NOTES -  WINDSTAR SEASON
As Utilized by the 5 Mt System of Miryai
In the Living Gods, Let the hallowed Light of Transcendant Truth be praised. Let the Sweet Mystery of Miryai awaken in the heart of hearts.


SEASONAL OVERVIEW


 Preface

The five divisions—Persona (Nile Civilization), Ego (Ptolemaic Egypt), Shadow (Pagan/Celtic/Masonic Europe), Anima (Monastic Europe), and Self (Jungian)—span ancient Egyptian, Gnostic, European esoteric, and modern psychological traditions, each with three historical movements rooted in verifiable histories and practices. Evolving from early cults to 20thcentury psychology, they emphasize innerouter unity through rituals like fire ceremonies, meditations like scrying, and introspections like active imagination, reflecting a shared pursuit of transformation and awareness. Despite distinct paths, they converge on exploring consciousness, though challenges like historical gaps, doctrinal complexity, and modern relevance persist.



INTRODUCTION

The Summer Session is designed to encorporate useful concepts and practices from the African and European culture, especially the Gnostic and Jungian tradition. Its most valuable contribution is in psychological understandings and in the principle of archetypes.

This season highlights the Jungian and Gnostic Path, and to some extent the Carmelite tradition, during its 73 day period. The goal of Jungianism is individualization, and of balancing the ego with the unconscious Self. This goal is addressed in various ways during this Summer period with a focus on making each of us more aware of our Shadow, Persona, Ego, Anima and Self during its five fortnight periods. (This season observes fasts at the end of each quarter moon, every seventh day, and during dark moons)
 Outro

These fifteen expressions share strengths in unifying inner and outer worlds through transformative practices—rituals, meditations, introspection—rooted in exploring consciousness, offering paths to selfawareness via symbolic and mystical means. The SetOsiris Cult’s duality lacks historical specificity; Pistis Sophia’s complexity limits accessibility; Masonic esotericism risks elitism; Teresa’s mysticism challenges practicality; Jung’s subjectivity resists universal application. Yet, their diverse approaches—from ancient Egypt to modern psychology—collectively enrich the human quest for meaning.

Contrasts of various Paths and Seasonal Focus
 
 

Peace to all....
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