Faery Craft: Weaving Connections with the Enchanted Realm Read online

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  How to Use This Book

  Faery Craft consists of eight chapters, each of which is designed to build your strengths in the different qualities needed for Faery contact. The structure is built around the symbol of the Faery Star, or septagram, a symbol which has been used with many varying meanings throughout history and which I have used here in Faery Craft with original interpretations and meanings inspired by my own work with Faery. The “Faery Craft septagram” (as I have dubbed it) connects each point of the star with the seven directions of north, south, east, west, above, below, and within, which in turn are connected with the four elements and the sun, moon, and stars. From these we find our key qualities needed within ourselves for Faery Craft: knowledge from the east and the corresponding element of air (chapter one), connection from the stars and the direction above (chapter two), trust from earth in the north chapter three), honour from the direction of within and the power of the sun (chapter four), magick from the moon and the direction of below (chapter five), joy from the west and the element of water (chapter six), and inspiration from the element of fire in the south (chapter seven).

  The eighth chapter represents the central point of balance within the star, where all the qualities meet. This may seem complicated or confusing now, especially if you are unfamiliar with the directions and elements, but don’t worry—all will become clear as the book progresses.

  Faery Craft septagram

  by Tamara Newman

  (www.tamaranewman.com)

  Seven Months in Faery

  There is a tradition within Faery lore that tells of people taken into Faery for periods of seven months or seven years. If you feel drawn to do so, you may choose to take a chapter a month and work through the exercises contained within and at the end of each chapter a number of times during that month. This will give you time to thoroughly explore each quality and pace yourself as you progress, enabling you to establish practices and routines that will enrich your relationship with the world and its hidden depths for the rest of your life. Faery Craft cannot be rushed. There are exercises contained within each chapter and also additional exercises and suggested activities at the end of each chapter in order to make it clear to follow.

  I strongly suggest that you keep a notebook or journal in order to record your experiences and progress, including any interesting dreams you may have during this time. Faery experiences can be powerful, but they can also be subtle, and it will be easier to remember key moments, messages, and images if you keep a good record. Things that may seem insignificant or nonsensical at the time can gain meaning later on.

  Take my hand as I lead you through the pages of this book. Let us adventure together, discovering our own unique gifts and strengths that we can bring to the world of Faery, working together with our Faery cousins to build bridges between our worlds so that we need no longer dwell in the damaging and painful illusion of disconnection.

  “Come away, O human child!

  To the waters and the wild,

  With a faery, hand in hand,

  For the world’s more full of weeping

  Than you can understand…”

  W. B. Yeats, “The Stolen Child”

  [contents]

  chapter one

  Knowledge

  We begin our journey into Faery in the direction of east, the element of air, and the quality of knowledge. Within the Western Mystery tradition, which has been highly influential in most modern esoteric teachings, the element of air is associated with logic, law, and the mental realm. This led clearly to my choice of knowledge as being the quality to be associated with this direction and element.

  In order to be able to better understand your experiences as you progress through the book, it is essential to have some background knowledge on the subject. This will mean that you are building on a strong foundation, enabling you to place any experiences into context and equipping you with the necessary tools of interpretation and discrimination. It also helps prevent making easy yet critical mistakes due to simply not knowing any better! If early time is spent in dedication to learning as much as possible about Faery lore and history, as well as the traditions of the land around you, then this knowledge has time to properly grow within you like a seed, as you nourish it with the spiritual work of the successive chapters.

  In this chapter we will cover the origins and nature of Faery, the concept of hierarchy, the darker side of Faery, basic etiquette, Faery beasts, and important symbols that are connected with the Faery realm.

  The Origins and Nature of Faery

  “When the first baby laughed for the first time, its laugh broke into a thousand pieces, and they all went skipping about, and that was the beginning of fairies. And now when every new baby is born, its first laugh becomes a fairy. So there ought to be one fairy for every boy or girl.”

