Until a few
months ago, I considered myself to be strictly Hellenic. Oh, sure, the
Egyptian
Gods were interesting, and powerful in Their own right. I enjoyed a
good
research session as much as the next Reconstructionist, but I never
thought my
interest would develop into anything other than idle curiosity.
Egyptian
Deities seemed so alien, so unapproachable – all those animal
heads and the
stiff, unnatural poses! How off-putting to my Greek senses! I had been
a Pagan
for nearly nine years, and Hellenic for eight of those years. The Gods
of
Greece, particularly Athena and Dionysos, were dear to my heart, and
had
sustained my soul through many trials.
But in the last
year or so, something has begun to change, and eventually it became
clear that
Someone was reaching out to me. Everywhere I went, Egypt
seemed to be the topic of
conversation. Pictures of mummies and Kleopatra graced the covers of
magazines
wherever I went. A stranger once stopped me on the street to comment on
the
weather, and her Isis
pendant seemed to leap
out at me. I began to dream about Isis,
vague
dreams of stumbling in darkness. All I could recall of them upon
awaking was
Her form illuminated in the darkness by the light of Her sun-disc
headdress.
At first I
ignored Her gentle nudgings. I dismissed the coincidences that seemed
to follow
me wherever I went, and sought to explain it away. I assumed that Egypt
was in my
consciousness because of the influence of an Isian friend. I had
absorbed the
propaganda of some Reconstructionists, the belief that worshiping
Deities of
more than one pantheon or culture would automatically make me a fluffy
bunny, a
person with spiritual ADD, jumping from one shiny thing to the next
with no
real spiritual depth. What would my fellow Hellenics think? Surely I
would be
mocked and labeled a ramshackle eclectic. I stuck close to my religious
home of Athens,
to the
Gods Who had first stirred my soul as a child.
This strange
sequence of events finally came to a head the day after Christmas,
2008. I was
visiting a friend, with whom I had made an agreement that we would not
exchange
presents, as neither of us could afford it. This friend was a fellow
Pagan, and
she was aware of my Greek inclinations, but not my recent experiences
of being
god-stalked by an Egyptian Deity. Out of the blue, she suddenly reached
into a
drawer, withdrew a statuette and handed it to me, saying
“This is meant to be yours.”
It was a beautiful, bronzed representation of Isis,
kneeling, Her face in profile, wings outstretched. I broke down. It was
no
longer deniable. There was something – or rather, Someone
– to everything that
had been happening to me recently.
That
night, I spoke to Isis
from the heart. I told Her that I finally acknowledged Her as a Goddess
in Her
own right. I told Her I was ready to begin a relationship with Her, but
that I
had made prior oaths to other Gods and that She would have to wait a
few months
until they were fulfilled. I sensed She agreed, and indeed She withdrew
while I
carried out my other Duties. She was still there, on the periphery,
waiting for
when I had the time to delve deeper into Her mysteries.
These past
months since, I have been examining my preconceptions about this
magnificent
Goddess, and doing what little research that time allows between the
demands of
daily life and my other projects. To my surprise, in my mental
wanderings I
have begun to see Her influence earlier in my life.
I remembered
how, years ago, when it first became known that I was Pagan, my best
friend's
mother refused to let me see her daughter anymore. She was very
Christian, of
the charismatic sort, and both her daughter and I were fourteen. She
feared
that I would corrupt her daughter, when if anything it was the other
way
around. Unknown to her mother, my friend had been an Isian for years
before I
found Paganism.
Eventually we
were allowed to see each other again, but only if I went to church with
her and
her mother. Missing my friend, I agreed. It was a megachurch with
thousands of
followers, all laser lights and fog machines and no spirituality. It
was pure
theatrics. My friend and I sang along with the Christian hymns, but we
replaced
the words “God” with “Goddess”
and “Jesus” with “Isis”.
We sang our modified versions at the top of our lungs, sharing secret
looks,
with her mother standing right beside us. None of the faithful noticed.
At one
point I felt a powerful spirit rise up within me, and tears streamed
down my
face. No one knew I was experiencing a Pagan Deity.
That was my
first experience with Isis,
although at that
point I called Her simply The Goddess. I would continue to worship the
Great
Mother of Wicca and general Neo-Paganism for about a year before
finding
Hellenismos and the worship of the Gods Who had called to me while
reading my
big, leather-bound book of Greek myths under a blanket with a
flashlight, so
long ago.
It would be many
years before I felt Her presence again. Since I broke down and accepted
Her
into my life, I have felt a change in myself, one that at times has
struck
terror in my heart. Since I began my studies on Isis,
I have been much more drawn to children than ever before in my life. I
found
myself wondering what it would be like to raise a child, to teach him
or her
the ways of the Gods, to feel the connection to them deeper then life
itself. I
few times I caught myself looking up information about adoption and
fostering.
