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moderndayruth

~ Tarot inspired essays and more

moderndayruth

Monthly Archives: April 2013

Queen of Wands as a Second Wave Feminist

26 Friday Apr 2013

Posted by moderndayruth in I Ching, Kabbalah & Western Hermetic Tradition, Tarot

≈ 8 Comments

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daily prompt

   Blame it  on the  Daily Prompt and mine being at writers residence: normally i write one post per week, but there you go – after days of being crazy busy with the book fair, i peeked at WordPress, checked the daily prompt by the way… and got stumped as i honestly could not remember which was the book to which i always go back (except the Bible that is, but -sic – there are enough preachers as it is.) And then it dawned on me, my last ‘Second Time Around’ (and third and forth) was Helen Gurley Brown’s “Sex and the Single Girl”, some ten years ago.

I was in the hospital back then (nothing too bad) and i remember a chatty nurse laughingly telling me how all the stuff was amazed by my choice of books – see, the book was at the nightstand, beside my hospital bed – and that couple of them, including the surgeon who operated on me, came in person to the room to make sure she wasn’t making it up, that the patient (aka me) indeed read the book of such a provocative title… I was too sick of anesthesia to say anything remotely sensible, yet i was in state of shock – by that time, everywhere else except in 3d world countries ruled by extremists, the book had become a subject of ridicule for its outdated views and presumably sexist advice.

Lo and behold, i am from Europe, from a country that’s candidate-member of European Union, which at the same time happens to be most conservative and traditional one.

I wrote about Brown and “Helenism” before in Single Girl, the Skinny God and the Plague of Labeling, what dawned on me as i was rethinking it all today was that HGB and the Cosmo Girl, as she envisioned her, are the perfect prototype of Tarot’s Queen of Wands.

Check her out:

Queen of Wands from the Rider-Waite Tarot deck

Queen of Wands from the Rider-Waite Tarot deck (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

She’s hot, she’s pretty, like the flower she’s holding she’s sunny and radiant, open and positive, she looks to the right – which is the direction of the future in Tarot. And as if a beautiful, confident, and positive woman wasn’t dangerous enough as it is – on the top of it she’s accompanied by a mysterious black cat who stares at the reader  making obvious Queen’s power to charm and enchant… Oy, the threat that she is to the patriarchy! Of course that “popularly” (idiotically) when this card comes out in a Tarot spread, she’s read as “slutty”, as the proverbial “other woman”, the easy one and  whatnot.

Earlier today i read  an excellent essay on movies, morals and reading cards and while i don’t agree on all points with the friend of mine who wrote it (see, we didn’t dump our own fundies anywhere, we’ve kept them all to ourselves – said tongue in cheek), she does have a point: “There’s lot of moralizing by otherwise good people in online card reading groups. It’s AUTOMATICALLY assumed that the married guy somebody’s asking about IS JUST USING HER FOR SEX AND DOES NOT CARE, that the Snake is the OTHER WOMAN, that naturally poly people are ASSHOLES, and the world is full of DIRTY BIRDIES WHO MUST BE STOPPED. Sounds like a code movie to me. If you’re reading this, you’re probably a nice person – that stuff is for harpies who snoop in their mens’ cell phones, not you! Don’t fall in with that kind of thinking. The world is more complex than that. The CARDS are more complex than that – read them and see what they say, don’t twist them to what the current, dry Bible-thumper culture would have you say.”

Remember Marge Piercy’s, one of the most prominent 2nd wave feminists’, poem For Strong Women?

A strong woman is a woman in whose head
a voice is repeating, I told you so,
ugly, bad girl, bitch, nag, shrill, witch,
ballbuster, nobody will ever love you back,
why aren’t you feminine, why aren’t
you soft, why aren’t you quiet, why aren’t you dead?
A strong woman is a woman determined
to do something others are determined
not be done. She is pushing up on the bottom
of a lead coffin lid. She is trying to raise
a manhole cover with her head, she is trying
to butt her way through a steel wall.
Her head hurts.

So does mine when i imagine a prudish Tarotist reading for Marge back in the day when she lived in an open marriage with her second husband and Ira Wood, her 3d hubby to be. I believe your fundie-reader would rather choke himself to death than read for her!

