Introduction
The Sword or the Wand
PART 1
Back to the Roots
1 Sky, Storm, and Spore
Where Do Gods Come From?
2 The Hanged Man Is the Rooted One
Thinking from the Feet
3 Between Naming and the Unknown
Shakespeare’s Twelfth Night
4 The Minotaur Dances the Masculine Back into the Milky
Way
Myths Need to Move
5 The Moon Belongs to Everyone
Lunar Medicine for the Masculine
6 Becoming a Home
The Empress Card Embraces the Masculine
7 Dionysus
Girl-Faced God of the Swarm, the Hive, the Vine, and the Emergent
Mind
8 Merlin Makes Kin to Make Kingdoms
A Multiplicity of Minds and Myths
9 Joseph, Secret Vegetalista of Genesis
Plants Use Men to Dream
10 Actaeon Is the King of the Beasts
From Curse to Crown
11 A New Myth for Narcissus
Seeing Ourselves in the Ecosystem
12 Everyone Is Orpheus
Singing for Other Species
13 Dionysus as Liber
The Vine Is the Tool of the Oppressed
14 Rewilding the Beloved
Dionysus Offers New Modes of Romance
15 Grow Back Your Horns
The Devil Card Is Dionysus
PART II
Healing the Wound
16 Let Your Wings Dry
Giving the Star Card to the Masculine
17 Tristan and Transformation
Escaping the Trauma of the Hero’s Journey
18 Boy David, Wild David, King David
The Land-Based Origin of Biblical Kingship
19 Coppice the Hero’s Journey
Creating Narrative Ecosystems
20 Merlin and Vortigern
Magical Boyhood Topples Patriarchy
21 Parzifal and the Fisher King
The Grail Overflows with Stories
22 Sleeping Beauty, Sleeping World
The Prince Offers the Masculine a New Quest
23 Melt the Sacred Masculine and the Divine Feminine into
Divine Animacy
The Sacred Overflows the Human
24 Resurrect the Bridegroom
The Song of Songs and Ecology as Courtship
25 Osiris
The Original Green Man
26 What’s the Matter?
A Mycelial Interpretation of the Gospel of Mary Magdalene
27 Knock upon Yourself
The High Priestess Wakes Up the Masculine
28 The Kingdom of Astonishment
Gnostic Jesus and the Transformative Power of Awe
29 Healing the Healer
Dionysus Rewilds Jesus
30 Making Amends to Attis and Adonis
No Gods Were Killed in the Making of This Myth
31 The Joyful Rescue
Tolkien’s Eucatastrophe and the Anthropocene
32 Sharing the Meal
Tom Bombadil Offers the Masculine Safe Haven
33 The Gardeners and the Seeds
Healing the Easter Wound
Conclusion
A Cure for Narrative Dysbiosis
Acknowledgments
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Sophie Strand is a poet and writer with a focus on the history of religion and the intersection of spirituality, storytelling, and ecology. Her poems and essays have appeared in numerous projects and publications, including the Dark Mountain Project and poetry.org and the magazines Unearthed, Braided Way, Art PAPERS, and Entropy. She lives in the Hudson Valley of New York.
“If we want to locate the underlying source of our civilization’s
headlong rush to destruction, we must dig deeper than capitalism,
deeper even than the Western worldview, until we encounter the
bedrock of patriarchy. In this exuberant tableau of resurrection,
Strand reveals how even our most archetypal myths have been molded
and devitalized to fit the patriarchal straitjacket, and Strand
lays the groundwork for a regenerated masculinity--one that is
liberated to explore life-affirming possibilities grounded in the
deep wisdom of long-buried ancient lore.”
*Jeremy Lent, author of The Web of Meaning*
“Sophie Strand’s beautiful and poetic book is a game changer. With
The Flowering Wand as a tool, it is possible to rewrite the mostly
traumatizing patriarchal narratives Western males so often base
their identity in and reconnect them with the underlying story of a
cultural and natural deep history of mutual transformation with
other beings beyond all modern binaries.”
*Andreas Weber, biologist, philosopher, and author of Enlivenment:
Toward a Poetics for the Anthropoc*
“Sophie Strand writes with the urgency of a prophet and the
musicality of a bard. Weaving myth together with botany, history
with theology, her virtuosic linguistic skeins would do her beloved
mycorrhizae proud. In The Flowering Wand, the masculine appears as
lover, as partner, as inspirer, as friend. This is a book important
in its joy, powerful in its love--exuberant in its curiosity.
Taking us by the hand, Strand leads us into a garden of delights:
tarot cards, ancient scriptures, Shakespearean comedies, sky gods,
the Minotaur, the Milky Way. Strand holds the gates of wonder open
and love comes flowing out. These are the birth waters breaking.
Rejoice! The masculine is reborn.”
*Amanda Yates Garcia, author of Initiated: Memoir of a Witch*
“A magnificent weave of ecology and myth--it is evident there’s
some pretty rich dirt, culturally speaking as well as actual dirt
no doubt, under the fingernails that have written this lyrical
journey. A book filled with magical insight, revealing Strand’s
wondrous curiosity and impressive learnings of the complex
relationships between humans and nature.”
*Sam Lee, musician and author of The Nightingale*
“The wisdom in this book is almost beyond expression. Sophie
Strand’s The Flowering Wand reveals the full potency and profligacy
of myth.”
*Manchán Magan, author of Thirty-Two Words for Field: Lost Words of
the Irish Landscape*
“Sophie Strand’s work is a must-read for lovers of mythology and
the Earth. Her work is poetic yet practical. It’s whimsical and
transportive, yet it’s describing the world around you, inviting
you back home to the reality of this mystical life and world we
inhabit.”
*Annabel Gat, author of The Astrology of Love and Sex and The Moon
Sign Guide*
“The Flowering Wand is a ‘wild thing’ and seeks out other forms of
recombination and transformative fusion and gives them life. The
surprising conclusion is, we humans have always been
more-than-human. Are you wild enough to find out why?”
*Glenn Albrecht, Ph.D., philosopher and environmentalist*
“Sophie Strand’s new book offers a luminous exploration of the
radical mythic underpinning of the masculine narrative. Here the
autocratic sky gods and sword-wielding dominators of people and
landscapes are replaced by a dynamic ensemble of dancers, lovers,
and liberators. Strand reminds us how these actors--from the
Minotaur to Merlin--inspire people of all places and genders to
break out of the straitjacket of patriarchal control and become
more embodied, protean, dramaturgical, and emergent in our lives.
Get entangled!”
*Charlotte Du Cann, author of After Ithaca: Journeys in Deep
Time*
“Sophie Strand’s words embody both the chthonic depth of
well-myceliated soil and the crystals, sharp with insight, among
its hyphae. In The Flowering Wand, Sophie remediates the ground of
western culture by rerooting the divine masculine--in all its
fertility, magic and imagination-- back into the earth. Through
Sophie‘s richly seeded prose and deep scholarship she shows us how
reclaiming this fertile, soporific energy--an energy that lives
within us all--can help heal our connection with the Animate
Everything and nourish the re-flowering of the world.”
*Asia Suler, author of Mirrors in the Earth*
“Readers will feel the words in this book tendril around their
hearts and minds, forming adaptive connections and creating
conversations with the ‘Animate Everything’ in the wilds of their
everyday worlds. Myths that stay the same don’t survive, Strand
tells us; she waves a wand toward the earth and summons up vital
wisdom for our time.”
*Gavin Van Horn, author of The Way of Coyote*
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