This post was originally published in May 2016 -- but since Glispa is visiting us again via the Oracle this week, it's worth revisiting!

As I've often said before, one of the things I appreciate most about The Goddess Inspiration Oracle by Kris Waldherr -- and one of the reasons its a key tool in my practice -- is how multicultural it is. I appreciate the inclusion of indigenous Goddesses from around the world alongside the more familiar European Goddesses. And I also appreciate that these Goddesses are never drawn in a stereotypical or fetishized way, and their stories are treated with the appropriate respect and reverence. I have learned so much about Goddesses from traditions with which I was largely or wholly unfamiliar. And while I realize that the cultures these figures hail from might see them as Goddesses in the same sense of the word that I use, I appreciate that they are included alongside all these other powerful female figures.

This week's Goddess is one such Goddess -- Glispa, the Navajo/Dine Goddess of Healing and Transformation. It is said that Glispa undertook a dangerous journey to the land of the Snake People, who taught her the sacred Hozoni healing chant, which she brought back to the Dine. (One lovely version of her story can be found here.) In undertaking her journey and in learning these healing songs with the Snake (or Serpent) People, she represents not only healing but transformation. Just as snakes are constantly shedding their skin and transforming, Glispa reminds us that we can grow, heal, and transform into something new. That when we have outgrown old patterns, old hurts, old beliefs, we can shed them -- not painlessly and not easily, but shed them we can.

I love Glispa's message to use music to access our own healing powers. Music has been central to my own spiritual practice for many years. I tell people that my real religion is rock n roll, and you'll find me playing Tool or Patty Griffin in my circles as often (or more) as you'll find me playing overtly Pagan music. Music has been there for me at times when nothing else could soothe, nothing else could speak for or to me. And so the idea of using music to access healing is one that is simultaneously intriguing and familiar.

Some questions I'll work with as a sing with Glispa this week, and which you might also ponder:

What music makes me feel most whole?

What do I want to heal?

What music might I use to start that healing?

What do I wish to transform?

How might I used music as a catalyst for that transformation?

How can I bring more music into my life?