The Daily: 2 May 2024


Because of the emphasis luni-solar calendars place on the eve of the day, today, May 2nd, is sometimes named May Day. More properly it is named Bealtaine — the later holiday for organized (ie paid) labor, May Day, is fixed to the first of the month in keeping with labor time rules. But Bealtaine is an older holy day, one that comes to us from pre-labor, pre-solar time-keeping. It begins and ends at sunset. For folks who want to keep all the maying in one month, rather than beginning on April 30th, the bonfires are lit on the 1st and the may poles are danced on the 2nd.

There is a similar confusion of dates in all the cross quarter days. These are all holidays that start on the eve. In fact, most of the ritual is tied to the eve and the night; by morning it’s nearly done but for the clean-up. In some communities, the critical eve is the last day of the preceding month. In others, the eve falls on the First and the sunlit holiday is the Second. So somewhere there are still may pole and Morris dances today, and I can be forgiven for still maundering on about the holiday’s meaning. Or that’s my story anyway…


In most NeoPagan circles, Bealtaine is almost synonymous with the particular symbolism of human sex, primarily with the synergy that comes from achieving balance between male and female energies. The young male god mates with the goddess of the land to bring fertility to the tribe. It is believed that two humans should invoke the respective deities and enact this mating in the physical world in order for it to be made manifest. There is often a battle between the aging god of winter darkness and the bright and perennially youthful summer lord, both of whom are lovers and sons of the goddess — who apparently has no choice in the matter…

As you can probably tell, I think this is all hogwash. I am hoping that as the climate of Paganism changes and expands, more people will drop this nonsense into the dustbin. It is not only baloney, but it is deeply unhealthy, removing agency from most of the world, centering a very limited idea of life, and excluding all those who do not fit into these “balanced” boxes. I am one of those people. I would guess that most of you are as well. We are, most of us, not horny summer lords in the prime of radiance nor devastatingly beautiful land deities who seem to be as bound to pitiful human convention as they are all-powerful. Stories like this set my old brain to muttering things like “Only a man…”

But that’s really not accurate, because as much as Gerald Gardner promoted his new religion — Wicca, from which much of NeoPaganism springs — he didn’t actually create very much of it. The creative work was done largely by the women in his life, and Doreen Valiente in particular. Doreen was a talented writer, a marvelous ritualist and wielder of the symbolic, and a caring and loving woman. But she was also rather enamored of nasty things like bloodlines and nationalism and “natural” hierarchy. She might have been fond of the witches who repelled the Nazis, but she also flirted a bit too heavily with fascism in its British guise to be remembered as a fount of esoteric wisdom.

So I do not like what Bealtaine has become in the last century or so. Now, this is not because I am opposed to fertility rituals or sex or men or anything else. It is because all this is not enough to encompass life. There is no balance when everything is hyper-focused on the paltry imaginations of self-absorbed humans. Human mating rituals are nothing to the awakening of a forest in springtide, to the rush of meltwater in mountain streams, to the delighted bleat of a lamb’s first foray into a meadow filled with blooming clover, to an egg cracking open, to the dark miracle of a seed sprouting in the warm sheltering soil. Human beauty and desire are wonderful things, but pale in significance next to the quotidian morning song of a robin welcoming an average sunrise. Human stories are affective and meaningful, but they are just stories, products of our limited perceptions and minds. Reality carries so much more meaning, we can’t comprehend a sliver of it.


It is perhaps fittingly ironic that the person who so laced the new faith in the wholeness of nature with toxic notions of human hierarchy and exclusion and patriarchal convention was also the person who crafted the credo that I follow, the only one I’ve ever not found wanting: Harm None. Valiente also wove a good deal of pseudo-medieval bullshit into her Wiccan Rede. “An it harm none, do what ye will.” (I mean, really!) And of course, she privileged the human will, in keeping with the teachings of her spiritual guidepost, Aleister Crowley. Later on, baby boomer Wiccans further muddied the waters by adding vague rhymed couplets and botched archaisms, but the essence of the rule is the same as the ancient Latin axiom, primum non nocere (first do no harm).