And i don’t even dare imagining what morals would be preached to Biblical King David upon his spotting  (oy the shame) Batsheba carelessly having a bath and sending her first husband, Uriah, to the battle and imminent death… Righteous Tarotist would dignifiedly wave their code of ethics and would firmly refuse to read on a third party… The king would be advised to hold back and by all means refrain from seducing the future queen… the tiny problem there being that this would have diverted the history of humanity as the Messiah comes from that very line and that King David did complete his spiritual correction before his soul departed: “When King David was very old, he could not keep warm even when they put covers over him.” (Kings 1:1) The truth is that he wasn’t that old – he  started ruling at thirty and ruled for forty years, which at the time of his passing makes him merely 70 – not to forget that Abraham fathered a son in his late 90ies ( “Abraham was a hundred years old when his son Isaac was born to him”, Gnesis 21:5) and that Moses became the leader of his people in his 80ies; expected biblical lifespan was 120 years.

Let us read further: So his attendants said to him, “Let us look for a young virgin to serve the king and take care of him. She can lie beside him so that our lord the king may keep warm.” (Kings 1:2) Rings any bells? Right, it was King’s chance to practice restriction and to make his tikkun hanefesh before departing.

Not to mention King David’s “gold-digging” great grandmother after whom i was named, Ruth the Moabite, who at night sneaked into bed of her older and wealthy husband to be… Oy gevalt! Isn’t she an epitome of the Queen of Wands?!

Gotcha!

In the Book of Thoth, Crowley expands on the Court: “The characteristics of the Queen are adaptability, persistent energy, calm authority which she knows how to use to enhance her attractiveness. She is kindly and generous, but impatient of opposition. She has immense capacity for friendship and for love, but always on her own initiative.”

Further, as she represent the watery part of Fire she’s attributed to I Ching’s 17th hexagram, Following, of which Hilary Barrett, my favorite contemporary Yi Xie scholar says: “This hexagram begins in the same way as the whole Yijing begins: with ‘the source, success, harvest, constancy’, yuan heng li zhen. Together, these four words show the presence of Creative Force, driving through to completion. There’s a sense of inevitability; ‘it follows’; everything will fall into place.”

The combo of Kabbalah, Western Hermeticism and Chinese Philosophy can and most often does blow the mind of the Tarot newbie, but no one said it was easy; what we claimed was that it’s possible to grasp this occult discipline and – with a lot of practice – become somewhat good in it.

Brown was eighty-seven when a biography, “Bad Girls Go Everywhere”  by Jennifer Scanlon, professor of gender and women’s studies at Bowdoin College was published. In words of Judith Thurman, “despite the title (“Good girls go to heaven, bad girls go everywhere” is one of Brown’s favorite mottoes), this is a serious academic reconsideration of a figure who, Scanlon argues, has been slighted by feminist history, and deserves a place in its pantheon, particularly because she was speaking to and for the typists, the flight attendants, and the sales clerks who couldn’t afford to burn a good bra, rather than the college-educated sisterhood that was “womanning” the barricades of the nineteen-seventies… In everything that Brown has written or edited, she has promoted the message that sex is great, and that one should get as much of it as possible. (Ditto for money.) Just about everyone knows this, and has always known it, but in Brown’s youth few women would admit it, even to themselves.”

Some (many?) still have issues with women enjoying sex and financial independence and therein lies the root of the problem with contemporary  (mis)interpretation of the Queen of Wands, who’s almost as commonly despised by the pseudo readers as The Queen of Swords is feared.

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book fairs aren’t fair

25 Thursday Apr 2013

Posted by moderndayruth in Essay

≈ 10 Comments

Tags

Belgrade Book Fair, Book, Doris Lessing, Isadora Duncan, Raymond Carver, Sarajevo, Trade fair, Writer

My heart was wrenching as i strolled down the spacious halls of Sarajevo’s book fair. The books were piled randomly -some new, some classics, some bigger ones, some tiny ones, hard to find books, out of print ones, bestsellers; poetry books, prose books, high brow books, funny books, sad books – all of them pushed to the sides of the aisles, gathering dust at the portable fair’s shelves. From time to time some passerby would slow their pace reluctantly, for a moment they’d almost gave in to the sellers’ desperate attempts, they’d fix their gaze at a title briefly and then walk away abruptly, further between the rows of unwanted books.

I felt sorry for the abandoned books, i was heartbroken for the unread words, my heart went to the authors – the unwilling participants of this ruthless wholesale, for that’s what most book fairs come down to ( among exceptions being author-oriented Leipzig Buhmesse and in this part of the world – Belgrade Book Fair.)

Real books are painstaking labor of inspiration, knowledge, skill and endless perspiration,  it’s downright sacrilegious to degrade them down to just another commercial product. There are many ways to make quick money, but books shan’t be among them… yet it’s being pushed down our throats over and over again.

I want to scream when some fool starts explaining me premises of the liberal capitalism and how books should fit into it… Hello, the latter had crashed bringing upon us wreath of economic depression and, unless it’s not already too late, it is high time to think over some premises.

