Woman Most Wild: Three Keys to
Liberating the Witch Within, by Danielle
Dulsky (New World Library, 2017) trade paperback, 6” x 9,” 252 pages. Also available
as an e-book.
Although
this book is mostly prose, Danielle Dulsky begins Woman Most Wild with a remarkable poem:
This Truth
Snuff out the candles! Make the room
dark!
I’ll cradle you close, star-shaped
child.
Inside your heart’s ripe, red
center— a spark!
When I speak of Her rhythm, this
Woman Most Wild.
She lives in a hut made of soft guts
and hard bones,
She crawls out of your mouth while
you sleep.
In the forest, the desert, She sets
up her stones.
‘Fore bare-breasted swimming in the
salty blue deep.
When She comes back to your body,
Her hearth and Her home,
She’s tired, and filthy, and fed.
She hopes that you’ll notice the
sand, water, and loam
She’s painted all over your bed.
Peel off her hard mask, the woman so
mild,
And drink of the succulent moon.
You, my sweet one, are the Woman
Most Wild.
You’ll swallow this truth whole and
soon.
(Copyright ©2017 by Danielle
Dulsky. Used with publisher’s permission)
In
an unusually personal and warm approach, Woman
Most Wild focuses more on practitioners’ or potential practitioners’ needs
and questions rather than on the history of Witchcraft, deities and mythology. Beginning
with her introduction, Dulsky addresses the reader as “my love,” and
“Sister-Witch.” In the introduction, she writes: “I will honor you as a
high-level Priestess. I am neither above you nor below you; we sit at the same
table.” She promises the reader that it’s okay not to be fully comfortable with
naming yourself “Witch,” and that she will not ask the reader to let go of “any
part of your belief system you hold as true.” Calling the reader to be a Witch,
she offers instead of religion, “glimpses of how your soft and perfect being
may be infused with the marrow of ritual, magic, and circle-craft.” She writes
that although this book is “primarily for those who identify as women, your
wild spirituality does not require a physical womb; it only asks you to honor
the fusion of your body and psyche to your feminine spirit.”
The
book is divided into three sections called Keys that, per the subtitle of the
book, are aimed at “Liberating the Witch Within.” Key 1, “Your Wild Rhythm,” begins
with a poetic invocation, followed by an introductory few pages in which the
author discusses embodiment and both the body’s and world’s cycles, writing:
“There is no great chasm between your enduring spirit and your holy, sensual
self.” She then relates this to her concept of “wild.” The chapters of this
section include material related to the seasons; the moon , including a
meditation, a prayer, and a ritual; material related to the sun and fire also
including guided meditation; blood rhythms related to the moon; and the role of
yoga and chakras. This and the other Keys’ chapters also include a feature
called, “Verses of the Holy Feminine.” Key 2, “Your Wild Ritual,” includes
chapters on circle-casting and its relationship to ecology; healing spellwork;
Goddess ministry; pathworking, and prayer and meditation. Key 3, “Your Wild
Circle,” includes discussion of magick and circle-craft, working with various
energies in the circle; ritual and other ways of belonging in a circle. The
last chapter in this Key is “Benediction of the Liberated Wolf-Woman.” The back
matter includes an epilogue, an appendix, “Moon Rituals for Lone Wolf-Women and
Witches Circles”; acknowledgments, notes, recommended reading, an index and an
author biography.
Woman Most Wild is a
beautifully written, empowering, and inspiring book. It is directed primarily
to those new to this path and who have yet to identify as Witches. It is also likely
to be of interest to those who have identified as Witches for years as well as those
who, like me, may not identify as Witches even after many years identifying as Goddessians
and/or spiritual feminists.
To complete this post, I’d like to
share with you parts of an interview with the author provided by the book’s publisher.
How do you
define the word “Witch”?
Danielle Dulsky: A Witch is
someone who has affirmed their connection to the wild, claimed their right to
handcraft their own spiritual path, established a flexible and personally
relevant practice of embodying nature’s cycles, and realized their birthright
as a global healer of the wounded feminine. “Witch” is not a name that can be
given by any external authority, nor is Witchcraft solely the domain of women. It
is the feminine—that soulful and cyclical energy within all beings that yearns
for a meaningful relationship with nature, craves sensual presence and creative
expression, and intuitively understands the role of ritual and magick in our
world─
that can
groundswell within us and urge us to claim the name Witch. To be a Witch means
to see magick in the mundane as often as possible, to attune oneself to both
inner and outer rhythms, and to know oneself as divine. In my experience, a
Witch is also a change-agent, as every spell or ritual cast by the Witch’s hand
is a reflection of the world in which s/he wants to live.
Can you tell us the story of your “coming out” as a
Witch?
Dulsky: I am asked this question a lot, and I always wish
I could pinpoint a single event or pivotal conversation that prompted my
“coming out.” A large part of me has always known I was a Witch, though I
suppose I did not call myself one until my mid-20s. I was raised attending a
strict born-again Christian elementary school and similarly evangelical church.
When I a little girl, I remember having many experiences─communing with dead family members, seeing angels,
and generally having magick-riddled dreams─that I would share with my teachers or mother, only to be immediately
scorned or invalidated in various ways. I have vivid memories of men from my
mother’s church putting shaking hands on my shoulders to cast the demons out,
all the while feeling like there was nothing really wrong with me. I remember
hiding tarot cards under my bed, talking to tree spirits, practicing yoga,
rituals, and chanting in secret, and numerous other signs that point to my being
a Witch during girlhood, but I did not call it anything other than childhood.
