Moon Enlightenment

Watching Her through the window

I catch sight of my reflection 

My cheeks seem to sparkle 

The Moon’s gentle light, transforming the trails of my tears  

Melancholy Grief 

So much of myself lost 

Given and taken away 

The silver rivulets tracing cracks I’m trying to repair 

Trying to feel worthy 

I am not a throw away vessel to be used and emptied 

This was (is) my failure

Her light reflects on my face, the idea I am wearing her magic, the only love that will protect me 

Is my own 

My nervous system reacts. 

Not only to the immediate moment 

but to all the ‘moments’ that came before. Moments that were never healed. 

Moments there were no breaks from. 

I do not welcome this. 

It’s not an overreaction to the now 

It’s safety training stuck in high alert 

Bind me in loving restraints 

Tell me I’m a good girl 

My nervous system reacts
Safely in the moment
Releasing some of the moments that came before
Healed
Breaking
I welcome this
It’s opening into the now
Safely retraining dialling down the alert
Bind me in loving restraints
Tell me I’m a good girl

Empty

There are no heroes 

There is no one to admire 

Pretty Art 

Is better 

Anonymous 

Can not trust a stranger 

Can not trust a known 

Can not believe the poetry from your lips 

Disguising the monster 

There are no heroes 

There is no one with out a mask 

An honest heart 

The words I love that built worlds in my mind 

Have tainted 

My own heart and awakened a distrust 

I long thought healed 

Rage ( Pt2, the Kicker)

The kicker

I’ve worked so hard from where this knocked me to the last time I was finding ‘self’.

I built hope

Hope that there was misinformation and miscommunication that could be healed

But I was so far down, buried in shame

Things I held true disintegrated like my hard fought ability to trust

But I resolved to build, trusting the vision I had would come, it feels like it is meant to be. The feelings of love in my heart would build a better foundation

Every baby step I make, a look or breath of a word can knock me down.

I resolve to lead by an example.

I resolve to lead without shame

I resolve to stay open to love and trust

I resolve to stop letting myself down and treasure the very humanness I am told is what shines ( not shame as the whispers say)

Here we are again

You only listen when you like what I have to say

you only look when it suits you

you will talk and talk and talk and talk

and it doesn’t seem to matter

the parts of me that make you uncomfortable

the parts of me that frustrate you

the parts of me that are trying to grow and express

Are time and time again

told

too much

too much

too much

there are times I can carry this

use it to fuel me to keep growing

there are times when it guts me

and leaves me bleeding on the floor

unseen unheard unalive

My 40s in Symbols

I didn’t get my first tattoo until I was beginning my 40s. In a few days, I’ll be 49. Today I just got my 9th tattoo.

Each tattoo is a symbol for something. This past decade I have been through some very dark moments, and have shed many things of myself.

This was the first. I had just surpassed my Mother’s age of death. This is my blood, my Celt roots, my Nan, my Mom, my son and my daughter. This was my mark to celebrate the gift of life.
My Ouroboros and Pentacle. My rebirth into my spiritual practice. Something in me felt a deep pull to learn and reconnect to the things that speak to me. This would be more important than I would have ever guessed.
‘Witch Know Thyself’
This sigil is a reminder I am stronger than my demons. At this point in my life I had made a kind of peace that anxiety and CPTSD may always be a part of me, but they would not defeat me
Next in Moon Glyphs I choose to keep another version of the elements with me. The Pentacle being the other. The two on the top represent balance and life. It was a reminder that I will strive for harmony with in myself and my environment

Things started to get a little shaky for me. Mental health wise I shut down. A mix of burnout and elevation of anxiety and old trauma surfacing. Being compounded by upheaval and high tension around me.

