Worship

Accepting to incarnate godship

Midway (Jean Carfantan)
Queen’s Children
3 min readFeb 12, 2021

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Photo by rajaclicks on Unsplash

In Worshipping the Goddess, Edward Riley, describes what he feels with his wife when he worships the Goddess in her.

I have lived this theme all my life. To worship, there are several pitfalls:

  1. If your worship is too mystical and not incarnated,
  2. If your partner has a poor self-esteem and does not welcome your worship,
  3. If your worship is too incarnated and becomes fetishist.

I have experienced the first one and mainly the second one and sometimes the third one before finding the genuine worship. You love the other one and you worship the God/dess in her/him.

A Goddess and God meeting and vice-versa. Each one, man or woman, incarnating both.

The last pitfall is to forget worshiping God in women and Goddess in men.

This theme runs in our texts this week*:

  1. Jean Carfantan, in Your Tools for True Transformation, suggests to use your body as a witness to your inner state.
  2. Katrina Bos, in When I First Felt the Goddess*, tells such fabulous true change that came during a amazing experience.
  3. Nalini MacNab, in Whose Toolbox is it Anyway?, explains to us that we have to avoid being attached to whatever tool and that each tool is very personal (my tool prompt).
  4. Denise G celebrates Imbolc, this time where we wait for germination, in honor of St Brigit, the Celtic Goddess.
  5. 𝘋𝘪𝘢𝘯𝘢 𝘊., in her poem Layer After Layer, in hindsight, looks back at the times when she had to peel off.
  6. Infiniti 🦋, in 2.3.2021 Today’s Energy Update & Spiritual Guidance, with several tools and a guidance from the High Council, gives us the mood of the day.
  7. Lori McCray, in Make Love Matter, gives us life lessons about love, what else could matter?
  8. Esther George, in Finding The Way Into My Heart, insists that heart is where we reach the Source inward (my tool prompt).
  9. Katrina Bos, in Noticing When My Life Force is Low*, tells us the process in her life that lead her on the verge of dying (my tool prompt).
  10. LS sends powerful punchlines about women in The Feminine Object.
  11. LS writes a poem, Rise, about phoenixes.
  12. LS writes a ode to Mother with Mother’s Magic.
  13. Beth Stormont, in The Shadow on the Hearth, makes you wonder if you ever see your shadow in the fire.
  14. Marcus, in Kama is Sitara’s God*, comes back again and again on his passed over lover in a new reality where the visible and the invisible are side by side
  15. Anthi Psomiadou dreams about the death of a witch, realities are touching each other like mirrors in The Witches.
  16. Esther George, in I Love You Because I Am You*, Gives us advises about how to find balance between masculine and feminine.
  17. Katrina Bos, in Making Love in the Astral Plane, tells us about her “astral lovemaking” session.
  18. LS, in Fold-Up Beds*, writes a poem about what it feels to be treated like a fold-up bed.

Let us swim together in this week high tide.

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Midway (Jean Carfantan)
Queen’s Children

Hypnotherapist, initiator, inspirer, always exploring where my Higher Self leads me to. https://lefildar.gent/en (in English--en, French or Spanish --es)