Calling All Priestesses and a FREE Gift!

Enjoy this the beautiful blog below by my sacred sister, Amrita, and a 1-hour audio 2014 overview from The Shamanic Astrology Mystery School, co-sponsor of Renaissance of the Sacred Feminine: Re-Dreaming the Magical Link Between Land and Sky, Soul and Spirit  journey to Scotland April 13-21, 2014. (link here)

2014 Shamanic Overview Pt. 1



2014 Shamanic Overview Pt.2

The cosmic events in April of 2014 are sure to provide a context for powerful

internal & external inspiration and transformation……Enjoy!

We have just 6 spaces left in our magical mystery tour!

Shamanic Blessings,

Anyaa
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 The Priestess in the Mirror by Amrita Grace

divineFeminine-queenWhen I look in the mirror, I see many things. I see a woman who has reclaimed wholeness after childhood trauma. I see a breast cancer survivor who is thriving. I see a happy and contented wife. And I see a high priestess of the renaissance of the divine feminine.

What does a modern priestess look like? Do they wear robes and special jewelry? Will you find them in sacred temples and at sacred sites? The modern priestess is as diverse and individual as today’s women are, and we each hold the capacity to embody the priestess within ourselves if we so choose. Formal initiations, trainings, and ceremonies are available in myriad forms by a wide range of teachers and leaders, but they are not required. I chose a path of initiation and ordination thirteen years ago that served me well as I learned to access my inner landscape and began my path of becoming conscious of the true being hiding behind the human pain and suffering. That path is a lifelong journey, and I’m grateful for that auspicious beginning.cauldron

Having been involved in circles of women and priestesses for many years, both as participant and facilitator, I released them all when I moved to Maui in 2006. I was called to Maui to work with the Divine Feminine Institute, and that felt like a new manifestation of my contribution as a priestess… more practical and less esoteric. While my outer priestess morphed into an administrator, my inner priestess continued to have initiations and give birth to her priestess arts in the form of the book and body of work known as Reclaiming Aphrodite. The Divine Feminine Institute came to a close, and breast cancer brought new insights and inquiries about my work in the world. Reclaiming Aphrodite is currently at rest, though the book continues to be offered as a free download and as a .99 Kindle book.

The imagery and symbolism of my years of priestess work continue to feed and embrace me. Honoring the dark time of the year (in the Northern Hemisphere), I find myself in a space of not-knowing. A cauldron or womb space, where what is gestating has not yet been born. My previous work has fallen away, and what is next has not revealed itself. I’m grateful to have some work to do in this interim time, work that I enjoy and that I’m good at and that supports a dear friend in her contribution to the renaissance of the divine feminine. My commitment to myself is to be with and in this state of not-knowing without pushing for answers or imposing my will. This is my greatest takeaway from my breast cancer experience: I trust that all will be revealed and that I will be perfectly guided. callanish-standing-stones-17

I’m experiencing a growing excitement as I answer a call to the depths of my priestess being to attend a very special gathering in Scotland this spring at the Callanish Standing Stone complex. I knew the moment I read the announcement that I was supposed to be there, and I set my intention to have it happen. Originally, I thought I would go alone and just to Scotland. This trip has now evolved into my first ever exploration of Europe with my husband. We’ll spend a few days in Amsterdam, Belgium, and Paris before heading to Scotland for a few days in Edinburgh. Then we’ll drive to Inverness for a night and fly to the Isle of Lewis, northwest of the Scottish mainland, to the tiny two-airline airport in the town of Stornoway. The week-long, expertly facilitated event will be held at the Doune Braes Hotel in Carloway near the Callanish Standing Stones. Unlike Stonehenge, Callanish is not fenced off, and is accessible to the public.Sacred Feminine by Cristina McAllister

The event is called Renaissance of the Sacred Feminine – Re-dreaming the Magical Link Between Land and Sky, Soul and Spirit. It will be facilitated by Anyaa McAndrew, High Priestess; Nita Gage, Shamanic Breathwork facilitator; and Daniel Giamario, Shamanic Astrologer, who has a deep relationship with the Callanish stones. Daniel has been to Callanish eight times, and he says, “It is my belief that the Callanish complex is the largest and most important of the ancient lunar ceremonial sites on the planet, the veritable prototype of all the rest.  It’s a massive building project of more than 20 stone alignments, all oriented to Sun, Moon, and stars, and all in harmony with the sacred landscape itself.”

The event is very reasonably priced to make it accessible for people, and between that and airline miles, I’m able to pull this off. I’m very grateful for this opportunity to connect to my Celtic roots and heritage, not just in my ancestry, but also in my priestess lineage. I sense that there is important information for me in this sacred place. I anticipate a magical time of deep connection with my priestess self, the land, the stones, and with the community of people I’ll be sharing this experience with. If this gathering calls to you, please click here for more information.

Wishing you a very expansive and abundant 2014!

