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Spirit Spouse

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Spirit Spouse is one of the most widespread elements of shamanism, distributed through all continents and at all cultural levels. Often, these spirit husbands/wives are seen as the primary helping spirits of the shaman, who assist them in their work, and help them gain power in the world of spirit. The relationships shamans have with their spirit spouses may be expressed in romantic, sexual, or purely symbolic ways, and may include gender transformation as a part of correctly pairing with their "spouse". Shamans report engaging with their spirit spouses through dreams, trance, and other ritual elements.[1] In some cultures, gaining a spirit spouse is a necessary and expected part of initiation into becoming a shaman. Evidence of spirit spouses may be seen in non-shamanic cultures as well, including dreams about Christ by nuns,[2][3] who are considered to be "brides of Christ".[4]


Particular Instances

South America

Mapuche, in Chile—"human-like wekufe include Punkure and Punfüta, nocturnal ... spouses ... in their dreams".[5]

North America

K'iche' in Momostenango, Guatemala—Diviners "are recruited in a classical shamanic fashion, including divine election – through ... dreams – and their initiation involves a marriage to a spirit spouse."[6] The "male elders who decide on community leadership roles all possess female personal icons (bara) which commonly manifest themselves in dreams as women."[7] "Quichés openly talk about the bara as a spouse".[8] "Quichés are open and expressive in talking about and playing with their bara, or metaphoric 'spouses,' kissing, fondling, opening, and caressing them".[9]

Oceania

Sandwich Islands—"ʼaumakua could ... have sex with living persons during the night. These spirit mates ... could be of help".[10]

Kaluli on the northern slope of Mt. Bosavi in Papua—"Mediums are men who have married spirit women in a dream".[11] "The medium is always a man who is married (in a dream) to a woman of the invisible world. When he has a child by her, he is able to go to sleep, leave his body, and walk about in the mama world."[12]

Kodi of Sumba Island in southern Indonesia—A man "dreamed that he had an encounter with two wild spirits who lived in the forest ... The wild spirit takes the form of a seductive woman, asking for ... sexual favors in return for the magical powers she controls." A generation later, this man's son "was seduced by the wild spirit woman he saw and entered into a "spirit marriage" (ole marapu)" with her, she becoming "his "spirit wife" (ariwyei marapu)".[13]

Asia

China—"King Xiang (Hsiang; third century B.C.E) is said to have dreamt of a tryst with a goddess on Wu Shan (Witch's Mountain), with the goddess seizing the initiative."[14] In another translation, "Witch's Mountain" is "Shamanka Mountain".[15] This goddess of Wu Shan "transformed into the fungus-like yaocao 媱草",[16] the "edible mushroom"[17] being a metaphor in courtship for marriage.

Goldi of Siberia, along Sea of Japan: A male shaman may have in dreams a divine wife as ayami ("spirit-helper").[18]

Yukaghir of Siberia, along upper Kolyma River: The goddess of hunting is "a lustful young woman whom hunters must persuade to provide them with prey animals by seducing her in their dreams."[19]

Yakut of Siberia: The daughters of the abassy ("deities"), "in appearing to the shaman in his dream, ... enter into sexual intercourse with him."[20] Thereby she imparts to him "luck".

Nganasan of Siberia: A woman in a shamanist family married the smallpox-spirit: she "became a wife of the Smallpox in her dream."[21]

Buryat of Siberia: In shamanic dreams, "The soul of a Buryat novice travels to the center of the world, where it meets, in an amorous encounter, the nine wives of Tekha, the god of ... dance. Eventually, the soul meets there his future celestial spouse."[22]

Akkad: "Hemerologies reveal that the ardat lilī-demoness could pick a man as mate (hâru)"[23] The "ardat lilī-demoness (associated with Lilith of Jewish mythology)"[24] appeared to men in dreams.

