Clinical Anthropology Copyright
© 2006, 2007 John Rush PhD ND
World Myths Tattoo
Gallery
(Touch on
Blue for Pictures)
Author: John A. Rush
Artist: Kim Forrest, Wild Bills Tattoo, Roseville, California
INTRODUCTION
The Egyptian, Chinese,
and Tibetan Galleries were, for the most part, culturally specific and aligned
on the body to show similarities between these traditions suggesting
cross-cultural interaction over a very long time span. Early shamanism, in my
opinion, can be seen as the floor plan upon which all magical-religious
traditions were built, past and present. Probably originating in Africa with Homo erectus, shamanism eventually
spread with their original migration (1.8 Million Years Ago) into the Levant,
southern Europe, and eventually China by over 1 MYA. Sacred rites and rituals
designed to influence nature or the gods are very conservative maintaining continuity
over long, long periods of time, for to change the ritual would represent a
loss of power. The more modern diffusion of symbols and ideologies begins
between 8000 and 4000BCE; slow at first as weather patterns changed and
populations increased. The diffusion routes, often referred to as the “Silk
Road,” can be seen as a conduit for the reworking of ideas and images connected
to these magical practices. These very old trade routes extend from the
Mediterranean in the west and eventually to Xian, China (and beyond) in the
east. The most recent religious/mythic mixtures with us today began between 600
and 500BCE. This gallery is more specifically dedicated to world myth and more
particularly astronomy and origin myths.
“This medieval pilgrim has traveled to the horizon, crashed
through the celestial dome, and seen the mechanisms once thought to make heaven
move. He has entered a transcendent realm beyond the blue horizon and the
confines of normal reality. Although this illustration is often mistakenly
identified as a sixteenth-century German woodcut, it is actually a
nineteenth-century work, probably drawn by Camille Flammarion, a famous French
astronomer and popularizer of astronomy.
It attempts to convey an earlier concept of the universe and harbors
some of the meaning the sky once held for our ancestors. To understand the meaning they saw in the
sky, we have to go behind the stories to understand symbolic functions performed
by the celestial.” (E. Krupp, Beyond the
Blue Horizon, 1991:10)
This “wonders of the heavens” referred to above serves to illustrate the theme of exploring
the unknown and the symbols used by numerous cultures to explain that which
appears above or beyond the earth.
The outline was completed May 2, 2006 and the coloring
was completed on May 23, 2006. The coloring took four and one-half hours. The heavens
represented an unknown but visually verifiable “place” above what was
considered by many cultures a flat land held up by pillars or foundations.
According to the Bible (1 Samuel 2:8 and Job 38), the earth rests on pillars and has
foundations. This is similar to the Egyptian Hathor myth of a cow, or, in the
Hindu tradition, elephants (as clouds in the sky) holding up the earth. The
spirit world was considered above and beyond humans, a geographical place far,
far away. Egyptian myth informs that Re rides the sun barque across the Heavens
during the day and the Underworld at night. In the Buddhist tradition Amitabha
(Boundless Light) is the God of the Western Paradise (Sukhavati), which is a
“heaven” of sorts but found in the west rather than above the earth. In the
Buddhist tradition there are also numerous levels (33) of heaven.
The Sorcerer of Trois Freres,
South-Central France
(Completed May
9, 2006)
Over one-hundred
years ago three boys were walking with their dog in the wood. The dog, as the story goes, fell into a hole,
and hearing the dog barking and running around, they decided to return home for
rope and lanterns. One brother was
lowered into the hole to retrieve the dog, and to his amazement the Sorcerer leapt out of the darkness after approximately 16,000 years (tattoo of Sorcerer). The symbolism attached to this image by European rock art experts
is very interesting in that the same general concepts are alive and somewhat
well in major religious traditions today. Religious traditions evolve to fit
social and psychological needs. Religion and myth lie at the fringes of our
scientific understanding of ourselves and the universe within which we live.
Looking at the
image you will see that it has a wolf’s tail (a carnivore). The genitals, on
the other hand, are those of a feline (cat); genitals stand for “life giving”
or sun, while the tail stands for life taking.
These two symbols together represents the sun, for not only is it the
life giver it burns away life as well.
The antlers, however, appear to be those of a Red Deer, a favorite food
for these people. Moreover, the antlers fall off and are regenerated, and
animals that loose something and grow it back (snakes, lizards, peacocks,
deer), or that morph from one form to another (caterpillars-butterfly), are
associated with the moon—it comes and goes as does life. The face on this
figure is probably that of an owl, and as a night predator gets connected to
the Underworld. So life comes into being
(feline-sun) and dies (wolf’s tail) and comes back (antlers-moon), but coming
back is also symbolized by the human inside this composite animal suit. This is
a shaman who is a conduit between the
spirit world and living, and one of his functions is to insure that animals
return. He makes sure that animals are revered and honored so they do not
disturb dreams and injure the hunter out of resentment. Contemporary Siberian
shamans likewise wear animal skins complete with antlers. The x-ray nature of
the image has many meanings, the primary of which is that the shaman is the
animal master or controller of nature. Another
possibility is that the x-ray nature implies the use of some hallucinogen
(possibly Amanita muscaria used by
Siberian shamans and others) to commune with the spirit world. We will see the
Sorcerer again in the form of Cernunnos, Artemis, and Pashupati the forerunner
to Shiva.
Hina, the Eel, and the Coconut
(Completed May 30)
Once upon a time there was a beautiful goddess, Hina, who lived
on a tropical island far, far away. In the early morning hours she would walk
along the beach and meditate on the sun as it peeked over the water’s edge in
that distant place on the blue horizon. And each day she would walk up from the
beach to her favorite bathing spot, the clear blue pool next to the gentle
waterfall, surrounded by orchids, their reflection like the rainbow after an
evening shower. This day as Hina looked into the pool, one of the resident
ells, somewhat larger than the rest, remained close by slowing circling but
carefully avoiding her legs, although moving closer and closer. Finally, entranced by the circling Hina
allowed the eel to approach and rub past her legs. No longer concerned about
the eel’s presence, she finished her bathing, dressed, and returned to her
garden home. From that day on, each morning when she went to the pool, the
other eels withdrew while the fearless one would gently rub past her while she
bathed.
This went on for some weeks when one day, entranced by the eels’
movement, it transformed into a handsome man named Tuna. They became lovers,
but, to avoid detection, he would change back into an eel at the appropriate
time and swim away. Love is a magical time but all things must pass. Tuna told Hina that he had to go away one
last time, that there would be a great flood bringing water to her door, but
for Hina not to fear. “I will swim to your house and place my serpent head on
your porch. If you love me as you love Tuna, you will cut off my head, at which
point the waters will recede. If you
love me you will take my head immediately to high ground and plant it in the
soft earth.”
Hina was saddened with the news but all happened as
prophesized. Tuna swam to her door and
placed his head on the sill calling, “Hina, Hina. It is time, Hina.” Trembling Hina approached, lovingly looked at
Tune, cut off his head, and planted it on high ground in soft soil. The waters rapidly receded but within a few
days several shoots emerged from the soft soil in the high ground and
eventually these grew into tall magnificent coconuts trees.
