Archive for 2011

>We need your help! Save this plantation!

Posted by Jessica Jewett 5 Comments »

>There is nothing sadder than an old plantation falling into decay and ruin. That is what’s happening to Red Doe Plantation in South Carolina because there isn’t enough money to begin serious restoration efforts. I’m very close to one of the women who works with this plantation and I’ve offered to use my clout with the thousands of people who follow my Twitter and Facebook accounts to help draw attention to this beautiful place. Nothing is more shocking to the senses than pictures, so I will show you the current condition of Red Doe first.

Pretty sad, right? I have been to this plantation several times and I can tell you from my own experience that it needs a lot of work. The rain porch was not stable enough to trust my wheelchair with being safe out there, so the work needed is not just cosmetic. It’s structural. Inside, it looks like a stereotypical dilapidated haunted house with different eras of peeling wallpaper, paint and so forth. Underneath the decay, however, there are beautiful gems of historical integrity waiting to be uncovered and restored. Believe me when I tell you that this plantation is very much alive and does not deserve the slow, painful death brought on by lack of public donations.

The historical marker on the road reads: Red Doe Plantation was built in 1846 for Evander A. Gregg (1818-1874), a planter in what was Marion District. Its high masonry basement and porch form, indigenous to northeastern S.C., make it a fine example of a raised Carolina cottage. It was acquired by R.L. Singletary (1830-1910) in 1867 and by J.W. Wallace (1861-1928) in 1912. The plantation was named Red Doe in the 1930s.

You may be wondering what good it will do to save a plantation. For one thing, plantations are excellent teaching tools to educate school children and the public about American history. These places bring in tourist dollars and create jobs in the local community. Additionally, my friend says that they want to restore the big barn on the property (pictured below) to house horses for the local humane society. Simply put, this plantation needs to be saved!

So what can you do? Well, here’s how you can help!

My friend who works regularly with Red Doe has established Lucky’s Dollars for the Doe to carry on the legacy of her dog, Lucky. He has cancer and she wants to use his name to leave a legacy long after his passing of restoration and hope that we can all work together to bring Red Doe back to life. The picture on the left is Lucky sitting on the front steps of the plantation that he has known for years as his second home. Lucky’s Dollars for the Doe is a very simple program. Dig through your change jars, lift up your couch cushions, etc., and find a dollar to help Red Doe survive in Lucky’s name.

In Lucky’s own words:

Hi, I am asking all of my friends and their peepuls to please consider sending one dollar in an envelope to the non-profit group Red Doe Plantation, Inc. in care of my mama (since I am not allowed to walk to the mailbox alone). You will receive a receipt!

This is my most favorite place to spend time and I would like to leave a legacy of luck at “The Doe” long after I can’t fight my cancer anymore. Some peepuls don’t realize how much a doggy can do so help me show them! Time has taken a toll on the house and outbuildings and it is in desperate need of donations in any amount. (Take a peek at the pictures on the group page “Red Doe Plantation”.

So flip up those couch cushions, reach under the car seats and check the bottom of the washer! Spare some change to save this piece of history pwease! You know you can’t resist my cuteness, hee hee.

(P.S. Any doggy currency that is received will NOT be eated by me I promise. It will be taken to the local humane society.)

Donations:
Red Doe Plantation, Inc.
c/o Gretchen Huggins
3695 Willow Creek Rd.
Florence, SC 29505

Contact:
Lucky Huggins
via Gretchen Huggins
reddoerestorer@yahoo.com

Everybody can afford a dollar. Just stick it in an envelope and send it today. If all of my Facebook friends and Twitter followers send one dollar, we have the potential to raise about $5,000. A lot of good can be done with $5,000! Please help us. I will consider it a personal favor and you will receive a receipt for your donation!

Lucky sitting on the front porch. Don’t disappoint this dog in the last phase of his life!

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Day One of Ostara Fasting

Posted by Jessica Jewett No Comments »
Today is the beginning of my fasting period as part of my Ostara celebration. For information about Ostara, refer to this blog. Tomorrow is the spring equinox and the Ostara sabbat, although many practitioners are doing their rituals tonight for practicality purposes. I am currently a solitary practitioner, meaning I create and celebrate my own rituals. I feel that fasting is an important part of bringing the winter season to an end and celebrating the rebirth of our planet in springtime. Fasting is a purification ritual done in virtually every religion in the world. There are misconceptions about fasting though, the biggest being that the person starves themselves by consuming nothing at all. This is not the case. Some go to that extreme but most do not.

