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Who Invented Fire?
by Barbara Wilder |
For the past 5000 years the majority of
the world’s cultures have functioned as dominator
societies – that is, societies in which some people,
usually men, dominate over others who are dominated. But
before the dominator cultures became prevalent the
people of world lived in much more partner-oriented
societies. In these pre-dominator societies people
worked together for the good of the whole. Instead of
chieftains or kings, partnership societies had councils.
Men and women were equals and everyone had a voice. War
was unheard of and preserving life was of the utmost
importance. In this pre-dominator era the Great Goddess
was the mother of all.*
In the dominator era, which we are still living in,
war and winning dominance over others defined the
paradigm. Women, who had been revered in
partnership-oriented societies, became chattel to be
owned and won by men. To exude power in this new model,
one had to own things. Until this time the concept of
ownership had not existed. Women, who by their very
nature threatened this new way of life, had to be
subjugated. This wasn’t an easy task. Women and
feminine principles were a potent force. It took three
or four millennia for the new model to achieve complete
dominance.
As women became the property of men, they were taken
from their mother’s homes and given to the husband’s
family, thus breaking the strong bond of the ancient
mother-daughter relationship. Women’s monthly lunar
meditations in the red tent or the bleeding
hut became illegal, therefore separating women
during their most potent time. Women were for the first
time in history dependent upon strong dominator men for
their survival. A woman without a man lived outside of
society. She had no way to make a living in this new
society, unless she became a prostitute, and men made
laws forbidding that profession.
Suddenly women, who had been loving sisters, became
rivals, competing for men to take care of them. Women
were taught to hate and distrust their sisters based on
the same strategy that the Roman armies used to take
over the world, divide and conquer.
With the coming of Christianity, the final
division of women was sealed. From that point on there
were two distinct types of women, The Virgin type
and The Magdalene type. Interestingly, both
groups were named after women named Mary, a word derived
from Mare, which means "sea" in all of the
Romance languages as well as several others. Mare is
also one of the most ancient words for Mother. With this
division firmly established, the war between the
virgin and the whore raged for 2000 years,
keeping women separated and therefore powerless. Men had
the best of both, keeping one woman as mistress, and one
as wife and mother of his children. In Europe this way
of life continues even today.
It came to be believed that these two kinds of women
were natural enemies. This suited the dominators’
purposes perfectly, for as long as women fought each
other, distrusted each other, and hated each other, they
posed no threat. Historically men’s greatest fear has
been that women would unite.
Since the sexual revolution of the sixties and
seventies, this division between women has weakened
considerably. The woman who sleeps around and the good
wife aren’t necessarily two separate women anymore.
The line between the virgin and the whore has been
softened. A woman doesn’t have to be one or the other.
We are integrating our virgin with our whore, and we are
loving it. We have been split down the middle both as a
sex and as individual women for two thousand years.
But let’s go back and look at the pre-dominator
era. In Paleolithic and Neolithic eras there is no
evidence that human beings engaged in war. No weapons of
war have ever been found in Neolithic archaeological
sites. Though, we have been led to believe by science
that dominance by an alpha male is the Homo-sapiens
prototype, this assumption is finally being questioned.
Until recently it was assumed that the Chimpanzee, an
alpha-male dominated species, was our closest primate
relative. The discovery of another primate species, the
Bonobo, has caused some serious doubt in the scientific
community. The Bonobos maintain a non-violent society,
in which the female principles of nurturing and
community are its mainstays. There are no alpha-males
among the Bonobos. When the Bonobos need to work out
their frustrations and differences they do it by having
sex, which they do exuberantly many times a day.
At the dawn of the new millennium, a brand new
picture of women and feminine principles is unfolding.
As we learn more about our pre-historic female ancestors
our own self-esteem is enhanced.
Recently while imagining our pre-historic mothers and
grandmothers, it suddenly occurred to me that it must
have been an older woman who discovered fire. I remember
a drawing in my grammar school history book of a hairy
man rubbing sticks together and making "the first
fire." But what we know now of the
Paleolithic era when fire was discovered suggests a much
different theory. Men were the hunters. They left the
cave and went on long hunting trips that lasted days and
even weeks. The women stayed close to the cave. They
foraged for berries and healing herbs, fed the babies,
healed the sick and prepared the meat when the men
returned. They ate the meat raw, because fire had not
been discovered.
