Author: Unruly Mystic

  • Asking a question is hard in live virtual events

    Asking a question is hard in live virtual events

    Learning from answers

    As the filmmaker-pilgrim behind The Unruly Mystic Series, I have always enjoyed hearing the answers that helped to inform me about the subject material for my films. I learned that knowing the right questions to task is the hardest part. Perhaps that comes from my DNA as the son of an astronomer (Peter S. Conti, September 5, 1934 – June 21, 2021). The answers I received through many hours of interviews helped inform me and gave me insight into my own constantly developing spirituality. That is entirely different in my new live virtual events where I don’t have the luxury of thoughtful editing.

    Through the process of making these films and putting on these live virtual events, I gained more confidence in my own creative work and importance of making something of value for the world. For those of us that haven’t yet taken that plunge fully, I would say there is someone right now looking for something that your future self will be creating.

    Going Live in virtual events

    I have encounter more people whose subject knowledge would have included them in my films. Their personal journeys are inspirational to me, each unique in their own way. But it would be virtually impossible to include everyone into a 120-minute film!

    Starting in 2020, during the pandemic, I decided to use a virtual live events format more fully where I can share those interviews in real-time and provoke a conversation in breakout rooms. These are the types of conversations which can lead to profound change and newer understanding of the world around us, and in us.

    The first experiment with live virtual events occurred with a VMuir Day Panel 2020 in which we celebrated John Muir’s one hundred and eight-second birthday during the Covid-19 pandemic on April 21, 2020. I asked my panelists questions about death, how they are connecting with nature while in isolation, and why John Muir is still relevant today.

    After running a bigger live virtual event in September of that same year for Saint Hildegard’s Feast Day on September 17th with over 150 virtual pilgrims attending the first live virtual Saint Hildegard Pilgrimage I have decided to make a repeat with Saint Hildegard presenters in 2021 (link below for sign-up).

    Hildegard Requirements

    • Has a personal connection to Saint Hildegard’s teachings, medicine, art or music
    • Done something interesting around that creative connection (has taken the plunge).
    • Is able to share their own process in doing that work.

    A work-in-progress

    I see each of us in Saint Hildegard, and Saint Hildegard in each of us too. That is a work-in-progress.

    Join with me in the conversation as we celebrate the spirituality and creativity of Saint Hildegard, as manifested by her natural medicine, art, writing, and music.

    Offering a virtual pilgrimage again in September for Saint Hildegard, both live and pre-recorded. Besides the 12-days of recordings, there are live 2-days of virtual events over Saint Hildegard’s Feast Day, September 17 & 18, 2021.
    https://sainthildegard.com/

    Join us in celebrating:

    Offering a live virtual pilgrimage again in September for Saint Hildegard, both live and pre-recorded. Besides the 12-days of recordings, there are live 2-days of live virtual events over Saint Hildegard’s Feast Day, September 17 & 18, 2021

    On September 17th 2021, at 1 PM EST, Saint Hildegard Feast Day starts with the ringing of the bells from the Hildegard Haus in Fairport Harbor, Ohio, followed by a sermon by Rev. Dr. Shanon Sterringer. On Saturday, September 18thRev. Carol Vaccariello starts the day at 1 PM EST. Later Rector Susan Springerprovides a “solemnity” for St John’s Episcopal Church in Boulder, Colorado.

    Rev. Dr. Matthew Fox who is the author of Illuminations of Hildegard of Bingen, Hildegard’s Book of Divine Works with Letters and Songs, Hildegard of Bingen, a Saint for Our Times: Unleashing Her Power in the 21st Century, will share some thoughts with us on spirituality and creativity.

  • Hildegard as Shaman?

    Hildegard as Shaman?

    Hildegard as Shaman: Matthew Fox writes in his Daily Meditations of 4/27/2021: “A shaman lives in two worlds at once. Poet Bill Everson speaks of the link shamans have with the Animal Powers and recognizes Christ’s relationship to such animal powers in Mark’s gospel following his baptism when he went into the desert.  Says Everson, “Christ related to the Animal Powers that preceded our more sophisticated religious impulses.””

    As a pilgrim-filmmaker, my own work with Saint Hildegard through the making of my film, The Unruly Mystic: Saint Hildegard, has made me also question if we could see Hildegard as Shaman through our modern-day lens. I realize that equating a Catholic Saint with shamanism is bound to rub some people the wrong way. I can thank Matthew Fox for the courage and insight to share that interesting perspective.

    “Hildegard too is much in touch with the Animal Powers. Time and time again she is visited by animals in her visions and paints them, including snakes that frame several of her paintings. She includes images of bears, leopards, lions, birds, vipers, scorpions, lobsters, and fish. Many of these beasts speak to her and advise her. She devotes an entire chapter in her book Physica to a discussion of animals and their uses for healing and assistance in our work. She recognizes that

    …birds symbolize the virtue a person reveals in his thinking when, by his internal premeditation, he reckons many things before they come forth in an illustrious deed.

