Publication Date: October 1994 | Series: Element's Little Book
This charming collection of blessings, praises, and prayers, written by the author of The Elements of Celtic the Tradition and The Elements of the Goddess, draws from the full spectrum of the Celtic world. Part of Element's "Little Book" series. Full-color throughout.
Hello! I'm Caitlin Matthews. I live in Oxford, England with my partner, John Matthews and two warring white cats who, despite our best efforts, can't abide each other and live on different floors of our small house.
I'm primarily known for being the author of many books including Singing the Soul Back Home, Mabon and the Guardians of Celtic Britain, Psychic Shield, and Sophia, Goddess of Wisdom. I write in the fields of metaphysical non-fiction, poetry, fiction, folkstory and myth, as well as writing books for children. I'm known for my research into the Celtic and ancestral traditions, and the ways in which I provoke exploration of the creative metaphysical field, and how we can apply it to our spiritual path.
With John Matthews, I've written the Encyclopedia of Celtic Wisdom, the Arthurian Tarot and Walkers Between the Worlds. Our latest collaboration is the StoryWorld series of cards and books for storytellers of all ages, which started coming out in 2009 - many more titles to come in 2010.
Although I'm the author of over sixty books, most of my work is oral rather than written. As a teacher of ancestral, shamanic and metaphysical traditions, I go all over the world, working with communities and spiritual institutions. With John Matthews, and my dear colleague Felicity Wombwell, I co-founded The Foundation for Inspirational and Oracular Studies, which is dedicated to the mythic, oracular and sacred arts. Our FiOS shamanic training programme teaches students the ancestral wisdom and healing arts as living sacred traditions in which we still engage.
As a singer, I play Celtic & medieval harps, sruti and psaltery. My CDs include Deep Well in the Wild Wood: Songs from the Place Beyond and the latest, Earth's Own Heart: Songs from the Faery Hills appears in 2010. I was the Pictish language originator and song-writer of Song of the Exile for the 2004 Jerry Bruckheimer film King Arthur and I appear frequently on international radio and television.
For the last 20 years, I've had a shamanic practice in Oxford dedicated to healing soul sickness and ancestral fragmentation. I use my voice to help open the way between the worlds, to sing the soul's essential nature, tracking it through the client's story and bringing it homeward, with the help of spirit allies who have chosen to work with me.
I'm currently working on Rekindling Ancestral Hearths: a book to help us come into good relationship with our ancestors. I believe that being in commuinion with our ancestors and gifting spirits is essential for the wellbeing of our world, and lies at the root of war and peace.
If you want to know more about my courses, events and forthcoming books, you are cordially invited to visit www.hallowquest.org.uk.
For new readers of my work, there is no 'one book' that conveys all that I teach, but the following practical books may be a helpful guide for you to begin somewhere:
Walkers Between Worlds - for a grounding in where our spiritual traditions arose. Singing the Soul Back Home - for a guide on how we come into come relationship with our gifting spirits Celtic Devotional - for a post-denominational way of spiritually acknowledging each day and season Psychic Shield - for those who need a friendly guide to how the universe and ourselves rub off each other and how we can do it more harmoniously
This review is from: The Little Book of Celtic Blessings (Element's Little Book) (Hardcover)
This little book mixes Pagan and Catholic thought as freely as it is found in its native Ireland, and presents it in a beautiful little format just like the little books the Anglicans used to put out... only this is not for Saxons but for Celts, wherever they are. There is a blessing here for everything, from birth, through marriages and other happy times, to life's inevitable strife, to those given for those who have passed. This can also safely be displayed on your coffee table where your strait-laced Baptist grandmother can see it; there is nothing here that will offend her, but we know what it means.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews
This review is from: The Little Book of Celtic Blessings (Element's Little Book) (Hardcover)
I have found this to be an invaluable present to give to friends and family who have reached a milestone in their lives (like reaching 80) or who have been extremely ill or about to die. I'm always at a loss of something suitable to give at these times - and really there's so much comfort in these sayings. Wrap it in gold paper and give to someone special. It's difficult to get hold of, but worth it. I've yet to read the little book of celtic proverbs - may be similar and easier to get hold of.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews