Archive for the ‘Spiritual Nomad Course’ Category

Late-Night Saturday Post of Updateness

Saturday, January 14th, 2012

I know I’ve been scarce this…year…so far, aside from my TVD recaps, but trust me, I haven’t forgotten my little blog!  Things have been a bit…well, ME around here lately, and not in a good way, but I think/pray/hope/knock wood/sacrifice faux chicken that life is evening out and the rusted gears in my poor addled brain are starting to turn properly again, at least for a while.

Let’s face it:  I’m a depressive.  Periodically things just fall apart on the inside of me; a friend of mine describe her experiences with depression her brain having a cold.  Mine moves in cycles, and each time I seem to be thrown up against a new set of issues, as if I’m sorting through my big ol’ pile of mismatched baggage one piece at a time.  It’s freaking exhausting, and aggravating, and makes me a bit stabbity when I’m not in the mood to view it as a lofty learning experience. I suppose I could consider myself “manic depressive” if by “manic” we meant “reasonably okay.”  To say “bipolar” would indicate I have more than one pole rather than one pole plus a state of decent functionality – actually when I think of it that way, it’s more like tetherball, where a functional state is the pole and depression is the ball that whirls around it hitting kids in the face.

Sometimes self-awareness is a pile of suck.

Spiritual Nomad Update

At any rate, I had intended to start rolling out the Spiritual Nomad course around Imbolc, but that isn’t terribly likely – I may aim for Ostara, or hell, let’s just say March.  I’ve decided to simplify the format a little; part of what was keeping me from finishing it was that the idea of doing recorded meditations and so forth really, really intimidated me, so I decided, screw it!  For now the course will be six weekly modules, all of it reading material, journaling questions, activities, and the like.  It won’t be terribly expensive; I will probably start up a Facebook group for it, or something similar, since I lack the time or inclination to create a forum but want students to be able to talk to each other (which will also give me a chance, when I can, to pop into the community and answer questions or join discussions).  And, if in the future I record meditations that come directly from the course material, anyone who’s bought the course will receive them free as bonuses.  At least, that’s the plan right now.

The material is nearly finished – just two modules left to complete, and some tweaking.

Meanwhile, if you’d be so kind as to hop over to my Facebook page, I have a very short poll there for you about the Nomad course.

Shadow World News

Shadow’s Fall is almost ready for the printers – you should see it on shelves March 27!  I’m about 1/3 through writing the fourth book of the series, and so far I have to say I think it’s some of my best work…so be afraid.  Muahaha.  The working title for book 4 is Of Shadow Born.

As we get closer to the release date I’ll have some goodies, giveaways, and other fun for you.

I’ll be back with actual bloggery very soon; I’m still sifting through the pile of work I let slide while I was crawling around with the yellow wallpaper. 

 

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Rabbit Rabbit!

Tuesday, November 1st, 2011

Last night I attempted to tell a Samhain story that was very painful for me, and I imagine it would have been pretty damn painful for you to read.  It was honest, it was necessary…but it wasn’t time.  One day, maybe, I’ll be ready for everyone to read it, but not now.

Instead, I decided to take my holiday musings in another direction.  I had a slight emotional meltdown this past weekend…okay, it was more than slight, but at least it does not seem to have done any long-term damage other than to my reliability since it caused me to miss out on several commitments.  Still, I think my friends prefer me sane, and I certainly was not sane this weekend.

Some people have anxiety attacks.  I have what I call despair attacks.  They can be triggered by a great many seemingly minor things, but they unleash a wave of intense depression that hits me so suddenly I have almost no warning for the sobbing, self-loathing, and near-suicidal sadness that hits me.  They tend to happen over the course of a night, and the day after is hellish – at some point during the attack I essentially shut down, and spend the whole next day in something of a mild fugue state that I never remember in its entirety.

It’s rather like what would happen if you took a year of regular depression and threw it in the dryer.  It shrinks and wrinkles and is impossible to do anything with.

These attacks don’t come along often, maybe two or three in a whole year.  They almost always happen when I’m a) far past my personal inebriation limit b) alone after a perfectly pleasant evening of socializing or c) already feeling lonely and therefore vulnerable.  I have my theories as to why they happen then, but let’s just say they reflect a set of events that happened in the story I was going to tell, and leave it at that.

