Sunday, November 20, 2005

"And you find magic from your God, and we find magic everywhere"

So, yes, I joined the crush of 10 year olds and their attendant parental units and went to see Harry Potter. It was quite good. But it was also quite obvious that there was too much in the book to fit in the movie. There was hardly a breather. Still supreme f/x and the chemistry between the actors just gets better and better every movie.

As I drove home, I could recognize that my anxiety level about going back to work tomorrow was raising, so I said a little prayer to Freyja telling her I needed a little help to get through tomorrow. And I remembered another fragment of a dream from Friday night (the night where, apparently I was channeling the Twilight Zone). I had dreamt that I was in some sort of airborn vehicle. It wasn't particularly an airplane, but I don't know what else it might have been. Anyway, at some point, I realized that it was going to crash (or roll over) which was going to be very bad. I had the sense that I could die, and I prayed...and it just flowed off my lips as a prayer to Freyja and Freyr. I don't remember anymore of the dream.

What's sort of significant about this is that I've always wondered about what my knee jerk reaction would be faced with imminent danger, in terms of prayer. Since I can still recite portions of the Lutheran liturgy verbatim, it seems fair to think that a Christian response might leap forth by rote. But, somehow, it seems important to me at the moment of my greatest danger to be able to pull close those gods that I now call my own.

Along the lines of prayers, my mother's cousin, Jimmy, is very sick. He just had spinal surgery and his recovery is not so pretty (my mother worries he's not going to make it). Anyway, if you pray or send energy or whatever you might do, I'd appreciate it going his way. He and his wife and my parents have been good friends in the past several years.

Here's something to be happy about - I only work 3 days this week. I think I, and all other involved parties, can survive that. I'm off to read my romance novel...for those of you who didn't follow the link in the last post, you might want to. It is hysterical.

And here's a pretty picture for your Monday.

8 comments:

Aravis said...

I'm sending good thoughts, good energy and any prayers I can drum up to your mother's cousin, and your family. *hug*

Charby said...

Best wishes to your mothers cousin!

Hyde said...

I'm thinking of your cousin too. I'm sorry he's sick!

-h

Anonymous said...

So sorry to hear about your cousin - I'm sending healing thoughts...

Anonymous said...

I like the Idea of healing thoughts your mothers cousin certainly has mine.

I don't believe in asking for anything in a prayer. Appart from being an atheist, if I suscribed to a God, Who would I be to ask for anything? I think it would be an insult to my God to assume that I know better and that my God should listen to me.

Anyways, I am rambling again I wish your mothers cousin the best.

red one said...

Best wishes for your cousin - and for you too, Spin. I hope the three days of work fly by as quickly as possible. The book covers are funny - can you hide printouts between the pages of your work documents?

red

HistoryGeek said...

Mystic: I've always subscribed to the belief of asking for what I want in prayer. I figure that the answer maybe "no" (or maybe I'm being ignored, who knows?). But you don't get what you don't ask for, right? Besides, I don't ask for things, so much as emotional support, generally.

Red - I should do that, I think. But then my patients would wonder what I'm laughing at!

Thanks everyone for your thoughts and wishes for my cousin (I guess he's my cousin, too).

Flash said...

I went to see Harry Potter with Le Boy on Sunday, I thought it was great! The best of the films so far.