Women vs. Men
By: Michelle Hass (in conversation with Scott Szakonyi)
"Ok folks, Loki and I have been chatting, and we're
ready to raise a ruckus that might go on for months."
Chiniginish and I relish the challenge... with Coyote
looking over our shoulders and chuckling...
"Here's the question: Are women superior to men, and if
so, why? I think that women are superior to men in the modern world
because evolution is lagging society. Most of the evolution of the human
race (about 60 million yrs) took place in hunter/gatherer tribes, where
aggressive behavior on the part of the male hunters was a survival trait,
and relating/caring behavior was a survival trait for females. Now, in the
20 thousand or so years since we have become agrarian, the need for male
hunter aggressiveness has gone the way of the Dodo, while the need for
relating/caring behavior has become primary. Where does this leave us?
"Well, as I see it, women are almost ideally suited to
the overcrowded, communication-intensive environment that we call modern
society. Men, on the other hand, are like people with no arms playing
handball. It's not that we're bad folk, it's just that we were designed by
evolution for an environment that hasn't existed for 20 thousand years,
which is a real drop in the bucket in terms of evolution. Evolution isn't
going to be giving us any help for at least a few million years; maybe
never since we are constantly screwing up the gene pool with our wars that
leave the genetically defective to breed and send the genetically
preferable off to evolutionary dead ends. So all we men can do is try to
better ourselves and ask for patience on the part of women, who must feel
like the entire male sex has completely missed the boat."
Well, you've got a nice point, but it assumes something
that I believe 'taint necessarily so. Is male aggressiveness part of
nature or nurture? The jury seems to be coming back from a long period of
deliberation, and it looks like the verdict is nurture.
This very nicely dovetails with my own theory of what
thelemites refer to as the "procession of the aeons". In Crowley's
notorious Liber Al vel Legis, we are said to be passing from an aeon of
belief in suffering male gods and patriarchy to an aeon of belief in the
value of Self and of partnership between the sexes. Crowley called the old
aeon the "Aeon of Osiris" and the new the "Aeon of Horus, the Crowned and
Conquering Child." The enthroned Child is not masculine or feminine, but
androgynous/gynandrous. The aeon before the Osirian was that of Isis, an
aeon of Great Mother Goddesses and matriarchy.
My chronology is a little different than that which
Crowley attributed to these three epochs of human history so far. Crowley
declared that the Aeon of Horus began with the Spring Equinox of +1904
Common, just before the writing of the Book of the Law. I maintain that
the change is still taking place, and had its roots in the +1700s Common.
The writings of the philosopher Locke were some of the first to make a
very important quantum jump, and provided ideological impetus for the
vital changes that have and are taking place.
What Locke asserted was that government did not rest on
Divine Right, but on the consent of the governed. Human beings were not
born to different castes, some fated to serve while others were fated to
rule by the grace of the gods. Human beings were born equal, and had
certain rights as a birthright: Life, Liberty, the right to pursue
Happiness, and the right to security of private property.
This assertion shows up in Liber Al as these
statements:
"Every Man and Every Woman is a Star."
"Do What Thou Wilt Shall Be The Whole Of The Law."
"Love Is The Law, Love Under Will."
"Thou hast no right but to do thy Will."
In a little less arcane language, these statements run
thusly:
Every Individual matters.
Every Individual has the right to live, be free and pursue Happiness
(harmony with one's life's purpose, or True Will) as they Will.
These rights stop at the boundary of the Wills of others. Live your life
as you see fit, but mind your own business and above all, harm nobody.
This includes yourself in a very conditional way. You do have the
right to self-destruction, but if you truly believe that you matter, why
would you want to?
These assertions are usually encountered firstly in a
Locke-inspired document that has passed into the history of this country,
the Declaration of Independence. If there is any one document that is a
trigger point for the New Aeon, it's that one. The American Revolution was
the first time monarchy was cast aside in favor of democracy of a
representative sort. Democracy was tried before, but never quite this way.
And despite several course corrections that needed to be made, (the
abolishment of Slavery, the giving of Women, Blacks and Amerinds the right
to vote) and some that still need to be made (the granting of total
equality for all races and sexes, a shift to a more direct method of
participation, ie Cyber-democracy) the democratic experiment in the United
States is the most enduring of all.
Before the 1700s, government was imposed from above,
not thought of as flowing from the consent of the governed. Individuals
were not accorded rights as a birthright, but were granted rights by the
king, usually on a class-by-class basis. Human beings were dealt with as
masses and classes, on a Collective basis.