Love & blessings,

Amrita

 

Amrita Grace is a High Priestess, Author of “Reclaiming Aphrodite-The Journey to Sexual Wholeness” and founder of Reclaiming Aphrodite® workshops, Amrita is a living example of wholeness on all levels: physical, mental, emotional, sexual, and mystical! Visit Amrita’s Blog, “Reclaiming Aphrodite,” at blog.reclaimingaphrodite.com/2014/01/05/the-priestess-in-the-mirror/

What In The World Are You Drinking?

What’s In YOUR Water?
Chlorine? Fluoride? Pharmaceuticals? Chemicals? Plastic?
Don’t think you’re safe if you drink bottled or filtered water.
This is the water that Gary and I drink in our home because it’s simply the best in the world..
Anyaa

Here are some great resources for looking at alkaline and acid water (the by-product of the alkalizing and ionizing process), its health benefits and it’s uses! Disclaimer: We are distributors of this amazing product and we get paid when you buy a unit. You can also become a distributor. Learn how.

www.ionways.com/watershamaness

For the Love of Soul and the Music

Anyaa McAndrew 10-20-13

I tu20131007_010211rn 62 in less than a week. I am in the midst of a bunch of Uranus, Jupiter and Saturn Transits that are pushing me to break out, break open and get free-er. So, in July when Gary & I were returning from an Eagles 40th year anniversary concert we happened upon the Soul Train Cruise, leaving San Diego in early October. Wow! Wouldn’t that be incredible? Then looking at the cost, we knew it just wasn’t doable, but we could get on the mailing list to wish and want and intend anyway. Then, later in the summer the price dropped to 40% off, and we had to do it. We flew out of Charlotte on October 5th and boarded the luxurious (really!) Holland America Westerdam in San Diego with 1,999 other lovers of soul music for The Hippest Trip at Sea. Continue reading “For the Love of Soul and the Music”

Meet Sister Susan Wilcox, Activist, Occupier: Collapsing into Consciousness Radio

Gary interviews our friend Sister Susan Wilcox.

Susan is a social justice activist in the best sense of the word and fully walks her talk. She has been outspoken about the catholic hierarchy who has accused nuns of being radical feminists for interest in social justice.

The men who run the Vatican thought they could simply clamp down on what they saw as the wayward activities of American nuns. They didn’t realize who they were dealing with.

Listen to internet radio with Gary Stamper on BlogTalkRadio

How a Radical Group of American Nuns Shook Up the Vatican to Better the World

“Band of Sisters” shows why a humble group of women fell under Vatican investigation for seeing the causes—not just the symptoms—of injustice.

How did American nuns move from the traditional confines of convent life to the social activism that has them under Vatican investigation for being too radical and feminist?  Blame (or credit) Vatican II in the early 1960s, which instructed Catholics to take their religion out into the world and make it relevant. According to Mary Fishman’s new documentary, Band of Sisters, American nuns eagerly took up the call to serve where there is greatest need. That work led them to seeing the causes, not just the symptoms, of injustice.

Going out into the world brought more than just a change from the black and white nun’s habit to ordinary clothing. There were intellectual, emotional, and spiritual transformations too, as the numerous sisters interviewed in the film explain. Many of the interviewees are old enough to have experienced the changes of role and attitude over the decades since Vatican II. Their testimony gives this film authenticity and gentle authority.

Band of Sisters poster

Click image to view trailer

The work of Sisters Pat Murphy and JoAnn Persh is one example. Fishman shows them as they prepare to go out into a dark Chicago winter morning to hold a vigil outside an immigrant deportation center. They want the authorities to let them inside to bring support and comfort to the deportees. In successive scenes, we see that they eventually do get inside the center, even though it takes time, organized lobbying, and a change in state law. Their determined action achieves results.

The radicalizing effect of focusing on the physical world and the equality of all humans is most obvious in the scenes where we see nuns running an organic farm and environmental center, or presenting a cosmology that is as much indigenous as Genesis. No wonder they’re in trouble with the church’s patriarchy, even under a new pope. But you can’t put this genie back in the bottle—or the Sister of Mercy back in the cloister.


Valerie Schloredt wrote this article for Love and the Apocalypse, the Summer 2013 issue of YES! Magazine. Valerie is associate editor of YES!

Interested?

  • No Room at the Inn? How Occupy Won Over Religion
    Religion is the means by which many imagine and work for a world more just than this one. Last year, Wall Street’s Trinity Church refused to shelter the movement; this year, churches and Occupiers are sharing a very different kind of Advent season.
  • A Pastor, a Rabbi, and an Imam Walk Into a Book …
    In “Religion Gone Astray,” three leaders—and friends—from different religions take on violence, exclusivity, gender inequality, and homophobia in some of their scriptures’ most controversial verses. What they discovered surprised them.
  • Radical Relgion, an American Tradition
    Book Review: “Prophetic Encounters” reminds us that we are part of a long and rich tradition that is more than simply a series of isolated movements for social change.

Love and the Apocalypse