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Five years ago, as a mother of two, I began to write
a magazine column entitled "Pagan Childe", focusing on issues around
raising the next generation. Complications set in ... I left my mate and
children and became quite absorbed in a new discovery. To be able to write
about the generation I am helping to raise, I needed to have a better sense
of the shape of the generation I am from - and what shapes me, in part, are
the life cycles I live through. As a pagan, I have faith that my experiences
of the rites of life can often be different from other people's. The degree
of conscious celebration and ritual alters the experience and alters me. As
members of a pagan community, we share and invite these complex
alterations, and it is on these experiences that this series will focus.
The ritual of handfasting was chosen with deliberation as the first in
this series. It is clearly a ritual that evokes images of Spring (or
perhaps the energy of Spring invokes the ritual!), The most important
reason is that there is something unique about the ritual of handfasting.
Birth, puberty and death, as rites, happen to us: there is little scope for
free will. Childbearing and parenting as rites of passage are only modestly
under our control. We are far more likely to be able to prevent them than
"plan" them. Some consider initiations, both magickal and those offered
by life, as rites of passage. Here again, there seems little free will
involved: life's initiations happen to us as well, and although we may
"choose" magickal initiations, many experience a sense of need when they
reach that particular doorway that precludes any sense of choice, The
pledging of a vow between two people is the one chance to voluntarily
create and experience a rite of passage.
I was tempted, while writing, to digress into lengthy discussions of why we
marry - the societal custom of marriage, its attendant purposes, benefits
and disadvantages. Handfasting is often equated with marriage done
simultaneously with a civil ceremony, or done in a separate but equal
ceremony. So, why do we do it?
My research began in a time-honored traditional way. "Handfast" and its
variations are defined in the Oxford English dictionary as "to make a
contract of marriage between (parties) by joining of hands." In several
well known publications there are printed versions of some handfasting
rituals. But because there is little in the way of scholarly material, I
asked for help from the community. I called friends in the pagan network
from all over New York and New England, and got names and numbers of their
friends. I questioned strangers! Men, women, lesbians, gays, celebates;
people of all ages were asked three questions:
- Have you or would you ever handfast?
- Was it/would it be simultaneous with, separate from a civil or other
religious ceremony,
or with no civil ceremony at all?
- Why did you/would you handfast?
The issues around civil services evoked a fairly predictable range of
feelings from this group. A civil or other religious ceremony (i.e.
legalized marriage) was very important for some, irrelevant to others, and
a definite issue for the gays and lesbians for whom this is not yet a legal
right in our society. I discovered that the feelings around handfasting
that were shared with me form a definite symbolic image - the symbol for infinity.
On one side, or curve, people handfast because there is a primal need to
share this rite with one's family. Family, from a person's family of birth
to the family of one's coven, was all encompassing. Most
people combined a degree of pagan ritual with a degree of civil marriage,
and found that by carefully choosing those degrees, they could share this
intense moment with everyone they defined as family. To be able to share
one's pagan self, especially for a "closet" or "quiet" pagan, can be
incredibly meaningful, and not terribly difficult, since so many pagan
symbols have merged into everyday use. It is the consciousness
that the couple involved brings to the circle
that makes the difference.
On the other curve, this rite raises energy that can also be shared with
the Universe. One image shared with me was that the joy and happiness of
this rite creates "a beacon on the astral plane" for all to enjoy and
share. Handfasting acknowledges that we are part of something much greater
than the physical plane. We are in relationship to those other planes; we
need to manifest "as above, so below."
In the center, at the intersection, the crossroad of infinity, are two
people binding themselves in a vow - with their earthly family on one side
and their universal family on the other. We find ourselves here because
this circle will give shape to vows, intentions and energies that are often
intangible. We find ourselves here because it becomes a reference point for
ourselves and those around us. We find ourselves here because we are
stepping through a doorway. We need witnesses for who we are as individuals
entering the doorway, and to the emerging shape of the energies we raise up
as a couple. We will need the love and support of these friends as we
travel this journey, whether for a year and day, or much longer.
While people shared their thoughts and feelings with me, I took notes,
recorded the images we shared, and tried to pay careful attention. The
thing I found most interesting was not the shape of this rite as it affects
us as individuals, but how the rites we are engaging in are building our
community. In everyday life, the customs we follow evolved to reflect the
needs and energies of the people, just as ours are now evolving. But in
everyday life, the customs are in place and in force to maintain the
structure as we know it. What filled me with wonder was the sense that we,
as a pagan community, are weaving rites and symbols from long ago, from
between worlds, and from the here-and-now, to shape the society in which we
want to live, mature, give birth and die ... a society manifesting "power-
within."
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