Lost and Found: What Is
Women's Spirituality? ~ by Susan Chiat
Reprinted with kind permission from The New Times, April 1999.
I have just bathed in the healing and cleansing waters of the
Goddess's love. No, I did not dip into the Ganges River or splash in
the mineral pools at Breitenbush in Detroit, Oregon or Esalen in Big
Sur, California. Instead, I spent nine days surrounded by hundreds of
women at the powerfully vibrant and festive Women of Wisdom conference
in Seattle, Washington. One rare evening home in the midst of my
immersion into the sacred feminine, laughter, songs to the Goddess,
poignant and authentic conversations and workshops on mandalas,
shamanic journeying, Wicca, and Yuruba spirituality, my male partner
asked me, "How is women's spirituality different from men's
spirituality, or spirituality in general?" It was an evocative
question, and one that left me pondering what I really do think about
women's spirituality. Initially, I am filled with gratitude for the
enormous support, solace, and nourishment I have received in my many
years of exploring spirituality with groups of women. Of equal
importance have been the basic philosophical tenets of the women's
spirituality movement of which I have been a part.
At the very heart of this phenomenon is the recognition that all
life is sacred and that we are all connected. From this main axiom
stems the understanding that each and every one of us can experience
the divine without needing another person to mediate it for us.
Finally, the women's spirituality movement validates women's
experience of the divine in our everyday lives, whether we are
cooking, giving birth, raising children, taking care of our families,
or healing ourselves. At its core, women's spirituality is a
spirituality that exists here on the earth. It suggests that inherent
within our ordinary lives is the doorway to the extraordinary. Many
women have never once heard the word "Goddess" spoken (even though
numerous cultures worldwide have historically revered the Goddess as
well as God), and repeatedly met closed or locked doors in mainstream
religion. For them, the opportunity to practice a female-centered
spirituality has been like the first sight of spring blossoms on
winter's barren branches.
In a world where women's mysteries, sexuality, and wisdom are still
demeaned, the attraction to women's spirituality remains vital and
pure. Even so, I cannot help but wonder about the need for this gender
distinction, for if everything in life is indeed interconnected and is
a part of spirit, then why do we speak of women's spirituality as if
it is a separate entity? Admittedly, it can be extremely useful to
study and compartmentalize our understanding of the human experience,
particularly where spirituality is concerned. In many cases, spiritual
understanding is truly so simple that our cynical and active minds
need to be given something useful to do. Traditionally, mantras,
meditations, chants, Tibetan sand painting, pottery, beadwork, and
other crafts have been pursued to calm the mind. These and other
practices facilitate the expression of our spirituality rather than
becoming the orphan of the mind's tendency for intellectual debates.
It is this authentic, creative, and unregulated expression of spirit
with which women's spirituality is most concerned. In speaking with
some of the women at the Women of Wisdom conference about their
personal experience, a common theme resounded again and again. Many
women spoke of a precious sense of safety and freedom they experience
within the context of women's spirituality.
In this atmosphere of trust and openness in women-only space, women
find they are able to deepen their relationship with the sacred.
Recently in Boston, Massachusetts, a lawsuit was filed against the
renowned feminist theologian Mary Daly, who refused to let men into
her course on women's spirituality at Boston College. Her grievance?
The notable silence of otherwise feisty and highly opinionated young
women when even one male college student was present in the classroom.
Even with the scores of research papers done by the likes of
psychologist and author Carol Gilligan and her colleagues on the
importance of women finding and expressing their voices, there still
is a deep socialization that can insidiously affect women when men are
present.
Yet, women's spirituality is not a fragile entity. It has persisted
and endured in numerous forms through thousands of years of ridicule,
violence, and suppression. The experience of our connection to the
sacred feminine will always be available to us, because Spirit is
alive. Perhaps the true challenge in this time is for all of us, men
and women alike, to become more and more receptive to Spirit, to
listen with our hearts and to develop finely tuned spiritual antennae.
This receptivity is not a passive process, but an active opening to
the divine. When we practice this, women with women, men with men, and
women and men together, the universe responds with its magic and the
result is always change, healing, and growth. Whether or not you
identify yourself with women's spirituality, it is important to ask
yourself, "How do I best connect with the divine, with a sense of the
sacred?
In this springtime season of new beginnings, I invite you to renew
and strengthen your awareness of your own unity with the divine and to
discover how you can connect more consciously every waking day.
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