Gee, I'd forgotten about this thread! great replies!
QuoteThe states of absoluter certainty and death have a lot in common.
Certainty is usually accompanied by a cessation of questioning.
Indeed
QuoteSome who is certain about everything will therefore exhibit very little brain activity and could be mistaken for brain dead!
Hehe! I'll remember that one.
QuoteThe tree-hugging, rock-holding, talking-to-snakes kind of pagan.
I talk to almost every critter. Sometimes they actually understand me. It is most fun to meow at strange cats though. They look
so outraged at it.
I don't understand why people are so afraid of snakes, myself-at least not in this country. We only have a few species of rattler that are really aggressive, while moccasins and copperheads are pretty mellow.
My wife disturbed a copperhead moving some trash wood this fall...twice, and both times it peaceably slithered off, probably thinking the snaky equivalent of " Jeez, I can't get any sleep around here..."
QuoteBuddhism is NOT a pagan religion.
Agreed, it's a religion of transcendence.
Buddhist philosophy and Pagan concepts are rather at odds in the respect that Buddhism's goal is to detach from existence...while Paganism seeks to cherish the earth and its' cycles, beings and ways. But Buddhism has never been incorporated purely wherever it went...rather, pre-existing deities found a place in it or alongside it.
However...
Buddhism is as much or more a philosophy, and a way of practice, than a religion...and as such I have no qualms about having both a Pagan and a Buddhist socket set in my spiritual toolbox. Besides that, I like Buddhism almost as much as I do Paganism. It's peaceable, humane, quirky, gentle, and usable. It's just that I feel a spiritual connection to life, and the innate sacredness of the living world, that occasionally overwhelms me.
So I sort of stand with one foot in both camps, despite the conflicting worldviews.
Addendum: I performed a rite to Hecate in November...on Hecate's day. The next month someone abandoned an almost-solid black Labrador Retriever at the gas station near my house...black dogs being sacred to Hecate. The dog had been at the gas station for four days, flipping out, and I was the first person who could lay hands on him.
I will rehome him presently, as he would be dog #4...He's not a bad dog-purebred, housebroken and rather sweet....but the probable reason he was dumped? he doesn't bark when frustrated, he caterwauls like he's being tortured. It's the most horrid racket imaginable.
One of my neighbors thought a dog had been hit by a car...nope, the lab was just spazzing because he wanted to run around and chase cats.

Note to self, next time, tell Hecate to send a black chihuahua, or a black miniature poodle.