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How Did Witches Come To Ride Brooms?
#1
What Really Happened

The popular icon of a witch is an ugly old woman riding across the sky on her magic broomstick and wearing a pointed hat. But as with all mythologies there is an element of truth behind the image. Witches did ride brooms, after a fashion, the brooms were magic, in a way, and the pointed hat was the mildest of the punishments inflicted on them for their activities!

During the time leading up to the witchcraft trials in Europe, the staple bread was made with rye. In a small town where the bread was fresh baked this was just fine, but as Europe began to urbanize and the bread took more time to get from bakery to grocer, the rye bread began to host a mold called "ergot.

Ergot, in high doses, can be lethal, a fact that led to the rise in popularity of wheat bread, which is resistant to ergot mold.

In smaller doses, ergot is a powerful hallucinogenic drug. And because the enjoyment of such things is not confined to this age alone, it became quite popular among those who were inclined towards herbalism and folk cures. It's mentioned in Shakespeare's plays, and turns up in virtually every contemporary writing of the witchcraft age. In particular, it is the inevitable central ingredient in the ointment that witches rubbed their broomsticks with.

You see, when eaten, there was the risk of death, but when absorbed through the thin tissues of the female genitals, the hallucinogenic effects were more pronounced with less ill-effects. The modern image of a witch riding a broomstick was inspired by the sight of a woman rubbing herself on the drug coated smooth stick of her broom, writhing in the throes of hallucinations, and no doubt, some intense orgasms as well. To her unsophisticated neighbors, such a sight would have been terrifying. The lack of an equivalent mechanism for men is one reason why "witchcraft" was seen as a predominantly female phenomenon. The addition of clothing to the witch is a modern embellishment to protect 'Family Values'."

In any event, what follows is a brief expansion on witches, brooms, and ergot, illustrated by woodcuts from the 16th, 17th, and 18th centuries.


The beginnings of the flying myth.

The first stories of "flying ointments" were recorded in the early 1400's. In those cases, mention was made only that the witches dreamt they were flying. Watched all night long, the witches were not seen to actually leave, but would awake with lurid stories of far away gatherings.

While the forged "grimoires" produced by the clergy prosecutors wove lurid tales of the boiled fat of a child as the central ingredient of the flying potion, the reality is that the concoction was based on easily available herbs such as aconite, nightshade, belladonna, and alcohol.

The clergy, eager to so horrify the masses as to remove all resistance to the abuses of the Inquisition cast all witches as a threat to the children, just as Hitler would later do to the Jews, and the present government to the internet. This myth of using a child's fat for a flying potion has no basis in historical fact, but persists to this very day, and was used as a story element in the film, "Warlock".

Of all the folk drugs available to the witches, ergot was the most powerful, and the most dangerous. In use as a hallucinogen it was absorbed through the skin, most quickly through the thin tissues of the female genitals. "Flying ointment" was administered by rubbing it on a smooth wooden pole such as a broomstick, and then "riding" the pole. 

http://www.whatreallyhappened.com/WITCHES/witches.html
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#2
I like the last paragraph, especially the very last sentence. "Riding the pole", lol. Anyways, I think the witches valued sexual acts as sacred because I hear satanism is about returning to natural expression. So some adventurious witch with influence must had "played around" with herbs on her broodstick until she got hit by hallucination and thought she was flying. Of course she wasn't flying, probably floating in her astral body,. But since she probably wrote it down and passed it to other witches, the authorities who found her instructions out of fear must had thought it was real flying.
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#3
It is a common misconception that witchcraft and satanism are the same thing, but please allow me to clarify things a bit.

Witches do not worship Satan.  (I don't believe that Wiccans worship Satan, either, but that's for someone else to explain.)   Witches worship no gods.  They do, however, recognize and use the natural substances and elements of the earth and sky.  Witches were the original healers, using herbs and other natural materials to alleviate suffering.  That is, until the male barbers of the world decided that they should do the doctoring, then witches and midwives were vilified into the evil witch caricature. 

This is a very abbreviated explanation, but further research is easily done if one cares to find out.  
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#4
Thank you for that reply Gertruda Rose. I also dislike it when people think that "witches" = satanism.
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#5
Sexism?
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#6
eh?
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#7
Nevermind.
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#8
Witches with brooms have always been the perfect companions for those with flying carpets.
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#9
Personally, I'd rather ride a carpet than a broom...[Image: 144.gif]
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#10
The real witches only used it for cleaning the room
or to 'marriage' people.

All the Best,

VVizz of Ur
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