Thursday, August 22, 2013

Global Ebook Awards

We all like to be acknowledged for our talents, for our creativity, for our accomplishments. Writers are no different. We get input from our critique groups, our beta readers, our agents, editors, and publishers. But we especially appreciate the feedback and reviews received from readers.

We love to know if our book touched them, helped them, or changed some aspect of their life. Visionary Fiction authors such as myself, aspire to transform and expand perceptions for our readers through the experiences of our characters. Because that is one of the main goals of Visionary Fiction, I find myself craving feedback for my novels. Did the characters in my novel speak to my readers, and move them on a deep level? Did my novel expand their consciousness, heart, and soul in new and different ways?

So, when I get a favorable reader review, my heart feels fulfilled. And when I receive acknowledgement from the writing industry, I know I have done my job well as judged from the standards of my peers.

My novels Carry on the Flame: Destiny's Call and Carry on the Flame: Ultimate Magic have been favored with  four National Awards. And most recently, Carry on the Flame: Ultimate Magic just received Honorable Mention in Dan Poynter's Global EBook Awards. Dan Poynter is a prominent expert in the field of publishing, a leading authority on ebook publishing. All novels in his global contest went through a nomination and approval process in order to be entered.

I am so grateful when my novels are recognized. Happy dance!!


Tuesday, April 30, 2013

Beltaine Celebration Novel Excerpt


May 1st marks the ancient Celtic Festival called Beltaine. The word Beltaine means the magic of flowers. It is the season where nature's life force reawakens from winter's deep slumber, bringing us the budding and blossoms of spring. We feel the vitality of summer approaching, its greening energy courses through our veins. Fecundity abounds, making spring, and Beltaine, a natural season for lovers. 

Beltaine is also named for the ancient Celtic god named Bel - the bright one. And -tane stands for fire. The Celtic tradition honors a god of bright luminosity as the male force that is one half of the cosmic act of creation.

In honor of Beltaine, I am sharing an excerpt from my novel, Carry on the Flame: Destiny's Call. The main character, the young priestess Sharay, recalls how she first learned about Beltaine from her mother and the priestess elder, Rosheen.


Hawthorn Blossoms, special to Beltaine

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Sharay felt a cool mist spray her face and hands. She turned to her left, to the foot of the Tor. There, a chalky white spring tumbled out a rocky fountainhead. The font was banked against an earthen wall that sprouted a living, perfumed tapestry of hundreds of delicate purple and yellow flowers. The branches of a gnarled apple tree hung low to the ground, brushing against the sides of the font. A pathway to the left led into a small café and gift boutique, set into the banks of the Tor. Both shops were closed for the evening.

The milky waters of the White Spring prompted unexpected memories for Sharay. She crossed the narrow Wellhouse Lane and sat on the rocks that enclosed the small spring. She remembered splashing her hands in its waters when, as a child of five, she had visited it with her mother and Rosheen.

In the glimmering light of that early summer day, she had sat in the exact spot she sat now. Her mother, close by her side, had readied bright red ribbons to string on the nearby apple tree branches. The sun had dappled the water into diamond hued clusters of bubbles, colored just like the ones she used to make when she blew soapsuds through her fingers during her bath time.

“Make a wish,” her mother had said, handing her a ribbon. 
“And bind your prayer to the magic of the apple tree with your ribbon.” She helped Sharay tie a silken knot around the branch above.

“I wish...” Sharay had closed her eyes tight, silently wishing she would grow up to have a laugh just like her mother’s. Light and lilting, her mother’s laughter made her feel warm inside, warmer even than when she drank a cup of her favorite hot cocoa.

On that day long ago, Rosheen had joined company with Sharay and her mother, as she often did. Her long brown hair caught the sun’s rays and shone like new spun silk loosely woven with fine strands of silver. Sharay thought it was almost as pretty as her mother’s light blond hair.

Rosheen had sighed contentedly. “Now this is what magic is all about. The Goddess orchestrating the White Spring to flow so close to our own Red Well.”

