UNDERSTANDING THE MYSTERIOUS MAYA
ANDTHE LESSON THEY DIDN’T LEARN
My plan for the end of
the Mayan long-count calendar 13th b'ak'tun? (December 21, 2012 if you somehow missed the news.)
Mayan Astronomy as depicted in The Dresden Codex* |
Par-tay! While others may be counting down the k’in (= the Mayan unit for days) with
dread … heading for the survivalist hills … expecting a cosmic crash with some
as yet detected planet …or digging in to weather some other apocalyptic
catastrophe, my view is this:
TGIM
Takeaway:
What matters most is today.
How do you live
today? How you live each day has more effect on what occurs after December
21, 2012 than any misunderstood interpretation of the history of a little
understood people.
In order to better establish the link between this
quasi-philosophical TGIM Takeaway and a panicky end-of-the-world mindset, let’s
first establish some facts about –
The mysterious Maya.
Maya history as we know it firsthand begins with Christopher Columbus. The
Admiral of the Ocean Sea met a trading party of “locals” off the coast of
Honduras on his fourth (and last) voyage in 1502. The story goes, when asked
where they came from the reply was, “from a province called Maiam.”
In fact the ancient Mayan world encompassed much of the
Yucatan Peninsula of Mexico, Belize, Costa Rica, Guatemala, Honduras and El
Salvador. But following quickly on the heels of Columbus came other
conquistadors and their attendant clerics who fairly well erased large chunks
of Mayan history that otherwise might have informed our modern understanding.
Then they moved on. And
the jungle-shrouded existence of the Maya was all but forgotten until 1839 when
explorers John Lloyd Stephens and Frederick Catherwood began surveying the
area.
Stephens wrote: “…
architecture, sculpture, and painting, all arts which embellish life, had
flourished in this overgrown forest; orators, warriors, and statesmen, beauty,
ambition, and glory had lived and passed away, and none knew that such things
had been or could tell of their past existence.”
Impressive, right?
And that led to a growing modern interest in the Mayan world that can now be traced
back to 2000 BCE origins. The intervening years of archaeological study fill in
much, but hardly all, detail.
The monumental architecture is now well known – the
ceremonial centers dominated by pyramids, plazas, platforms, ball courts and
palaces. These areas were ruled by leaders who, in constant rivalry with their
neighbors, created a resource drain that contributed to the downfall of the
Mayan civilization.
What does this have
to do with December 21, 2012?
Some of the intellectual achievements of the Maya are as
impressive as the architecture, most notably in the related areas of astronomy,
mathematics and calendar making.
Although they were rather fond of bloodletting and human
sacrifice, and didn’t figure out the keystone arch or come up with a useful
wheel, the Maya grasped the concept of zero and created a symbol for it long
before the European world which overran them.
Do the math. Using
that symbol (and only two others) they developed a system based on the number
20. Reminder: We traditionally use a
base of 10.
That mathematical ability, coupled with detailed
observations of the heavens, enabled them to predict eclipses and create
calendars as accurate in their way as the one in current use.
So the Maya mystery
is: How and why did this civilization, so highly developed in some
respects, disappear so quickly and completely?
The current pieced-together scholarly answer brings us back
to December 21, 2012.
Unfortunately the calendar was not only a guide to keeping
time, but was viewed as a predictor of the future, with each day having omens
and associations – what Mayanist Michael Coe called “… a kind of perpetual
fortune-telling machine guiding the destinies of the Maya ….”
Many contemporary theorists now feel that the strong belief
of Mayan leaders in the predictive power of their calendar precipitated the
downfall of the Mayan civilization.
More specifically:
Much like today, it seems that the end of a calendar cycle in 790 CE was
believed to predestine political upheaval.
