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Anonymous asked: We like marketing research, and you like free stuff. Head over to TUMBLRMARKETING(.)COM and claim a free gift card for filling out a short survey. Thanks, TumblrBot

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I don’t feel that it is necessary to know exactly what I am. The main interest in life and work is to become someone else that you were not in the beginning.

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Anonymous asked: tumblrmarketing(.)com is showing how silly tumblr is. they'd do worse than facebook in the stock market. just giving free shit away

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moominboy:

THERE WAS NEVER A TIME WHEN THINGS WERE “SIMPLER” AND “MADE MORE SENSE” AND THERE NEVER WILL BE

THE ENTIRETY OF HUMAN HISTORY IS A BIZARRE SERIOUS OF EMOTIONAL SOCIAL AND PSYCHOLOGICAL CONFLICTS ON AN INDIVIDUAL AND GLOBAL SCALE

THE ONLY REASON YOU THINK THINGS WERE BETTER 10 YEARS AGO IS BECAUSE YOU HAD FEWER BRAIN CELLS WORKING 

(via geekybones)

Photoset

stfuconservatives:

twelvebats:

veganltw:

So why can’t I wear it? 

  • Headdresses promote stereotyping of Native cultures.
  • The image of a warbonnet and warpaint wearing Indian is one that has been created and perpetuated by Hollywood  and only bears minimal resemblance to traditional regalia of Plains tribes. It furthers the stereotype that Native peoples are one monolithic culture, when in fact there are 500+ distinct tribes with their own cultures. It also places Native people in the historic past, as something that cannot exist in modern society. We don’t walk around in ceremonial attire everyday, but we still exist and are still Native.
  • Headdresses, feathers, and warbonnets have deep spiritual significance.
    The wearing of feathers and warbonnets in Native communities is not a fashion choice. Eagle feathers are presented as symbols of honor and respect and have to be earned. Some communities give them to children when they become adults through special ceremonies, others present the feathers as a way of commemorating an act or event of deep significance. Warbonnets especially are reserved for respected figures of power. The other issue is that warbonnets are reserved for men in Native communities, and nearly all of these pictures show women sporting the headdresses. I can’t read it as an act of feminism or subverting the patriarchal society, it’s an act of utter disrespect for the origins of the practice. (see my post on sweatlodges for more on the misinterpretation of the role of women). This is just as bad as running around in a pope hat and a bikini, or a Sikh turban cause it’s “cute”.  
  • It’s just like wearing blackface.
    “Playing Indian” has a long history in the United States, all the way back to those original tea partiers in Boston, and in no way is it better than minstral shows or dressing up in blackface. You are pretending to be a race that you are not, and are drawing upon stereotypes to do so. Like my first point said, you’re collapsing distinct cultures, and in doing so, you’re asserting your power over them. Which leads me to the next issue.
  • There is a history of genocide and colonialism involved that continues today.
    By the sheer fact that you live in the United States you are benefiting from the history of genocide and continued colonialism of Native peoples. That land you’re standing on? Indian land. Taken illegally so your ancestor who came to the US could buy it and live off it, gaining valuable capital (both monetary and cultural) that passed down through the generations to you. Have I benefited as well, given I was raised in a white, suburban community? yes. absolutely. but by dismissing and minimizing the continued subordination and oppression of Natives in the US by donning your headdress, you are contributing to the culture of power that continues the cycle today.

But I don’t mean it in that way, I just think it’s cute!

  • Well hopefully I’ve illuminated that there’s more at play here than just a “cute” fashion choice. Sorry for taking away your ignorance defense. 

But I consider it honoring to Native Americans!

  • I think that this cartoon is a proper answer, but I’ll add that having a drunken girl wearing a headdress and a bikini dancing at an outdoor concert does not honor me. I remember reading somewhere that it was also “honoring the fine craftsmanship of Native Americans”. Those costume shop chicken feather headdresses aren’t honoring Native craftsmanship. And you will be very hard pressed to find a Native artist who is closely tied to their community making headdresses for sale. See the point about their sacredness and significance.

I’m just wearing it because it’s “ironic”!

  • I’m all for irony. Finger mustaches, PBR, kanye glasses, old timey facial hair, 80’s spandex—fine, funny, a bit over-played, but ironic, I guess. Appropriating someone’s culture and cavorting around town in your skinny jeans with a feathered headdress, moccasins, and turquoise jewelry in an attempt to be ‘counterculture’? Not ironic. If you’re okay with being a walking representative of 500+ years of colonialism and racism, or don’t mind perpetuating the stereotypes that we as Native people have been fighting against for just as long, by all means, go for it. But by embracing the current tribal trends you aren’t asserting yourself as an individual, you are situating yourself in a culture of power that continues to oppress Native peoples in the US. And really, if everyone is doing it, doesn’t that take away from the irony? am I missing the point on the irony? maybe. how is this even ironic? I’m starting to confuse myself. but it’s still not a defense.

