|
Everyday is Sacred
by Link
Throughout history, people of nature religions found
something sacred everywhere they looked. There was no
clear-cut boundary between what was religious and what
was not, what was magical and what was not. Examples
of this can be found all over Europe, where people had
Goddesses and Gods for virtually every part of daily
life. From ovens and doorways, to bridges and wells
-- everything was sacred! Latin, and the languages which
descend from it, were shaped by Pagan cultures. Language
assigned gender to every person place and thing, perhaps
reflecting the idea that all things link back to a specific
Goddess or God. Every person place and thing truly is
a part of nature!
Historians and archaeologists uncover bits of ancient
lore and share their treasures with us. We love to marvel
at something old and rich in years. But while the richness
of history gives us valuable perspective, we should
not overlook the present. In this way, we learn from
the progression we make over time, the flow from yesterday
to today. Today, every thing is still just as sacred
as it was in days of Old.
Look to your own surroundings and see the sacredness
in everyday life. The seasons and cycles still tell
us much about the nature of many things. Every year,
every moon, and even every single day waxes and wanes
in a similar fashion. What do these cycles mean to you
personally? How do you mark their special points and
midpoints? How do you celebrate them? You may find that
even simple events like your morning shower can be a
special ritual, marking the beginning of your own "Wheel
of the Day."
The town in which you live is full of sacred sites
and shrines! The busy concrete roads you travel every
day are sacred. And so are the many crossroads we pass
along our path. However trivial they may seem at the
time, each of these crossroads and intersections bring
us where we need to be. Many roads have names or route
numbers; we can address them personally and thank them
for our many safe journeys. Remember this the next time
you are frustrated in rush-hour traffic or lost on a
dark, lonely highway.
Remember how your own neighborhood felt as a child?
Every tree or bush or sewer pipe was unique and familiar.
As we mature, we need not lose that familiar feeling.
Notice the things around you. Take time not just to
smell the roses, but to read the billboards and to hear
even the noisy commotion all around you. You may find
that they speak just as clearly as the rivers, winds
and thunder.
Your own home is full of sacred beings! An entire pantheon
lives in your pantry! Your kitchen is not just the place
you cook; it is a temple for the herbs, fruits and animals
which give us life. Each of them is a relic of a bygone
life form, with spirit deserving our respect. See each
meal as a ritual, a blessed event which brings new life
to that which we have harvested. These "food relics"
become part of you; they live again through you.
Throughout your home, photos of loved ones can be a
shrine to that sacred someone. Perhaps your own family's
Mother Goddess? Or your own beloved Lord of the Wood?
A photo captures and stores the light and energy of
the moment in which it was taken. Mementos of any special
occasion capture a bit of that energy, like the charge
within a battery or a charm. Feel it the next time you
"release" that energy, as you open an old photo album,
uncork that special bottle of wine you've been saving,
or just open up your favorite junk drawer! Things around
your house store bits and pieces of your life. They
come into contact with the sound of your voice, the
heat from your body, the energy from your thoughts.
They hear your most private conversations; they feel
your heartbeat race. And just imagine the dreamy stories
your pillow could tell. . . No wonder packing and moving
all your possessions out of your home is so traumatic.
The energy built up little by little over the years
is all released in one sudden moving-day whoosh!
Your plumbing and faucet, furnace and electrical wiring,
fans and windows, floors beams and walls are
these not the Elements themselves? Do they not combine
to give you a fifth, making your house into a home?
And within yourself, many, many sacred things can be
found. Every atom of every cell has its nucleus, its
center. Within us are many Suns! Our fingers and toes,
arms and legs branch like the limbs of any tree. Our
tiny capillaries feed larger veins and arteries, no
different than rivers or streams helping a drop of rain
flow to the ocean. And within our spirit lies the spark
of all life, like a pilot light which burns as long
as we do.
If we choose to see the sacredness in all things, even
the most mundane parts of our lives will become magical.
Perhaps someday, thousands of years from now, historians
and archaeologists will uncover age-old tales of deities
which bless our microwave ovens or look both ways through
our aluminum sliding glass doors. Perhaps they will
see how we made every day sacred.
|