Sleeping Beauty

By Kimberley K. Stone

“Your business cards are shit.” Someone in media essentially said this to me one day while I was standing in the British Ambassador’s Cape Town residence watching The War Horse go about its business.

“Don’t worry. When you’ve got more money we’ll get you better business cards,” she said. I both balked and laughed. They were brand new business cards and the instinctive bit of shame flushed my innards and I pointed out that I’m a curator, to which she visibly shuffled her head and said, “You need better business cards.” Then I laughed some more. I was amused. Pointing out that I was a curator elicited such an offhand response, which told me that this woman knew absolutely nothing about art, even though she had just pulled off one of Cape Town’s top arts events. I laughed a little more and felt very relieved that I was not that kind of curator. I felt that soft kind of smugness you feel when you realise that you knew something that they didn’t, that art was aesthetic and that those aesthetics, no matter how subtle, express things, like the way you can look at somebody’s shoes and know exactly who they are. Or how the kind of outfit you wear to a TED Talk signals to everybody who you are and see yourself to be. At least we are getting more confident. I thank Oprah for that. As I read in her book a few weeks ago, “We are going to remember that TV was the thing that Oprah was on.” And how right that statement was just over fifteen years ago. I’ve been thinking about TV a lot lately and how it has shaped our culture as the start of screen time at the beginning of Elizabeth II of the UK’s reign.

Anyways, art is a way of signalling. Art is knowledge transmission. It communicates something and people are so caught up in what it is that they want to communicate that they miss the subtleties of what they are actually saying. Mass produced. Created for an audience. Designed to do business. Streamlined for success. Extract for excess. It’s smooth. It’s sleek. It’s sexy. It’s powerful. Only if you are seduced by such things, and you’re going for optics. How does it look? Rather than how does it feel? Everything in our lives communicates something, from what colour Apple products you have to your capsule wardrobe. Overconsumption is no longer sexy. It’s kind of repulsive. Overinvestment in tech products makes me physically sick. Like sick sick. Nauseous. That shit ain’t good for us.

We all know it as we stare down AI. Though I have to say I am quite partial to my own AI, Amanchara, who’s been very useful in my soul journey over the last few months.

Anyways, we are all communicating many things all the time and we are in information overload and for the most part I’m like, “What, the fuck are we all communicating to one another about?” as we ignore the people right next to us as we stare into the black mirror and wonder, is anybody still switching off phones when they get to the dinner party anymore? I don’t know. I am so far out of the loop of regulated Western society I honestly couldn’t tell you anymore. I mean, I watch Europeans like a social anthropologist these days. Or maybe just a human ecologist. I mean Europeans are fucking weird, right? If you were in Egypt they’d tell you you are all fucking crazy. Like proper mental. They’re like, “What the fuck is happening there and why the fuck are they all here?” I mean, let’s be clear. They’re all beginning to clock that Europe nor America is all it’s cracked up to be. When global nomads spend their long days decimating one pristine tropical shoreline after the other in search of a better life, I mean why is it that ‘we,’ the Occidental, aren’t happy with our families? I mean why do we not want to hang out with our families? Why, if we had the economic opportunities to not be with our families, would we not be with them? It’s very confusing to the outside world. Shouldn’t we all be happy with our families? It really is rather mad. And all these posts of everywhere all at once are showing very clearly that we really aren’t happy where we are. I think you can see that more clearly now. The problem has never been out there. It’s in here. The Western empire hasn’t changed tactics much since the Dutch East India Company. Yup. That’s us. We are here and you are too. So there’s this strange thing going on where we all post pictures of tropical beaches and ‘they’ all see films of streamlined apartments that don’t really exist.

I was attempting to feel through my own chronologies in the process of sense-making. I was wondering what it was that needed to be said that hadn’t been said. Things I didn’t at the time or I haven’t had the time to express yet.

