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Posted By: wwh New word - 11/30/01 01:56 AM
In the Ben Franklin thread, Wordminstrel cited painting by Delacroix of Liberty leading the people into battle.
She was wearing a Phrygian cap, so I looked that up. I ran into a long discussion of mind altering mushrooms
and their use in ancient rituals and mysteries. The catchall word for such substances is "entheogens" which was new to me.Here is a link to sites on this topic:
http://dir.yahoo.com/Health/Pharmacy/Drugs_and_Medications/Types/Entheogens/Religious_Use/

Posted By: Jackie Re: New word - 11/30/01 02:14 AM
Oh dear. Oh dear. Just looking at the titles on this site tells me not to read further...I just know they'd lead me to post something I'd regret. [hands over eyes e]

Posted By: WhitmanO'Neill Re: New word - 11/30/01 02:39 AM
entheogens

Truly, Dr. Bill...Don Juan and Carlos Casteneda salute you! I had you pegged as a 'shroomy form way back!

Posted By: wwh Re: New word - 11/30/01 02:56 AM
Dear WO'N: You and Jackie sound as though you think I am peddling that crap. Far from it, just the new word. It sure was news to me that the ancient Greeks used them.

I am not enthusiastic about entheogens.

Posted By: consuelo Because I am [yellow]curious[/yellow] - 11/30/01 03:30 AM
The Archaic Revival : Speculations on Psychedelic Mushrooms, the Amazon, Virtual Reality, Ufos, Evolution, Shamanism,and the Rebirth of the Goddess,
by Terence K. McKenna, et al;

I haven't read this book, but it is on my wish list and not on the list found at Bill's site.



Posted By: WhitmanO'Neill Re: I Am Curious (Yellow)? - 11/30/01 04:35 AM
My dear consuelo...I didn't know you had past affiliation with a breakthrough film of such startling infamy! May I have your autograph?

Posted By: of troy Re: Because I am [yellow]curious[/yellow] - 11/30/01 03:08 PM
Curious ? eh, connie? sometime this past summer, Naturual History magazine has a article about the Inca's and ancient Mexican's use of mild altering drugs, and their preferred methods of taking them. (the article also discussed why this was a very effective method for ingesting(not sure ingesting is the right word to use here. (or there...))

they, too, used mind altering mushrooms and plants as part of religious services.. a sort of Amen enema Palindrome thanks to Barbara Kingsolver, The poisonwood bible

Posted By: Faldage Re: New word - 11/30/01 05:10 PM
Don't ask me how the reindeer got into the Santa Claus myth.

Posted By: WhitmanO'Neill Re: New word - 11/30/01 05:32 PM
the Santa Claus myth

Are you trying to tell me that Santa Claus doesn't really exist!? Darn!!! Well, I have to tell you...I pulled his beard once and it was real! Rudolph made me do it!

Posted By: Faldage Re: New word - 11/30/01 05:54 PM
Rudolph made me do it!

That would be Rudolph the Red Nosed Drag Queen?

And just because someone's a myth doesn't mean he doesn't exist!

Posted By: Wordwind Re: New word - 12/01/01 10:56 AM
Faldage, please do tell us how the reindeer came to be associated with Santa. I'm all antlers these days, seriously.

Drugs and the Aztecs: What drug did they give to the virgins before sacrificing them?


Posted By: Keiva Re: New word - 12/01/01 02:26 PM
I'm all antlers these days
do you mean to say ... (nah. too easy)

Posted By: Wordwind Re: New word - 12/01/01 03:44 PM
Yes, Keiva, too easy...

My brain is erupting them... And I really would like to know synonyms for horny, but that's another thread on another day. Horns are very different from antlers. I maintain: I'm all antlers; I'm not horny.

DubDub

Posted By: of troy virgin at the altar.. - 12/01/01 06:37 PM
an other myth-- for the most part they sacraficed young men. i wonder where the "sacrafical young virgin" myth arose. some time not to far back i suspect. just another way to restrict women..

almost all cultures that had human sacrifice, used healthy young males. (all the better for the old, rich, powerful priests, princes and rulers to get the young virginal women into their own beds!)

from a biological point of view, you never want to kill of your young women.. but young men are much more expendable.

more boys are concieved, and more boys are born-- but by young adulthood, there is a shift.. and there are more woman than men (of the same age) but in cultures where men could and did have multiple wives, there was still an excess of men.. Food for the gods!

Posted By: wwh Re: Antlers and horns - 12/01/01 07:50 PM
Dear WW: I found a site with a bit of information, took a couple paragraphs:
Antlers are found in most species of deer. They are made of solid bone and grow from a bony base on the skull.Antlers begin growing in the spring as skin-covered projections. The dermal covering, or "velvet," is rich in blood vessels and nerves. When the antlers reach full size, the velvet dies and is rubbed off. The antlers are used in combat by males during the breeding season, and drop off afterwards. Antlers vary from simple spikes to enormous, branched structures. In most species, only males have antlers (both sexes have antlers in caribou).
All bovids have horns, at least in males and often in females. Horns can vary from simple spikes to extremely long, curved structures - but always unbranched. Bovid horns are made up of a permanent bony core covered with a layer of keratin, which is never shed. The horn picture above shows the hollow area where the bony core would be found.

