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    Lady Ishtar's 
    Newsletter
    
    Volume 1, 
    Issue 5
    May 2004
    © Lady Ishtar. All rights reserved
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    In This Issue:
    
    
    1. Sneezing: A 
    Symptom or A Symbol?
    2.
    The Raven: Balancing 
    Man and Nature.
    3. Spell of the Month: Anger Banishing
    
    * * * * * * * *
    1. 
    Sneezing: A Symptom or A Symbol? 
    by Cheryl Lynne Bradley
    
    "One sneeze, a wish
    Two sneezes, a kiss
    Three sneezes, a disappointment
    Four sneezes, a letter"
    
    As my household has spent 
    the past two weeks fighting the fall version of the 
    pit plague crud, in between the God Bless You's and doses of cough medicine,
    
    I have had some time to contemplate on sneezing, or sternutation. 
    
    
    "Once a wish,
    Twice a kiss,
    Three times something better."
    
    Sneezing 
    received much attention in ancient cultures as omens and divination. 
    Sneezing was attributed by some to relate to the invisible visit of a 
    protective deity, 
    the bird of Jupiter Conservator. A widespread belief in Persian folk 
    tradition 
    considers a single sneeze to be a sign that you have to stop whatever you 
    are doing.
    This is called sabr Amad (patience is in order). A double sneeze is a sign 
    that 
    you should speed up whatever you are doing. 
    The Japanese believe one sneeze means someone is speaking highly of you and 
    two
    indicate someone speaking ill of you. 
    
    'If one observes the movements and cries of birds or of any animals, or the 
    sneezing 
    of men, or the sudden movements of limbs, this belongs in general to 
    "augury," '
    St. Thomas Aquinas, Summa Theologica, Part II of Part II, Question 95
    
    The Roman Augers used five different systems of omens to fortell events. 
    The fifth was called Dira which covered such events as spilling salt on a 
    table, wine 
    on your clothes, hearing strange noises, stumbling or sneezing. While some 
    people 
    feel that saying "Bless You" or "God Bless You" to someone who has just 
    sneezed is 
    superstitious, it was a common expression in Roman times. 
    In those times sneezing could have been the first sign that the sneezer 
    had the plague and it was said as a blessing. 
    
    Some superstitions believe that the devil can enter your body when you 
    sneeze; 
    someone saying, "God bless you," will drive the devil away. Another common 
    belief 
    was that the soul could leave or escape from your body when you sneezed. 
    Covering your mouth while you sneezed prevented this from happening. 
    
    "Ring a Ring of Roses
    A Pocket full of Posies
    Tishoo, Tishoo
    All Fall Down."
    
    The verse to a very old children's game we all played, refers to the spread
    
    of illness through sneezing. In days not all that far past, small pox, 
    plague 
    and influenza were spread through sneezes and all carried a high mortality
    
    rate - "All fall down." Not a happy story for a such a sweet rhyme. 
    In 1919 a law was enacted in the United States to keep victims of the 
    influenza epidemic off the streets. It became a crime to sneeze in public.
    
    People with flu, colds and hayfever were jailed if they broke the law. 
    The epidemic killed 20 million people before it was finished. 
    
    The common cold is the most common illness, with symptons lasting from 
    4 days to two weeks, and some 200 viruses known to cause colds. 
    As we age we will get fewer colds. One sneeze can propel 100,000 bacteria
    
    into the air at about 320km/h and the average force of a sneeze is 167 km/h.
    
    Women catch more colds than men but the symptoms are less severe. 
    Sneezing while driving a vehicle can leave you driving blind for 100 to 300 
    feet. 
    
    According to the Dalai Lama, Buddhist teachings inform us that people can
    
    attain low-level near-death awareness and "clear light" by sneezing.
    It is the Buddhists aim to pass through every transition with lucid 
    awareness, 
    the ultimate goal being to die lucidly. The same "clear light" experience 
    occurs 
    with yawning, falling asleep, and orgasm. Sneezing is sometimes referred to 
    as 
    the orgasm of the nose and it is quite a popular sexual fetish. 
    
    Sneezing is both a symptom and symbol. Divination for cough and cold season,
    just a little magic to go with the medicine. God bless you!!! 
    
