By: Isabelle Ghaneh
Decisions are hard for
all of us. Which way do I go now, which path is the right one,
what do I do next, or, most urgently, where do I go from here?
Life is never easy and some decisions can be hard ones, very hard.
And, at times, it can seem as if there is no answer, although we
know that is untrue and every situation has a solution, no matter
how hard it can be to glimpse it at times.
This is where Hekate comes in. Hekate is the goddess of the
crossroads. She is also the mistress of the magic arts, and is
included in the grouping of the Moon goddesses. In ancient
portraits she is shown to have three heads and they look in each
of three directions.
When we are at a crossroads Hekate is there with her torch light
and her ability to transcend both heaven and hell and her dwelling
place on the earth. She can bring both the conscious mind and the
unconscious mind together, and the need to live in day to day
reality home to us. She is the one to go to for direction when we
don’t know which path to take and which road makes the best
choice.
Hekate uses the wise owl as her messenger and she relies on the
willow tree for sustenance. She is a goddess of the Moon and when
the Moon is dark she can use her torch for light and in search of
the best pathway to take. When we need to make a hard decision for
ourselves we are calling on Hekate for guidance, since she travels
through the realms of sky, earth and Hades, the underworld.
Hekate is called the most lovely one of the Moon, and Hekate is
there when a child is brought into the world, as she is the
goddess associated with midwifery. When Ceres lost her daughter
Persephone, Hekate used her torch to help Ceres look for her in
the underworld. When we are unsure of ourselves or when the light
around us is fading, and everything looks dark, we are traveling
by night in the most metaphysical sense.
I believe that Hekate’s province as goddess of the crossroads
led inevitably to her status as goddess of the magic arts. One
would naturally lead to the other. Who better than Hekate would
know how so often our indecision leads us to call upon the
energies present in the universe to ask for help and guidance when
we cannot figure out what to do. Once a decision has been made,
asking the powers that be to help incarnate that desire would
naturally fall upon, who better, the goddess who shows us all the
different roads available to us.
Hekate is the 100th asteroid named and discovered on July 11,
1868. In her manifestation as 100 Hekate, her asteroid
designation, she is the place we go to in our astrological charts
to find out what we need to do to discern our direction in life.
She is the also the place we go to find those parts of ourselves
that were lost. When we are in need of using our magical selves to
find or answer questions, Hekate as goddess of magic is there.
By looking up her placement in our charts we can see what
astrological sign and house she occupies. Looking at my own chart
I found that Hekate is in the 9th house, the house of religious
belief and philosophy and law. She is exactly by 0 degrees square
both Mercury, the mind, and Jupiter, the natural ruler of the 9th
house. This tells me that at times I allow my conscious mind and
my wish for how I want things to be to cloud my inner wisdom and
natural thought. That when I need to find the place to go to for
guidance I need to go to the 9th house. Perhaps I over analyze
situations too much and do not allow the wisdom that can be found
in religion and philosophy to tell me the answer.
To compound matters Hekate is in the sign of Cancer, a sign I have
no other placements in. I am not personally familiar with the
energy of Cancer, since while I have water signs in my chart,
Cancer is not one. Perhaps this unfamiliar position is the one I
need to learn from the most. Cancer is of course ruled by the Moon
and represents feeling in its purest sense. So perhaps I need to
use more Moon guidance in my discernment of the pathway, or
perhaps I need to go emotionally on decisions and let the thought
process be stilled, and use intuition more.
I know on the day I first began to become interested in Hekate, I
looked up her current sign in the zodiac and she was at 0 Aries. 0
Aries is a power point sign, it is the world placement sign, and
is the beginning of the spring solstice, a time of new beginnings
for the earth as a whole. I believe Hekate is asking for notice
and asking to speak to us. She is telling us she, not usually
included in the more commonly known pantheon of goddesses, has
been neglected for far too long.
Hekate entered the sign of Taurus on June 11, 2005, and will be
there until April 9, 2006. In Taurus Hekate will be bringing her
energy to Taurus symbolism. And what does Taurus symbolize? The
greenery of the earth; planting, growing, creating beautiful
gardens. Cooking, eating, enjoying the results of the fragrance of
the seeds we put into the ground, and the nourishing foodstuffs we
obtain from vegetables and fruits.
Taurus also rules our sensual side since Taurus is a sign that
favors the five senses; taste, touch, sight, sound, aroma. Once
Hekate enters Taurus it is a time to allow ourselves to experience
the pleasures each of the five senses has to offer us, as we
partake of the garden of life.
Letting ourselves feel secure enough to make the right decision is
also a part of Hekate’s foray into Taurus, since Taurus is a
very security minded and ‘I want to be risk-free’ sign.
That’s good to know, too, since we will certainly make better
decisions the more secure we feel.
As you learn who Hekate is, and what she has to tell you this
year, you will discover a vast fountain of information you never
knew she, or you, possessed.
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The
Goddess Path: Myths, Invocations, and Rituals
Now you can find more meaning and
joy in your life, journey inward, find the divine, and become
transformed, when you read The Goddess Path by Patricia
Monaghan.
The Goddess Path can be your guide to speed you on your
spiritual quest. Think of this book as a signpost on your
spiritual travels, designed to help you nurture your own
connection to the goddess and share in her boundless wisdom.
Call her into your life with beautiful and ancient invocations.
Create your own rituals to honor the lessons she has to teach.
As you ponder life-changing questions and venture on brave new
experiments, you fan the divine spark into flameand, in that
fire, you are transformed.
The Goddess Path includes myths, symbols, feast days,
ancient invocations, and suggestions for connecting with the
following goddesses for these purposes and more:
 | Amaterasu for clarity
 | Aphrodite for passion
 | Artemis for protection
 | Athena for strength
 | Brigid for survival
 | The Cailleach for power
 | Demeter and Persephone for
initiation
 | Gaia for abundance
 | Hathor for affection
 | Hera for dignity
 | Inanna for inner strength
 | Isis for restorative love
 | Kali for freedom
 | Kuan-Yin for mercy
 | The Maenads for ecstasy
 | The Muses for inspiration
 | Oshun for healing love
 | Paivatar for release
 | Pomona for joy
 | Asule and Saules Meita for
family healthMonaghan, a faculty member at DePaul
University, is a leader of the contemporary goddess
movement. In The Goddess Path, she presents a means
to work with the goddess, using ancient and modern
techniques that will thrill and amaze you. For new levels of
peace, joy, and increased closeness to the Divine, get The
Goddess Path.
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Goddess
Companion: Daily Meditations on the Goddess
Organized as a daily
meditation book, The Goddess Companion is also indexed by
culture, goddess, and subject, so you can easily find prayers
for specific purposes. Following each prayer is thoughtfully
written prose by Patricia Monaghan that illustrates the aspects
of the goddess working in our everyday lives.
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