In my journey to rediscover my "wild woman," I've had to initiate some serious soul searching, and self reflection. My first step was to come to terms with the fact that I have lost my "wild woman" and am not where I want to be.
There was a time in my life, where I felt that I was getting to know that "wild woman," and that I was headed in the direction I wanted to go in life. It was at the height of this blog, and I was completely dedicated to my studies and my craft.
Life happened, and got in the way. It's not an excuse, but an explanation. I found myself working job that required so much of me physically and mentally, that I was just too tired to sit and study and write blog posts and practice my craft. I let work become more important than my spirituality, and I couldn't find a happy middle ground for the two to coincide. So I let go of my spirituality. I packed away my altar and my books, I stopped going to my blog, I stopped reading articles and participating in online groups. I stopped wearing my pentagram. I focused on work.
At the time, it just seemed like what had to be done, so I didn't worry much about it. Looking back, I hate it. I hate losing that part of me. I feel that I have lost my sense of direction in life. I stopped making goals, I stopped thinking about the future. I started living day by day, and being overly fluid to whatever happened. I allowed myself to be off track, and it caused a heap of depression I was ignoring.
I was unhappy with my life, but I wasn't ready to face the fact that allowing myself to lose my spirituality, was the cause. No longer was I the witty girl with a pen always in hand. No longer was "Pagan" a huge defining factor of my being, but rather it became more of an afterthought. I was no longer flamboyantly pagan, and although I wasn't in the broom closet, it just seemed that my paganism was easier to just place on a shelf to collect dust.
Most people wouldn't know by looking at me that I am pagan. And although that's not necessarily a bad thing, it is definitely in contrast to where I wanted to be. I wanted to be that "wild woman" I was discovering. That "wild woman" I've lost.
Wild Woman:wīldˈwo͝omən/
noun: a woman who lives authentically, acting with a sense of creativity, passion, and courage, with the aim of expressing herself and ideas freely in order to live her truth
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