Member-only story

The “Coon” Woman, The Sacred Scapegoat Of Vampiric Culture

Sanni Lark
3 min readJan 12, 2024

--

If my ancestors are a literal part of my DNA and cellular makeup it only makes sense to elevate them by elevating myself.

Credit: Seun Oderinde via Pexels

Our personal evolution naturally results in the evolution of this society and earth as well. This is how life would have it. Still, there is something about cultural traditions that has nearly everyone who is committed to evolution in a tizzy. This is because traditions really are nothing more than peer pressure from dead people. Dead people who want to see to it that their rules and belief systems from centuries ago are still being carried out, regardless of any new information we receive that tells us we should move on.

As a black woman I will say that black culture as a whole is very committed to keeping the past alive, no matter how deeply traumatic that past was. This has resulted in many black people identifying very closely with the pain, discrimination, abuse, and servitude their ancestors endured, to the point where there are strong energetic links between living black people actually suffering from post traumatic stress that serves as a residue and testament to what transpired in the lives of their family members before they were even born.

Personally, I cannot imagine existing with a mental illness due to experiences I never lived through and calling it culture…

--

--

Sanni Lark
Sanni Lark

Written by Sanni Lark

Channeling sacred, unadulterated, feminine chaos and wisdom through writing. For more primordial womanhood activation visit: https://www.sannilark.com

No responses yet