I remember having our Herefords dehorned by chemical cauterization when horn bud was first beginning.
But I bought an hermaphrodite goat to eat a big patch of mixed poison ivy, bittersweet, and barbed wire, which I could not manage with pruning shears because of the invisible barbed wire. The goat gave me one very amusing demonstration of the use of his horns. A stray dog came into the yard, and headed for the goat at top speed. The goat ran a short ways, then turned on a dime, and butted the dog unconscious. But he hurt my daughter, so the horns had to go. When the vet approached him with a huge pair of pruning shears, I asked:"Does the patient get any anaesthesia?" "Negative," said the vet, and brought the handles of the pruning shears together with a lot of muscle power. The goat jumped up six feet, and came down blowing big bloody bubbles out of the gaping hole, and through his nose because the cavity was connected to his nasal sinuses. I assure you I did not enjoy the spectacle.
One interesting thing to be seen in the woods is a tree where several bucks have scraped the velvet off their horns, which incidentally recorded which one was the biggest, and destined to defeat the smaller guys.

Posted By: Capital Kiwi Re: Antlers and horns - 12/01/01 08:22 PM
Deer velvet is a valuable export for Zild. Pound for pound, it's worth more than gold. It's used in various Chinese (or Oriental,anyway) herbal medicine remedies from increasing fertility and virility to God only knows what. Velvet probably represents one of the biggest returns from farming deer. The velvet is collected by removing the antlers and processing them. Doesn't seem to distress the deer too much, but I think they use local anaesthetic. Deer get stressed easily at the best of times as anyone who's had to work with them can tell you.

We had a goat (called Grundig after the tape recorder manufacturer - guess why!) who lived to the ripe old age of 15. He, like our sheep Mint Sauce who I discussed in a previous post, was a wether but I often wondered whether or not he'd been dealt with properly because he got very goaty from time to time. He was a fun animal and really very little trouble to keep, unlike the mobile hogget roast. If he got off his chain he made a beeline for the front door and would camp in the porch until one or the other of us went out and tied him up again. He was also very popular with the local kids. He loved playing and wasn't too rough with them. Like most goats, his favourite game was king of the castle. He knew what his horns were for though and several of the local dogs found that out the hard way. But when he was playing, he always pulled his punches. He and my first Keeshond bitch were great mates and would play king of the mound games for hours. He also used to enjoy sneaking up behind Sandra when she was hanging out the washing and would just gently prod her. If she fell over, he thought it was a great joke. He'd call triumphantly, stand there and wait for retaliation in kind. Let the games begin ...

As you may gather, I rather miss him!

Dehorning goats is cruel, because the horns are their natural and only defence. Without them they will hurt themselves using the tops of their heads as if the horns were still there. Typically, goats use the flats of the horns in combat, not the points, so they can't usually gore their opponents, although a kid's short horns can be dynamite. The instincts to use the vanished horns don't go away when the horns are removed. The SPCA in Zild frowns sternly on dehorning them.

Posted By: Bingley Re: New word - 12/01/01 11:12 PM
In reply to:

And I really would like to know synonyms for horny


The one that causes much cross-pond amusement is randy.

Bingley

Posted By: Jackie Re: New word - 12/02/01 12:38 PM
(called Grundig after the tape recorder manufacturer - guess why!)
Um...because you can put anything into one? Lovely story, Ck. Thanks!
===========================================================
The one that causes much cross-pond amusement is randy.
Why? (If you can say without the prose being too purple.)
===========================================================
Dr. Bill (and anyone), would you please try and give a warning that I am about to read about cruelty to animals?
The idea of an animal in pain or distress sends a knife straight into my heart; and yours was a very graphic image.

Posted By: wow Re: Randy - 12/02/01 02:36 PM
The one that causes much cross-pond amusement is randy.
Why? Jackie asked (If you can say without the prose being too purple.)

Dear Jackie - have you never heard Randy as a nickname for Randolph, or Richard? And reading this I am sure I am waaaay off base.
Anyone care to try the prose?


Posted By: wwh Re: New word - 12/02/01 02:40 PM
Maybe Bingley feels about Grundig the way I do. About forty years ago I bought a Grundig radio for about fifty bucks, which inflation since makes look small, but was serious money to me then. It had piano keys to select the various functions. My younger son pressed two keys at same time. Both went down and STAYED down. Dealer said cost of having it fixed would be forty bucks. I do not love Grundig.