In their book Ancient
Mysteries writers Peter James and Nick Thorpe conclude: “Warfare, social
unrest, and invasions were therefore inevitable and should not be stopped
because they were ingrained in the very fabric of the universe. Indeed wars
became more bloody as rulers of neighboring cities fought during this ordained
time of war, sacrificing their captives to feed the demands of the gods. Tired
of watching their world fall apart as aristocrats did nothing but fight among
themselves, the peasants took matters into their own hands.”
Whether this view of the disappearance of the mysterious
Maya is entirely accurate, or whether it’s a contributing factor – along with
overpopulation, disease, drought, or other natural disasters and capped by the
invasion of the conquistadors – there’s still a TGIM lesson or two for us
in the 21st Century.
TGIM ACTION IDEA: What you do and how you think today has more
impact on what occurs in your life in the days ahead than anything anyone
suggests is planned outside of you.
TGIM IDEA IN ACTION: How you live each moment dictates
tomorrow. No hocus-pocus, alignment of stars or calendar dates has greater power.
As we’ll probably remind you once again when 2012 rolls over
to New Year 2013, a calendar is a very arbitrary thing; a human-made
contrivance with starts and stops and steps in between that suit the planning
and time management of the solar/lunar/seasonal cycles they measure.
- They are structures we can use to our benefit if we endeavor to do so.
- Or they can lead to our downfall if we foolishly let a misplaced adherence to them dictate our future actions.
The future lies
within. Being driven by the calendar – any calendar – or by the “wisdom” of
the crowd shared via contemporary technology, may not serve as well as being
guided by “good old gut reaction” – that established-by-experience instinct
that tells you what action is right for you and when the time for action is
right.
What goes around
comes around. Or vice versa. There
seems to be no evidence that the Mayans themselves believed that the current
version of creation would come to an end at its 13th b'ak'tun. A five-numeral count will
reset after the 13th b'ak'tun,
but this is celebrated as the completion of a cycle, and was not necessarily seen as a
doomsday event by Mayan culture.
So let’s get ready to
par-tay! If you're concerned about the fate of mankind, there are more
pressing issues than the end of the Mayan calendar. If you’re considering
making some sort of Maya “New B'ak'tun” Resolutions, keep the opportunities to
create a brighter future in mind.
Geoff Steck
Chief Catalyst
Alexander Publishing & Marketing
Chief Catalyst
Alexander Publishing & Marketing
Englewood, NJ 07631
201-569-5373
tgimguy@gmail.com
201-569-5373
tgimguy@gmail.com
P.S. "We are not myths of the past, ruins in the
jungle or zoos. We are people and we want to be respected, not to be victims of
intolerance and racism." Rigoberta MenchĂș said that.
Why are we quoting her here, today?
Here’s the Maya
connection: She is an indigenous Guatemalan, of the K'iche' ethnic group who has dedicated her life to publicizing the
plight of Guatemala's indigenous peoples during and after the Guatemalan Civil
War (1960–1996), and to promoting indigenous rights in the country.
MenchĂș is a UNESCO Goodwill Ambassador. And, in case you
missed it, she received the 1992 Nobel Peace Prize.
* In
addition to a sophisticated number system the Maya had also developed a written
language. However, because the Spanish conquerors were appalled at the
religious practices of the meso-Americans they viewed anything not connected with
their European-style religious beliefs, especially the writings about astronomy, as evil and to be destroyed.
So only a few examples of the Maya codices survive. These codices are now named
after the European cities where they eventually re-appeared.
Probably
the best preserved is the Dresden Codex pictured here. It is a detailed account of the
astronomical observations of the Maya.
The
huge effort and accurate measurements of the Maya do not seem to be applied
toward an effort to understand how or why the sky appears as it does. Instead,
the heavens are treated as an immense, accurate piece of clockwork that is used
in the same sense as the signs of astrology, to predict the future.
We
can admire the technical skills of the Maya astronomers, be awed by the
resources their society put into their temple/observatories, and even speculate
that, given time, they might have produced a Maya genius who would have bent their
effort into a more scientific direction.
However,
so far as it went, their astronomy was a scientific dead end.