Path: shell.portal.com!svc.portal.com!uunet!in3.uu.net!cam-news-hub1.bbnplanet.com!tezcat!morpheus.tezcat.com!user From: morpheus@tezcat.com (Alan Salmi) Newsgroups: alt.lucky.w Subject: Re: M&M Oracle Date: Sun, 18 Aug 1996 13:35:21 -0500 Organization: St. Urho Society Ladies Sewing Circle and Terrorist Group Lines: 52 Message-ID: References: <4t3hfu$ppn@news4.digex.net> <4u1bd1$mbm@ccnet3.ccnet.com> <4uc3s5$er9@Turing.Stanford.EDU> <4ud9vv$ftl@news2.cais.com> <4uerno$rj3@Turing.Stanford.EDU> <4ufnal$9av@dfw-ixnews3.ix.netcom.com> <4uoj1h$scd@ccnet3.ccnet.com> <3210D2D5.7B6D@sonic.net> NNTP-Posting-Host: morpheus.tezcat.com In article <3210D2D5.7B6D@sonic.net>, yronwode@sonic.net wrote: > Fred Burke wrote: > > > > Jonah Thomas (JEThomas@ix.netcom.com) wrote: > > : I came up with a method of divination based on the colors of M&Ms as they > > : come out of a shaken package, and do you think any of my astrologer friends > > : wanted to hear about it? Not on your life. "Astrology is based on > > : *ancient* traditions, it's based on thousands of years of experience. > > : You're making fun of me." Or the more self-assured, "Come back in a few > > : thousand years after you get it fully developed." > > > > Heck, there's plenty of synchronicity to go around! How does this oracle > > work? > > I second the request for details. In the 1960s a bunch of us Berkeley > science fiction fans and proto-hippies developed The M&M Game, based on > Herman Hesse's Bead Game (in the novel "Magister Ludi") and had a lot of > philosophical and existential fun with it. Starting with a half-pound > bag of M&Ms we could run a game for about a week on the hallroom or > entry-way table of a communal house, with each entrant making one move > as he or she passed the table. If we got stoned and felt munchy, we > could run a half-pound M&M game in a couple of hours on the kitchen > table. > catherine yronwode ------------------------- mailto:yronwode@sonic.net > news:alt.lucky.w - discussion of folkloric amulets, charms, & talismans > LUCKY W AMULET ARCHIVE ------ http://www.sonic.net/yronwode/LuckyW.html > mailto:space@intuition.org --- sacred sites, geometry, archaeoastronomy > THE SACRED LANDSCAPE ---- http://www.sonic.net/yronwode/sacredland.html I can think of one way to make an oracle like this: set up a cross on a piece of cloth, make three concentric circles around the cross. Each section of the cross would indicate an element (air, fire, water, earth), the three circles could represent closeness to the querent (in time or space perhaps). All you would need would be to decide on the meaning of the M and M colours and there are plenty of color correspondences to go around. I would be interested in knowing how Jonah did this however and I would also be interested in knowing the rules for the game Cat describes above (or should I just get the book?). I also think that Jonah ran across some very stuffy astrologers, the ones that I've been around would probably love this oracle!! ~from: Alan Salmi, Chicago, IL morpheus@tezcat.com ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "Beginning in February 1976 your assistance benefits will be discontinued... Reason: it has been reported to our office that you expired on January 1, 1976." - Letter from the Illinois Department of Public Aid