Excerpt from “Women Who Run with the Wolves,” by Clarissa Pinkola Estes…………….
The archetype of Wild Woman resides in the guts, not in the head. She can track and run and summon and repel. She can sense, camouflage, and love deeply. She is intuitive, typical, and normative. She is utterly essential to women's mental and soul health.
She is the female soul. Yet she is more; she is the source of the feminine. She is all that is of instinct, of the worlds both seen and hidden -she is the basis.
She is intuition, she is far-seer, she is deep listener, she is loyal heart. She encourages humans to remain multilingual; fluent in the languages of dreams, passion, and poetry.
She is the voice that says, "This way, this way."
She is the one who thunders after injustice. She is the one we leave home to look for. She is the one we come home to. She is the things that keep us going when we think that we're done for.
To adjoin the instinctual nature does not mean to come undone, change everything from left to right, from black to white, to move the east to west, to act crazy or out of control. It does not mean to lose one's primary socializations, or to become less human. It means quite the opposite. The wild nature has a vast integrity to it.
It means to establish territory, to find one's pack, to be in one's body with certainty and pride regardless of the body's gifts and limitations, to speak and act in one's behalf, to be aware, alert, to draw on the innate feminine powers of intuition and sensing, to come into one's cycles, to find what one belongs to, to rise with dignity, to retain as much consciousness as we can.
go see: http://www.elexion.com/lakota/textos/texto31b.htm
This cathouse
SERIOUSLY
recommends:
By Diesel
Buy New $11.95
2 comments:
Right you are... it's not exhaustive information, but important (in my not-so-humble opinion). As with all things, you must separate the wheat from the chaff. There must be balance. And, of course, a man can learn much from what the good storyteller has to say.
*The Queen submits to the will of the stranger*
Post a Comment