A symbol to honour the Goddess Morrigan. I had connected with her to help guide me as I found my self in a very dark, anxious place. This was a reminder I was not alone in this pitch, she would prop me up when I fumbled.
There can be a point when it feels like all your pieces have blown apart. A raw exposed nerve. I felt so ugly, shamed, worthless. This piece ( The Enzo) represents finding beauty in unfinished imperfection. Even though I did not feel beautiful, I could identify with not yet being finished.
A very tumultuous time preceded a much needed break and reconnecting trip with my husband to my spiritual home – New Orleans
This was at the end of the first year of Covid, I knew my mental health was taking a hit. I was struggling under the weight of old trauma patterns I wanted to break. The uncertainty of the world, and a deep disconnected feeling. The arrow was to remind me know matter how far back I feel I’ve gone, my trajectory is forward. AKF has been an important part of sustaining me. It’s a wonderful online support ( Always Keep Fighting)

I have been doing intense work over the last year. Working on releasing trauma patterning, learning about myself, the light and dark. At times the realizations have been hard. The pain uncovered, the isolation. Things I want to repair but am unsure how, setting firm boundaries. Again I’ve called to the Morrigan to remind me that I’m am strong, a worthy warrior.

Which bought me to this, as I’m days away from my 49th. A reminder of the armoury I am building. I have defences that are not toxic, but are strong. It is within hands reach.

I do not know what this last year of my 40s will bring, what I do know is, that this past decade has had incredible highs and lows. I’ve gained and lost so much. I am hoping my 50s will be more learning but less drops. I know it will be recorded, the pictures on my skin a reminder to myself of my journey, my growth and my power.

Awkward Tales from the Shadow Side: Reflections Underneath

I stand in front of the mirror

Armour on

Battle worn, cracked and brittle

Some areas thick and rigid with hasty repair

Is this the way you love me?

Lifting the helmet, what can’t be seen, as they reside so deep, are the howling banshees who live inside. Burrowed in, born of survival, fear and pain. Revealed, tired, wanting eyes.

The cuirass goes next, throat exposed

Words have died here

Breath extinguished

Fine network of scars unseen but felt

Pauldron lifted, the weight had held my arms in place to brace against the blows. Shoulders curled forward with the phantom weight of all that was, without the bindings now threatening to disengage

Plackart next, twisted scars over where the heart resides

Thick, thorny vines at once piercing and protecting the beating centre

Jagged lumps of torn tissue across the upper back holding my arms in place

Faulds removed, one by one, exposing my sex. Sometimes taken, sometimes gifted

Mistaken often for the sole root of power – it is but one area I can hold sacred

The cuisse loosened to fall away, revealing legs with nearly invisible trails of scars, some inflicted through war, some used as a release to quiet the banshees on their terror.

Here I stand, the mirror reflecting all that was hidden beneath the armour

The ugly truth of the damage. The damage that created the need for the armour.

Can you love me this way?

Can I love me this way?

Awkward Tales From The Shadow Side: Healing on Assumption

The sacred spiral that is life. 

In so many ways we want to believe that it is linear, being able to plot each date and event. A constant trajectory forward. What ever was in the past should and can stay there. 

I have been committed to working on my shadow side. Not to bring it all to light, but to also learn how to make friends and build compassion and understanding with some of the things that lurk there.

There is a lot to choose from. Some traumas fold in on others, a majority having taken place in childhood until my early 20s. There is a a linear trajectory in how the following story takes place, but the fall out, the scars and ticks are embedded in the infinite spiral. 

As a small child I was told the fairy tale of my origins. My parents met and fell in love and I was the result of said fairy tale.

That story did not hold up for long. I don’t recall my parents ever being affectionate. About the age of 8 I became aware that my father wasn’t the shining hero I had assumed he was. He was an alcoholic, who often threatened suicide. He would disappear for days, make threats and was verbally abusive. This became apparent in a slow steady drip to me. There are things here that will be fodder for another time. But this is not the part of the story I want to tell. 

From here it will be disjointed, I am going to tell the story of how I came to be, the way I have learned it. 

My mother had told me when I was young that her and my dad had gotten married in 1971, I was born in 1973. When I was 10 my parents slipped up when they had mentioned it was also 10 years that they were married. My mother then changed the story to tell me that they has married the August before my March birth. It still made the myth a believable that they married for love as she would have been newly pregnant. Not long after, I came across their marriage certificate, they had indeed been married in August of 1973, I was 5 months old.

By the time I had discovered this, the cancer that was eating at my mother had begun to take hold, my fathers drinking and mental illness had gone off the rails with no reprieve. 

