Introduction. The sword or the wand -- Sky, storm, and spore : where do gods come from? -- The hanged man is the rooted one : thinking from the feet -- Between naming and the unknown : Shakespeare's Twelfth night -- The minotaur dances the masculine back into the milky way : myths need to move -- the moon belongs to everyone : lunar medicine for the masculine -- Becoming a home : the empress card embraces the masculine -- Dionysus : girl-faced god of the swarm, the hive, the vine, and the emergent mind -- Merlin makes kin to make kingdoms : a multiplicity of minds and myths -- Joseph, secret vegetelista of genesis : plants use men to dream -- Actaeon is the king of the beasts : from curse to crown -- A new myth for narcissus : seeing ourselves in the ecosystem -- Everyone is Orpheus : singing for other species -- Dionysus as liber : the vine is the tool of the oppressed -- Rewilding the beloved : Dionysus offers new modes of romance -- Grow back your horns : the devil card is Dionysus -- Let your wings dry : giving the star card to the masculine -- Tristan and transformation : escaping the trauma of the hero's journey -- Boy David, wild David, King David : the land-based origin of biblical kingship -- Coppice the hero's journey : creating narrative ecosystems -- Merlin and Vortigern : magical boyhood topples patriarchy -- Parzifal and the fisher king : the grail overflows with stories -- Sleeping beauty, sleeping world : the prince offers the masculine a new quest -- Melt the sacred masculine and the divine feminine into divine animacy : the sacred overflows the human -- Resurrect the bridegroom : the song of songs and ecology as courtship -- Osiris : the original green man -- What's the matter? : a mycelial interpretation of the gospel of Mary Magdalene -- Knock upon yourself : the high priestess wakes up the masculine -- The kingdom of astonishment : gnostic Jesus and the transformative power of awe -- Healing the healer : Dionysus rewilds Jesus -- Making amends to Attis and Adonis : no gods were killed in the making of this myth -- The joyful rescue : Tolkien's eucatastrophe and the anthropocene -- Sharing the meal : Tom Bombadil offers the masculine safe haven -- The gardeners and the seeds : healing the easter wound -- Conclusion. A cure for narrative dysbiosis.
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