So I had been chatting with a friend the day before the Lenaia, and
 mentioned working on some last minute preparations. She said something 
to the effect of being glad that it was work I was up to doing. It 
hadn't occurred to me in this context (as being optional) and I said so.
  I was running a fever every day of the Anthesteria last year and I was
 still drinking, gathering flowers outside, trying to do devotional 
craft work, ritualizing, feasting, drinking more.  She said that was 
remarkable, but I told her, simply, that I love my god.  And like when 
you are in love with someone, it's never "enough" at any point, it's an 
ongoing process of expression and becoming.  
I've had friends and family commend me for doing things, in spite of my grief -- for attending concerts, going dancing, seeing plays, traveling, celebrating festivals -- and it's been a really difficult thing to verbalize a response to. My emotional response might translate to a strangled yell of "how can I not??" It's not easy, granted, but everything I love demands it. Dionysos demands it. My love for my husband demands it. But not in a demanding way, it's just... these are the things that hold me to this world, that create moments that make life worth it, that put me in touch with who I am and remind me of all that I love and have loved. I have come across more than one unique complication of being a grieving Dionysian; that's one of them. There is no luxury of disengagement.
Onto the festival itself...  I love to see plays on the 
Lenaia; it seems particularly appropriate to this festival.  Although I 
didn't begin ritually until Monday, I went Sunday night to my favorite 
local theater, and it was a nice way to ease into the festival.  The 
play was "Take Me Out" performed by Nearly Naked Theatre.  I'm quite 
glad I saw it in spite of it being about baseball (I have no interest in
 sports whatsoever), but it was appropriate in other ways, with 
its themes of queerness and identity, not to mention a lot of male 
nudity. I didn't expect the actual showers of water to come falling from
 above the stage onto the actors during the shower scene -- pretty cool 
for such a small production!
In the interest of recording my success AND failures, 
I'll share that Sunday night I tried to get some confirmation via 
divination on how to proceed with the festival. I had certain activities
 and ideas in mind, but timing-wise, I wasn't sure about the order.  I 
tried a couple different decks, re-framed the questions a couple ways, 
but was unable to get any remotely clear answers. I even threw the dice a
 couple times to try and get something clearer... nope.  I'm decent at 
giving readings for friends, but I've never been particularly good at 
divining on my own behalf. I was still disappointed, as I had hoped a 
clear purpose and question would have yielded some hints.  I could think
 of 3 reasons that it didn't. 1) I suck. (Lack of skill or fumbled 
the session somehow.) 2) The god did not have a preference. 3)  The 
god wanted me to use my intuition instead.  Whatever the reason, I just 
went with my intuition and hoped for the best, which in the end seemed 
fine.
I ought to mention, too, that a few months ago I 
acquired a new phallos for Dionysos' shrine and ritual use.  The old one
 was clay, but I had been wanting to find a wood one for some time.  (I 
also want to hand-carve one of fig wood, but that will be a project for 
when I encounter a generous and suitable fig tree.)  This one I found on
 Etsy and knew it was perfect...  It is absolutely stunning. It's made 
from rowan wood found by the sea.  I have been anointing it and 
preparing it since before but especially during the Rural Dionysia.
Day 1:  
I
 felt drawn to honor Semele and the nymphs with more emphasis this 
year.  A major aspect of the Lenaia, for me, is about the love, 
reciprocity and mystery in the relationships that Dionysos has with 
women.  So the very first thing I did after setting up the festival 
altar was give an offering to Semele (benzoin incense), read her a hymn,
 and ask for her presence.  Then I made a mindful procession to a park a
 mile away, listening to Daemonia Nymphe the whole time, which 
definitely put me in an other-ish mindset.  For whatever reason I went 
to the park to the east instead of the west, which was a longer walk but
 had me walking towards the moon. When I got to the park I meditated for
 a bit, poured out milk and honey and burned incense for the nymphs, and
 read them a hymn.  The sun was setting while I was there.  Perhaps this
 liminal time added to the strange otherness I was feeling. In spite of 
the natural setting I had a hard time grounding myself.
