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Author Topic: rendering an ancient fish  (Read 1266 times)

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Offline trout whisperer

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Hey you want more than a cooked fish fillet try unwrapping some of this fish paper. …it is from a variety of sources.
Fish, and not one type, just fish, was sacred to the Greco-Roman mythology, check this in the myth of Aphrodite and Heros- when they turned themselves into fish- in order to escape from the ferocious Typhon.
In Christianity, the fish, again no specific specie- is a symbol of abundance and faith. 
Pagan traditions recognized the fish, again any fish- as a feminine symbol of fertility and an attribute of the Goddess.  This is the one, I wonder, if where we get mermaids from?
An ancient Celtic fish (salmon, specifically) this is the first mention I find of one specie,) dealt with knowledge, wisdom, inspiration and prophecy.  Umm, fish as brain food perhaps, I love the Irish.
In ancient Eastern Indian mythology, the fish (any fish) is a symbol of transformation and creation. This is one long fish tale and it’s quite a  read…..you gotta get in king Manu’s boat.
Ancient African myths tell of Mangala, a creator, planting seeds in the universe’s womb. From these seeds two fish erupted. (This probably spawned the first fishing contest I’d imagine or where we get modern multi specie anglers.
In China, the fish most often a (koi) I think I spelled that correctly,  Is symbolic of fidelity, and the attitude of being one or combining into one.   
Im pretty sure it melts down in Buddhist terms that the fish represents happiness and freedom.
If your still fish reading this far, I will end with the Norse. Again just fish-, meant determination, and the flow of life. Had to do with fish coming back to spawn always up river, and against the current.
Fishingly yours
The trout whisperer

trout whisperer author/guide