The thing is, I don’t think the fact that Heathenry is dripping with machismo is entirely the fault of Heathens, after all, they’re only going off what they read in the Eddas, forgetting that the Eddas overwhelmingly focus on what elite men are doing with sharp pointy objects. We don’t get to hear stories about fishermen or farmers (boring) or most women (even more BORING) or pretty much anyone who wasn’t born with a sword and shield by their crib.

Awesome point on bias in the lore from this awesome blog (via amber-and-ice)

This is true for pretty much all written mythologies! “Myth and Reality” (an incredible book you should all read) says this about the Hellenic god-tales: “Though as Plato put it, Homer had educated all Greece, he composed his poems for a specific audience: the members of a military and feudal aristocracy … he did not record all the mythological themes that were in circulation in the Greek world. Then too, he avoided evoking religious or mythological conceptions that were either foreign to his essentially patriarchal and military auditors or in which he took little interest. Concerning all that could be called the nocturnal, chthonian, funereal side of Greek religion and mythology, Homer says next to nothing. The importance of the religious ideas of sexuality and fecundity, of death, and the life after death have been made known to us by late writers and archaeological excavations.”

Seriously, every recon should read this book.

(via hofgythia)

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under the present brutal and primitive conditions on this planet, every person you meet should be regarded as one of the walking wounded. we have never seen a man or woman not slightly deranged by either anxiety or grief. we have never seen a totally sane human being.

Robert Anton Wilson (via thefirstchurchofcyberpunk)

We should not underestimate the capacity of well-run propaganda systems to drive people to irrational, murderous, and suicidal behavior. Take an example … World War I … on both sides, the soldiers marched off to mutual slaughter with enormous exuberance, fortified by the cheers of the intellectual classes and those who they helped mobilize across the political spectrum, from left to right including the most powerful left political force in the world, in Germany. Exceptions are so few that we can practically list them, and some of the most prominent among them ended up in jail for questioning the nobility of the enterprise: among them Rosa Luxemburg, Bertrand Russell, and Eugene Debs. With the help of Wilson’s propaganda agencies and the enthusiastic support of liberal intellectuals, a pacifist country was turned in a few months into raving anti-German hysterics, ready to take revenge on those who had perpetrated savage crimes, many of them invented by the British Ministry of Information. But that’s by no means inevitable, and we should not underestimate the civilizing effects of the popular struggles of recent years. We need not stride resolutely towards catastrophe merely because those are the marching orders.

Noam Chomsky (via noam-chomsky)

I was just talking about how ashamed I am for having supported the invasion of Afghanistan. I’m a different person now, but I am still susceptible, as we all are. Be vigilant. Demand peace.

When I despair,
I remember that all through history
the ways of truth and love have always won.
There have been tyrants, and murderers,
and for a time they can seem invincible,
but in the end they always fall.

Think of it – always.

mahatma gandhi – early 20th century (via gnowing)

We live through books; we have adventures in them, we lead alternative lives through them. We expand our memories through them. And that sometimes art can offer us more intense experiences of the world than life itself can.

Anthony Doerr (via myheartbeatsforparis)

“Zeus: ‘Mother, highest of the Gods, immortal Nyx, how am I to establish my proud rule among the Immortals? How may I have all things one and each one separate?’

Nyx to Zeus: ‘Surround all things with the ineffable Aither, and in the midst of that set the heaven, and in the midst the boundless earth, in the midst the sea, and in the midst all the constellations with which the heaven is crowned. But when thou shalt stretch a strong bond about all things, fitting a golden chain from the Aither.’

Thus then engulfing the might of Erikepaios, the Firstborn, he held the body of all things in the hollow of his own belly; and he mingled with his own limbs the power and strength of the God. Therefore together with him all things in Zeus were created anew, the shining height of the broad Aither and the sky, the seat of the unharvested sea and the noble earth, great Ocean and the lowest depths beneath the earth, and rivers and the boundless sea and all else, all immortal and blessed Gods and Goddesses, all that was then in being and all that was to come to pass, all was there, and mingled like streams in the belly of Zeus.”

” In the Orphic Cosmogony, the universe comes about, but then Zeus swallows Phanes and creates the cosmos anew, therefore he is the creator.”

– Orpheus Orphic Rhapsodies, Orphicorum Fragmenta 164-167 (Otto Kern numbering) as found in Orpheus and Greek Religion by W.K.C. Guthrie, 1906, in the 1993 Princeton Univ. Press edition (Princeton, New Jersey) on pp. 139-140.

(via lonelyspelltoconjureyou)

Every one should discover, by experience of every kind, the extent and intention of his own sexual Universe. He must be taught that all roads are equally royal, and that the only question for him is ‘Which road is mine?’ All details are equally likely to be of the essence of his personal plan, all equally ‘right’ in themselves, his own choice of the one as correct as, and independent of, his neighbour’s preference for the other. He must not be ashamed or afraid of being homosexual if he happens to be so at heart; he must not attempt to violate his own true nature because public opinion, or mediaeval morality, or religious prejudice would wish he were otherwise.

Commentary to The Book of the Law I:51 (via lucifelle)

If you want to write and write well then write about what you’re most afraid of. I’m not taking about spiders, or the dark— I’m talking about what you run away from. The things you’re scared that other people might find out about you; the skeletons in your closet.

George Orwell describes doublethink as the unconscious acceptance of conflicting facts, principles, etc.

‘The War against Terrorism’
Democracy is purported to be government where decisions are made on the basis of what the people want but all over the world we are forcefully providing that people should live the way we want them to live, not how they want to live, in the name of Democracy.
War is engaging in conflict by force of arms, threat and violent measures. Terrorism is the use of violence and threats to intimidate or coerce. How can one be used “against” the other when they are one and the same?

People who go uninvited, to a country other than their own, shooting, detonating bombs and killing civilians… We call them ‘Terrorists’ when they come here. We call them ‘Heroes’ when we send them.

We have been lead to believe that killing people is bad but also that it is good.

Evette Carter (via prometheanreach)

If you love a flower, don’t pick it up. Because if you pick it up it dies and it ceases to be what you love. So if you love a flower, let it be. Love is not about possession. Love is about appreciation.

Osho (via lunaoki)

Also there’s a 0.0000000036% chance Hades will immediately ride forth from the Underworld and carry you off to his realm to be his Queen.  Which is okay, I guess, if you’re into that kind of thing.

(via sonneillonv)