If Harm None is the prime directive, then there is no room for exclusion and enforced labeling, which breaks down divisions and hierarchies of all sorts. It also, apparently unbeknownst to dear Doreen, strips human will of its privileged centrality. To harm none is not to follow the will, but to limit the will to only that which does not cause damage. Harm None engenders a search for a trail of causation and impact, a search for victims and a broadening of the realm of consequences. It builds and renews awareness. It is a removal of the blinkers imposed by our culture, the blinding screens that are emplaced between action and effect. Humans are so wired that once we see the harm we do, we cannot unsee it. One of the essential functions of the elite propagandists is to keep us blind to our actions — or we’d just stop… out of pure revulsion… and bring down the whole system with our cessation.

Harm None leads to a radical opposition to violence and destruction and waste. You can’t understand waste when you eliminate an Other that is forced to accept and absorb all your consequences. There is no “away” to hide behind when you can harm none, not even hidden beyond that bin in the kitchen. But it’s even deeper than that. It takes Harm None to see that the idea of waste itself is not real. It is a human construct. Entropy is not truly real. Energy and matter are conserved, always, though order shifts constantly. What we name waste is simply that which has moved beyond our control. If entropy were the ontological reality in the universe, then by this time, there would be no order left — and we would not exist to name it.

Tolstoy tells us that Pythagorus once said that to allow our children to kill insects is to enable them to kill any other being (though one gets the feeling that the particular horror lies in killing humans of that child’s socioeconomic class, not killing per se…). But I would say that killing bugs is not as soul-destroying as raising a child to this culture’s norms of waste and generalized harm.

The boy who pulls the wings from butterflies is sick. We recognize him as such. He recognizes the sickness in himself. Perhaps he enjoys that sickness, that special recognition. But he is not judged to be normal. He is acting in deviant fashion. He is wrong and he knows it. In our culture there are tools and techniques to isolate the wrongness, to contain it and, as much as possible, set it right. He is not encouraged to kill innocent beings. He is not even allowed to continue this behavior openly. He must hide if he is to persist. The point is that he is unable to be blind to the consequences of his acts. If he is to continue, he must face the fact of the insect death by his hand. Killing is so deeply disturbing that seeing this death is normally a barrier to that act. The boy must be truly ill to carry on with that full knowledge. He is causing immediate harm with intent. He is damaged, no doubt, perhaps was already damaged before committing such a senseless wrong, but he is not damaged by that act. He is not becoming acclimated to hidden harm as a consequence of that act.

He is damaged, but he is not as damaged as children in this culture who casually cause harm that they never see, that they are not allowed to see. Killing a butterfly is recognized wrongness, but it is nothing compared to the numbing effects of our daily living, committing waste and harm at all scales. A teen that eats fast food — food that is predicated upon the suffering of many beings, including other humans — that drives a carbon-spewing automobile that racks up a windshield of dead insects — among many other harms — that tosses the toxic plastic trash out the window — sickening and killing thousands of beings for decades to come: that young adult is considered normal. Each of these acts damages our children, inures them to the damages incurred by their acts. They are blinded by the normalcy of the harm that they do. They do not recognize it as harm. All that death, all that destruction at her hands is not only accepted — and therefore hidden from view — it is required of normal status. In our culture, it is deviance to not engage with all this death and suffering.

Our children learn that an Other exists, a place and being state that will take all the consequences of consumer culture, that will hide it all away from the sensitive human psyche. The suffering and harm that a boy might experience directly in the presence of his wasteful behaviors — for example, drinking water poisoned by cattle feedlots — is made acceptable when only experienced by hidden victims, no matter how numerous. This form of off-loaded violence is admissible, normal, and right. And the child that learns it, learns far more efficiently how to kill without consequence than the sick child with the torn butterfly wings.

The sick child is deterred. The normal child is encouraged, as long as her methods are indirect and hidden away, as long as she can confine her victims to a hidden Other of inferior status, as long as she firmly believes that she is insulated from the consequences — even when she is not. Our normal children are taught to kill not only other specific beings, but whole classes of life. They are taught to steal the futures of these Others, to take away all interiority and desire in their victims. They are taught to deaden the larger world, view it as a resource or receptacle for their consequences. They are taught to take the life of the living world. And as a result they are taught to deaden their own sense of right and wrong, to damage their own souls, and to hate the very root of their being.