    My Nose Garden 
    
    I have roses and rowses of noses and noses, 
    And why they all growses I really can't guess. 
    No lilies or roses, just cold-catching noses, 
    And when they all blowses, it's really a mess. 
    
    They runs and they glowses, these sneezity noses, 
    They frips and they flowses, they blooms and they dies. 
    But you can't bring noses to fine flower showses 
    And really expect them to give you a prize. 
    
    But each mornin' I goeses to watter with hoses 
    These rowses of noses that I cannot sell, 
    The red sniffly noses that cause all my woeses, 
    Why even the crowses complain that they smell.
    
    Why noses, not roses? Well, nobody knowses. 
    Why do you supposes they growses this thick? 
    But since there's no roses come gather some roses- 
    I guarantee each one's a good nose to pick. 
    
    Shel Silverstein, Falling Up
    
    * * 
    * * * * * *
    2. The 
    Raven: Balancing Man and Nature
    by Cheryl Lynne 
    Bradley
    
    "He likes bright abalone shells, silver beads, endless vittles, 
    gossip and warm sleeps over the smoke hole. The Raven-ego is the lover-to-be 
    who wants "a sure thing." The Raven-ego is afraid passion will end. He is 
    afraid and tries to avoid the end of the meal, the end of the fire, the end 
    of the day, and an end to pleasure. He becomes wily, and always to his 
    detriment, for when he forgets his soul, he loses his power." 
    
    "Women Who Run with the Wolves" by Clarissa Pinkola-Estes
    
    The raven creates a strong 
    emotional reaction in people based on its historical perception as a 
    harbinger of death. To dream of one is usually a forecast of coming sadness 
    though not necessarily of grief. The raven is considered to be the most 
    prophetic of all the birds and to have knowledge of private and public 
    misfortunes. People born between September 23 and October 23 have the raven 
    as their animal totem. 
    
    General Information
    
    Before we deal with all the 
    wonderful lore, mystery and superstitions about ravens, here is some basic 
    information. The common raven (Corvus corax) is a member of a family of 
    birds known as the Corvidae, which includes jays, crows, and magpies. The 
    raven is found throughout most of the Northern Hemisphere in a variety of 
    habitats. Ravens are abundant in Canada and the Rocky Mountains. Favoured 
    habitat is remote, heavily-forested wilderness, seacoasts and wooded 
    islands. The raven is a permanent resident in the Arctic, withstanding 
    temperatures of -80 degrees Celsius. The Migratory Bird Treaty between the 
    United States, Canada and Mexico was amended in 1972 to include the Corvids, 
    thus giving federal protection to these species. 
    
    The raven is the largest 
    species of songbird and largest all-black bird in the world. Ravens have 
    large, stout bills, shaggy throat feathers, and wedge-shaped tails. Ravens 
    are 20-25 inches in length, with a wingspread of about four feet. Their 
    plumage is entirely black, with green and purple iridescence. Both sexes the 
    same colour; males are generally larger than females. They will attack 
    hawks, owls and eagles who intrude on their territory. 
    
    Ravens are excellent aerial 
    acrobats and can soar to great heights. Ravens move quickly with seemingly 
    slow wing beats. Their courtship display flight is quite dramatic and the 
    courtship process requires the passing of many tests. Ravens first breed at 
    3 or 4 years of age and mate for life. Once they have bonded, a pair will 
    seek out an isolated nesting spot, at least a mile away from other ravens. 
    Nests are often built on cliffs or in the tops of large trees. Ravens will 
    build a new nest on top of their previous nest. 
    
    Ravens begin courtship 
    behavior in January, and by March adult pairs are roosting near their 
    nesting locations. The female lays from 3 to 7 oval eggs, which are greenish 
    and covered with brown or olive markings. Only the female incubates the 
    eggs; she is tended by the male while on the nest. Young ravens leave the 
    nest by the first week of June. Ravens consume a wide variety of both plant 
    and animal matter and are scavengers who also prey on small animals. Ravens 
    will hide or cache food supplies. They also have the habit of regurgitating 
    undigestible food in the form of a pellet. Ravens are long-lived in the wild 
    possibly up to 35 years; one captive bird died of old age at 29 years.
    
