PantheaCon is a unique event - I will attempt to explain this unique
gathering. Follow this link for a wee bit of history about it.
I'm currently working on a soon-to-appear blog entry that summarizes my
spiritual journey thus far, to make it easier for friends and family to
understand where I am now and where I am going, and how my path has
taken me to the annual gathering known as "PantheaCon" (or "P-Con," or
simply, "the Con.")
A brief aside. The metaphor of "Life as a journey" is an interesting
one, because it presupposes a beginning (birth) and an arrival at the
destination (death?)
"Life as journey" is complete in some metaphoric realms (e.g.,
experimenting with different things is like walking through a doorway,
into a room from a place where you were unfamiliar with the new
experience). It doesn't seem to me to be a proper metaphor it a
spiritual sense of the word, because I believe that one's spiritual
journey is never really over - it evolves, is subject to greater
clarity and times when things are not so clear.As a former student of a
renowned scholar of metaphor (UC Berkeley professor George Lakoff), I
have always found the use (and misuse) of metaphor in English
fascinating (Note to myself to blog on THAT topic one day).
So... PantheaCon is an annual conference/convention of 1500-2200 souls
held on President's Day weekend. Attendees come from a wide range of
established pre-historic or pre-Christian philosophies. Some attendees
come from newly emerging polytheistic philosophies they and others are
co-creating.
We are the Druids, Dianics, Witches, Voudouns, Asatrus, Eclectics,
Solitaries, Followers of Freya, Hermetics, New Reformed Order of the
Golden Dawn folks, Reclaiming Witches... dozens and dozens of
traditions, paths, covens, groves, affinity groups, and "kindreds"
(that's a new one for me). And a number of those who practice along
(known as "solitaries").
The purpose of PantheaCon? To share information, to commune with
like-minded souls, to enjoy brother/sisterhood. According to 30 years
of study by NPR reporter Margot Adler, we are growing rapidly. And it's
no wonder why. Many of us were disappointed and disillusioned with the
faiths of our birth families. Some of us cannot accept the lack of
acceptance of social diversity. Others don't care for the
objectification of the Earth as an object to exploit.
The DoubleTree Hotel in San Jose is ours for the 3-day weekend. At
first, I thought it strange that P-Con would be held here - why not San
Francisco? But it's really not that unusual. While attending my first
Con three years ago. I asked a friendly DoubleTree hotel staffer
(they're all very friendly!) what they thought of us as a group.
Generally, if you were to gather us all in one room (all 1800 of us)
you would see a wide range of eclectic clothingf people who read a lot,
think a lot, and have very eclectic tastes in clothing, we're clad in
many types of dress - flowing cloaks, tophats, white Druid robes,
leather and boots, goddess robes, stunning jewelry, and other
adornments (I'm the only one sporting ribbon leis from the Crafty Bear
in Kaimuki (absolutely no connection with "the Craft") in my recently
acquired Jewish "black hat" I got at an estate sale in San Francisco.
Some of us carry swords and ritual knives (called "Athames" used in
conducting rituals, "peace-bonded" in sheaths) as we wend our way
through the hotel. A number of people have dogs (one woman I see every
year has a Schipperke - the very first time I saw one of these in San
Francisco 16 years ago, I had to ask a stupid question - "What *IS*
it?" I didn't know it was a dog! It looked like a teddy bear. So, the
desk clerk turned to me, smiled, and said (with no intended slight to
our community) "This is nothing. We host a large Science Fiction
convention and we have the S&M and BDSM (Sado-Masochism and
Bondage/Domination Sado Masochism) convention as well, so we've seen it
all."
All of this in San Jose?
Apparently.
I spend a good bit of time catching up with my old Reclaiming friends
and others I've met and hung out with at previous Cons. I need these
people in my life. I hope they like being needed by me. We are at the
same time very ordinary people, yet our "beliefs" and world view are
either held in contempt or suspicion, or we're simply not taken
seriously.
The contempt, confusion really used to bug me, but not anymore.
Fortunately for me, everyone takes my spirituality seriously - people
like my wonderful boss at work, my colleagues, my friends. They all
know I'm involved with the Fire Tribe, especially with the explosion of
musical instruments at our house!
Before you knock someone, you need to get to know them - if you depend
on journalists re are absolutely WONDERful people here. People like me,
who experience life like much of the rest of the world, but we relate
to the world around us differently.
What I love about the Con, and something that isn't limited to the Con,
and happens to me at other conferences, are those serendipitous
unexpected conversations I have with strangers waiting in line, in
elevators, at the poolside, cruising the exhibits or markets. We begin
as strangers, and end up as acquaintances - our thoughts, jokes, and
feelings, our shared experiences bringing another piece of community to
this village.
For example, Cathy and I met in William's wheat weaving class. William
is a fellow graduate student at Cherry Hill Seminary. William plays a
mean harp, majored in philosophy, enjoys weaving stalks of many
different kinds of wheat into astonishingly beautiful artifacts (and
likes it enough to teach 40 people on the mezzanine one afternoon), and
loves old dusty books.
Cathy was there with her service dog Jesse, who was wearing one of
those "Pet me I'm friendly!" vests. Jesse was happily munching on a
rawhide bone while mom and I were making Harvest Knots and Brigid's
crosses, weavings made Irish country folk for centuries. PantheaCon has
something for everyone - rituals, music, instruction, academic talks. I
like to mix and match my activities at PantheaCon, especially ones that
sharpen my ability to use my hands to make crafts while following
directions by the presenter. I need as much exposure I can get to
spatial kinds of projects like this one. of activities to sharpen my
ability to take direction in doing a craft where there's spatial
orientation required. (Jesse was in doggy heaven, and polished off the
bone in about 45 minutes!)
I inquired about Jesse's pedigree, and was quite surprised to find out
she was half pit-bull. My immediate reaction to pit-bulls is reulsion.
They injure people, and some men make them mean and parade them around
as an extension of hypermasculinity (a substitute for their lack
of masculinity in their boxer shorts)... but I digress.
Cathy then talks to me about how gentle these dogs really are. Her
sincerity confronted my prejudice. Deep down I believe she is right,
and she most probably is. Jesse is actually cute now, because she's
*so* tuned in to Mom. Cathy goes up and gets a few more stalks of
wheat, and Jesse immediately stops gnawing and follows Cathy, as if to
say "May I help you?" Cathy reassures Jesse that everything's okay,
we're not ready to go yet.
I actually enjoy the confrontation of my prejudices. It's something I
believe each of us need to work harder on to move toward a more
peaceful. We all need to work harder to overcome that which binds us
and holds us back - to minimize and destroy their control over us.
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Aloha!
I'm Kevin Roddy, an Associate Professor and Information Literacy Librarian at Kapi'olani Community College in Honolulu, on the Island of O'ahu. This site was originally created to keep folks up-to-date with my linguistic fieldwork on the Island of Yap in Micronesia. I graduated last summer, so the site has now morphed into a multi-faceted blog. View my professional site here, and my magickal background here.
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Comments
Re: Notes from PantheaCon
by
Erik
on Tue 20 Mar 2007 05:28 AM HST | Permanent Link
"I'm currently working on a soon-to-appear blog entry that summarizes my spiritual journey thus far..."
I recently did this myself, and it was tougher than I thought it would be (it's an interesting exercise, looking at part of your life from the outside!)... Trackbacks
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