  J. M. Barrie, Peter Pan and Wendy

  Unlike the fairies of J. M. Barrie’s Neverland, we do not need to believe in Faery beings in order for them to exist, any more than we need to believe in the postman to receive our mail. But even those of us with close connections to the elusive Faery realm can find it difficult to explain exactly who they are, for their origins are as mysterious as their destiny, which is inextricably tied to our own.

  As definitions and understandings grow and change over the years, the term Faery has come to cover a vast variety of beings. In many ways, the more you learn, the more confusing it becomes, as the lines between faeries, gods, angels, elementals, ghosts, and other spirits become very blurred, if indeed those lines exist at all in some cases. We can expand our understanding by looking at myth and folklore. It is then up to individuals to find, through their own experiential and intellectual exploration, their own insights, the grain of original truth that formed the pearl of myth.

  Nature Spirits

  “They were not the same as nature spirits, though they were allied to them. They were a race apart, with their own laws and rulers, their own ambitions and occupations, marriages, births and even, at long last, deaths.”

  Christina Hole, English Folklore

  As explained in the introduction, the term Faery has become, in recent years, an umbrella term for many different classes of beings, though they were more distinctly divided in the past. This, allied with the wide availability of works founded on fancy rather than experience or research, may lead to some confusion. The modern interpretation of Faery beings is that they are first and foremost nature spirits—that is, the spirits of trees, plants, rivers, and the spirits of place. Perhaps that is because it is these beings who most call out for our attention at this time of environmental crisis, and forming a connection with these beings certainly forms the basis of most Faery work, as indeed it does in this book.

  However, if you look into older teachings and folklore, which are the only real written sources we have at our disposal, we can see that there is a distinct race, or perhaps several races, of beings whose existence is clearly connected to, yet independent of, the land. Activities such as stealing babies and kidnapping midwives to look after them, or even stealing away young women for breeding purposes, speak of a dwindling race living out of time, who have, in the past, mixed their blood with ours to keep them from extinction. Are such stories simply propaganda on the part of a church wishing to keep the powers of the otherworld as something to be feared? It becomes very difficult to know for certain. The Faery race (or races) was always considered to be made up of powerful beings who were often to be feared, especially if crossed in any way. Throughout the old tales it is clear that they have lives and a culture that is distinct and comparable with our own, with marriages, births, and funerals. Though it has been suggested that these may be simple mockeries or reflections of our civilization, there seems to be more depth to it than that—some subtle and intrinsic connection with our own lives and events. Through my own otherworldly contacts, I have experienced events th
at reflect our own customs, but with a very distinct cultural identity of their own. Thus it may be inaccurate terminology to refer to the Faery race as nature spirits, yet they are inhabitants and guardians of the inner landscape of our world, just as we are of the outer landscape, no matter what poor a job we make of our guardianship.

  Nature spirits are an extremely important part of Faery work. We may see them as a point of mutual interaction and responsibility between ourselves and the Faery race—and, through them, the world soul, a relationship in which we are currently out of balance. Nature spirits may be found in all traditions around the world, reflecting the nature of the varying landscapes that they inhabit. In the Hindu tradition they are known as Vidyeshvaras, the guardians of the living world. In ancient Greece the legends are full of nymphs, dryads, and satyrs, who often mix and interbreed both with humans and gods. Native cultures around the world have a close relationship with the spirits of their land and a deep awareness of the mutual need for that connection.

  It is worth noting that the wilder and more inhospitable to human life the landscape is, the stronger and potentially more dangerous the spirits of that place will be. Hence in mountainous regions you will find great tall beings and races of giants, but in mostly domesticated and inhabited areas, the nature spirits can seem much gentler and smaller, unless there is an underlying power to the place that remains.

