 |

Sylvan Thorncraft ~ Late
Summer 2006
Watching
Bear in the wild can teach us many lessons. As we move into deeper
relationship she may also visit our dreams to share her wisdom. Humans
have been involved in this sort of relationship with Bear since ancient
times. The following is an expression of what has resonated with me
from Bear’s teachings.
Sharing time in
the woods with Bear has been a rare and fleeting experience for me, a
moment of silent black, gliding through green, a mother and two cubs.
She steady and sure, babies hurrying tumbling along be-hind. Bear has
always represented maternal devotion and ferocity when need be, common
knowledge telling us that one of the worst places to find oneself is
between a bear mother and her cubs. Hundreds of ancient figurines
depicting the bear as mother or nurse, have been found in central
Bulgaria, implying that these people understood how Bear embodied the
Goddess’ ability to protect and care for young ones, the divine
children. The goddess Artemis is sometimes associated with Bear, in fact
her companion Callisto was sent into the heavens to
become Ursa Major, one of the most recognizable stellar constellations.
This group of stars was seen as a great bear by ancient peoples around
the Northern Hemi-sphere, where we can still watch her through the
seasons circling Ursa Minor, her cub, who holds the jewel of our pole
star, Polaris. Artemis is the woman of the wild places, the wilderness,
whole unto herself. Like the ancient Bear Mothers, she is a protector
women in childbirth, of children and creatures of the forest. She is
also the huntress, bringing death when appropriate as well as nurturing
life.
The ancient people
of Ireland and Brittan celebrated the great mother bear goddess Artha
and her womb like caves in the earth by building their own caves,
chambered
passage tombs in the earth, ritual places used during the mysteries
about death and rebirth, a place where cremated ancestral remains
commingled in large, bowl shaped, stone vessels. The inner walls of the
tombs were often carved with spiraling and looping lines, a bit more
elaborate than the marks the giant cave bears of Europe during the
Pleistocene era made on the walls of their caves. These ancient bears
used their caves for many purposes, and may have returned to them to
die, some still have the remains of many generations of bear tucked into
them. Bear’s annual disappearance into the earth in autumn and
emergence from the womb of the earth in spring brought them wisdom about
the mysteries of renewal and birth, like serpent shedding its skin.
Female bears give birth in their caves during the depths of their winter
sleep. This time of sleep in the underworld is a place to access our
deep, fertile, creative selves, manifesting and nurturing our creations
in the safety of our cave as they grow and strengthen. Bear’s deep
sleep connects her to the watery realm of dream, intuition and prophecy,
bringing messages from spirit and teaching us to trust our own deep
knowing.
Before her long
winter sleep Bear begins feasting on the late summer bount y,
the sweet fruits of the season. She eats to put on rich layers of fat
to sustain her for the season to come. I often think of bear in the
late summer and during harvest, the joy of storing up what nourishes me,
refining and cooking down the richness of the past season’s experiences
as I tuck things in for winter. Most bear live in environments that
allow them to be omnivores, often consuming a surprising amount of plant
material for such a large creature. The Polar Bear is the only one that
consumes mostly meat, but then again, so do the native people that share
that terrain, as that’s what is available to eat there.
Since Bear is able
to walk on her hind legs she was considered to be close kin to humans by
many Native American traditions. Bear reminds us of our natural and
primal selves, the wildness we all carry within. Like Artemis, Bear
reminds us to tap into that wild instinct, our inner knowing, using all
our senses to guide us as we move through the world.
Return to Articles
|
 |