ENOUGH PARTISAN POLITICS for a while.
Even after the energizing victory of Elizabeth Warren in
Massachusetts, I still doubt there is anyone in this nation – or
for that matter anywhere on this tragically afflicted planet – who
has the power and will to get us off the slide to extinction on which
capitalism has launched us by its insatiable greed.
But if there is such a person, and if
she is to save us from ourselves, surely her attributes will include
not only the socioeconomic and political bravery of Warren but the
death-defying courage and Gaian passion that makes Norma Miedema both
a modern heroine and the back-to-the-future embodiment of a female
consciousness seemingly absent from our species since the age of
Celtic myth. It is not far-fetched to suggest Warren and Miedema
represent parallel and entirely congruent aspects of a single impulse
toward human survival.
Warren of course is already becoming known
throughout the world as a symbol of an electorate's awakening from
political torpor. Miedema, who organized and led a presumably
impossible, deadly dangerous and therefore epic horse rescue in Holland,
is scarcely known beyond her native land. As to the specifics of what
Miedema did and why it is so
psychologically and metaphysically important, I suppose these details
too could be labeled political, albeit only in the broadest and yet
most deeply personal sense of our win-or-become-extinct struggle
against capitalism and patriarchy in general. I say this despite
the fact most of the information I have about Miedema reached me only
late Friday, and much of that was by inference alone – the
ability of video-taped imagery to transcend the barriers of language
– the entire package handed me by one of those Muse-haunted
coincidences Carl Jung labeled synchronicity. Saturday I was still in joyous
shock at the absolute correctness of the journalistic intuition that
prompted my research and so moved by my discoveries I could not find
words to write what I had learned.
Hence it seemed there was naught to
do but strap the ever-more-essential brace on my right knee and go
for a long walk. The Internet said the outside temperature was 41
degrees Fahrenheit but it felt colder, maybe in the late 30s. The sun
was setting a sickly storm-warning yellow behind the ramparts of the
hospitals on the hill above the seasonally emptied expanse of Wright
Park. Those who pay attention would have seen a graybeard geezer
wearing a black beret and a faded olive canvas coat open to the wind
and beneath the coat a bright red-and-yellow plaid wool neck scarf
and under that a shirt of dark red coarse heavy wool girthed at the
waist by a black belt-purse, all this above baggy black flannel
workout pants with elastic cuffs tight over hiking boots: today's
variant on my normal winter apparel. To others less attentive – and during the
entire 45 minutes afoot I encountered only six humans total (two
runners and four dog-walkers) – I was just a bespectacled vaguely
foreign-looking old man hobbling with his hickory cane along formal
tree-lined paths that had vanished beneath great drifts of brown and
yellow leaves, maple and chestnut and birch and poplar, oak and ash
too but without the bitter thorn that completes the trio of calendar
trees by which one might curse an enemy, as Jack Orion, the Celtic
Star Lord, had fatally cursed the interloping plagiarist who dared
try usurp the bed he shared with the Goddess.
Now the pale sun was hospitalized and
gone; now it was dusk, the lingering blue-shifted twilight of the
Pacific Northwest, and I could not but see in Nature's temporary
imposition of autumnal anarchy another harbinger of the apocalypse we
now fear to be inevitable: this is how the park will look in the
first fall of its abandonment, a mile of bare-branched silence, its
summer children banished and surely dead and all our music lost
forever. It was a terrible realization, lump-in-the-throat painful.
Instinctively then I sought the ancient
reassurance denied us by the we're-damned-forever sadism of the
religions that still vainly seek to rule us, the Abrahamic cults of
Christianity and Judaism and Islam and all the imperialistic science
so derived, and I committed precisely the sort of reflexive heresy
that surely would have gotten me arrested were the Christian fanatics
yet as theocratically empowered as they were in the 1600s when two of
my female ancestors were persecuted as witches in Connecticut. I
ungloved my right hand, reached out and touched the giant sequoia
that soars near the middle of the park, then a few hundred yards
later caressed the first of the smooth-trunked beeches that border
its southern end. As I did so I realized I was mentally reciting,
seemingly by instinct, the opening stanza from Robert Graves'
reconstruction of “Cad Goddeu” or “The Battle of the Trees,”
a mysterious and perplexing work by the ancient British poet
Taliesin:
The tops of the beech-tree have
sprouted of late
Are changed and renewed from their withered state...
Are changed and renewed from their withered state...
Graves believed the verses to be a
poetically charged description of a historical event, but to me, the
first lines have always had an aura of prophecy as well. The beech in
European mythology is a tree of life, of restoration and
regeneration. It is therefore a symbol of the Great Goddess – which
makes it arguable Taliesin was prophesying her resurrection. So were
the Ghost Dancers, 1500 years later and a continent away:
The white man's god has foresaken
him
Let us go and look for our Mother
We shall live again!