Always ready to teach, she had pointed her fingers for Sharay’s sake, first to the White Spring beside them, then to the Red Well a mere fifty yards across the lane, gurgling behind the rock wall that enclosed the well and flower gardens.

A car’s headlights flashed along Chilkwell Street, but Sharay was so lost in memory she barely noticed, incorporating their high beam into her recollected images of that dazzling bright day with her mother and Rosheen.

“Let’s sing the Beltaine song, Blanche,” Rosheen had said, her face lit with enthusiasm.

Rosheen and Sharay’s mother began to sing the poem in unison. Sharay loved the tune, and the sound of their voices singing was high and pure. The words they sang rose up in Sharay’s memory—words heard repeatedly as a child, mysterious words she hadn’t understood then, but did now. 

She softly sang along with the memory of her mother and Rosheen.

“Milky white water, fluid male seed, vitality of the Father,
springs from deep within the Tor, releases near rounded womb of Mother. From the earth we see Her bleed,
Red Well water
joins with the seed.
In coupled chorus they sing,
and dance in harmony.
Male and female unite!”

The masculine White Spring rippled in harmonious compliment to the feminine red water, the Red Well of the priestesses, bringing Sharay further memories of that bright sunny day.

“What’s male seed, mama?” Sharay had asked after the song had completed.

Her mother had smiled at her, that special smile saved for Sharay alone. “Well... it has to do with the rites of Beltaine.”

“Rosheen taught me about Beltaine,” Sharay had said, proud she remembered Rosheen’s teachings.

“And what did I teach you?” Rosheen asked.

“Beltaine’s one of our holy days,” Sharay had replied dutifully.

Rosheen beamed. “That’s right, Sharay. Beltaine is a special time of the year. It’s the time of year when the star formation called the seven sisters rises low on the western horizon. Remember, we showed them to you last night?”

Sharay nodded yes, recalling how she’d marveled when the seven sisters twinkled and pranced across the night sky.

“Beltaine is when the first white hawthorn flowers bud, just like this one.” Her mother plucked a cluster in full bloom from the bush next to her and lifted it to Sharay’s nose for her to smell. Its many blossoms tickled Sharay.

“We celebrate the fullness of the flowers and the fullness of being a woman,” Rosheen said.

“It’s when the well waters rise high. The young men and women make their plans for the passionate Beltaine holy day,” Sharay’s mother added.

Sharay’s attention drifted from her mother’s voice and was drawn to a shiny black beetle crawling through the delicate white bloom of the hawthorn. It fell upside down on the rock she sat on, its legs wiggling wildly as it tried to upright itself. She touched her finger to its feathery legs and it lay still. She tried to help it stand.

“I remember my first Beltaine,” her mother reminisced, turning to face Rosheen. Her back was to Sharay, which usually meant adult conversation.

“I wasn’t with Jarred, but I was taught the pleasures of the Goddess.”

Sharay wanted to be included, wanted her mother and Rosheen to teach her some more. “What does that mean...the pleasures of the Goddess?”

Her mother smiled. “It means the depth of sexual union offered up in Her name. Something I’ll teach you about later.”

She picked up the hawthorn bloom, tickled Sharay’s nose, and turned to Rosheen once more. Sharay watched the beetle crawl slowly across the valleys and hills of the small rock enclosure around the font of the white spring.

“Jarred certainly benefited from what I learned on that Beltaine,” her mother said to Rosheen, her rich, lovely laughter punctuating her words.

Rosheen sighed wistfully. “And I remember my first Beltaine.”

Her mother grew serious. Sharay looked up from the beetle when the tone of the conversation changed. She wanted them to laugh again. She pulled eagerly on her mother’s skirt. Her mother reached down and stroked her hair, tucked a lock of it behind her ear, then turned to face Rosheen.

“I’ve heard from Dillon. We received a note this morning.”

“How nice. What news is there?” Rosheen’s voice was high and bright, almost forced.

