Personal thoughts on 9/11

Today is the 10th anniversary of the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Towers, the Pentagon, and the thwarted attack on the US capitol.  2,977 people lost their lives that day and most of us remember it vividly.  It is seared into our DNA.  Most of us, after ten years, are able to look past the events of that day and live normal lives.  Others are still crippled by grief.

We all have a 9/11 story.  Every one of us.

We’d like you, our family, to feel free to share your story with us.  What do you remember from that day?  What prayers would you like to offer for peace, not just the absence of violence, but peace in our souls?  Do you need healing?  Ask for it.  Can you offer healing?  Offer it.  Our only request is that you do not delve into political statements and that you honor one anothers words and personal truth.

Here is my 9/11 story.

9/11, the days leading up to it and the days after it, are painful to get through.  It’s everything I can do just to brush my teeth.  I avoid reading articles and blog posts about it.  Salt in an open wound.

I lost one of my best friends, and Air Force buddy and matron of honor at my wedding.  I didn’t know she was in one of the towers while I sat in stalled traffic on 394 that morning ten years ago.  She was on a sales call, visiting one of the offices.  Early bird gets the sale.  I was horrified hearing the radio news report that a second plane had hit a tower and, judging by how the traffic slowed and then stopped as people lost focus on driving, the other drivers shared my horror.  Traffic stopped.   And it felt like the world stopped.  Each year the world should stop again and it doesn’t and that feels wrong

No.  I didn’t know that R was already dead, if she was lucky.  My mind flashes to all kinds of possible deaths for her.  While I was talking to my boss about the attack, was R jumping to her death to avoid the worse fate of burning?  To this day, I can be making breakfast and I can hear the ‘thump’ as she hits the pavement.  It jolts through my entire body.  Did she pray? Perhaps she died from the smoke.  That’s as happy a thought as I can come up with.

It’s difficult for me to hear about Pagans using this day to learn more about Islam, using it as a platform to attack the political party of choice, or being bored by the coverage because it harshes their mellow.  I get why they do that, in my head, but it hurts my heart.  Why aren’t they praying for justice and comfort to the Gods we honor?  Why aren’t they learning the names of those who died?  Why aren’t they making offerings to Heroes of 9/11, that they may continue to look after our country?  Why aren’t they screaming?  Screaming like R must have been screaming when she felt the building start to fall?

Why aren’t I screaming?  Screaming?  Hell, I can’t even speak out loud about it.  To this day, I’ve said exactly one sentence to my husband about R dying.  In Hellenic burial ceremonies the family shouts the name of the dead three times and then they leave the burial site. It’s supposed to be a way to separate the living from the dead. I won’t say R’s name out loud. I can’t.  I think if my mouth opens, I will starting screaming and not stop.  All I can do is type while I pray and pray and pray that R’s last moments were not ones of fear and pain.

She was a really wonderful person.  She was tough when she needed to be and kind all of the time.  Truly compassionate. When I arrived in Spain, my first duty assignment in the USAF, she was the one who helped me settle in.  She watched out for me and showed me the ropes.  We were so inseparable that we were investigated by the OSI for being gay.  I loved her.  Her hair smelled of Suave.  She chewed her nails.  She wore dangle earrings and had a graceful neck.

I push away thoughts of her coughing and gasping for air.  I want to picture her at peace.  I try to remember her as we were on one of the better nights of my life.  We were bar hopping in Madrid and it was late (or early, depending on how you look at it)  and it started to rain.  We wanted to go to bar down the street so I took off my long coat and we held it over our heads and laughed as we ran for it, companionably bumping into each other.  Neither one of us are like that anymore.  R died because some evil bastards wanted to make a point and I don’t know how you recover from that.  Not just the death, but knowing someone you loved died to make a point.

I’ve had people close to me die and some of them have been violent deaths.  A friend of mine killed his ex-girlfriend and then himself.  It was a shock and you feel guilt for grieving for a person who did such an unspeakable act.  But this is totally different and I feel lost and bewildered and don’t know what to do.

I’ve drank.  Some years I plan a ton of activities to distract myself.  Or I lay in bed all day.  Three years ago I tried to pray and make an offering to the Heroes of Flight 93, but I couldn’t.  I think I’ll be able to this year. There is a growing Hero cultus in Hellenismos for the 9/11 heroes and I take great comfort in that.  I give money each year for the memorial to Flight 93 in Pennsylvania.   The photos of the site are beautiful and I hope to make a trip there and place my offerings like other Hellenic Pagans are doing.  I especially like that the group creating the memorial publicly acknowledge that they picked the exact site because of an omen.  Omens are a significant method of divining the will of the Gods in Hellenismos.

“On a cold winter day in 2002 committee members Ellen Saracini, Grace Godshalk, Tara Bane and Fiona Havlish found a tattered flag caught in the brush in an undeveloped township park. This was to be the omen that marked the spot for the future memorial.”

