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"...this
should be welcome reading for neo-pagans seeking to
spice up their spirituality with something a little
off-beat."
~Publisher's Weekly |
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"Kynes
has quite obviously put a lot of work, time, and love
into this book. It is an excellent guide to the layout
of your altar-–not necessarily the specific tools
and their uses, but the actual altar itself.... Kynes'
writing style is excellent, inviting and easy to read,
yet informative."
~FacingNorth.Net
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About Your Altar
Slowing
down and taking time for meditation can be a life-changing
experience, but getting from here to there may seem too difficult
unless you use the right tool. That tool is simply an altar.
While it is standard practice to use an altar for focus, Your
Altar presents a new way to utilize it as an integral
meditation technique.
Your
Altar is a guide for using a meditation altar as a tool
for self-exploration and growth. Like a labyrinth, an altar
can serve as a map that leads the mind through a pre-determined
flow for a unique form of meditative practice. Dividing the
altar top into multiple sections and using them to focus a
flow of thoughts allows the altar to function as a powerful
and symbolic tool not unlike a Buddhist mandala (sacred circles),
classical Christian icons and Hindu yantras.
Creating
an altar using the power of numbers allows you to achieve
spiritual stillness in a personally meaningful way. The numbers
one through nine carry profound symbolic history and significance.
By dividiing your altar into a certain number of parts, you
can harness a powerful energy and apply it to your life.
The
purpose of this book is to introduce different altar setups/matrices
that call on the power of numerical patterns to help the reader
explore inner and outer (beyond one’s self) space. However,
it’s not so much about what and how you place things
on an altar, but how you use the energy.
Because
of the energies that converge, an altar is not a passive space—there
is constant interaction that leads from the psyche to the
soul. This meeting point of spiritual and mundane energies
can provide an orientation or anchor in the world—a
place to hold onto and come back to for personal strength
and exploration.
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Reviews
Publisher's
Weekly – October 15,
2007
Readers
interested in this volume from Kynes (Year of Ritual, etc.)
would do well to pay attention to the subtitle, as the title
is somewhat misleading. The book is not a comprehensive overview
of home altars, but a guide to using an altar space for meditation.
The thrust of the book is that an altar is like "a game
board"—through different arrangements of objects,
practitioners can prepare themselves for varying states of
reflection. For example, Kynes describes how an altar space
can be divided into three parts, with each part representing
one of the divine triplets from an ancient spiritual tradition
(e.g. Brahma, Vishnu, and Shiva from Hinduism or Fotla, Erin,
and Banba from the Irish Celtic tradition). She then suggests
what to place on the altar for different effects. A three-part
arrangement can be used to rebalance energies or as an aid
for decision-making. In all, Kynes outlines nine basic altar
compositions and gives hints for alternatives in each main
category. While some may be annoyed by Kynes's use of the
second person throughout the book, this should be welcome
reading for neo-pagans seeking to spice up their spirituality
with something a little off-beat.
~
FacingNorth.net
Review
by Lupa
I
sometimes imagine an alternate world where there are huge
libraries dedicated to magical tomes of all sorts. Not only
will you find general texts, but you'll find thorough books
on very specific topics.
It's
sort of like walking into Hogwarts or a similar fantasy-based
setting, and finding books on the care of magical creatures,
entire expositions on the best use of the wand, and histories
of incredibly obscure sects.
While
I am firmly planted in this reality, I have been delighted
to see a rising number of books that go into detail about
specific practical pagan topics, rather than "a chapter
on this, a chapter on that" generalities. "Your
Altar" is a superb, innovative guide to a rather deceptively
simple idea: how to set up your altar.
Kynes
has quite obviously put a lot of work, time, and love into
this book. It is an excellent guide to the layout of your
altar--not necessarily the specific tools and their uses,
but the actual altar itself. She explains the theory and practice
behind altar setups involving anywhere from one to nine sections.
It's a wonderfully cosmopolitan book as well, drawing from
neopagan, Buddhist, Christian and other religious traditions
to give examples of how the individual practitioner may set
up hir sacred working space. Rather than simply giving us
a bunch of correspondences, Kynes explains why each layout
is important, and what its appeal is. It's truly thorough,
yet streamlined.
Kynes'
writing style is excellent, inviting and easy to read, yet
informative. And I was incredibly pleased to see a nice selection
of footnote citations showing exactly where she got certain
pieces of information from her research, rather than just
leaving us with a bibliography and a pile of questions. She's
done her work, and it shows.
Overall,
I found this to be an excellent read--and I admit, I'm a tough
one to impress! Whether you're a newbie just getting started,
or a seasoned witch or mage looking for new ideas for your
altar space, give this book a try.
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Interviews
about the book
Llewellyn's
Monthly e-magazine – December 2007
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