The coconut
means life to the people of the South Pacific because so much is fashioned from
the leaves and bark as well as coconut meat and milk. If you closely look at a coconut the eel’s
face and eyes are clearly visible. This is creation out of sacrifice and the symbolism is somewhat complex and interconnected to her
other characteristics mentioned below. Hina becomes the instrument for
releasing life. The serpent represents wisdom because it dies and comes back,
in this case as a coconut tree. The coconut represents life because the tree
and its fruits are intimately connected to all aspects the islander’s lives
from the food they eat, clothes they wear, and the houses in which they live.
These are all practical items not taken for grated. A sacrifice is the coming
and going of life; all life, as the Hindus recognize, eats life, but it
returns, endlessly. Early sacrifices, once again, explained common events.
Hina, like Tuna in another of her characters, becomes the sacrifice in a more
philosophical manner similar to that of Jesus.
Hina’s character
in the above story is a more recent rendering for she probably evolved from a
chthonic, underworld goddess, Hine-Ahu-One
(Maiden formed of the Earth) created by Tane
(the god of light) out of red earth. After she was formed he breathed
life/spirit into her in a similar fashion as the deity of the Old Testament.
Hine-Ahu-One and Tane gave birth to a daughter, Hine-Ata-Uira (Daughter of the Sparkling Dawn), originally the
goddess of light, but she eventually descends to the Underworld personifying
death with a new name, Hine-Nui-Te-Po
(Great woman of the Night). This
metamorphosis is significant in that it suggests a shift in social
relationships and the personification of the female principal. She is characterized as having eyes of jade,
seaweed for hair, and teeth like a shark.
Hina is also the
daughter or consort of the creator Tangaroa,
a sea god responsible for the creation of the oceans and fish. With Tangaroa we encounter creation from an
egg. Tangaroa took the form of a bird
that laid an egg on the primordial waters.
When the egg cracked open it became the earth and sky (the ancient
Egyptians had a similar myth—see the cornucopia below). Legend has it that while fishing he brought
up the land beneath the deep, deep sea to form the Tongan Islands, a common
creation story generally called Earth-Diver.
He also created Tane, the god
of light, and produced a son, Phi,
who married Sina, and they brought
forth the rest of the Polynesian peoples. Genealogy is very important to tribal
groups. Tangaroa can only be imagined and that is why objects depicting him are
only slightly worked and not represented full scale as are his offspring and
other creations. There is a wonderful
realization here: The energy that informs all cannot be known and only partly
experienced—thus the slightly worked renditions. Popes and other religious
clerics of our time claim to know the nature of the energy that informs all,
but as the Buddhists say, “Those who claim to know this energy, know not; those
who do not know, know.”
Fierce Star Maidens
Cherentes, Brazil
(June 6, 2006)
ONCE upon a time there was a young man who would prop himself
against a rock each night, next to his little hut, and wonder about the stars.
They seemed so beautiful especially the seven stars in the shoulder of Taurus,
what we recognize as the Pleiades. On one really clear night he could almost
make out the beautiful features of a maiden in one of the stars. He imagined
and wished that she would come to him so that he might carry her in his water
bottle while he worked during the day, and, at night, share his bed. As he
imagined he fell into a deep, deep sleep, but awoke and found a beautiful
maiden with glowing eyes standing next to his bed. “You have wished upon a star
and I am here. I will stay in your water
bottle during the day, and share your bed at night.”
And that is exactly what happened. Day after day the young man
carried the maiden around in his water bottle, and at night they would love.
One night the beautiful star maiden decided that it was time the young man
shared her world. “Come with me on a great adventure into the heavens,” and so
she took his hand and they climbed a tall, tall tree which lead right to the
center of Heaven. When they reached a special spot the maiden said, “You must
be hungry. Wait here and I will find
some food.” Off she went returning in a short time with some corn. He had never seen corn before; he only ate
dead leaves and bark from trees. So the star maiden gently convinced him that
it would be good for him and his people.
So back down the tree they went and the young man introduced his people
to corn.
The next night, once again, the star maiden talked of adventure
and off they went, climbing that tall, tall tree into the heavens where the
young man was instructed to wait while she went in search of food. Over the course of several nights he learned
of yams, cotton, and numerous fruits all of which he introduced to his
people. On the fifth night he was
instructed to wait, and wait he did. Hour after hour went by and finally he
decided to follow the maiden’s path, and as he walked along he could hear music
playing and people singing in the distance. Finally he came into a small
clearing and there in front of him were rotting corpses, dancing and singing,
and as they danced the rotting flesh would sling from their limbs, splat on the
ground, and slid around. He screamed in horror
and ran to the tree, but he could hear the star maiden approaching quickly from
behind yelling, “You’ve broken your promise, you’ve broken your promise. Come
back, come back!” But his mind was on returning to his village and certainly
not remaining in such a place. So down the tree he went, branch after branch,
looking back fearfully, finally arriving at his village where he was greeted
with great surprise as he had been gone so many days. He began his story, but before he could get
but several words across his lips, he fell down dead.
How might one
interpret this myth? This story and its many, many variants, first and foremost
is an origin story or where things—food, animals, humans—come from. We come
from the stars. The additions and subtractions encountered in the variations
represent the local spin usually wrapped around appropriate and inappropriate
behavior. Desiring a woman is not an offense, but desiring certain women might be, perhaps from different surrounding tribes
or if one is already married (male and female infidelity is a common theme in
some renditions of the story). The above version speaks to the inevitability of
death and a view that suggests a place in the sky, the heavens, where you will
one day reside.
At a deeper level
this is a story of a rite of passage, from youth and dreamer to adult with
desires, curiosity, and passion, a man who will become immortal through the
female. By doing so you bring fourth new life (corn, cotton, yams) but at the
same time prepare for your demise and genetic continuance through your
children. Once you see this other place it is a signal that it is your turn.
Read another way the young man is in control of the woman; he knows where she
is and he communicates at his convenience. His control, however, is an
illusion.
But there is
another aspect to this story and that is obeying the deities; not obeying will
spell disaster, a common theme in both Old and New World myths. With age comes wisdom, or so we are told, but
the story is also about the behavior of the deities who are projections of our
parents and others perceived as all powerful “gods.” Some gods are good and
show approval and continuance (life), while others are less approving and more
rejecting (death—see J. Rush. 1996. Stress and Emotional Health).
Follow the rules and you obtain approval; disobey and you risk death (physical,
social, genetic, spiritual).
From a
cosmological perspective the Cherentes see the heavens as a place from which
one obtains knowledge; it is the place from which you came and to which you
will one day return.
Mother Earth, Father Sky
(Navajo)
(June 13, 2006)
Native American Indians
saw the land as sacred not just in terms of sacred rocks and trees, but as a
sacred place of creation. This tattoo is
of a Navajo sand painting. The Earth was like a mother who brings forth all we
experience. Father Sky is a reference to our spirit but there is really no
separation between the spiritual and material world.
The Navajo
recognized numerous constellations as well as individual stars and small
clusters. Their main constellations
included the Big Dipper (Male One Who Revolves), Pleiades, Orion, and the Milky
Way.
We hear in many tribes tales of an Earth-Diver
(turtle, Grebes), who swims to the bottom of the ocean and brings up mud which
becomes land. Or Raven, who spears a sea animal that becomes land, and so on.
The common theme of the earth/life emerging from watery depths is quite
widespread; from a scientific, evolutionary perspective it is partially
correct.
