Spirit Walk Ministry
A Shamanic Studies Ministry
583 State Road
Plymouth, MA 02360
United States
ph: (617) 682-8354
contact

Although the Shamanic Principles are universal,
Local myths and legends predominate the culture,
Which the shamanic ritual must embody,
As the tribal allegorical references.
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For most of us, our common reference is "The Passion".
Thus, we begin our spiritual quest from a point,
Where somebody gets nailed to a cross,
For saying we should be nice to each other.
So we believe, in order to return to our spiritual home,
We have to be sacrificed.
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That is a tough place for anyone to have to start from.
Catch-22 on a Cosmic level!
But, we do have another mythos in common.
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Baseball is mythical.
Baseball has heroes of epic proportion.
Baseball has sinister villains.
Baseball has the tragedy of a Lou Gehrig,
And the comedy of a Yogi Berra.
Baseball has tales of Jedi Knights,
Who battle "The Curse" of "The Evil Empire".
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Baseball is spiritual.
The path in Baseball will lead you back home.
Though you may make a mistake along the way,
There will be no penalty.
You have only made an error.
You may be called upon to make a sacrifice,
But, your sacrifice will be to help someone else get home.
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Baseball is ritual.
You gather together in congregation.
On a spring afternoon under the Sun,
Or a warm summer evening under the lights,
And you sit and watch,
As people play out your dreams,
Just for the love of the game.
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And nobody gets nailed to anything.
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Fenway Park
Home of the Boston Red Sox
. One of the joys of New England life is returning to the chapel that is the home of the Boston Red Sox; Fenway Park. Unlike other Shrines, though, this house of worship generates electricity. It is a place where visitors can see the invisible murals that have been painted and left behind by the men who have played there in years gone by.
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That glorious "chapel" called Fenway Park began its formal life history in September 1911 when ground was broken by the James McLaughlin Construction Company. Less than a year later, (and after two rain delays), Fenway Park finally hosted its first professional baseball game on April 20, 1912. (The first official game played in Fenway Park actually occurred on April 9 when the Red Sox beat Harvard University, 2-0.) Nearly a century later, the hallowed grounds are still standing despite the commercialization of virtually every aspect of the game.
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"As I grew up, I knew that as a building Fenway Park was on the level of Mount Olympus, the Pyramid at Giza, the nation's capitol, the czar's Winter Palace, and the Louvre; except, of course, that it is better than all those inconsequential places." (Baseball Commissioner Bart Giamatti)
"As Commissioner, you’re supposed to be objective. It wasn’t much of a secret, though, that I loved Fenway; especially how it made you a participant, not a spectator." (Bowie Kuhn)
"The thing that I remember the most is just the feeling you get when you walk out on that field. All of the ballparks, especially the new ones, and Camden Yards, I guess, started the trend, try to capture in the modern sense the feeling of Fenway Park. It's just a great feeling to be able to play baseball on that field. It's a special place." (Cal Ripken, Jr in Sports Illustrated)
"Fenway is the essence of baseball." (Tom Seaver in the Christian Science Monitor)
"I'm helplessly and permanently a Red Sox fan. It was like first love...You never forget. It's special. It's the first time I saw a ballpark. I'd thought nothing would ever replace cricket. Wow! Fenway Park at 7 o'clock in the evening. Oh, just, magic beyond magic: never got over that." (Art Historian Simon Schama in 'History in Brilliant Brushstrokes')
"That moment, when you first lay eyes on that field; The Monster, the triangle, the scoreboard, the light tower Big Mac bashed, the left-field grass where Ted Williams once roamed ; it all defines to me why baseball is such a magical game." ( ESPN Analyst Jayson Stark)
"That's the magic of Fenway Park . That’s why people love it so. Come to think of it, at Fenway almost every year is a wonder year." (Red Sox Announcer Ned Martin)
"New England's parlor, a region's nightclub, and the Olde Towne Team's hearth. To generations of Americans, going to Fenway Park has been like coming home." (Curt Smith in 'Our House : A Tribute to Fenway Park')
“A crazy-quilt violation of city planning principles, an irregular pile of architecture, a menace to marketing consultants, Fenway Park works. It works as a symbol of New England 's pride, as a repository of evergreen hopes, as a tabernacle of lost innocence. It works as a place to watch baseball." (Martin F. Nolan in 'A Ballpark, Not a Stadium')
"We love Fenway Park because we love antiques, be they rocking chairs or ballparks. But we love it even more because the eccentricities of the place mirror our own. It is, like us, difficult and cranky. And this makes it a mighty hard place for a player to play in. Too bad. Players come and go, but Fenway Park may become an American Pyramid." (Boston Red Sox Sportscaster Clark Booth in 'Fenway' by Dan Shaughnessy)
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"The Red Sox Anthem".
The original version of "Tessie" (You Are the Only, Only, Only) was written by Will R. Anderson and was featured in the Broadway musical The Silver Slipper. While a popular tune, the song gained greater notoriety when it was adopted as a rallying cry by the Royal Rooters, a collection of loyal fans led by Michael T. McGreevy, informally known as "Nuff Ced McGreevy", owner of the 3rd Base Saloon. McGreevy earned his nickname "Nuf Ced" due to the way he kept peace in his bar; when he grew frustrated with arguments over the Boston Americans (who would later be renamed the Red Sox), he would pound his hand on the bar and declare "'Nuff said!"
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The Boston fans remembered "Tessie" fondly through the years, even though the Royal Rooters had stopped singing in 1916. The Red Sox won the World Series in 1918, but then endured an 86-year drought. In 2004, the Boston-area Celtic punk group the Dropkick Murphys recorded a cover of "Tessie", which was released on an EP of the same name. The Murphys said it was their intent to "bring back the spirit of the Rooters and to put the Red Sox back on top". The goal of the Dropkick Murphys was realized when, on October 27th, 2004, the Boston Red Sox won their first World Series in 86 years..
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Spirit Walk Ministry
A Shamanic Studies Ministry
583 State Road
Plymouth, MA 02360
United States
ph: (617) 682-8354
contact