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Birds on the Tree - a Qabalistic Aviary

 
  

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electric monk
14:52 / 10.06.05
I get an amazing amount of bird traffic thru my property and around the community I live in. It’s not unusual to see a flock of ibises or a great heron in the backyard as I make the morning coffee. Just recently, a female cardinal that’s nesting in our bouganvillia took an interest in my newborn son. She’ll sit on the windowsill near rooms he’s in or sing outside his nursery during his feeding time. It got me wondering where she’d fit on the Tree of Life. 777 turned out to be less than helpful, so I had to do the work myself.

I did some reading here but didn’t find it immediately helpful. I’m convinced it’ll be a good resource to have on hand, but don’t think I’ve quite got the mojo to make it work for me at the mo’. So for now, little cardinal is representative of Path 14, as it corresponds to my son’s birth sign (Taurus). It’s a shot in the dark, admittedly, and is lightly penciled in my 777. More investigation is in order before I invest too much trust in that hinky bit of intuition, and I do plan to make this a long-term project. I’m hoping to place a bird comfortably on each sphere and path of the Tree through a combination of intuition, meditative reflection, observation, and dry science-y reading.

Has anyone else done this or know of resources to look to? How would you place a given bird on the Tree (say a bluejay or grackle)?
 
 
Unconditional Love
16:23 / 10.06.05
The Conference of the Birds: The Selected Sufi Poetry of Farid Ud-Din Attar


you might find that helpful
 
 
Unconditional Love
16:41 / 10.06.05
crows magick tarot

perhaps that...

Aviary at the Gates of Heaven

this one?

a search on google for bird symbolism turns up some good stuff.
 
 
electric monk
17:03 / 10.06.05
Conference of the Birds looks especialy promising from an inspirational/ecstatic POV. Thanks for sharing that, Gone. What kinds of birds appear in the poems?
 
 
electric monk
10:00 / 16.06.05
So for now, little cardinal is representative of Path 14, as it corresponds to my son’s birth sign (Taurus).

I, of course, meant Path 16. Always fact check yr posts, kids.

At any rate, here's some initial placings to nudge discussion along. Fire away!

Kether - Eagle, as high-flying bird observant of all below it.

Chokmah - Owl, as representative of wisdom. Head turning all the way round, taking in all.

Binah - Goose, as Mother Goose and fierce defender of young.

Chesed - Heron (this is pure intuition)

Geburah - Bluejay, as loud and aggressive. Chases all other birds from a given area before feeding.

Tipheret - Phoenix (traditional G.D./A.C. attribution, needs a real bird to put here)

Netzach - Lovebirds, natch.

Hod - Ibis, as representative of Thoth

Yesod - ?????

Malkuth - Possibly Raven or Crow

Paths of the Tree to come...
 
 
Gypsy Lantern
10:16 / 16.06.05
Kether should really be a white dove, as in the OTO lamen and Thoth deck, etc... The white light descending into matter. The golden eagle is a better fit for Tiphareth, I'd say.
 
 
panthergod
18:37 / 16.06.05
Tipereth=Hawk(Horus) or Dove(Holy Spirit,Jesus)
 
 
electric monk
09:59 / 17.06.05
The dove! Why did I totally blank on the dove? I agree that that makes a good fit with Kether. Symbol of peace and unity and all that. Nice one.

The eagle and hawk in Tipheret I'm a little hesitant about. I think the hawk may be a better fit in Geburah, as a calculating, ruthless hunter. I once saw a hawk snatch a small bird right out of the air, perch on a nearby limb, and tear out the little birds feathers before happily chowing down. I have a hard time reconciling that with Tipheret, but hey, I'll keep an open mind. Isn't Horus "the Lord of Force and Fire" tho? As to the eagle, are you suggesting the golden eagle based purely on coloration, GL, or something more? 777 actually has him on Paths 11, 21, & 23 matching the Roman god Jupiter as a matter of fac'. Odd. An affinity between eagle and Jupiter?
 
 
Gypsy Lantern
10:09 / 17.06.05
I'd agree with the hawk in Geburah.