In my case, as part of celebrating Ostara, I’m limiting my diet to natural spring/summer foods in order to cleanse myself of the impurities and heaviness built up during the fall/winter seasons. We eat a lot of heavy things to keep warm and we basically go into hibernation during that phase of the earth’s cycle. In my practice, the dark months are a death phase and the light months are the life phase. Fasting allows me to physically cleanse my system and prepare myself spiritually for this rebirth period in the earth’s yearly cycle. It takes discipline to deny oneself the comforting things eaten during the dark months but the outcome is a healthy jumpstart on life.

As part of my fasting, I’m limiting myself to fresh fruits and vegetables, noodles, eggs, light breads with honey, water and natural juice. I have eliminated soda, coffee, sweets like candy and cake, meat (I have not been eating most meats for a while anyway), dairy and anything that will leave me feeling heavy after eating it, including eliminating fast food from my diet. Eggs and light breads with honey are traditional foods in the celebration of Ostara and eggs can help make up for the protein lost with giving up meat. Asparagus and spinach are great vegetables at this time of year. I have been putting uncooked spinach in my salads to get all the nutritional value without tasting it much (I don’t really like the taste of spinach). I’m controlling my cravings for sweets by eating pears and grapes. Those things trick my mind into thinking I’ve eaten sugar but without having what I call the food hangover afterward. Controlling the amount of food consumed is part of fasting as well. Once you enter into a fasting period, you become acutely aware of everything going into your body and you begin to realize that many of the times you eat are simply due to boredom. I’m only eating when I feel hunger. That means I’m not snacking on potato chips, candy, etc., just because they’re sitting there looking at me.

So far the hardest part has been giving up the soda and sweets. I have been having fantasies about a frosty Dr Pepper today even though I have been working the last few weeks to significantly cut down on the amount of soda I consume. Diet or caffeine free doesn’t count either. Those things are just as bad for you as regular soda. I’ve become very aware of how much I eat in the way of sweets now that I can’t have them. A beautiful freshly frosted chocolate cupcake is the stuff of fantasy today.

Outside of fasting, the next thing you can do to prepare yourself for the rebirth of spring is to do a deep clean on your house. “Spring cleaning” has a lot to do with these practices. Sweep under your furniture, pull up the area rugs and beat the dust out of them, clear out any dead leaves on plants, dust everything, clean out your closets and make donations to needy people, begin preparing your gardens for the growing season, etc. It’s also very important to clear out any remnants of the Christmas/Yule season. Simplify your homes and bring in fresh flowers to brighten things up. All of these things are rituals in themselves that will prepare you spiritually and mentally for the upcoming seasons. If you are a real practitioner, don’t forget to set out sweets by your door tonight.

Last night I had a dream that might have been symbolic of the goddess and rebirth of the planet right now. My mother was young again and in labor, having a baby. She was wearing a long white gown and flowers in her hair. I was helping her through the labor. This was obviously not my actual mother since she is neither that young or able to have children anymore but the mother figure is the goddess. The act of being in labor is renewing life. I must have been thinking heavily about the celebration of Ostara last night when I was going to sleep!

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You Call It Easter, We Call It Ostara

Posted by Jessica Jewett No Comments »
Article by Peg Aloi

Try this sometime with your children or a young niece, nephew or cousin: on the day of the Vernal or Autumnal Equinox, just a few moments before the exact moment of the equinox, go outside with a raw egg. Find a reasonably level place on the sidewalk or driveway. For a few moments just before and just after the equinox, you can balance the egg upright (wider end down) by simply setting it down on the ground. No kidding! It will stand up all by itself. Kids love this, and most adults are amazed and delighted, too.

This little “trick” brings together two of the most potent aspects of this holiday: the balancing of the earth’s gravity midway between the extremes of light and dark at Winter and Summer Solstice; and the symbolism of the egg. The egg is one of the most notable symbols of Easter, but, as someone who was raised Catholic and who was never told exactly why we colored eggs at Easter, or why there was a bunny who delivered candy to us, or why it was traditional to buy new clothes to wear for church on Easter Sunday, I always wondered about this holiday. As with many of the seemingly unrelated secular symbols and traditions of Christmas (what do evergreen trees, mistletoe, reindeer and lights have to do with the birth of Christ? You might wanna read “You Call It Christmas, We Call It Yule” for an exploration of these connections), Easter too has adapted many ancient pagan symbols and customs in its observance.

Easter gets its name from the Teutonic goddess of spring and the dawn, whose name is spelled Oestre or Eastre (the origin of the word “east” comes from various Germanic, Austro-Hungarian words for dawn that share the root for the word “aurora” which means ” to shine”). Modern pagans have generally accepted the spelling “Ostara” which honors this goddess as our word for the Vernal Equinox. The 1974 edition of Webster’s New World Dictionary defines Easter thus: “orig., name of pagan vernal festival almost coincident in date with paschal festival of the church; Eastre, dawn goddess; 1. An annual Christian festival celebrating the resurrection of Jesus, held on the first Sunday after the date of the first full moon that occurs on or after March 21.” The Vernal Equinox usually falls somewhere between March 19th and 22nd (note that the dictionary only mentions March 21st, as opposed to the date of the actual Equinox), and depending upon when the first full moon on or after the Equinox occurs, Easter falls sometime between late-March and mid-April.

