This Blog has become a forum for a number of serious Pagan women to post and create. Our object is to provide a voice.

Sunday, November 18, 2018

EVENING VESPERS IN THE RABBIT HOLE by Peno Hardesty

i lost my right to life the moment i was born
for i had no right to food nor warmth nor healthcare
and so i died i had no right to life
i lost my right to life the moment i was born
genocide and slavery
denied my right to life because of my skin
i lost my right to life the moment i was born
born gay
born trans
born bi
your religions told me there was something wrong with me
i was a sinner
and so your hate hung me
i lost my right to life the moment i was born
it ended with your gun
the one you claim a right to
i am here now to reclaim my right to life
i reclaim my right to food
healthcare
i reclaim my right to life in the skin i was born in
without oppression
without fear of police brutality and unjust sentencing
i reclaim my right to life with the identity i was born with
free to love
free to marry
free to be who i am
i reclaim my right to life free from your gun
fired in hate
fired in anger
i reclaim my right to life in spite of your unjust laws
your religons
your guns
we are

Monday, October 8, 2018

The Mean Streets by Barbara Carvallo




Currently I am reading a biography of Raymond Chandler; well a fourth actually. In reading it I am reminded that when he started writing for “The Black Mask” in the ‘30’s he was living in L.A. He worked for the oil industry and was astounded at the level of corruption that flowed between the industry and the city. In creating Philip Marlowe, his detective, and the world Marlowe inhabits, the mean streets as Chandler generally calls it, the writer used the profound corruption of the city as his moral backdrop. Accordingly, Marlowe who is an honorable man is drawn in stark contrast to his world even though he is forced at times to engage in behavior that is less then honorable on the surface. In his essay, “The Simple Art of Murder,” Chandler defined his detective thus: "... down these mean streets a man must go who is not himself mean, who is neither tarnished nor afraid." 

It is the quality of being neither tarnished nor afraid that inoculates Marlowe from the corruption. I say inoculates because it is clear in Chandler’s work that his view of corruption, like mine, is that it is a contagion.  Moving from person to person, place to place it swells and grows and feeds on itself. It can be barely perceptible in the beginning, but left to its own devises it will become rampant.  

Last week we watched an epidemic explode from the growing corruption that has plagued our body politic for a very long time. The legalized bribery and fraud that has grown evermore acceptable for both political parties have taken their toll in a numb acceptance of sleaze, hypocrisy, obfuscation and the outright swindling of the American people. The acceptance is so wide and deep as to make many Americans willing, even joyful, participants in their own abuse.

Donald Trump isn’t the first of his kind; he is just the worst of his kind.  A Libertine by disposition, a con artist and thug by philosophy and a cheat by profession, Trump fouls everything he touches. Those who follow him slavishly, admiring, supporting and making excuses for him are tarnished and afraid of everything he tells them to fear. As such they are irredeemable.
  
 
Out of dozens of jurists Trump picked the one most likely to save him from the law; a pathetic, aging frat boy with the firm belief that whatever he wants is his due.  What happened in the course of shoving this ill-suited man onto the court was a travesty against the American people, womanhood, the law, the Senate and the court. Trump and his cabal of screaming fanatics were acting out of pure self-interest. That is the only way Trump knows how to act. That is his corruption, and it is a contagion.

If we are going to become inoculated against the contagion, if we are going to become untarnished and unafraid we will have to face some facts. First, too few people run too much in this country.  From the electoral college that allowed a minority party to put its minority president in office; to the coalition of small Conservative states, with less than half the population of this country, which control the Judiciary Committee and have now forced their ideology up the people’s rear end against the people’s will, it is time for the majority to raise some serious hell. We can stop allowing the media to tell us we are outnumbered to start.

Secondly, in this country that harps on democracy and the rule of the people no one, but no one, should serve anywhere for life.  If the Supreme Court ever was a nonpartisan arbiter of the rule of law and the Constitution, Kavanaugh has demonstrated for all time that it is now the strong legal arm of a partisan agenda.

