T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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617.1 | people actually buy this stuff????? | SUBURB::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Mon Jan 07 1991 12:15 | 5 |
|
Codswallop
Heather
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617.2 | | GWYNED::YUKONSEC | The perfect level of hugosity | Mon Jan 07 1991 12:23 | 7 |
| >> <<< Note 617.1 by SUBURB::THOMASH "The Devon Dumpling" >>>
>> -< people actually buy this stuff????? >-
Yes, Heather.
E Grace
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617.3 | | BOOKS::BUEHLER | | Mon Jan 07 1991 12:43 | 2 |
| Oh yes. Some of us are experiencing it even as you doubt...
|
617.4 | ! | DECWET::JWHITE | bless us every one | Mon Jan 07 1991 12:45 | 3 |
|
i think it's rather profound
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617.5 | RE .1 | CSC32::M_EVANS | | Mon Jan 07 1991 13:08 | 9 |
| Heather,
Many of us not only "buy" this, but we are recreating "our" own image
of a female deity. I am not sure of the topic number, but you might
want to see the love of the godess topic in here.
(See? I am learning to tone down my responses)
Meg
|
617.6 | | LEZAH::BOBBITT | each according to their gifts... | Mon Jan 07 1991 13:34 | 19 |
| I find that throughout my life I didn't have a really strong,
supportive, accepting woman in my life, and missed out on owning and
appreciating (and even NOTICING) parts of myself that I'm starting to
stumble over (*oof*...what's this. wait a minute. It's part of me.
Oh....) - some parts are good, some parts society has told me are BAD
(weakness, trust, faith, compassion, fear, anger) in certain amounts,
but I am learning to see them (the hardest part is trusting that at my
core, at my very foundations, I am a *good* being, and am fine just the
way I inherently am).
The little voices surface slowly. And I am so glad I have this
community to share them with.
This book beautifully complements Maria Shafer's "Dance of the Spirit -
a woman's guide to spirituality" (or some title like that - I brought
it up in the "good books" topic).
-Jody
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617.7 | Powerful!!!! | BPOV02::BRIOSO | | Mon Jan 07 1991 14:44 | 17 |
| Well, I haven't been here in Womannotes for a long while and I have not
had something move me quite as much as this passage did. For me, it
spoke where I am and what I have inherently believed but was afraid to
act on for such a long time.
I, too, am beginning to believe in a Goddess although my interpretation
is somewhat different from the one I am beginning to learn about here.
Something in Heather's reply hurt me and I don't know why or just where
as yet. I hope I can allow myself the space to find out. My usual
response to this would have been anger, but at this point it is just
pain and sadness.
Thank you, Jody, for this note. I want to read the book if the rest of
it is a rewarding as the passage you entered.
Bernice
|
617.8 | | LEZAH::BOBBITT | each according to their gifts... | Mon Jan 07 1991 15:03 | 18 |
| re: .7
.1 stung me a bit also, but I think it's only because I am so new to
hearing myself, and so likely to lose my voice among the stronger, more
sure voices of others. I felt my choice to read that book, and my
enjoyment of it and the harkening it made to some of the growth I am
doing and will probably need to continue to do for a while was
invalidated by those few words. It is *my* weakness that makes me
listen to others - a weakness of compassion and empathy. I listen too
much, and hear what others say when I should sometimes raise my walls
and stand firm on my opinions and feelings.
Yes, I buy books like this, so that I can see parts of myself reflected
in them that I might otherwise miss. Through the isinglass pool of
codswallop such as this, I see vague outlines of selves I have yet to
claim. But to each their own opinion.
-Jody
|
617.10 | | MR4DEC::MAHONEY | | Mon Jan 07 1991 16:36 | 11 |
| A "Goddess" or Good Earth Mother started in prehistoric times some
35.000 years ago, it evolved with times and became what is now our
modern religions God and Mary His Mother to Catholics, Mohamed to
Moslems and so on, and so on. Does that book try to take us back to
where we were 35,000 years ago? it'll be hard to jump all the years in
between... and I wouldn't like to live in a place with only women, I
love people and that includes men, women, boys, girls, old and young,
I'm fascinated by diversity and find our modern world a wonderful place
to be at the moment... in spite of all the problems that we have today!
