I donât think about my childhood much. Itâs not that it was particularly awful or that I suffered irreparable damage itâs just that it feels unimportant. Almost as if it happened to another person or it was a movie I saw once but canât quite remember the details. It somehow does not connect to me anymore, does not inhabit my soul the way childhood does in others.
But I do reflect now and then, dredging up distant memories like faded photographs blurred and distorted with time and age but still recognizable if you look closely enough. If you squint just right, adjust the light the image will begin to make sense and you will find yourself saying, âAh, yes, I remember now. I had forgotten.â
Upon recent reflection into the question of spirituality and what that means to me I found myself looking at some of those distant memories. I can see myself as a young girl, hair brushed and held securely with a barrette, my nicest dress ironed and immaculate, my white socks and patent leather shoes, everything in its proper place nothing allowed to be out of order. I was sitting in a hard metal folding chair with my notebook and bible waiting for our weekly pilgrimage to âGodâs Houseâ to get underway. Two hours of religious instruction in âthe wayâ about to begin.  The ritual of prayer, hymns, and dutiful note taking that was a part of my weekly duties as a good daughter. This weekly preparation to save my soul from the sinful and dangerous environment in which I lived known to me as âthe worldâ as if it was a separate state or distant and foreign land was somehow going to keep me safe from the devil âhaving his way with meâ as my mother said making it sound so salacious and almost sexually exciting to a newly hormonal young lady.
I was a good student. I accepted this teaching because it was expected and it was all there was. One way~one God. However it never moved me, never swept me up into a feeling of grace, never inspired or delivered me from heartache. I was told the answers before I was ever allowed to ask the questions. In fact even the questions were picked for me and those that didnât fit into the churches dogma were quickly discarded forbidden to further discussion. I did what I did, believed what I believed out of fear. Fear of punishment, fear of abandonment, and fear of not pleasing this God that was a jealous and demanding God somehow displeased with the human nature he supposedly created in his infinite and infallible wisdom. Forever paying the price for the sin of the first man and woman, a debt that Jesus paid but somehow I still carried on my account. The sin of individual choice, thought, and desire. It didnât add up (perhaps why I have always hated mathematics) but I went with it all out of fear.
Until in my seventeenth year of life having been freed from the church going experience since the age of thirteen when I left my mother and moved in with my father I stumbled on a book in the library about the history of witches and paganism. Being the bad ex-Christian I was at the time I stole this book, which later I lost never to be recovered–my first lesson in karma. For the first time in my life the words I read caused a physical and emotional response that had no trace of fear. There was only a feeling of peace as if lost in a foreign land I had suddenly stumbled on a map I could read and understand. There was in fact a spiritual world that seemed to fit me. Although I liked the idea of this particular spiritual path I didnât start to seek any real training or learning until my mid twenties. I found myself surrounded by other young people who were drawn to Wicca and paganism as I was, but I felt out of place. These young people dressed in costume flirted with witchcraft but didnât take it seriously. They were like children playing dress up, reveling in shocking and disturbing the status quo with their outlandish and heathen behavior. They were emotionally unstable, personally unreliable, and some even dangerously intrigued by the idea of wielding magic to gain power over others, involved in practices I found to be morally questionable. I walked away from these people and their playacting disillusioned and disgusted. If this was Wicca I wanted no part of it.
Donât get me wrong I still considered myself a Pagan. I wouldnât be running back into the arms of Christianity any time soon, but finding no community in which to grow, learn, and practice with that I could trust or even consider real I simply stuck to the central guidelines and forgot about pursuing any deeper commitment to the craft. I rarely performed any type of ritual, I did not continue my studies, and I avoided most so called witches like the plague being completely disinterested in any drama or Hollywood type practices. Most of the people I came into contact with became interested in magic because of a movie theyâd seen expecting to find a magical outlet that would gift them with some sort of power they could wield over others. Hogwash. There is no power to be had over another only the power to enrich and expand oneself. Those who seek to control, influence, or even âhelpâ others without their consent are in my mind very dangerous and misguided individuals.
