Celebrating personal discordia and spiritual anarchy.




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"Anarchy is not intended to be sustainable. It is not a system of government, a codified list of rules and beliefs, or a mind set geared toward cultural constructivism. It is a spark, a flash, a small flame that ignites a paradigm-obliterating explosion. It is destructive by nature. It lies dormant and, like diesel fuel, can only be ignited by tremendous pressure. It deconstructs. It strips flesh from bone and grinds bone to dust. It is doomed to consumption in the conflagration instigated by its own primal spark. It is a catalyst. It is tinder. It is powder and fuse."

Rich Oliver




Ritual Cannibalism as Sacrament

Ritual Cannibalism:

The eating of all or part of the physical or symbolic body of a given person or personified entity in hopes of gaining one or more of their desirable attributes.

I was sitting in church on Sunday and witnessed something I had seen a million times, the sacrament. I dawned on me, rather unnervingly, that I was witnessing a rather savage, disturbing custom: the ceremonial eating of human flesh and drinking of human blood. Sure, symbolically, it belongs to a demi-god and we are hoping to gain some kind of spiritual influence through partaking, but damn... I actually had to pass it by. The older woman to my immediate left, however, actually licked her fingers and smiled. Her visage was so sublime I couldn't bear to tell her she had a crumb of archetypal godflesh clinging to the corner of her mouth.

Maybe anthropophagy stems from the cults of Dionysis. He does have some things in common with Jesus:

Dionysus comes down to earth as god made flesh as a savior and is the son of God.

His Father is a god and his mother is a mortal virgin.

His born in a humble stable on December 25 before three shepherds.

He dies at Easter time for the sins of the world.
After he dies he descends into hell and rises again on the third day.

He preaches about a Holy communion of his sacred body and blood for the forgiveness of sins.

Hey, isn't that Baccus???

Even anarchists have Mothers

What could be more threatening, awful, nasty and disreputable than an unwashed, disheveled, angry, weird hippie / anarchist? I mean, seriously?

Sure, I hate government. I admit this freely. Sure, I'm angry and I dress funny. Granted, I'm kind of a conversation killer and not much fun at parties or political rallies... but my mom still loves me and thinks I am special. I like to think she is right. I'm a special, angry, difficult snowflake. Thanks mom.

EHow has some help for you if Mom needs an explanation of your chaotic political bent:

LINK

The label "anarchist" has a lot of unfortunate, inaccurate connotations. For most people, the word brings to mind images of violent, bomb-throwing terrorists who want to abolish all government and replace it with chaos, lawlessness and survival-of-the-fittest. Those of us who are anarchists know better, but how can you explain your ideology to Mom (or for that matter, anyone else close to you) without freaking her out?
Difficulty: Moderately Challenging

Instructions

1
Refer to yourself as a "classical anarchist." There are a lot of people out there calling themselves "anarchists" who really DO subscribe to the violent, bomb-throwing rebellious lot, and that's not you. Making this distinction will signal to Mom that what you are has nothing to do with her preconceptions about what the word means.

2
Speak Greek. Explain that the word "anarchism" comes from the Greek "anarcho" and means "without rulers." Launch from this into the basic definition of anarchy: a governing system based on real equality, where systems are set up in such a way that no one has power over anyone else.

3
Give her a brief history lesson. Explain that the word "anarchy" being commonly used to mean "chaos" actually came about as a result of the anarchist movement of the 1800s, both because people weren't ready to imagine equality without pandemonium, and because enemies of the anarchist movement worked to push this definition.

4
Tell her that contrary to popular belief, anarchists don't actually want to set up a society that's free of rules and laws or even free of government - we just want the laws and government to be determined by and serve the people completely.

5
Explain about the best parts of what anarchism promotes: freedom, equality, liberty, and community, taking care of, defending, and looking out for each other, and letting everyone live the lives of their choosing. Explain to her that anarchists want racial, sex, and GLBT equality, are devoted to environmentalism and ending poverty, and want to see all people provided with the things they need. (You can either drop the "communism" bomb now, later, or never, depending on what you know about your mother.)

6
List some examples of prominent anarchists living today. If Mom thinks that anarchists are all crazy terrorist kids, imagine how her opinion of our ideology will change when you tell her that some of the prominent subscribers to our ideology include a famous professor of linguistics (Noam Chomsky), a renowned classical composer and former assistant to John Cage (Andrew Culver) and a martial arts fighting champion with a masters in psychology (Jeff Monson).

7
Promise your mother that you don't want to or plan to hurt anyone or blow up anything, because this is not only a violation of your principles, it's completely counterproductive. Explain that the current goals of the anarchist movement are mostly centered around helping people, fighting oppression, and educating about what what "anarchism" is really about. Tell her some of the good things you plan to do and want to do.


Hug her a lot. I think that helps...and do dishes once in awhile...