greenfairy
philosopher wood nymph
- Joined
- May 25, 2012
- Messages
- 4,024
- MBTI Type
- iNfj
- Enneagram
- 6w5
- Instinctual Variant
- sx/sp
Lolz you guys.
Aww shit. It's gonna be a Witch Off.
Here is the place where you can ask anything you want to know about mysticism, spirituality, developing your feeling side and Ni, fairies, polytheism+atheism, talking to trees, psychic ability, etc.; and how it is possible to reconcile all this with being NT.
^Ill do a follow up on that: what is your individual definition of a witch and, if you are comfortable enough to share here, what is your specific 'label' (ya know, eclectic, solitary, hereditary, trad, stuff like that) as well as what kind of practices you well...practise![]()
Serious question: how is it that you're able to let go and actually believe in anything besides reductionist monism? I can't take anything mystical sounding seriously enough to even know how I feel about it.
Hypothetically, how could I become open enough to see the value in it?
Do you believe in multiple Gods? What's the purpose of multiple Gods? Isn't one enough?
some of us simply exchange chi with trees. That may or may not be the same as what your describing.
How conscious are trees?
What makes you believe in psychic ability?
tell me the magic words
I couldn't say how conscious trees are, I just believe that they are. I guess you'd have to ask a tree.
It is a somewhat different sort of consciousness, given the nature of their existence.
Since objective reality you know by observation, and subjective reality you know by interaction, you would have to both observe the tree for signs of consciousness (such as wiring it to a machine to detect electrical activity with various stimuli) and interact with it in order to get a complete picture of the truth.
my tree comment was in reference to someone else posting here, not towards you. Taoism in particular talks about chi exchange with trees, I've read it many times [pine trees are the best!]. I've done it far many more.
How about my earlier questions?
I have a lot of background in Taoism, Buddhism, and certain Hindu things. It would not be incorrect to describe me as Tantric Hindu, though many other labels would not be incorrect either. A smidgeon of me is shamanic, I like Native American stuff but don't really identify with it. I do identify with various Celtic stuff however.
Personally, how much my Taoism and Hinduism semi-feel pagan/shamanic/nature-like seems to go in wild swings between "rather similar" and "not at all similar." At the level of energy practices [in the taoist sense of the term energy] it can feel very similar, at the level of mind practices usually there is almost no similarity. I don't mean this in an offensive way but often when I see psychic people my reaction is "Oh look they are psychic, but otherwise more or less like anybody else. They are not 'person-plus'". I think eastern stuff reaches much more transformative levels. Potentially other things could do, but I've never seen it and almost never heard of it.
Nothing in my eastern training has ever focused on spirit guides. While there existence is not denied per se, questions about such topics have always been returned by answers like "If your goal is freedom why are you looking for advise from other beings still snared in the wheel of death and rebirth?" Auras are really hit or miss. We often can do things that basically are reading auras, but we dont think or talk about it in that way. Or else we basically say "how does empower and superenergize all levels of your being." Psychic is a word that is used infrequently and often shunned, yet things we train go for far beyond what would qualify in most people's minds as psychic. Past lives are touched upon infrequently, usually in a "everything that has happened before has brought you to this point here and now, why are you interested in hearing about your past lives?"
I'm not sure I've ever heard the terms "Akashic records" used in any Eastern anything. Nor "metaplanar journeys." We don't cast spells or "do" magic. Desiring things, altering things, and desiring to alter things on a certain level are all rather dangerous/distracting/grasping intents and generally to be avoided. I've almost never heard of anyone "summoning" a spirit.
Anywho, just some of my thoughts on eastern/western differences. Feel free to chime, add in, or ignore as you see fit.
http://www.typologycentral.com/foru...tions-yahweh-vs-lucifer-existential-game.html
Above I have a thread sort of similar to this one where I talk about some of the magical forces controlling the universe among other related topics.
And no I don't care if people steal my ideas because knowledge is free. Anyway I like your theories greenfariy on the mystical side of the existence.
There was a venerable old oak tree where I used to live, who seemed quite the arboreal conversationalist, at least until he was threatened with destruction to make way for a drive-through pharmacy. His name was Nicodemus.If I ever want to know how to talk to a tree, Amargith can tell me.
(On second thought... I hope she's not that far gone.)![]()
As Greenfairy described, many of us see the many deities of the various pantheons as simply different facets or aspects of a single divine entity. This balances male and female, and other polar opposites in a way that leads to creativity/creation. But not all pagans share this view. Paganism is a religion of common practice more than common faith, meaning that in our groups we share common ritual which makes a communal spiritual experience possible, but each might interpret it differently, in accordance with his/her individual beliefs.Do you believe in multiple Gods? What's the purpose of multiple Gods? Isn't one enough?
In my tradition, we use the word "witch" to refer to the spiritual side of things (for both men and women), and the word "wizard" to refer to the more skills-based side, e.g. manipulating energy, understanding herbs, plants, crystals, etc. One must develop both sides to be balanced and effective. A witch is someone who has learned enough to attend to his/her own spiritual needs, to be an effective priest to him/herself, but this definition is rather specific to the tradition in which I was initiated.^Ill do a follow up on that: what is your individual definition of a witch and, if you are comfortable enough to share here, what is your specific 'label' (ya know, eclectic, solitary, hereditary, trad, stuff like that) as well as what kind of practices you well...practise![]()