“He says his grandson’s magical training is coming along nicely. That the boy is talented. Quick to learn.”

“I’m not surprised.” Rosheen looked down at her hands. “Will he visit us?”

“He didn’t mention that he would.” 
Her mother paused. 

Sharay carefully pushed the black beetle away from the spring water where she was sure it would drown without her help.

“Oh, Rosheen. I take it Dillon stopped writing you?” her mother asked.

Rosheen nodded. “There’s really nothing more he can say, Blanche. We took each other as Beltaine lovers to honor the Goddess. That was a long time ago. You know there’s no more to it than that.”

“Don’t minimize the power of your union, Rosheen. You honored each other in the Beltaine ritual. That’s a very special bond.”

“Yes, I know. And he’s always been extremely dear and kind since then. It’s just that...” Rosheen wiped a sudden tear from the corner of her eye. “It’s just that I managed to fall in love with him, and he managed to fall in love with another.” She shook her head and smiled. “Look at me. Years gone by. Me married to George. I really do love George, you know. Yet I still shed tears over Dillon.”

Sharay traced her finger along the rocky crevices of the White Spring well’s enclosure where the beetle had crawled that day long ago. Conversation that had little meaning back then, suddenly brought her new understandings. Dillon and Rosheen. The true meaning of Beltaine.


~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*

Jodine Turner is the award winning, best selling visionary fiction, fantasy author of the Goddess of the Stars and the Sea series about young priestesses who have lived in Avalon down through the ages to today. www.jodineturner.com


Friday, November 30, 2012

Winter Solstice Blessings

Avebury, England at winter, photo by Chris Turner
Winter Solstice, Yule, December 21, is the longest night of the Wheel of the Year's annual cycle of seasonal festivals. The power of the sun is at is lowest point. But from this day onward, the sun experiences a rebirth, where each day we will begin to see more and more sunlight until we reach the Summer Solstice. In ancient times, the return of the sun meant people could once again plant and harvest food, ensuring their health and longevity. 


Winter Solstice's significance lies in the fact that although everything appears dead, we can remember and celebrate that new life will burst forth come the spring. It is a time of inner preparation for rebirth.

As part of our inner preparation, we can use the Winter Solstice longest night to focus on the power and blessings of darkness. Not the negative connotation of darkness as evil, or even winter's suppression of nature's bounty - but, rather, the richness of the fertile, fecund, gestating earth, and that same dark richness within each of us. This rich darkness holds the divinity in matter, as well as our intuition, our creativity, and all potential. Divine Darkness, according the to the spiritual path of embodied love called 'Adorata', is the Divine Mother in God, the divinity inherent in all physical matter. 

The Earth Mother births the sun/divine son at the Winter Solstice. Legends around the world carry this theme - Isis rebirths her son Horus, Demeter gives birth to her sacred daughter Persephone, Rhiannon gives birth to her sacred son Pryderi. In 336 A.D., to align with the theme of the returning power of light,  Jesus' Nativity was moved to coincide with the Winter Solstice, thus changing his historical birth to December 25th in order to merge Christianity with ancient religious rituals and customs. 


The origins of the Yule Log and Christmas Tree

Oak King and Holly King picture from deafpagancrossroads.com
At Winter Solstice, the ancient Celts lit bon fires with the purpose of driving the cold winter away. They would beckon the Sun God, known as the Oak King, to rise and defeat the long dark winter which is the dominion of the Holly King, thus ensuring that the sun would return to rise and triumph again. When the Norsemen invaded England and brought their Yule Tide traditions with them, the Celts adapted it to their own bon fire ritual and the Yule log was born. Lighting the oak log also gave reverence to the Earth Mother and her wisdom in nature. The Yule log would be lit on the eve of the solstice, using the remains of the log from the previous year, and would be burned for twelve hours for good luck. Today, candles are lit in many religions around the world, in celebration of returning light. 

