Hope you feel better! Questions! Where do you see Gaelic Polytheism in five, ten and fifty years from now, based on what you truly believe it will become and what you dream it to be? What do you like about the South? What is your specific "religious" background and practice in?
Thank you! I’ve warded stuff off for like a month now, so it was probably about time somethin got through, lol.
1) Where do I see Gaelic Polytheism in 5 years?
I think I see it continuing to grow similar to how it is growin now. Some people come in, some people leave, but overall a positive population increase. I think I see more of us fallin into the beginnings of broader leadership roles as our practices grow, as we’ve been doin this longer, and as new folks come in and find us for answers. But in 5 years, I don’t see things lookin just too much different, just with some new faces.
In 10 years, I think we’ll start to see some changes. In 10 years, I think some of us will have had kids. Some of us will have completed Ph.D.s, some of us will have finally solidified a practice that truly works for us. Overall, I think a lot of the community will still be online, but I also think we’ll start seein the beginning physical spaces. I think some of us will start to emerge as early clergy and/or leaders, authors, ritualists. I think a lot of this can and will be facilitated through existing non-GP groups like UU Pagan groups (or ADFs, etc.) that…splinter sounds negative, but carve out spaces for people on specific Pagan paths rather than what I see now in eclectic groups or various traditions all mish-mashed together out of necessity.
At this point, this is all what I dream would be reality. There would be some sort of established clergy. Probably only a few, maybe in Boston, LA, Atlanta, Dallas, and/or Chicago. It would still be young and very regional. But there would be concrete spaces. Not literally concrete, maybe, but physical spaces. There would be a priest or 2 that held rituals in these locations. People could travel there to get married or have the regional clergy come to them. Maybe some sort of donation system so that a lot of the cost could be covered by those that could afford it and were local to the clergy so that those living farther away wouldn’t have to shoulder as much of the burden. Eventually even having large ritual gatherings, planting new community centers where the need arose. I think these…we’ll call em temples for now cause I frankly like the grandeur of the word, could help with aspects of local cultus, celebrating the holidays on the “calendar date” along with the rest of the world (I’m also imagining this globally in the background), but also hosting more locally appropriate celebrations in addition. But maybe that’s just a pipe dream.
What do I like about the South?
What don’t I like? lol, Obviously, every region has its issues. Poverty here is a big one and it, IMO, is the root of the vast majority of our societal ills. But I love so much here. I love the climate and how warm it usually is (this week can go to hell, tbh). I love how friendly people generally are. And I know, people roll their eyes when they hear that, but honestly, the people here are nice most of the time. I’ve been invited into the home of a white woman my grandmother’s age when I was lost in rural Western Kentucky. I’ve made friends with the little old Black ladies while in the line at the grocery store in North Memphis who told me about the folk magic they learned from their grandmothers. I wandered onto strangers’ property in Appalachia and been met with a curious glance, but not much more than a “you lost?” Bear in mind that I’m a 6′1″ broad, pierced, tattooed, long mohawked, beared man. Cleary, some of my experiences also carry the white privilege I have, but I’ve met far more loving people than I ever have hatemongers. They’re certainly here, but as I’ve long said, hospitality is a part of Southern culture and somethin that I think will be the cornerstone of truly changing things for the better. But as much as anything, it’s home and I’ll be damned if I leave because of someone else.
I was raised Southern Baptist in a megachurch with about 30,000 people. It was an evangelical church and one where I was routinely told I was defective and unworthy of love. It lead to a lot of mental health issues that I still struggle with today, though less than I used to, and even once when my parents tried to exorcise me. It’s a little comical now, but it left me soooo many scars. I’d quit bein Christian, though I was scared to admit it, by the time I was 16 and when I left for college at 18, I jumped head first into Wicca, made some mistakes, but all of them lead me to where I am today. Through every attempt that wasn’t right for me, I recalibrated my trajectory, and here we are, 12+ years later.
Thanks for some truly excellent questions, @beardedboggan!!!