I took a closer look at my desire for “spiritual purification.” Here’s what I discovered.
In response to the events of this past year, I’ve been reexamining many aspects of my spirituality. This is part 3 in a series about old beliefs and practices that I’ve decided to clarify and shift. You can read part 1 here and part 2 here.
In Radical Acceptance, Tara Brach writes, “Those who feel plagued by not being good enough are often drawn to idealistic worldviews that offer the possibility of purifying and transcending a flawed nature.”
When I first read that sentence, I recognized myself.
“Spiritual purification” has been an obsession of mine for many years. I’ve written lots of blog posts and created lots of videos about it. I’ve literally written entire books about it. I’m talking about things like space clearing, aura cleansing, and purifying crystals and other objects with sunlight, sage, salt, and running water.
I still find value in these things. But I see them differently now.
Or, rather, I see myself differently. And the world.
Reading that sentence in Radical Acceptance – “Those who feel plagued by not being good enough are often drawn to idealistic worldviews that offer the possibility of purifying and transcending a flawed nature” – helped me realize that often, beneath my desire to purify, was the belief that I was toxic. And that the world was toxic. That there were scary spiritual cooties floating around that I needed to combat. Maybe even that there were bad or lonely spirits that wanted to attach to me and sap my energy. Those were sort of my unspoken, unexamined assumptions.
You don’t just leave a religion, it turns out. That religion stays with you. It shapes you.
Luckily, its power over you does appear to fade over time. But it takes a while.
In the article, Dr. David Ludden explains,
Early childhood is the formative period in which we learn our language and culture, and our personality and attitudes are largely shaped during this time as well. Even when we intentionally reject the religious teachings of our childhood, we’re still greatly influenced by [its] implicit attitudes…
As I’ve written about before, my childhood experience with religion led me to live in fear of satanic or demonic possession. (It didn’t help that I grew up in the 1980s, during what’s now known as the satanic panic.)
And, as you may know if you’ve followed my work, I am a survivor of childhood sexual abuse. So it’s not too difficult to see why I might have believed myself to be toxic, or why I would have been drawn to the idea of spiritual purification.
As I’ve also written about previously (last week and the week before), the pandemic inspired me to look more deeply and attentively at my spiritual beliefs and practices; to analyze and question them. But even before the pandemic, one day I was listening to an old Doreen Virtue meditation (yes, I still listened to her meditations every once in a while, even after she converted to Christianity), and I remember being somewhat taken aback when I heard these words:
Very often, psychic attack takes on an etheric form that looks like and feels like daggers, arrows, swords, and other instruments of attack. And as Michael magnetically lifts swords, arrows, daggers, and other instruments of attack out of your back, out of your shoulders, out of your neck, head, and other parts of your body, feel your muscles being refreshed.
At that point, it had been a while since I had heard a Doreen Virtue meditation, or since I had been in contact with her work at all. I was surprised to her her say that we may be psychically attacked with energetic weapons “very often,” to the point where we would need to regularly perform a meditation remove them. But then I looked back on all the times I listened to her radio show and remembered how frequently she mentioned things like “earthbound spirits” and the danger of them “attaching to your aura” so they could “drain your energy.”
Reflecting on this now, I can see that one reason I was drawn to Doreen’s work (and other teachings like it) was because it put words to what I was already afraid of – invisible spiritual toxins and spiritual attack – and gave me advice about how to protect myself from it.
And, actually, I think it helped! Over time, all that spiritual cleansing helped me to feel more powerful and less afraid. Perhaps, as I repeatedly visualized myself as spiritually clear, whole, and protected, I slowly began to believe myself to actually be that way.
Still, it would have been valuable if someone had said to me, early on, “When you engage in any kind of spiritual purification work, remember that you are not inherently toxic. Let purification (space clearing, aura cleansing, etc) be an act of self-compassion and self-care, rather than a way of trying to make yourself better, or or more worthy of love, or more deserving of wonderful things.”
Similarly, I remember judging myself if I got sick, or ran into hardship. I would think, “I must not have purified myself enough. My vibration must not be positive enough. Otherwise, why would this be happening to me?”
Again, that’s changed over the years. As I wrote about in this blog post, I now realize that was a form of victim blaming. Even though the victim I was blaming was myself.
So, why did the past year bring all of this into greater focus? Because QAnon.
The particular brand of confusion we call QAnon – which has unfortunately claimed so many new agers – has clearly demonstrated the problem with holding a worldview that includes an invisible spiritual battle between pure and impure, also known as good and evil.
