Pt 2
We have traditional storytellers and shamans that don't speak a word of an indigenous language. We have not one, but two great-great grandsons of Geranium, although the Geronimo family says that they are not missing anyone. We even have people from non-existent tribes such as "Mingus Susquehaba, Mound Builder, and Allegheny Sioux."
Heck, we even know somebody that walked into a museum and proclaimed that he was full-blooded Calusa! Neat trick, huh? As a matter of fact, we have complained so much about plastic Indians that one pseudo-Indian group has even started the "Plastic Indian Defense Fund." Yes, they intend to sue us for our Plastic Medicine list. What could their defense possibly be? "We are fakes and we know it?" or "We are frauds that steal people's money, so what?" or maybe "We are not really Indians, so what!" (I was going to send them a
contribution of laminated Monopoly money...plastic money for plastic Indians). Hell, we even have a Princess Velveeta. Get it? Plastic Indian, plastic cheese.
Then, of course, we have the infamous pow wow circuit. Granted, there are a few legitimate pow wows in the state, held by the Miccosukees,
the non-traditional Seminoles and the American Indian Association, but if you happen into one of the others beware! You will find all white dancers, women in Grass Dance regalia, people with those
old '60s feather roach clips hanging in their hair (which actually looks kind of painful), and ladies dressed in purple suede and feathers. (What kind of birds do you get purple feathers from, anyway?) You can find medicine bags the size of cattle feeders, and shamans selling weekend seminars where you too can learn to be a shaman and healer for around $1,200. There are also videos available, if you don't have time to spend the weekend away from home. And look out...you will be saged to death. People will break out their cooking sage and blow it in your face; they will sage the tents, the air, the trees, the outhouses and piles of dog poop.
The latest craze down here is the sale of that most cherished and holy of objects, the dream catcher. Crystal and metallic beats, glitter string, pink, purple, neon green, silk, satin, lace, stuffed, gaudy dyed feathers and color-tinted plastic. They can be small enough for earrings or big enough to take up an entire wall of your house. Some people even collect them as though they were stamps. I guess, since dream catchers are so sacred, that the more you have the more sacred you become.
It's the same thing with certain types of jewelry, with chokers at the top of the list, especially for men. You see, every "warrior" MUST have at least one sacred choker. We have been heard that "you
are not a warrior unless you have one." Don't you know that a self-respecting warrior wouldn't be caught deal without his holiest of attire, the five-string choker. Somebody gave one of these
monstrosities to one of our board members. It was stiff as starched shorts and long enough to be a belt for a very large man. We figured that if he ever wore it he would probably have hanged himself, so it was added to the box of other strange and bizarre things that people have given us.
Moving on, we now enter the world of the ceremonies. Yes, boys and girls, if you want to participate in an "Indian Ceremony," Florida is
the place to come. There are Full Moon ceremonies where the host breaks into a rendition of "Amazing Grace" in the middle of everything. There are New Moon ceremonies where you sit with store-
bought cornmeal between your fingers to "collect your negativity." (Careful not to get it on your neighbor, or you will give them YOUR negativity.) Women playing the drum, drumsticks that look like Irish shalaylees, and "traditional sacred songs" set to Walt Disney animated movie music. We've seen sweat lodges big enough to park a truck in, smudgings down with cooking sage, and you can even take classes on the west coast that will allow you to become a "shape shifter." (One dissatisfied customer called us because he was told that he would be able to turn himself into a bird. He broke his leg jumping off his garage.) We have "traditional" Lakota medicine men and women who don't know their waste from their wanblee and we've seen Sun Dances where they do the Hora. Ah yes, Dances with Wolves strikes again.
Lot's not forget our "traditional Indian names." No Indian is complete without one, you know! You can get them via a "naming ceremony" or through a "vision," and the more Harlequin Romance-ish
it is, the more Indian you must be. Sees Far Woman, Piercing Eyes, Bo Bo Jumping Eagle, Three Black Feathers, Three Eagle Cloud, and Tonka
Cloud Walker. Morgan Eagle Bear, Princess Chi Kee, Soaring Paws & Hooves, and more Lone Wolves than you can count. Early Spring, Swamp
Owl, Sawgrass and Crow's Wolf. There are eagles involved in all sorts of activities, yapping canines, Snake Chiefs, and all kinds of bird wings except chickens of course. Oh, and yes, there are more "chiefs" than there are Indian Nations. We all decided that we needed Indian names too. One night we sat around making them up with great
hilarity. The girl who dresses up like a nun at our moscot protests was going to be Princess Black Robe, and one of our directors chose Chief Waa-Naa-Be Slayer. There were others, but they are not really appropriate to print here.