Taíno Mysteries
Copyright 2022 by Michael Auld
These are events in the adventures of a young Spider-Boy which begin in "Ticky-Ticky's Quest", which is Part 1 of a trilogy. He is a determined 12-year-old daydreamer attending a Jamaican boy's school. In this first story, Ticky-Ticky is forced by the strict British headmaster to bring his missing father, the infamous folkloric Anansi the Spider-Man, to school.
About this guy: Ticky-Ticky's father is half god and half spider. His mom is a full-blood Yamaye Taíno woman, indigenous to the Caribbean island which she calls Yamayeka. We know it as Jamaica. So, Ticky-Ticky is a young tri-racial Jamaican schoolboy with an itch to travel the Americas. He’s also a determined undercover Spider-Boy who likes to hide the fact that he is four-legged. It's complicated! As a son of Jamaica's Anansi the Spider-Man from Ghana, with ancient roots among the Ashanti gods, he is 1/3 god, 1/3 spider, and 1/3 human! In the first book about his Quest, he introduces the reader to some of the following facts:
Check out Ticky-Ticky's first story, and go on the young Spider-Boy's Adventures with him. So... |
Follow and join Ticky-Ticky in his educational adventures.
Find out about Ticky-Ticky's encounter with Guabancex, the hurakan (or hurricane). Yearly, she comes to the Caribbean, Central, and North America’s Eastern Woodland’s Coast, all the way up from Florida to Massachusetts. However, she is misnamed by meteorologists who give her non-Amerindian names! This is why she remains angry!
Above is Guabancex, The Angry Woman Wind Goddess known as the Hurakan, riding GuatauBA, her herald who announces her pending arrival, and his twin brother Coatrisque the Deluge or the hurricane's Surge which follows her. She is forming in the Atlantic again as we speak! But meteorologists are calling her out of her name, They now call her "Fiona", and then to add insult to injury, they now use a Scottish man's name, "Ian"! ... Shiish! What's next?
Let’s get it straight.
Above: Two satellite images of hurricanes. One looks like the skull of a human, while the other is a Taino "S"-shaped image superimposed over hurricane Katrina as she made landfall over Louisiana.
Historically, the Caribbean’s Taíno civilization was annually in the path of the three weather entities whose destructive forces they knew well. |
Above: The front cover of PART ONE of the Ticky-Ticky Trilogy. The illustration is of the mythical Caribbean Sea.
ALSO: Click on this link so that you and your children can get the hurricane lowdown!
HERE IS A SNEEK PEEK PREVIEW OF
Part 2, which is in production!
In Part 2, Ticky-Ticky "Travels to Turtle Island", which is Ticky-Ticky's adventure into North America, still in search of his dad who is visiting what Anansi is convinced are his "rich American god-relatives". This adventure takes Ticky-Ticky to ancient American places to meet his Native American spider-god relatives, heroines, and heroes.
Above: Front & Back covers of PART 2 of the Ticky-Ticky trilogy. Ticky-Ticky is surrounded by and wears an ancient protective shell spider amulet from archeological sites found in North America. |
Figure 3: Anansi confronts the Swamp Dragon, a gigantic Seminole alligator he plans to capture on a dare. It is in the Florida Everglades, where Ticky-Ticky later makes the first landfall on the American continent, next to the Caribbean Sea. The alligator is about to be surprised at Anansi's cunning. |
Figure 4: The bat-canoe swooshed up out of the swamp followed by a snapping alligator frenzy, rescuing Ticky-Ticky and his friend, Opiyel snatching them from gaping jaws. |
Figure 5: Ticky-Ticky saw an elderly Gullah Sea Island man casting a shrimp net into the surf. |
Figure 6: After kicking, butting, and belly-jamming the figure, Aunt Nancy got stuck to the Tar Man in the batata field where "she" was stealing sweet potatoes in the field one night. This was just like what happened to both Br'er Rabbit and Anansi in stories about "The Tar Baby." |
Figure 7: Fables. Br’er Rabbit’s fuzzy daughter, Bunny Rabbit stood at the Old Gullah’s front door.
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Figure 9: Sunlight residue from the Grandmother Spider’s sun-collecting ceramic pot, |
Figure 10: Seeming to glide over the water's surface like a water spider, Grandmother Spider displayed her signature weaving technique outside her asi. She is the most ancient Cherokee heroine who brings sunlight to the dark side of our world, and, like the other spider-gods, teaches the people how to weave. |
Figure 11: Stomping down the tall prairie grass, the Plains Indian boy moved to the thump-thump sound of his heartbeat, turning step by step on the arching edge of a sacred dance circle. |
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Above: The protective Creation heroine, the Diné or Navajo Spiderwoman or Na'ashjé'íí Asdzáá, lives on Spider Rock in New Mexico. It was she who in ancient times, taught the Navajo how to weave rugs. Next: Ticky-Ticky and Opiyel in the Bat-canoe over Spider-Woman's lair above Spider Rock, New Mexico. A zombie attacks and tries to hitch a ride. (The zombie was Illustrated by Ashkii, my 8-year-old Navajo grandson). PLUS... ON THE Q.T. In Part 3 of the trilogy, Ticky-Ticky goes back in time to Central Mexico's ancient pyramid city of Teotihuacan to meet with Great Spider Mother, another relative! Yamayeka Taínos have been going there for centuries. Spanish destroyer of the Aztec or Mexica (May-she-kah) Empire, Hernan Cortez met an island woman from Jamaica there in 1519. And the older, travel-savvy, undercover Spider-Boy is following a follower of a "Golden Hunch". |
(You can click on the above link to see a bit about my history on my anansistories.com website.)
Ticky-Ticky's adventures are based on my own experiences in Jamaica and the United States of America. I've known about Kweku Anansi the Spider-Man all my life. I am an exhibited visual artist, published author, and educator from the elementary through postgraduate levels. I was born in Jamaica where, from infancy, the practice was to swap Anansi stories. So, we entertained ourselves with the antics of the Ghanain-originated Spider-Man from the Akan-speaking Ashanti/Asante people. One of my first elementary school books was about him. It was about Anansi going to bird country. Anansi was very deep in the Jamaican psyche and we reinforced our island's morality via his stories that ended with local morals, of which there are many.
A member of Taíno cultural groups, I received a British Colonial education up until my graduation from Calabar High School (see Ticky-Ticky's uniform with the school's colors on his shoulder tabs). So, Ticky-Ticky is based on some of my own high school experiences and my arrival in the United States to attend Howard University to major in Design. I married a District of Columbia Native American on campus from Pocahontas' Pamunkey tribe, the leading nation of the historic Powhatan Paramountcy. Both artists and educators, we traveled the Eastern Woodland's powwow circuit informing audiences about our Indigenous heritages via educational handouts and hand-printed posters and apparel. My grandchildren have Navajo ancestry from New Mexico, while others have Mixteca ancestors in Cuernavaca, Mexico.