Earth myths come
with tales of stars, but equally important the stars informed people when to
plant and harvest. The Navajo, for example, planted when Orion set at dusk
(early May) and stopped planting when the Pleiades appeared in the east at dawn
(mid-June—see Miller, D. 1997. Stars of
the first People. Boulder, CO: Pruett).
Northern Paiute
(Nevada) see the Milky Way as a dusty trail to the south where the souls of the
dead travel to their final reward. This is not a passage without hindrances,
for you will meet coyote along the way who will attempt, in one manner or
another, to delay the passage. Once you reach that land to the south you will
find a heaven of sorts, with game animals and lots of singing and dancing.
The Pleiades
(the emblem used on the Subaru), a star grouping in the shoulder of Taurus, is
gestalted into place by diverse people from all parts of the world, with some
people seeing seven brothers while others seven sister or seven of some other
thing or entity. This star grouping was important for a variety of reasons
informing, for example, of changes in the seasons, and as points of wonder
while being enculturated (educated) into the ways of the tribe. In these
stories the existence of the stars first has to be recognized and mythologized,
and around this main theme various articles were added as the following Kiowa
legend, explaining the creation of both Mateo Tepee (Devil’s Tower, Wyoming)
and the Pleiades.
There was in the time past a chief, White Paw, who had seven
beautiful daughters. He watched them over the years as they grew older and he
noticed that they often said yes about things just to keep him happy. When scouts informed of hunters from other
tribes in the area, he told them to stay by camp least harm should come to
them. But no braves from other tribes
ever came into the camp, so the daughters occasionally wondered away. “Be careful today my daughters for the scouts
have seen a hungry cougar near camp,” and once again they stayed close least
they be in harms way. But no cougars, no braves.
One morning they decided to go a short ways from the village and
pick berries. “Be careful my daughters, for a very large bear has been seen in
these parts.” They had heard this before
and followed the path to ripe berries quite some distance from the
village. As they picked, ate, and
laughed they did not notice a very large bear standing some distance away. Finally it snorted, the girls turned to look,
and in fear of their lives, ran back toward the village. The bear, however, could run much faster than
the girls, and fearing the worst, they jumped upon a slab of rock and prayed it
would save them from the bear. And that
it did, growing higher and higher into the sky with immense force placing the
sisters in the heavens as the Seven Sisters or Pleiades. The striations
(weathering) on this huge rock were caused by the bear attempting to climb to
the heavens.
Now, there is a
strange part to this because only six stars are clearly visible to the naked
eye. So, at one time, there must have been a brighter star in the cluster, and
some claim that this star goes dim and brightens over time. There are also
several explanations for the whereabouts of the seventh star. Some say that one
of the sisters ran off with the Little Bear, the Little Dipper. In another version one of the seven sisters
fell from the rock and was rescued by the bear who, after seeing her lifeless
body, placed her next to the other sisters as a very faint star far, far away.
Heavenly Order
(June 20, 2006)
Hina is a very
dense personification in that she speaks to many aspects of nature including
the human condition. As you recall from Hina, the Eel, and the Coconut, Hina introduces
humankind to wondrous things—essentially life—but at a price. The underlying
message is that, in order to get something, you have to give in return. Let’s
look at Hina as a sacrifice.
A long, long time ago on a distant island lived the ancestors of
the Tahitians. When the sun went down there was nothing but darkness, night
after night. One day an old woman, Hina,
suggested that they hang something in the sky so that the night might be more
pleasing. Her husband Tangaroa felt it a good idea as well and set people to
work during the day. They all gathered
the bark from the palm trees and the women began to beat it together to make a
cloth they called tapa onto which
they painted all manner of stars and constellation. Day after day they pounded,
painted, and finally there was enough to begin hanging it in the sky. But work
must continue. Hina had other things to do during the day and insisted that she
pound tapa at night. Tangaroa, of
course, was trying to sleep but night after night Hina kept him awake. Finally he ordered Pani to tell Hina to stop
but she refused, and upon reporting to Tangaroa, Tangaroa became very angry. “Go
tell her to stop,” he frowned, but again this had no effect. After the third request Pani became so angry
that he grabbed the mallet from Hina and smacked her over the head. Her head
opened wide and her spirit ascended upwards as a flash of light becoming the
moon in the mid-night sky. As the moon
comes and goes, relentlessly, month after month it remains in the sky as a
reminder of the labors of life and death and Hina’s (woman’s) connection to
this never ending duty.
Octopus
(July 6, 2006)
This
is a Cretan design but the idea is found in many traditions. It is the rose of
the European tradition as well as the lotus in the Egyptian and Hindu. It is
also the spider, and when centered in the web represents maya (Hindu tradition), the illusion of it all. All of the above analogues (octopus, rose,
lotus, and spider) have a central point or point of creation and the arms or
petals unfold from this center. In my
view and using the Western scientific model (no less a myth but grounded in
science) the octopus represents the Milky Way, at the center of which appears
to be a Black Hole. The Aztecs and Maya, for example, see the Milky Way as the
road to Xibalba, the underworld, their concept of a Black Hole. In one story (see The Twelve Gates) the creator god Quetzalcoatl and his dog-headed
brother Xolotl travel to the underworld and retrieve bones from those who had
traveled the road before. Recovering
them they return to the surface. Snake Woman (Cihuacoatl) grinds them into meal,
and Quetzalcoatl adds blood by running a sting-ray spine through the foreskin
of his penis. In this sense the Milky Way represents a point of creation.
Milky Way
(July 28, 2006)
This
is the Milky Way galaxy, our galaxy. The coloring, rather than being lights in
a dark space, represents the various hot spots and gaseous clouds. Our sun is
located in one of the arms outside the center. The universe is a violent place
and we are simply particles within. With all the vastness of space, the
violence, and billions and billions of life forms, it is naive to think that
through prayer or sacrifice we can influence this energy that informs all to do
your bidding. To think that this energy requires human sacrifice or that martyring
one’s self and taking innocent lives in the process is pleasing to this deity,
transforms this energy or god (Yahweh, Allah, God), into a demon. Jews,
Christians, and Muslims worship a demon who requires absolute submission, and most people pray to this
demon requesting health, wealth, and progeny (children), all of which represent
one’s animal nature. There is absolutely
nothing spiritual about popular religion at all.
Artimis
(July 28, 2006
Artemis in Greek
mythology is one of the 12 Olympian gods.
She is the goddess of the moon, the hunt, childbirth, and patroness of
chastity and unmarried girls. By chastity the reference is to autonomy and
independence or the freedom to take lovers or reject them, and not to the
chastity/virginity, which implies celibacy or not being sexually active. Virgin
means "one-in-herself, to be
true to her own nature and instinct" [see E. Gadon, The Once and Future Goddess, pg. 191]). What
we have here is a sense of independence and individualism in women, a very
different picture then what was to come later with Judaism, Christianity, and
Islam where women are considered “less than” men and, of course, evil because
they can’t follow directions. Artemis is an accent on the individual. According
to many Jews, Muslims, and Christians “Women give men erections,” a statement
of emotional irresponsibility which justifies rape and other forms of physical
and emotional violence toward women.
Artemis is also a reference to the bear who,
according to Joseph Campbell, is the oldest worshipped deity in Europe. The
bear was the original animal master evidenced by its behavior. That is to say, the bear (cave bear) goes
down into the cave, hibernates (dies), and returns in the spring (resurrects)
usually with new life (cubs). The bear represents life, death, and return. Eventually the shaman takes over this role of
animal master as seen in the Sorcerer of Trois Freres.