Hector Lugo honors the Passengers of Flight 93 as American Heroes in the Hellenic tradition. He sent out a prayer last year and I’d like to share it with you.   Hector, in honoring the dead and paying tribute to the Heroes of 9/11 using our religion’s practices, is making this day sacred and bearable for me.  He is giving me a framework and a support system from within our shared spirituality of Hellenismos to deal with the emotional burden I carry.  People like Selena Fox, at Circle Sanctuary, is doing likewise for those follow a more Wiccan form of Paganism.  (Please check out the facebook page, Pagans Healing Remembering 9/11, created by Selena Fox)


In shock and wonder we stared, unbelieving.
At the loss of our innocence.
At the loss of our pride.
But soon were we aware.
Of the greatest loss of all.

Your lives were this day taken.
Your light in this world shut off.
Your deaths a pain in our hearts.

We pray to you, who rule below.
We pray to you, who rule above.
We pray to you, who cross the lines.

Bring to these souls their deserved peace.
Bring to these souls this knowledge.
That never will they be forgotten.
Nor by those here maligned.

Bring to these souls their new name.

Heroes.

And our thanks and love this day.

Polytheist priest sets out on ‘Heroic Path’

Known in the Twin Cities area as the founder and priest of the recently closed Celtic temple, author of the book Walk Like a God, and blogger for Patheos.com, an tSruith Drew Jacob is now ready to begin the next chapter of his life.  It’s a crazy idea, which an tSruith Jacob readily admits, to walk from Minnesota to Brazil.  Yet that’s precisely the path that Jacob set his feet on.   Last night I attended his 30th birthday/Rogue Priest deployment party and at 9 pm he used a slick move straight from Lord of the Rings to leave the party and start his trip unseen.

PNC-MN Editor Cara Schulz, tSruith Drew Jacob, and PNC Contributor Diana Rajchel

The trip has been a dream of Jacob’s for several years and he’s been planning in earnest for the last six months to make this dream a reality.  He sees the trip, one that will give him time to get to know an area and its people and test himself, as a spiritual calling.  “I decided to live the Heroic Life after many years of telling the myths of the ancient heroes. One day I realized that although their stories are fun to read or hear, they would be more fun to live. So I’ve begun to change my entire life to be able to travel and do great things.  To live the Heroic Life means taking action, living for high ideals, charging fearlessly into new and grand plans, building a name around your art or skill, and using your life to change the way the world works.”

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A Senior Festival Experience – Interview

Larksong is a new Sacred Harvest Festival festivant and joined Harmony Tribe last February. At age 70 she is possibly the all time senior in both categories. I asked her about her experiences.

Larksong

Have you camped before?

When my kids were little we camped, but this is the first time we have camped in quite some time! At least twelve years ago, and then we had a pop-up camper.

What does it feel like to travel 600 miles from Michigan to be with people you don’t know and spend a week?

Great! It really has been great. We brought our three nieces, so that they could have a drama free week and we have just been having a ball. They have been having a ball. The only problem for me here is everything is so far away. I’m in the middle, but it is a long walk either direction. After two or three trips I need to take a nap! Continue reading

Sacred Harvest Festival survives The Tower

The Tower card from the Rider-Waite deck

When the Tower card appears in a spread it is not greeted with cheers and smiles. Although Pagans recognize the cycle of destruction must happen in order for new growth to thrive, it isn’t an enjoyable process. It’s painful. At times it can be downright ugly. While a group or organization is in the midst of conflict and tearing down of the old, it can be difficult to manage the process in a way that achieves a positive outcome.

Local festival in crises
For the last year Harmony Tribe, the group that produces the Sacred Harvest Festival, has been dealing with the aftermath of the Tower. Shortly after last year’s festival the board, Tribe members, and festival attendees became embroiled in a serious conflict. Tensions came to a head after a controversial move was initiated by Harmony Tribe to ban two Tribe members and the walls came crumbling down as the entire board of Harmony Tribe resigned en masse early last fall. A rift formed and community members began to choose sides. To make a painful situation worse for all involved, this played out in public.

For many in the wider community, the escalating conflict and subsequent rift struck from out of the blue. “This entire episode was so hurtful and angry. It wasn’t anything like the community I had come to love,” said one attendee who asked not to be named. “I was stunned. I shut down. I almost didn’t come this year.”

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Pagan Sweats – News? No, an Interview!

Jim Esralian, and Karen have been leading Sweat Lodge ceremonies at Sacred Harvest Festival (SHF) for many years. He is so unassuming many don’t know his connection to this ceremony. I interviewed him at SHF.  He first off declared proudly he was Armenian, “A conquered people as well”.

Traditional Sweat Lodge

You have a pretty deep connection to Native American traditions?

Back home I live in central Michigan, near the Saginaw Chippewa reservation. In addition I have become friends with folks from Turtle Mountain reservation, and other places, that have brought traditions from that area, to Michigan. They are actually mixed traditions themselves. They are combinations of Metis, Cree, Ojibwe, Ashinabe, and Lakota. A lot of the medicine that was passed down was already fairly multi-national. Turtle Mountain is in North Dakota, in an area where several tribes border each other and their cultures inter-mingled. People came from that area bring with them what is called the ‘Thirsty Dance’, very similar to a “Sun Dance”. They also brought some of the Lodge traditions, as well as some of the songs. Continue reading