The Magic of the Alchemical Process and the Courage of our
Vulnerability
By Carmela Cattuti, author of Between the Cracks
Having just published an historical
novel based on my great aunt’s experience of the 1908 earthquake in Sicily, I
started to think about the alchemical process of growth open to the human race
residing on this planet. In order to open ourselves to this transformation
process we must have what the Italians call “coraggio,” a quality highly
regarded by the culture. The word means courage, but when an Italian says it,
it is more of a blessing of confidence to transcend the obstacle or confront
the issue at hand. A person with great “coraggio” always triumphs regardless of
the outcome. This is especially true of the writing process, particularly when
we are dealing with difficult material.
In my novel, we see the main
character, Angela, moving into a time line that is regenerative and healing.
Many of us currently living on this planet possess courage in spades, and are
waking up to who we really are. Those who remain steeped in the constructs of
religion and politics may take a few more life times to develop enough courage
to extricate themselves from these paradigms. But for those of us with enough
courage (energetically developed over life times) to face the amount of
imposition placed upon the human race from the media, politics, and religion,
our transcendence is assured. The time line is created, all we need to do is
bring it into our awareness. This is the time line Angela attempts to navigate.
She realizes she cannot stay in Sicily; she has to traverse the unknown.
It took a great deal of courage for
my great aunt to survive that massive disaster, then marry a man she hardly
knew and immigrate to a strange country. I wrote her story and I am humbled by
it. Her younger sister was never found and for the rest of her life she often
wondered about her fate. Many years later she and her husband returned to
Messina to see if they could locate her, but there was no evidence that she had
survived the earthquake. I think her story is a tribute to the indomitable
human spirit.
From what I can remember of our
conversations, she was very much in touch with her inner knowing from the time
she was quite young. When she was a child both her parents died and she and her
brother were sent to live with grandparents while her younger sister was sent
to live with an aunt, so from early on she had confronted loss and abandonment.
After the earthquake she was completely alone, surviving on the streets until
the Americans came and took orphaned children aboard ships. She ended up in a
convent and was raised by the Sisters of Charity.
Her early life was an intense
alchemical experience that strengthened who she was and what she came to this
planet to accomplish. A less developed soul without an abundance of courage
would have perished or given up. Her relationship with the Catholic Church was superficial
and the energy of her worship was focused on the Blessed Mother. Even though
she was raised in a strict religious atmosphere where her behavior was closely
monitored, the construct of religion was not a force behind her spiritual
beliefs. She was vulnerable to criticism for her “Mary Worship” by the Italian
Community, but she persisted in having an altar devoted to Mary in her home
regardless. It is imperative that we as writers develop the same stamina and
courage.
Angela was bombarded with family
obligations and tragedy, but she persisted in her spiritual development and
serving others, even when they were less than kind. Her influence on my life
has been profound and when I think I am having a difficult time filling a page,
I refer to her life and it puts everything into perspective.
About the
Novel
Join Angela
Lanza as she experiences the tumultuous world of early 20th century Sicily and
New York. Orphaned by the earthquake and powerful eruption of Mt. Etna in 1908,
Angela is raised in the strict confines of an Italian convent. Through various
twists of fate, she is married to a young Italian man whom she barely knows,
then together with her spouse, immigrates to the U.S. This novel is an
invitation to accompany the young Angela as she confronts the ephemeral nature
of life on this planet and navigates the wide cultural gaps between pre-World
War II Italy and the booming prosperity of dynamic young America. Author,
artist, and teacher Carmela Cattuti created Between the Cracks as an homage to
her great-aunt, who survived the earthquake and eruption of Mt. Etna and
bravely left Sicily to start a new life in America. This is the first in a
trilogy.
Bio
Carmela Cattuti is a writer, visual artist,
and teacher. She is the author of Between
the Cracks, a novel based on her great aunt's inspirational journey from
Sicily to the U.S. Carmela is a graduate of Boston College master’s program in
literature. Join her Facebook community and visit her on her Twitter and
Pinterest for event updates and articles. Visit
www.betweenthecracksnovel.blogspot.com for your free chapter. The novel may be purchased on amazon.com.
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