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I'm somewhat a believer in the totemic power of wild animals. That's why I have a jaguar skin on my sleeping loft wall and a ceramic hawk suspended in the center of a large dreamcatcher that hangs by my bed. I don't have anything representing my other totem, the bear, but he comes to visit me to raid my bird feeders and berry patches anyhow. I think I read somewhere, something by Joseph Campbell perhaps, that originally the pharohs were sacrificed to encourage the Nile to flood and replenish the soil. Over time they came to recognize the downside of this system and persuaded the priests to substitute animal or lesser human sacrifice, which seemed to work just as well. If you want to be a sexual sacrifice, Svetya darling, a young woman who had the same fantasy joined me in writing a little three-part scenario that might give you an idea how it might work. Just click on these 3 links: [group_post 573727] [group_post 575702] [group_post 577800] If you'd like to read all eight chapters, you'll find them at the bottom of this index of links: [post 964663] Enjoy!
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I agree with MasterButch52 that you would be highly prized. I would want to view, touch, and inspect you as part of your sacrifice to eroticism, culminating with so many orgasms you are a spent, whimpering puddle of flesh.
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You have presented an interesting conundrum. It seems the basis of most sacrifice is deprivation. A deprivation of food, or money, or time, or in extreme cases life. Take the typical Lenten idea of "sacrifice". One will give up something for this number of weeks in order to facilitate a spiritual cleansing. What you suggest sounds more like the Hollywood idea of the satanic sacrifice of a woman's sex on an altar in front of a congregation. I think it would be less a sacrifice than an interactive performance especially since you would probably take a measure of satisfaction from it.
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I would have loved to have studied under Campbell too. I think he may have lived in Hawaii while I was there, but if so I wasn't aware of it at the time. I kept in close touch with the faculties at the University of Hawaii and the East-West Center that dealt with International Relations and Asia and Pacific studies, but nobody ever mentioned Campbell, so it's possible that he arrived after I moved to Korea. His books and insights are incredible.
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I saw my first Noh play and my first Chinese Opera at the University of Hawaii when I was an undergraduate. Actually the whole state is awash in multi-cultural dance festivals and performances. It's a shame you never got there. It's really a fabulous experience.
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