  Even when experienced in connecting with the spirits of the land, it can take some adjustment when travelling—normally a few days spent in an unfamiliar or ancestrally alien landscape—to make the energetic shift necessary to perceive them, but they are always there. To connect with the living energies of the world around us, from the tiniest flower to the greatest continent, is to live in harmony with our Faery cousins and experience a deeper understanding of the world and its needs. Since the realm of Faery is so all-encompassing and fluid in its nature, it is difficult and confusing to dwell too much on terminology, but it is beneficial to reach the understanding that not all beings that we think of as being Faery have the same natures, powers, or origins. As with any experience of Faery, if we try to grasp it too tightly, our understanding may slip away. Certainly the closer you look, the more blurred any dividing lines become between faeries, nature spirits, elementals, spirits of place, and even the ancient gods.

  Julia Jeffrey, “Queen of the Skies”

  Ancient Gods

  “The earlier Celtic Gods and Goddesses are better represented among the fairies. Morgan le Fay is generally considered to descend from Morrigan, the War Goddess. Aynia, who is the Fairy Queen in Tyrone, is one form of Anu…”

  Katharine Briggs, The Fairies in Tradition and Literature

  For anyone used to the modern-day disempowered image of the tiny, childlike, winged fairy that lives in a mushroom or shyly hides behind a flower, it would seem quite a leap to suggest that many Faery beings were, or indeed are, gods. However, you do not need to delve very deeply into ancient tradition to discover that most of what are considered to be Faery kings and queens have also been worshipped as gods, nor indeed do you need to take many steps into their world to understand the power that they hold. One of the best-known examples of a crossover between deities and Faery lore may be found in the ancient Celtic myths of the Tuatha de Danann, our best source for which is the famous Book of Invasions. Though the text dates back to the eleventh century, the original sources are widely believed to date back much further, incorporating material from as far back as the fourth century ce.

  Through the ancient myths, we learn that the Tuatha de Danann (children of Danu) were a powerful race of magickal beings who inhabited Ireland before they were driven underground by the Milesians, a race of mortal men. They arrived on ships from the four mystical cities of Falias, Gorias, Murias, and Finias, bringing with them treasures that bear a remarkable resemblance to the four grail hallows of Arthurian lore: the spear of Lugh, the sword of Nuada, the stone of Fal, and the cauldron of the Dagda; we can also recognize these treasures in the four suits of the tarot. The Tuatha de Danann are considered to be the pre-Christian gods of Ireland; interestingly, they were preceded by a race of giants called the Firbolgs, with whom they shared the land for a while before eventually going to war with another race of giants, the Fomorians. Both may be compared to the Titans of Greek mythology, great primal forces of the planet who were overcome eventually by the Olympian pantheon we are familiar with today. Indeed, there are many tales throughout the world of an ancient race of giants who inhabited the earth before humanity, and these are also significant in Faery lore. The sidhe (pronounced shee), the Faery people of the Celtic lands, are believed to be the descendants of these gods and, in some cases, the gods themselves.

  Probably the best-known example of one of the sidhe who is both a Faery queen and a goddess is the Irish war goddess named the Morrigan. She plays a major part in all the battles of the Tuatha de Danann and is a significant power within the Celtic pantheon. Her name has been given to many places within the Celtic landscape, and her influence can be seen to spread through the lands and ages into many other tales and cultures. True to her shapeshifting nature, she has many guises, most notably Morgan le Fay of the Arthurian tales. Other people of the sidhe who may be considered deities include Lugh, a solar deity from whom we get the Irish harvest festival of Lughnasadh; Nuada of the silver hand, who was their king; Manannan Mac Lir, a god of the sea; and Etain, who was both a sorceress and a goddess of sovereignty.

  Scotland brings us strong, powerful giantess faery queens to suit its rugged landscape and unforgiving climate. Here we find such fascinating figures as the Cailleach, a great shapeshifter of tremendous strength who is often credited with forming the landscape, whose presence may be seen in folklore throughout the British Isles and beyond. A similar figure may be found in Nicneven, the great faery queen of Scottish lore who dwells beneath the mountain Ben Nevis. She has often been equated with the ancient Greek goddess Hekate, seen as being not only the queen of the Faeries, but also of witches and the dead.