Artimis is the female counterpart of the Sorcerer; she is the animal master
within an agricultural setting.
Artemis, a moon
goddess, was the daughter of Zeus and Leto and twin sister of Apollo, a sun
god. The Romans saw her counterpart in
their goddess Diana, and in the New Testament
she is referred to as Diana. In different areas of the Mediterranean
Artemis went by other names, that is, Agrotera (huntress), Coryphaea (of the
peak), Limnaea and Limatis (of the lake), Daphnaea (of the Laurel), Aeginaea
(goat goddess), Caryatis (of the walnut tree), Ariste (best), and Calliste. Her
most famous title was Artemis Plymastus (many-breasted—this photo was taken by the author at the
Vatican July 2001) represented by a statue of Artemis with many “breasts.” The
“breasts,” however, are really bull testicles.
So we have the
Bear, the original animal master, who makes sure that animals return for the
hunt. Humans take on this role as seen in the Sorcerer of Trois Freres (this
happened by at least 30,000 years ago), and then we encounter the female
stand-in of the sorcerer represented by the earth goddess Artemis when we move
from hunting to agricultural pursuits. She is the goddess of the moon (coming
and going—life and death), hunting (as the animal master—she has also been
called slayer of stags), and childbirth (fertility). Finally, she didn’t have much of a sense of
humor and was asexual. She once had a
crush on Orion because he was a capable hunter but that seems to be as far as
things went.
In the next
tattoo we also have the Celtic image of the Sorcerer of Trois Freres, complete
with horns or antlers, called Cernunnos, which translates as “lord of
animals.”
(August 11, 2006)
Cernunnos is one
of the many gods in the Celtic tradition who is directly related to Pashupati (see below),
which translates as “lord of cattle” (or livestock). According to scholars Pashupati is the
precursor to Shiva. Both Cernunnos and Pashupati are connected to the
Indo-Europeans who raided into the Indus Valley (between 1800 and 1500BCE) and
the Bavarian Alps (around 1000BCE).
Cernunnos is
found on the silver Gundestrup Cauldron discovered in
Denmark in the late 19th century, and dated to around 200 BC. The
Gundestrup Cauldron displays many motifs representing the energy of the gods of
the Celts. Of course this energy is
nature. In the current tattoo (Cernunnos) we see the ram-horned serpent (cerastes) in the left hand of this antlered god that sheds its skin
and then born again. In his right hand is a torque or neckpiece. The Celtic
torque, worn as neckpieces or arm bracelets, was made of solid gold. Gold is the color of the sun and the serpent
is the animal of the moon (death and rebirth). This antlered god, Cernunnos,
represents a synthesis of the two polar ideas—a singularity. And what do you
suppose he is going to do with the ram-horned serpent? He will pass it through the torque
emphasizing his connection to fertility.
Also note the boar, which represented war and hunting as well as
hospitality and feasting. The boar was
the most common animal of the hunt but was highly revered as boar amulets were
worn for protection in war.
Thus, you have
Cernunnos representing the concept of death and the concept of rebirth. This, then, is the number three—Cernunnos
(the singularity), death, and rebirth. This theme called triplism runs throughout Celtic mythology and religion. It is
actually very common in Indo-European traditions in general as well in other
more distantly related cultural groups.
For example, the Morrigna were a
triad of Irish war goddesses, but really only one existed as a tangible
entity. Artimis was seen with three
heads: Luna (moon), Artimis (earth), and Hecate (underworld). Artimis is likewise linked to the phases of
the moon. That is, Artimis as the crescent, Selene the full phase, and Hecate
the new moon. In a similar way we have the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost in
Christian epistemology.
Cernunnos
became the antichrist in Medieval Christian legend. The Antichrist, mentioned
in I John 2:18, 22; 4:3, and II John 7, means one who denies Christ. However, it also means a great force that
fills the world with evil and whose defeat will lead to the Second Coming. In
short, Cernunnos had to be discredited.
King Arthur (a reference to luminous bear), like Cernunnos, was
associated by the orthodox of the Eleventh Century with demon worship and was
discredited as well.
So we have the
bear, the animal master representing life and death, transforming into the
horned sorcerer/god as the shaman takes over the role. The horned god then
transforms into the female goddess Artemis who has numerous local or folk
renditions. It is the transformation of
living from nature—first as hunters and then as farmers—that leads us to a
general religious tradition in Europe that is still enacted both in Europe and
the United States in the form called Wicca. The Orthodox religious systems, that is, the
various types of Christianity, see Wicca as pagan and evil and thus they refer
to the Wicca as a cult. Christianity (as well as other monotheistic
traditions—Judaism and Islam) is intolerant of the beliefs of others; the gods
of other traditions are devils. This
makes good sense when a religious system is connected to the government as was
the case in Europe until recent times and which is still in play in the Middle
East. Diverse systems and diverse ideas
make for rebellion especially when Church and State are one and the same. When everyone is thinking the same, it is
much easier to control the populous. When monotheistic traditions control the
politic, pain, suffering, and poverty are quick to follow. If you do not
believe this then pay attention to Christian history, as well as the grief and
misery of people under Islamic rule today. For some Islam is a peaceful
religious tradition, but the reality is that Islam began as a conquest religion
and like Judaism has institutionalized violence, war, and revenge. Although
Christianity has had its far share of violence and war, there is really nothing
in the New Testament that can properly be attributed to our mythic hero Jesus
that institutionalizes such beliefs and practices.
Older gods and
the goddesses are still with us; their images alter through time and mirror the
prevailing cultural concerns. My opinion
is, however, that the female goddess has not altered in the same way as the male
god. The reason for this is that the
female goddess, to this day, has always been associated with nature and the
mysteries of life and death. On the other hand the male god(s) (because men are
not as closely associated with nature once we encounter population growth and
differences in status) become more associated with society.
(August 29, 2006)
Stonehenge, located on the Salisbury Plains in England, is only one
of many megalithic sites scattered across Europe. The original building of
Stonehenge was accomplished by indigenous people and not the Celts as was
originally thought. The Celts did not push into the British Isles until around
600-500BCE. The earliest structures were in place around the same times as the
building of the Step Pyramid of Djoser (Old Kingdom—2667-2648) and perhaps a
few hundred years before that.
Undoubtedly there was communication between European and Egyptian
cultures. Numerous books have been
written about Stonehenge (see North, J. 1996. Stonehenge: A New Interpretation of Prehistoric Man and the Cosmos.
New York: The Free Press.).
There are essentially two interpretations of Stonehenge. The first is that it is a colander site for tracking
the sun and the moon for planting and harvesting, but also as a
religious/ceremonial and perhaps burial site.
Some researchers, however, limit the site to more ceremonial activities. Either way it was obviously used in some
manner to calculate movement of celestial bodies in order to time human
seasonal activities for practical concerns, for example, game migrations and
weather changes. But they also combined these with ritual activities which
re-enact mythic themes—availability of fish, game, and plant, and corresponding
weather patterns, perhaps not precisely, but within a window of time of a few
days or weeks.