While I like to think my personal obsession with purification did not veer into ableism, racism, or anti-semitism, this is not the case with the QAnon worldview. (Much of QAnon’s anti-vax, anti-mask rhetoric is ableist. As in, if you’ve eaten pure enough food and practiced pure enough spirituality, the virus can’t hurt you. And you need look no further than the Capitol insurrection to see the links between QAnon, racism, and anti-semitism.)
Like so many of you, I was initially shocked to learn of the QAnon/new age connection. But it turns out the new age has had this issue before.
In Occult America: White House Seances, Ouija Circles, Masons, and the Secret Mystic History of Our Nation, author Mitch Horowitz writes about a wildly popular article from 1928 called “Seven Minutes in Eternity,” written by author William Dudley Pelley about his reported near death experience, where he met
…the “Spiritual Mentors” who tutored him, as they would many times in the years ahead, on karma, reincarnation, and the realities of the afterlife.
…Revived by the “cool, steadying pressure of [the Mentors’] hands,” the nude Pelley was gently directed to bathe in a soothing marble pool. The magical waters seemed to remove his sense of nakedness, and he then strolled through the illuminated Roman porticos of the Higher Realm, where he encountered “saintly, attractive, magnetic folk…no misfits, no tense countenances, no sour leers, no preoccupied brusqueness or physical handicap.”
(Note that first, upon entering this rarified realm, he was spiritually purified. Then, he noticed that everyone he saw there fit his personal description of healthy and attractive.)
The article was a huge hit. Pelley popularized “the near death experience” and became a new age superstar. Soon, however, he leveraged his his metaphysical platform to become
one of the nation’s most notorious hate leaders: an avid admirer of Hitler, the organizer of America’s prototype Neo-Nazi order, a literary influence on the anti-semitism of poet Ezra Pound, and [still] a popular writer who reported receiving “hyper dimensional instruction” from “Spiritual Mentors.”
…By 1933, acting under “clairaudient” instructions from his cosmic Mentors, Pelley started the Silver Shirts, a paramilitary neo-Nazi order that served as a template for some of the worst hate groups of the twentieth century.
Still later in life, after serving time in prison for spreading conspiracy theories about the US government, Pelley created
a massive output of channeled writings from his higher messengers, which he called the Soulcraft teachings…[He] crafted an astral-Spiritualist religion based on cosmic messages from interstellar guides.
I was surprised to learn that Guy and Edna Ballard, founders of the I AM Temple (which helped popularize the ascended master Saint Germain and his purifying violet flame) were greatly inspired by William Dudley Pelley’s article. And, they saw their spiritual mission as intrinsically patriotic. According to the podcast Cults, they believed they were protecting the United States through their spiritual work.
I was also surprised to learn that the prolific new age author Elizabeth Clare Prophet – author of such books as How to Work with Angels and Violet Flame: Alchemy for Personal Change – spouted conspiracy theories that inspired extremist behavior. According to Mitch Horowitz, while she led the Church Universal and Triumphant in the 1980s, “church members dug an elaborate network of underground chambers near Yellowstone National Park, stockpiled weapons and provisions, and awaited American-Soviet nuclear armageddon.”
It was George Santayana who said, “Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.”
I certainly didn’t remember that time a new age guru founded a seminal hate group.
I also didn’t remember that time a couple founded a new age church with a mission that included spiritually protecting the United States.
And I most definitely didn’t remember that time a new age author instructed her followers to stockpile weapons and hide underground to protect themselves from an imaginary threat.
And I know a lot of you didn’t either.
So QAnon showed up in our spiritual community and many of us were blindsided.
But now, while we probably don’t remember these QAnon foreshadows firsthand, at least we know about them. And we may even have a little insight into how they came to be.
Perhaps unhealed trauma, lending itself to an unexamined sense of toxicity and unworthiness, was at the root.
And perhaps the “religious residue” of the good versus evil paradigm was also playing a role.
So, moving forward, when we engage in spiritual purification work, I propose that we first remember that we are not inherently toxic.
Next, I suggest that we remind ourselves that the good verses evil paradigm (just another way of saying the pure verses impure paradigm) is not only overly simplistic, but it’s also divisive. It flows right into the us versus them paradigm: the vilification of the other.
Finally, I think it would be valuable to ask ourselves: what exactly are we purifying? Why are we doing this? What is the intention? If we want to reset our personal energy, or open up to a new way of being out of compassion and love for ourselves and the world, great. If you want to reset the energy of a crystal after you buy it at the store or use it in another ritual, fantastic. If you want to clear the energy in your home after you and your partner have a fight, or just to get energy moving in a positive direction, fabulous.