  Nearby Wales also gives us a rich vein of Faery gods and goddesses, including Gwyn Ap Nudd, the king of the Tylwyth Teg (the Welsh Faery race), who rules the Welsh underworld, Annwn, and leads the wild hunt with his Faery hounds.

  In other lands, similarly blurred lines may be found between Faery and deity. Within Nordic tradition we find gods such as Loki, who is descended from giants (who again are defeated by the Nordic pantheon), and Freyr, who is the king of Alfheim, the land of the light elves. In fact, the Nordic gods are separated into two races, the Aesir and the Vanir, and the Vanir share many qualities with Faery races such as the sidhe, such as great beauty and the gifts of prophecy and sorcery. They are also deeply connected to agriculture and the land. In his book Leechcraft, Stephen Pollington tells us that while “the Norse myths mostly concern the two main races of gods—Aesir and Vanir—the poetic tradition often juxtaposes Aesir and Alvar as ‘gods and elves.’ ”

  The name Freyr, or Frey, translates as “lord,” and the name of his twin sister of the Vanir, Freya, translates as “lady,” but it is unclear whether there is any connection to the title sometimes given to the trooping faeries of lords and ladies or, indeed, the titles of the Wiccan God and Goddess, who are often referred to as Lord and Lady; it would appear to be no more than a curious coincidence. However, Freya also has some definite parallels with Faery, being the psychopomp queen of the Valkyries, who, with their connection to battle and the dead, as well as an association with ravens, display some strong connections to the Irish Morrigan.

  Freyr is sometimes referred to as a horned god, and like horned gods of other traditions, he is strongly associated with fertility, both of humans and the land itself. Indeed, most deities that are considered to be kings of Faery are depicted as horned and have this same association with fertility. Like Pan of Greek mythology, many display a voracious sexual appetite and priapic qualities, which are normally combin
ed with a lack of morality as we would understand it; so, ladies, be warned! These are real and very powerful energies.

  Other horned gods who are considered kings of Faery include Cernunnos of Celtic tradition, Herne the Hunter of English folklore, and Gwyn ap Nudd and his earlier counterpart Arawn of Welsh mythology. Veles, or Volos, of the Slavic culture is another horned god who, though not overtly linked to the Faery lore of that land, is seen as ruler of the underworld and the dead. Similarly, the ram-horned god of ancient Egypt, Khnum, was associated with fertility and the underworld. This chthonic role is strongly associated with Faery, as both the ancestors and the Faery race may be found in the underworld.

  When we look at deities who are considered to be Faery queens, we can also see some striking commonality. Goddesses who rule over Faery are usually associated with war and battle, and quite often take a psychopomp role in that they can travel between worlds and guide the souls of the slain on their journey to the underworld. They invariably are considered sorceresses and shapeshifters, with powerful skills in the magickal arts, and usually with similar animal associations, such as ravens, horses, serpents, wolves, or dogs. A gift that these goddesses also seem to have in common is the gift of prophecy, often playing a hand in the fates they predict for mortals. This is particularly interesting when we consider that the name faery comes from the Latin fata, meaning “fate.”

  Professor Ari Berk on Faeries and the Dead

  We would much prefer to see tiny fairies in floral dresses and so on, but the truth behind this idea of fairies as little children is part of an older, dark tradition that people are really not too excited to hear about. When you start talking about Faery lore and the disposition of the souls of unbaptised children, a lot of people are ready to turn off. That’s it—back to the Disney Channel! But really this is where so much of the lore originates: in loss, in mourning, in wanting to know the dead remain close to us, in our desire to continue our conversations with those we love. In this branch of lore, Faerieland becomes a kind of earthly limbo. But this is only one aspect of Faery.