Just as the first tattoo of this series (The Awakening of the Pilgrim) stands for the absolute wonder and
imagination of it all, Stonehenge shows how wonder and investigation is turned
to culture’s benefit, in terms of finding cause and effect in nature. But this
can also lead to some rather questionable and what appears to us at least
irrational beliefs and ritual expression—like human and animal sacrifice in an
attempt to influence or steal the energy of the universe and put it to private
use. Many otherwise intelligent people in the world today believe that through
prayer, begging, pleading, sacrificing or otherwise getting the deity’s
attention in some positive manner (according to one’s definition), you can
influence the energy that informs all.
After all we can get electricity to behave for our benefit so why not
God? You cannot have rational thought
without irrational, and it is through this clash that radical change occurs.
Consider the political climate in the US today; this will lead to a new
paradigm, and we will either go back to the Middle Ages or move forward into a
new world with new possibilities and new opportunities—for everyone. To create
stability we can become more irrational
and continue to influence God, or we become more rational and push the irrational aside for the moment. Stonehenge, for the most part, represents the
more irrational (more time and energy is devoted to obtaining special
privileges from the deity) rather than refining scientific observation. It is now mainly a tourist and research
attraction, although some modern pagan groups might congregate there from time
to time. If the irrational elements in the world today have their way we may
abandon our scientific endeavors as well.
Just like the ancient Egyptians, it is necessary to pro-act and keep the
monster Apophis (Apepi) at bay, keep its power in check, least chaos reign. You
will never destroy the monster but you can limit its power.
(September 12, 2006)
Trees were very important to the Celtics perhaps even more so than
the Native American Indians. Each tree had its special characteristics. The oak, for example, represented power and
the word Druid may be derived from the root dru,
meaning oak. The oak also took on the characteristics of Zeus and Jupiter
because of its strength and ability to touch the sky. The tree as a general
symbol connects the upper world with its tall branches, and the lower, that is,
the roots connected to the underworld.
This is the lower and upper worlds, the basic duality within which we all
live. In other words, all things in the field of time come in twos—at least.
Tribes were named after trees and connected to geographic areas for purpose of
ritual. This is where we encounter the “sacred grove” (nemeton) where the presiding goddess was Nemetona. This is also
where some of the more irrational and animalistic rites were held. So what is the message: All is as it should be; irrationality tries
to hide its face in the sacred grove.
The tree is also the axis mundi, the axial tree around which
life revolves and evolves. It is the
center of the universe; it is where you are sitting or standing right now. What
kind of “tree” do you want to live in?
(September 26, 2006)
The Dogon of central Mali (south of Algeria) imagine the creative force as a weaving of
the paired opposites
resulting in a checkerboard pattern as seen on the left and right; these images
also represent the eastern horizon on the right (blue patches) and the western
horizon on the left (all black and white). This weaving also represents order
in the human world.
Checkerboard patterns are common and are represented in the layout of Dogon
fields and designs on their living structures.
The creator being for the Dogon is Amma (does this sound similar
to the Egyptian Amun?). One of her first creations was Ogo, symbolized as a
pale fox, the white figure in the center of the tattoo. Ogo was flawed; he was
pure male (oneness) having been born without a placenta. Ogo represents the destructive
elements of the universe, chaos. The message is that balance requires two of
everything. Fortunately, Amma created a
twin (Nummo) whom she sacrificed, cut into pieces, and spread the parts all
over the universe restoring balance. After five days Amma collected all of
Nummo’s parts bringing him back to life, and assigning him the job of keeper of
the universe. Nummo then created the four ancestors of the Dogon tribes and
sent them to earth in a boat. Amma eventually changed Ogo’s name to Yuguru or pale
fox. But there is more.
The four tribal ancestors found themselves in some sort of
dispute and headed off toward new horizons. According to one story they took an
emblem of fertility—a piece of mud—from the tomb of a spirit ancestor called Lebe Serou. The piece of mud turned into
a serpent (left center in tattoo) which then led the ancestors to where they
live today.
The human figure to the right of center represents the vertical
axis (axis mundi—center of the universe), while the figures across the top (the
drum- and hourglass-like figures) represent radiation of the four directions
from the center. The human represents
balance and in his right hand is life represented by a stalk of barley, and in
his left a grave representing death.
All of this simply represents another variation on creation
myths all over the world. However, the
Dogon have something special to offer. Anthropologists who studied the Dogon in
the 1940s heard a fantastic story. Sirius, 8.6 light years from earth, is an
important beacon in the heavens.
According to the Dogon, there is a sister star that revolves in an
elliptical orbit around Sirius completing the circuit every 50 years. Although such a sister star was predicted as
early as 1844 it was only photographed in 1970 and called Sirius B—the Dogon
call Sirius B, Po Tolo or “star that
is smallest.” The Dogon also stated that Po
Tolo was white and made of a super dense metal called sagala. Sirius B is a white
dwarf. The Dogon have artifacts thought to be at least 400 years old
representing this star but they also tell of a
second star, much lighter, that also orbits Sirius, although to date
this star has not been located. According to Dogon myth, the Nummo came from a
planet that orbits this second star (Emme
Ya) arriving in a boat or vessel emitting fire and thunder. The Nummo are
characterized as human-looking, with fish skins, who live in water, and who
imparted wisdom and technology to the Dogon people. The Dogon myth goes on to say that Nummo was
crucified, resurrected, and that he will return in the future in human
form. Similar myths are reported in
Egypt (the reptilians composing the Ogdoad), Ea (a fresh water, subterranean
god among the Sumerians), and Oannes. Oannes, a Babylonian god, emerged from
the Red Sea or the Persian Gulf in the shape of a reptile but with a second
human head issuing from the reptilian head.
He imparted knowledge and technology to humans, and when finished “cut”
himself off from humanity returning to his watery abyss. Oannes is the model upon which the mythic St.
John the Baptist is based—St. John the Baptist also imparted spiritual wisdom
and was likewise “cut off” from humanity. Arrested by Herod Antipas because he
was thought to be a prophet with magical powers, he was, as the story goes,
beheaded at the request of Salome (see Matthew 14: 1-12).
How is it possible that the Dogon could see a sister star of
Sirius without the aid of high powered telescopes? It is quite possible that
Sirius B (Po Tolo) was visible to the
naked eye within human memory, but after it exhausted its nuclear material it
became a planetary nebula eventually settling down becoming a very hot white
dwarf. Extraterrestrials (the Nummo in this case) are common elements in many
cultures and are represented by the Christian god and many of the numerous gods
of the Middle East and elsewhere who live in “heaven.”
The Sun in the Dreamtime
(Australian
Aborigines 10-10-06)
Once
there was a gecko and goanna who decided to go on a walkabout and visit some
old friends down the way. On their journey Gecko bragged of his expertise with
the boomerang, while Goanna informed of his prowess in contacting the ancestors
with his bullroarer. So as they toddled along Goanna began to swing the bullroarer
and sure enough he could make fine music, talk to his friends many miles away,
and even send messages to the gods. The polite Gecko listened intently but
silently thought how he might impress Goanna with his boomerang.
Well, he
didn’t have to wait long for as they rounded the bend and started up a small
hill they were horrified by what the saw. Their friends had been slaughtered!