Because the Equinox and Easter are so close, many Catholics and others who celebrate Easter often see this holiday (which observes Christ’s resurrection from the dead after his death on Good Friday) as being synonymous with rebirth and rejuvenation: the symbolic resurrection of Christ is echoed in the awakening of the plant and animal life around us. But if we look more closely at some of these Easter customs, we will see that the origins are surprisingly, well, pagan! Eggs, bunnies, candy, Easter baskets, new clothes, all these “traditions” have their origin in practices which may have little or nothing to do with the Christian holiday.

For example, the traditional coloring and giving of eggs at Easter has very pagan associations. For eggs are clearly one of the most potent symbols of fertility, and spring is the season when animals begin to mate and flowers and trees pollinate and reproduce. In England and Northern Europe, eggs were often employed in folk magic when women wanted to be blessed with children. There is a great scene in the film The Wicker Man where a woman sits upon a tombstone in the cemetery, holding a child against her bared breasts with one hand, and holding up an egg in the other, rocking back and forth as she stares at the scandalized (and very uptight!) Sargent Howie. Many cultures have a strong tradition of egg coloring; among Greeks, eggs are traditionally dyed dark red and given as gifts.

As for the Easter egg hunt, a fun game for kids, I have heard at least one pagan teacher say that there is a rather scary history to this. As with many elements of our “ancient history, ” there is little or no factual documentation to back this up. But the story goes like this: Eggs were decorated and offered as gifts and to bring blessings of prosperity and abundance in the coming year; this was common in Old Europe. As Christianity rose and the ways of the “Old Religion” were shunned, people took to hiding the eggs and having children make a game out of finding them. This would take place with all the children of the village looking at the same time in everyone’s gardens and beneath fences and other spots.

It is said, however, that those people who sought to seek out heathens and heretics would bribe children with coins or threats, and once those children uncovered eggs on someone’s property, that person was then accused of practicing the old ways. I have never read any historical account of this, so I cannot offer a source for this story (though I assume the person who first told me found it somewhere); when I find one, I will let you know! When I first heard it, I was eerily reminded of the way my own family conducted such egg hunts: our parents hid money inside colorful plastic eggs that could be opened and closed up again; some eggs contained pennies, some quarters and dimes and nickels, and some lucky kids would find a fifty-cent piece or silver dollar! In our mad scramble for pocket change, were my siblings and cousins and I mimicking the treacherous activities of children so long ago?

Traditional foods play a part in this holiday, as with so many others. Ham is the traditional main course served in many families on Easter Sunday, and the reason for this probably has to do with the agricultural way of life in old Europe. In late fall, usually in October, also known as the month of the Blood Moon, because it referred to the last time animals were slaughtered before winter, meats were salted and cured so they would last through the winter. Poorer people, who subsisted on farming and hunting, would often eat very sparingly in winter to assure their food supply would last. With the arrival of spring, there was less worry, and to celebrate the arrival of spring and of renewed abundance, they would serve the tastiest remaining cured meats, including hams. This also marked a seasonal end to eating cured foods and a return to eating fresh game (as animals emerged from hibernation looking for food), and no longer relying on stored root vegetables, but eating the young green plants so full of the vitamins and minerals that all living beings need to replenish their bodies in spring.

Modern pagans can observe these same customs by eating the fresh greens and early vegetables abundant now: dandelion greens, nettles, asparagus, and the like. There are some Witches who believe that fasting at the Equinox is very healthy and magical: it clears away all the toxins stored over winter, when we eat heavier foods to keep warm, and can create an altered state of consciousness for doing Equinox magic. By eliminating all the “poisons” from our diets for a few days (including sugar, caffeine, alcohol, red meats, dairy products, refined foods), and eating lots of fresh fruits and vegetables, we not only can shed a few pounds and improve the appearance of our hair and skin, but also improve our health over the long term. The overall benefit to health from an occasional cleansing fast helps strengthen our immune system, making our bodies more resistant to illness, and help us feel more alert and energetic. Try it! Be sure to “break” your fast slowly, reintroducing your normal foods one at a time, instead of going from several days of fruits, grains and herbal tea to a feast of steak, potatoes and chocolate cake! The breaking of the fast can be incorporated into the cakes and wine portion of your ritual, or at the feast many Witches have afterwards.