    “Animals that run on land represent the “thoughts and meditations a person brings to completion in work,” as well as spiritual longing. Lions mirror the will of a person, while panthers show “ardent desire.” Tame animals that walk on land show “the gentleness of the human being.” In short, “animals have in them qualities similar to the nature of the human.””

    “A shaman is one who has undergone deep initiation and emerges to serve and heal the community. Hildegard was such a person. Estes defines an “initiated woman” this way:

    To be the keepers of the creative fire, and to have intimate knowing about the Life/Death/Life cycles of all nature—this is an initiated woman.”

    “Was there anyone who was busier keeping the creative fire alive than Hildegard?”

    hildegard as shaman
    Feather along the Hildegard Way, Germany 2019

    As one who has been creatively inspired by Hildegard as a filmmaker, I would answer with a resounding “No”. While I am sure others were keeping the “creative fire alive” during those times, we luckily have Hildegard’s work still with us. I see her as the Patron Saint of Creativity. Yet to think of her as a shaman as Matthew Fox shares?

    I have two ways of looking at that perspective. Having walked in Hildegardland as a pilgrim-filmmaker, I can testify the experience there resonated with me on a deeply spiritual level, similar to other places that are thinly veiled or considered as sacred landscapes. Specifically, I share a those experiences in my second film, The Unruly Mystic: John Muir.

    While those experiences might be profound for me personally, it doesn’t necessarily mean it is because someone blessed once was there. How Hildegard perceived her environment during her time, both internally and externally in her work, connects the past with the present. That is clearly evidence of someone that has a deep connection to spirit and the land.

    Finally, shamanism is also much like mysticism. Both are subject to cultural definitions as seen through our modern lens. I would invite us to think of the contributions and attributes that Fox has associated her with from his own unique perspective. There is much value in that observation.

    This particular thread that Matthew Fox started continues on his website. You can also find out more about Hildegard through his book below.

    Matthew Fox writes in Hildegard of Bingen about this amazing woman and what we can learn from her.

    In an era when women were marginalized, Hildegard was an outspoken, controversial figure. Yet so visionary was her insight that she was sought out by kings, popes, abbots, and bishops for advice.

  • Living saints today? Have you met any?

    Living saints today? Have you met any?

    Where have all the saints gone?

    living saints
    St. Francis Hiding in the Garden

    Living saints?  Have you met any?  Not a Hindu or Catholic Saint, placed on candle-lit altar or in rose garden.  But a living saint today.  Someone who projects a oneness with the world, is filled with loving compassion, who has a purpose of being in service to others?  A humble person who is truly awake?

    I have been asking these questions, not as a religious person, but as a filmmaker who has made several films on past saints, the visionaries who woke us up like Naturalist John Muir and Mystic Saint Hildegard of Bingen; my own patron saint of creativity, has lead me to the idea who wouldn’t appreciate more saints?

    What would they look like?  Where would you meet them?  At a volunteer or charity event?  A yoga studio?  A meditation retreat?  At the office?  I bet you haven’t met a lot, if any at all.  So where have all the saints gone?  We should have more.  We have a greater population now than when historical saints lived.  We are more educated.  We have the internet of all things amazing.  So, why don’t we have more saints?  Is organized religion turning them away?  Are we treating them with antipsychotics?  Are they self-medicating with recreational drugs?

    Obviously I am not alone if you google “Where have all the saints gone?”  The question generally gets turned to who are the living saints today?  With wonderful answers from people that have meet Mother Teresa or other Sainted modern religious figures that were only officially canonized after their deaths.

    Living Saints?

    I like this comment I found:  “There are many living saints amongst us right now that we do not know of, simply because it wasn’t part of God’s will for them to be revealed to us. So it’s always good to love your neighbor, not only because we are called to do so, but also because you never know when you are talking to a saint!”

    Have you ever met a living saint?   #livingsaint

    That is so true.

    When I set out to make my films, I didn’t know at the time, that I would also be exploring that question in a more timely perspective as my subject material was historical figures that had personally inspired me and others into our live’s purposes.   “Early Christian communities venerated hundreds of saints, but historical research by 17th- and 18th-century Catholic scholars determined that very few of these saints’ stories were backed by solid historical evidence. Lives of such well-known figures as St. George, St. Valentine, and St. Christopher were based either on a legend that often predated Christianity or were entirely made up. Other saints had local followings. In rural France, St. Guinefort was venerated as the protector of infants after he saved his master’s baby from a snakebite. Saint Guinefort was a dog!” (Appeared in the November 2013 issue of U.S. Catholic (Vol. 78, No. 11, page 46).

    If you want to learn more about saints, here is a list of recommended movies about saints that I have compiled. It is primarily Catholic Saints, but obviously that isn’t the only religion that has mystics and saints walking among them.

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