I trust humankind... God bless them all!
|
617.11 | :^| | DECWET::JWHITE | bless us every one | Mon Jan 07 1991 17:45 | 3 |
|
'evolved'?
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617.12 | | IE0010::MALING | Working in a window wonderland | Mon Jan 07 1991 20:20 | 8 |
| Thanks for posting that, Jody. Discovering our own spirituality is
something each of us must do alone. Each person is at a different
point on their journey. When I saw .1, I did not feel angry or hurt.
I saw myself saying something like that 10 years ago; I smiled and I
felt compassion.
Mary
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617.13 | | YUPPY::DAVIESA | Passion and Direction | Tue Jan 08 1991 04:09 | 21 |
|
RE .1
Heather - you've been around in here for a while now, and I would have
hoped that you would, at the very least, have learned that it is
appreciated here if you preface blanket statements with an "In my
opinion" statement.
If you want to say "In my opinion, this is codswallop", I have no
problem with that.
If you keep issuing blanket statments like "Codswallop" without a
preface, especially on subjects that may be important to people in
here, you will become accustomed to the consistant reaction you will
get. Hopefully you will get bored with this and learn to change your
style to one that will get your views across more effectively in this
forum.
'gail
|
617.14 | | BRABAM::PHILPOTT | Col I F 'Tsingtao Dhum' Philpott | Tue Jan 08 1991 06:03 | 17 |
|
The only statement in .0 that struck me as codswallop is the line that
says the Goddess has died.
When exactly did that happen?
The Old Religion (Goddess Trilogy and all) may have been occluded by
the Patriarchal trilogy of Judeo-Christian religions but it never died,
was never truly forgotten, and never abandoned its adherents.
You cannot kill a fundamental truth...
However, In My Opinion, it is written in an overpoweringly matronising
style. I certainly couldn't image myself reading more than a 100 lines
or so of this book...
/. Ian .\
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617.15 | | SUBURB::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Tue Jan 08 1991 08:36 | 43 |
| > Heather - you've been around in here for a while now, and I would have
> hoped that you would, at the very least, have learned that it is
> appreciated here if you preface blanket statements with an "In my
> opinion" statement.
The base note specifically asked for " Please reply with thoughts,
comments, as the fancy strikes".
That's what I did, I put down what immediately struck me which was:
"codswallop", and "Do people really buy this?".
> If you want to say "In my opinion, this is codswallop", I have no
> problem with that.
That isn't what the base note asked for.
If a considered opinion was requested, I would give one, however I wrote
down what struck me.
> If you keep issuing blanket statments like "Codswallop" without a
> preface, especially on subjects that may be important to people in
> here, you will become accustomed to the consistant reaction you will
> get.
I actually haven't got a consistant reaction here, I have had
discussions in some topice where a few people have agreed with me, and
many have disagreed, and I have had discussions where many have agreed,
and a few have disagreed, I have had discussions which are just
additional information or requests for more info. I have also had
mails of support.
The discussions here are lively, I don't expect to always be considered
right, or always to be understood, that sounds like a world of clones.
> Hopefully you will get bored with this and learn to change your
> style to one that will get your views across more effectively in this
> forum.
I actually believe the one word sums up the fact it was what struck me,
rather than the - in my opinion etc...... which would intimate that I
had considered it for some time before replying.
Heather
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617.16 | | LEZAH::BOBBITT | each according to their gifts... | Tue Jan 08 1991 09:44 | 10 |
| re: .15
I believe you can find guidelines for "owning your opinions" in the
guidelines (specifically 1.25).
I did indeed ask for opinions, but hoped to get them gentled by the
guidelines of the conference.