Now, given that I’ve experienced them before and I know they have a lifespan of about two days from onset to recovery, you might think I have coping skills in place for them, but you’d be wrong.  They are *so* very unexpected and so rare.  We’re not talking a couple of bad days here – we’re talking the kind of downward spiral that happens so fast you’ve got the gun in your hand before you even realize it.

(No, I don’t own a gun; I hate guns. That’s just a metaphor.)

However, as the current attack has waned and the world has started to regain its color and texture (I was doing really well for quite a while before the end of October raised its PTSD-addled head), I found myself reflecting not just on the weekend but on this entire year.

Samhain is a holiday of accounting, after all.  We take stock.  We bring in our harvest and we stack it up and consider if it’s going to get us through the winter.  Of course in modern society that’s almost entirely metaphoric as well; for us, harvest means going to the megamart, and even the most meager grocery store will have produce year round so we don’t have to live off tubers for six months like our ancestors did.  But even metaphorically, the year is winding down.  Everyone can feel the change of energy that swirls in uncertain clouds around the Halloween season.  And while I do hate Halloween itself, the truth is, I LOVE AUTUMN.  I love its watery energy, the chill in the air; the feeling of time slowing as it reaches the end of its yearly cycle, just before it’s about to tip over into the new year.  While I find myself very active, because living in Texas we try to move as little as possible from May through September and have to cram a lot of adventure in those few tolerable months, I can still feel the shift in the air.  If you’re watching me when I think I’m alone, you might see me sniff the air.  There’s an undefinable scent:   leaves, dead and alive; smoke; hay bales; pumpkin spice everything wafting from coffee houses.  The air itself feels heavier but at the same time sound travels through it more easily.  So many luscious contradictions, and at the heart of it, we Scorpios, lounging saturnine in our own impossibility, a whip in one hand and a chocolate covered strawberry in the other, as if to ask, “Are you willing to get this…to get this?”

This time of year I hear the Snake Mother calling me.  I have not served her in years, but She still knows my name.  And if I were to go to her, She would do exactly as She promises:  burn it all out of me, leave me clean and pure…but that purification by fire has always been too much for my poor heart.  No, I say…No, I say…and She goes, shrugging, knowing one day I won’t be able to resist that knowledge that lies beyond fear, and I’ll find her crawling through my skin again, only this time…I don’t know who might come out.

But this year, this 2011, started out so sweetly:  I had a few sacred intentions, which I could break down into goals, into projects, into actionable items, and work my way through them .  It was sensible, it could even be fun.

Life happens.

I got laid off, and my whole world did an abrupt 180.  Suddenly I went from a reliable, well-paying source of income from a job I hated and dreaded, although I loved and adored my boss; to a paltry unemployment income that might, if I was lucky, get me through five months.  The job market brought the word “vivisection” to mind.

And something in me decided…just…not to.

I decided to finish my book and see what happened.  I didn’t do anything dumb with my money, I cut back on spending, I worked on my novel, and I waited.

And money just sort of showed up when I needed it.  Ideas, connections, windfalls, they just sort of appeared–nothing extravagant, but enough to keep me going as long as I kept up my end of the bargain and wrote.  And even when it was hard, part of me knew, created a mantra, held it close:  It’s all going to work out somehow, babygirl.  Because if it doesn’t…so what?  It’s all going to work out somehow.  God will not let your kitties starve.   God will not let you starve.

And here we are, and my writing earnings have managed to keep me afloat – even paid for my new computer.  I’ve had to learn to trust the universe:  God wants me to write.  God wants me to write for a living.  This much I am clear on when I consider both my path to publication and the timing of all of this.  I just have to trust that God  isn’t going to steer me into a bog; if I ask myself, “How do I feel about this decision” and my body constricts as with fear or avoidance, the answer is NO.  If my body feels relaxed, like I’ve been untethered and am free to speak, the answer is YES.  Simple as that.

Anyway, the point I was eventually going to try to make here was that 2011 was the Dreaded Learning Experience.  In the last year I have learned so very much about myself:  what I will and won’t put up with, what I will and won’t accept in work, in love, in friendship, in religion.  It’s shown me the best ways to approach my puppy mind for lasting change, and I’ve done a lot of experimenting to find new ways to accomplish the things I never thought I’d get good at, like meditating.  I have learned so much about my strengths and limitations, and I am grateful for every moment.

