Kundalini Splendor

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Thursday, April 09, 2009

Persophone Again (poem) 


Because it is spring, and the time of renewal, and because we are approaching Easter, the time of resurrection of the spirit, I am publishing a poem on Persephone (symbol of perpetual rebirth) that I wrote some months ago and posted on the blog. I am also including a description of the source myth on which the poem is based.


Persephone Again


Everyone wants to talk

about Persephone.

Especially the poets.

How she was grabbedand carried off,

how she was kept in darknessso many months,

while her mother searched everywhere,

waited for her darling

to come home.


Some say

the daughter

liked what had happened

(you know the story,

how women really want it

even when they say no),

others claim it is in fact

the mother who is at fault,

that it is she

who drove her daughter

away, forced her to

leave home and

flee into that hidden world

because of her own impossible

demands.


And then of course

there are those

who read it as a simple

nature myth--nine months

of lushness and sun,

three of winter and death

over the land.


What do I think?

I think she is the soul

of each of us,

going down to obscurity,

twilight, and grief,

resurrecting like a flower

over and over

as our seasons return.

Dorothy Walters
December 10, 2008


(Image from http://www.paleothea.com/sortasingles/persephone.html)


Persephone's story appears in Greek myth in various versions. Essentially, it is told as the experience of a young girl (daughter of Demeter) who was abducted by Hades, King of the Underworld, as she was out picking flowers. Ultimately she was allowed to return to the world above, but, since she had eaten a pomegranate seed while she was captive, she was forced to return to Hades for three months each year (winter) and then allowed to ascend back to earth and her mother for nine months (spring and summer). Thus she represents fertility and renewal.


In the Eleusinian Mysteries, her story became the central myth of the death and rebirth of the spirit. These Mystery celebrations can be seen as a forerunner of the Christian and other celebrations of the death and renewal of the psyche.


In fact, these themes can also be connected to what happens with kundalini and other profound spiritual transformations. The "old self" disappears and a "new self" is born. Thus one is in fact "born anew" in a particularly meaningful way.

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