-Jody
|
617.17 | | SUBURB::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Tue Jan 08 1991 10:28 | 30 |
|
Jody,
I didn't read your note as asking for opinions, but for an immediate
respose to how it struck me, as I explained previously. If you would
like opinions, then I would understand more, if you asked for this.
I have been following the voting topic, and some others, and have read
many of those, the majority of which are opinions, but not couched in
the phraseology you state.
I still don't understand why this is the first note I have seen in
the month I have been noting here, that anyone has brought this up,
when it is happening throught the conference.
I have read note 1.25 now, This was written before I joined this
conference, so I was not aware of it, I took 1.0 to be the guidelines,
as that is normally where they are, and also, 1.0 specifies that it
is the guidelines.
Even so, I still don't understand.
If someone asks my opinion,
"Codswallop" is not acceptable, whereas
"In my opinion this is codswallop" is acceptable.
Heather
|
617.18 | | WMOIS::B_REINKE | constantly making exciting discoveries | Tue Jan 08 1991 10:54 | 8 |
| Heather
Just a 'nit' here. Any time you go into a new conference you should
read all of the 'guidllines'. Some conferences even have this as
the conference banner (i.e. 'new noters read all of 1.* *before*
writing.)
Bonnie
|
617.19 | | LYRIC::BOBBITT | each according to their gifts... | Tue Jan 08 1991 10:59 | 40 |
| re: .17
> I have read note 1.25 now, This was written before I joined this
> conference, so I was not aware of it, I took 1.0 to be the guidelines,
> as that is normally where they are, and also, 1.0 specifies that it
> is the guidelines.
Apologies for any confusion. 1.* gives you all the conference policies
and guidelines.
> If someone asks my opinion,
>
> "Codswallop" is not acceptable, whereas
>
> "In my opinion this is codswallop" is acceptable.
Primarily, as outlined in 1.25, when you do not preface an emotion,
opinion, idea, concept, or feeling with "I feel" or "I think" it puts
the onus of the idea, concept, etc on the OTHER person, when in fact
the onus belongs with you - they are your words and your concepts. The
"own your own stuff" paradigm is often used by facilitators when doing
work with groups because it feels less judgemental and less
threatening, and is less likely to result in defensive posturing or
outright debate/argument. When you say "Bulls#it" about something I
believe, I feel you are judging not only what I said, but that it may
also be an evalutation of me as a person, or my way of thinking or
living, and that in turn may upset me or make me angry. When you say
"I think that's Bulls#it", I am more able to say to myself, "Okay, that
is her opinion. It is not being put forth as a universal truth, it is
not a threat to me or my ideals. It is her take, and very valid for
her, but she's not forcing it on me as some judgment."
Even with the above explanation, I realize that you may not understand
since apparently you have a very self-assured background and seem to
have high self-esteem and no problem with people offering challenging
or negative statements about things you saay. But not all of us are
like that. Yet.... ;)
-Jody
|
617.20 | Clearly a shot. =m | OXNARD::HAYNES | Charles Haynes | Tue Jan 08 1991 15:43 | 5 |
617.21 | off to 1. | SUBURB::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Wed Jan 09 1991 04:32 | 32 |
|
Okay, but why is it okay for everyone else, but not me?
Two examples .11 in this topic:
"Discovering our own spirituality is something each of us must do alone"
Why is this not "in my opinion .......
or " I think that.......
and 342.216:
"no war is worth fighting for"
Why not:
in my opinion no war.....
or I beleive no war........
This is happening in the majority of the notes I read.
I misunderstood the base note to mean - "write what strikes you",
and not "write your considered opinion", - I have re-read it, and I
still read it as such - tho' I know understand that it's not what was
meant.
I will go and read 1-1.25, but I hope that if I have to stick by all
these guidelines, that everyone else will have to.
Heather
|
617.24 | my place is of the sun | RUTLND::JOHNSTON | bean sidhe | Wed Jan 09 1991 16:08 | 61 |
| re.0 my feelings, responses, and perceptions
> If, the first time you had experienced that sharp awareness of
> ego, of "me, I'm ME, not you"...you had been received and hugged and
> affirmed instead of shamed and isolated.