Golden eagle in Tiphareth was just intuitive really. Tiphareth reminds me of a golden lion, like a big glowing lion face in the sky, as in Promethea. Also vaguely analogous with Rasta. The golden eagle strikes me as the nearest ornithological equivalent to that image.

I quite fancy the Magpie in Hod, for the trickster aspect.
 
 
Unconditional Love
12:03 / 17.06.05
my posts are dissappearing, odd, oh well.

a parrot for yesod or perhaps daath, the mimicry of the word, the bright colourful display.
 
 
Seth
13:37 / 18.06.05
How about the pelican for Tipharet? Nurturing its young with its own blood...
 
 
nyarlathotep's shoe horn
15:50 / 18.06.05
I like the idea of the parrot for da'ath - maybe a minah - as they imitate and mimic vocal patterns without understanding the language.

sound like "knowledge" off the tree?

ta
pablo
 
 
electric monk
10:59 / 21.06.05
Do pelicans really do that, or is it a myth/fable? Either way, friggin' great! I'd heard that somewhere before, but couldn't remember which bird was said to do that.

I like the parrot for Da'ath too. Perrrr-feck. Though I hadn't planned to attribute anything there, I'll make a note of it.

I'm in the process of working meditation back into my routine. Not easy with a baby in the house, but I know there's room in the schedule somewhere! Will share when I've thought a bit on Malkuth and have something from the meditations. In the meantime, I'll share placements on the Paths if I can. They're proving a mite difficult for me to nail down.
 
 
Gypsy Lantern
11:50 / 21.06.05
Pelicans don't really do that, they just feed their young with bits of whatever it is they pelican's eat held in their beak. This looks a bit like they've pierced their own heart and are feeding their young with the contents thereof, giving rise to the myth. I'd place the Pelican in Netzach myself, as I think it's related to the mysteries of the heart peirced with a sword, hence it's appearance on The Empress card of the Thoth deck. But I see where Seth's coming from with the Tiphareth attribution, as you could look at it as a sacrificed redeemer like Christ and Osiris. I'd go for Netzach though, as I don't see it as specifically solar.
 
 
Sekhmet
14:50 / 21.06.05
What about a peacock for Tiphareth - beautiful, shining feathers radiating like the sun, associated with romantic and paradisical imagery - and a vulture for Malkuth?
 
 
nyarlathotep's shoe horn
15:21 / 21.06.05
I dunno about the vulture for Malkuth.

maybe something like a Road Runner, Ostrich, Emu, Penguin, Kiwi, Chicken, etc... Symbolically, Earth-bound avians.

Or the Rock Dove, aka Pigeon, a pretty common, Malkuthian bird.

Or an arctic tern. they migrate the furthest of any avian (as far as I'm aware). This could represent the travels from Malkuth to Kether and back.

Or the Albatross, flying over the tree but never quite landing on Malkuth.
 
 
Unconditional Love
20:45 / 21.06.05
the peacock brings iblis the peacock angel to mind
 
 
electric monk
10:43 / 22.06.05
Personally, I like the carrion birds in Malkuth. I see them as avatars of decay and change, I guess. Maybe they're a better fit in Geburah, where change and decay first become possible, but we'll have to see. Pigeons would probably be a good fit in Malkuth. That and Yesod I'm stuck on. I was thinking of putting the nightingale in Yesod, mainly because of this:

Nightingale wrens are very elusive, which makes them difficult to study, as well as to observe and enjoy in the wild. Their markings and habit of hiding on the forest floor or in low vegetation help them to be safe, and also avoid intervention from humans. The song of these birds is largely what helps people locate them in the forest and distinguish them from other birds.
Microcerculus philomela males learn only one song during their lifetime, but this song can be altered to fit different uses, such as mating and marking territory.

(Howell & Webb 1995)


Very dreamlike, I thought. Perhaps my criteria for Yesod is too loose. :-P

I'm not sure about the peacock in Tipheret. They've always seemed very proud and show-y to me. Superficial beauty. Conversely, I think the pelican makes a perfect fit in Tipheret, mostly due to Christian upbringing.

*sigh* I'm going to have to buy the Book of Thoth, aren't I?
 
