I have been away from the church for a year and a half now. In that time, I've attended church a handful of times, but otherwise did not engage in anything resembling "faith-based living". I've delved deeper into Daoism, meditation (I'm on a 100+ day streak of daily meditating!), and more recently my indigenous Pagan roots.
It occurred to me that as a European, my ancestors also had an indigenous spirituality that was stolen from us by the Christian church when it colonized us, so to speak, about a thousand years ago. Various aspects of that ancient faith were adopted and "baptised" by the church and handed down as Catholic traditions, while a few others stayed on as mere myth in cultural fables. But since I do not live in the country of my birth, I have no way of tapping into what seems to be a fringe reigniting of our ancient faith, rodziwiara.
As I dabbled in "alternative spirituality" via the yoga center I attend for qigong and yoga, I was introduced to a book that was presented as a "bible" of sorts to women's spirituality. After hearing a podcast episode on it from the "Breaking Down Patriarchy" podcast, I finally decided to get it. Reading it was tough. It's all about archetypes, which to me equals "fiction", and I've never been much of a fan of reading fiction. But since I made the investment, I pressed on reading it. I'm still in the thick of it, but slowly the ideas started seeping into my psyche.
The book - Women Who Run with The Wolves - goes through various stories passed down the generations in various cultures and explains the psychological archetypes in them. One in particular grabbed my attention: Baba Jaga! Here's a "witch" I grew up reading about and strangely being attracted to (I had a toy Baba Jaga as a child, and I still have a bigger one, hanging on a broom, in my "altar area"). Turns out she was a Slavic Goddess that got deformed by Christianity to represent all things undesirable, and in the process lost her power.
At any rate, point being that I was slowly opened up to how archetypes work. In the mean time, I started utilizing ChatGPT very regularly for various inner working type projects, and I started plugging in my dreams for analysis. Again, I was being gifted archetypal explanations and I finally started making the connection - truth does not need to be fact!
Slowly, I started to wonder how one might reinterpret Christian symbolism through the lens of archetypes. Was it even possible for someone like me, with such rigid black-or-white thinking, to "do religion" in a way that doesn't steal my agency, authenticity, or autonomy?
Soon, I received my answer through a crisis that brought me to my knees.
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