Coincidental with these developments was a surfacing of
hermetic thought in a more widespread way then ever before in history. The
Rosicrucian and Freemason movements brought hermeticism to a wide
audience. Within the ranks of Freemasonry were both common and noble, and
often commoners would be lodgemasters in lodges frequented by those of
noble birth. Hermetic orders ennobled not by birth, but by level of
knowledge and initiation and (hopefully) by level of spiritual attainment.
Now, this was fine in theory, but unfortunately in
practice things weren't so swift. It was only until the mid-1800s and
groups like the original Golden Dawn that women had the possibility of
initiation. Even now, in Masonic lodges that have lost their occult focus
and are now little more than men's clubs, men are ritually strip-searched
to assure the initiator that the candidate is indeed male and not a
disguised female.
The baggage of the old days of sexism and classism
remain in a lot of hermetic orders even today. Crowley himself had serious
problems accepting women as equals: he had a rather low opinion of them
and was quite cruel to them in numerous cases. But very explicit in the
message of the New Aeon is that people are to be dealt with, not by sex or
race or social strata but by their inborn, inalienable rights as
individuals... as Stars, to use a thelemic term.
The Neo-pagan movement was a definite evolutionary step
in defining a New Aeon mode of spirituality. Unlike the traditional
hermetic order, Wicca and other forms of Neo-paganism do not have a
multiplicity of ranks and a chain of command. Some have three degrees,
some two, some only one, that of initiate. Initiation is not a bestowal of
rank, but more a purpose-oriented process. As magickal orders continue to
evolve, they will either need to emulate more and more the informality and
non-hierarchical non-structure of Neo-paganism or choke on their bloated
hierarchies. It is funny when one considers that there is much evidence to
suggest that Neo-paganism evolved from the Astrum Argentum and the OTO,
and that much of Gardner's groundbreaking work in reconstructing the old
pre-Osirian Druidic religion was helped along with the research help of
Uncle Al himself.
Perhaps, as the knightly orders of the past were meant
as guardians of the Christian Church, there will become a symbiotic
connection between Neo-paganism and Magickal orders, especially among
those whose non-structure mimics that of the coven. Arguably this
symbiosis exists now, and hell, I'm living proof of this.
So what the deuce does this have to do with the sexes?
You'll see as I wrap this up. Ok... remember I mentioned that before the
Osirian epoch and the patriarchy, which seems to have come in with the
rise of the big cities and the transformation from a hunter/gatherer
society to an agrarian one (methinks you have placed the transformation a
little too far into the past) there was the Isian epoch and the
matriarchy? Well, before patriarchal philosophy displaced matriarchalism,
women pretty much ran things. They didn't hunt because to place women, who
were the living image of the Goddess and the ex-nihilo creatrixes of the
next generation, in bodily jeopardy was literally blasphemy. Women were
the intermediaries for men to the Goddess, who was unapproachable
otherwise. The men had their hunting cults, but they were as insignificant
in reality as the Victorian-era anthropologists misread the ancient
religion of the Goddess as merely an inferior "fertility cult."
When the transition came to the cities and to
patriarchy sometime around -10,000 to -7,500 Common, the long-suppressed
males took by force what the Goddesses of the Isian era denied them by
their divine decree... power. Male warrior deities replaced female mother
deities. The priestesses of the old religions were destroyed. (The Book of
Joshua in the Old Testament is a vivid account of one triumph of Osiris
over Isis.) And the new order began. But the old matriarchal religions
survived for several thousands of years after the turn of the aeon, and it
is painfully obvious that the old patriarchal ways will haunt us for
thousands of years into the future, even as new ways take hold and new
philosophies become more accepted. But it really is nurture rather than
nature that makes men aggressive and women passive. Men can learn to be
nurturing and loving, and women can learn to be assertive and empowered.
In order that we can truly enter this new aeon where all are leaders and
all are Stars, we each have to cultivate the "other side" of our Selves.
No, women are not superior to men, nor is it the other way around. Every
Individual matters. Everyone has the potential to be a King, in the
thelemic sense of the word. We need to learn to treat all with dignity, be
they material successes or abject material failures. We need to treat even
those still enslaved by the old ideas fixes with as much dignity as
those who have declared their secession from them and their embracing of
the New Law.
The evolution is really and truly in our own hands.
Beauty and balance, Will and Love,
Michelle.
The coven that I've been working with in Denver begins
its cup blessing by a dialogue between the Priest and the Priestess. Both
have a hand each on the athame and the chalice:
Priest: "Be it known that a man is not greater than a
woman.
Priestess: "Nor yet is a woman greater than a man"
Priest: "For what one lacks"
Priestess: "The other can provide"
Priest" "As the Athame is to the male"
Priestess: So is the cup to the female.
Both: And when conjoined together, they become one in
truth, for there is no greater magick in all the world than that of love.
BB Rowan |