Not long before my mother died, on a day when she was still decently lucid but bed ridden I had crawled into bed to snuggle with her. This had been our habit when she was not in hospital, as long as I was gentle I could climb in carefully and wrap myself into her frail body. 

On this particular day she stroked my hair and leaned into me. 

‘There is something I want to tell you’ What followed ate at me for years. ‘I love you my little doll. But I never wanted you. I never wanted to leave you in this, you know your dad is not a well man. This was not how this was supposed to be. I am sorry that you will have to do this when I am gone.’ That was the last live conversation I ever had with her.

She passed not long after. 

I had not been particularly close with my mothers two daughters from her first marriage. They are 9 and 11 years yeas older than I am. I don’t recall the older one living with us all the time. 

They had promised my mother that they would look after me when she was gone. There is a lot to unpack her for another time, but the over view is that along with not feeling particularly close  I also had the distinct feeling that they did not much care for me. The hate they had for my father was well known ( more the older than the younger), and somewhere deep I knew they held resentment towards me because of this. It was rarely direct, but I never felt really connected or seen. 

Little things would get said/revealed in anger or rare unguarded moments. By my mid 20s I really began to understand that they were also processing the loss of their mother too. I also recognized that they held their own weight of trauma.

Until I was 20 I tried very hard to maintain a relationship with my father, he was the only parent I still had. I felt it my duty to make it work. Again there is a lot to specifically unpack here but that is for another examination. I just want to note that it is through this that I also was told my fathers version of things, mostly in drunken laments, but once in a while a dry conversation would happen and I would be given pieces of the disfunction picture.

I carried around a lot of odds and ends from my childhood. fragments of a fragmented life. One of my treasures was a cassette tape. On this ancient recording was a moment frozen in time of me at the sweet age of about 4 and my mother. We were discussing my dog at time. I never played it because the tape itself was twisted. 

A few years ago I asked a friend who is an audio specialist if he could fix it for me. With great care he did, and also transferred it to digital. When he gave me the recordings back he informed me there was more on there than I thought. 

My mother had told the story of the night I was born. I have written of this before. My father had not really been in attendance, he was trying to out run the police. He had been at the at the hospital, but obnoxiously drunk. They did not catch him. 

This is the platform of where my understanding about some of my family dynamics came from.

My father was a sick man. Not only with alcoholism, but all of the unaddressed trauma and mental health issues he had.

My sisters and I did not connect, I was under the assumption they did not like me, mostly for who my father was. There were snippets of stories, whispers of things may father may have done. Never confirmed. 

I had learned early on in life to be self reliant. To succeed on my own, to never anticipate active  support. Deep things rooted and rotted in me. I would never be worthy, of love, of compassion, of empathy and of validation, no matter how hard I worked. I would never fully out run the shadow of the monster of my father. 

I would try sometimes to connect with my sisters. I tried to not be a bother. I stopped asking for help from either of them because I was a burden, I felt the frustration and aggravation when I needed something. Eventually I stopped inviting them in to my inner space. This happened in pieces, starting not long after my mom had died. By the time I was married with my own child I had a ‘couple times a year’ kind of relationship with them. I had all but given up trying to feel respected and valued by them.

I made sure that I built relationships with my nieces and nephews. I adore each one of those kids. It was and still is important that they know I love them deeply, no matter the relationships that I have with their moms.

I learned long ago to let go of the malice and anger I felt towards them. I recognized we had all come from trauma, we all had our own version of that trauma. I know that they did the best that they could at the time. While I may have been only 12, my sisters had just entered their 20s. They took on what they had promised but none of us were really prepared or supported as much as we should have been. 

It has been almost 37 years since my mother died. It has been 28 years since I have set eyes on my father. I have occasional visits with my sisters, one lives across country now, so those are even more infrequent. I am included in the odd text. But I don’t think that we often cross each other’s minds. The disconnect has gone on so long.

This past Christmas we were going to have a small family gathering. This Covid world we live in making big parties non existent. It was to be my older sister, her son, and my little trio and my other sisters kids who live here. But due to possible exposures to Covid only my sister came. My daughter then decided to squirrel away into her room and my husband decided to make himself scarce. 