For the next ten plus years I existed in spiritual limbo. I battled (mostly unsuccessfully) my chronic depression, wore my anger and cynicism like a suit of armor, used my humor and indifference as my weapons of choice, and generally just drifted through my life without really ever showing up to the event. I was deeply sad as if in a state of constant mourning. I felt completely disconnected from others and myself. In the distance beyond the fog and shadows in my brain I heard a faint call. So faint I decided it must surely be my imagination.
Imagine my surprise when the call began to get stronger, louder, and more insistent. It was the same voice that spoke to me all those years ago at the tender age of seventeen. The same invitation to leave my state of spiritual limbo and show up to life alive, in color, and present. An invitation to come home only this time my Goddess sent me true guides in the shape of friends. And so now approaching my fortieth year on this earth I resume a journey long ago abandoned, I exchange my armor of anger and cynicism for a warm cloak big enough to share with fellow travelers. I keep my humor but turn in my indifference and select instead an open heart in which to house my many souvenirs, and set out to join the dance of life with childlike abandon and wonder, trusting that this time faith will sustain and inspire me instead of chain and punish me. And I know I am truly blessed to have this time to continue my journey.
Thanks Nancy for your blog entry. Your travels are similar to many others who have worn out their shoes on the road to freedom. Keep on the path, and experience a rich abundant life.
James.
“Armstrong was a man utterly without honor, without principles, without a shred of genuine decency or patriotism. He was the ultimate exterminator of religious life for thousands, and the grand compelling creator of a vast army of atheists.”
I’m just letting people know that this “Nancy” is my youngest daughter, Nancy Dexter, and I am very pleased with her insight and growing maturity and wisdom. I was about the same age as she when I began my journey to reason and sanity. She has a few years up on me in her progress.
Interesting comments and perspectives, Nancy! I definitely found some identity in some of your experiences, even though we happen to be of different gender. Fact is, many experiences are genderless. They are common to the human condition.
For one thing, in reflecting on life, I have realized that up to a certain point, I never really knew or projected my real identity to others. I analyzed situations, determined what character or act I could create to deal with said situations, and got through my experiences fairly successfully. Over the past three years, I’ve been attempting to get rid of all that is fake or street theatre, and to come across as being honest, and the same thing to all people. It is amazing, when we stop to consider the panorama of human existence, how much there is which is a valence or facade.
I’ve also known some Wiccans. My basic problem with those folks is that they seem to have one thing in common with most Christians. Some I know spoke of “white spells”, and the negative energy which comes back to you if you project badness on to a fellow human, but then ended up not living up to this ideal. I don’t know whether they really have any power which other humans lack, but am thankful that the deity whom I worship is more powerful than Wiccans, or the earth spirits or other entities in whom
they might believe.
Welcome aboard! Hope you share more of your experiences with us in the near future!
BB
“There is no power to be had over another only the power to enrich and expand oneself. Those who seek to control, influence, or even âhelpâ others without their consent are in my mind very dangerous and misguided individuals.”
Beautifully stated.
“I keep my humor but turn in my indifference and select instead an open heart in which to house my many souvenirs, and set out to join the dance of life with childlike abandon and wonder, trusting that this time faith will sustain and inspire me instead of chain and punish me. And I know I am truly blessed to have this time to continue my journey.”
Yes! So hard to do when the stress of What Al calls fundamentalist “virus” overwhemls us. If there is a beauty to be reaped from the experience, it is that each of us were forcede, by this great trauma, to discover who we are as individuals, as people, as living, breathing beings. Some of us may have retained a belief in God(as I have) for very different reasons, and many if not most became atheists. But what has occurred is that each of us had to decide for ourselves who we are as individuals. Each of seems to have become, almost of necessity, indidivuals.
If you ask for a purpose in life, I’d say that’s a darn good purpose, and a blessing.