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OMG APOCALYPSE 2012!!

MONDAY FEBRUARY 11 2008 6:00 AM

Submitted by Flux. Edited By erin_broadley.

TAGS: 2012, apocalypse, Maya, Mayans, end times, time, chocolate

The other day I found myself in SG chat and somehow ended up in a conversation about indigenous America (or, more rightly, Abya Yala). While some of you were indulging my Derrida-and-booze inspired pontifications about Mesoamerican writing, I was asked in particular about the “theory” that the Mayan calendar “ends” on December 21, 2012 and that this somehow foretells “the end of the world.” It’s apparently so popular that even that bellwether of journalism USA Today is concerned.

For those of you with canned goods and duct tape at the ready, I’m sorry to disappoint. Although the oft-mentioned principle of Fluxy’s Razor states that I should be in favor of this interpretation, my piddling background in Mesoamerican studies insists that I protest, despite how awesomely hilarious I might find websites like Survive 2012 (warning: serious tinfoil hat zone).

The calendar in question is the Long Count, a record of specific days about which entire books are written (I know this because I spent a lot of time in the UNC library’s Maya section for this article (you people are so spoiled) and whose complicated and fascinating particularities are frankly too much for the scope of this article. Wiki that business or pick up Prudence M. Rice’s Maya Calendar Origins. The part that gets the doomsdayers so excited is the cycle of 13 b’ak’tuns (one b’ak’tun being 144,000 days) which happens to end in 2012. They have interpreted the “Mayan Bible” Popol Wuj’s tale of the destruction of human races prior to our own (and similar Aztec cyclical creation traditions) to mean that at the end of this “Great Cycle,” shit’s going down.

Well, see, those crafty Maya happened to record dates that were to follow 2012. If dates are recorded that fall after the end of the 13th (actually the 12th, but this is another one of those complexities I mentioned) b’ak’tun, doesn’t it follow that this creation will persevere past that date? The Long Count isn’t evidence of some long-held Mesoamerican prophecy so much as it is evidence that the Maya were simply obsessed with dividing time cyclically. And if the “Mayan Bible” were so intent on the apocalypse, you would think that the Popol Wuj would have something akin to the book of Revelation (hint: it doesn’t (but you should read it anyway; it is a goddamned masterpiece).

In short, almost anybody who has more than a cursory understanding of both the Mesoamerican sense of reality and of the foundations of its worldview would say that this whole 2012 freak-out thing is a great, big misunderstanding.

No, the 2012 Apocalypse and its cousin, the 2012 Consciousness Shift, are creations of new agers and journalists who seem to find the complex civilization of Mesoamerica so improbable that they must assign some unusual spiritual significance to it; if those backward Indians could be so smart as to figure out the concept of zero and the solar year, they had to have some sort of magical knowledge gifted them by Kukúlcan. It’s no surprise that these books are filled with personal anecdotes, drug-induced visions, and extrapolations into non-Mesoamerican history and the current world situation (and crappy astronomy or that others try to tack their own ideas (novelty theory, the peak oil catastrophe) onto the Long Count framework. There’s not enough actual meat to support their ideas.

So why do these people who are neither Mayanists nor Mayan themselves continue to champion this great change on the winter solstice of 2012? Methinks it’s the same reason people were wrapping their pets in bubble wrap at the end of 1999. We are obsessed with the end. Figuring these dates allows us to relax our responsibility; our actions don’t matter because in four years, things are going to change. It’s actually quite Western eschatology: Christ is coming, so we’ve just got to chill. God gave us the world to turn into our own personal living room, as it were.

One of the things that fascinates, repels, and compels about the Mesoamerican cultures is their emphasis on sacrifice. The Mexica (Aztec) pantheon held gods who required quite individualized forms of human sacrifice; the Mayan kings pierced their bodies with spines. Bloodletting and human and animal sacrifice were nearly ubiquitous in ancient Mesoamerica. The gods and the earth required blood and flesh to continue. Creation was precarious; humans must sacrifice to preserve it.

We are not inclined to sacrifice. Sure, you might switch to a hybrid automobile and remember to bring a cloth bag to the supermarket, but these aren’t really sacrifices. And whether we like to admit it or not, the world cannot go on at this brisk pace. Unless we start colonizing other planets, like space conquistadors ready to plunder a truly New World, we must eventually learn to really sacrifice ourselves, albeit without obsidian blades and maguey spines. That is the real legacy of the Maya; that’s the 2012 consciousness shift. We aren’t any more likely to be struck by an asteroid or have the feathered serpent come sodomize our minds. We will however, learn to make sacrifice.

Anyway, with Valentine’s Day coming up, give thanks to the Mesoamericans while enjoying their other great legacy: fucking chocolate, dudes.