In this era the main focus was on survival. And the
women’s main concern was giving birth and keeping the
babies alive to propagate the race – for this,
feminine knowledge was requisite.
Imagine yourself as a grandmother in a Paleolithic
tribe. You have learned a great deal about herbal
remedies and food preparation. Over your long life,
perhaps forty years, you have prayed to the Great Mother
and have become adept at reading the signs she gives
you. It is a bitter cold day. Two of the babies are
struggling to stay alive. As a grandmother you are no
longer tied down to the cave by nursing and mothering
duties, so you go out to gather herbs, hoping to find a
remedy for the babies’ illness. A storm comes up.
Lighting strikes a tree very close to you, and causes it
to burst into flame. You have seen this happen in the
past, but never before have you been so close to the
fire. It frightens you, but before you run, you realize
that the fire is warm. You think of the cold, sick
babies at home. It occurs to you that babies die more
often in the cold part of the year than in the warm
summer months. You put two and two together. The warmth
from this fire might help the babies live. You’re
afraid of the fire, but you are also woman. You know how
important it is to keep the children alive. So, driven
by your instincts for the survival of your brood, you
pick up a piece of dry wood and stick it into the fire.
It lights. Amazed and scared, you rush back to the cave
with this possible cure for the children. You make a
pile of sticks and create a bigger fire. The sick
children huddle around the fire, and they live through
the night.
Though we will never know for sure if this story is
accurate, it is my contention that this story is just
one example of how older women, the grandmothers, made
all or at least most of the major discoveries of the
pre-historic era. Older women were the nurturers and
healers of an entire species. Men were busy hunting.
They had no time for anything else. They invented and
developed hunting weapons, because that was where their
attention was, but the other innovations, such as fire,
pottery, cooking, healing, and the wheel, all came under
the auspices of the women.
Also, war was not something that these early peoples
engaged in. During the Paleolithic era there weren’t
enough humans who lived, to waste life so unnecessarily.
We banded together in partnership, helping each other
survive. Partnership, community, nurturing, survival of
the race – these are all feminine aspects of humanity.
This is our heritage. This is the deep memory that we
women must reconnect with, so that we can begin to
remember just how powerful we are.
Excerpted from: "The
Millennium Woman at Midlife: Eleven Steps to Finding and
Expressing Your Wisdom and Power in the Second Half of
Life." Copyright ã
Barbara Wilder 2001.
* To learn more about dominator
societies and partnership societies read "The
Chalice and the Blade" by Riane Eisler – Harper
& Row, 1987
Barbara Wilder is a nationally recognized
workshop and seminar leader, who has appeared on talk
shows hosted by Shirley MacLaine and Uri Geller and has
led dozens of workshops around the country on various
subjects of concern to women over fifty. Wilder spent
the first twenty years of her adult life in the motion
picture business, first as an actor and later in
production and development. She was an executive on film
locations throughout the US and Europe. Midway through
her motion picture career she began studying metaphysics
and spiritual healing, which eventually led to a second
career as a teacher of emotional growth and healing.
Wilder is the author of MONEY
IS LOVE: RECONNECTING TO THE SACRED ORIGINS OF MONEY, a
book about the metaphysics of money and how to transform
the way money functions, dislodging it from the realms
of power and domination and repositioning it in its
original place of sacredness and nurture. She travels
the country giving workshops based on the principles of
transforming the energy around money from fear and greed
to love and abundance for all. Ms. Wilder’s essays
about the Neolithic roots of feminine power have
appeared in magazines and anthologies, including The
L.A. Weekly, Sage Woman, Travelers’ Tales: Journeys of
the Heart, and The Boulder Daily Camera. Her
newest workshops are the basis for her newest book THE
MILLENNIUM WOMAN AT MIDLIFE for which she is currently
looking for a publisher.
Currently Barbara lives in
Boulder, Colorado with her poet husband Patrick
Pritchett, where she teaches her workshops and works as
a personal coach to women looking for their next step in
the second half of life. She also is an award winning
screenwriter and teaches screenwriting classes at Naropa
University from time to time. Her latest screenplay, RED
RAVEN, based on the true-life story of Boudicca, the
first century Celtic queen who united the Celtic tribes
and almost succeeded in driving the Romans out of
Britain, was a semi-finalist in the coveted Nicholl
Fellowship sponsored by The Academy of Motion Picture
Arts and Sciences, and is currently making the rounds in
Hollywood.
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