Serpents and Celtic Serpent Power Searles Wed Sep 20 02:50:24 2000 Serpents and Celtic Serpent Power*p*This is a posting I once made in reply to a question about snakes and kundalini. Some of you were present then and I'd like to continue that discussion now in a search for our own snakes and pathways.*p*When the Goddess Brighid stepped forth from the flames towards me (in a dream of my own), she had a serpent entwined on either arm. They were coiled in the appropriate directions, sunwise for the right hand and landwise for the left. Their heads were facing outward. One could bite and the other could swallow. They amplified her power and they symbolized it at the same time and they also left no doubt for me that they were the tools of wisdom and knowledge: teaching and learning, experimenting and analyzing, creating and destroying.*p*The coiling of the snake has many meanings. One meaning is in its ability to spring from a coil. Another meaning is its ability to form new shapes. Yet another ability, is its ability to reinforce itself through supporting itself. The coils also serve to make its a smaller target. The shedding of the snake's skin is definitely symbolic of new birth and learning. In life and learning we grow to fit the size of our containers. When these are filled, we either quit growing or we get larger containers. The snake sheds its skin. There are other more sensual and suggestive meanings of this shedding of skin as well, but I leave that to the power of your imagination to manifest. *p*Snakes go into the earth and return again. Snakes sleep through the long winter and re-emerge in spring. Snakes enjoy the sun and derive their inner warmth from it. In this they are much like the fires of the mind, which is one of the meanings of kundalini. The "Daughter of Ivor" is the snake, is Brighid. Ivor is The Dagda. Wisdom is the daughter of Excellence in doing. *p*Your two snakes are a symbol of the latent and dynamic power of your spiritual wisdom. They coil about your three centers of wisdom: your pathway to the present, your *now,* and your ability to create a future. If they battle, you will suffer. It is better to let one teach while the other learns. In this way the Moon may be swallowed (and even the Sun) but each may also be digested for growth of the self rather than in contention one with the other. In Vedic teachings, these coiling serpents are called Nadis. Their names are Ida and Pingala (one is while and the Moon, while the other is re and the Sun). The lunar nadi connects to the left nostril and the solar nadi connects to the right. A Yogic exercise in breath control alternates the usage of each nostril in patterns to bring balance back to these two forces. Observe the nature of your breathing and you will see whether the Sun or the Moon is running yourself at any particular time. Is it the Red Bull of the Sun (Ruadh Rofessa) or the White Cow of the Moon (Bóann), or is it both in balance and an ever-changing harmony of differences? *p*If you view them as contending, then I would say that there is a lesson in the contention. Perhaps you should watch the contention and face it to learn its teaching, or have it learn whatever lesson it is that you *will* teach to it? It is time for you to be as Merlin was when he was to be the sacrifice at Vortigern's Tower. You can be the offerings or you can become the revelation and the solution. Reveal the dragons and let their lessons be the ones that are learned by the many, free of their enclosure. *p*Searles*br*