I've been thinking about Cassandra.
Jun. 25th, 2005 02:43 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
It's said that her curse was not that she could see the future but that she would never be believed about her prophecies.
But what would belief have done? I'm not an expert on Greek mythology, but I can't think of a single time somebody had a prophecy, and then used the information they got wisely and thus prevented the prophecy from coming to fruition. Indeed, most of the time the mere act of getting a prophecy seems to be the key ingredient in forcing the prophecy to come true!
It's hard to know the future before it happens, but how much harder would it have been for her to know that it was through her actions to prevent the future that her visions were made real?
I'm thinking that maybe the curse, the truly bad part, was not that she saw the future, or even that nobody believed her, but that she felt compelled to tell everyone what she saw. When I was little, I used to wonder why she didn't just lie. Tell everyone the pretty lie, they disbelieve you, and then the future is averted. Instead, she had to tell them the truth and deal with their scorn, even as she was proven right time after time. She couldn't accept that they would never believe her, so she had to keep trying to change the course that was already set out. If she had been able to just not talk about it, maybe... things would have gone the same, but maybe it would have been easier for her.
It just seems like it would have been, that's all.
But what would belief have done? I'm not an expert on Greek mythology, but I can't think of a single time somebody had a prophecy, and then used the information they got wisely and thus prevented the prophecy from coming to fruition. Indeed, most of the time the mere act of getting a prophecy seems to be the key ingredient in forcing the prophecy to come true!
It's hard to know the future before it happens, but how much harder would it have been for her to know that it was through her actions to prevent the future that her visions were made real?
I'm thinking that maybe the curse, the truly bad part, was not that she saw the future, or even that nobody believed her, but that she felt compelled to tell everyone what she saw. When I was little, I used to wonder why she didn't just lie. Tell everyone the pretty lie, they disbelieve you, and then the future is averted. Instead, she had to tell them the truth and deal with their scorn, even as she was proven right time after time. She couldn't accept that they would never believe her, so she had to keep trying to change the course that was already set out. If she had been able to just not talk about it, maybe... things would have gone the same, but maybe it would have been easier for her.
It just seems like it would have been, that's all.
no subject
Date: 2005-06-25 12:34 am (UTC)"Hello
I am a post-operative male to female transsexual. I consider that God
has gently led me to realise that I am female, against my anguished
denials. I will be forty next year, but I would very much like to go to
Farmington in order to develop uterus and ovaries, so that I might
become pregnant.
As far as I understand the prophecy, the other possibility when I enter
Farmington is that I might realise that I had been mistaken all this
time, and be restored as a man, in my right mind. In either case,
according to God's good will, I would be made healthy.
L, are you aware which result I would experience, as part of the
prophecy? Which result do you think I would experience?
Love,
xxxxxx"
(I figure it is publically available it is ok to reprint.)