Their fear turned to anger as they questioned, "Who might have done
this?" And then they knew by the
dog prints in the soft sand and the tracks leading off to the west. In hot pursuit they caught up with Sun-woman
and the dingos. Although caught by surprise Sun-woman laughed and danced daring
and motioning those of small stature to combat. But before she could finish,
Gecko threw his boomerang squarely hitting Sun-woman who in her retreat fell
over the western Horizon. All went dark
and the dark continued, on and on, day after day. Finally Gecko threw another boomerang toward
the West but nothing happened. Goanna then whirled his bullroarer trying to
make contact with Sun-woman but there was no response. Finally, not knowing
what to do, Gecko threw another boomerang to the south—nothing! Then to the north; still nothing. Finally, with his last boomerang, he hurled
it with all his might to the east, and as he did Sun-woman appeared on the
Eastern horizon rising high in the sky. From then on she maintained her proper
course from east to west, day after to day, bringing life and light to the land
below.
Australians
believed that the “dreamtime” was the real world, and in this world everything
happens at once. That is why Sun-woman
and the sun are one and the same, but Sun-woman was the sun before the sun came into
existence—energy before energy. Gecko and Goanna represent the cosmic rules
with everything in its proper place—cosmic harmony and balance, which is just
as important in social living (as above, below). They, in this sense, represent
Ma’at of the ancient Egyptians and Dharma of the Hindu tradition.
The
sun as Sun-woman represents disorder (the expression of energy but without
purpose) while her counterpart, the impersonal sun, in orderly fashion travels
the sky from east to west serving the life and death forces of nature. This is
order out of chaos. Sun-woman represents life and death in that the sun brings
life but also burns it away. The dingo dogs represent adjectives describing her
death/chaotic component.
Finally,
in Gecko we see the warrior-chief and in Goanna, the magician-priest. Some examples of this duality can be seen
with Moses and Aaron, King Arthur and Merlin, and more recently in Osama Ben
Laden (warrior chief) and Ayman Al-Zawahiri (medical
doctor-magician priest).
Notice in the
images that surround the tattoo. For
example, the upper tip of the boomerang is pointing to the sun in Heavenly Order to the upper left, while the nipple becomes the sun and the
boomerang the moon. There are many symbols throughout the tattooing (some accidental
and other purposeful) placed in similar conjunctions.
The
word Zodiac is said to come from the Greek meaning “circle of animals,” but the
word might have derived from the Hebrew word sodi or zodi meaning a
way or path. The Greeks may have borrowed this as found in their word zodiakos which means “a way of steps” or
The Path. The origins of the Zodiac as a system for tracking celestial events
must be thousands of years old. Tracking celestial bodies—star groups and
constellations—most certainly can be attributed to Home erectus of 1.8 million years ago. Looking into the heavens at
night they would see star groups with stars brighter than others; their
“zodiac” would have been very different than ours because the stars have moved
in their positions. These would be gestalted into familiar images in their
surrounding environment. We know from modern day religious tradition that these
lights in the sky were powerful, especially the sun and the moon. In the star
clusters our ancient ancestors would see the powerful animals they hunted or
who hunted them (the bull, lion, and ram), and later on crustaceans and
spiders, and, in time, more abstract concepts (Libra or justice) as the system
matured. The popular Zodiac of twelve divisions probably does not date much
past 500BCE (Before Current Era) although at least seven (bull, water-carrier
or Aquarius, lion, Hired Man or ram, scorpion, goat, and swallow or fish) of
the twelve are available in the Sumerian Period (3200-2000BCE). Astrology today
is placed within the unknowable-irrational category and derives from a false
analogy. First, the gestalted images and their recognition were initially used
to calculate and honor specific gads (Innana, Sin, and Utu or Shamash) as well
as determine seasons. In this sense,
astronomy came before astrology, although they have always been
intertwined—even today.
Second,
the Sumerians and others thousands of years before them, recognized that there
were wanderers in the heavens—planets, and these planets, as well as the
constellations, moon, and sun traversed the heavens in an orderly fashion. This recognized cosmic order was called Me (in India it is called Dharma and
Ma’at in Egypt), and because there was this cosmic order, this is the way
things have to be on earth. We read in Mathew 6:10, “Thy will be done on heaven
as it is on earth.” As above, so below! Within this cosmic order there are
imagined players who do have personalities, for example, Innana (Venus), Sin (Moon),
Shamash (Sun). The priest-kings make up
these personalities and their attributes, and because these celestial bodies
have these attributes they are reflected onto mortal humans who are likewise
part of the overall cosmic order. As time went on these heavenly observations
branch and become astronomy and astrology respectively. The astrology we see
today is relatively recent only developing around 2500 years ago in
Greece. As of November 14, 2006, this
image is not complete as there are some internal components and a background to
be added.
Innana, Sin, and Shamash
(10-24-06)
Although
depicted in human form the symbols for this triad are Venus for Innana (an
eight-pointed star), the crescent Moon for Sin (originally Suen), and the Sun
for Shamash (Utu—a four-pointed star with emanating rays).
Innana
was connected to the mother goddess cults associated with agricultural
communities. She went by many names in the Middle East (including Egypt) over a
3000 year period, for example, Innin, Ishtar, Ashtar, Astarte, Astoreth, and
Qedeshet in ancient Egypt. She is the goddess of sex and war, or life and
death.
Sin
is the Akkadian name for the Sumerian Moon God. Sin is also known as Nanna
among the Sumerians. Nanna, as the story
goes, was born to Ninlil after being raped by Enlil. Enlil was banished by the gods for his crime,
but Enlil, pregnant with Nanna and about ready to give birth, followed after
him. Nanna grew up to marry the goddess Ningal, and their two children were
Utu, the Sun God, and Innana the goddess of sex and war or life and death, and
her symbol is the planet Venus. Sin was
a very popular personification throughout the Middle East with many references,
for example, Mt. Sinai. In the above
story the moon gives birth to the sun. Astronomical reckoning among the
Sumerians originally involved tracking these celestial bodies as they traversed
the heavens. The ability to predict the
position of Venus and so on would have given the priest-kings tremendous power
over the ignorant masses. They would seem possessed with magical powers, powers
given to them by the gods. Manipulation
of the masses is easy; all you need is a good story.
Pashupati
(10-31-06)
This
is the clay image of a very ancient god of the Indus Valley tradition (modern
day Pakistan). There were certainly
many, many renditions of this god that have since disappeared into that dark
abyss of time, the mighty destroyer. The
animal on the top left is a rhinoceros, and below that a water buffalo with its
head lifted up and tipped a bit so its left horn is higher than the right; this
suggests movement through imbalance. The
animals to its right is the elephant and below that, the tiger. It is interesting that the rhino and elephant
face forward (to the right), while the water buffalo and tiger face each
other. The water buffalo stands for
civilization and the tiger stands for our opposing animal nature, with the one
trying to overcome the other. The rhino and elephant indicate movement in a
specific direction, and this suggests that the Indus Valley script (those marks
on top) is to be read from left to right, but no one knows for certain how to
translate the script. The animal master in the center, meditating on his
platform, is Pashupati. Notice that he has three faces just as does Cernunnos
(Artemis also manifests triplism). The right face points to the water buffalo
(civilization-right), while the left points to the tiger (nature/animal nature—left
or chaos). The center face represents the singularity, that single point out
which all paired opposites emerge and back into which they flow; life coming
and going. I am reminded of a mobius
strip that forms an endless loop. These people would not have conceptualized
history as did the later traditions in the Middle East. Their “history” was an
endlessly repeating cycle with no beginning or end. Below the seated figure are
what appear to be rams with the heads thrown over their respective shoulders, one
looking back while the other looks forward.
