I don't think that was directed at you, Eyebrowse. I think she meant it was generally unfair. Which it is, of course, but certainly not your fault.Eyebrowse wrote:Of course it's unfair I wasn't arguing that it wasn't.
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I don't think that was directed at you, Eyebrowse. I think she meant it was generally unfair. Which it is, of course, but certainly not your fault.Eyebrowse wrote:Of course it's unfair I wasn't arguing that it wasn't.
I don't disagree on any point. It was my mistake to include homeopathy in with modern witchcraft and Wicca when I meant medieval and even earlier herbal concoctions instead. I also agree that to those who call themselves Wiccans or Pagans or even "witches," there is more to it than incense and candles and poetry meant to be taken as a "spell." I was only explaining what I have done on my own that was based in the early traditions of witchcraft. I don't follow any set rites or ideologies but take what I like from each and incorporate them into my own life. That was all I meant to put across, not that that is all there is.MidnightCoder wrote:I'd just like to toss in that likening homeopathy to traditional herbal medicine is a mistake. The two have about as much in common as phrenology and neurology do, which is approximately none.
Wicca may be a repackaging of older beliefs, but even the term Pagan is one that's been branded by the Church. Calling themselves witches in this day and age is (to me) more like the way blacks (wait, I can't say that anymore now either can I? African Americans then) call each other niggers as a way of destigmatizing the derogation.
And yeah, Wicca does have absolutely nothing to do with the disney-esque depictions of witches, which itself is just a repackaging of the old Christian hate for those that wouldn't be converted. Even if the collection of beliefs practiced today is fragmented and pasted back together due to massive losses of "true" ancient practices, it's still a lot deeper than pretty candles and sweet smelling incense - for those who pursue it anyway.
I think this is the best way to go about it. For a long time I practiced what you could call a modern repackaging of Druidism, along with cherry picked aspects of Wicca, Native North American beliefs, and several other obscure religions. It worked, for me, for awhile. The deeper into it I got, the more I realized just how firmly entrenched the old beliefs were in their various fairy tale gods and goddesses. The realization that there simply wasn't a popular belief system, past or present, which was compatible with my own ideologies and didn't require belief in supernatural entities is what finally caused me to resign myself to pure atheism. I searched long and hard, many religions, but the one thing I never found was one shred of tangible evidence to support any of them. Eventually I just gave up.bleachededen wrote:I don't follow any set rites or ideologies but take what I like from each and incorporate them into my own life.
No worries.MidnightCoder wrote: Btw, I wasn't offended in the least when I posted earlier. Just trying to correct a couple factual things, sorry if i sounded like a smart ass in the process.
bleachededen, I feel as though you somehow no me.bleachededen wrote:I don't think that was directed at you, Eyebrowse. I think she meant it was generally unfair. Which it is, of course, but certainly not your fault.Eyebrowse wrote:Of course it's unfair I wasn't arguing that it wasn't.
OK, thanks for clearing that up, very kind of you. I feel like a great burden of guilt has been lifted from me now that you've explained everything to me that I failed to realise by myself. LOL.bleachededen wrote:I don't think that was directed at you, Eyebrowse. I think she meant it was generally unfair. Which it is, of course, but certainly not your fault.Eyebrowse wrote:Of course it's unfair I wasn't arguing that it wasn't.