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Archive for the ‘Mythology’

Fear and Loathing of the Beast

May 22, 2008 By: Ken Nicholson Category: Community, Mythology, People No Comments →

Fear is an insidious destroyer of a good time, also fear is bad for your health. To deal with fear, people are always looking over their shoulder to see how close they are to something bad happening. Fearful people are forever devising strategies to be safe, secure, and protected from all the worlds evils. To escape bad happenings, people hoard things—things and money, and they organize their world in such a way so as to preclude bad things happening . They become Republicans.

And yet, bad things happen anyway. Life is not fair. For example: In Otero County and Southern New Mexico, as in most of the country, the wolf had been hunted to extinction, Apaches and Mexicans were marginalized and killed to make life safe for the Anglos who had migrated here from Texas, via Appalachia, and originally, Northern Ireland. (more…)

Excerpt from “The Book” by Alan Watts

March 25, 2007 By: Ken Nicholson Category: Mythology No Comments →

Answers to those tough metaphysical questions

Where did the world come from? Why did God make the world? Where was I before I was born? Where do people go when they die?…

There was never a time when the world began, because it goes round and round like a circle, and there is no place on a circle where it begins. Look at [your] watch, which tells the time; it goes round, and so the world repeats itself again and again. But just as the hour-hand of the watch goes up to twelve and down to six, so, too, there is day and night, waking and sleeping, living and dying, summer and winter. You can’t have any one of these without the other, because you wouldn’t be able to know what black is unless you had seen it side-by-side with white, or white unless side-by-side with black. (more…)

Applied mythology

December 15, 2006 By: Ken Nicholson Category: Mythology No Comments →

DEALING WITH MYTHS
Sam Smith
Progressive Review

Having been an anthropology major, I don’t get as riled up about mythology in public life as many in the media and politics. Myths can be helpful, benign, sad, or deadly but mostly they’re there to fill the empty places in reality.

Sometimes myths are carried on the backs of famous people because the reality isn’t powerful enough to do the job. A classic case involves the death of Dr Charles Drew, the famous black surgeon.

It is widely told that Drew, then 46, died in North Carolina in 1950 following a car accident for which he was unable to get treatment at a white hospital and had to be transported to a much more distant black hospital, wasting critical treatment time.

But the Annals of American Survey notes:

(more…)

The Three Of Us

May 05, 2006 By: Ken Nicholson Category: Economy, Motorcycle, Mythology, Philosophy No Comments →

Lately, I’ve been working on my much neglected KLR650 and am now neglecting the V-Strom. Although having two motorcycles in the garage sounds enticing, polygamy is not as easy as you may think. The V-Strom, the newest addition to my family, has been the focus of most of my attention as far as material things go.

I have never thought much about polygamy, at least in the sense of how problematic it could be in practice. In theory, according to the scientific viewpoint, when you are with one, you are not with the other. Metaphysically, I suppose you could be with both at the same time. I do know that you can’t ride two motorcycles at once. Hmmm, I wonder where this metaphor is taking me? (more…)

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