Reclaiming my Hand

Fingers in
Pressing down
Can you feel it?
I used to wonder
Why I never allowed myself
To get drunk
Now I know

Fingers in
Pressing down
Can you feel it?
Always wondering why
Never knowing
Hating hospitals
Avoiding surgery

Fingers in
Pressing down
Can you feel it?
Saying you were just
Following orders
Isn’t good enough
Hypocrisy sticks

Fingers in
Pressing down
Can you feel it?
How long was it
Before one of you
Had the Nerve
To take a stand?

Fingers in
Pressing down
Can you feel it?
Each digit is mine
To command
May they rot off your bones
Blacken your name

Fingers in
Pressing down
Can you feel it?
Violation
Is not just a word
Meant for someone
Awake or aware

Fingers in
Pressing down
Can you feel it?
Silence is not Golden
Your voice wilts
It holds no power here
Not anymore

Fingers in
Pressing down
Can you feel it?
I am not some lesson
A text book
Written in flesh
Blood and bone

Fingers in
Pressing down
Can you feel it?
My fingers
Pressing your bones
Tearing your flesh
While you sleep unaware

Fingers in
Pressing down
Can you feel it?
My hand around your throat
Strangling your thoughts
Pressing on your
Peace of mind

Fingers in
Pressing down
Can you feel it?
The panic as you try to wake
Ease yourself from fear
But don’t worry
I’ll be back tomorrow

Fingers in
Pressing down
Can you feel it?

© AM (Xander) Hunter March 2020

About this poem

Enjoying the wonders of creation

I am a song writer, not a singer. Although I do record myself singing, it’s illustrative more than anything else.

I love singing!

The joy that comes from the simple act of air moving through the vocal chords always catches me by surprise. Even on my worst and most negative days singing along to my favourite songs, or just singing the words in my heart, never fails to lift my mood.

Singing is one of the hidden wonders of our world; a sacred act. It connects us in profound ways to the vibrations of life; the beginning and end and renewal of all things.

Singing brings us home.

Writing songs is not something I do. It’s who I am. The songs come as naturally as breathing and are as nourishing as the most exquisite feast. They spiral through my heart, my soul, to my head and give me no peace until I capture them. Sometimes I imagine them as butterflies dancing around my eyes. Their colour, beauty and design so close, so wonderful. And yet if I reach out and grab them it’s so easy to end up with something squashed and twisted beyond all recognition. My songs as I catch them are never the way I hear and see them. My voice is not good enough; I can’t sing that high, or that low; I’m not a soul singer, a jazz singer, or whatever the song calls for.

What I catch is an impression of what I experience in my head.

The other week I was watching the X-Files season one. It was the episode of the Jersey Devil. The wild woman lay dead in the leaves and Mulder, his eyes filling with emotion, looked into the smug face of the Alpha Male who shot her and said ‘why’.

And my head sang:

In the  thrall of our own trauma
We thrive on the pain of others
To numb our own.

It came as a Gregorian Chant, repeated over and over again like a delicate bell tolling the marking of some special occasion. And I kept seeing Mulder’s face, hearing him asking ‘Why’. And thinking of the Wild Woman dead in the leaves. The Man of Authority who shot her. How happy he was to have done so.

I wondered: why those words and that scene – together?

Singing the chant over and over as I moved through the next few days I began to realise why the Wild Woman had to be dead in the leaves. Why Mulder’s face while he asked that question was so haunting. Why it called to me so profoundly and touched me so deeply.

I am Mulder asking myself – that part of me that curbs my passions and corrals my creative imaginings into something ‘acceptable’ – why I am laying dead in the leaves. My wild soul; my true self.

Focusing on the pain of others means I don’t have to focus on my own. Confronting my shadows is a revolutionary act if I can allow myself to feel the pain, and see the beauty; to experience love, truth and wisdom in the darkness as well as in the light. And yet facing that particular mirror is terrifying.

I don’t trust many people – especially myself. Anxiety traces the spider’s web of fears that threaten to splinter my soul. It creeps out of the corners and lurks just out of sight.

