INTERVIEW
| RITES OF PASSAGE AND INITIATION
Welcome
to this section of the website. Johanna asked Amrita if she could
interview her for a project she was doing at school. Amrita agreed
if she could interview Johanna. The following is the first part.
Go to Johanna speaks
to read what she had to say.
JOHANNA
INTERVIEWS AMRITA
What does
a Rite of Passage mean to you?
It's been
my way of growing myself up.
It took me
until I was 34 to realise that I wasn't a girl anymore. There
was no one to tell me, or treat me otherwise. I was still being
called a girl by friends and also at work. I was in a powerless
and small place inside and outside myself.
A major life
Passage was when I left England. The following year, 1979, I experienced
a spiritual awakening. Something deep within me was altered. At
the time I wasn't conscious of what it was. So although it drastically
changed my life, I didn't have any point of reference for it.
I didn't
know that these events could be marked with ritual.
Part of me
went through a death. I felt reborn. My whole life and the way
I saw the World had changed.
What is
a Rite of Passage?
A Rite of
Passage marks a transition.
It offers
time away from everyday life and is an opportunity for reassessment,
reevaluation and regeneration.
It's a movement
from one phase of life or way of being, to another. This can be
the transition from child to adult, single person to married,
ending one aspect of a working life, acknowledging another.
These events
can be ritualised and time away can be taken to contemplate their
significance.
Emphasis can
be placed beyond the personal on the big picture.
It is not
just the obtaining of a driver's license or a young man shaving
for the first time though it can be. There is something spiritually
significant about an experience for a Rite of Passage to be truly
that. Something is consciously acknowledged and ritualised.
A true Rite
of Passage or Initiation ceremony involves a number of different
elements.
My definition:
Conscious awareness of what the Passage is. Its significance.
Awareness of where you are at the beginning and then at end of
your Journey.
If you recognise
what has changed, what allowed that to happen and ritualise it
in some way, that helps make the experience real. It brings it
back into your daily life. With understanding about what the liminal
space (time between) is offering, you can be conscious of the
benefit of your Rite of Passage.
A Rite of
Passage allows an embodiment of a spiritual experience in some
way.
An ordinary
event does not usually qualify as a Rite of Passage. What takes
place occurs on many levels: the physical, emotional and spiritual.
If the experience goes deep enough there is an effect on levels
that are also subconscious but which may become conscious at some
future time.
Why did
you start running Rites of Passage camps?
While running
seven-day camps with teenagers it became clear there was something
missing!
Some teenagers
seemed to be begging to be challenged, tested and strengthened.
I sensed there was a way to support young people to move through
adolescence with more understanding and awareness.
A true Rite
of Passage marks a transition. Adolescence is one of our biggest
ones. Once I became aware of this I began facilitating ten-day
Journeys for teenagers.
These were
clearly a Rite of Passage and for some an Initiation process.
A Rite of
Passage matures and readies young people for what they face during
their transition. It also offers a signpost to where they are
headed. It is useful to include Initiation and Ritual as an accepted
part of growing up.
These experiences
are more powerful when there is family and community involvement
and follow-up.
What changes
have you seen in yourself since you have become Initiated?
The little
me was wounded, damaged and unconscious of her spiritual connection.
Every time
I go through any kind of an Initiation I give aspects of myself
back to myself. I am able to stand in my centre and power and
to accept and love myself as woman to a greater extent. I take
risks, live more fully and am more of myself, more and more and
more.
I have Initiated
myself, at times through bleeding (menstruation), by isolating
myself in the bush, by participating in rituals offered by others
and by running my own workshops.
Recently having
gone through the change (menopause) I have gone even deeper into
the process of maturing and reclaiming myself. At times I have
been excruciatingly challenged as I faced my limiting beliefs
and personal demons.
By cutting
away the illusion, the dross, my Essential Nature has become more
visible, this has allowed me to become whole.
By coming
to the edge, jumping off and sometimes reluctantly going into
the void, I have learned about life. This has allowed Spirit to
work and shine through me.
How have
Rites of Passage affected your lifestyle?
They have
brought to my awareness many different levels of consciousness.
When I take
myself away from everyday life, space is created within me for
something new to arise. Often I change direction at these Rites
of Passage times. I am constantly led to create situations that
allow this deepening process to occur. It feels like I've lived
many lives in this one.
I see Rites
of Passage and Initiations as crucial for my spiritual awakening,
deepening and evolving. I then translate this into my work. I
co-create Rites of Passage for others that are appropriate within
this culture.
Could
Rites of Passage be a value system?
Yes. Rites
of Passage and Initiation are an important part of culture.
Through them
people generally and young people in particular, can experience
their sense of place and where they belong in the scheme of things.
There can be confusion, isolation and disconnection for some young
people that could change with appropriate Rites of Passage. They
also support young people to mature. They enable them to take
more responsibility for what's going on within and around them.
With appropriate
Rites of Passage we could support our children to mature both
emotionally and spiritually. We could bring all of our goodness
to each other and the World.
Rites of Passage
assist individuals to connect consciously to their deeper, Essential
Selves and allow an intimate relationship with Spirit and the
Earth.
Are Rites
of Passage like an education?
When a person
is ready and willing, Rites of Passage can be a real education.
They are an invitation into that which is beyond our personal
sense of self. They can be an introduction, consciously to our
Essential Nature and to Spirit.
With children
the question, Who am I?, is not relevant because they just
are. As a young person that kind of question becomes vital. Without
asking appropriate questions young people can remain immature
and disconnected.
Moving through
a Rite of Passage can bring an awareness of our capabilities and
responsibilities. It paints a picture that shows we are conscious
about who we are at this point in our lives and prepares us for
the next phase.
It is helpful
if there are guides - adults who can answer questions wisely.
These people deserve respect. They have gained wisdom from their
experiences of life or from spirit beings or God.
For teenagers
to sit in a circle and ask their questions is a great gift to
them, to the adults present and to me.
No one told
me much that was useful to prepare me for menstruation or my first
sexual experience, or about the challenges of leaving school.
This was an enormous disadvantage and it left me floundering and
vulnerable.
At what
point in life are Rites of Passage most powerful?
Obviously
birth is the first Rite of Passage and then the next is around
seven or eight years old because at this time the child can lose
the natural connection to Spirit. But within the context of moving
into adolescence ten is an age for girls to have a Ritual in preparation
for what's changing in their bodies and what happens when they
menstruate.
The time between
twelve and fifteen for both males and females is the time to acknowledge
the physical, emotional, mental, social and spiritual changes
they face.
Rites of Passage
help teenagers to embrace the Journey towards manhood and womanhood
more easily.
Leaving school,
first sexual experience, changing life directions, marriage, pregnancy,
menopause, retirement and death are all events that are well served
by ceremonies, rituals or Rites of Passage processes. There are
many more.
We are lacking
rituals that weave strong threads. These threads create rich tapestries
to carry us through life into a fulfilled and satisfied spiritual
maturity.
Are Rites
of Passage still relevant?
More so than
ever!
A material
focus in life is no longer enough.
Many people
have moved away from religion and feel disconnected. Others are
bringing meaning into their lives and are reinventing the ways
in which they pray. They are yearning to reconnect with the Sacred.
When what
seems ordinary is celebrated it becomes special.
Absolutely
everything constantly changes.
Life is enriched
when these changes are marked with Ritual.
Amrita offers
her services to groups who wish to organise Rites of Passage camps
for young people. Incorporated into a camp is raining of a team
of volunteer assistants. For further information contact us.
Amrita interviews
Johanna. This talks about special
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