As a career-driven woman who has for so long considered herself
childless by
choice, this about face terrified me. It caused me to back off from Isis
for a while.
I have a lot of
issues when it comes to children and motherhood. My own mother was
extremely
abusive, and we have not talked in years. I have never known what real
mother-love felt like, and I am somewhat doubtful if it is something I
can ever
give. It is not that I do not have a nurturing instinct; I do. I
currently work
with developmentally disabled adults after all, a very nurturing (and
challenging!) position to be in. But having never had a healthy image
of
motherhood, I fear I would never be able to be a good mother.
Add to this the
fact that in our culture women are not really given much choice in the
matter.
It is always assumed that a woman will have children. In many families,
it is
only a question of “when”, never
“if”. The matter-of-fact statements of
complete strangers – “You'll change your mind about
having kids one day” –
always pissed me off to no end. And so here Isis
comes into my neat little world. Isis
is many
things, and one of Her many roles is that of Mother, to the child-king
Horus,
to the pharaoh, and to the world. The sudden thoughts of children
surprised me,
knocked me off balance. So I panicked. I ran as far from Her as
possible.
But Isis
was gentle, and patient with my neuroses. She
waited, and did not push me past my limits. Eventually, I swallowed my
fears
and returned to my studies. Isis
was ready with
a gentle embrace. I realized that worshiping Her does not mean that I
will
automatically have children someday. I still have choice in the matter,
and Isis
would not want me to be a half-hearted parent. I am
uncertain how I feel about children now, but I am still young. Isis
is encouraging me to work on my issues and to own my
feelings, all of them. I am still in a process of transformation into
whatever
I am becoming, so I cannot write certainties at this moment.
Recently, I held
a ritual in my home on the Panegyris, a festival of thanksgiving to Isis
as She was equated with Agathe Tykhe, the
Hellenistic Goddess of Good Fortune. It was the most important festival
of Isis
in the city of Medinet-Madi.
This ritual was attended by several other local Pagans, although I was
the only
Reconstructionist. This was my first ritual honoring Isis
since She entered my life this past year. The altar was set up in my
living
room, and I offered barley to the Goddess. Her altar was laid with a
silver
cloth, Her image surrounded by flowers and semi-precious crystals.
We purified
ourselves in consecrated water and the smoke of sage and rosemary. When
the
lights were turned off, the room was illuminated only by candlelight.
In the
quiet of anticipation I called the Goddess, and She attended. The
spirit of Isis
was palpable in room, thick as incense. We
meditated, and She met us in the fog of our subconscious. In the temple
of my
mind She clasped my hands in Hers, and told me She was proud of me and
that we
were only beginning. She kissed my forehead, and I was bathed in the
sacred
waters of the Nile
River.
So here I am
now. I don't know what my relationship with Isis
is yet, or what it will develop into. I don't know if I will be called
to
worship other Egyptian Deities. So far Isis
has not led me to worship Her Husband Osiris or Her Son Horus, but I
suspect
that will come with a deepening of our relationship. Perhaps I will be
drawn to
explore the Gods of Egypt as well as Greece.
Or perhaps not. Perhaps
Isis will be my sole connection to the desert sands of Egypt.
I know
that wherever my path may lead, I will not not abandon the Gods Who
have fed my
soul and sustained me for these ten years. Greece
is in my blood, too deep in
my soul to ever be wrenched out, even if I wanted to. I will forever
honor the
Gods of my spiritual ancestors. I will forever pay tribute to my
patroness
Athena, the warrior maiden, the scholar's Goddess, owl-eyed daughter of
Zeus,
King of the Gods.
But the ancient
city of Alexandria
has developed new meaning for me. In the teeming bustle of the world's
first
truly cosmopolitan city, Greeks, Romans, Egyptians, Jews and people of
many
more cultures and ethnicities coexisted peacefully. The interaction of
cultures
and the exchange of religious ideas has always fascinated me on a
scholarly
level, devotee of Athena that I am. But now I see something else. Alexandria
feels much
more relevant to my spiritual practice now. I look to those brave
Greeks who
left their homeland and came to a new land, embracing the traditions of
the
people there, while staying true to the Gods of their ancestors. I see
myself
reflected in them, men and women who passed from this world 2500 years
ago. May
I learn from them, and fearlessly embrace the wisdom and beauty of both
cultures. May the Gods of Greece and Egypt
look on me favorably and
bless my efforts to understand and to worship. In the names of all the
Gods, I
pray it will be so.