Happy
New Year!
When
I entered the post office recently to buy stamps I was reminded that 2013 is
also the year of the snake. The stamps displayed elaborate and stylized images
of the water snake in celebration of the Chinese Zodiac.
I’m
told by followers of the Chinese Zodiac that people born in snake years always seem to have money flowing their way. They are
described as intelligent, creative and adventurous. Chinese astrologers use the
color black to depict this year. Black is the color of space, the arctic night
and the darkness of the abyss and deep waters. The black snake, say the
astrologers, will bring people unexpected changes, instability and change. In
the wake of “the end of the world” and the dawning of a new age (the seventh
golden age) this is not surprising (see my last editorial).
I
was born in the “year of the horse” and checked out my prospects for the year
of the snake. They were mixed: I was told that “horse people should do
everything by themselves instead of turning to others. By that, they can get
good fortune. Also the expense will not be that much. In general, their fortune
will get better bit by bit.” (Oh boy! Looking forward to those bits!). Astrologers
told me that my career life would not be smooth but that I would make good
money (sigh with relief!). I was also advised that I should donate blood in
early 2013 because I might have an accident in this “snake” year (oh dear!); a
kind of karma-thing happening here, I guess! LOL!
Snakes
can be found on every continent except Antarctica. Biologists recognize over
3,400 species, ranging from the 10 centimeter Thread Snake to the reticulated
8.7 meter long Python. Most species are non-venomous. Snakes are thought to
have evolved from either burrowing or aquatic lizards during the mid-Cretaceous
Period.
The
snake remains a mysterious creature, steeped in controversy. Considered vile
and “evil” by many, it often elicits strong feelings of dislike and fear. It is
an elegant cold-blooded reptile, and smooth to the touch (contrary to what most
people think: NOT slimy). The snake embraces a rich and metaphoric history,
representing a wide range of symbolism that encompasses change, metamorphosis
and transformation. In The Dictionary of
Mythology (1961) Gertrude Jobes recites a long list of symbols that span
from the wicked to the sublime. Perhaps her extensive alphabetized list serves
a good representation of this, our year 2013: androgyny, circle,
convalescence, cunning, danger, death, deceit, destruction, divine emanation,
evil, false appearance fertility, guardianship, generation, grief, health,
intelligence, jealousy, lasciviousness, malice, materialism, misfortune,
phallus, pleasure, power, prophecy, prudence, renewal, revenge, self- creation,
self -indulgence, self -sustenance sensation, sensuality, sin, subtlety,
temptation, treachery, the unfathomable, universe circle, vexations, vice,
wiliness, wisdom worldliness. Emblem of lightning, physicians, witchcraft.
J.E.
Cirlot in A Dictionary of Symbols
(1971) suggests that, “If all symbols are really functions and signs of things
imbued with energy, then the serpent or snake is, by analogy, symbolic of
energy itself—of force pure and simple; hence its ambivalence and
multi-valencies. Another reason for its great variety of symbolic meaning
derives from the consideration that these meanings may relate either to the
serpent as a whole or to any of its major characteristics—for example, to its
sinuous movements, its common association with the tree and its formal analogy
with the roots and branches of the tree, the way it sheds its skin, its
threatening tongue, the undulating pattern of its body, its hiss, its
resemblance to a ligament, its method of attacking its victims by coiling
itself round them, and so on.”
The serpent’s
portrayal as the most common symbol of God—in human psychology and spirituality
from Moses, to the Freemasons, Baptists and psychologist Carl Jung and many
others—has puzzled anthropologists for years. To Jung, the serpent reflected the
Omnipotent and Omnipresent power of God that lives within every human: “The serpent is an adversary and a symbol of enmity, but
also a wise bridge that connects right and left through longing, much needed by
our life… I have united with the serpent of the beyond. I have accepted
everything beyond into myself.”
The
ancient Tibetan Book of the Dead tells us that the darker side of one’s own
nature may reveal itself in serpentine form in the afterlife. It becomes
a mirror through which a person may encounter the feelings or thoughts they
repressed when alive.
Chaldeans
had only one word for life and snake. The snake’s elegant undulating form
symbolizes both soul and libido. In the Hindu tantric belief, it represents the
lotus of Kundalini, the coiled force of transcendence that begins at the base
of the spine and travels up the chakras toward enlightenment. In Indian
mythology, Lord Vishnu sits on a thousand-headed snake, which sets off the
primal vibration and the vital source of the Universe. Scholar and mythologist Joseph
Campbell suggested that the symbol of snakes coiled around a staff represents
the Kundalini physiology. The staff represents the spinal column with the
snake(s) being energy channels. In the case of two coiled snakes they usually
cross each other seven times, a possible reference to the seven energy centers
called chakras.
