Don't Step on the Cracks! Musing on the Mystic by Pauline Chandler
If you’re allergic to astrology, fortune-telling and Tarot cards, look away
now, because I'm about to muse on such mystic activities fascinate millions of us. Who are these people who claim to ‘know’, to be able to 'see what lies beyond’? Are they all charlatans? Or just needy people who claim ESP to make them stand out in the crowd?
Part of me wants to believe it's possible to see 'beyond the veil', to foretell the future and find out what's in store. Another part says I'm a gullible fool, with too much imagination for my own good! Aint that the truth! Especially on a dark night in an empty house...wooo.hoooo...Is any of it true? My dear old mum thought so.
Mum was the most superstitious person I’ve ever known. Every
day there was something else to beware of.
‘Never pick up a dropped knife’. You get a present if someone else does
it for you. ‘Put your knickers on inside out?’ You’ll get a surprise! And not
just with pants but with any garment. ‘Don’t leave knives crossed or scissors
open’. You’ll cut a friendship. ‘Never give anyone a purse, without putting a
coin inside’. You're handing over bad luck if you don’t.
Sagittarius |
Bad luck. Good luck. Did you buy a lottery ticket this week?
Read your horoscope? I’m a Sagittarius, which
means I’m sporty, cheerful and friendly, but also impulsive, rash and sometimes tactless, with a tendency
to blurt out exactly what I’m thinking. It’s a fair summary, except for the
sporty bit! But I don’t really ‘believe’
it, do I, that the position of the stars at the time of birth of every single
individual on earth affects their personality and behaviour? Whaat? That’s barmy. Ridiculous.
And yet.
A writing group I once belonged to, invited a mystic to lead
us on a vision quest with the hope of finding our animal spirit guides, which seemed
a fun idea at the time. On a chilly Saturday morning, we sat in a circle in the
village hall, watching the mystic prepare by first cleansing the room of
negative influences. This involved laying crystals here and there, with quite a
lot of hand waving and muttering, which was vaguely alarming, but nothing to
frighten the horses.
The quest proper started when we closed our eyes and were
asked to imagine ourselves standing outside a cave on a distant hillside. To the
sound of the mystic’s soft-spoken voice, we entered the cave, then, after meditation
in the dark, emerged on the opposite side of the hill, overlooking a beautiful
sunlit view. At this point an animal spirit guide would appear. Oh yes, I
thought, of course it will. Ha ha.
from geograph.org.uk - author Peter Barr |
He stood quite near to me, having silently emerged from some
young trees to my right. I was shocked. Amazed. Entranced. There was no time to
ask questions, as the stag turned to lead me down the hillside, and, dear
reader, I followed. And that’s that, really. To my utter astonishment, I’d
found my guide.
There was a bit more to the ‘quest’, with a funny bit at the
end, where, after our animal guide had left us, we were supposed to meet a man at
the end of the path and offer our souls to him, at which point I rather spoilt
things by rearing up large and refusing to comply.
Afterwards, over a nice cup of tea, the mystic asked us to
recount our experiences. When I mentioned my stag she said I must have strong
Celtic leanings, which was tremendous news, as I’d always fancied myself as a
Celt.
By Silar (Own work) [CC-BY-SA-3.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0)], via Wikimedia Commons |
Did the vision quest help me in any way? I think it did.
It’s nice to feel ‘chosen’ and to have a ‘guide’. But what if the stag was only a figment of my
imagination? Does it matter ? I’m not sure that it does. All I can say for sure,
it was completely unexpected. Either something came to me from outside, or something
bubbled up from my subconscious. Whichever it was, it was reassuring. And, by
golly, I’m not complaining. Writers need all the reassurance they can get. It’s
a lonely path we tread.
On my desk, next to my computer monitor, is a small wooden
cross. I’m a Christian but a non-practising one. I love the message and the liturgy,
but not the evangelism and the politics. Next to the cross is a silver stag, representing
my Celtic guide. I see no disparity. At the heart of the beliefs they represent
is the same thing, something positive and lovely.
I’m happy not to ’know’. I distrust ‘certainty’ and anyone
who claims to ‘know what lies beyond’.
I’ll just carry on travelling hopefully, reading my horoscope for fun, and, yes, Mum, I’ll try not to step on the
cracks.
My fascination with the mystic side of life finds its way
into my books.
In ‘Viking Girl’,
Beren sees a fox, her father’s spirit guide, which helps her solve the mystery
of his death.
In ‘The Mark of Edain’, the heroine, Aoife, is a Celtic
princess, daughter of the Druid, Bevan. She has the ability to communicate with
animals and can ‘see’ through the eyes of Bala, the emperor’s war elephant,
visions which help her to save Bala’s life.
Both books are now available as ebooks on Kindle. Good luck with your projects!
Pauline Chandler
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