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Myth of Creation
by Shinjukou
In the beginning there was
Pasiphae: she and the aether were as one. The currents of the aether
were Her home, and their depths were Her mysteries. For eons, She
traveled peacefully, content to be free of all but the consciousness
of Being.
In time, Her mind grew tired
of Being and turned to Creation. From the aether, form was drawn by
that most powerful mind. Playful tugs of Her will brought forth the
land, strokes of grace the great oceans. And for a time, our Mother
was content again.
But the Goddess' mind was a
restless thing and in time She grew weary of viewing the empty
wonders of Her Creation. It was not enough to simply look upon. With
great curiosity, She ventured into the realms of Her new world,
marveling at all that spread out before Her. But in its youth, the
world was without creature to inhabit it and so again Pasiphae
extended Her will, creating the beasts of the earth and those of the
water. Being simple things, they did not know their Mother and lived
with little awareness, unable to share Her love, Her joy and sorrow.
As She realized this Pasiphae
wandered from the water, Her chosen home, to the great forests that
covered the land. There She took up a fallen branch and broke it
within Her hands into several pieces. From these, wild laughing
children sprang leaped; their brilliant green eyes took in the
forest around them and their lungs sang with the thick air of their
new world.
And Pasiphae was again happy
for a time, watching her children grow and learn and multiply. But
the children were ungrateful. Tricksters stepped forward, claiming
to be the true Gods and Goddesses of these people. The children of
the land turned from their stricken Mother, seeking refuge in the
forest of their birth. Pasiphae was left alone once more.
For many years, our Mother
wandered in Her grief, straying far from the oceans. In her
loneliness, sorrow slowly turned to rage. Giving Herself to the
anger, She struck at the land itself, tearing great holes in the
earth and throwing the stone in immense piles that reached far into
the sky. Her force was so great that sparks flew from these stones
as they landed. From these sparks sprang fresh young children, born
of Pasiphae's wrath and the earth's own fire. Surprised and
delighted by this, the Goddess took these children to herself and
taught them the lore of their creation and giving them the gift of
love for stone, for flame. But in their greed for this teaching,
they too turned from their Mother, fleeing into the mountains to
hide and forget their Mother.
Bearing new wounds to Her
heart, the loneliness becoming like a hunger, Pasiphae began Her
wanderings again. A thousand thousand years passed, until finally
She reached a great cliff overlooking her former home. Upon seeing
the leaping waves, being wrapped once more in the pristine salt of
the air, the pain became too much. To Her knees the Goddess went,
giving breath to a blood-chilling scream that would freeze even the
warmest sea. In Her voice was a terrible gale, a gale which ripped
into the air -- and teased into being creatures of beauty, as if to
taunt the Mother's despair. Perfect in form, with great wings and
golden hair, they laughed and danced and spun on the storm of the
Goddess' grief. Most fickle of Her children, they left Pasiphae
behind them with hardly a glance.
Soul aching, our Mother could
only turn to the ocean once more, Her mind seeking desperately to
find a reason for children's desertion. Was wood too weak for Her
will? Was Stone too steady? Was Air too insubstantial? Her troubled
thoughts foamed for millennia with these problems, creating great
storms of emotion that built, and incubated within. And when it grew
so great that not even Pasiphae could keep it inside, it tore from
her in the form of tears, of laughter, of a great wellspring of
feeling. Strong enough to unfocus Her will, it whipped at the ocean,
at the sky itself in a terrifying whirlwind of salt, and wind, and
water, and the Mother's tearful laughter -- creating the last of
Pasiphae's children. Formed of Her essence, and the storm's raging.
In the first confusing moments
of their life, these children looked upon their battered
Mother...and loved her, comforting her in spite of their own
tumultuous birth. For they, brought about by the power of mind and
emotion, had the gift of sharing thoughts, as well as healing them.
Seeing this, the Goddess' pain
eased, Her soul's scars closed over and She took her most loved
children to Her bosom. With them She shared the beauty and bounty of
Her chosen home. And with Her, they shared their lives, their
devotion and their love.
So were the Atlanteans born,
Pasiphae's youngest and truest children. She continues to guide
them, and in return Atlanteans must always remember to trust and to
remember Her for all time as the others did not, though they may
share her as their Mother. Pasiphae is deserving of care, for all
life springs from Her own passionate heart. So it has been and so it
shall always be.
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