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TRANSFORMATION

MYTHOLOGY OF SELF

A box on my head

The view from the center

Psyche

The world tree

Axis mundi

The mandala

The phoenix

The labyrinth

A God-shaped hole

Sisyphus and the rock

The flight of Icarus

The chariot of the sun

Finding the way home

The journey

The appearance of a white hart

Open to my own humanity

A fool, a cup and a wounded fisher king

Do I dare to eat a peach?

Seeking the Ox

Ten ox herding pictures

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AUTUMN 2007
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THE APPEARANCE OF A WHITE HART

white hart

Wilton Diptych Verso. Egg tempura on oak panels. 1300s.

The white stag is a part of early Celtic mythology. Its appearance can indicate that the Otherworld is close at hand and that a mortal has trespassed on sacred grounds. Its appearance can also signify the beginning of a great adventure.

. . . Each journey and the challenges that come with it are unique to the individual. But whether you go deep into the woods to pursue the fabled white deer, as King Arthur did, whether you enter the Grail Castle, as Parsifal did, whether you push off from familiar shores as Odysseus did -- you must be willing to leave your home behind and enter the uncharted realm of your soul's wilderness.

To unpathed waters, undreamed shores.
William Shakespeare (1564-1616)

The Winter's Tale, Act IV, scene iv

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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