Therefore, 2012 is going to be my Year of Practice – of creating the Sylvan Method for Compassionate Living, Mostly Awesome Health, and Spiritual Badassery.  In many ways I’m starting from scratch, rebuilding the daily life I want from the ground up.

My hope is to have the Spiritual Nomad course finished by the end of November to roll out on December 1; that way anyone who wants to use it to start off the year can do so, or follow along on my own adventures with the Sylvan Method and see where we all end up.  *laugh*  I’ll let you know what the plan is once there’s a plan.

For right now, however, I’m going to go to bed, because it’s 5am and though this is the first time in 72 hours I’ve been excited to write something (I started writing Shadow World Book 4 last night, just FYI), I’m having trouble focusing on the screen.

So.  More to come!  I’m about to tear the Nomad materials apart and fix them, and soon you’ll be seeing some previews of what’s to come.  Enjoy your November, my darlings!  I plan to celebrate my impending 34th birthday with a good deal of cake and copious offerings to the Holy Booze Weasel.*

 

* – Me.

 

 

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Spiritual Nomad: Lookin’ for God in All the Weird Places

Sunday, August 21st, 2011

Greetings, earthlings!  I am back to working on the materials for the Spiritual Nomad e-course, and I wanted to take a moment to ask for your input.

Part of what I want to emphasize in the course is that spiritual inspiration, ritual ideas, and symbolism can come from anywhere, regardless of whether it’s from an established tradition or, hey, a TV show you love.  We can find spiritual ecstasy dancing to Madonna or reading a favorite novel.  All of these sources are authentic to you – if something rings true to your spirit, don’t judge it, just go with it!  People get their God ya-yas from Lord of the Rings, the Narnia Books, Star Wars, you name it.

What I’d like for you to do is comment with an unlikely source of spiritual wisdom that has been an important part of your individual growth.  It can be something mainstream like a Psalm, something wacky like the TV show Fringe, your participation in Star Trek fandom, pulling weeds in your garden, volunteering at a food bank…anything that you find brings you closer to God.  Tell me about it!

I’m hoping to have the course ready for its first outing by the end of September, but that’s not a firm date – in a week or two I’ll have a better idea as well as some news on how I’m going to run the course itself.  I’m still sifting through the options to figure out what will work best for my schedule.

So, speak up!

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Countdown to Shadowflame…23 Days!

Sunday, July 3rd, 2011

To think a year ago Queen of Shadows hadn’t come out yet – and here I am, less than a month from the release of my second novel and growing ever closer to finishing the third!

I realize I’ve been a little scarce around here since I became unemployed; it’s been a pretty difficult adjustment, and of course is still ongoing as I reach the end of the novel and have to shift into serious job-hunting mode.  I’m trying to keep myself good and busy so my brain doesn’t become all depression-mushy.  That’s why it seemed like such a good time to go through with the wedding, and to devote serious work to the Nomad course.

I do, however, have to be honest with myself.  It’s a problem I’ve had ever since my early days teaching Wicca; I got in over my head taking on projects I really didn’t want to do because a priestess/teacher/author was “supposed” to do them, and I ended up overwhelmed and resentful, two things you don’t want a spiritual teacher to be.  I’ve found that a lot of the online writers and bloggers and self-help goddess peeps I’ve been involved with lately are, simply, not like me; I’m a writer first, not a life coach or anything remotely like that, so I have to work according to my strengths, not my “wouldn’t it be cool ifs” that end up being “I can’t believe I said I’d do thats.”  My job is to write good things for other people to read.  So, I’m pausing to consider all the options I have with the Nomad course and what I am and am not willing to devote my time and energy to.

