• IninewCrow@lemmy.ca
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    11 months ago

    I’m Indigenous and I’m actually more afraid of other people in a populated place … you never know what these damned humans will do next.

    I have a cabin in the woods with no internet, phone or communications … it’s even out of cell phone range and I feel safer there than anywhere else.

    I grew up with stories of Windigo … my parents used to freak us out with campfire stories in the dark and then pat us on the head and tell us to go to bed staring into the dark. My grandmother used to warn us not to make such dirty smoky fires because Windigo might see it from far away and find us.

    I spent many nights alone out there and never had a problem … or maybe that is just want Windigo would like you to think.

    The stories go hand in hand with stories of cannibalism in my culture. Many of the stories suggest that during times of famine, which regularly occurred before our modern era back about a hundred years ago, people would go mad with hunger. You have to realize that families of about five to ten people lived alone out there alone for months at a time or even years. And when famines occurred, the families would disappear and there would only be one lone survivor and everyone would quickly realize what happened. The legends suggest that over time, those people who had tasted human flesh eventually just started seeing others as prey to be eaten and consumed … they had been taken over by the spirit of Windigo.

    And the stories get better because there is no one description of Windigo because it’s a legend that any one who has ever seen very few ever live to tell. One description we were taught as kids is that it is covered in mounds of animal furs and layers of human skin to misshape its human body into a giant monster. The other feature was the teeth and mouth … before it gets to the point of eating actual people, the famished person first starts eating themselves. They start ripping off portions of their lips and mouth to eat. It exposes their teeth and they can no longer close their mouth properly. So now you have this big hulking thing wandering around in the bush and when it looks at you, all you see is human teeth.

    This is the Ojibway-Cree version of Windigo in the mushkeg and northern lake lands of Ontario. The descriptions vary from tribe to tribe throughout North America but this is the one I grew up with.

    After many years of being in the bush … I’ve yet to see one … but late at night next to my camp fire in the wilderness, I always think of these stories.

  • DragonTypeWyvern@literature.cafe
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    11 months ago

    And people wonder why the Founding Fathers wanted the right to bear arms.

    They were scared. The spirits of their stolen land knew their sins.

      • Kusimulkku@lemm.ee
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        11 months ago

        DIY burial ground since Yanks had to put many of the Indians to the ground themself

        • DragonTypeWyvern@literature.cafe
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          11 months ago

          Fun Fact: the reason the West Was Won was because after the American Civil War America had a whole bunch of army dudes standing around not necessarily ready to go home but not being “useful.”

          Including William Tecumseh “Kill All The Buffalo” Sherman.

    • Bo7a@lemmy.ca
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      11 months ago

      Yeah, stores suck. Town days are the worst part of living in the middle of nowhere!

        • Bo7a@lemmy.ca
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          11 months ago

          Oh, I know!

          I live in the middle of a forest in the middle of nowhere. After living in over 20 cities in 4 countries, over 13 years - I am very done with city life. We started out here with a patch of untouched forest and lived the first 14ish months fully off-grid. I’m talking like - getting water from the creek in buckets and chopping down enough trees to make room for our trailer to live in off-grid.

          We have mains power and starlink now, but remote is definitely the right word for our situation. The nearest human is about 5km away most of the year, with the occasional hunter in the fall and camper in the summer.

          Now all I need to do is build another shed so that we can buy two big freezers and take the town trip frequency down to quarterly instead of monthly :)

  • Draconic NEO@lemmy.world
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    11 months ago

    Two questions:

    1. How good is the internet there?
    2. Does it come with the Skulldog/deer thing?

    Internet isn’t negotiable because I do have to be able to work from home. The skulldog is cute and would be nice but not an absolute necessity like the internet.

  • TheOPtimal
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    11 months ago

    I feel like that would just get really, really lonely.