As
you notice, parts are missing from the original clay tablet so here is a
partial reconstruction
of Pashupati. I have seen this clay tile reversed with the elephant and rhino
facing the opposite direction (to the left). The later Vedas (Rig Veda), the
ancient religious texts of this tradition, are written in ancient Sanskrit and
are to be read from left to right. I’m not sure which orientation is correct
but I suspect that rhino and elephant facing right is probably the original
positioning. (Pashupati Tattoo)
Pashupati
is wearing horns as is Cernunnos and the Sorcerer of Trois Freres. He is a
creator god and probably an earlier representation of Shiva, the phallic
creator god. He is directly related to The Sorcerer of Trois Freres, Cernunnos,
and Artemis. It is not difficult to also
see in these images the shaman, who would dress in a similar fashion, and
initially act as a conduit between earth and sky. As time went on and culture became more
complex the shaman evolved into a full-time priest, often a priest-king, who
would, through the development of a mythical charter, set himself up as keeper
or caretaker of that (land and people) which belongs to the gods.
Pashupati,
which translates as “Lord of Cattle” or “Lord of Creatures” including sheep,
goats, cattle, and horses, is, as mentioned, probably the forerunner to the
great god Shiva. In this sense Pashupati is the “good Shepard” who watches over
his flock. In Psalm 23 we read, “The
Lord is my shepherd, I shall not be in want.
He makes me lie down in green pastures, he leads me beside quiet water,
and he restores my soul.” This is a predictable metaphor for a people who tend
or herd animals, animals that become dependent on the shepherd for protection,
pasture land, and water. The world as we
experience it is a mirror of ourselves.
We are gods to these animals, I suppose, as we choose who will live and
die. We project this onto the energy that informs all and in some traditions
humans end up as helpless sheep. This is, for the most part, the metaphor at
the core of Judaism, Christianity, and Islam, that you are a sheep who will
stray unless guided by agents (religious clerics) of God. Pashupati reminds me
that I choose not to be a sheep. Keep in mind what happens to sheep; they are
robbed of their possessions (their wool) and killed and eaten. Judaism,
Christianity, and Islam, especially in their fundamental renderings, rob us of
critical thinking and kill independent thought.
These traditions might want to rethink their metaphor.
Pashupati
is related to Artemis and Cernunnos through the Indo-European tradition coming
into Pakistan (Indus Valley) and Bavaria between 2000 and 1000BCE. However, the
Sorcerer of Trois Freres suggests that the idea of an animal master is
connected to the Shamanic tradition common to hunter/gatherers going back a
long, long season and found throughout the world.
The Cornucopia of Life
(11-7-06)
The
cornucopia, or that which spews forth life or life giving substances, is a very
old motif. This idea became symbolized as the Grail during the Middle Ages
through the Arthurian legends.
Historically there was no cup of Christ or special cup from which Jesus
drank during the mythic Last Supper with his twelve disciples, nor was this
given to Joseph of Arimathea for safe keeping until invented by the poets
sometime between 1150 and 1250CE. To believe that the Grail, or cup of the Last
Supper, is a real, historical fact would be similar to believing that there was
a magic harp that kept life flowing in Happy Valley, the village in which we
find our reluctant heroes Mickey Mouse, Donald Duck, and Goofy. The search for the grail is a metaphor for
the search of life everlasting. Here we see Cernunnos (100BCE-100CE France) flanked on the right by
Mercury and the left by Apollo (Belenus in the Celtic). In his hands is a
cornucopia pouring forth the life substance.
Under this seated figure we see a Bull (on the right) representing
civilization and a deer on the left representing nature. This is the same image as Pashupati; they both derive from the Indo-European tradition.
Here
is another rendition of
the Grail (see Heinrich, C. 2002. Magic
Mushrooms in Religion and Alchemy. Rochester, VT: Park Street Press).
Although this is a modern image, the connection of the Grail with Amanita muscaria, the sacred mushroom,
is referenced during the Middle Ages as that which leads to God and everlasting
life. The god-plant Moses encounters on the mountain, the turning of the waters
of the Nile red, the red caps worn by Cardinals in the Catholic tradition are
all references to this magic mushroom. At St Mark’s Basilica in Venice Jesus
can be seen holding the sacred mushroom in his hand; there are many mushrooms
throughout the mosaics. This mushroom is part of the Soma cult of the ancient
Hindu tradition and was borrowed by the ancient Zoroastrians (700-600BCE) who
called it haoma. Some of the
Zoroastrian rituals and procedures were borrowed by the Catholic tradition. The
wafer presented during communion in the Catholic tradition is analogous to the
dried Amanita muscaria mushroom. Consumption of the wafer represents
everlasting life, the cornucopia of life through Jesus. During the time of our mythic hero Jesus the
mushroom and other mind-altering substances were used as a method of instilling
the belief in God. In this case the
participant, unlike the Catholic ceremony, had the experience along with the
priest (Jesus, St. John the Baptist, etc.).
Jesus, in fact, is referred to as the “Drug Man” (see Ruck, C., Staples,
B., and Heinrich, C. 2001. The Apples of
Apollo: Pagan and Christian Mysteries of the Eucharist. Durham, NC:
Carolina Academic Press, and, Bennett, C. and McQueen, N. 2003. Sex, Drugs, Violence and the Bible.
Gibsons, B.C.: Forbidden Fruit Publishing Company).
The
cornucopia tattoo
is that of a woman with numerous flowers and fruits in a crate worn as a
headdress in the shape of ram’s horns.
Surrounding each breast is a cornucopia or horns of increase. Looked at more closely they also appear as stylized
geese. The goose was a very important and dense symbol as it has many
attributes. In the Pyramid Texts we encounter the story of the sun being born
from the egg of a primordial entity personified as a goose. In China until more recent times a goose and
gander would be exchanged as gifts in marriage. The symbolism involved the
loyalty of the one to the other and their cooperative nature. In the cornucopia tattoo the geese symbolize the Mother Goddess and represent
the going and coming of life, just as the birds migrate north and south
depending on the seasons. This is life,
death, and return. Life and death, the
seasons of the year, stability and unwavering devotion, these are the
characteristics of the Mother Goddess, although she can have her dark side
especially when wronged or slighted. Who is this goddess? In the Greek tradition this is Demeter and in
the Roman, Ceres.
Demeter
was the Goddess of the Grain or Agriculture and the mother of Persephone or that
which represents Demeter’s immortality and continuance. She gave the gift of
the harvest to humanity and thus her connection to the cornucopia. Moreover,
she is connected to the seasons of the year through her daughter. As the story goes . . .
One beautiful day Persephone was walking in the
fields enjoying the sun, birds, and flowers.
She was a beautiful young woman, desired by men far and wide. On this day, however, she had another
admirer, Hades, the ruler of the underworld. As she walked and admired her
beautiful surroundings Hades emerged from the underworld in his black shinning
chariot pulled by two powerful horses. And quicker than you can say ergot
fungus or Lysergic Acid Diethylamide (LSD), he grabbed Persephone around the
waist, hoisted her onto the chariot, and headed back to the underworld.
Toward nightfall Demeter, concerned and worried,
went in search for her beautiful daughter.