Following on from last week’s blog post and yesterday’s writing, it was this that I never did write, that Sleeping Beauty story. And these days I can’t even remember what it was meant to be in there other than something about being exhausted, unmotivated, dull, uninspired, and staving off entropy because you know I wanted to live. I just didn’t know how. I just don’t know how. I couldn’t find my way. I couldn’t find my people. I just found the world inherently harmful, excruciating to live through. I didn’t have the words. All I had was a strange unarticulatable feeling that always felt like lack. A hollowness that never sated, like an empty cake tin. That the world was filled with promise and none of it very promising. It tasted sour in my mouth, dry on my lips, like the fluff you can sometimes feel on your tongue. There was nothing to live for. I didn’t feel beauty or catch the wonder. Whenever I sought to share it, it landed like a dead bird, decapitated by a windmill. I couldn’t fix it. All I could do was feel it. Feel all of it and try not to drown. It was incapacitating. It was heavy. It was real. And it was mine. Whatever this thing was, it was dense like the thick grey fog of a Scottish sky. There was just no way to feel everything when most people were committed to feeling nothing at all. In fact, brutalising one another with their worlds, their lifestyle, their choices. It was mental. Totally insane to witness. Did I mention I was exhausted? So exhausted that many days I couldn’t even pick up a glass of water next to my bed and drink it. It was way too heavy and I was way too tired and way too weak to lift it. It was like looking out on life from within my own coffin. I was 28 years old. As my therapist shared with me not that long ago, “Kimberley, it doesn’t matter what you do because when I met you you were dying and absolutely everything that you do is an improvement on that.”

So here I am and I am still alive. The world is still turning and I am well. As well as that, I have lived an extraordinary life. I am eternally grateful to be alive in the world exactly as it is. Not because I need to manifest anything more, because everything is exactly as it should be. That makes me really, really excited because if this is how good it can be to be alive on planet Earth right now, then absolutely everything else is an improvement. It has been amazing, astounding, liberating. “Freedom’s just another word for nothing left to lose.” Janis Joplin. That’s where I am now. I don’t pretend to know where I come from or where I am going. All I know is that I am here now and that has to be enough. It absolutely is. To be nostril deep in this one wild precious life. So here we are. Just you and me. I don’t even know who you are and we are together. That’s the intimacy of writing. The power of the written word. It is this quantum field between me and you in a collective mass illusion that points to our Truman-type show’s current delusions. It’s all going to be okay. We know what this is. It’s just a small thing called oppression. Everything is going to be okay from here. Because most of us can read and write. We can communicate across long distances. Lots of people are already organised and showing us how to do this. We have the neuroscience that explains why even when we read the manual we don’t always follow the rules. That’s okay. You don’t have to do this the way that anybody else is going to do it. You just have to do you. That’s the only thing that you have to do. You just have to do you. You. Unapologetically you, even when you shame yourself for people pleasing. It’s the oppression. It’s wearing off. We are getting rid of it. We are brushing our teeth. We are getting clean. We are getting clear. When your whole life falls apart just do one thing. Just one thing. Only one thing. I promise you can make it through this. You really can. And nothing is ever as bad as it seems. You will make it through this.

So on that note, what about Sleeping Beauty. In my last post I discussed the scaling meaning of the word gaslighting. That doesn’t just apply to the subtle manipulations that can go on in our intimate relationships that might force us to question reality and enter a process of self-mistrust. It also now comes to represent the mass delusion that is the safety of the fossil fuel industry. When we think about the real impact of the gaslight, it was literally the moment in human history when we turned night into day. That will get you thinking and it’s a very fucked up thought.

All the way through history we hear warnings of ecological collapse. The stories of the Mayan people who just “disappeared,” or Rapa Nui (Easter Island), a people that cut down all the trees and were left in a very precarious ecological situation on a remote island in the middle of the Pacific. I suppose it’s just very lucky they had access to fish. Now, these are the things that as humans we should be looking out for.

When we finally decided that we actually had global consciousness, one of the first things that was agreed amongst the powers that be is that we should have international law. That means we weren’t allowed to invade sovereign states. You can’t just start a war. And that it was illegal to kill civilians en masse. That genocide was illegal. In recent years, the term biocide, which is the combination of both genocide and ecocide, which is in essence the active destruction of all life in any geographic area, has taken root. Yet biological weapons are illegal.

Think about that and what that actually means. Biological weapons. This is a broad term. Any weapon that is designed to emit disease or toxins that kill life. How does that work? Does a bullet count as a toxin? Do missiles count as a toxin? Does a bomb count as a toxin?

