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Alexandrian/Gardnerian:
To reveal this would be to break my oath of secrecy. I can say,
though, that it really is an ancient rite, dating far back in time,
back even before 1951, and I have learned it from an unbroken lineage.
As Gerald said, it takes a chicken to make an egg.
Asatru: First,
we don't believe in a "One Chicken" or a "Hen and
Rooster." We believe in many chickens. Second, "crossing
the road" is part of the three levels, or worlds, and the chicken
simply crossed from one level to another. Hail to the Chickens!
British Traditional:
The word "chicken" comes from a very specific Old
English word ("gechekken"), and it only properly applies
to certain fowl of East Anglia or those descended therefrom. As
for the rest, I suppose they are doing something remotely similar
to crossing the road, but you must remember that traditional roads
are not to be confused with the modern roads....
Celtic: In County
Feedbeygohn on Midsummer's day, there is still practiced St. Henny's
Dance, which is a survival of the old pagan Chicken Crossing fertility
rite. Today, modern pagans are reviving the practice, dedicated
to the Hen and the Green Rooster.
Ceremonial: "Crossing
the road" is a phrase that summarizes many magical structures
erected and timed by the chicken to produce the energy necessary
for the intention of the travel across the road. For example, the
astrological correspondences had to be correct, the moon had to
be waxing (if the chicken intended to come to the other side of
the road) or waning (if the chicken intended to flee to the other
side of the road), and the chicken had to prepare herself through
fasting and proper incantations. Note: certain forms of invocation
(summoning an egg *inside* your chicken self) can produce abnormal
or even dangerous eggs and should only be conducted inside a properly
erected barnyard....
Chaos: Thinking
in terms of "roads" and "crossings" is simply
looking at the formal, typically perceived structure of chicken
crossing space-time. We, instead, focus on the possibility of chicken
crossing itself; what appears to be a random act is thus actually
the norm--it is the road which is the freak of chance. Indeed, quantum
mechanics now demonstrates what we knew all along: two roads can
simultaneously exist in the same place at the same time. Thus, by
attuning ourselves to the dynamic energy (called "crossing"),
we can manifest the road. Of course, to the knowledgeable, this
appears as a chicken crossing the road.
Dianic: The chykyn
("chicken" is term of patriarchal oppression) sought to
reclaim for herself the right to be on the other side of the road,
after it had been denied to her for centuries. By doing so, she
reawakened the power of the Hen within herself.
Discordian: cock-a-doodle-doo!!!
Druid: To get
to the sacred grove, of course! Keep in mind that 99% of everything
written about chickens-crossing-the-road is pure hogwash, based
on biased sources. Yes, there were a few unfortunate chicken sacrifices
in the past, but that is over now...
Eclectic: Because
it seemed right to her at the time. She used some Egyptian style
corn and a Celtic sounding word for the road and incorporated some
Native American elements into her Corn-name, Chicken-Who-Dances-and-Runs-with-the-Wolves.
Faery: In twilight
times and under sparkling stars, those properly trained can still
see the chickens crossing the roads. Reconnecting with these "fey-fowl"
as they cross is crucial to restoring the balance between the energies
of modern development and living with the earth.
Family Traditional:
Growing up, we didn't think much about "crossing the road".
A chicken was a chicken. It crossed the road because that was what
worked to get her to the other side. We focused on what worked,
and we worked more with the elders of the barnyard and less with
all this "guardians of the chickencoop" business. We didn't
get our concepts of "chickens" or "the other side"
from Gardner, either. You can choose not to believe us since we
did not "scratch down" on paper what was clucked to us
orally (which, at certain times in history, was the only way to
avoid becoming Easter chicken soup!), but that doesn't change the
facts: there were real chickens, and they really did cross the road!
Kitchen Witch:
The chicken crossed the road to get food, to get a rooster, or to
get away from me after I decided to have chicken for supper!
Left Hand Path:
White, fluffy chickens prancing across the road! Do you think that
is all there is to crossing the road? Do you dare to know the dark
side of crossing the road and the other path to self-development?
New Age: The chicken
crossed the road because she chose this as one her lessons to learn
in this life. Besides, there was so much incense and bright, white
corn to explore on the Other Side.
Posting on an Online
Discussion Group: What do you mean "why did the chicken
cross the road?"???!!!??? Haven't you read **any** of the previous
posts? We've been [expletive deleted] debating every word of that
question, painstakingly trying to come to some kind of answer. I
know you wrote "all i wnted to know was why chickens cross
the road, i'm not looking for any chicken spells" but I'm fed
up with newbies who can't even bother to REEEEEEEEAAADDD the posts
on that very topic! No, this is *not* a flame. But, I and several
others here have the *maturity* to properly explore and respond
to this question, and we were properly trained; we *didn't* just
read a book and think we were full-fledged chickens. (whew, feeling
much better after ranting)
Reclaiming: "Didn't
we settle this in the November meeting?"...."Yeah, why
do we have to keep revisiting consensus all the time?"...."Actually,
in November we decided that the chicken did cross the road, but
we ran out of time for why."...."Well, I think the chicken
came before the egg."...."Can we stick to the point here!?
Was it a free-range chicken, or did it escape from one of those
awful factory farms?"...."O.K., everybody -- breathe.
Remember that we're here for all the chickens."...."I
see lots of hands. Pondweed, then Mudflat, then ..."
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