She walked the fields looking for some sign of her daughter’s
whereabouts but there was nothing. She
traveled to the four corners of the land searching for Demeter, and each day
she searched nothing grew; no new life came into this world. Finally she encountered a shepherd who
informed her of a chariot and driver who seemed to come out of nowhere, scoop
up a young lady, and then disappear. “Strangest thing I ever saw, a huge
gleaming black chariot drawn by two jet black horses. And that young girl was
just taken, scooped up onto this large driver’s thigh, like a doll on the hip
of a toddler. And then down into the earth they went. Puff, gone! Few believe my story, but this is what I
saw.”
Immediately Demeter knew what had happened. In order for her to rescue Persephone she
would have to go to Zeus whose power is second to none—well maybe one. Demeter, like Prometheus, had little use for
Zeus and instructed that, “Unless my daughter is allowed to leave the
underworld nothing in the upper world will grow. All the land will turn to dust
and the bones of your worshipers will mix with the dust in the wind!”
With that Zeus instructed Hermes to accompany
Demeter to the underworld, out of guilt no doubt, as Zeus had given his
approval for the abduction and marriage in the first place! To the underworld they went, across the river
Styx, and finally to the abode of Hades. And there was Persephone, seated next
to Hades. After a short discussion Hades reluctantly agreed to allow Persephone
to return to the upper world. As fate would have it, however, Persephone had
eaten three seeds of the pomegranate, the fruit of the underworld. Hades could
hardly contain himself. Persephone would
have to spend one month each year for every seed she consumed. And this is why
for three months of the year the land does not produce food but, instead, rests
in the underworld preparing for the new harvest.
Demeter
and Persephone are connected to the Eleusinian mysteries, a Greek cult that
used ergot fungus, which grows parasitically on barley, to affect profound
changes in the perception of the initiates. It was not uncommon during the Middle
Ages for whole villages to go temporally insane after consuming ergot infected
bread. The use of mind altering substances was a common procedure within
religious or cult traditions in the most areas of the world. Although substances differed from group to
group their goal was the same, that is, for the initiate to have a “tangible,”
guided, spiritual experience. Ergot fungus contains LSD and there was
apparently a family involved in producing wine from the infected barley. Little is known about the rituals associated
with this cult. One ritual common to
many of these cults involved having the initiate close his (or her) eyes and a
concaved or convexed mirror was brought into place. When the initiate opened his
eyes the distorted image served as a shock especially when under the influence
of a powerful mind-altering substance. The shock would serve to disrupt mental
process and for the guides to input specific information in order to enhance or
guide the experience. These
mind-altering substances, however, were consumed within a ritual context and
not consumed (for the most part) for recreational purposes.
There
are many other symbols connected to the cornucopia tattoo, a representation of Demeter. There is the female
element, which in a large sense represents the cornucopia. She represents
nature, and through her life emerges and returns in a never ending cycle.
Art, Surgical Techniques,
and the Uncertainties of life
On the night of November 17, the author was sent a gift
from one of the numerous demons woven into the fabric of the universe. The
demon caused acute appendicitis. The surgeon on duty quickly assessed that,
indeed, through CAT scan analysis, I had acute appendicitis and he needed to
operate immediately.
Approaching the bedside in the emergency room Dr.
Velastegui pulled back the sheet and then the gown revealing the above art
painstakingly etched into the skin over the past nine month. Some of the art,
however, (right-lower quadrant of Awakening of the Pilgrim - the coloring) was directly over the
perforated appendix. The surgeon calmly
questioned, “I’ll ruin the art. Is that
okay?” “Well, I’d like not to ruin the
art, but on the other hand, I don’t want to die of peritonitis.” “Let’s see,” responded Dr. Velastegui. “I
could make the cut here, but it depends on where it is. I might have to cut from here to here, on the
diagonal (Awakening of the Pilgrim).
“We’ll’ have to see; I’ll try and save it.”
Dr. Velastegui made the cut along a purple line directly
under the Fearsome Star Maidens and it is hardly
noticeable. I thank Dr. Velastegui for
being sensitive to the art and changing procedures to accommodate it.
Balancing the Zodiac with Fractal
The Zodiac encountered earlier needed a background and I
chose a fractal. A fractal represents
accumulated error which manifests in a geometric pattern over time. The zodiac,
on the other hand represents accumulated order of a social sort. In other
words, astrology provides a story designed to reassure that there is order in
our social and physical worlds.
Moreover, we may have some control over our destinies for if people can
tell our futures we should be able to alter those future stories.
These final tattoos were begun on March 13 and they are symbolic
of the bottom line in all the tattooing. The chrysanthemum is comparable to the
rose in Europe and the lotus in Ancient Egypt and India and symbolizes life
everlasting; it comes and goes just as the petals of the rose and the closure
of the lotus flower as the sun sets in the west. But the chrysanthemum is woven
deeper into the Chinese fabric. The word for chrysanthemum is ju.
And according to Eberhard (Dictionary
of Chinese Symbols 1986:63) this is the flower of autumn, or the ninth
month, also translated as “to remain.”
This word (ju) is very close
to jiu which means a “long time, thus
the flower is connected to longevity. A
special day to drink a tea made from the dried blossoms is the 9th
day of the 9th month. The
number nine is a very important, magical number in Chinese myths. The flowers are sometimes tipped with
grasshoppers or cicada, another symbol of immortality as well as honesty. Most
of all, the chrysanthemum stands for peace.
Different species of Chrysanthemums have been used medicinally in
China for thousands of years. Chrysanthemum grandiflorum flowers, for
example, are used to lower fevers, sooth inflammation, and increase blood flow
to the heart. Another genius of the same family is Tanacetum parthenium (Feverfew) is famous for its abilities to
relieve migraine headaches, while Tanacetum
cinerariifolium is used as a pesticide.
The wood of the peach tree is said to keep evil demons at
bay and the consumption of the fruit at one time would have conferred
immortality. But no; Monkey Sun jumped into the royal gardens and consumed all
the fruits before they ripened! Thus,
the Sun is immortal; we are left with death. The Yao and Zhuang of
southern China (my wife and I visited both these tribal groups in December
2002) tell a compelling story of the twelve peach blossom caves each of which
is a gate, if you will, opening from one death phase to another until you are
resurrected in that other place. This is similar to the twelve gates of the underworld
in ancient Egypt (see Rush, J. 2007. The
Twelve Gates. Berkeley, CA: Frog LTD.). The peach blossom is also connected
to the life bringing organs of woman, and the phrase “Peach-blossom Cave may
refer to the coffin or death (see Eberhard, W. A Dictionary of Chinese Symbols,
page 228). So we have longevity, death, and resurrection; the peach also stands
for the 3rd Chinese month. Like the peach blossom caves, the flower
is also connected to specific geographic places where important things happen,
for example, the bringing together of heroes in peace and friendship as
occurred in the “Peach Garden” (Romance
of the Three Kingdoms, translated by Moss Roberts 2005).
There are many Prunus
species including apricots, plums, almonds, and black cherries, all of which
contain various medicinal compounds. All
parts of the plant are used (fruits, bark, pits, leaves). Prunus
Persia (peach) is used as a laxative, for coughs, fever lowering, and as a
cardiovascular stimulant. The pits of almonds and apricots are used in
anti-cancer products.
Except for some touch up this brings the tattooing to an
end. However, I have many dreams and prophecies to render in a future
publication (see dreams connected to The Twelve Gates).