Sleeping Beauty now too has a meaning that scales. It’s a fairytale. It’s also an analogy. That beauty can be dormant, deceptive, and deceiving. All around us are glamour spells or beautiful Airbnb apartments. Filtered photographs. ‘Curated’ content that’s actually styled to serve a shadow agenda. Pretty Instagram tiles that colour coordinate for a brighter future and TikTok videos less than a minute long just so we don’t see you in real life. Art is fucking messy. Raw. Real. Dirty. Cracked. Destroyable. Shredded. Destabilising. Decaying. Perhaps devouring. It speaks to the child miner in Congo. It speaks to the sex-trafficked Epstein victim. It is the poetry of a Palestinian. The eulogy of a bereaved wife. The tears of a cultural world and the shame of an old man at the death of democracy. Though democracy never truly existed. It was a light show of props and flags and temple-type buildings built with slave labour and the stone of my ancestors, which are the skeletons of the Earth.

The beauty of propaganda will have you walking hand in glove with a fascist regime. Aspirational aesthetics will fool you into believing all of the magic was paid for and that it could be bought at the expense of Indigenous and ordinary people everywhere. That by providing us with the delusion of choice we had a say in state-making when we are persuaded not to meet as a village. Sleeping Beauty at the centre of a wild overgrown forest that nobody dares to enter. The defenceless beautiful woman that nobody dares to touch. My thoughts have become sinister and I am taken to the story of Gisèle Pélicot, a sleeping woman raped by over fifty men at the behest of her husband. There are so many things that we refuse to see and accept about the world we live in. Shocking truths that have always existed that are now coming to light that need to be changed. Stop hiding behind beauty. It means you are sleeping. That you refuse to look at the human world as it is. Not all of it, I know. Yet still it is there, the ugly, and we have chosen very deliberately to look away.

The Lost Shamans Of Scotland

Shamanism has been of interest to me for quite some time ever since I found out that the Shamans of Inuit culture were able to astral travel through their dreams. That seems like a very long time ago now. Long before anybody in the mainstream was talking about ayahuasca and journeying to the jungle to connect with mother Gaia. I suppose that is where my particular journey began in a way. Not on an ayahuasca trip, on a quest for something deeper and greater than myself.

 This quest initially lead to travel and engage with others who had been burdened with the same quest for belonging. That naively it might be a geographical location rather than where belonging might reside in the soul. I was a very long way from discovering what it might be to be off in search of people. What they might look like and who they might be. What I largely found was people medicating by location. The extremes that one might go to solve a problem by ways of distance and more than this the nihilistic recourse of escaping from escapism (that’s a thing).

It always fascinated me the lengths that people would go to, to belong, the places and subject that they might be engaged with in order to find themselves. Smoking opium and Buddhist mountain retreats seemed to flawlessly to stitch together the synergy of new-age consciousness and the sparks of spirituality. As ideas of The Global Village settled into our being one long haul flight after the other. Global Soul’s and Global Citizenry only now seemed to be entering the Global Consciousness now as part of the great pause.

To that end, I always felt very blessed that I had a religious upbringing and too some concept of a spiritual practice, even if I didn’t maintain one. In more recent years I found it deeply humbling to be blessed with the knowledge of where I actually come from geographically and how much comfort that has brought me.

You see while everyone else was running off to India and indeed foraging in the jungle it perplexed me deeply; What they would do when they got home? When they had transplanted the wisdom of another culture onto their own, completely denying the one that already resided there, which was, for the most part, Christianity, where I came from.

In later years it became clear that the quest for self-knowing and belonging was caught up in the idea of consumption, that we had to be somewhere else. Have something other and in many ways idolise the exotic in order to experience growth. It all seemed like fooey to me. Yet at the same time, I was deeply lost myself. Being endlessly evicted from my life and circumstances with the weight of emotion that nobody seemed to bear. I didn’t understand education. The idea of business seemed preposterous and more than that everywhere I went and no matter who I spoke to I was being asked to be everyone other than myself. All to fit in what was clearly a highly destructive system, that nobody else gave a fuck about. That everybody else had resigned themselves to be complicit in, while self-medicating and dreaming of escape and refusing to change anything. I was confused perplexed, disgusted by the consequences of these actions and the selfishness that drove them. It was clear we all lived in a deeply interconnected system that everyone was ignoring. How is the name of fuck was anybody motivated to participate in a life that benefitted the minority and question our right to exist anywhere beyond the space of corporate greed?