Europe

French—"During the night, in dreams, which he contrives to excite, he takes care to be the principal object of her ideas...'tis her sylph that causes her those pleasing reveries".[25] "Humans long to mate with sylphs, according to the Comte de Gabalis, because they want to live forever".[26]

Africa

Ewe of Togo: variant in Haiti (Vodou)—"Wedding ceremonies between Vodou divinities and their devotees take place ... It is also believed that there is sexuality between the conjugal pair, by way of dreams."[27]

Baule of Côte d'Ivoire: "Baule statuary is dominated by elaborate figures carved to symbolize "spirit spouses". Baule mythology dictates that every adult, male or female, has such a spouse, manifested through dreams."[28] Each woman has a blolo bian ("spirit-husband"), and each man has a blolo bla ("spirit-wife"): these may be encountered in dreams;[29] "Every Baule man and woman living in the world has in the blɔlɔ a "spirit spouse". Women have a blɔlɔ bian ... and men have a blɔlɔ bla ... This dream partner is always described as very beautiful".[30] Figurines representing them made be made for particular reasons.[31] The blolo is able to give "good luck".[32]

Amongst the varied tribes of southern Nigeria such as the Yoruba and the Igbo, Spirit Spouses of the Sea are common features of life due to the geographical closeness of their cultures to the Atlantic Ocean, though attitudes to their supposed existence depend largely on the religious inclinations of the individuals concerned. For example, a Yoruba traditionalist might look at a conjugal visit from a dream-based lover in much the same way as the aforementioned Ewe and Baule do, whereas a Muslim or Christian tribesman in the same situation would most likely look at it as a grave misfortune and seek the mystic aid of a spiritual counsellor to rectify what he would see as a probably dangerous connection to an otherworldly demon.

Neopaganism

The controversial, self-proclaimed traditional witch Robin Artisson includes a variation of the Norse fetch concept in his book The Witching Way of the Hollow Hill.[33] He supports this with the thesis that the questing/rescuing heroes in myths, legends, and fairy tales can be seen as the soul, and rescued maidens as the fetch bride. However, he does not make it clear if this occurs in dreams, shamanic journeys in a trance state, or both—though trance work is an important part of his theology and recommended practice. Some other Neopagan authors from very different traditions have also hinted at the possibility spiritual-sexual union of some sort with divine or spirit being.


Contrast against Opposite-Gender Spirit-Mediumship

The practice of dream-based spirit-marriage would appear to exclude and be excluded by (i.e., not be practiced by the same practitioners, nor perhaps even ever known in the same ethnic culture, as) the practice of opposite-gender spirit-possession mediumship. The latter practice (of opposite-gender spirit-possession mediumship) is attested in, e.g., Okinawa, Siam, and Burma, in each of which areas it would appear to be mainly (if not entirely) based on non-remembered (putatively non-conscious) trance.

The practice of dream-based spirit-marriage would appear likewise to exclude and be excluded by shallower trances involving some partial degree of control (but permanently and continuously, instead of merely intermittently as was the case in non-remembered trance) of the practitioner by a spirit-entity of opposite gender from that of the practitioner; which is attested not only among the berdache in tribes of the Great Plains of North America, but also among the manang in Borneo, and perhaps also among numerous other persons and geographic regions (including European practitioners of homosexual magick, etc.).

Asia

Thai—For a male spirit-medium, "female spirits possess the medium on Saturdays";[34] for which occasions the male medium is attired in feminine garments[35]—these are events of spirit-possession by the medium's "losing consciousness".[36] However, dreaming is not significant for T'ai spirit-mediumship.[37] (There is, nevertheless, some degree of similarity between this practice of becoming possessed by an opposite-gender spirit regularly on a particular day of the week; and the custom in Haitian spirit-marriage of regularly devoting a particular day of the week to one's marital duty to that spirit.)[38]


