Ever hopeful for increased prosperity and other cosmic bonbons, I decided to perform the Venus Santeria ritual that Dana wrote about at the Taurus New Moon. It sounded so simple – a piece of bread, a smallish candle, a nickel, a body of running water – but it took me the better part of an afternoon to collect the right size candle, the right shape roll. Finally, I had everything I needed to perform the ritual on the Friday (Venus’ day) after the New Moon.
So just before lunchtime I wrote out my wish list, prepared my little roll, and lit the candle. As it burned down, I followed the ritual’s instructions to pursue pleasant Venusian pastimes. I had my favorite food for lunch, and then I replaced my decaying guitar strings, which seemed appropriately Venusy. Within a couple of hours the candle burned itself out, and I was ready to … well, roll, so to speak. The question was, where to release my Venusian offering into the wild? I had been thinking of taking it over to Coronado and tossing it into the ocean, but then I reread Dana’s article and realized salt water was out of the question.
Then my husband remembered a spot down in the valley where we might be able to get close enough to the bank of the San Diego River to surrender my cosmic muffin therein. We parked in a nearby lot, trundled down the street a piece, and found a likely – if rocky – spot. We picked our way cautiously a few feet down, where I perched on a rock and hurled the bun. At first, I was dismayed; the roll fell just at the edge of a kind of breakwater thing and just sat there for a minute. And then I noticed that the wind was blowing the water toward the breakwater, and despaired of my little offering to Venus getting very far at all.
Then, an intervention: a group of four ducks descended on the roll, pushed it into the river, and began eating it. “That’s… good, right?” I asked my husband. “I mean, nature participating in the ritual, and all.” “Well, think of it this way,” he pointed out. “That roll is going to get a lot further down the river in the stomach of that duck than it would have on its own.”
I am weirdly (among my astrologer friends, anyway) skeptical about magic, which is perhaps why my forays into ritual so often go comically awry. And yet, they have occasionally yielded intriguing results, too. Many years ago, not long before I met my spouse, I performed a New Moon ritual that included writing a list of the qualities I desired in a mate and leaving it under a burning candle. A couple of years later as I was packing up to move to San Diego and get married, I ran across the long-forgotten list. It read like a resume of my husband-to-be.
Likewise, since performing the Santeria ritual a couple of weeks ago, it seems that I’m getting pretty much whatever I ask for (which, believe me when I tell you, is not a normal state of affairs), along with something great that I didn’t even think to ask for – a contract to write a new book.
I don’t know. Maybe it’s all a series of coincidences. But at this Full Moon in Scorpio, the sign of magical, unseen forces and the power of universal support, I find myself dazzled by this generous display of cosmic goodwill. It’s illuminating to contemplate that among the Gods of mythology, Pluto/Hades – ruler of Scorpio – was known as “The Rich One.” In astrology, Scorpio, Pluto, and the 8th house have come to symbolize the world’s riches – “other people’s money,” inheritance and loans, mysterious windfalls. It makes sense to consider that what we put forward from Venus and the second house must eventually find a response from Pluto and the eighth house.
And yet, it’s very hard for some of us to rely upon Scorpio’s cosmic trust fund, the enormous stockpile of goods, services, and enlightenment that sits waiting for us to draw checks against it. I grew up among farmers who worked extraordinarily hard for every dollar, and I definitely absorbed the ethos that hard work alone, not magic, would summon financial security (although none of the hard-working families around us seemed especially prosperous).
So I’ve always worked hard and asked for little. And I think I’m beginning to understand that while preparation is key to receiving the world’s bounty – and hard work is part of that preparation – so is the ability to articulate what you want, and the willingness to claim it. It’s important to use all your gifts to create a life that is a sincere offering to the gods, but prosperity is a dance you must do with the unseen forces of the collective. You can’t achieve prosperity in a vacuum, not unless you own a mint. Prosperity is not a closed system; the money you hope to attract has to come from other people. And the minute you demonstrate a willingness to accept help from the collective, the oppressive weight of trying to earn a living is immediately cut in half. There’s no shame in letting others carry you part of the way along your journey.
So it’s important to prepare the Cosmic Bun of Goodwill and Intention, to do the work of finding the stream, and to drive down to the water to send it on its way. But once you’ve done your part, maybe it’s perfectly all right to let your offering be carried along downstream in the wind, or stuck to the bottom of a boat, or even in the belly of a duck – propelled by collective forces that can carry your wishes far beyond the limited reach of your own, small imagination.
© April Elliott Kent
Great read, April! I also performed the Oshun ritual that Dana wrote about recently! Thanks for the reminder that there is some work to be done when opening yourself to abundance. Looking forward to this month ahead! All the best! -Mers
I was physical, mentally and emotionally abused until the age of 30. In my book,
“A Dream is a Wish The Heart Makes, or if at first you don’t succeed change the rules”, is my spiritual journey that assists people in their quest to receive the abundance of who they are, easily, pleasurable, safely with fun, joy and enthusiasm. Who made the rule that life was hard? Go to my website for Amazon.com to find out more.
A few years ago I followed the instructions by Donna and did the ritual that she republish on the last new moon. I also struggled with the difficulty in finding the right elements, in my case a freshwater sweet river where I could cast my desire. It was very difficult because there is no such place near where I live. I also thought in the sea … After all, Venus was not born of sea foam? It was a ritual for Venus… right? And that’s what I did. What I wished for appeared in full moon following, in the way I had been desired. In conclusion, it’s the intentions that counts and the ability to deliver (not letting go) the request to the universe. The search of certain elements to the ritual is important, but as Donna so well said, we have to be creative because if we can’t choose to lit a candle for the element fire, why don’t we choose instead something to us that means our connection to the fire? The history of the ducks that have eaten the bread and the coin … made me laugh, laugh. The universe is always surprising ways to deliver their blessings.
“…the ability to articulate what you want and the willingness to claim it.” This critical point has been my lifelong challenge. When I was 8, the neighbor boy and I were talking over the back fence. He told me they were going to Disneyland for a vacation and wanted to bring me something, and he asked, “What do you want?” I never could name or claim well, even then, so answered in the “whatever” vernacular of that time. He turned and shouted to his parents, “She wants a ray gun!” I felt stunned by one! Two weeks later, sure enough I was the proud owner of a silver ray gun with lights and whirrs and special powers. Did I have fun with it? Sure, because I am able to find joy in anything. But it left me wondering, how much more wonderful could it have been had I actively participated in the selection of my gift? My playmate chose the best thing he could think of for me, and that alone is delightful! But clearly articulating and claiming remains challenging for me. Thank you for a great article and reminder to be an active creator who can ask as well as receive. — Teresa