Circle of Insects 11/30/07

November 30, 2007 – 4:54 am

I have been thinking about stealing spiritual practices from other cultures, particularly [in the Untied States] the indigenous tribes of the Americas. There are new agers, white lighters, wiccans, and some folks who don’t know what else to do with their money who are all souped up on shamanism, medicine circles, and other practices which they believe to be the real thing. And because there is an average of a sucker born every minute, there are lots of grown up suckers willing to part with their hard-earned cash to go on vision quests. And there is a market for those glossy slick-backed “Medicine Cards” with the nice drawings of Bear and Shells and stuff on them.

Awhile back, I posted to an e-group which I no longer belong to asking about how come no one ever claims the cockroach as their special animal. Everyone wants wolves, lions, tigers, bears, eagles, buffaloes, deer, frog. But absolutely no one wants to have any sort of spiritual relationship with a cockroach. The cockroach is the most successful evolutionary experiment, able to adapt under a myriad of conditions, and quite the traveler too. The spiritually bent should be fasting and begging for Cockroach to be their power insect or totem animal. But alas, not.

Now and again, there are folks who assign mythical beasties to the four cardinal directions or elements in a working circle. Dragons and unicorns abound, right along with the more traditional undines and salamanders. Phoenix and sirens, gargoyles and mermaids yet nary a real insect is noted.

For those who are so inclined, I present the Circle of Insects!

earth: deer tick, cockroach, wood bee, head louse, termite, house fly, ground killer wasp

air: flea, white-faced hornet, pubic crab, fruit fly, horse fly, jumping spider, hover fly

fire: firefly, honey bee, wasp, sweat bee, fire ant, red ant, scorpion

water: skate, diving beetle, mosquito, springtail, noctuid moth, leech, stone fly

sapphoq healing t.b.i.

  1. 4 Responses to “Circle of Insects 11/30/07”

  2. An interesting thought. I don’t know if you meant this tongue-in-cheek or if you are serious. If it is meant to be tongue-in-cheek, then well said with many HaHa’s thrown your way.

    If you are serious, then I would say that many people simply overlook such Totems because insects are taken to be nuisance creatures and vermin and they are to be destroyed.

    That in itself is a profound statement, if you think about it.

    Whichever way you meant this, it was an entertaining read.

    Thanks,
    Goon

    By WonderGoon on Nov 30, 2007

  3. This is awesome! I’ll claim the honey bee, for fire and for mead!

    By fenixmage on Dec 1, 2007

  4. Yes actually I am perfectly serious about this.

    Some of the animals I listed are arthropods but that is okay.

    I am serious about them also.

    They all have an ecological niche and anything that goes extinct causes instability in the system.

    So either we mean it when we say everything is sacred or we don’t or we don’t really understand what it is we are claiming when we say that everything is sacred.

    Thanks for visiting you two.
    spike

    By spikeq1love on Dec 3, 2007

  5. A logical conclusion. Thank you, Spike, for pointing it out.

    Goon

    By WonderGoon on Dec 8, 2007

You must be logged in to post a comment.