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Author: CWCW Date: Oct 26, 2006 10:33
Hello everyone,
Please let me know if this subject is magickal enough for you or not.
I had a dream the night before last with the sea witch in it, like from
The Little Mermaid. This deeply troubled me. Is anyone familiar with
her? Has anyone worked with her?
Regards,
CW
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Author: whyzardwhyzard Date: Oct 26, 2006 10:45
CW wrote:
> Hello everyone,
> Please let me know if this subject is magickal enough for you or not.
> I had a dream the night before last with the sea witch in it, like from
> The Little Mermaid. This deeply troubled me. Is anyone familiar with
> her? Has anyone worked with her?
> Regards,
> CW
that's cool
did she have octopus legs too?
jungians study dreams more, and the jung newsgroup currently has a few
new very intelligent posters. You should try there
alt.psychology.jung, oh wait, i can just crosspost my reply to that
newsgroup.
They will get your post quoted in my reply.
good luck
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Author: TomTom Date: Oct 26, 2006 14:12
> Hello everyone,
> Please let me know if this subject is magickal enough for you or not.
> I had a dream the night before last with the sea witch in it, like from
> The Little Mermaid. This deeply troubled me. Is anyone familiar with her?
> Has anyone worked with her?
Worked with the sea witch from "The Little Mermaid"? No. I can't say I
have.
Now, if you'd like, you might be able to devise a way of doing so.
Enduring children's characters often express mythic or archtypal figures.
The Uncle Remus tales of Brer Rabbit, for example, are actually African
stories about Anansi, the spider-trickster. It would be possible, I think,
to invoke Anansi through a magical application of the imagery of Brer Rabbit
just as one might invoke the Greek gods by a magical application of their
myths, as was done in the Eleusinian mystery rites.
So what archtypal figure do you think the sea witch represents? Are there
any mythic stories from any other culture that parallel her character?
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Author: whyzardwhyzard Date: Oct 26, 2006 15:02
Tom wrote:
>> Hello everyone,
>> Please let me know if this subject is magickal enough for you or not.
>> I had a dream the night before last with the sea witch in it, like from
>> The Little Mermaid. This deeply troubled me. Is anyone familiar with her?
>> Has anyone worked with her?
>
> Worked with the sea witch from "The Little Mermaid"? No. I can't say I
> have.
>
> Now, if you'd like, you might be able to devise a way of doing so.
> Enduring children's characters often express mythic or archtypal figures.
> The Uncle Remus tales of Brer Rabbit, for example, are actually African
> stories about Anansi, the spider-trickster. It would be possible, I think,
> to invoke Anansi through a magical application of the imagery of Brer Rabbit
> just as one might invoke the Greek gods by a magical application of their
> myths, as was done in the Eleusinian mystery rites.
> ...
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Author: Karipidu MariannaKaripidu Marianna Date: Oct 26, 2006 15:58
"Tom" comcast.net> wrote in message
news:9fSdnVAeUoJPudzYnZ2dnUVZ_r-dnZ2d@comcast.com...
>> Hello everyone,
>> Please let me know if this subject is magickal enough for you or not.
>> I had a dream the night before last with the sea witch in it, like from
>> The Little Mermaid. This deeply troubled me. Is anyone familiar with her?
>> Has anyone worked with her?
>
> Worked with the sea witch from "The Little Mermaid"? No. I can't say I
> have.
>
> Now, if you'd like, you might be able to devise a way of doing so.
> Enduring children's characters often express mythic or archtypal figures.
> The Uncle Remus tales of Brer Rabbit, for example, are actually African
> stories about Anansi, the spider-trickster. It would be possible, I think,
> to invoke Anansi through a magical application of the imagery of Brer Rabbit
> just as one might invoke the Greek gods by a magical application of their ...
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| Show full article (1.78Kb) |
| 1 Comment |
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Author: KisaiKisai Date: Oct 26, 2006 16:54
Tom wrote:
> "CW" noreply.org> wrote in message
> news:Cj60h.23266$6S3.12842@newssvr25.news.prodigy.net...
>
> So what archtypal figure do you think the sea witch represents? Are there
> any mythic stories from any other culture that parallel her character?
The Sea Witch from the Little Mermaid represents the Dark Mother and
represents the fears of transitioning from child to woman.
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Author: whyzardwhyzard Date: Oct 26, 2006 16:58
Kisai wrote:
> Tom wrote:
>> "CW" noreply.org> wrote in message
>> news:Cj60h.23266$6S3.12842@newssvr25.news.prodigy.net...
>>
>> So what archtypal figure do you think the sea witch represents? Are there
>> any mythic stories from any other culture that parallel her character?
>
> The Sea Witch from the Little Mermaid represents the Dark Mother and
> represents the fears of transitioning from child to woman.
i think the sea witch from the little mermaid is symbolic of a sea
witch wanting to take poseidon's throne.
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Author: CWCW Date: Oct 26, 2006 17:27
whyzard wrote:
> CW wrote:
>
>> Hello everyone,
>> Please let me know if this subject is magickal enough for you or not.
>> I had a dream the night before last with the sea witch in it, like from
>> The Little Mermaid. This deeply troubled me. Is anyone familiar with
>> her? Has anyone worked with her?
>> Regards,
>> CW
>>
>
>
>
>
> that's cool
> did she have octopus legs too?
>
> jungians study dreams more, and the jung newsgroup currently has a few
> new very intelligent posters. You should try there ...
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| 15 Comments |
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Author: CWCW Date: Oct 26, 2006 17:33
Tom wrote:
>> Hello everyone,
>> Please let me know if this subject is magickal enough for you or not.
>> I had a dream the night before last with the sea witch in it, like from
>> The Little Mermaid. This deeply troubled me. Is anyone familiar with her?
>> Has anyone worked with her?
>>
>
> Worked with the sea witch from "The Little Mermaid"? No. I can't say I
> have.
>
> Now, if you'd like, you might be able to devise a way of doing so.
> Enduring children's characters often express mythic or archtypal figures.
> The Uncle Remus tales of Brer Rabbit, for example, are actually African
> stories about Anansi, the spider-trickster. It would be possible, I think,
> to invoke Anansi through a magical application of the imagery of Brer Rabbit
> just as one might invoke the Greek gods by a magical application of their ...
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Author: CWCW Date: Oct 26, 2006 17:35
Karipidu Marianna wrote:
> "Tom" comcast.net> wrote in message
> news:9fSdnVAeUoJPudzYnZ2dnUVZ_r-dnZ2d@comcast.com...
>
>>> Hello everyone,
>>> Please let me know if this subject is magickal enough for you or not.
>>> I had a dream the night before last with the sea witch in it, like from
>>> The Little Mermaid. This deeply troubled me. Is anyone familiar with her?
>>> Has anyone worked with her?
>>>
>> Worked with the sea witch from "The Little Mermaid"? No. I can't say I
>> have.
>>
>> Now, if you'd like, you might be able to devise a way of doing so.
>> Enduring children's characters often express mythic or archtypal figures.
>> The Uncle Remus tales of Brer Rabbit, for example, are actually African
>> stories about Anansi, the spider-trickster. It would be possible, I think, ...
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| no comments |
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