Our Christmas tree tradition was brought to England and Ireland by the Norsemen who, in their land, would cut boughs of evergreen fir trees and bring them inside to decorate and enliven their homes as a symbol of life amid the death like grip of winter. The fir boughs eventually led to bringing in whole trees that would later be dressed with offerings to their various gods and goddesses, and also items to represent wishes for the coming year, such as an abundant harvest, a marriage, or children.

               Mistle toe and Holly

To the Druids, holly's evergreen nature made it sacred. It was believed Holly remained green to help keep the earth beautiful when the deciduous trees, like the oak, shed their leaves in winter. The holly berries represented the sacred menstrual blood of the Goddess. People would decorate doors and windows with holly to capture any evil spirits before they could enter the house.

In the Celtic language, Mistletoe means 'All Heal'.  Mistletoe was considered so holy that even enemies who happened to meet beneath a Mistletoe in the forest would lay down their weapons, and keep peace until the following day. From this old custom came the practice of suspending Mistletoe over a doorway or in a room as a token of good will and peace, which led to the popular custom of kissing beneath the mistletoe.


         More Christmas traditions roots

Alban Arthuan was a Celtic festival held during the Winter Solstice. Alban Arthuan means 'the Light of Arthur', celebrating King Arthur, who was said to be born on the Winter Solstice.
  
Santa's elves were once the 'nature folk' of ancient Celtic religions. Santa's reindeer were associated with the Celtic Herne, the Horned God of the forest and its animals.



               2012 Solstice is special

We're well aware of the upcoming Shift of the Ages.

December 21, 2012 is predicted to be the onset of the golden era prophesied, among others, by the Hopi Indians, the Maya, as well as the procession of the Astrological Ages. It also marks the end of the Hindu dark ages called the Kali Yuga. It is said we will rise out of degenerate ways into a new consciousness and a new way of being.

Before I learned about all the prophecies, New Age or ancient, I had a vision when I was in my late teens. 
I always remembered it, although at the time I had no context for it. I sensed and saw this turning of the ages. Not the chaos, turbulence, and destruction which always precedes rebirth. But, rather, a peaceful quality of life possible afterward.

So, at the 2012 longest night, at the end of the epoch of degeneration and turbulence, we can use our inner preparation to choose to align with love and the hope of a promising tomorrow. That is why I write visionary fiction, where the emphasis is on our limitless human potential, and transformation and evolution are entirely possible. 
(see the newly formed Visionary Fiction Alliance)

That is why my novels offer not only a vision of humanity as we dream it could be, but also some practical tools to get there.

I agree with Bilbo Baggins from The Hobbit, who says, “I think I am quite ready for another adventure.


        +~+~+~+~+~+~+~+~+~+~+~+~+~+~+~+~+~+~+
    "Carry on the flame to a new dawn. I am with you."
              ~The Goddess of the Stars and the Sea

              from Carry on the Flame: Destiny's Call
 
****************************************************************************

  Winter Solstice Rituals

1. Hang a wreath of holly sprigs on your door for protection from unwanted energies entering your home, and to celebrate the greening power of nature - the 'Veriditas', as named by Hildegard Von Bingen..

2. Place the  gemstone that symbolizes the Winter Solstice, the Red Carnelian, on your altar; or you can simply place it on your kitchen counter or bedroom dresser. Imbue it with your wishes, prayers, and intentions for the upcoming year. Everytime you see your Red Carnelian, or hold it in your hand, you can remember your wishes and feel the power of your intentions.

3. Sit in quiet contemplation of this time of inner preparation and rebirth. Connect with the Divine Mother, the Divine Darkness, within your body. She is the divinity of God in physical matter. 
Let her love fill you and nourish you so you can meet the demands of this busy holiday season, or of any stressful occurrence in your life. Ask Her to increase your capacity to receive and give love, to create a harmonious balance between the two. Give Divine Mother your thanks.

(Adapted from the Adorata Virtue of Service)

___________________________________

Some traditions information from Mara Freeman, Celtic Spirituality teacher.