 
--
17:03 / 22.06.05
What about Daath?
 
 
Less searchable M0rd4nt
17:22 / 22.06.05
Maybe a nightjar in Daath?
 
 
nyarlathotep's shoe horn
17:34 / 22.06.05
wtf's a nightjar???

I suggested minah or parrots for Da'ath.

knowledge (imitation of human speech) without understanding.

but, I reiterate, wtf's a nightjar? how do you see it relevant to Da'ath?

please share.

>pablo
 
 
Less searchable M0rd4nt
19:20 / 22.06.05
Nightjars are a big family of birds noted for their distinctive and rather eerie calls (including the whip-poor-wills that turn up in Lovecrafty stories when something messed up is going to happen). Why Daath..?

Ummm... *shuffles feet*

I was sort of thinking about the fact that nightjars have a bit of a reputation for giving people the fear and have a lot of superstition surrounding them. People have described getting seriously spooked by hearing them out in isolated places after dark. They are rumored to drink the milk from goats. And in the middle of all this fear and confusion and nonsense, there's just this little bird that does nothing more scary than put a dent in the local insect population. I suppose that's what made me connect them to Daath.

I'll shut up now.
 
 
Less searchable M0rd4nt
19:28 / 22.06.05
I mean... the bird's call is the knowlege, and the panicking observer is demonstrating a lack of understanding. I guess.
 
 
electric monk
23:16 / 22.06.05
Just to be clear: I highly doubt we'll arrive at some definitive decision on what bird goes with what sphere/path. I'd rather we each try to make a case for our suggestions, and let the debate flow where it will. I prefer not to herd cats, when possible. ;-)

I'll collate all our ideas/suggestions in a later post, so's we can see what we gots.

Cool?
 
 
electric monk
23:19 / 22.06.05
The nightjar sounds interesting. Where is it to be found? I don't know if we have them here in the States, tho we do have whip-poor-wills.
 
 
electric monk
23:21 / 22.06.05
Ah, just re-read yr post Mordant. Now I get it. The whip-poor-will is in the nightjar family, yes?
 
 
Gypsy Lantern
08:05 / 23.06.05
Just to be clear: I highly doubt we'll arrive at some definitive decision on what bird goes with what sphere/path...'ll collate all our ideas/suggestions in a later post, so's we can see what we gots.

I was secretly hoping that you were actually going to make this Quabalisstic aviary. Some mad contraption in your garage with loads of old bird cages filled with different species all connected together in the shape of the Tree of Life...
 
 
electric monk
10:35 / 01.07.05
Were I a younger man with access to the old sculpture studio, I surely would. I can just hear my professor now:

"Mr. Monk!"

"Yes?"

"What in blue hell is this?"

"A Qabalisitc Aviary, Mr. Richmond."

"Why is it shitting all over my floor?"

"That's the Qlippot, sir."

"Make sure it gets cleaned up."


As it stands, I may work up some type of graphic to illustrate this Tree.
 
 
Unconditional Love
10:50 / 01.07.05
taxidermy? or perhaps maybe the feathers?
 
 
Gypsy Lantern
11:56 / 01.07.05
taxidermy? or perhaps maybe the feathers?

Cop out. You either rent warehouse space and construct a vast, insanely intricate, living, squawking, fully interactive aviary representation of the Otz Chim manifested through birdlife, or I suggest this thread should be moved to the conversation. You know it makes sense. If you build it, they will come...

Unless we're talking about combining this idea with the themes under discussion in the falcon cloak thread, and actually make yourself a feather-based version of the Quabalistic aviary in the form of a spectacular costume that you can wear...

Chicken feather slippers...A dove feather hat... A parrot print necktie representing the horrors of the Abyss...
 
 
Unconditional Love
13:03 / 01.07.05
i was thinking more feather duster, a doddian sephirothic tickling stick, dusting for that immaculate conception.

who were the little people? my feathery friends.
 
 
electric monk
17:44 / 01.07.05
You either rent warehouse space and construct a vast, insanely intricate, living, squawking, fully interactive aviary representation of the Otz Chim manifested through birdlife, or I suggest this thread should be moved to the conversation.