Let us go and look for our Mother
We shall live again!
And poignantly forlorn as the park was
in its dwindling light with the dark exclamation points of its few
tall conifers and the fading mid-November ghosts of October's bright deciduous
color, the power I sensed beneath my fingers in that living wood,
even in its dormancy, was so compelling it left me whispering fervent
thanks to a deity who at the very least (and even if she has no
objective existence) is the consummate symbol of our environmental
salvation and whom I'm sometimes certain is real as life itself but
nevertheless, more often than not, agnostically deny.
All of which, as we shall soon see, has
everything to do with Norma Miedema.
*****
On the rare occasions I manage to
suppress my cynicism enough to believe in the Goddess as I did for
those moments during my walk in the park, to imagine her as objective
reality and not just an essential symbol, I am invariably smitten,
sometimes to tears, by joyful gratitude for the good fortune granted
me by the women who inspired and clarified my words and pictures and
blest me with sweet love and patient friendship sufficient to ease
the wounds inflicted by a murder-minded mother. The essay entitled
“Dancer Resurrected”
expresses this gratefulness in detail, though it is entirely too
long and desperately needful of a competent editor. In this context
the historical events it references – the 1965 Blackout and the
1967 Easter Be-In – are prerequisites to the personal confirmation
described in its penultimate section. The episodes related separately in
“Abutments”
and “Doorways,” each of which remains personally compelling in its own right, are themselves assertions of faith and thankfulness.
But always there is the relentless
thrust of the counter-reasoning I describe in “Outlanders,” a memoir-chapter I
wrote two years ago but have yet to publish because I am torn between
the (seemingly impossible) task of writing plausible fiction
sufficiently adept to hide the identities of the three women who are
responsible for the most metaphysically pivotal, profoundly
revealing, undeniably magical and yes shamelessly sensual weekend of
my life. The alternative is to include essential details that would
make their names unmistakable even behind the cover of aliases.
Though one of the three has read the work and says “Do it; use my
name. I'd love to see it in print,” she is a professional musician
who yet smiles on cutting-edge outrageousness while the other two
are seemingly beyond contact range and, I suspect, have in their
elder years become far more private persons. All of which is
irrelevant here; the relevant part of “Outlanders” is not
subject to writerly angst, probably because it flatly contradicts the
very evidence the rest of the chapter dares reveal:
A big part of me rejects
as patently absurd not just the idea of reincarnation but any other
conception of life-after-death: at best a terrified byproduct of
belief in the divine (itself the adult variant of the Santa Claus
myth), at worst clinical dementia. By the same logic I likewise
dismiss religious visions, past-life memories, ghosts and all the
rest of the allegedly supportive evidence of a deity or a “hereafter”
as genuine insanity – even when the phenomena in question is my own
personal experience. In this frame of mind I regard all such
episodes as but preliminary symptoms of the terminal madness that
accompanies the unbearable moment-of-death realization that for each
of us our death is truly the end of everything forever, the
recognition of which destroys the human mind in the same way rot more
gradually obliterates the body, the mind mercifully disintegrating
into a chaos of hallucination much as the body deteriorates into an
entropy of maggots; that death is not just the demise of one's
physical body but the termination of one's consciousness and
therefore a microcosm of apocalypse – the end of the world, indeed
not just the end of all being but the end of all potential; that
death proves the unspeakable meaninglessness of selfhood; that the
nonsensical nature of life in general is thus established beyond
dispute by the final destination of the passage from the Big Bang of
conception through its siren-song aftermath of expanding
possibilities that all lead nowhere save to ultimate betrayal, the
hitherto-denied but now inescapable darkness of the Black Hole;
infinite silence, an ultimate deafness never again to be relieved by
the exquisiteness of music; every vestige of our own personal reality
consigned to a grave thus the graveyard of reality itself – all
such assertions condensed in one question that like everything else
at the instant of death-as-oblivion is reduced to irrelevance. If
such is death – and this mode of thinking allows me no alternative
– then life is but a non sequitur, the dread knowledge with which
irony-minded U.S. soldiers in Vietnam so often comforted their dying
comrades: “it ain't nothing, bro; let it go; it ain't nothin.”
And
now, as if some presumably imaginary being had become so vexed at
agnosticism and disbelief she materialized in emphatic rebuttal, there
is that videotape I first saw on the Internet in
2006, Norma Miedema and five equestrian
sisters rescuing a terrified and fractious herd of at least 100
horses marooned by a fatal storm – a rescue men with machines had
thrice attempted and thrice failed.
As is promised (or perhaps
threatened) by a very old ballad:
Cunning and art he did not lack
But aye her whistle it will fetch him back.
But aye her whistle it will fetch him back.