In
religion, mythology, and literature, serpents and snakes represent fertility and/or
a creative life force. As snakes shed their skin through sloughing they
symbolize rebirth, transformation, immortality, and healing. Snakes embrace the paradox of
creative-destruction in the form of an Ouroboros,
the serpent biting it’s own tail. It reflects a cyclic sexual union within
itself, a constant self–fecundation and a perpetual transformation from death
to life. The serpent represents sexual desire and passion in the
Abrahamic religion and Rabbinic tradition. The circle of the Ouroboros symbolizes eternity but only
through the perpetual cycle of regeneration: life from death. The Ouroboros is
a ubiquitous symbol of the “all-in-all”, the totality of existence, infinity
and the cyclic nature of the cosmos. Believed to have been inspired by the
Milky Way (“the serpent of light residing in the heavens”), Ancient Egyptians
associated it with serpent gods Wadjet and Hathor. Jormungandr, the World or
Midgard Serpent of Norse mythology encircled the world in the ocean’s abyss,
biting its own tail.
Every
night the Sun enters the underground world ruled by serpents, to become the
serpent itself in order to fight them and to reborn in the morning. The Vision Serpent of Mayan mythology lies atop the World Tree as a
symbol of rebirth.
Christianity
portrays the serpent negatively but sacred texts testify its double aspect. The
regenerating Christ itself is sometimes represented as a serpent on the cross.
During Medieval times the serpent on the cross was interpreted as the serpent
of Eve.
The
serpent-encircled staff of Asclepius, the God of medicine and healing, has
become the symbol of modern medicine. The snake's venom is associated with the
chemicals of plants and fungi that can heal, poison or provide expanded
consciousness. The snake was often considered one of the wisest animals. Its
divine aspect combined with its habitat in the earth between the roots of
plants made it an animal with chthonic properties connected to the afterlife
and immortality.
Serpents
often guard temples, sacred spaces and deities. At Angor in Cambodia, numerous
stone sculptures present hooded multi-headed nagas as guardians of temples and
other sacred sites.
In Ancient
Egypt, Ra and Atum became the same god, which took on the form of a serpent: The
two-headed serpent deity Nehebkau (he who harnesses the souls) guarded the
entrance to the underworld. He is often seen as the son of the snake goddess
Renenutet or Wadjet, the Egyptian cobra, the patron and protector of the country.
In
many myths the chthonic serpent lies coiled around a Tree of Life in a divine
garden. In the Genesis story of the Torah and Biblical Old Testament, the Tree
of the Knowledge of Good and Evil sits in the Garden of Eden together with the
Tree of Life and the serpent. In Greek mythology Ladon coiled around the tree in
the garden of the Hesperides, protecting the entheogenic golden apples.
Nidhogg, the dragon of Norse mythology, eats from the roots of the Yggdrasil,
the World Tree. Lastly, the Buddha sat in ecstatic meditation under the Bodhi
Tree of Enlightenment. When a storm arose, the mighty serpent king Mucalinda
rose up from his place beneath the earth and enveloped the Buddha in seven
coils for seven days, not to break his ecstatic state.
The image of
the serpent as the embodiment of the wisdom transmitted by Sophia was a Gnostic
emblem.
OK. So, what
does all of this have to do with 2013 and the Year of the Snake? Why, nothing…
Perhaps everything. It depends on whether you are mindful of the symbols around
you; whether you think and write metaphorically; whether you are fanciful and
whimsical; whether you appreciate the ancient wisdom of humanity and its link
to the divine… Whatever your inclination, I wish you a wonderful and productive
year of transformation and wonderful surprises. I for one am looking forward to
2013. I’ve decided to embrace the multi-faceted and transformative energy of
the snake and intuitively let my muse lead me here. Last year I began to
research and this year will be writing two books whose subjects are “medieval
wisdom in healing and wellness” and “water”. Appropriate, don’t you think?
P.S. My upcoming book on water entitled Water Is... will be published by Pixl Press in Summer 2015. It brings my over twenty-years experience as an aquatic ecologist to explore what water means to each of us. Part history, part science and part philosophy and spirituality, "Water Is..." combines personal journey with scientific discovery that explores water's many "identities" and ultimately our own.
P.S. My upcoming book on water entitled Water Is... will be published by Pixl Press in Summer 2015. It brings my over twenty-years experience as an aquatic ecologist to explore what water means to each of us. Part history, part science and part philosophy and spirituality, "Water Is..." combines personal journey with scientific discovery that explores water's many "identities" and ultimately our own.
Nina Munteanu is an
ecologist and internationally published author of novels, short stories and
essays. She coaches writers and teaches writing at George Brown College and the
University of Toronto. For more about Nina’s coaching & workshops visit www.ninamunteanu.me. Visit www.ninamunteanu.ca for more about her writing.
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