limit. If you are alone and not setting a time limit you will need a cue so you remember to return. A safety word or chant to use while wandering in the otherworld should work.
  8. Lay down on the floor either on your back or stomach (there are differing opinions as to which is better so I leave it up to you), and cover yourself with the blanket so your body being cold doesn’t bring you out of trance. If you’ll be drumming or playing another instrument throughout you can stay sitting up, and just make yourself comfortable with blanket and pillow. If light distracts you, wear a blindfold.
  9. Pick a place to start/enter. Is there a tree you go to, a cave, a stairway, a well? Fall up or down the rabbit hole like Alice. You can have a specific destination in mind or person/spirit/god to reach or you can have no plan and see what you see and go where you go. Both are rewarding. Let the images and experiences and words come. Don’t fight what you experience and don’t try to control it. Relax and let it happen.
  10. Remember this is spirit work and the most important thing is manners, manners, manners. Be very polite to whatever and whoever you meet. Read fairy tales to brush yourself up on spirit manners as well as how to protect from the dangerous ones. I hold a Rowan wand when travelling as spirits cannot harm one touching the wood and sometimes it can be used to open more doors once in the otherworld.
  11. Don’t rush back – retrace your steps and find a way back. If you need help, ask your familiar guide to lead you back. When you are fully back in your body wait a moment to rest, collect all the bits of your soul back together, and think on your experience. When you are ready, sit up.
  12. Write down your experiences and any messages you received right away so you don’t forget. No matter how much you think you’ll remember it later, you won’t.
  13. Thank your familiars and leave them their favourite offerings. You don’t need to banish familiars because they are a part of you.
  14. Ask the gatekeeper/animal/tree to close the door between worlds. The gate is closed – lock it with your stave as key. Leave them another offering and say farewell to gently banish their presence from your space and their power from your stave.
  15. Take down your protective space and ground. Eating is the easiest way to ground after travelling about as it reminds you you’re flesh and blood.

The 1st day of Spring - 1 Feb 2011 - Brighde's Eve

- also known as Candlemas, Imbolg, Oimelc

Here is some info from http://www.llewellyn.com/journal/article/345

Extract: 

Brighde /Brigit is the Celtic goddess of healing, smithcraft, and inspiration. She is a multi-talented goddess, like Minerva of Rome, Isis of Egypt, or Freya of the Northlands.

She is also a saint of the Roman Catholic Church.

If you explore her story, you will find it complex and amazing.

She is a healer extraordinaire, a poetess and wellspring of creativity, a metalworker ranked with Hephaestus and Vulcan.

To mention only a few of her accomplishments, she is a fire goddess, the Lady of sovereignty who conferred her blessing on kings and queens, and teacher and patron of warfare and the martial arts.

She is the one who calligraphers and scribes prayed to before they touched quill to parchment. She is the great protectress who guards us from all evil and calamity. She is the goddess who taught women the caoine, keening to mourn their beloved dead. She guards the health of flocks and herds, she invented whistling, and they say she likes beer.

The image that stays with us is that of the flame alight in the midst of winter. When February second dawned in ancient northern Europe, the first signs of spring could be seen in the British Isles.

But across the isles and the continent, people knew that the storms were not over, that long months lay between the first buds pushing through the snow and the ripe fields of crops ready to be harvested.

Symbol of Hope
Yet there was Brigit, herself the eternal flame. Here was this solitary, indomitable spark who spoke one word to all of us, “Hope.” We believe it was she who inspired Camus to say, “In the midst of winter, I discovered within myself an invincible summer.” She is the harbinger of spring, a goddess of fertility, flowers, and lambs. In that respect she is the promise of survival year by year, for ourselves, families, communities, and the circle of life. Yet she is more significant even than that. She is hope in all circumstances at all times.

We look at a world filled with human suffering, where children starve, where men kill over their beliefs or territory, where there is never enough medicine but always enough weapons. We see the parade of history punctuated by the Inquisition, slavery, oppression, ethnic cleansing, and now by the events of September 11.

Perhaps we are deeply mired in our own personal tragedies: a childhood of abuse, an incurable disease, a faithless or cruel spouse, a parent with Alzheimer’s, or a dead-end job and poverty. We have heard it said that every person you meet this day has a personal tragedy that we don’t know about. And yet, in the middle of heartbreak and chaos, we keep going. We feed our children, care for our ill, even smile at the people around us. We fight for social justice, better education, kindness to animals, and peace.