Posted By: Jackie Re: Randy - 12/02/01 04:56 PM
Dear Jackie - have you never heard Randy as a nickname for Randolph, or Richard?
For Richard, no, for Randolph or Randall, yes. But why is Randy in particular funny--more than, say, Dick? Though that may explain why the name Peter has gone out of fashion.

Posted By: wwh Re: Randy - 12/02/01 05:46 PM
" But why is Randy in particular funny?" my dictionary says:2 sexually aroused; amorous; lustful
And I have seen one of the Brit royals referred to as "Randy Andy".

Posted By: WhitmanO'Neill Re: New word - 12/02/01 09:53 PM
That would be Rudolph the Red Nosed Drag Queen?

No! Rudolph the Red Nosed Drag Racer, of course! Vroom! Vroom!

myth Good point, Faldage. Just ask Carl Jung about that! Perhaps, to make it a definite disclaimer, it needs to be in the phrase "just a myth". I agree that myth, on its own, certainly does not imply non-existence!

Posted By: WhitmanO'Neill Re: Antlers and horns - 12/02/01 10:14 PM
Bovid Horns ...Not to be confused with David Horns!

And how 'bout horned-out, Double Dubyas?

But I bought an hermaphrodite goat to eat a big patch of mixed poison ivy, bittersweet, and barbed wire

And you say you never did magic mushrooms, Dr. Bill? Pheewww!! Sounds like a great Frank Zappa tune!..."cruisin' to my poison ivy patch with my hermaphroditic goat, gonna eat us some barbed wire, yum!yum!, so bittersweeeeet!..."

Posted By: wwh Re: Antlers and horns - 12/03/01 12:07 AM
Somebody in a post said a kind word for bittersweet. I could never find anything sweet about it. I have heard it said that some birds eat the seeds, but never saw it happen. It kills trees, rips shingles off of barns, and is hard to cut with any tool. The woman who sold us the property got extremely angry when I killed it where it was damaging my barn. She claimed it was wonderful for Holiday wreaths. The berries are a blah orange yellow. Yuk.

Posted By: Bingley Re: Randy - 12/03/01 08:09 AM
In reply to:

But why is Randy in particular funny--more than, say, Dick?


UK Randy is an approximate (I was going to put rough but decided that was open to misinterpretation) equivalent to US horny, though randy implies, I think, a more permanent character than a temporary state like horny. Imagine innocent USn introducing himself in the UK, "Hi, I'm Randy". Grammatically it doesn't work so well with Dick because the double entendre would require "I'm a dick" rather than "I'm Dick". Also Dick is well known as a name in UK (Dick Turpin and all that) but Randy is only known as a name in a USn context.

Bingley

Posted By: jmh Re: Randy - 12/03/01 08:45 AM
>But why is Randy in particular funny--more than, say, Dick? ...
>I think, a more permanent character ...

Hence the reference to Randy Andy in his younger "Koo Stark" days (too good a rhyme not to use).

I noted that Jackie mentioned that Peter was dying out as a name - it isn't here. The reference may be understood but bariely raised a titter.

Jo


Posted By: consuelo Dick - 12/03/01 10:34 AM
There is a stock car driver in the US with the name Dick Trickle. I think he must like the picture that paints as he could have been called Rick, Ricky or Richard (maybe even Randy?). He's quite the character it seems. He used to drive races with a coffee cup in one hand and a cigarette in the other. When the money for winning became significant, that behavior was discouraged.

Posted By: of troy bittersweet - 12/03/01 02:46 PM
native american bittersweet is an endangered species. it has been largely replaced with chinese bittersweet which is much more agressive. both are common here in Northeast.

I think both are beautiful, and always cut some (chinese only!) in the fall for a fall bouquet. (turning foliage, (ie, crimson, or golden) stays fresh for weeks if you add glycerin to the water-- 1 part glycerin to 3 parts water. most drug/chemist stores sell glycerin. an 8oz. bottle cost under $1 usually.. it also works very well for holly and ivy (if you like those greens for up coming holiday.. )

i think for a tree, you'd need a gallon!--

Posted By: Jazzoctopus Re: Randy - 12/03/01 03:51 PM
but Randy is only known as a name in a USn context.

This is primarily true, but due to the success of the movie, Austin Powers, the "honry" sense has become more well-known. Also, the title of the Austin Powers sequel, The Spy Who Shagged Me was accepted by the ratings board because they figured most Americans didn't know what shagged means.

Posted By: Keiva Re: Horny Reindeer - 12/09/01 06:18 AM
Santa's reindeer are female. They remain horny during the Chrismas season; it has been called to my attention that that fact proves them to be female reindeer.
http://www.senecazoo.org/kids/wonder/reindeer.htm

Alas, poor Rudolph! One can only conclude that Rudolph either is female, or is a eunuch.


Posted By: Geoff Re: Dick - 12/09/01 06:53 PM
Just be glad you're not Peter Boyle! Ouch!!!

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