What Will happened if you combined the powers of Beast Force Manipulation and Totemism Together?
What Will happened if you combined the powers of Beast Force Manipulation and Totemism Together?
What will happened if you have the combined powers of Monster Magic and Totemism?
40 Votes in Poll
Far in the future, people live in a dystopian world where everyone has a Kidemónas. These creatures are their owner’s Spirit Animal, and feels everything—pain and emotion—they feel, along with sharing the same thoughts, Powers and memories. If a Kidemónas dies, their owner looses all of their Powers completely and are unable to get them or their Kidemónas back. But now, these Kidemónases are being exterminated. Can you stop this extermination? Will you be the one that’ll be the victim of it? Or will you join forces with it?
Sign-Up Rules:
•Your character can ONLY BE A HUMAN! NOTHING ELSE!
•EVERYONE MUST HAVE A DIFFERENT KIDEMÓNAS! NO TWO PEOPLE CAN HAVE THE SAME KIDEMÓNAS!
•Your character can have any Powers/Abilities AS LONG AS IT RELATES TO THEIR KIDEMÓNAS AND AS LONG AS THEY’RE NOT OP, OMNI, META, ULTIMATE, ABSOLUTE, TRANSCENDENT, ASCENDED, ECT!
•WEAKNESSES ARE REQUIRED FOR ALL CHARACTERS! IT MUST BE MORE THAN ONE!
•NO MEME OCS! PUT EFFORT INTO YOUR CHARACTER! ANY MEME OCS AND/OR TROLL OCS WILL BE DENIED IMMEDIATELY!
•REMEMBER, YOUR KIDEMÓNAS SHARES THE SAME POWERS AND WEAKNESSES THAT YOU DO! SO CHOOSE YOUR POWERS WISELY!
Character Sheet:
Name:
Alias:
Alignment:
Appearance:
Appearance (Kidemónas):
Species:
Age:
Personality:
Gender:
Sexuality:
Pronouns:
Occupation:
Weapon/Paraphernalia:
Powers/Abilities:
Weaknesses:
Backstory:
Extra Info:
Neoshamanism refers to "new" forms of shamanism, or methods of seeking visions or healing. Neoshamanism comprises an eclectic range of beliefs and practices that involve attempts to attain altered states and communicate with a spirit world.[1] Neoshamanic systems may not resemble traditional forms of shamanism. Some have been invented by individual practitioners, though many borrow or gain inspiration from a variety of different indigenous cultures. In particular, indigenous cultures of the Americas have been appropriated.[2][3]
The word "shaman" originates from the Evenki word "šamán".[4] The Tungusic term was subsequently adopted by Russians interacting with the indigenous peoples of Siberia,[5] and then applied very broadly by western anthropologists to many, diverse spiritual systems that share some kind of practice of calling upon, and mediating with, spirit beings.
Neoshamanism is not a single, cohesive belief system, but a collective term for many philosophies and activities. However, certain generalities may be drawn between adherents. Most believe in spirits and pursue contact with the "spirit-world" in altered states of consciousness which they achieve through drumming, dance, or the use of entheogens. Most systems might be described as existing somewhere on the animism/pantheism spectrum.[6] Some neoshamans were not trained by any traditional shaman or member of any American indigenous culture, but rather learn independently from books and experimentation. Many attend New Age workshops and retreats, where they study a wide variety of ideas and techniques, both new and old.[2][3]
Some members of traditional, indigenous cultures and religions are critical of neoshamanism, asserting that it represents an illegitimate form of cultural appropriation, or that it is nothing more than a ruse by fraudulent spiritual leaders to disguise or lend legitimacy to fabricated, ignorant, and/or unsafe elements in their ceremonies.[7][3]
According to York (2001) one difference between neoshamanism and traditional shamanism is the role of fear.[8] Neoshamanism and its New Age relations tend to dismiss the existence of evil, fear, and failure. "In traditional shamanism, the shaman’s initiation is an ordeal involving pain, hardship and terror. New Age, by contrast is a religious perspective that denies the ultimately [sic] reality of the negative, and this would devalue the role of fear as well."[9]
The 2011 United Kingdom census made it possible to write in a description of one's own choosing for "Religion". The figures for England and Wales show that from just over 80,000 people self-identifying as Pagan, 650 wrote in the description "Shamanism".[10]
Core ShamanismEdit
"Core Shamanism", which formed the foundations for most contemporary neoshamanism, is a system of practices synthesized, invented and promoted by Michael Harner in the 1980s, based on his reading of anthropological texts about indigenous peoples in the Americas, primarily the Plains Indians.[1] Harner, who was not himself indigenous to the Americas, asserted that the ways of several North American tribes share "core" elements with those of the Siberian shamans.[1][2][3] Many non-Native American readers believe that Harner's ideas were representative of actual traditional indigenous ceremonies, when they were not actually very accurate according to subsequent critics.[2] Some members of these tribes assert that Harner's ideas or representations were not in any way accurate,[2][3] nor do they call their spiritual leaders "shamans".[2][11]
Harner professes to describe common elements of "shamanic" practice found among indigenous people world-wide, having stripped those elements of specific cultural content so as to render them "accessible" to contemporary Western spiritual seekers.[12] Harner also founded the Foundation for Shamanic Studies which claims to aid indigenous people preserve or even re-discover their own spiritual knowledge.[13]
Core shamanism does not hold a fixed belief system, but instead focuses on the practice of "shamanic journeying" and may also rely on the novels of Carlos Castaneda. Specific practices include the use of rapid drumming in an attempt to attain "the shamanic state of consciousness",[14] ritual dance, and attempted communication with animal tutelary spirits, called "power animals" by Harner."[15]
Power animalsEdit
Main article: Familiar spirit
See also: Spirit guide
"Power animal" is a concept that was introduced in 1980 by Michael Harner in The Way of the Shaman.[15] While Harner took inspiration from his study of animistic beliefs in many different cultures, his concept of power animals is much like the familiar spirits of European occultism, which aid the occultist in their metaphysical work.[15]
The use of this term has been incorporated into the New Age movement, where it is often mistaken for being the same as a totem in some indigenous cultures.[3] The concept has also entered popular culture in various forms, such as in the 1999 film (and earlier novel) Fight Club, when the narrator attends a cancer support group. During a creative visualization exercise, he is told to see himself entering a cave where he will meet his power animal. When he does, he imagines a penguin is speaking to him.[16]
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