Brigit’s Gift
Where does this courage and compassion come from? How can it exist in this harsh world? Why have we not surrendered? We do not understand it, but we have names for its source: God. Goddess. Providence. Original Source. The Tao. Buddha. Mary. Jesus. Isis. Allah. The Sacred.

One of those names is Brigit. Whether you see her as goddess, archetype, myth, spirit—or as a woman in fifth-century Ireland who showed us how brave and loving a human being can be—she is a perfect symbol of the light in darkness, the warm place in the blizzard, the invincible hope that keeps us going in a hard world.

Original article by Amber K
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Pagan sabbats
Eostre/ Ostara is the festival of the spring goddess,
Lammas/Lughnassad is the celebration of the Celtic Lugh of the Long Arm,
Beltane is sacred to the shining god Bel
Candlemas, /Imbolg, Oimelc, /Brigit’s Eve - 1st of spring (N/Hemisphere)

Astronomy: Looking at the skies - Feb 2011

by Magis Center of Reason and Faith on Wednesday, 02 February 2011 at 15:27
 
Extract:

There are some interesting alignments of moons of Jupiter and Saturn. These alignments allow one to see all four of Jupiter’s largest moons and Saturn has a similar display.

Jupiter
On the night of February 5th at approximately 9:30pm look at Jupiter in the West.

Take your telescope and look to the south east of the planetary disc. You will see all four of the Galilean moons lined up in a diagonal. The names of those moons are, starting from the closest in to furthest out are Europa, Io, Ganymede, and Calisto.  Remember that Europa is the moon with an ocean encased by ice and JPL is in the planning stages of designing a mission to land there.  While looking at Jupiter don’t forget to look for the south equatorial band that is still missing. It has been missing before but not this long.




Saturn
On the night of February 4th and 5th take a look at the Solar System’s showpiece, and on both nights you find a triangle of three moons, which lie to the southeast of the planet. They are Dionne, Tethys (upper corner), and Rhea. In addition if you look directly above Saturn’s disk you will see that famous red-orange dot better known as Titan: The moon with an atmosphere and lakes of liquid methane.




Comet Hartley
Comet Hartley is now exiting (left) and will not be visible to amateur astronomers for 12 years.

It did put on quite a show and now the EPOXI mission, which photographed in its unusual shape, is publicizing some scientific results (it is shaped like a potato). 

The results show that the comet’s nucleus contains frozen water and carbon dioxide. The outgassing, which the EPOXI Mission saw in great detail, was driven by the carbon dioxide which sublimated or converted itself from solid to gas! That was confirmed by looking at the dust that was being distributed.  See picture provided.




* Personally I think its shaped exactly like a chicken drumstick - don't you?   LOL!

Chinese New Year - 12 Feb 2011


Hey, its the Chinese New Year on 12 Feb.  We are entering the year of the RABBIT.

Tuesday 1 February 2011

Crystals for healing, meditations and everyday use.

My favourites are natural/raw/rough crystals, gem stones.  My family has been doing crystal healing and UE Healing since 1993 and I learnt it myself as an apprentice in my everyday life.  There are so many times I have used it for animals and people and we all use it everyday.  Our house is full of crystals and each crystal has a different use and energy.

I have my own personal collection of crystals which I treasure and my favourites are rose quartz, amethyst, quartz, amber, onyx, tigers eye, topaz, sapphire, jasper, adverturine, jade, obsidian, tourmaline, emerald, ruby, agate, flint.....

We also use crystals for protection.

This is a good site for referencing the properties of various crystals and gemstones:

Metaphysical, New Age and Crystal Healing Lore Information, Spiritual Thoughts

http://www.crystalsandjewelry.com/metaphysical_healing.html

Here is the page that list the index for the various crystal stones:
http://www.crystalsandjewelry.com/metaphysicalproperties.html

EXTRACT:

Rose QuartzRose QuartzQuartz, Rose
Rose quartz is a stone of unconditional love. It opens the heart chakra to all forms of love: self-love, family love, platonic love, and romantic love. Rose quartz has excellent protection energies during pregnancy and childbirth. The elevated energy of quartz gives rose quartz a property of enhancing love in virtually any situation. It also brings gentleness, forgiveness, and tolerance. Rose quartz is also said to be helpful with weight loss. Rose quartz is associated with the heart chakra.

The above mentioned site also has a downloadable pdf of the healing properties of various crystals.