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An odd collection of arms and hands |
This is a photo of some of the arms and hands I've collected. I haven't tried very hard to find them; they seem to have found me. I do like them very much, mostly because they seem to have symbolic meaning beyond their actual plastic or china reality. I'd like to do more with them. I made this jewelry box:
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the wonder of spray paint |
The hand has a long history as a symbol, figuring in many cultures as a lucky talisman and,
I discover, having strong links to ancient fertility cults. The site I just linked to,
www.luckymojo.com, is the most extraordinary, sprawling site, with information about every conceivable lucky charm and more, and is the almost-singlehanded work of Catherine Yronwode, whose
life story is one of the most interesting I've ever read.
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letter-holder -- touching |
The hand stands metonymically for the whole person. I wish I had the nerve to use the word 'synecdoche' here as that means a part standing for a whole, but I just don't know how to put it into a sentence properly. Not only does the hand stand for the person, but it's a particularly significant part, the part that touches, holds, connects:
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sparks fly |
Hands ward off the evil eye -- it's almost intuitive in the way we hold up a hand to say 'stop'.
Browsing on LuckyMojo.com has made me want to buy tons of milagros and other charms. I already have a Mexican cross studded with milagros, including several hands:
I don't have any kind of faith, but I enjoy the idea that people have invested power in objects and body parts.
I do have two personal lucky charms which are my 'lucky stones'. I found these as a child and have kept them safe ever since. They're naturally shiny, not polished. I've photographed them on my computer to give an idea of size.
Love that second photo down.... wonderful collection. I also like to look for gravestones that have hands on............
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