This is why we live in a rolling identity crisis. There are cracks in the screens now. We can no longer hide away the harm completely. We may not be entirely and consciously aware of all our consequences, but we also can’t remain as blissfully unaware as was once possible when the consequences were not Everywhere, All the Time. So we do not like who we are and we are thrashing about trying to find some sort of mirror that reflects the goodness that we want to see in ourselves. Quite often this leads to even more harm. Because, of course, everything within this culture is dependent upon harm. We end up doing needlessly harmful things like shaming those who can’t afford the standards du jour for seeming normal. Or… like creating a ludicrous “nature” faith that centers a human sexuality that does not even encompass most of the forms of that very limited fragment of Being.

But they did create Harm None. And maybe that will help us escape our abnormal normalcy. For one thing, more and more people are aware that gender is just as artificial and silly as race, but just as devastatingly effective at excluding people from the tiny list of those who benefit from work done in this culture. More people are turning away from the forms of toxic masculinity that are seen in this Bealtaine story of two men fighting against each other for the right to possess an objectified woman. More people are realizing that a culture guided by the feminine principles of cooperation and community is not only less destructive, but it is also more happy, full of abundance and contentment. And a few people are starting to see that history is on our side— this type of joyfully interdependent living is the actual human norm. It is how most past societies have been organized and how many societies outside this culture are currently organized. Man the Hunter is fading into the misty savannah and Woman the Gatherer is reclaiming her original prominence.

But sometimes I lose faith…

In The Wakeful World: Animism, Mind and the Self in Nature (2012, Moon Books), Emma Restall Orr talks of dissolving all lines, but still cordons off the rationalizing thought modes of humans as best or perhaps uniquely able to process the world of information — even as she admits that we have no way of knowing how other being states perceive and then integrate that perception into their being. Still, she goes no further than to propose that there are analogues in other Beings. Well, undoubtedly there are! How else do we explain synthesis and conclusion and resulting responsive action? These may be wholly foreign methods of accomplishing what is called rationality by humans — even by an animist — but they are valid evidence of mind. Perhaps her cautious tone is to assuage egos, to make her book more marketable. But when she draws back, it sounds like a false note.

In her defense, that’s a permanently muddy puddle in philosophy, because we can’t know what others know, nor even how they know. We can’t even know what it is to be another human with all the same methods of perception and knowing. So I’ll give that one a pass. However, in talking about the past and human ways of viewing the world prior to this culture’s exclusionary influences, she blithely assumes violence in the human constitution — when that is quite possibly the only difference between us and our ancestors. Orr also falls into the intellectual trap of apologizing for seeming to desire a return to the Dark Past — though that is exactly what she is saying and what is likely necessary. That past was when humans lived good lives within the comfortable bounds of the natural world, an integrated part of the world. This is not romancing the unknowable past; it is simply stating what worked and continues to work. And crucially, the breakdown of that functional past is the only discernible difference between now and back then — our intensified capacity for violence.

Among all homo sapiens, there isn’t any physical or mental capacity that is different from, never mind inferior to, modern humans. Those who lived two hundred thousand years ago are exactly as we are. Furthermore, there isn’t much basis to believing that our homo sibling species were all that different, given how similar our more genetically distant but contemporary ape cousins are to us. We all have the same hardware and are culturally programmed with very similar software, but for one important exception. We moderns are violent. More basically than that, we are capable of violence. Uniquely. This is such a rare trait in life-forms that it begs for explanation, not assumptions. And it is directly tied to our very recent fall from an animated world.