In my experience, women often have memories of being little Witches, as
children are far more attuned to nature and feminine rhythms that are adults.
In attempting to be contributing members of society and appearing to be in
fierce control, we tend to spiritually conform and reject that which is most
divine within us; I am lucky in that, as soon as I possibly could, I refused to
practice anyone else’s religion. For a few years, I believed Wicca would
satisfy my thirst for spiritual authenticity, but, alas, there are as many
predators and narcissists in the Pagan community as there are in more
traditional religions. I can say with certainty that I did not fully own the name Witch until I separated
myself from all covens and hierarchal Pagan organizations. There is a necessary
sense of agency that comes with claiming the name Witch, and I think most wild
ones require a level of sacred solitude and personal practice before they are
sufficiently empowered to liberate their Witch’s soul.
What is
“wild woman spirituality” and how does that relate to being a Witch?
Dulsky: To my mind, there is no significant difference between following a path
of Wild Woman Spirituality and being a Witch, other than the obvious need to
identify as a woman. Gender is a social construct, but wild spirituality speaks
to the feminine energy within all human beings. To be wild is to be soulfully
awake but hardly immature or out of control. To be wild is to honor the ebbs
and flows within you as well as those in nature, being particularly attuned to
the relationship between those two forces. A Witch does all of these things,
refusing to separate her sensuality, emotionality, and creativity from her
spirituality.
How do your two sons feel about their mommy being a
Witch?
Dulsky: Honestly, apathetic. They have lived with it their whole lives, so, while
I think they have an understanding that not everyone’s mother is a Witch, they
don’t really see it as anything special either. My older son is 11, and I think
he just realized this past year that not everyone buries apples in their yard
for their ancestors on Halloween night. I involve them in circle casting and
spell work every so often, but only minimally. I am not raising them to be
Witches, as I think everyone should have the right to choose their own
spiritual path, but I answer every question they ask, to the best of my
ability. If my boys grow up to stand against oppression and be open-minded,
tolerant individuals, I will be a happy Mother-Witch.
Can you be
a Witch and also religious?
Dulsky: A Witch follows her own spiritual path, and I do
not believe religion and Witchcraft are necessarily incompatible. There are a
number of religious traditions that condemn Witchcraft, however, and I do not
believe a Witch should be forced to hide who she is in order to practice her
religion. Importantly, though, Witchcraft is a practice and not a religion; it
demands nothing from the practitioner other than what s/he is willing and able
to give. There is no concrete dogma or contract to sign. You take what you like
and leave what you don’t; this is the way of wild spirituality.
How does sexuality and wild woman
spirituality intertwine?
Dulsky: A hallmark of wild woman spirituality is the
refusal to separate the realm of the soul, that is the connection with nature,
sensuality, emotionality, sexuality, and selfhood, from the realm of spirit. A
wild woman honors her bodily autonomy and acknowledges she can be a sexually
vibrant creature who is also spiritually awake and at one with the world around
her.
What is
your advice for people who are scared about coming out as a Witch?
Dulsky: My go-to advice
is never to come out as a Witch until you are ready and confident enough in
your identity that you can face any condemnation. That said, a Witch does not
owe anyone her “coming out.” You are not made more Witch by telling the world
you are one; it is admitting to yourself you are a Witch that is the real
“coming out.”
How does
your experience in a coven differ from your experience in a women’s circle?
Dulsky: Let me begin by saying I know there are very
empowering and soulful covens in the world that are longstanding and
hierarchically ordered; I was never a member of one of these organizations,
however, and I will say that my experience in a manipulative and spiritually
predatory coven is unfortunately a common one that keeps many young women from
safely practicing the Craft. A women’s circle is a non-hierarchal entity that
is a beautiful affirmation of feminine communication, women’s right to speak
and be heard, and the importance of sisterhood. In my work, bridging the coven
and women’s circle has been paramount, as I believe whole-heartedly in the
genuine, healing power of women coming together, sharing their stories, and
working magick together. I also believe younger/newer Witches are in dire need
of a safe context for mentorship and support, where they are not in danger of
being manipulated or exploited.
How does
feminism play a role in witchcraft and wild woman spirituality?
Dulsky: Feminists are
fundamentally against oppression, as are Witches. There is an element of
vindication involved in claiming the name Witch openly, as most of the women
prosecuted, tortured, and killed during the Witch hunts were not Witches but
women who did not fit the socially validated role of dependent woman. They were
women without support networks or independent earners. They were women who were
isolated, and they were women who were vulnerable to prosecution because they
represented aspects of the feminine that could not be sufficiently bound by the
predominantly male-controlled social, political, and economic instruments in
place. For the most part, they were oppressed people, not Witches. By
extension, taking back the name Witch and claiming wild womanhood is a refusal
to succumb to such deeply institutionalized prejudices again.
What do you love most about
sharing your new book with the world?
Dulsky: I love that I live in a world where the wild feminine can speak and be
heard, whether through me or through other feminist voices; I want to never
take that for granted.
Danielle Dulsky is an
artist, yoga teacher, energy worker, and founder of Living Mandala Yoga teacher
training programs. She leads women’s circles, Witchcraft workshops, and energy
healing trainings and lives in Phoenixville, Pennsylvania.
Interview copyright
©2017
by Danielle Dulsky. Excerpted and printed with permission from New World
Library. You can find another interview with Dulsky about the book (of about 5
minutes) on the publisher's site.
Labels: books, Goddess traditions, reviews