Gratia

Goddess Guide

Gratia

Since Sage Goddess launched, many people have asked me, “What is Sage Goddess? What’s your purpose?” And it’s simple: To infuse life with magic and ritual, and to inspire us – all of us, men and women – to access the divine power, sacred beauty, and innate grace that are our birthrights. A goddess behaves, thinks, engages, and believes in very specific ways that I will explain over time through this site, my teachings, and my products. One of those ways is the subject of this post.

Hang out with me long enough and you’ll find that I have a fascination with languages – especially Latin. I have formally studied more than a dozen languages in my life and Latin, of them all, speaks to my soul. Maybe that’s why I’ve given some of my products, like my oil blends, Latin names. As I’ve developed the Sage Goddess concept and begun planning later offerings like the seminars I’ll be launching this winter, I’ve been isolating the qualities I associate with the development of a goddess mentality and – no surprise! – they are all Latin words. And the first of them is gratia. Gratia is the root of the name Grace and the concept of grace in English, which has come to be beautifully associated with the Christian concept of redemption and forgiveness. In Latin its meaning expands, to include the concept of a free gift or favor, and also a blessing. Gratia is an offering, which is the fundamental principle of Sage Goddess: To give and receive fully and abundantly and be in divine flow. Giving and gifting are sacred practices in any form. I like to use the metaphor of planting seeds without any expectation of growth – planting for the sake of sowing and offering nourishment to the Earth alone. That is gratia. And it’s as much about the intention as it is about the act.

This week I’m celebrating the launch of Sage Goddess with an awesome giveaway that I offer without any expectation of how that investment will return to me. It’s an offering, a gesture of gratitude and thanks-giving, of celebration. It’s a modeling of a practice that I feel is critical to the process of unlocking our divine selves. My own mother, who is visiting from out of town, modeled the same practice of gratia so beautifully for me today in fact. We were sight-seeing when she came upon a homeless man to whom, she told me, God had moved her to speak. She spent about 15 minutes with the man, named Stone (of course!), and when she was done she simply said, “I had a message for him. God wanted me to tell Stone how much he loves him.” There was my Mom, giving and offering effortlessly and without expectation of return. Of course in a universal sense there is always a return; good energy is returned to the sender (as is negative energy) but the beauty is you can’t predict the form of return. So you should not act with expectations in mind. That part is out of your control and in the hands of the divine.

And so it is.

I leave you with a question, then, as I often will in this blog – how are you experiencing or engaging in gratia right now? And how intentionally are you doing so? I do believe you can change your life by opening your hands and your heart wide. Wider than you think is safe or possible. Out beyond your fear is a space of sacred communion where your offering is met with a well of gratitude that never runs dry.

Grace-filled blessings to you,
Athena

4 thoughts on “Gratia

  1. “it’s meaning expands, to include the concept of a free gift of favor, and also a blessing.” -I think gratia might become one of my favorite words. I love the idea of giving and receiving fully & abundantly- that right there is being in a divine flow and being open. Something about it just feels so grounding, honest, and…well, expanding. Love it.

  2. Yet another beautiful & thought provoking post. I am too isolated and too reserved. I don’t open myself up to others enough. I need to bring more gratia into my life and I really want to teach my children to be open & giving. Time to start thinking of ways I can do little acts of kindness for those around us. Thank you for the reminder!!

  3. i give a lot of myself to my students, i am an elementary school teacher, and often think i give them too much and maybe this is because i am giving with expectation so i will try to remember your words, thank you

  4. I love all the comments you’ve shared – so important to be mindful givers and if we can truly release the expectation of any return, the energy within our giving shifts. It’s quite powerful. Giving puts us in divine flow, which is that state we’re all looking to achieve but seems so mysterious. It begins with an open hand.

Comments are closed.