No other species sees itself as distinct and separate, and no other human culture so vehemently prizes isolation and exclusion and a false image of independence that hides all the actual dependency in hierarchical Othering. This is how we are violent and this is how our ancestors and those completely outside of the EuroWestern tradition were and are not. A being that sees itself as an integrated part of a whole with no Other states of separation does not produce violence and the harm of waste because that whole being knows that there is no violence possible that does not harm the self. In an animist world, there is no “away” to hide waste and destruction. All harm is known and felt, all harm is self-harm — a truth we are now learning…

Acting violently assumes disconnection, separation — from consequences, from victims, from the whole being state. Animism recognizes no such distinction. Animists are quite assiduous at Harm None, because all harm hurts the animist on top of everything else the animist cares for. Violence is only common in modern humans (and human-adjacent beings) because we have created this myth of separation, of special status, of agency in an ocean of insensate matter, of resources to be exploited. And for a little time, until the consequences became overwhelming, that myth of separation made it possible to reap wild benefit from the inferior world. So our animist natures were suppressed in the elites that benefitted the most, and violence crept in as a tool to maintain their status. But violence cannot arise where there is no story of specialness, where the world is whole and encompassing, and all consequence is shared.

On the deep levels of our being, we know that we cause harm even as we consciously hide it away. However, this story of special separation demands superiority over all Others. So if we possess a negative trait, even one that we carefully conceal, all those lesser Others must also be subject to that trait. Maybe even more so. Thus the logic of superiority hides the dearth of evidence for Other forms of violence. We do not see this lack of violence in the wider world precisely because we are conditioned to not see its prominence in ourselves. We assume violence where there is none and are blind to what bleeds out of our own culture. The lives of our ancestors were not “nasty, brutish, and short”, full of aggression and conflict. Those are all modern inventions. There must be an object for there to be aggression, and there are no objects in a world that is wakefully alive with interiority in every being state. Aggression simply does not thrive in the animist world that is the common condition of humanity.

We scratch our heads over this lack of evidence for aggression. We invent myths of primitive humans with spears and constant wars, seemingly unaware that violence is a tool of elite humans intent on maintaining that privileged state. But in the wakeful world — the world apart from those unnatural elites — aggression is minimized, always and without exception. Where there is conflict over needs, the matter is always settled in ways that minimize harm and stress. Oppositional beings will merely slide away to avoid the stress. Violence is never the tool of choice even when facing death. (Which is not violence… but only a cycling of life.) This would be common sense if there weren’t such walls around our perception, hiding away our own violence. Evolution through natural selection does not favor those who compete. It favors those who reproduce another generation. And violent competition does not, as a rule, beget healthy offspring. Yet we, in our unhealthy culture, uniformly believe that Darwin was talking about aggression. To hide who we are, we’ve turned reality completely on its head.

The good news is that this violence is not our inheritance. It is a decidedly alien trait that we must aggressively maintain through belief, propaganda, and acts that are abhorrent, acts that are so vile we must be actively dehumanized in order to overcome our innate revulsion. If we were to escape this constant conditioning, if we could let it all fall away, then we would slide away from all these stresses like the sensible beings that we are. We would lose the ability as well as the desire to be violent. This is not us. This is Them…

From this I do take hope. I believe that we will regain our ability to live within the bounds of a whole and healthy world. We will not degrade into a dystopian man-scape. I don’t believe that is even physically possible. It is not possible to be so destructive without suffering the consequences that limit that ability to destroy. Man-scapes do not exist except in our fancies. This one is already crumbling, though it has the support of literally an entire world’s worth of inert resources. I also would point out that this culture has never been as pervasive as those who create it believe it to be. But its time is limited by the limits of this planet. It is already riddled with holes, revealing the real world beyond our fancies. And when we remember that the world is awake, we lose the capacity for harm. That is how Harm None is made real. That is our past. That is our future. This present is an aberration, one that is breaking apart under its own dis-logic.

I believe we are moving into a world in which everything is Us. And when everything is Us, there is no room for wasteful harm. When everything is Us, there is no objectified Other to take on our violence. When everything is Us, the very concept of violence vanishes. When everything is Us, we are whole.

And May Day is just another day to celebrate the eternal renewal of Spring!


For more developed arguments revealing the whole, animist world…

Nurturing Our Humanity: How Domination and Partnership Shape Our Brains, Lives, and Future by Riane Eisler and Douglas P. Fry (2019, Oxford). By the end of the first chapter, Eisler and Fry quite effectively dismantle any lingering delusions about the modern story of innate human violence.

