Thursday, September 30, 2010

What Does It Mean If Your Pee Is Cloudy

Wolf and Man, an unbreakable bond

Few animals on earth are capable of evoking strong emotions such as the wolf. And a few others have been subject to discrimination and persecution such as to cause the extinction of most of their ancestral lands.

Despite the reputation that many cultures attribute to him, the wolf is actually a timid creature, elusive and extremely intelligent.
The folk tales and legends about wolves abound, wrapped in a fog of fear, admiration (envy) and loathing hypocrite. I put the word envy in parentheses and added "hypocrite" at the end of disgust, because deep down the man, written tiny, meaning the animal man has always desired to possess the characteristics of his worst nemesis. The Wolf.

In ancient hunter-gatherers, the Wolf was the example to follow, the powerful totem to turn ... and a relentless competitor with which to measure the ongoing struggle for survival. It was clear that his figure was more than myth. With the advent of an economy of agriculture and pastoralism, the figure of the wolf has taken on more negative connotations, as was the continuing threat to cattle. But something remained of the old admiration. With the articulation of human society, the so-called civilization, many clan warriors began to consider how their own ancient ancestor the wolf.
Even ancient Rome, which has definitely brought a turning point in European history and culture (and world), was originally given a link with the wolf, nurse of the mythical founders Romulus and Remus.
As written earlier, the Norse revered the wolf dressed as a carrier of Chaos, Fenrir, the son of Loki, the monstrous wolf of Ragnarok, but also the two wolves were faithful companions of Odin, Geri and Freke, the Father of of lovingly nourished with the food that drops from his table in Valhalla.

E 'with the advent of Christianity that the wolf became a symbol only evil. Was indeed associated with the Devil, the Adversary (perhaps even as a distortion of the beliefs of ancient times when men competed in hunting and wolf), as opposed to Christ, "the Lamb of God", creating a metaphor perhaps obvious, but certainly very evocative .

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