We began to talk. It is a conversation that was not planned, yet in looking back it followed a very specific path. 

I will never tell my sisters stories, not the details, it is their’s, not for me to share publicly. There are aspects of their stories that do affect me, and it is those affects that are mine to share. 

We discussed the bland day to day of work and life in a pandemic. It started down the road of mental health, then more specifically the mental health history of our family. I had let it be known that I have been actively working on my mental health for the last couple of years. She also offered up the fact that she had been engaging in the work of understanding the burdens she’s been carrying and how to make them more manageable.

It really was a gift of a conversation. 48 years in the making. I am very proud of her. I really am, she is working with her own shadow to step out of the family curses.

When I really began to look at where my mental demons were born, I could see so many childhood events that were the germination. Because two of the main people are no longer here to answer questions, and I never felt connected or comfortable enough to ask questions of those who still could clarify, I chose to base some of my self work around what I assumed to be true.

There were many dangerous and damaging interactions I had with my father. I had always assumed he was capable of far worse. I witnessed things he did to my mother, I saw how it escalated as the level of alcohol increased. 

I have worked hard to step out of the guilt, shame, fear and anger I have felt towards him. The disgust has softened, compassion had moved into the space that was occupied by rage. But much of the information I used as my platform for healing was assumed. 

That gift of a conversation turned some of those assumptions to truth. 

It took me 3 days before I spoke of the conversation. In those 3 days I could feel that truth moving through every cell, I believed I had moved away from this. I could feel an awakening of emotion I had not felt in years. Emotion I had run from, masked, medicated from. Emotion I thought I had worked through. 

I had begun to realize that the work I had done around my father had indeed mostly been a practice run. As soon as I tried to speak of it, I saw a pattern so clearly, one of denial appear almost instantly. So easy to shut down because I know it can make others uncomfortable. So easy to say just the facts, but not even come close to touching the emotion that festered deep below.

Emotion…. I can write about it. I can analyze it. I can sit with anyone while they experience their own. But I do not cry, or really reveal my emotions in front of others. I learned early on not to take up that space or to ask for it. At least that is the way it has always been. When I was a child and we were on the thin ice around my dad I learned not to show any weakness, emotion would take time I did not have if I wanted to manage the situation. I learned not to cry about my mother (your such a brave girl). I mastered not crying about the abuses and toxic situations I found myself in. I just got on with it.

At least I had mostly mastered it in front of others, unless large quantities of alcohol or drugs were involved, then I fell into the family trope of hysterical drunken rantings. 

Being alone is a very different story, silent rage crying is a skill I have mastered, sobbing in the shower, waiting until I am on my own, no one around and screaming until I am hoarse. Through out the years this has also led to varying forms of self harm, some immediately visible, some not.

There are two times in the last 20 years I can recall actually leaning into another human when I broke, and I was not shamed, shut down or given platitudes. I was shocked, embarrassed and also fascinated that it seemed allowable for me to receive, not just give. At the time I did not feel judged. The break down and study of this profound event is for another time. Sufficed to say, this current situation has brought up emotion I don’t know what to do with, and no real place to lean.

I am devastated, for the young girls me and my sisters were. I am angry at both my mother and father (something I really believed I had worked through). I am horrified at what we were subjected to. I feel shame and guilt that this still takes up space in my mental and physical body after all these years. I feel shame and rage at the negative patterns (initially for survival) I have had, especially in some very important relationships. I feel shame that I allowed and facilitated these patterns.

 I am acutely aware of how emotionally cut off I am. I am painfully aware of the patterns I have created in my life. I may be comfortable sitting with others during their emotional time but, I have set it up that many close to me are not comfortable holding this space. I apologize if the tears begin to fall. I don’t try to force the conversation. I will back track and brush it off, if I get the hint of discomfort. I don’t ask for the support because I feel it will not be there. Well meaning enough, but telling me ultimately this can be a good thing for me and my sister (I am also very aware of this and unsure where it will really go), invalidates the emotions that have surfaced. Very obvious not wanting to hear any details, so I default, go quiet and seek solace in the bathroom quietly screaming into a towel and fighting the urge to express the pain I feel in an unproductive way. I am hyper aware of how many people have triggers that can go off because of my story. I also witness the crushing stress current events have foisted on to everyone, and I can not ask over taxed people to hold me up with this. 

