(2021-05-02 20:41)LycanTheory Wrote: I believe therianthropy -as a state of mind- is a rejection of the artificial, plastic, manufactured world. It is likely an adaptation for survival when these pillars of industrial, consumerist, technological society come crashing down in implosion and they will, eventually. There is no way to sustain our current way of life. It is malignant to us and to the rest of the natural world.
To me - spiritual, psychological, philosophical or ontological therianthropy makes sense. Identity does not
I'm not sure I entirely agree with you, because WVZ has established pretty thoroughly that therianthropy is not a new phenomenon, and it probably about as old as humanity itself. Although the way it manifests itself in this current age, is probably somewhat unique. Just because we have the internet, and are living farther from nature than ever.
Taking your original theory and adapting it to accommodate this larger timeline, perhaps therianthropy — as a state of mind — is a reminder to the rest of humanity that we are connected to everything else in the circle of life. An adaptation for survival, because when we loose sight of that we destroy nature, and ultimately thus ourselves who depend upon it. An adaptation that ensures a certain amount of the population still knows, instinctually deep down from their animal part, how to survive. Some of the beasts among us who would call themselves therian have forgotten that and prefer to play human. To take up their time with petty online squabbles of a highschool level. There are those among us though who remember how to fish, and hunt, and life with the land rather than from it.
Personally I like to believe that why we're here, now, as therians, is as guardians of nature. A wolf therian is uniquely inclined to protect wolves, a bear therian uniquely inclined to protect bears, for the same reason a human is uniquely inclined to protect humans. A therian is inclined to protect nature as a whole, because that is the way of life for the wolf and the bear. Just like a human is inclined to destroy it as a whole, because this is the way of life for the human. Although I think it's important to recognize that it doesn't have to be. I think if you look at a lot of the cultures of humans who didn't do this, they have a strong connection to animals/ plants, and animal symbolism. It might seem simpler to just be a wolf or a bear, however we have the advantage of human hands, and human minds which can think and plan far into the future. A bear can protect nature only as he sees it in that moment. We also have the ability to communicate with humans in the only way they will listen, with words.
I do wonder about the role of therians such as you or myself. What does a domestic therian have specifically to contribute vs a wild one? Or in my case a foreign one vs a native one? Or a therian who is an extinct species? I'm not sure. Perhaps it has something to do with adapting to the changing climate, or growing human population.
I agree with your message though. This world will fall, either into death or complete slavery as it is trending towards. And when that time comes it doesn't matter what you identify as, or the reason for your therianthropy. Either deep in your nature lies the animal who knows these skills, or it does not. You will live or you will not. And even if you have animal within you, that doesn't guarantee survival.
Sometimes I have visions where it is just me. Plants have taken over the cities, there are pools of fish living in the ruins of sky scrapers. It's probably just wishful thinking, but I yearn for that time.