Finally, blind self-interest is not patriotism no matter what Trump says or what kind of behavior he models. Some people of whom I am suspicious, Graham who wants to be AG; McConnell who wants to load the court with people who serve the donors he servers, God is not one of them; and although what she got out of this is unknown, Collins who stood on her feminist bonafides and told women that a half-assed investigation by the FBI and the word of a man who demonstrably lied in two separate confirmation hearings makes him more credible then his accuser. All of this clearly confirms a pernicious level of corruption as one Senator after another impersonated their man in the Oval Office, with half-truths, phony outrage and yes, slut shaming.

Last week we were told by people only too happy to use the Tea Party as a vehicle to destroy our first African American President that women protesting a Supreme Court appointment which threatens our liberty represent a mob. We were instructed that the battle over Kavanaugh represented the lowest point in the Senate’s confirmation process by people only too happy to ignore the outrageous treatment of Merrick Garland. If we didn’t know it before we must see it now, hypocrisy is the default position of the morally bankrupt. However, truth does not die because some would murder it.

Like just about everybody I have talked to in the last forty-eight hours who witnessed our national descent into the worst stink of the contagion of Trump, I feel exhausted, a little sick and mad as hell.  I keep wishing I could hire Marlowe to ride forward in his single-breasted armor and fedora helmet with his .38 at the ready to do battle with the corruption of the day. But, Marlowe isn’t real. There isn’t a hero to save us. We must save ourselves using our voices and our votes, our values and our veracity. It is imperative that down the mean streets we alone must go, remaining untarnished and unafraid.

Thursday, September 13, 2018

The Camera's Eye by Barbara Carvallo

Sometimes the light, the conditions, the bloom and the background come together in such perfect harmonThe y as to stun the camera's eye.  This is Mother Natures version of what Jung called "Synchronicity". 














Friday, July 27, 2018

Outta the Blue by Barbara Carvallo

'Outta the Blue' is a shrub rose. Standing upright, she is of medium height with a full old-fashioned bloom. It is hardy, resistant to most diseases and very fragrant with a true rose scent. Hybridized by Carruth in 2002 for Weeks this rose sports medium size flowers with 25-30 pedals.
When I first acquired this rose it was a much deeper purple/pink. In 2014 it became infected with a virus that caused it to variegate, leaving white stripes on the bloom (see photo 5). While the virus did not harm the plant, and the variegation lasted only one season, the rose now has a lighter color. Additionally, it is possible to see a remnant of the variegation in the fully opened rose (see photos 1 & 2). Nonetheless, 'Outta the Blue' is still one of the most beautiful roses in my garden.








Thursday, July 26, 2018

The Mystery of the Garden by Barbara Carvallo

The gardener proposes and the Goddess disposes, the Witches say. Only understanding this can unlock the spiritual mysteries of the garden.







Friday, July 6, 2018

Wildflowers by Barbara Carvallo

The Goddess gives us many blessings.  The wildflowers and the bumble bee are two of the sweetest.  Enjoy.











Sunday, July 1, 2018

The Wild Rose by Barbara Carvallo


People often ask me about the use and care of the wild or rambling rose.  I have photographed them in their natural habitat to illustrate their attributes.  They are small of thorn, bloom and leaf, running from pink to pale pink to white and often tangled bramble-like.  They are not climbers and don’t grow very tall, preferring instead to spread.

In the high country of the Rocky Mountains they swell into the shade of great trees or in the sunlight along trails and walkways.  They bloom once a season, leaving behind luscious hips to turn red or red-brown in the fall and winter.  Their scent is subtle but carries well on mountain breezes. As Shakespeare said, “The rose looks fair, but fairer we it deem for that sweet odour which doth in it live.” 

In my estimation the wild rambling rose is not a garden rose.  Popping up where ever it pleases along its extensive root, this rose is very difficult to contain. It is best left to the wild places its blossom grace so beautifully in spring. 





Monday, April 2, 2018

RESURRECTION IN THE RABBIT WHOLE BY PENO HARDESTY

i shared a dinner
i was a stranger at the table
we dined on bread and water
not one word was spoken
life stories were told by scars and baldness---missing limbs and tears
music played
songs from the beating heart of truth
i was a stranger at the table
resurrected from the tomb of life
come
there is a song for you
there is a place for you also
in the beating heart of truth
we are
blessings