At the Field's Edge: A Pagan Podcast
This episode began as a question about inspiration and became something harder to answer: what stands between us and the experiences we most need to receive? It moves through an old Irish story about a salmon and a still pool, a reflection on what ritual actually does, and an honest account of being asked a real question inside a ceremonial space. ---------------------------------------- A NOTE ON SOURCES AND HONESTY The story of the Salmon of Knowledge comes from early Irish mythology, preserved in medieval manuscripts including the Fenian Cycle. The association of the River Boyne with the Well of Segais and the nine hazel trees is well-attested in the source material. The tradition of Awen as a concept in modern Druidry is rooted in Welsh poetic tradition but substantially developed through eighteenth and nineteenth-century revival, particularly through the work of Iolo Morganwg. Where this episode draws on that living tradition rather than the historical record, it does so as practice rather than history. ---------------------------------------- THE SALMON OF KNOWLEDGE The story belongs to the mythological background of Fionn mac Cumhaill, the great hero of the Fenian Cycle. In its most familiar form, Fionn gains wisdom not by catching the salmon himself but by accidentally tasting it while cooking it for his teacher, the poet Finnegas, who had spent seven years waiting at the pool. The wisdom was never meant for Finnegas. It arrived, as it tends to, sideways. ---------------------------------------- AWEN AND THE QUESTION OF INSPIRATION Awen is the Welsh word most commonly translated as inspiration or flowing spirit, central to the Bardic tradition within modern Druidry. Its deeper implication is that creativity is something received rather than produced — which raises the question this episode is really about: what prevents the receiving? The obstacle, as the episode suggests, is rarely the absence of inspiration. It is more often the habit of intercepting it before it arrives. ---------------------------------------- WHAT RITUAL DOES There is a growing body of work in the cognitive science of religion exploring what ritual actually achieves — not in theological terms but in terms of attention, framing, and the suspension of ordinary self-monitoring. The short version: ritual works not by producing outcomes but by producing conditions. It creates a held space in which a different quality of presence becomes possible. Whether or not that framing satisfies, it matches the experience. ---------------------------------------- FURTHER READING AND LISTENING THE MABINOGION, TRANSLATED BY SIONED DAVIES (OXFORD WORLD'S CLASSICS, 2007). THE CLOSEST EQUIVALENT IN WELSH TRADITION TO THE IRISH MYTHOLOGICAL MATERIAL — ESSENTIAL BACKGROUND FOR ANYONE WORKING IN THE BARDIC TRADITION. CELTIC MYTH AND RELIGION BY SHARON PAICE MACLEOD (MCFARLAND, 2011). A SCHOLARLY BUT ACCESSIBLE INTRODUCTION TO THE SOURCE MATERIAL, INCLUDING THE IRISH MYTHOLOGICAL CYCLES. THE ORDER OF BARDS, OVATES AND DRUIDS — DRUIDRY.ORG. THE HOME OF THE TRADITION THIS PODCAST GROWS OUT OF, WITH A SUBSTANTIAL LIBRARY OF ARTICLES ON AWEN, THE BARDIC GRADE, AND RELATED THEMES. ---------------------------------------- THE POOL IS ALWAYS THERE, AND THE SALMON ALWAYS RETURNS — THE QUESTION IS ONLY WHETHER WE ARE WILLING TO MAKE THE SAME JOURNEY.
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