I am so full of fear. I have made a few passive attempts at asking someone to listen, but I don’t want to burden anyone with such old tales. The funny thing is, I would encourage someone to tell their story, knowing the danger of carrying it alone. Yet here I am. Writing publicly about most of it. But being such a public forum, I am consciously leaving out so much of what I need to lay down, because it is not only my story and I do not have the sole right to publicly reveal it.

I asked my self why I feel safer to post? Weirdly I do find it a less risky way of connecting. Less chance of being denied or shut down. People can choose to engage but because I don’t see you, or feel the energy of being pushed away, I only get the sense of acceptance when people choose to engage. It’s a way to connect without placing demands or requests on the people I know. It is the antidote to being I am being told that I am/ or the situation is too much. There is always the hope that someone I know will read it. There are those of you who will, and just knowing that, gives that fleeting moment of being seen and acknowledged and validation. 

Although I feel I have done much work. I see how much more work there is to go. It is not linear, it is a spiral. I am not the same person who faced these monsters before. I am not he young girl who lived them, I am not the young woman who tried to examine the fallout, but did not yet have to tools to make great change. I am the vital woman, knowing I am worthy of not having to carry this, I have learned some tools to make great change. There is another me waiting on the other side of this.

In this immediate now, I am tired, I am pandemic exhausted, I am trying to see how expressing these emotions feel. I am trying to find a safe space to risk that much vulnerability. I am trying to make it through the every day stresses that seem so heightened but the state of the world. I am trying to do what I do best and take care of those I can, family, friends, my community. There is just a slight difference, I finally made it to that list, I am also determined to take care of me.

A Message on the First Night of Yule

The 12 days of Yule have begun. It is also the night before Winter Solstice. I had been thinking over the weekend how I wanted to honour the start and celebrate my Ancestors, my Kin and my own Spirit.

The Universe directed me. I have hit a wall, a hard one. Physically, emotionally and mentally.

By the time I finished my ‘official’ day yesterday I was done, my body and mind were heavy and exhausted.

I went to bed early. Knowing enough to try to rest as today was another full tilt one.

This morning I had a headache and I felt like I ran a marathon ( this is a common body response when my anxiety has been high). While I have had some anxiety peaks in the last month, I did not feel this was the sole cause of my malaise.

I am burned out. The stress of the outside world has pecked away consistently at my armour. I have been on go for so long I’m not sure, other than when receiving a massage, when else I’ve actually hit pause. Even sleep feels like a momentary dead drop and right back at it.

It’s almost amusing, because one of the things on my never ending ‘to do’ list is to rearrange my schedule in the new year to have more ‘life, quiet, creative, connection time.’ It moved up the list to a top spot.

On this first day of Yule, the day to honour the Mother, the strong feminine, I honoured myself.

So today, I hit a full pause. I am grateful for the clients who understood, rebooked for another time and encouraged my day of rest.

I kept my pjs on. I ate light, I slept, read, listened to podcasts, curled up with my dogs.

I honoured my wisdom to listen to my body, my strength to not push through, I nurtured myself.

There is guilt lurking in the back ground, things left undone, not productive enough for the day. But the self talk I am practicing is that, this is what I needed, this was critical soul food. That in order to be present and participate, I needed this recharge.

Do I feel whole? No, but I feel a little more peace. The burning stiffness that anxiety trails through my muscles has softened. The pounding in my head receded. I don’t feel as emotionally drained.

I am not the only one. But I am one of the few that finally gave myself permission to stop.

I should have done it sooner. I have been the one who did not listen, who crashed hard with illness and yet kept going. Waiting for someone else to tell me it’s ok, that I am deserving to rest.

Do you feel this? Are you just trying to carry on despite everything?

On this first night of Yule, my gift to you is permission to hit pause.

You are worthy and you are very deserving.

Rest, move mindfully and know that’s more than enough.