This is _very_ similar to what happened to me. I was, from the
beginning, encouraged and rewarded for being my_self_ [and in fact
punished for trying to be like <name>]. The pressure to bury my
_self_ came in my early teens ... far after the twig had been bent and
far too late for me to see it as anything other than an offense
against nature and order.
The 'mother' imagery is _extremely_ uncomfortable for me.
[god-as-mother is a notion that quite literally makes me ill. Lest any
feel that this statement is a denigration of their personal belief
system, I hurry to state emphatically that this is not the case -- the
mother I know best, my own, is so far from nurturing, valuing, or
loving that I cannot make a connection.]
I see a great deal of truth and value in the excerpts.
HOWEVER, I feel that they present a _very_ small part of what I want
from self-awareness and self-validation.
Inner vision as 'descent' is a concept with which I am not
comfortable. As presented it is coupled with emotions and realities
that have been portrayed as 'negative' when allowed at all. Anger,
sorrow, fear, pain ...
Far better to acknowledge and live with these realities in the light
than to 'descend' to them. To seek and find 'her own deepest nature
and give it voice' in light.
I do not agree that this knowledge and value of self can only be found
in 'the still, dark realm of the unformed' ... we exist, even within
ourselves, in the 'upper world' where we have, everyone, a right of
place and a unique value.
I am probably _most_ uncomfortable with the focus upon 'masculine' and
'feminine' nature. Something within me feels a wrongness in such a
dichotomy. I am a woman; hence my nature can be _no_other_ than
feminine whether it yearns to fly or yearns to bide ... and my process
can be _no_other_ than feminine whether it tends to order or to chaos.
> "A woman must break out of the old mold. She must risk disobeying the
> given decrees, those dictated from outside as well as those written
> within her by her past.
Indeed. And the old compulsion to pidgeonhole her attributes as well.
Sometimes, I feel that this insidious by-product of denial of a
woman's self is the most damaging of all.
Pain & ecstasy, order & chaos, life & death ... self- determination
and self-identity.
Indeed life would be different if we were to grow up with a sense of
connection and continuity -- yet as unique individuals -- rather than
a sense of [should be] homogeneous islands in time.
Annie
|
617.25 | .Cosdwallop? I dunno.. | DENVER::DORO | | Wed Jan 09 1991 17:44 | 16 |
|
re: .6
Jody -
Yeah. me too. 'specially the {oof!.. stumbled over myself again!}, and,
most sadly, accepting (learning) who I am with a positive judgement on
that knowledge.
... gee, it would be NICE to have that place.. of course ANYONE of ANY
gender would profit emotionally from a refuge/resource lijke that..
jamd
|
617.26 | | WMOIS::B_REINKE | constantly making exciting discoveries | Wed Jan 09 1991 18:21 | 16 |
| Interesting point here..
My mother in law gave me the book for Christmas because it meant
a lot to �her.
I started to read it and was very put off by the woman's style
of writing which I found affected.
So I can understand where Heather is coming from.
Now that there has been so much controversy over the exerpt
I'll have to go back and read it again.
Thanks for entering the base note Jody.
Bonnie
|
617.27 | third time of trying.... | SUBURB::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Thu Jan 10 1991 04:19 | 11 |
|
Hi folkes,
I have a few emergencies here, I haven't dissapeared, but I may not get
back to you for at least today.
Heather phew! at least the network's stayed up this long.....
|
617.28 | | SUBURB::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Thu Jan 10 1991 07:09 | 7 |
|
As the initial note mentioning hogwash has been deleted, I have
deleted .22 and .23.
I'm still considering .1
Heather
|
617.29 | Heather I have a reply | VANTEN::MITCHELLD | ............<42`-`o> | Thu Jan 10 1991 07:34 | 2 |
| IMO As an atheist, I consider .0 to offensive to atheists in that it totally
disregards the logical approach to the existence and behaviour of women.
|
617.30 | | LEZAH::BOBBITT | each according to their gifts... | Thu Jan 10 1991 09:20 | 20 |
| re: descending.