See Also


Notes

  1. Orlando O. Espín & James B. Nickoloff: An Introductory Dictionary of Theology and Religious Studies. Liturgical Press, 2007. p. 1315b
  2. instance (Russian Orthodox) – Steven Fanning: Mystics of the Christian Tradition. Routledge, 2001. p. 71
  3. instance (Catholic) – "nuns of Barrios Altos"
  4. instances – Patrician Crawford: "Women's Dreams in early modern England", p. 100. In:- Daniel Pick & Lyndal Roper (eds.): Dreams and History. Psychology Press, 2004. pp. 91-104
  5. Ana Mariella Bacigalupo: Shamans of the Foye Tree. U of TX Pr, Austin, 2007. p. 35
  6. Barbara Tedlock: "Divination as a Way of Knowing", p. 194. In:- FOLKLORE, vol. 112 (2001):189-197.
  7. Barbara Tedlock: Dreaming. School of American Research, 1987. p. 121
  8. Barbara Tedlock: Dreaming. School of American Research, 1987. p. 111
  9. Barbara Tedlock: Dreaming. School of American Research, 1987. p. 127
  10. Scott Cunningham: Hawaiian Religion and Magic. Llewellyn Publications, St. Paul, 1994. p. 130
  11. "Kaluli"
  12. Edward L. Schieffelin: The Sorrow of the Lonely and the Burning of the Dancers. St. Martin’s Pr, NY, 1976. p. 98
  13. Janet Hoskins: The Play of Time. University of California Press, 1997. p. 224 – 8. "Contested Time: the Feast in Dream Village" – "Land Rights and a Dream of Wealth".
  14. Sandra A. Wawrytko: "Prudery and Prurience: Historical Roots of the Confucian Conundrum concerning Women, Sexuality, and Power", p. 169. In:- Chenyang Li (ed.): The Sage and the Second Sex: Confucianism, Ethics, and Gender.. La Salle: Open Court, 2000. pp. 163-198
  15. Alsace Yen: "Shang-ssu Festival and Its Myths In China and Japan", p. 66
  16. Chen-chen Tseng "Myth as Rhetoric: the Quest of the Goddess in Six Dynasties Poetry". JOURNAL OF NATIONAL CHUNG CHENG UNIVERSITY, Sec. I: Humanities, Vol. 6 (1995), pp. 235-278
  17. Carol Rubenstein: The Honey Tree Song: Poems and Chants of Sarawak Dayaks. Ohio University Press, Athens, 1985. p. 15
  18. Andrei A. Znamenski (compiler): Shamanism. London, 2004. vol. 1, p. 128
  19. Rane Willerslev: Soul Hunters. University of California Press, Berkeley, 2007. pp. 142-143
  20. Andrei A. Znamenski (compiler): Shamanism. London, 2004. vol. 1, p. 134
  21. "Dyukhade Kosterkin"
  22. Michael Ripinsky-Naxon: The Nature of Shamanism. State University of New York Press, 1993. p. 76
  23. S.A.L. Butler: Mesopotamian Conceptions of Dreams and Dream Rituals. Ugarit-Verlag, Münster, 1998. p. 62
  24. loc. cit.
  25. Jonathan Gross: The Sylph. Northwestern U Pr, 2007. p. xlvi
  26. Jonathan Gross: The Sylph. Northwestern U Pr, 2007. p. xliv
  27. Marie-José Alcide Saint-Lot: Vodou, a Sacred Theatre. Educa Vision, 2003. p. 151
  28. "Baule"
  29. David W. Machacek & Melissa M. Wilcox: Sexuality and the World's Religions. ABC-CLIO, 2003. p. 26
  30. Wilfried van Damme: Beauty in Context. Brill, 1996. p. 222
  31. "Blolo bian in context"
  32. Susan Vogel: Baule.
  33. Artisson, R. (2009). Witching Way of the Hollow Hill. Pendraig Publishing.
  34. Morris 2000, p. 297
  35. Morris 2000, p. 301
  36. Morris 2000, p. 89
  37. Morris 2000, p. 290; referring to Gananath Obeyesekere: Medusa's Hair, p. 180.
  38. "Once the ceremony is complete, the spouse will abstain from sexual relations on his or her Lwa's day of the week, reserving that time for visits from his or her divine mate." Lilith Dorsey: Voodoo and Afro-Caribbean Paganism. Citadel Press, New York, 2005. p. 46


Bibliography

  • Barbara Tedlock (ed.): Dreaming: Anthropological and Psychological Interpretations. Cambridge University Press, 1987.
  • Rosalind C. Morris: In the Place of Origins: Modernity and Its Mediums in Northern Thailand. Duke University Press, Durham (NC), 2000.


External Links