And yet that simple, almost childish question of ‘why’ reminds me of how beautiful and freeing compassion and empathy are. I remember that they are my strength. The innocence of the Wild Woman, killed for following her nature and daring to be her true self, contains such courage. It’s the kind of courage that I constantly forget because society continually tells me that I should be something other than who I am.

And I am complicit.

That chant, that scene, is my call to arms to myself to be courageous again. To act with compassion and empathy. To be in tune with my heart as it sings that silvered otherworldly glow fluttering behind my eyes into life.

Following Wombat

Written by AM (Xander) Hunter at EarthSong Witchcamp, Australia 2019

Walking the Earth
Ambling around
Following wombat
Under the ground
Through those roots
And over those stones
Brushing by
Those dry old bones
Honouring the Earth
With every breath
We honour this land
With every step

Walking the Earth
Ambling around
Following wombat
Under the ground
Through those roots
And over those stones
Brushing by
Those dry old bones
Honouring the Earth
With every breath
We honour this land
With every step

Walking the Earth
Ambling around
Following wombat
Under the ground
Through those roots
And over those stones
Brushing by
Those dry old bones
Honouring the Earth
With every breath
We honour this land
With every step

Walking the Earth
Ambling around
Following Wombat
Under the ground

 

Listen to the song
© AM Hunter (Xander) September 2019

Acknowledging Country – DjaDja Wurrung

Dedicated to the people and country of the Dja Dja Wurrung
Written at EarthSong Witchcamp, Victoria Australia

We pay our respects
To the Dja Dja Wurrung
And to their land
We are standing upon
Pay respect to their Elders
Past, present and emerging
And to any other Elder here
It may be concerning

This was and always will be
Aboriginal Land
Sovereignty was never ceded
This is stolen land
So as we stand here together
To practice our Art
We acknowledge this Country
Has a Dja Dja Wurrung heart

Listen to the song
© AM (Xander) Hunter October 2019

About the song as a ritual piece

I am Waiting

I am waiting
For that four leaf clover
I am waiting
For that rabbit foot charm
I am waiting
To come across a lucky fountain
And a golden coin to ‘protect me from harm’

I am waiting
For that bell to keep on tolling
I am waiting
To hear you calling my name
I am waiting
For that door within the mountain
To open on up and let me live again

I am waiting
For your Hell to freeze over
I am waiting
For your Satan to rise
I am waiting
For your hosts of heavenly angels
To rain down justice from the skies

I am waiting
For the Earth to keep on burning
I am waiting
For those oceans to rise
I am waiting
For the World to keep on turning
After Humans have succeeded in their own demise

Listen to the song

© AM (Xander) Hunter September 2019

I am here

By the North
By the South
By the West
By the East
By the North-East
By the Centre
Let us pause
And take a breath here

As above
So below
To and from us
All things flow
As above
So below
To and from us
All things flow

I am here
I am now
I am here
And I am now
I am here
And I am now
I am here
And I am now

I am Is
Was and Shall Be
I and the Land
The Sky and Sea
I am the breath
The blood and bone
I am the spark
That sings me home
I am the Fetch
I am the Core
I am Divine
And so much more
I am the tree
Trunk roots and branches
And I stand here
Fully grounded

I am here
I am now
I am here
And I am now
I am here
And I am now
I am here
And I am now

I am the fire
Of the Devil
I am the ice
Of the Angel
I am the stars
That number seven
I am the sword
That strikes from Heaven
I am the Darkness
I am the Light
I am the Eyes
That watch at night
I am the face
Within the leaves
I am the Voice
Upon the breeze

I am here
I am now
I am here
And I am now
I am here
And I am now
I am here
And I am now

By the North
By the South
By the West
By the East
By the North East
By the Centre
Let us pause
And take a breath here

As above
So below
To and from us
All things flow
As above
So below
To and from us
All things flow

To and from us
All things flow.