Couple of publishers i met at the fair vented about low sales and poor attendance, NONE of them mentioned emerging writers they met or some new visions from the books they were promoting… And they blame it on the reader who presumably is dumbed down… It ain’t so. The good reader – who is even rarer bird than a good writer – is brought down to her knees by omnipresent greed, her buying power is diminished, her free time almost non-existent for she needs to take ever and ever more   workload to keep going. So, don’t blame it on the reader – i am a writer and i am a reader myself, i know… I know it all. That being said, it’s one of the main motives i switched to blogging, i write for the people (feel free to scream all you want*) and i don’t need much more than my text reaching the audience, that’s about  it. It is time consuming, more than that – it’s blood consuming… If you read Dianne Gray‘s writing – it’s clear that such writing is done by alchemically processing personal pain into the meaning of life and for those of us for whom writing is vocation it is the modus vivendi.

*As a side note – recently, i had an eminent literary critic nearing the edge of a nervous breakdown upon my mentioning that i do write for others… see, they thought writing should be both self-centered and self-indulging act where the unnoticed reader is reduced to not more than a peeping Tom… yeah, sure. 

Last night we hang out with an amazing Croatian writer, Edi Matic. Edi looks like  Raymond Carver at his best – tall, tanned with gray hair and penetrating gaze, he writes somewhat like him too – in short, sharp sentences which, read aloud at launches, seem to cut the air at the book fair’s hall, tearing it apart as a razor would, just above the heads of the previously lulled into sleep audience.

We agreed that we, the writers, are faced with an impossible mission – at the launches, we are supposed  to promote what goes labeled as ‘high brow prose’… and that’s close to impossible. Good prose is more than entertaining – it’s like a roller-coaster ride, but one that stays with you for a long time – if not for good; the thing is that you can’t market it as you’d market a dish washer because good books are a phenomena unto themselves, they are discreet, predestined to be enjoyed in privacy and seclusion. It’s an almost monastic task – to read a good book, you need your you-time, you need reasonably peaceful surroundings, and above all, you need a fertile ground -an open mind – to plant the seeds from the book into your personal discourse. Great writers from the past didn’t have launches, it’s a quite recent fabrication and quite a controversial one. Of course that a good reader feels like godsent to a writer – and most of us are indeed looking forward to discussing our writings, the thing is that the publishing and bookselling industry pushes us into burlesque of a kind and – with due respect – you don’t get Isadora Duncan to wig a fake fur tail in a smokey night bar… these are parallel universes which can not – and, for everyone’s best, shall not – coincide EVER.

No one knows with certainty what’s the way out from this living sand of commercialization and profanation. There will always be Dan Browns and hopefully there will always be at least couple of authors of Doris Lessing’s calibre…

Last but not the least – hopefully there will always be at least couple of non-commercial publishers, such as Bosnian Publishing House Fra Grgo Martic and inspired promoters such as Bosnian Croatian poet and publicist Milo Jukic thanks to whom good readers still manage to find their way to good writers – without fanfarras and the fake fur; the rest, together with megalomaniac publishers and cheap booksellers – the powerful weapon of time will sort out and uproot.

“I hate tricks. At the first sign of a trick or gimmick in a piece of fiction, a cheap trick or even an elaborate trick, I tend to look for cover. Tricks are ultimately boring, and I get bored easily, which may go along with my not having much of an attention span. But extremely clever chi-chi writing, or just plain tomfoolery writing, puts me to sleep. Writers don’t need tricks or gimmicks or even necessarily need to be the smartest fellows on the block. At the risk of appearing foolish, a writer sometimes needs to be able to just stand and gape at this or that thing- a sunset or an old shoe- in absolute and simple amazement.”
Raymond Carver, Fires

Milo Jukic and Edi Matic, writers’ residence in Kreshevo, Bosnia (April 2013)

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Businessman, patron of art and stud breeder, Mr Anto Stanic (front row center)

422118Publishing House Fra Grgo Martic at Sarajevo Book Fair 2013, from left to right: Ljiljana Shop, Tanja Stupar-Trifunovic, Milo Jukic, Seida Beganovic, Lena Ruth Stefanovic, Edi Matic
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Literary evening in Kreshevo, during writers’ residence 2013.
kreshevo launch 2013

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Pray for Boston

16 Tuesday Apr 2013

Posted by moderndayruth in Uncategorized

≈ 8 Comments

goodness… may wounded in Boston be healed promptly, may those who lost loved ones be comforted and let the terrorists be caught promptly and dealt with harshly

Black and Grey Boutique Blog

Praying for all affected by such a horrible tragedy.

