• THE MEN'S CIRCLE - The Rocky Mountain Men's Group

    From Ricky Sutphin@TIME to All on Wednesday, November 05, 2025 03:20:10
    THE MEN'S CIRCLE
    (c)1986, by Robin

    The Rocky Mountain Men's Group has put in a good deal of
    time the past two or three months working on a Manhood Ritual for
    initiating young males into adulthood. We still don't have a
    complete ritual that we are all satisfied with, but a good start
    has been made. Some of the approaches taken in creating this
    kind of ritual have drawn upon traditional tribal rites of
    passage. Some of these tribal manhood rituals include taking the
    young candidate abruptly away from his family to an isolated
    spot, where he must remain for a long period of time, usually
    blindfolded and bound in the dark. Part of the ritual may
    involve physical pain such as tattooing, circumcision or
    ceremonial infliction of cuts that leave characteristic scars.
    Even leaving out the physical cutting, these rites deliberately
    put the young candidate through frightening, isolating and
    painful experiences.

    No one has seriously proposed any ritual that leaves
    permanent scars on the candidate's body, but even so some feel
    that putting an innocent youngster through a traumatic experience
    is insensitive. It seems to me that this attitude misses the
    point. It is not a lack of compassion that is being expressed.
    There is no single word for it in English, it is a willingness to
    inflict (or at least allow) pain in order to teach a necessary
    lesson that cannot be conveyed in any other way. As sensitivity
    is usually considered a light feminine quality, so this
    complement is a dark masculine quality.

    Is this dark masculine quality desirable - or even ethical?
    I think it is. There are elements of it in the Wiccan Initiation
    Rituals and the symbolism of the Scourge. It partially explains
    some of the Legend of the Descent of the Goddess into the
    Underworld - where the Goddess only learns to love the God after
    being scourged by Him. "Remember this - that you must suffer in
    order to learn". Although many people are put off by the dark
    quality of this particular attribute of the Masculine, it is
    important to remember that although not pretty, it is necessary.
    Perhaps the following story will illustrate this point.

    A boy around eight or nine years old once found a very large caterpillar. It was dark green, as long and thick as a man's
    finger, and decorated with curious stalky and warty protuberances
    in blue, red, and bright yellow. Since it was nearly the end of
    summer, he took it home and put it in a large open jar, and kept
    it supplied with leaves of the type he had seen it eating. After
    a couple of months it began to spin a cocoon about itself. He
    watched this with fascination, and when the cocoon was complete,
    he put the jar on a shelf of his screened back porch, where it
    remained through the winter. When the days began to lengthen and
    the weather grew warmer he checked the jar every morning and
    afternoon, waiting for a little miracle of rebirth. One Saturday
    morning his patience was rewarded. There was movement within the
    cocoon and a small hole had appeared. The boy watched in
    fascination as the hole became larger and the reborn creature
    inside struggled to emerge. The struggle went on for what seemed
    to the boy a long time and he began to feel sorry for the trapped
    insect. Out of compassion, he ran off and returned with a pair
    of his mother's smallest, finest, scissors. Carefully he
    enlarged the hole, and then stood back to watch a beautifully
    patterned moth emerge into the light of day. The moth spread its
    folded wings, moving them gently to dry in the air. Their tan-
    and-gray markings seemed to the boy to be one of the most
    beautiful things he had ever seen. When the moth's wings seemed
    dry, he carefully held the jar to the outside of the porch screen
    so that it could crawl out. He planned to watch it until it flew
    away to find a mate. The moth crawled onto the screen and
    perched there. It flapped its wings from time to time but did
    not fly. When evening came, several male moths came and
    fluttered about the female clinging to the screen, but although
    she seemed to be trying to fly off and join them, she never moved
    from where she was. She stayed where she was for three or four
    days, and finally died and fell to the ground. The boy later
    learned that the struggle to emerge from the cocoon is so
    prolonged for moths and butterflies because the long effort
    serves to pump necessary fluids into their wings and strengthen
    them for flight. By shortening this process, to spare the moth
    pain, he had prevented her wings from fully developing and so she
    could never fly and mate and lay the eggs of the next generation.
    ......Robin
    ......from RMPJ Oct. '86

    This article is excerpted from the Rocky Mountain Pagan Journal.
    Each issue of the Rocky Mountain Pagan Journal is published by
    High Plains Arts and Sciences; P.O. Box 620604, Littleton Co.,
    80123, a Colorado Non-Profit Corporation, under a Public Domain
    Copyright, which entitles any person or group of persons to
    reproduce, in any form whatsoever, any material contained therein
    without restriction, so long as articles are not condensed or
    abbreviated in any fashion, and credit is given the original
    author.!
    Rixter
    telnet://ricksbbs.synchro.net:23
    http://ricksbbs.synchro.net:8080

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