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- Path: sparky!uunet!wupost!udel!intercon!usenet
- From: amanda@intercon.com (Amanda Walker)
- Newsgroups: alt.pagan
- Subject: Re: Documented Evidence
- Date: Sat, 2 Jan 1993 15:34:42 -0500
- Organization: InterCon Systems Corporation
- Lines: 60
- Distribution: world
- Message-ID: <9301021534.AA42979@amanda.dial.intercon.com>
- References: <1i2b79INNvr@cat.cis.Brown.EDU>
- Reply-To: amanda@intercon.com (Amanda Walker)
- NNTP-Posting-Host: amanda.dial.intercon.com
- X-Newsreader: InterCon TCP/Connect II 1.1b31
-
- SL500000@brownvm.brown.edu (Robert Mathiesen) writes:
-
- > The one and only *text* handed down in my family is one sentence long,
- > as follows: "Mathiesens [or whatever the current last name is] are
- > different!" [...] This is the only thing I
- > really made a great effort to pass on to my own children, and it took
- > with both of them. Everything else is technique or technology, and
- > anything that works can never be lost forever.
-
- This is true; and depite my occasional frustration, I must say that this idea
- is very much alive in my family as well. As one of my great-aunts often (and
- occasionally ruefully :)) puts it, "Ain't none of us *dull*." Grin. And
- again, despite the scarcity of concrete information passed from generation to
- generation, the tools are very carefully and explicitly passed along,
- including such things as:
-
- - A ravenous curiousity, and a feeling that not knowing something is
- just an incentive to find out, whether by research or experimentation.
- This is what lead to my great-grandfather being one of the first people
- in his entire county to install electricity, or have a car (which he
- evidently bought as a kit and assembled himself), obtain patents on
- wind generators, and so on.
-
- - A strong sense of individuality and family cohesiveness, coupled with
- the knowledge that living by other people's rules is a choice, not a
- requirement. One aspect of this is keeping knowledge of the family
- around, a tradition which my mother and her brothers are continuing.
- We have most of the family lines traced back to their arrival on this
- continent, although from there it gets rather fuzzy. Try to find a
- particular line of tall, blue-eyed, blonde-haired Scandinavians who
- came to this country in about 1670 from Sweden and took the name
- "Smith", for example :).
-
- - Deep skepticism of anyone who claims to have all the answers, no matter
- what the context.
-
- - A strong appreciation for the world around us, nature, and other people.
-
- And so on. Eccentricity is encouraged. Grin. No matter how odd I may be,
- the worst I really have to worry about in the long run is being dubbed a
- "crazy cousin" by my relatives...
-
- > Your words about your own family are eloquent beyond any need for me to
- > add comments of my own. One thing only: if your family had Masonic
- > connections and was in the Old South during 1850-1900, almost certainly
- > any fondness for esoteric interests would have led them to explore
- > General Albert Pike's version of Scottish Rite Masonry (Southern
- > Jurisdiction).
-
- Actually, I don't know of any Masonic connections in that branch of the
- family--the only ones I know about are in Pennsylvania and New England, and
- are on my father's side of the family.
-
-
-
-
- Amanda Walker
- InterCon Systems Corporation
-
-
-