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Summoned contains the stories of six famous women from history,
each on a spiritual path. I have selected specific women who,
through their positive vision, significantly altered their society.
Each woman tells her story from first person point of view as I
imagined it. For each of these women there was a turning point, a
fork in the road, when they were summoned by a power greater than
themselves to take steps that changed the conventional course of
their lives and altered society. Once summoned, each woman felt
there was no turning back, no matter how difficult the path. Once
on the path, each woman was guided step by step. In retrospect, it
all fit into place although when the women were taking each
individual step, they did not perceive the ultimate goal or the
far-reaching beneficial effects their actions would have upon
society. Telling their stories, they reflect back to encourage and
empower the women of today to have the courage to trust their
instincts and intuition, the vehicle through which a higher power
speaks. I, likewise, in the writing of this book, felt summoned and
guided in the steps I took although I had no idea of the ultimate
outcome. Whenever I attempted to do it my way, I met with
resistance, conflict, and confusion. However, when I opened myself
and allowed the words of these women to come through, I moved
forward easily. Traditional biographies are written in third
person, present the facts of their subjects' lives, and provide a
critical analysis. This book is different. While I researched
traditional resources, my intuition told me to use the first person
point of view. Each woman in this book speaks in her own voice and
tells "her story." They come from different walks of life and are
examples of what is possible. The power of these women is the power
of every woman if she has the courage to follow her inner voice,
instead of blindly following the dictates of society. The voices
are stories of hope and possibility for the women of today. Each of
these woman was an ordinary person who accomplished extraordinary
things by trusting and following her inner voice. You can do the
same by following your inner voice. For the last one hundred years,
American society has focused on the production of goods and on
appearance rather than the quality of life and family
relationships. Science and technology have been the twin gods of
the modern world and the focus has been on validating evidence
produced by the experimental method. The natural feminine energies
of intuition, vision, empathy, and creation have been regarded as
unnecessary, sentimental, and extraneous to the progress of the
human race. As we enter the new millennium, these are the very
energies needed to heal our society. The book contains a
bibliography of the books I read so that any woman reading the book
may find information she needs to further investigate, study, and
strengthen her personal awareness of these six women. Women must
break free of the limiting stereotypes that have fettered them and
get into action. Spiritual growth is a process, so let us begin. I
wish to thank Karen Marie Riggio for her participation in creating
the first version of this book that was titled The Woman's Way but
was never published. May the readers of Summoned be instilled with
courage, strength, faith, and fortitude.
The poems in "The Ides of March" were published in literary
journals during the l970's during the Women's Movement, a time of
consciousness raising groups. At that time Toni Ortner who lived in
New York edited and published "Connections" which was supported by
grants from CCLM.. Connections was one of the seminal journals to
publish work just by women. Copies of "Connections" have been
donated to Poet's House for researchers and readers. "The Ides of
March" represents that time of change when women gathered in small
groups to understand that the personal is political. The power of
women working together is extraordinary and necessary to effect
positive change in the world. The Sybil of Delphi was not the only
visionary. It is interesting to note that the majority of poems in
the book were written during that time of year known as the Ides of
March.
“The title poem, “Entering Another Country,” is dedicated to
a male friend who has died. There are exuberant, rich landscapes of
imagined travel, journeys into the visual worlds of Grandma Moses
and Rousseau, and the painful realization that what the poet means
by travel is change and growth, the raw experience of
self-birthing, a process into a place as unknown as the death place
of her friend. Here Ortner connects with her female heritage. It is
a courageous poem of breaking out, and the unfamiliar terrain into
which this takes her almost robs the poet of speech.” —Helen
Cooper, Motheroot Journal
Dream in Pienza was originally published by the Timberline Press in
a hand-set and hand-printed limited edition. The title poem,
written in Rome, sings of the passion of unrequited love in another
century. From birth through resurrection, we sweep our separate
shores for sight of stars. Although the angels may have left us to
our devices, we become the measure of what we believe. This is
God’s gift to each of us.
“The chapbook is about the experience of being in a mental
hospital although it could have been about being in any kind of
prison. The specifics are here, and it is well written.” —Judy
Hogan, Motheroot Journal
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