New Moon Blessing
Shekhinah, we come to you at this time of the moon’s renewal,
to join you in regeneration and rebirth
to plant new seeds
to honor this time of piya wiconi—new beginnings.
As we embark on new projects and contemplate new
ways of being
help us to see ourselves and each other with new eyes
of appreciation and gratitude,
to remember to thank you, daily, for all our blessings.
Help us to reach our own fullness,
Even as we go inside,
in seclusion with Her
She Who is waiting for us
To discover divinity
in ourselves
–D’vorah J. Grenn, March 1998 in Talking to Goddess
readings
New Moon Blessing
Our Mother Prayer, Version 2
This version of the Our Mother prayer is from Patricia Lynn Reilly:
Our Mother, who art within us,
We celebrate your many names.
Your wisdom come. Your will be done,
Unfolding from the depths of us.
Each day You give us all that we need.
You remind us of our limits and we let go.
You support us in our power and we act with courage.
For you are the dwelling place within us,
the empowerment around us, and the celebration among us.
As it was in the very beginning, may it be now.
Inner Wisdom
Inner Wisdom
Once upon a time, before the study of theology,
there was inner wisdom.
Before church buildings
there was the earth beneath my feet.
Before religious hymns,
there were the spontaneous chants inspired by the season’s blazing colors. Before preachers,
there was my grandfather, with his big old picture Bible,
adding flare and nuance to those old stories
in a way the preachers could hardly imagine.
But even before the Bible,
there were stories of my life, and Demetra’s and Rebecca’s,
and the little boy who lived down the street.
Before Sunday dresses and Easter hats,
there were blue jeans and cotton blouses that were made for caressing
the earth, trees, and railroad tracks that ran behind our house.
Before words and liturgy,
there was dance and motion…circling, jumping, leaping my prayers
among my friends the trees, the sun, the shadows, the spiders.
Before solemn statues,
was the Spirit of Life within, around, and beyond me,
and there was my mother with her kind words,
her crystals and her fresh-baked bread from the oven.
Before the baptism of salvation,
there was the baptism of summer rain showers,
and before that,
the baptism of birth in the waters of the womb.
Before lines,
there were circles.
Before ladders,
there were spirals.
So I circle and I spiral to the wisdom of my childself. </–Shea Darian, Seven Times the Sun, p. 172
Summer Solstice Prayer
This prayer was reprinted in this month’s e-newsletter from Temple of the Goddess and I want to remember it for our family’ summer solstice ritual: 
A Prayer of Healing
From the United Nations Environmental Sabbath
We come together this Summer Solstice under old oak trees, nurtured by the ground, the living green grass under our feet, to honor the longest day of the year. We see the pain of the Earth, the devastation of Her body. But today we celebrate Her. We say Prayers of Healing, for the world and for all Her children.
We join with the earth and with each other.
To celebrate the seas.
To rejoice the sunlight.
To sing the song of the stars.
We join with the earth and with each other.
To recall our destiny.
To renew our spirits.
To reinvigorate our bodies.
We join with the earth and with each other.
To create the human community.
To promote justice and peace.
To remember our children.
We join together as many and diverse expressions of one loving mystery: for the healing of the earth and the renewal of all life. We join with the earth and with each other.
To bring new life to the land.
To restore the waters.
To refresh the air.
We join with the earth and with each other.
To renew the forests.
To care for the plants.
To protect the creatures.
The sum of human culture…
Thousands of years
of history have passed…
and during all that time
human beings
have fought, killed
plundered and wronged each other
in every possible way.Of such stuff history is made.
But also during that time,
other human beings
have quietly and patiently persevered
in the development
of the arts, crafts
inventions, ideas and programs.
From these millions of creative persons,
most of them unnoticed and unknown
in the upheavals of history,
have come the good and lasting things
in the sum of human culture.–Barbara G. Walker in Life Prayers
That holy fire
”Dare to let that holy flame within you
grow hot and dangerous,
and you will be able to look the world straight in the eyes,
and say
oh yes, I have seen into the depths of beauty
and I will not settle for anything less
than the real deal”
From this post by Awakening Women Institute.
(Photo taken by a friend at a weekend campfire.)
Everyday Goddess

This is a photo of the back cover art from a wonderful back issue of Sage Woman magazine. I love how the women in the painting are holding classic, ancient Goddess figures from ancient times 🙂
I’d marked these two poems in the 2011 We’Moon datebook:
What Does a Goddess Look Like?
She is tuberous terracotta, she is golden twins,
sacred violins, nappy triangles tucked
at meeting of thigh and belly
snakes swing in the air
arms raised in prayer
She is a silken hair-robed majesty standing on a sea shell
Our great mother deconstructed into male fantasies and re-gathered:
milk, water, mixed with blood in barreled belly folded flesh
round red vase
She is old and rests on rock, feet braced apart,
hunched in grief, arched in anger, hands smashing stones
against the iron feet of thunder gods
She is women laughing, spilling wine, chopping onions
licking licorice, looking backwards savoring salt, satisfied, she is
mother pulling patience from the air, bedraggled hair, she is
woman stacking shocks of corn, woman making love in dreadlocks
sweeping floors sweating summer heat.
What does a goddess look like?
She looks like you, She looks like me
She looks like us in sacred conversation.
–Yvonne Pearson
Uprising
They are coming to life,
They are coming!
They are singing back to us.
And they are dancing!
Mama mia!
The Venus of Willendorf has hip
rocked open the entrance doors
of Vienna’s Natural History Museum.
She’s waltzing down the Strasse,
pendulous breasts swinging.
Her hands which have rested on them
for millennia are arcing
through the air
like two ecstatic love birds.
Meanwhile in Malta’s Hypogeum, The Sleeping Lady is waking
from labyrinthine dreams, pregnant with power for healing.
She is opening her eyes, rolling her vast thighs over
the platform sides. Snakes are spiraling from her ankles to the ceiling.
In every corner of the planet, they are breaking out of their prisons–
archaeological sites where there are no sacred rites,
vaults and glass boxes in temperature controlled rooms
where they are seldom seen and there is no touching.
They are growing back their missing limbs,
repainting themselves in the colour of life.
And they are dancing.
It is harvest time. The moon is full and fat and buttery.
She is spreading her liminal light along the pathways
where hundreds of them are streaming—
cavorting, cackling and mischieving.
Every woman who has a besom has snatched it from the closet
And is flying out the back door to greet them.
And now the Venus of Laussel and Dolni Vestonice
have joined to make an archway.
With a shimmy and a shindig, Sheila-Na-Gig
(dauntless icon of fecundity and pleasure)
jostles through first, snapping her purse
revealing and concealing her treasure.
They are all here.
Grain goddesses, crowned snake goddesses,
uterine egg-shaped goddesses,
bird-faced goddesses, birth-giving goddesses.
Dancing for our lives. Dancing for our future.
Dancing for the Earth. Dancing for the Great Mother.
–Debra Hall (this poem is offered as a prayer of liberation and healing For Aung Sun Kyi and the women of Burma)










