azzazza !?
Bluelighter
"Mystique" and "Mystic" are two different things.
If you are talking about cut n' paste "wicca", then there is actually a very technical term for that: "Fluffbunnyism".
i used mystique in the sense of experiencing the mystical (no?); and yes, i did mean in the academic sense. a mystic, once he has found union, will externalize his experience; carry it outwardly. this actually happens in situ; a mystical state can not be held for longer then a few hours, at most. the second the mystic uses a means external to his oneness; a reflection of himself, such as language; marks his journey back to the world. most of the times, if not always, they will use frameworks and concepts of existing traditions to varying degrees; which usually also provided important 'construction sites' (to borrow the term from Heideggers On the Way to Language) along his mystical path to the union with the divine. Any exoteric religious system is a conceptualized esoterism. don't absolutize the poles these terms denote; in reality, they exist within each other. an absolute esoterism would be eternally deaf and mute; a God, forever locked in a little prison chamber with no windows. alone.
i apply your technical term of fluffbunnyism to what i generally would describe as 'new age'. personally, i'm not immediatly lumping the theological concept of the divine in wicca under that category. to my own surprise actually. but yes, some cut 'n past wicca can surely be. but some cut n paste christianity be just as such imho. it ceases to be an actual religion at that point; it becomes more of a 'feelgood pastime'. fluffbunnyism is very much a disease of our time in general. it springs from our current arrant marginalisation and misappropriation of death. it is becoming a taboo these days. everybody has to be young and vibrant, we're all believing science will make us immortal one day, until then: cryogenics, hell even genitalia have to be shaved so as to look like prepubescent teens. lets keep death and withering as far away from our beds as possible and pretent it doesn't really exist. its something that happens to other people. not me. and thank god for television; now we can 'virtualize' it. we are losing a genuine relation to death, all superficiality and fluffbunnyism resulting. Heidegger once called it 'the mystery of pain'.
(yes, i've been revisiting heideggers thought lately...)
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