Apr
Friday,
8,

Goddess #atozblogchallenge


Carl Jung talks about archetypes as patterns that repeat. A friend on Facebook poses this question this week:

"Have you ever noticed, most futuristic movies have a woman leader? In which most of these movies portray a dystopian future for us all!"

It has caused me to think about archetypes. And a book I read a few years ago called, "When God Was a Woman" by Merlin Stone. (I highly recommend it.)

Before Christ, before history, the belief is that the goddess ruled. She didn't rule in a dualistic or opposing way to god. She ruled as a mother. As a nurturer. As a creator. (I always questioned how god was the creator when women were created to have babies.) In the matriarchal society, the children belonged to the mother. Inheritances passed through the female. That makes so much more sense... because the female keeps the children, the property, the control of the family unit. And the society supports one another.

When a tribal band of desert dwellers came into their land, they took control by force. They split families up, sending them into other parts of the countryside and the men of these invading nations dominated the women, raped them, impregnated them and forced the goddess underground. They tore down the places of worship and called them an abomination. They twisted the feminine into something evil. Patriarchy took over.

All of this has me thinking... If life is about patterns, archetypes, characters that we see replayed over and again throughout history, maybe these movies are a foretelling of a time to come when the goddess re-emerges and life comes under the rule of matriarchy once again.

I believe in the rise of the goddess culture. Again, I don't believe the intent is to oppose men, but it is not compatible with patriarchy. Goddess culture, to me, is the encouragement to use your voice and tell your story, to write your own rules and to live by them, to live and dwell in peace and to allow others to do the same.



2 comments:

JenG said...

Women are very powerful. We are the vessels that transport Souls from the spirit world to the physical world.

Susan Gourley/Kelley said...

Well now, LOL, you gave me a lot to thing about. I wish we could have tea sometime. I have five sons and one daughter. She is the youngest and we've always contented that between the two of us, we had the men in the family outnumbered. I've many times stated that when you look at the world, the most troubled spots and poorest countries are those where women have no rights. So I guess I'm saying, you are right!
Hello from A to Z.
Susan Says

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