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going listy: my top 10 oracles, besides Tarot

15 Monday Apr 2013

Posted by moderndayruth in Kabbalah & Western Hermetic Tradition

≈ 20 Comments

Tags

Brian Froud, daily prompt, DPchallenge, Fortune Telling, Germany, Hay House, I Ching, Kabbalah, Piatnik & Söhne, Tarot

Daily Prompt: The Satisfaction of a List

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Here they are, in all their glory:

1. First among equals: The Kabbalah Deck, Pathway to the Soul by rabbi Edward Hoffman – probably the only “kosher” Kabbalah deck around (besides KC’s 72 Names of God cards which are not exactly a deck, but a prayer in a form of cards.)

2. Beautifully illustrated and dead-on accurate Symbolon Oracle which comes with the creepiest little white book in existence!

3. I Ching by Klaus Holitzka, the Book of Changes illustrated in traditional Chinese watercolor paintings;

4. Law of Attraction Cards published by Hay House with great affirmations and even greater illustrations;

5. Moonstone oracle by my beautiful and talented friend from Germany – Morwenna Morasch;

6. Hard-to-find Lenormand, Baralho de Cartas Ciganas, a gift from Brazilian friend;

7. Piatnik’s Gypsies, Zigeuner Wahrsagekarten, the deck i inherited from my grandmother;

8. The Faeries Oracle by by Brian Froud and Jessica Macbeth:

capture of an actual reading i did for a friend

capture of an actual reading i did for a friend

9. Mindblowing Druid Animal Oracle:

Druid Animal Oracle by Philip & Stephanie Carr-Gomm

Druid Animal Oracle by Philip & Stephanie Carr-Gomm

10. And the latest addition to my All-Darlings Collection: an amazing Fortune Telling deck – Ryder’s Lenormand by genius eight years old artist – Ryder George who is visionary and a seer son of worldwide known spiritual counselor and a friend of mine – Rana George.

I am a third generation reader in our family – i’ve written on what is it like in The Fortune Teller – so i know what blessing it is… It’s not that we are passed some family secrets, unavailable to others – all hereditary readers i know of pass their knowledge to others happily, it’s that from an early age we are blessed to be free from fear.

In Ryder George’s case – this unlimited vision comes together with an amazing artistic talent.

Blessed Be

Related articles
  • The Vintage Lenormand (mycuriouscabinet.wordpress.com)
  • Weekly Kabbalah Tune Up: You are more powerful than you know April 14th – April 20th, 2013 (monicakupfer.wordpress.com)
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my rant on punctuation

12 Friday Apr 2013

Posted by moderndayruth in Humor

≈ 29 Comments

Tags

Arts, English language, Exclamation mark, Full stop, Greeks, Hervé Bazin, Punctuation, Question mark

A laughing smiley in an exclamation point.

A laughing smiley in an exclamation point. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

I mean, really…  Some people have written whole novels without using any! And this exclamation marks too – literate folks avoid them as a plague, they say using one is like tapping yourself on the shoulder. My favorite – semicolon – has been frowned upon as the symbol of ultimate snobbery and merely a show off that you did some college. Right. It’s common knowledge that what’s in brackets – you can skip writing all together, if you in your capacity of the author consider it less important than the rest of the text – stigmatizing it by the shameful brackets – i bet you that in this rushing ADD era (as much as i am convicted that it’s a non-existent disorder) your readers won’t bother to dwell on it. Not even for a second.

By now, you might have noticed that i adore ending my sentences with ellipsis… But, how many of those one can use in a paragraph, without crossing the line? And what to use instead? The ellipses sort of denote that you haven’t said your last word on the matter AND that, as a presumably intelligent person, you retain your right to think of something else later on  OR to add something all together very different… With FULL STOP, you don’t stand a chance.  That’s it, you pronounced yourself, you made the statement, no room for improvements or latter reflections PERIOD.

Blame it on the Greeks, ’twas Aristophanes of Byzantium who came up with full stop’s first form – it was he , who invented  single dots to separate the verses… AND it was so long ago – 3 centuries BC – that i doubt we can do anything to reverse the tragic effect of the invention on contemporary stream of consciousness writing. There, i said it! (The former exclamation mark is me high-fiving myself as it’s for a while now that i hold a grudge against renown Greek scholar AND i do feel better now that i took off my chest!)

Kudos for Chinese who only recently, in 20th century, succumbed to this devastating Western influence and who, for the best part of their written history, in poetry and traditional calligraphy, did not use any punctuation!

