MOTHER MYCELIUM: Kybele, Attis, & the Fruit of the Gods, by Iona Miller, 2020

MOTHER MYCELIUM: Kybele, Attis, & the Fruit of the Gods, by Iona Miller, 2020

https://ionamiller2020.weebly.com/cybele.html We cannot forget that ancient people sought to alter their consciousness for preternatural seeing. Rhythmic dancing, auditory-driving with rhythmic sound patterns, and hyperventilation can produce ecstatic trance states. Thought-lives manifest belief systems. All religions have an ecstatic component and all religions alter consciousness to some extent.

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MYCOLOGY & MYTHOLOGY Asiatic Cult of Kybele, by Iona Miller 2020

MYCOLOGY & MYTHOLOGY Asiatic Cult of Kybele, by Iona Miller 2020

https://ionamiller2020.weebly.com/kybele-attis.html The Asiatic goddess and her cult-partner arose long before the classical era of belief. She is the Phrygian goddess of magic, wild things, and faith -- the dark mysteries of earth and nature. Phrygians originally worshiped their goddess in an aniconic fashion, like the Thracians who before being influenced by the Greeks never depicted their goddess anthropomorphically. (Bogh, 2007) Generally, she is characterized by a dual nature of unpredictable power and beneficent qualities. We are not proposing a discounted universal goddess theory or matriarchy (Gimbutas 2001). Instead we have to look for evidence derived from an experience of the sacred and artifacts. Arguably, it is a mystery religion, which requires undergoing ordeals, a death-like epxerience and suffering.

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Kybele's Forbidden Fruit

Kybele's Forbidden Fruit

The forbidden fruit of the mythic tree is Amanita muscaria (Ruck). Different toxins and alkaloids prevail depending on the concoction. We can't be sure if the divine entheogen was abandoned or replaced by surrogates, but it induced a visionary reality and cohesive worship. It was euphemistically and symbolically known as the "bull" for its power. We don't know if the divine elixir was a single substance or a mixture. Psilocybin and Cubensis mushrooms were also found on the plains. Drug-induced initiations were practiced throughout the known ancient world with mushrooms, opium, ephedra, cannabis, ergot, acacia, henbane, Syrian rue (mountain rue; Peganum harmala), datura, and more. In Sacred Mushrooms of the Goddess, Ruck (p. 73-84) describes the Lesser Mysteries of Artemis as based on the wild mushroom. They pushed human experiential boundaries to their limits and beyond the agonies of ecstasy. Modern reports of ingestion in wine describe energetic states, a strong desire to dance followed by sedative effects around 3 hours, and intense dreamlike trips for hours. "The effects of Amanita muscaria are diverse and vary according to dosage, method of preparation and the cultural and psychological expectations of the consumer. A small dose (or the initial effect of a larger one) causes bodily stimulation and a desire for movement and physical exercise. Responses to the fly-agaric varied widely. Sometimes an intoxicated individual had to be restrained from over-exerting himself, whilst on other occasions it would induce a tranquil state of bliss in which beautiful visions appeared before the eyes. The effects can be divided into three basic stages, which sometimes overlap. About fifteen minutes after taking the mushrooms the stimulating effects begin and there is much loud singing and laughing. This stage is followed by auditory and visual hallucinations in conjunction with the sensation that things increase in size."

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