I think this clicked with me because of a book I read (was it "Women's
Reality"? - I think so) which discussed how when women are feeling
insecure they discuss it as a feeling of hollowness, a depth or pit
within them, a hole, which often seems located near the solar plexus.
You'll sometimes see them curled up, sitting or lying, and explicitly
cradling this part of their body with their arms when they are feeling
hurt or whatever (I have noticed this in myself also).
It sometimes almost feels like a discontinuity, or something I can
stand on the edge of and look down into, dizzilly, wondering if I will
fall in and lose myself completely.
There are theories that this relates to compulsive eating - an attempt
to fill the hole and make ourselves whole with a readily available
material...food
-Jody
|
617.31 | Did you see house of cards? | SUBURB::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Thu Jan 10 1991 09:29 | 11 |
|
> IMO As an atheist, I consider .0 to offensive to atheists in that it totally
>disregards the logical approach to the existence and behaviour of women.
You may think that, but I couldn't possibly comment!
I posted my decision in another topic, saying I would leave .1 as it stands.
Heather
|
617.32 | pov | RUTLND::JOHNSTON | bean sidhe | Thu Jan 10 1991 10:05 | 17 |
| re.30 on 'descent' and 'hollowness'
Certainly my own personal reality has included feelings of insecurity,
emptiness and worthlessness ... and often still does. At present, I'm
facing some pretty harsh realities that strike at the core of my own
identity as a woman ... a twilight time.
I can descend to these realities, but _I_ cannot deal with them in
darkness. I carry my light with me and I rout them out. I sit on the
edge of the abyss in stillness and wonder in a cloud of cool and
brilliant mist and I worry at my fears until I extract what I must own
and toss the detritus back into the void.
The woman who taught me the way of looking inward taught me to look
inward to knowing and light.
Annie
|
617.33 | | LYRIC::BOBBITT | each according to their gifts... | Thu Jan 10 1991 11:14 | 10 |
| do you have any texts on the inward knowingness and light? I've read
Louise L. Haywood?'s "Living in the Light", but nothing particularly
about self-enlightenment with light.
I guess I've always thought that mucking out the inner turmoil and
"growing from it" always seemed a task, rather than a delight - perhaps
that's where I can learn more.
-Jody
|
617.34 | | OXNARD::HAYNES | Charles Haynes | Thu Jan 10 1991 13:53 | 11 |
| Traditionally Buddhist "enlightenment" has meant just that - a blinding moment
of light and clarity (well not blinding really - more like opening up
perception and realizing your previous blindness). There is serious argument
about enlightenment though - whether it is/can be a *process* or is an *event*,
and whether the event must be preceeded by the process. The process might be
akin to the "mucking out" that you describe Jody.
Personally I find that by concentrating on the "light" inside me the "muck"
tends to dry up and blow away...
-- Charles
|
617.35 | | RUTLND::JOHNSTON | bean sidhe | Thu Jan 10 1991 16:20 | 19 |
| no, Jody, I have no texts. the manner in which I was taught was in the
manner of oral tradition -- passed down 'by hand and by heart' to me
through 'teachers' and many 'generations.' No doubt texts exist, but I
never felt the need to seek them out.
'Mucking out' is indeed a chore. That's why I endeavour to avoid
anything that remotely ressembles it in my inner journey -- if getting
to know myself is a chore, than _I_ probably would not bother.
Light and mists and inner stillness are the means/images that allow me
to embrace my self -- my nature/vision and my process/journey -- and
enable me to share that self with others. 'Muck' is something I do not
hurry to embrace and do not want to share.
The gut-wrenching 'Why?!' can echo in dark caverns of my heart and mind
with it's seductive undertones of shame and fatal flaws or it can be
embraced as honest grief and examined, understood and dealt with.
Annie
|