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You are here: Home : Community : Travel Writers : Fertility Goddess

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Travel Writers: Is the Fertility Goddess Still Alive? by Leonardo DiFrancesco

     

Location: Bhutan, Northwest Asia, winter 2003

I’m writing from 13,500 feet elevation with a bloated stomach (due to low air pressure combined with a huge gourmet breakfast) at the foot of Mt. Jhomolhari, the most sacred of Bhutanese mountains. According to Tibetans there are rainbow palaces on these peaks inhabited by goddesses and spirits, however these goddesses are part of Tibetan culture, just four miles away, as the bird flies across the Bhutan border and into China (Tibet). Tibet is the backside of this magnificent 24,130 ft mountain I’m gazing upon. I'm a tourist from Seattle in mid-trek with friend Ann, from Kentucky on a 9-day hike through the world’s best-preserved monarchy and by some accounts the most isolated culture left on the planet.

 



image: fertility symbol

 

In order to get to Bhutan requires a mandatory flight on the royal Bhutan airline, the only airline serving Bhutan. We awaited the flight two days in Bangkok to get over jet lag and happened to stay at the Bangkok Hilton where there is a special place I’ve heard about but never visited in person. When the hotel was built the locals fought to preserve the last remaining fertility temple in Thailand. The temple consists of an alter surrounded by hundreds of penises of all shapes, sizes and colors carved from wood, rock and styrofoam. The penises are accurate representations from the pleasure ridge around the head down to bulging veins. Some even have legs. One lonely, old growth tree remains of the great forest that once was Bangkok and is said to house a fertility spirit that still lives in the tree. Infertile women and couples in need come from all over the world in hope that praising the spirit and/or penises will bring them a child.

The fertility goddess predates Thai culture, was common to all humanity pre-domestication plants and animals and as I have found is very much still alive in Bhutan where yak herding matriarchs use six-foot penises painted on their house, ribbons tied around a multi-colored shaft with semen exploding out across the wall to ward off bad spirits and attract the fertility goddess. She, the goddess only lost her power when farming was invented and a surplus of food appeared allowing populations to grow uncontrollably for the first time. The fertility goddess was then slain and replaced by the population control man-god and here we all are today with big daddy in the sky and big brother on the ground!

During my trip to Bhutan, I saw some amazing lifestyles, forests, artifacts, cliffside monasteries, the remote city of Paro, which is actually just one main street with a Sunday market full of beautiful specimens of fruit and vegetables brought up from the Indian plain, 110 degree stone bath where heated rocks by firewood are placed in a water trough carved from a single log where you sit within, buttermilk (Yak milk) tea, monk ceremonies and chanting in preparation for the Kings arrival and rice alcohol with a farmer in his farmhouse. All of these places, people, ubiquitous images of Buddha, and every aspect of life are threads in a continuous, living mythological weave where miracles are happening everyday; the next door dog is a reincarnation of a family member and yeti, ghosts, gods and spirits fill the invisible spaces between all things.

 

Text © Leonardo DiFrancesco 2003, All Rights Reserved

     
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