Hervé Bazin, French writer, known for his topics of teenage rebellion and dysfunctional families, in an essay from 1966 –  Plumons l’Oiseau (“Let’s pluck the bird”) – proposed six new punctuation marks:

  • the “love point” (point d’amour: Point d'amour.svg)
  • the “certitude point” (point de conviction: Point de certitude.svg)
  • the “authority point” (point d’autorité: Point d'autorité.svg)
  • the “acclamation point” (point d’acclamation: Point d'acclamation.svg)
  • the “doubt point” (point de doute: Point de doute.svg)

There were other more than cool suggestions, like:

Superellipses . o 0  – to indicate a dramatic pause (source: halfblog.net )

The Sinceroid – when you want to be REALLY HONEST, as in: Oh, wow! Thank you! This sweater is just what i wanted .

Not to forget interrobang ‽ which presumably denotes excited disbelief and saves you the time that you’d normally use to type down a question mark and an exclamation point… In the course of several life times, the saved time could easily climb up to as much as five minutes ?! 

The bastion of English language – The Oxford Dictionary – added ♥ as the first symbol ever to grace its pages; mind you, spokesperson clarified, “While symbols do become spelt-out words relatively frequently, it is usually only with a mundane meaning as the name of the symbol… It’s very unusual for it to happen in such an evocative and tangential way.”

(Read more: http://techland.time.com/2011/03/25/the-oxford-english-dictionary-adds-3-and-lol-as-words/#ixzz2QFNZJMVv )

Personally, i am all for including (introduced by John Wallis in 1655) infinity sign to the most common written languages – firstly because i don’t believe in any other, but self-imposed limits and, secondly, because it would be quite handy when, for example, you don’t know how to end an essay  ∞

 

 

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Nabokov House, St. Petersburg

09 Tuesday Apr 2013

Posted by moderndayruth in Photography

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

art, Mansfield Park, Nabokov House, Pale Fire, Paris, Russia, Vladimir Nabokov, Wikipedia

Vladimir Nabokov was born in this mansion on 47 Great Morskaya Street in 1899

writer Vladimir Nabokov was born in this mansion in 1899

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“If I correctly understand the sense of this succinct observation, our poet suggests here that human life is but a series of footnotes to a vast obscure unfinished masterpiece.” Vladimir Nabokov, Pale Fire 

 

“All the seven deadly sins are peccadilloes but without three of them, Pride, Lust, and Sloth, poetry might never have been born.”  Vladimir Nabokov, Pale Fire

“We are most artistically caged.”   Vladimir Nabokov, Pale Fire

“Dear Jesus, do something.” Vladimir Nabokov, Pale Fire 

“There are three points of view from which a writer can be considered: he may be considered as a storyteller, as a teacher, and as an enchanter. A major writer combines these three—storyteller, teacher, enchanter—but it is the enchanter in him that predominates and makes him a major writer.To the storyteller we turn for entertainment, for mental excitement of the simplest kind, for emotional participation, for the pleasure of traveling in some remote region in space or time. A slightly different though not necessarily higher mind looks for the teacher in the writer. Propagandist, moralist, prophet—this is the rising sequence. We may go to the teacher not only for moral education but also for direct knowledge, for simple facts. Alas, I have known people whose purpose in reading the French and Russian novelists was to learn something about life in gay Paree or in sad Russia. Finally, and above all, a great writer is always a great enchanter, and it is here that we come to the really exciting part when we try to grasp the individual magic of his genius and to study the style, the imagery, the pattern of his novels or poems.The three facets of the great writer—magic, story, lesson—are prone to blend in one impression of unified and unique radiance, since the magic of art may be present in the very bones of the story, in the very marrow of thought. There are masterpieces of dry, limpid, organized thought which provoke in us an artistic quiver quite as strongly as a novel like Mansfield Park does or as any rich flow of Dickensian sensual imagery. It seems to me that a good formula to test the quality of a novel is, in the long run, a merging of the precision of poetry and the intuition of science. In order to bask in that magic a wise reader reads the book of genius not with his heart, not so much with his brain, but with his spine. It is there that occurs the telltale tingle even though we must keep a little aloof, a little detached when reading. Then with a pleasure which is both sensual and intellectual we shall we shall watch the artist build his castle of cards and watch the castle of cards become a castle of beautiful steel and glass.” Vladimir Nabokov, Lectures on Russian Literature

 

Wikipedia article on Nabokov House

Vladimir Nabokov Lectures on Russian Literature

Related articles
  • Beautiful Failures: Nabokov and Flaubert’s Early Attempts (newyorker.com)
  • An A from Nabokov (nybooks.com)
  • Vladimir Nabokov, “Houdini of history”? (salon.com)
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