    
    Come, night! come, 
    Romeo! come, thou day in night!
    For thou wilt lie upon the wings of night,
    Whiter than new snow on a raven's back.
    Come, gentle night; come, loving, black-browed night,
    Give me my Romeo: and, when he shall die,
    Take him and cut him out in little stars,
    And he will make the face of heaven so fine
    That all the world will be in love with night,
    And pay no worship to the garish sun.
    Romeo and Juliet 
    by William Shakespeare(1595) act 3, sc. 2, l. 17 
    
    There is no mistaking the 
    raucous call of the raven; the deep, resonant "kaw" is its trademark. The 
    raven can produce more than 30 distinct vocalizations. They fly with their 
    mouths open during hot weather. Ravens are considered among the most 
    intelligent of all birds. They learn to imitate a variety of sounds, 
    including the human voice. Their calls include guttural croaks, gurgling 
    noises, and a sharp, metallic "tock." Ornithologist John Terres states that 
    corvids have "the highest degree of intelligence". Zoologist Bernd Heinrich 
    shares that the raven is "assumed to be the brains of the bird world", while 
    animal behaviorist Konrad Lorenz gives the raven "the highest mental 
    development". In a 1991 paper, Irene Pepperberg of the University of Arizona 
    attests they may share "the cognitive capacities" of many primates. 
    
    
    "We saw a raven very high 
    above us. It called out, and the dome of the sky seemed to echo the sound. 
    It called again and again as it flew onwards, and the mountains gave back 
    the sound, seeming as if from their centre; a musical bell-like answering to 
    the bird's hoarse voice." 
    Dorothy 
    Wordsworth
    
    Myths, Stories and 
    Legends
    
    The raven has played 
    important roles in cultures, myths and literature. Ravens disobeyed Noah by 
    failing to return to the ark after being sent to search for land. The raven 
    was used as an emblem by raiding Viking warriors. In Norse mythology, the 
    god Odin used two ravens named Thought and Memory, to fly the world each day 
    in order to inform him of what was happening. Ravens are also associated 
    with many deities from different cultures: Apollo, the Greek God of the 
    Arts, healing and light; Athena, the Greek Goddess of Wisdom, learning and 
    war; Hera, the Greek Goddess of Childbirth, home and marriage and The 
    Valkyries, the Norse Goddesses who selected those who would die in battle. 
    Freyja, the wife of Odin and Goddess of Leadership, led The Valkyries and 
    was able to take the form of a bird. It was said that she sent the trance 
    state from which knowledge and wisdom emerged. The Roman College of Augurs 
    revealed secrets told to them by ravens. 
    
    The story of Elijah the 
    Tishbite, the prophet, being fed by the ravens is told in 1 Kings, Chapter 
    17. God commanded Elijah to tell King Ahab, the husband of Jezebel, that God 
    was angered with him for allowing Jezebel to worship, and encourage others 
    to worship, Baal, the Storm God The God of the Old Testament was a harsh God 
    who demanded repression and denial of other faiths - One God above all Gods. 
    God's punishment for Ahab and his people was drought that would last until 
    God allowed rain again. God commanded Elijah to hide by a brook and that 
    ravens would come and feed him every day while the drought took its toll. 
    After the slaughter of the prophets of Baal on Mount Carmel, God sent rain, 
    thereby usurping the authority of Baal. 
    Verse 4: "And it shall be, that thou shalt drink of the brook; and I have 
    commanded the ravens to feed thee there." 
    Verse 6: "And the ravens brought him bread and flesh in the morning, and 
    bread and flesh in the evening; and he drank of the brook." 
    
    The spiritual importance of 
    the raven to Native peoples is still recognized. Many view the raven as the 
    creator of the world and bringer of daylight. The myths of the raven are a 
    strong social and religious element of their culture. In many myths, Raven 
    is a wise guy, trickster and practical joker who instilled his greedy, 
    mischievious spirit in everything he touched. He likes pleasure only and 
    dislikes uncertainty. He is both cautious and greedy. Patience is not a 
    strong point. The Raven in these myths was no ordinary bird. He had 
    remarkable powers and could change into whatever form he wished. He could 
    change from a bird to a man, could fly and walk, and swim underwater as fast 
    as any fish. Ravens themselves are thought of as birds of balance between 
    man and nature. 
    