Thus, I’ve decided not to open up a forum of any sort for the course, at least not at first; I simply don’t have the time to manage a community, and to be honest, I don’t have the desire either.  I’m going to offer the course either in six individual pieces that will be auto-delivered via email, or all at once as an e-book that you can use however you feel moved to (the material will be the same either way); what I’ll probably end up doing is offering the e-book by itself at a lower price and then adding some bonuses to the six-week version so that it’s a slightly higher value.  Regardless, I’m not in a place where I want to or have the energy to devote to managing discussion groups online or mediating internet drama that seems built into every forum no matter how positive and mature the community.  Now, if students of the course want to set up their own community or discussion group or whatever moves them, that’s up to them, but I’ve already got a lot on my plate:

~ getting ready to do some promotion for Shadowflame (mostly guest blog posts and interviews)

~ finishing Shadow’s Fall and hopefully immediately starting work on book 4 (no title yet)

~ planning my self-marriage and making room in my life to fulfill the vows it will involve

~ writing the Spiritual Nomad course and designing the book and projects

~ looking for a new job so I can do crazy crap like eat, pay rent, and put gas in my car

And of course there are the usual cooking, cleaning, laundry, cat box, and the work of daily living that goes on whether you’re a newbie genre novelist or JK Rowling.

These are all things I’m doing right now.  My Eventual Plans list is even longer.  I’m trying not to think past July at the moment, because as you can see, it’s already chock full o’stuff.

I should have a firmer release date for the course in a week or two – as soon as registration is open I’ll let you know.

Meanwhile work on Shadow’s Fall continues apace.  I’m about to get to the point in the story where Shit Gets Real and I go down the rabbit hole until the denouement.  That’s always my favorite part of a book – all the setup, all the pieces come together, and it’s full steam ahead! I imagine I’ll vanish for a few days once I reach that point, and I can’t wait!

Off to get a little closer to the Groove…stay tuned.

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Coming Soon to CrazyBeautiful…

Wednesday, June 29th, 2011

In addition to working like a fiend on Shadow’s Fall, I’ve had a secondary project going on for a while that I hope to debut this summer:

The Nomad course is an outgrowth of my own personal spiritual explorations as well as the lessons I’ve learned in the days since I first wrote The Circle Within; it takes the same personalized approach to spiritual practice, but widens the playing field from Wicca to all religions, creating a truly eclectic spirituality that is unique to every person who sets out on the path.

The course will last six weeks; each week the student will receive essays, projects, Prayer Practices, and other ideas to help them create their own practice and navigate the oft-choppy waters of solitary exploration.  We’ll discuss prayer and meditation, values and ethics, how to be a responsible eclectic, and how to honor your religious history both good and bad.

I also plan to include several guided meditation recordings for those who take the course; their exact nature and number are still being determined, but I can guarantee at least three meditations and hopefully some other goodies that come with your packets.

I’m still trying to decide if I want to set up a forum for students to interact on – I won’t have time to answer every single question, but I do like the idea of giving the Nomads a place to talk and discuss the material that I can drop in on a few times a week and offer my own input as it’s needed.  That might also be a good way to give out further bonus fun things later – but like I said, it’s still hypothetical at this point.

In addition to ritual and meditation ideas, your course will include instructions on creating your own Holy Book, a Guru Board, a personal Mojo Budget, a Code of Values, and a variety of other projects.  My hope is that the course will be fun, with the kind of snarky reverence you’re used to from all of us here at Sylvan.

I’m about halfway finished with the first run-through of the material, and ideally I’d like to have the first wave of signups begin in July – I still don’t have a cost nailed down for the class, but I assure you I will make it as affordable as possible, probably in the $30-40 range (possibly higher depending on the bonus materials).  You’ll have the option to download it all at once as an e-book, or have it emailed to you in weekly packets.

At any rate, I just wanted my readers to know that in addition to finishing a novel and getting ready to launch another and trying to find a job and pay the bills, I’ve been jumped and claimed by this project too, and hopefully  if it gets off the ground soon it’ll do two things:  one, and most importantly, give people a bit of guidance as they strike out on their own spiritual paths; and two, help me pay for my wedding.  *laugh*

There’s much more to come, including the launch date, full fee schedule, and a full syllabus!  But if you have any questions or requests for the course now, please feel free to comment on this entry and let me know.  I won’t be able to accomodate everyone but I am interested to know what you’re looking for in an online exploration experience – what would you love to see me include?  I’m interested in all sorts of ideas and there’s still time to add to what I have planned.

Blessings and such!  Next up:  we’ll talk more about the wedding.

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