 

Listen to the song

© AM (Xander) Hunter August 2019

Weaving Warding Song

I weave my will into this charm
I weave my will into this charm
I weave my will into this charm
It shall protect me from all harm

I weave my will with this red thread
I weave my will with this red thread
I weave my will with this red thread
Malicious ones trap in my web

I weave my will with breath and bone
I weave my will with breath and bone
I weave my will with breath and bone
Protect this hearth protect this home

Listen to this song

 
© AM Hunter 2019

My Dark Lover

He beckons to me
My Dark Lover
In secret whispers
And hidden sighs
Come to me
My broken beauty
Dance with me
On shattered lives
His voice is deep
And full of longing
Like sunset light
Among darkened trees
Fingers reaching
Pale shards of bone
Piercing skin
Like tattered leaves
And I lay wrapped
In his silken blackness
Parted lips wait
To breathe their last
Till teasing smiles
Crack me open
Silvered tears
Break my fast
And I sigh
One long breath out
A holy prayer
To he who waits
For me to grasp
His outstretched hand
And dance the dance
Of Wyrd and Fate

© AM Hunter – May 2019

About the poem

Life Between the Veils; a reflection

My life is spent between the veils of the seen world and the unseen worlds. What I mean by that is that I see and need to navigate both, often at the same time.

The world shimmers around me as a I walk, sometimes quite vividly and others barely noticeable. But the veil is always there.

In my workplace the walls of the corridor become the walls of my Patron Deity’s temple. I see the stone, smell the incense, trace the designs with my mind’s eye as they shimmer in the torchlight before blinking back to being office walls.

Driving means being very aware of the road in the here and now and of other traffic, despite perhaps seeing houses change to forest with faces staring out from behind the trees. Grounding and aligning are practices that I do daily; sometimes several times each day. I use my tools to help with this navigation so that I remain aware of all worlds.

Navigating the worlds as a Seer (which is how I choose to label myself) has its difficulties.

Raised in a Western society that views the unseen as imagination or as madness, I was fortunate to have people around me who patted me on the head and attributed my difference to the former. Even so, I learned to be careful about engaging with the unseen in ways that might upset the others around me. I could not disguise the fact that I was ‘different’. Nor could I escape the consequences.

I remember vividly my first ‘vision’, which happened when I was a teenager on a train packed with my fellow class mates. We’d been on a field trip, it was late and dark outside, and I was tired. I remember drifting in a way that I had developed instinctively during class-time when I had to pretend that I was there when I really wasn’t. Eyes open, but unfocussed, picking a detail to stare at and then look beyond.

The air shifted.

Picture book Jesus was there before me, in white, with black neat beard and long black hair. He was very bright and shinning with an inner radiance. Around him the sky was rose coloured. He smiled at me and held out his hand. I was filled with such indescribable joy that it overwhelmed me. I held out my hand and reached toward him. We spiralled around each other as the sky changed colour from rose to blue. The light became stronger.

I blinked.

And returned to a sea of faces staring at me.

It was many years before I confessed my vision to anyone. I held it close. I did not identify strongly as Christian – my family were not church-goers, at least not at that time, and I really only knew some vague stories about Christmas and Easter.

I was careful about when and where I decided to drift from that moment on.

To say ‘I hear voices’ or even ‘I see things’ is to be open to ridicule and be in danger of being designated ‘looney-tunes’ by the others. There was a hospice for such people near to where I grew up, and a strong negative association with being assigned that particular label. So I allowed others to perceive me as something of a dreamer, someone who may not be ‘all there’ but was largely non-threatening; a little naïve, and a little stupid.

I made myself invisible.

I shackled myself and told myself that the things I saw and heard were not to be noticed in any ‘real’ sense; they were characters in a story I was writing that had become a little more vivid (as story characters often do).

I began to write.

I am no longer shackled, and have embraced my true nature. Being able to see, to sense, to feel is a gift, and like many gifts, one that is not always wanted. But it comes with responsibility and purpose. It can be grown or ignored (at your peril, usually). I chose to grow mine. I have never regretted that decision. Sometimes the gift that is not wanted becomes the one you most prize.

Zooming forward in time to the present, I know that it was my Fetch-mate and not ‘Jesus’ who held out his hand to me. Jesus was just a mask he wore because it was a spirit being that my brain had words for.

A way of engaging.

A doorway, if you like, to which I am a key.

 
© AM Hunter February 2019