Passing Through & Under: A Ritual Healing in England

https://pixabay.com/photos/tree-trunks-trees-rock-cleft-rock-167479/

Until the 20th century, the inadequacies of orthodox medical services left a large proportion of the population dependent upon traditional folk medicine – essentially a mixture of common sense remedies based on the accumulated experience of nursing and midwifery, combined with inherited lore about the healing properties of plants.

Madagascar Superstitions & Taboos: Fighting the Aye-Aye Fady

Ako is the name of an aye-aye in the children’s book written to combat harmful folklore in Madagascar. Illustration by Deborah Ross on book cover of “Ako the Aye-Aye”.

In some regions of Madagascar, it is considered fady to eat certain lemurs, meaning local taboos can actually act as a shield to protect specific species. However, aye-ayes appear to be the only lemur associated with fady leading to their persecution. How did the aye-aye end up drawing the short straw when it comes to local folklore?

Encounters With Ajarns: My Experiences With the Rituals of Thai Lanna Buddhism

Wat Phra Singh (Chiang Mai, Thailand) by Paul Arps. CC BY 2.0 https://www.flickr.com/photos/slapers/16067837829

Rituals can be transformational episodes that connect the initiand with other realms and higher cosmic plains. Thai Lanna Buddhist rituals are sublime and magnificent ceremonies.

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