Sunday, December 6, 2020

MUSINGS ON THE CAILLEACH UPON READING PADRAIC MAC PIARAIS

Another facebook post. I am trying to get back to real writing.

The Cailleach of Scotland, who brought the Highlands as boulders in her apron, probably arrived via Ireland and the raiding Scotti that gave Alba her English name. She is present in place names in Ireland and Scotland.
Like the Irish Tara I imagine she is one of the least altered Indo-European deities to travel with the Celts, and a relative of Hindu Kali. (Green Tara and White Tara are definitely linked to Irish Tara.) The Cailleach is blue skinned and has one red eye. (In Hindu systems the Third Eye chakra is red. That is why unmarried women wear that red bindi on their foreheads.)
The Cailleach in Scotland was a trickster. She would trick strong men into working for free by challenging them to keep her pace. Seeing the ancient hunched creature they would laughingly agree. None ever received a penny for the work they did. And some dropped dead trying to keep pace with her.
Cailleach is still the word for old woman and witch in modern Irish. Sgàthach, the famous Scots warrior that trained the greatest hero in Ireland, Cú Chulainn, and for whom Skye is named, was known in Scotland as being a daughter of the Cailleach (which means Aoife was too, probably). The Scots, being more stoic and Presbytarian, and less likely to celebrate female warriors (or witches) quite frankly, did not write about her as much.
Stories about her are usually confined to the locales of her place name, and each story is specific. In Scotland her name is often used for nuns, such as Inchcailloch, the Island of the Cailleach, on Loch Lomond. So in that legend she is a nun or founded the convent, or in some way played a part in shaping the Island's former occupants. (It's a public park and picnic spot now.)
In Ireland the Old Woman of Bearra "crowned" kings (by bedding them). There is a beautiful old Irish poem where she walks on the beach at Bearra and laments her youth and the beautiful warriors she used to know.
I feel like I must have seen this poem before, as the author is well know in Old Irish circles, but I do not recall it. (BTW, Cú Chulainn is the "Hound of Ulster" but cú can also mean "cub" so in Irish there is an even more poetic meaning to that first line.) He was political and executed during the Easter rebellion, and the poem is about the division of Republic and Northern Ireland. (Also, this poem structurally is amazing. He uses a triad and other forms found in Old Irish. Amazing poet, man, warrior.)

Poem from:
Pádraic Mac Piarais (1879–1916)
I am Ireland:
I am older than the old woman* of Beare.
Great my glory:
I who bore Cuchulainn, the brave.
Great my shame:
My own children who sold their mother.
Great my pain:
My irreconcilable enemy who harrasses me continually...
Great my sorrow
That crowd, in whom I placed my trust, died.
I am Ireland:
I am lonelier than the old woman* of Beare.
Mise Éire:
Sine mé ná an Chailleach* Bhéarra

Mór mo ghlóir:
Mé a rug Cú Chulainn cróga.

Mór mo náir:
Mo chlann féin a dhíol a máthair.

Mór mo phian:
Bithnaimhde do mo shíorchiapadh.

Mór mo bhrón:
D'éag an dream inar chuireas dóchas.

Mise Éire:
Uaigní mé ná an Chailleach* Bhéarra.

Tuesday, March 17, 2020

STAY HOME AND CHANGE THE WORLD

If you don't have to go, don't go. And just because you know somebody does not mean that you can assess whether they have covid 19 or whether they would be able to survive it if they contracted it. 

I saw a couple of other posts that basically said "you know this is not a snow day". This is not a chance to go to a restaurant when it's deserted, or going to somebody's house because you know them and you're sure it's safe.

It's not about you. It's not about whether you're going to get sick. And it's not even about whether you're going to give it to somebody else. It's about shutting the world down. There are people who cannot or will not stop unless the rest of us do.

The medical community needs to get ahead of this. Currently there are not enough hospital beds for even the most conservative estimate. Testing takes weeks. There is no vaccine.

Every time you go out a gas station attendant has to take your money, a retail worker has to restock shelf, a janitor has to clean a bathroom. Bus drivers have to take people to work.

Internet providers have to send out work crews to deal with all the people home and on line. Call centers have to take your orders and complaints, data entry personnel have to update all of your electronic transactions.

Linemen still have to go out and work on the electrical poles. Sewer workers still have to unblock the sewers. Plumbers still have to fix the plumbing from all that goddamn toilet paper people are shoving down the toilets.

Stay the f*** home. This is not a f****** holiday. If you can work from home, work from home.

And no matter what you're doing please call your elected officials and demand emergency funding. Demand universal healthcare and free testing.

And please, remember our vulnerable populations: migrant children alone in ICE detention centers, the homeless, prisoners, and women and children in abusive homes.

Create an emergency plan via social media sites. This probably isn't the last apocalypse.  7 and a half billion people and insane income inequality have created an unsustainable environment for humans.

Use this downtime to make changes. Please.

http://yokai.com/amabie/