*****
True
to form, by the time I got home from my walk, my cynicism had resumed
its snarling negativity, but the video was there waiting. The
previous night while watching a poorly subtitled cable-TV movie about
Asian horse-herders, I had suddenly remembered the rescue I had
viewed in 2006 and the atavistic echoes it evoked, and I spent
whatever time it took to find it on the Internet and several more
hours researching the event itself. It is an episode so powerful it
suggests not just the reality or at least the psychological validity
of the concept of a goddess but provides us a vivid and
not-at-all-mystical portrait of Epona or a woman who is surely
her priestess whether consciously or not.
For those unfamiliar with mythology,
Epona is one of the innumerable representations of the Cosmic Mother
– the womb that gives birth to all that ever was and ever will be –
in this instance portrayed as the Bountiful Mare or a woman and mare
together, the Goddess as she was (quite rationally) pictured by the
ancient People of the Steppe, the Scythians and their genetically
confirmed descendants the Celts.
Such metaphysical constructs are always
more instinctively familiar and comforting to me than those of the
Abrahamic cults, and they have been so for as long as I
can remember, which is probably no coincidence since DNA analysis has
proven the equestrian tribes of Eastern Europe and Western Asia to
have been amongst my earliest and most genetically dominant
ancestors. Though my family name is English, probably originally
German, far enough back maybe Jewish, my genetic heritage is almost
pure Celt. Perhaps that's why the video in question invariably evokes
delicious chills and affirmative gooseflesh and tears of recognition:
Epona again, scarcely changed from when she was immortalized on
England's White Horse Hill, some molecular part of me wordlessly remembering the age and truth
so gracefully symbolized and – yes – mourning its loss and
yearning for its restoration.
The resurrection of the Goddess, which
remains our species' most important yet most unreported story, was
begun by (mostly male) scholars more than a century ago. But it's present-day impetus comes from a uniquely potent, utterly
spontaneous combination of increasingly female artistic vision and
breakthrough science. The former – precisely as Graves himself
recognized – is always the realm of the Muse. The latter, though
patriarchal in hierarchy and method, nevertheless shattered the
patriarchy's biological and conceptual cornerstones, first by
inventing the birth-control pill, which restored to women the control
of their bodies men stole from them thousands of years ago, secondly
by restating via the Gaia Hypothes the core principle of our species'
first and oldest religion: that the Earth (and by extension the
entire universe) is our Mother – alive, conscious and
self-regulating. In this context, the misogynistic hatred and terror
that motivates today's theocrats and their wars against women and
nature are entirely predictable reactions.
If Edward Whitmont (The Return of
the Goddess, Crossroads, 1982) is right about the re-emergence of
Goddess-archetypes as survival mechanisms – and I cannot doubt his
findings – it is to be expected that in this era of backlash and
terminal climate change and the death and despair so inflicted, we
would meet again an archetype approximating Epona, who let us not
forget is also a warrior-goddess. Which I believe explains why –
six years after her dramatic leadership of that epic horse rescue –
the coverage the Dutch press is giving Norma Miedema
suggests she is finally becoming one of our modern heroines, a
role-model of the sort we have not seen in many lifetimes, as
if she rode in from the plains of Scythia or materialized from the
pages of Herodotus' Histories or Tacitus' Agricola.
Now that you've seen Norma Miedema's portrait, here is the video of what she organized and led. It's unfortunate the accompanying music is so distractingly modern; Faun's “OynengYar,” which I first heard only yesterday but seem to remember from forever, would be an infinitely better anthem. Too bad I have neither the Nurdish knowledge or skill to make it so: its “Dance My Love” is an invocation not only of the Steppe but in the Kazakh tongue and almost certainly of pre-patriarchal traditions as well. But at least this Dutch version of the video is infinitely better and more detailed than the variant that first appeared in the United States six years ago, monitored as it is today by a maliciously Christian censor who – as I can personally attest – blocks any attempted reference to the pagan echoes the imagery so undeniably evokes. Note too this USian version is accompanied by an intrusively masculine and therefore obnoxiously inappropriate Vangelis piece, “Conquest of Paradise,” which some nyekulturniy malcontent has dubbed onto the tape no doubt in an attempt to assuage his threatened masculinity, his own small contribution to the war against women and nature.
In resistance we have the brave precedent set by Elizabeth Warren, who alas may yet be
betrayed by the opportunistic cowards and moral imbeciles with whom
she must of political necessity interact. But in our time of need we
are also given that which is beyond betrayal, the courage and sensitivity and wisdom shown us by
Norma Miedema and the blessed memories of bonfires and moonlight sung
us by Faun and most of all the quickening splendor of our species'
oldest wellspring of mindfulness.
Let the roses and rosebuds
bloom
Dance my love, dance my love.
Dance my love, dance my love.
LB/10-12
November 2012
-30-
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