But if what you really want is to get the cooties out – to unconsciously strive to make yourself feel more worthy or deserving, to attempt to feel less inherently toxic, or to get rid of etheric arrows or knives that seem to attach to you “very often” – it’s time for some loving shadow work. Bring those underlying, disempowering perspectives out into the light of conscious awareness so you can dissolve them and build something new, more loving, and more true.
So in some cases, you’ll be incorporating another dynamic of cleansing: releasing the reasons you thought you needed cleansing in the first place.
***
I hope it’s clear that I’m writing this series of posts not because I suddenly dislike metaphysical spirituality and want to dismantle it, but because I care about it so very passionately. There actually is a baby in all that dirty bathwater, and I want to get it out of there.
Did this post resonate with you, or bring up any thoughts you’d like to share? I’d love for you to speak up in the comment section below.
Butterweed says
The very symbol of the witch is a broom, as if our Sisyphean task is to cleanse away the continual buildup of spiritual gunk.
I have some OCD tendencies around cleaning (my therapist told me this) and I can tell you, it is an illusion – it will NEVER be clean enough to make all the anxieties go away. You must relax FIRST – that is, address your sense of unworthiness, and THEN, from that place, you may clean, not to achieve worthiness or peace, but simply because the dishes need washing.
CactusWitch says
Tess, I really love your recent series of articles. I’ve also experienced a great reexamination and shift in my viewpoints over this past year. After some renovations in my home that forced me to clear things out, I realized that over half my books no longer resonate with me and will be donated (keeping yours, though!). I’ve also experienced several friends and acquaintances in the new age community getting swallowed up by Qanon and its theories and it’s painful to realize that I no longer recognize them. Thank you for your thoughtful and insightful posts on these topics.
Samuel Owens says
And as far as conspiracy theories are concerned. I had a friend tell me a deep intimate truth about things and then showed me a poster of a bunch of conspiracy theories in a church who didn’t know that truth.
It then occurred to me and stuck with me that conspiracy theories is just a signal that whatever I might be doing is incoherent with the way things are if my mind ever decided to go there. Connection to real natural laws within myself and the world is the only way to both not be at the mercy of other people’s “secret knowledge” and to keep my sanity at the same time.
Samuel Owens says
Fear and hatred as motivating forces are logically incoherent with faith in love, and that’s why a lot of these spiritual journeys are often doomed to failure before they’d even begin. People try to “hitch their wagon” to the “right group” out of “humility” and end up dooming their own cause before it even got out the door.
Samuel Owens says
I liked this article. I like how a lot of that dirty water you were discussing might be something that might need to be cleaned, but it isn’t something that can be cleaned by anyone who WANTS TO CLEAN IT. Like the person who just wants to get ride of all dirt so as to justify some kind of imaginary righteousness. I personally feel that all individual human beings are perfect, but are often at the mercy of constantly adjusting natural laws.
The only person who could clean that dirty water is someone who could do it compassionately with the faith that their humanity is beautiful and finding common ground among other people already attached to that dirt.
It’s not that a lot of the people you referred to were wrong in their observations, in that some spiritual cleansing is often a test of faith and connection to the divine that a vaccine too soon might prevent, but the structure of a group trying to surround themselves and circle their wagons and look for someone to blame would pollute their own chances for success by engaging a situation that requires love and faith and solitude with fear and hatred.
I personally believe that not only is that kind of spiritual racism wrong, but that by not venting the beautiful light that some imagine to be protecting them by hiding in fear and suspicion, they might be creating a hell because of cowardice and incoherence with the world.
And so a lot of well meaning people who were born in racist energy (I don’t consider anyone to be inherently “racist,” not only is that not compassionate, but that would just ignore the fact that some people are born into water they didn’t have a choice but to be born into) would create a hell of their own making so as to avoid hell.
That’s the effect of locking in wisdom. All wisdom has to be coherent with the greater all of everything, and that’s the fatal flaw of all racial ideologies. Race matters in that if it didn’t matter there wouldn’t be any racial differences, and there’s wisdom in acknowledging the distinct racial experiences of different people.
Acknowledging a truth, that racial differences exist and need to be studied and understood, is very distinct from fear.
True racism is inappropriate responses to truth. I feel that political correctness is a new form of racism, because the danger of it is that it sought to bury truth in fear and suspicion, which is the hallmark of what racism is in structural terms.
And there is something to fear in racial mixing, otherwise people wouldn’t be afraid of it. But it’s either an issue we can all solve together, or it’s a problem we can all fry in isolation because of fear.
Often the bedrock of the humanity of one race is the stumbling block of another race. But ultimately everyone is a human being and all races are just incomplete parts of the puzzle that we’d die if we didn’t communicate with one another.