Flux will totally cyber-punch anyone who tries to get on her for “misspelling” the Popol Wuj. Bitches.

 

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abracadabra

abracadabra

Seattle, WA
April 2004

FEB 12, 2008 03:13 AM

cothebadger said:
Certainly not research, but see the Wiki on Geomagnetic Repolarization: However, Homo erectus and their ancestors certainly survived many previous reversals.



This is fascinating, and could also explain why the tectonic plates have been shifting a lot lately. It is a result of the core heating up and could possibly be a contributing factor to global warming. Archaeologists looked at rock samples and found that a pattern of disruption occurred pretty consistently. This also happened to fit into the Mayan pattern. I think that looking to the past to determine what could happen in the future should not be discounted.

Admiral_Pants

Admiral_Pants

Austin, TX
May 2004

FEB 12, 2008 04:28 AM

Messidor said:
Shouldn't we be more concerned about 2112 (by Rush)?



It's nothing new. It's just a waste of time.

Shell_Shock

Shell_Shock

Rockmart, GA
May 2007

FEB 12, 2008 04:55 AM

Writings of historical significance with concrete or exciting endings = PROFIT

It's all about profit. Ask the underpants gnomes. Or ask "Left Behind" series authors Tim LaHaye and Jerry Jenkins.

Ascanius

Ascanius

South Royalton, VT
October 2006

FEB 12, 2008 06:20 AM

sitar said:
its almost as if the circle was a shape that the human psyche found symbolic and meaningful, regardless or race, culture, or geography!
no es possible!


Hey, say what you like, but two ancient cultures on opposite sides of the planet arranging their calendars as a series of concentric circles with abstract symbols in the inner circle and pictographs in the outer- well that's pretty clear evidence that aliens built the pyramids to me. Either that or evidence that some of the Tang dynasty (618-918 CE) excursions to search for the mythical Eastern Islands might have run into the Mayan civilization at its height (c. 250-900 CE). Who knows?

Mankarlen

Mankarlen

Deer Island, OR
June 2006

FEB 12, 2008 08:03 AM

Well if you have read the bible it even states not the end of the world but a change for the better at the cost of many ruining it. There will be those that survive the change and turn the earth to a garden. I thought I would throw that in to the futher discussion of the mayan 2012 theorey.

HAGGARD

HAGGARD

I'm lost
December 2005

FEB 12, 2008 09:36 AM

Thank you!

Noctua

Noctua

Palo Alto, CA
February 2004

FEB 12, 2008 10:42 AM

All I could think about while reading this article was the phrase, "Eschew immanentization of the eschaton!"

Flux

Flux

SUICIDEGIRL

North Carolina, USA
XamaX_is_Dead

XamaX_is_Dead

La Mesa, CA
March 2007

FEB 12, 2008 10:57 AM

i wrote a little blog a while back about this, and i never bought into the whole "the world ends 12/21/2012" call me a skeptic. i had never seen the mayan calendar at all so i had no idea it was a circle, i just assumed they had figured out a workable calendar hundreds of years into the future, got tired and said "you know we have the next several hundred years mapped out, we can pick this shit up later, let's go get stoned and sacrifice some humans" to which mayan number two responded "SHIT YES!!! IT'S LIKE YOU READ MY MIND!" but this article has informed me of how damn wrong i was. thank you.

Horrorflick

Horrorflick

Detroit, MI
February 2003

FEB 13, 2008 09:02 AM

You are quickly becoming one of my favorite writers on this site. The cyclical nature of the Mayan calendar is a common subject of discussion among myself and quite a few of my friends. Personally, I think that the recent concentration of media attention on this phenomenon is just the same sub-par sensationalism that we've all come to know and love. (I heard something yesterday on the radio about all this snow we're getting and the apocolyptic possibility that we might "run out of salt" for the roads. (This is in Michigan, mind you...) You gotta love the press!

Metaverse

Metaverse

Portland, OR
March 2005

FEB 13, 2008 08:17 PM

Really loved the article. I love ancient history and aztec, mayan and incan culture have always been fascinating.

True_LOVE

True_LOVE

Australia
November 2005

FEB 14, 2008 01:28 AM

I like what u say & how you say it. Any encouragment that inspires ACTUAL resonsibility is like totally cool. Smart & humourous writing. Nice work.

InnocentSid

InnocentSid

Providence, RI
June 2007

FEB 14, 2008 05:51 AM

I thought it was because they ran out of room on the wall at that date. It happens to me every December. I am trying to write down that hot date on my calendar that happens right after New Year's and "damn, I forgot to get the new year's calendar." tongue

tadkil

tadkil

Atlanta, GA
September 2004

FEB 19, 2008 01:20 AM

This article was like a depth charge for freaky responses!

Flux delivers again.

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