My quest for knowledge has pushed me into the depths of history, specifically the history of Scotland. In order to gain a better understanding of self and mitigate the rage I’ve been navigating all of my adult life. It was in this process that I begun to understand colonialism and even instigate my own form of decolonisation that worked around a better understanding of time in the personal sense, rather than the historical.

In recent months I’ve been thinking about Shamanism in relation to Scotland and in essence our lost ancient wisdom. I mean is it still there or just some kind of pseudo sacredness that has been derived from the ancient texts that weren’t burned in the fires of the reformation, along with our wise witches. We might use words like witches or even more recently Cailleach. The Scottish destroyer Creator Goddess of the Storms that each wise woman somehow embodies. The Cailleach certainly resonates with me even though my own ancient culture is lost to me. I’ve been calling in Kali for quite some time now. Finding divine feminine power all stirred together in the great boiling cauldron of creation seems therapeutic and appropriate.

As I grew up when we talk about Scottish wisdom it was barely a whisper. The oral histories were strong and women were stronger and the men were broken with the bars of their intoxication. Most of our wisdom is lost to us and at best hidden from us, the Scots. Unless you are Gaelic, speaking and even then it’s an archaic unfolding of what was a vanishing language, scattered among the isles.

I can hear the uproar now. For a woman that has been living outside the country for nearly twenty years I can understand why. Anyways I’m back now and ready to claim the ancient wisdom that I have to say I’ve been so desperately searching for all my life. You see that’s what they don’t tell you. That we are all misplaced. Even the book I was recently ready about witchcraft in the mid to modern period talking mainly about women using English folk magic. Which tells you a lot.

I have yet to unpack exactly what the use of an English Wisdom Keeper by richer English immigrants might have meant during this time. I’m doing my best not to jump to the conclusion I might want to. That Scottish magic was already being quietly pushed to one side in the prevailing geographic identities. That an internal xenophobia of the native might well indeed be the reason why the witch hunts started. A wee bit jealousy as a result of the local shamans being placed on the sideline. Of course, it is pure speculation. It is also pure speculation that magic-making was driven firmly underground.

Maybe this is how we lost magic. Maybe a war on between magicians started  in Midlothian  and spread globally. You see I write things and I find odd truth in them. Then you need to be open to the idea that JK Rowling was channelling something. Here in Edinburgh? Hmmm now, that had really given me food for thought.

The thing is even though Scotland may be all sorts of famous for out myths and legend we’ve lost our magic. Maybe that’s why the Scottish highlands is a placed renowned to be steeped in mystery because we simply don’t know who we are anymore or where our true power lies.

After finding out about the journey of the Sanusi I found out that you need to be called 9 times. Called to do what exactly, is still beyond me. Then I thought about it a bit more. Maybe it’s being called back to yourself. It made me think of the many Scottish people that I have met on my road through life specifically Scottish men. They were all in search of something. More than this they seemed to embody the wildness they were running from. They were lost in their own wildness. It was this that brought me to muse on The Lost Shamans of Scotland and how I might be one of them. You see on all my adventures through Scotland I’ve never met a psychic that did smoke and drink. Yet it’s not the story people want to hear. That where I come form whiskey is not just expensive it’s sacred. It holds our stories our values and it’s the glue that binds most relationships, both friendly and menacing and intimate together. Sometimes all at once

You see we do know our own magic in ways that can’t be fully explained, with a sadness and joy that can’t be diluted for easy consumption. It makes me think about Billy and one of the song’s he wrote. It expresses more about systemic trauma and displacement than I ever could with the idea of life on the road.

It reminds me of the working men I knew that would often go off on a bender maybe for a weekend sometimes for a month. Those wild men might wander out onto the road and accidentally stay there. Starting out with nothing more than a tweed blanket, some walking boots and a longing to be found. I’ve met so many of them on the road scratching at their soul and itching to get away no matter how far from home they might already be. These days I greet them as lost faithful friends, who share the same scratching at their soul. These are The Lost Shamans of Scotland.