Speaking of food, another favorite part of Easter for kids, no doubt, is that basket of treats! Nestled in plastic “grass” colored pink or green, we’d find foil-wrapped candy eggs, hollow chocolate bunnies, jelly beans, marshmallow chicks (in pink, yellow or lavender!), fancy peanut butter or coconut eggs from Russell Stover, and of course our Mom always included one of the beautiful ceramic eggs she painted by hand. Like that other holiday where children are inundated with sugar (Hallowe’en), no one seems to know precisely where, when or how this custom began. And why are the baskets supposedly brought by a bunny???

There are some modern Witches and pagans who follow traditions that integrate the faery lore of the Celtic countries. It is customary to leave food and drink out for the fairies on the nights of our festivals, and it is believed that if the fairies are not honored with gifts at these times, they will work mischief in our lives. Certain holidays call for particular “fairy favorites.” At Imbolc/Oimelc (February 2nd), for example, we leave gifts of dairy origin, like cheese, butter or fresh cream. At Lammas/Lughnasa (August 1st) we leave fresh grains or newly-baked bread. At Samhain, nuts and apples are traditional. And at Ostara, it is customary to leave something sweet (honey, or mead, or candy)–could this be connected to the Easter basket tradition? Perhaps a gift of sweets corresponds to the sweet nectar gathering in new spring flowers?

To refer again to The Wicker Man, the post office/candy shop where May Morrison works (she is the mother of Rowan Morrison, the young girl who is supposedly missing and who Sargent Howie has come to Summerisle to find) offers a large selection of candies shaped like animals. When Sargent Howie says “I like your rabbits” Mrs. Morrison scolds him saying “Those are hares! Lovely March hares, not silly old rabbits!” And when Howie goes to dig up the grave of Rowan Morrison (who it turns out is neither dead nor missing) he finds the carcass of a hare, and Lord Summerisle tries to convince him that Rowan was transformed into a hare upon her death. Clearly this is an illustration of the powerful association with animals that many ancient cultures have (Summerisle being a place where time has seemingly stood still and where the pagan pursuit of pleasure and simple agricultural ways define the way of life). The forming of candy into the shape of rabbits or chicks is a way to acknowledge them as symbols; by eating them, we take on their characteristics, and enhance our own fertility, growth and vitality.

For clearly the association of rabbits with Easter has something to do with fertility magic. Anyone who has kept rabbits as pets or knows anything about their biology has no question about the origin of the phrase “f*** like a bunny.” These cute furry creatures reproduce rapidly, and often! Same with chicks, who emerge wobbly and slimy from their eggs only to become fluffy, yellow and cute within a few hours. The Easter Bunny may well have its origin in the honoring of rabbits in spring as an animal sacred to the goddess Eastre, much as horses are sacred to the Celtic Epona, and the crow is sacred to the Morrigan. As a goddess of spring, she presides over the realm of the conception and birth of babies, both animal and human, and of the pollination, flowering and ripening of fruits in the plant kingdom. Sexual activity is the root of all of life: to honor this activity is to honor our most direct connection to nature.

At Beltane (April 31st-May 1st), pagans and Witches honor the sexual union of the god and goddess amid the flowers and fruits that have begun to cover the land; but prior to that, at Ostara, we welcome the return of the spring goddess from her long season of dormant sleep. The sap begins to flow, the trees are budding, the ground softens, ice melts, and everywhere the fragrance and color of spring slowly awakens and rejuvenates our own life force.

I have always thought this had a lot to do with the tradition of wearing newly-bought or made clothes at Easter, in pastel spring colors. Wearing such colors we echo the flowering plants, crocus, lilac, forsythia, bluebells, violets and new clothes allow us to feel we are renewing our persona. How many of us feel sort of “blah” after winter ends? Along with the fasting practice mentioned earlier, this is a time for many of us to create new beginnings in our lives: this can apply to jobs, relationships, living situations, lifestyle choices. But since the Equinox is such a potent time magically, and often (as it does this year) falls in the period when Mercury is Retrograde, starting a new endeavor at this time can be problematic if we do not take care. One good way to avoid catastrophe is to engage in small, personally-oriented rites or activities: a new haircut, a new clothing style or make-up, a new exercise program, the grand old tradition of spring cleaning, a new course of study: all of these are relatively “safe” ways to begin anew without risking the weirdness and unpredictability of Mercury Retrograde.

This is a very powerful time to do magic, not only because of the balancing of the earth’s energies, but because of the way our own beings echo the earth’s changes. We are literally reborn as we emerge from our winter sleep, ready to partake of all the pleasures of the earth, and to meet the challenges we will face as the world changes around us daily. As we greet and celebrate with our pagans brothers and sisters of the Southern Hemisphere (for whom the Vernal Equinox more closely resembles the beginning of autumn, in physical terms!), we remember that Spring is not only a season; it is a state of mind.

Blessed Be in the Season of Spring! Go Forth and Flower!

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