Stop getting so defensive, it’s seriously just fashion!

  • Did you read anything I just wrote? It’s not “just” fashion. There is a lot more at play here. This is a matter of power and who has the right to represent my culture. (I also enjoy asking myself questions that elicit snarky answers.) 

What about the bigger issues in Indian Country? Poverty, suicide rates, lack of resources, disease, etc? Aren’t those more important that hipster headdresses?

  • Yes, absolutely. But, I’ll paraphrase Jess Yee in this post, and say these are very real issues and challenges in our communities, but when the only images of Natives that Americans see are incorrect, and place Natives in the historic past, it erases our current presence, and makes it impossible for the current issues to exist in the collective American consciousness. Our cultures and lives are something that only exist in movies or in the past, not today. So it’s a cycle, and in order to break that cycle, we need to question and interrogate the stereotypes and images that erase our current presence—while we simultaneously tackle the pressing issues in Indian Country. They’re closely linked, and at least this is a place to start.   

Well then, Miss Cultural Appropriation Police, what CAN I wear?

  • If you choose to wear something Native, buy it from a Native. There are federal laws that protect Native artists and craftspeople who make genuine jewelry, art, etc. (see info here about The Indian Arts and Crafts Act). Anything you buy should have a label that says “Indian made” or “Native made”. Talk to the artist. find out where they’re from. Be diligent. Don’t go out in a full “costume”. It’s ok to have on some beaded earrings or a turquoise ring, but don’t march down the street wearing a feather, with loaded on jewelry, and a ribbon shirt. Ask yourself: if you ran into a Native person, would you feel embarrassed or feel the need to justify yourself? As commenter Bree pointed out, it’s ok to own a shirt with kimono sleeves, but you wouldn’t go out wearing full kabuki makeup to a bar. Just take a minute to question your sartorial choices before you go out.       

…and an editorial comment:  I should also note that I have absolutely nothing against hipsters. In fact, some would argue I have hipster-leaning tendencies. In my former San Francisco life, had been known to have a drink or two in the clouds of smoke outside at Zeitgeist, and enjoyed shopping on Haight street. I enjoy drinking PBR out of the can when I go to the dive bars near my apartment where I throw darts and talk about sticking it to ‘The Man’. I own several fringed hipster scarves, more than one pair of ironic fake ray-ban wayfarers, and two plaid button downs. I’m also not trying to stereotype and say that all hipsters do/wear the above, just like not every hipster thinks it’s cool to wear a headdress. So, I don’t hate hipsters, I hate ignorance and cultural appropriation. There is a difference. Just thought I should clear that up.

WAY more notes please

A great explanation of why you should stop this hipster nonsense.

(Source: veganparty, via witchyways)

Answer

Anonymous asked: Are you going to "The Beatles: The Lost Concert" movie premier in a few weeks?

Hahaha… I’m not sure. I’m not a movie person, and while I do like the Beatles, if I see it it’s probably because some friends will convince me into it. Why? x)

#Anonymous   #ask  
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Untitled Ritual/Multipurpose Ritual Construct

blacktieblackmagick:

Light candles, cast circle and meditate to clear mind.

“Mother Hecate, Dark Lady, now kneels before you a son of Athene.

I come humbly to ask for your armor.  Protect me Enodia,

guide me Phosphoros, save me Soteira!”

Chant:

Anana Hecate Ayer At  x3  —Ave Hecate!

Invoke the directions. 

Facing East: Lucifer: Renich Tasa Uberaca Biasa Icar Lucifer

Facing South: Amaymon: Elan Reya Amaymon

Facing West: Leviathan: Jaden Tasa Hoet Naca Leviathan

Facing North: Belial: Lirach Tasa Vefa Wehlc Belial

Back to facing East, Middle/Center: Satan: Tasa reme laris Satan - Ave Satanis

Now Invoke other Daemons:

Blank, obviously.  Prepare your Enns and sigils before hand.  Know which Daemons you will be invoking and working with.  Limit them to 2-3, you do not want to invoke a bunch of daemons all at once…too much power to handle.

Proceed with magickal workings:

Blank, obviously.  Don’t get curse crazy.  2-3 workings for the ritual is plenty.  

Blood sacrifice:

“I offer this blood for this rite and for these workings to come to pass.”

Offer a few (2-3) drops of blood.  (Drop it either on a burning candle or a charcoal disk)  Additionally, spit or sexual fluid is acceptable as offering as well. 

Closing:

Thank the Daemons and bid them farewell. 