Christ, not the Morpheus Treatment! I'll build it! I'll build it!!
 
 
Unconditional Love
10:41 / 02.07.05
feathered scholars

not exactly on topic, but very intresting none the less.

Taoist monks are called "Plumaged or Feathered Scholars," from the idea that by their discipline and pills they can emancipate themselves from the trammels of the material body, and ascend (fly up) to heaven. Arrived there, as Immortals or Hsien, it further appears they were constituted into a hierarchy or society, of which some of them were "officers," higher in rank than others.
 
 
electric monk
14:48 / 04.07.05
It occurred to me, after looking into the "mysteries of the heart pierced with the sword" (referencing the Virgin Mary's suffering on while watching Jesus suffer on the cross), that the pelican should probably go with Path 28. This is a strictly personal decision, based entirely on this dream.

This process is becoming more and more intuitive for me, and I feel more confident in my decisions and less confident at the same time.



BTW, did you know that bluejays are said to meet with the Devil once a week to discuss the sins they have witnessed people committing?
 
 
electric monk
10:17 / 18.07.05
The female cardinal has become more insistent about coming into the house. She's been at every window in the backyard, searching desperately for a way in. Pecking on the glass and hovering-(!) in mid-air in front of the French doors. Beady black eyes agog at this clear mystery.

So I went and I dun' it. I'm not proud a' whut a' dun, but I dun it.


From (the recently purchased) Animal Speak by "Father" Ted Andrews

CARDINAL
KEYNOTE: Renewed Vitality through Recognizing Self-importance
CYCLE OF POWER: Year-round (often with a rhythm of 12—hours, days, months, years)

Most people have no trouble recog­nizing these redbirds. They also are part of the finch family, and a general study of finches is beneficial for those with this totem. Unlike many other birds, they are usually year-round residents, and their influence and the archetypal energies associated with them can be accessed all year long. They remind us that regardless of the time of day or year, we always have opportunity to renew our own vital­ity and recognize the importance of our own life roles. The cardinal has a loud and clear whistle. Whistles are often reminders to listen closely—to pay attention to what is blowing on the winds. In the case of the cardinal, the female joins in on the whistling, which is unusual among birds. This reflects that we should be listening to the inner voice (the feminine) more closely for our own health and well-being. Since most female birds usually are quiet and camouflaged, a cardinal totem almost always reflects a need to assert the feminine aspects of creativity and intuition more strongly.

All cardinals are beneficial and friendly. They eat many weed seeds and injurious insects. The seventeen-year locust (cicada) is one of these. Cardinals can reflect a need to be more careful about your diet, that what you are eating may be injurious to yourself and affecting your overall vitality.

Cardinals lay three to four eggs, and they hatch in about twelve days. This, along with it being a 12-month resident, reflects the rhythm of twelve that is going to become more prominent within your own life.

The male cardinal makes a good parent, and often shares with the female the task of egg incubation. The male, though, will always feed the female while she is in the nest, and the baby cardinals as well. Although the male normally has the brighter color, when it shares the task of incubation, its colors remain much the same as the females, all for the sake of camouflage. This often reflects lessons associated with responsibility and the recognition of the importance of the task at hand.

The males usually have a bright head, although their coloring will often be duller on the back and wings. The bright-colored crest is a warning to rivals, while the duller colors can help shield it.

These birds are named for the cardinals of the Roman Catholic Church, with their bright red robes. If it is your totem, it may reflect past-life connections with the church, or even a reviving of more traditional religious beliefs, regardless of denomination.

Cardinals brighten the environment. They catch the eye and add color to our lives. When they appear as a totem, they do so to remind us to become like them. Add color to your life, and remember that everything you do is of importance.


It is interesting to read the bits about parenting and the sharing of duties. I definitely need to be more conscientious about that. I think the "loud and clear" whistles of the cardinal represent communication since the female joins in the whistling. This makes a (tenative) connection to the Heirophant(V) of the Tarot and, thus, to the sixteenth Path. The connection to the Church is interesting as well, as I'd made attempts some time ago to reintegrate Christ into my life.
 
  

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