Ani.Mystic: Encounters with a Living Cosmos (2022, Scarlet Imprint) by Gordon White is one of the most bizarre books I have ever found myself in complete agreement with. It is a modern revelation.


©Elizabeth Anker 2024

6 thoughts on “The Daily: 2 May 2024”

  1. A group of Wiccans flourish in this area. It is rather surprising to find from what professions and walks of life these (mostly women) come from. They meet regularly and annually hold an evening festival to which they invite friends for a bring and share. Those who attend always find the company particularly interesting.

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  2. I find it most interesting that Eliza’s credo, primum non nocere, is also the prime directive of Western healing science, aka modern medicine.   In a large part, this reflects that humans now live in world that is profoundly broken and desperately in need of healing.    As one of only 19 eusocial species (16 of the other species are insects), it is extraordinarily difficult for the individual human to be healthy in a social system – patriarchy – that is so profoundly diseased.    The root of this fundamental social dysfunction is human alienation from the natural world and other beings in the web-of-life.    Maybe we can forgive the little boy who pulls the wings off butterflies but as a society we cannot understand the full consequences of this kind of behavior – both ecological and social.   Omnes ecologists sumus and we all live in world of wounds.    

    Speaking of behavior, we share with the web-of-life a human nature that contains both aggression and altruism.   As ultra-social beings it is our social organization and structures (institutions, culture) that ameliorates this human nature and enables the individual to successfully participate in the complex societies that are the hallmark of eusocial species.    The problem is that the hierarchical organization of society with men at the top, both absolutely (God the Father) and at every sub-level down to the family has become profoundly unbalanced with the other primary pole of society, horizontal organization and structures with gender integrated individuals.    

    The dominance of this patriarchal social organization has produced a society where many if not most individuals are deeply broken and sick.   A sick, broken society that has produced massive inequality and needless consumption that benefits a very small part of the species (most rich men), while creating an existential threat to homo sapiens as a whole – as well as much of the product of 2.2 billion years of biodiverse evolution.    A society where the welfare of a few individuals pathologically dominates the altruistic instincts at the core of a caring society.   Eliza’s message of hope is that healing our societal disease begins with an existential commitment to non-violence.    Non-violence toward our fellow humans and most importantly in our personal relationships to Mother Earth and our comrades in the web-of-life.         

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    1. Riane Eisler calls this the domination system, contrasting that to partnership modes of organization. Dominance systems are nearly exclusive to complexity, but complexity does not always produce domination. The hopeful thing is that partnership seems to be the more durable and more pedigreed mode of organization. And this applies not just to humans. Her framework seems rather robust.

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      1. As ultrasocial beings, the way human society is organized has a great influence on how human nature, i.e. aggression, altruism, is expressed.     Hierarchical and horizontal are the two poles of human social organization.   Human societies however, are never purely organized one way or the other but are a mixture of institutions and culture that reflect both.   I’m using “culture” here in the ecological sense of the unique way that a species or society makes a living – survives and reproduces (life’s prime directive).    Politics is the struggle within a particular society on how the two poles, horizontal and hierarchical are balanced.   The human historical record over the last 10,000 years suggests that patriarchal organization has become pathologically dominant in almost all societies worldwide, i.e. nation states.   I would further note that each social organization pole has different value sets.    Hierarchical organization favors violence as a means for settling conflict, competition, and obedience among other values.   Horizontal organization favors values that promote cooperation, non-violence, consensus decision making, empathy, compassion and above all caring for each other.    

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  3. P.S. How serendipitous

    Summoned by the Earth: Excerpt

    resilience.org/stories/2024-05-02/summoned-by-the-earth-excerpt

    By Cynthia Jura, originally published by Resilience.org  May 2, 2024

    The implications of a collective awakening are shattering to our sense of individuality. Our identification with a separate sense of self will no longer be the organizing principle for life on Earth. Our evolution as a species and as a planetary culture depends not only on our realization of this, but our embodiment of it. Living our lives in a profoundly transformed way and connecting our communities in service to Mother Earth is where hope can be found.

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