    Almost every tribe has a 
    legend about how Raven got his black . The Haida say that once, when Raven 
    was white, he would go out at night and fly as high as he could in the 
    midnight sky. One night when Raven was flying he didn't notice how high he 
    was until he was lost. The further he flew the more lost he became. One day 
    he finally saw the earth again and he returned. No one recognized him. Raven 
    saw his friend the Rabbit but Rabbit didn't know him either. He told him he 
    was Raven. Rabbit said that it couldn't be, as Raven was white. Rabbit 
    encouraged him to look at his reflection in the stream and Raven saw that he 
    was as black as the midnight sky. Raven knew he had stayed too long in the 
    night sky and had become the same colour. That is how Raven got his black.
    
    
    In Greenland the story is 
    slightly different. The raven and the diver were once white birds. They were 
    not happy and thought it was very dull to be white. They agreed to help each 
    other by painting designs on each other. They took black lamp soot and the 
    raven painted a nice black design on the diver. The diver was pleased and 
    started to paint the raven black with white round patches. When the raven 
    looked at the result he found a patch he thought was not good enough. He 
    started to fix it himself, but it got worse and the raven got angry. In his 
    anger, the raven ended up completely black as he covered himself with soot 
    all over. Since then the raven still flies around, angry and black, shouting 
    out loud. 
    
    In Cornish legend, King 
    Arthur became a raven after his death - the bird associated with the Celtic 
    War Goddesses. In the Welsh legend The Dream of Rhonahwy written in about 
    1200 AD, Rhonawy, a warrior, fell into a deep sleep while waiting to go to 
    battle the Anglo Saxons at Mount Badon, and was transported into the 
    dreamworld. In his dream, Owein (Yvain) was playing a game with King Arthur.
    
    
    Celts loved quarrelling and 
    infighting, if they had no enemy to fight they were quite content to fight 
    with each other. As Arthur and Owein played their game, their two armies 
    started to quarrel. Owein's army was made up of 300 ravens - some versions 
    say his warriors shapeshifted into ravens. Arthur's men started harrassing 
    the ravens, when Owein protested, Arthur said "Your move." A second report 
    met with the same response. The third time Owein allowed the ravens to fight 
    back. Arthur's men started to complain , Owein said "Play on." The last 
    messenger came reporting that if any more of Arthur's men were killed he 
    would be unable to defend Britain from the Anglo-Saxons. Owein called off 
    his birds. The game was ended and so was the Battle of Badon, the foes had 
    agreed to postpone the battle for one month. When Rhonawy awoke he had been 
    asleep for three days and three nights and the battle had been postponed for 
    one month. 
    
    Owein (Yvain) was the son 
    of Morgan Le Fay who was born of the Irish Morrigan. The Morrigan is the 
    most prominent of the Irish Mother Goddesses and is closely associated with 
    sexual potency, war and death. She decided the fates of warriors in battles. 
    The Morrigan was able to metamorphose into a raven or a crow and was said to 
    hover over battlefields as fighting raged below. She often appears as The 
    Washer at the Ford, the war Goddess who waited by rivers and 
    streams,sometimes as a woman and sometimes as a raven, and determined the 
    fate of each warrior as they passed by. 
    
    In the Mabinogion, we learn 
    the story of Bendigeidfran or "Bran the Blessed" .He was a giant with 
    superhuman strength associated with the Celtic cult of the head. He ended up 
    being beheaded and his head, according to legend, still continues to speak. 
    His head is buried under "White Mount" in London, which is assumed to be the 
    Tower of London, and acts as an amulet of protection for the island of 
    Britain. Bran means "raven" and his story is the possible source of the 
    superstition that the kingdom would be safe as long as ravens are kept at 
    the Tower. If they become lost or fly away the Royal Family would die and 
    Britain would fall. 
    
    The sad tale of Deirdre of 
    the Sorrows is contained in a manuscript from the 9th century. There were 
    disputes between the Kingdom of Ulster and Queen Maeve of Connacht and her 
    allies. Fergus, who had been King of Ulster, supported Connacht rather than 
    his native Ulster during the raid. Fergus had desired to marry his brother's 
    widow, Nessa. She would only agree if he allowed her son, Conchobar, to be 
    King for one year. Deirdre was the daughter of the chief storyteller of 
    Conchobar. The druid Cathbad, the new King's chief advisor, predicted her 
    great beauty and that many Ulster warriors would die because of her. The men 
    of Ulster wanted to kill her but Conchobar hid her under the care of a nurse 
    as he intended to marry her. 
    