*Just a simple multipurpose ritual to invoke daemonic aid.

*If you want to change the opening words to something else, that is ok.  Use the 66 Adorations of Hecate or the Prayer to Hecate-Selene or The Orphic Hymn to Hecate.  If you want to invoke a different God/Goddess/Daemon for the opening, that is ok too!

 *If you aren’t comfortable with invoking Satan for the center, feel free to change to another Daemon that you are comfortable with.  Hecate will also work for invoking in the center. 

*Unless you are a son of Athene/Minerva, you should probably change that.  As I stated before, I am a member of a Fraternity that worships Athene/Minerva and have been initiated into the mysteries of said Fraternity.

*This is for a diamond shape ritual construct, but it can be used for circle, square…so on.  You will draw in chalk, use black electrical tape, or whatever, affix an inverted pentacle to each direction, and one in the middle/center of the outer four on the floor of your ritual space.

*Your Altar should face East.  This is pretty common in Demonolatry, and is recommended for an Hecate Altar as well. 

*Any questions, message me.

*Remember, don’t fuck around play with Daemons.  No invoking just because you can.  Have a purpose. 

(via witchyways)

Photo
thegreenwolf:

golden-zephyr:

thegreenwolf:

Did you know I write, too? My writing hasn’t been as prominent in the past couple of years as my artwork, in part because grad school sort of ate my writing brain. (That and I’ve been going more places than ever with my art!) 
The image above is the cover for my most recent solo book published by Immanion Press in early 2010, Skin Spirits. I’ve been working with animal parts in my spiritual practice for over a decade, and this book is all about how I’ve learned to work with the sacred remains (the book includes instructions on how to make a lot of projects, too!)
(I do have a new book coming out from Llewellyn in December, New Paths to Animal Totems. Seems I can’t stay away from the writing very long!)

so… you’re not native?
ee.
this makes me incredibly uncomfortable.

No, I am not Native, nor have I ever claimed to be Native, and I make it very clear in all of my writings that I am a white neopagan chick from the midwest. Where in the concept of “working spiritually with animal parts” does it say “THIS IS NATIVE AMERICAN”? Where does it say that *animism* is Native American? I am working specifically from a neopagan perspective, using spiritual techniques that I developed myself. Everything in that book is something I created from scratch.
I am very well aware of issues of cultural appropriation. Here. Read this. It’s a recent blog post I made specifically about work with animal parts and the cultural appropriation issue.
In fact, go ahead and read through ALL the posts I’ve made about cultural appropriation and the struggles I’ve had with it and my shamanic practice over the years. And if you’re so inclined, read the anthology on cultural appropriation in the neopagan community that I edited a few years ago and contributed essays to.
Then feel free to ask questions, not make assumptions.

Why does everyone assume using animals is appropriation?
It’s sort of like copyright law. You can copyright the name Coca-Cola, but not the letter C. You can appropriate specific practices with remains, but not the remains themselves.
Assumptions are go!

thegreenwolf:

golden-zephyr:

thegreenwolf:

Did you know I write, too? My writing hasn’t been as prominent in the past couple of years as my artwork, in part because grad school sort of ate my writing brain. (That and I’ve been going more places than ever with my art!) 

The image above is the cover for my most recent solo book published by Immanion Press in early 2010, Skin Spirits. I’ve been working with animal parts in my spiritual practice for over a decade, and this book is all about how I’ve learned to work with the sacred remains (the book includes instructions on how to make a lot of projects, too!)

(I do have a new book coming out from Llewellyn in December, New Paths to Animal Totems. Seems I can’t stay away from the writing very long!)

so… you’re not native?

ee.

this makes me incredibly uncomfortable.

No, I am not Native, nor have I ever claimed to be Native, and I make it very clear in all of my writings that I am a white neopagan chick from the midwest. Where in the concept of “working spiritually with animal parts” does it say “THIS IS NATIVE AMERICAN”? Where does it say that *animism* is Native American? I am working specifically from a neopagan perspective, using spiritual techniques that I developed myself. Everything in that book is something I created from scratch.

I am very well aware of issues of cultural appropriation. Here. Read this. It’s a recent blog post I made specifically about work with animal parts and the cultural appropriation issue.

In fact, go ahead and read through ALL the posts I’ve made about cultural appropriation and the struggles I’ve had with it and my shamanic practice over the years. And if you’re so inclined, read the anthology on cultural appropriation in the neopagan community that I edited a few years ago and contributed essays to.

Then feel free to ask questions, not make assumptions.

Why does everyone assume using animals is appropriation?

It’s sort of like copyright law. You can copyright the name Coca-Cola, but not the letter C. You can appropriate specific practices with remains, but not the remains themselves.

Assumptions are go!

(via hellboundwitch)