Back at home, I prepared for the main ritual and 
bathed.  I rubbed myself with flying ointment, had some lotus tincture 
(which subtly intensifies and compliments the effects of wine). The 
ritual outline itself was very similar to last year's, but the 
tone was different this year. The raising of energy over the Liknon was 
more pronounced, more sensual. After the water and wine flowed, I stared
 longer into the mask... into the space beyond the mask, into the god's 
presence and non-presence.  I remember speaking to the mask, although I 
don't remember everything I said.  The music (like last year, on 
shuffle) was more bizarre, maybe less light-hearted, still meaningful --
 it went hand in hand with the sort of emotional roller-coaster I went 
through staring into that mask.  There was an important message there 
that I experienced, although I'm not sure how much I can verbalize it.  (A
 poem, yes, a poem is needed.)  I danced.  I wept heart-wrenchingly one 
moment, smiled the next.  I danced more.  Later I jotted down, 
"absyrdity, absurdity, absurdity, life, life, life".
I feasted afterwards, in a daze of drunkenness and 
post-ritual giddiness, on a variety of locally made and grown foods.  I 
wound down by watching a comedy routine by Bo Burnham that Sannion 
recommended on his blog -- I recommend it as well!
Day 2:
The same club 
that I was lamenting had closed last Lenaia recently re-opened under new
 management and tentatively reinstated a similar, goth-friendly-themed 
night with my favorite local DJ.  So a night of devotional dancing was 
the main order of the evening.  I set my intention that it was all for 
Him, to stir and arouse Him.  The night was a blur, my body translating 
music to movement without thought.  If there were dance-floor 
epiphanies, I don't remember them.  I do remember a moment of gratitude 
in my abilities, in the time I had taken over the years to hone, through
 observation and practice, a style of dance that has become very 
ecstatic, that now flows very easily.  (She can't divine worth a quince,
 but she can dance at least!)
I almost feel sorry for the people who try to engage
 me in conversation when I take a breather. No, I'm not new to the 
scene.  No, I shall not remember your names or faces. I come not for the
 people. I come for the Dance.  
Day 3:
Where I live now, I 
don't have a natural, semi-wild place in walking distance like I used 
to.  (Oh river wash, I miss you.)  But I do live only about 10 miles 
away from the westernmost mountains in the valley, which are the White 
Tanks.  These are the mountains I can see from my bedroom window.  
It proved not very busy on a weekday, and it was not
 difficult to find a little-used trail and then a place not too far off 
the trail where I could sit in privacy.  I was surprised at how green 
things are getting already.  There is the barest carpet of grass 
that has started to come up on the desert floor, perhaps because we 
actually had several days of decent rain last month.  The only plants 
starting to bud any flowers were the jojoba bushes.  Otherwise, no hint 
yet of the riot of wildflowers we'll get in another month or two.
I nestled myself between a palo verde tree and a 
cozy mesquite tree with a lattice of branches arching to the ground.  I 
prepared for some impromptu ritual and more offerings.  My main 
intention was a challenge that had come to me suddenly, at some point 
during the festival -- to bring out the liknon basket and phallos from 
the indoor shrine to the outdoors, in view of the mountains, and to sing to it.
  This was a challenge for me for several reasons.  I don't sing, and with 
the exception of dancing I'm not particularly off-the-cuff spontaneous. 
 But I did and I was, and if I remember the song I wouldn't tell because
 some things are best left to mystery.  Here are some pics I took 
afterwards walking back up the trail.
I am still, a week later, feeling a bit raw, still 
letting everything sink in.  I suspect the feeling will last through 
Anthesteria.  
My heart hurts. 
And yet.
The god I love still loves me.
I am full of doubts, because I am human. Yet in the midst of those moments when Dionysos comes there is no room for doubt.  
Here are some songs:  
The lyrics of this first one, especially, really got to me.



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