    One winter when she was old 
    enough to marry, Deirdre saw a raven drinking the blood of a freshly 
    slaughtered calf. "I could love a man with hair like the raven, cheeks like 
    blood and skin like snow." and her nurse told her there was such a man. His 
    name was Naoise, son of Usna. Deirdre and Naoise met and eloped to Scotland 
    with his two brothers. Conchobar was furious but dispatched an offer of 
    peace. They agreed to all return if Fergus accompanied them for safety. 
    Conchobar had Fergus delayed and them all murdered with the exception of 
    Deirdre. Fergus's son was travelling with them and he was also murdered. 
    Fergus left Ulster and offered his services to Queen Maeve. Deirdre lived 
    with Conchobar for a year but she never overcame her grief and killed 
    herself by jumping from a chariot. 
    
    The Romany admire ravens 
    for their loyalty to their tribe. The ravens are said to hold tribal 
    councils and will gather in large groups, or murders, much the way crows do. 
    If a raven goes against the laws of their tribe, they will commit suicide by 
    diving into the ground from a high place. 
    
    Superstitions
    
    There are a great many 
    superstitions surrounding ravens. To some Native tribes they are a good omen 
    but to others they are not. Some Native Americans view them as the 
    "Messenger of Death" and this is a common theme among cultures. If one is 
    heard croaking over a house it portends a death or an illness before long. 
    If the bird actually flies around the chimney then the persons fate is 
    sealed. Some theorize that this is because they have such an acute sense of 
    smell they can sense decay from a remarkable distance. If ravens are seen 
    flying towards each other, it is an omen of war to come. Scottish deer 
    hunters view them as a sign of a good hunt. If they face in the direction of 
    the clouded sun it is a prediction of hot weather on its way. If they are 
    busy preening themselves it is a good indication of rainy weather. 
    
    
    In closing...
    
    Ravens continue to awe, 
    inspire and intrigue us as they balance between sky and earth; man and 
    nature; knowledge and wisdom. Their tenacity, determination, intelligence, 
    teamwork and extraordinary endurance are lessons in survival for us all in 
    an increasingly uncertain world. They are certainly the stuff legends are 
    made of. Now I must go, it's midnight and I think I hear someone gently 
    rapping .... 
    
    Once upon a midnight 
    dreary, while I pondered, weak and weary,
    Over many a quaint and curious volume of forgotten lore,
    While I nodded, nearly napping, suddenly there came a tapping,
    As of someone gently rapping, rapping at my chamber door.
    The Raven by 
    Edgar Allen Poe, 1845 
    
    Sources
    The 
    Medicine Wheel
    First Fireside Edition 1992
    by Sun Bear and Wabun
    ISBN 0-671-76420-9
    
    A Dictionary of Omens and Superstitions
    by Phillippa Waring
    Souvenir Press 1978
    ISBN 0-285-63396-1
    
    Heroes of the Dawn: Celtic Myth
    Duncan Baird Publishers 1996
    ISBN 0-7054-2171-6
    
    The Holy Bible
    King James Version
    
    Women Who Run with the Wolves
    by Clarissa Pinkola-Estes
    Ballantine Books NY 1992
    ISBN 0-345-37744-3
    
    * * * * * * *
    
    3. 
    Anger Banishing
    by Ostara 
    Nitewillow
    
    You need: Floating white 
    candle, Banishing herb, Bowl of water. 
    
    Hold the candle and pour 
    all the anger into it. Cry if you feel the need. 
    When done, place the candle into the bowl of water. 
    Sprinkle the banishing herb on the water widdershins around the candle. 
    Draw the fire banishing pentagram over the candle, light and say: 
    
    
    'By the power of fire
    I banish all anger and bitterness.
    Turn it into love and patience to make myself a better person
    With harm to none’
    Leave to burn. Bury 
    the remains off your property. 
    
    * * * * * 
    * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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