Sunday, August 07, 2005

A case for a war

The exact time frame of the origins is unknown. It may even pre-date the egg and the chicken question. There used to be hens, and their male protecters: Cocks. A native indian, in cunjunction to those cocks, had a shaved head with only a strip of hair from front to back; called a roach. Miguel Cervantes thought of the idea of unification. The idea that two subjects can be combined in their nature, and yet be two different entities, hence he created Don Quixote and Sancho Panza. But Cervantes' story is unrelated to cocks, hens and the indian since chivalary died, and romance was institutionalized by the Bourgeois(: the flagbearers of mediocrity).
This tragedy however did not alter the sufferings of Prometheus. The eagles kept tearing apart his liver over and over again, for their nutritional needs. The Condours consequently were not happy with the eagles for stealing their job. Meanwhile, the indian smoked tobacco, and the cocks were being cocks; what hens were doing and the status of the roach is not clear during that particular moment.


If you have thought that this fable would end in concatination of the cock and the roach then know this that it has not. The fable has survived because of its conservatist interpreations.

2 comments:

Vincent said...

Do you think Jungian principle of anima/animus applies to humans? What about synchronicity? Have you read my piece called "Anima?" on the blog?

Vincent said...

Not an affirmation, certainly. Perhaps, I were trying to discover Hermine, since I can project her onto any female human (according to Jung).
The matter of vibrating strings and us hearing the individual notes is true I guess -- not to forget that individual only resonate with the vibrating notes. Hence, one can even learn from the flowing river just by tuning his mind to reproduce that OM.