Monday, October 5, 2015



People say Bigfoot believers are a little crazy.  That seeing Bigfoot is crazy.  Well, seeing what big corporations want to charge  to use the internet is crazy.  The internet should be free.  If bigfoot was here he would say:

Network neutrality is the idea that your cellular, cable, or phone internet connection should treat all websites and services the same. Big companies like AT&T, Verizon, and Comcast want to treat them differently so they can charge you more depending on what you use.
The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) is currently debating legislation to define limits for internet service providers (ISPs). The hope is that they will keep the internet open and prevent companies from discriminating against different kinds of websites and services.


Wednesday, September 30, 2015

Likewise, many people may be able to see what sorts of emotions lie under highly mythologized oral narratives and written works.  They understand when cultures start the task of articulating, and evolving into themselves, stories, folklore, and myth are created.  Not coincidentally, many local legends draw on a wealth of manifestations of the now famous Bigfoot, Sasquatch, or Yeti.  The American west nurtured such stories as if there really are Bigfoots populating the region.  The Pacific Northwest seemed ready for a new beginning, and narrative performance for this type of phenomenon.  These stories, and uncivilized representations of Bigfoots are compelling as they often depict hairy, bipedel creatures with wild eyes, and pursed, whistling lips.  The indigenous population of the Pacific Northwest is found to have many Bigfoot stories.  Their beliefs often contain a spiritual element, like the "skinwalker," who is responsible for protecting the forests from the damage humans would do.
     For example, clansmen, and women of the Lummi share tales about Ts'emekwes, which is their tribal version of Bigfoot.  Details about diet and behavior of Ts'emekwes differ between clan families, but the overall description are similar in all stories.  Other regional versions seemed to be stories used to scare children.  The Kwi-Kwiyai or Stiyaha are hairy monsters who would come at the mention of their names in the night, and carry off a person----sometimes to be killed.  In 1847 Paul Kane, reported stories by the native people about Skoocooms: a race of cannibalistic wild men living on the peak of Mount St. Helens.  Less menacing versions also exist, such as the one recorded by Reverend Elkanah Walker.  In 1840, Walker, a Protestant missionary, "recorded stories of giant apes among the Native Americans living in Spokane, Washington.  The Indians claimed these giants lived on, and around the peaks of nearby mountains and stole salmon from the fisherman's nets.  These legends existed prior to a single name for Bigfoot, Yeti, or Sasquatch.  For this reason, the name Bigfoot will suffice throughout the rest of this examination blog.

Thursday, June 4, 2015

     For or hundreds of years, people have reported hairy man-like creatures that walk on two legs and live in forest and mountainous areas of the Americas, and around the world.  Legends and native myths have attempted to explain phenomenological events in oral traditions presented as living truth.  Yet, many scientists discount the existence of Bigfoot, and attribute the vast amount of sightings as a combination of hoax, folklore, and misidentification rather than evidence of an authentic species.  However, Bigfoot is real, and more than a pseudo riddle of history.  The beast is an example of modern pseudoscience in western culture, with prominent coverage of theories, and eyewitness account of the creature's physical reality.  Consequently, an examination of the history, social influence, and scientific legitimacy of Bigfoot, reveals the existence of a worldwide phenomenon. 
     Whether we listen with child-like amusement to the tales of some Tibetan Monk, or read the cultivated accounts of modern mystics, it is a wonder to learn mythology everywhere is the same.  The meaning of myth "comes via mythos from the Greek root uv (mu) meaning to make a sound with the mouth, and is thus basic to human existene as we know it (Adams,1)."  As well of the metaphorical, symbolical, or direct expression of the unknown, many people mistake the defintion of myth as a story with no basis, and often discredit the eyewitness explanation of the unknown(1).  Yet, it is believed by many Mythologist that the comparing of myths from various cultures would reveal a correlation of truth. 
     In the same way, myths like dreams are physically real.  The point is not to search for the intrinsic meaning of myth, but for the truth in the meaning.  For instance, different myths have essential patterns of truth revealing the past, and the current world around us.  Our culture still nurtured in mythology the landscape, as well as all of human existence is made alive with symbolic suggestion.  The forests and mountains have their supernatural protectors who are known through long standing episodes of local histories.  As Joseph Campbell describes in The Hero with a Thousand Faces, "many other symbolizations of this continuity fill the world of mythological instructed communities.  For example, the clans of the American hunting tribes commonly regarded themselves descended from half-animal half human, ancestors.  For the primitive hunting peoples of those remotest human millenniums when the saber tooth tiger, the mammoth, and the lesser presences of the animal kingdom were the primary manifestations of what was alien (Campbell, 384)."  We can see many examples of this in Indian dances, and rock paintings around the globe.  Likewise, "the great human problem was to become linked psychologically to the task of sharing the wilderness with these beings.  An unconscious identifications took place, and this was finally redered conscious in the half-human half-animal figures of the mythological totem-ancestors(384, 390)."  Many Native American tribes have stories about Bigfoot with their visages carved into totem poles calling the hairy man-like creatures Dsonoskwa, Steatco, and Bukwus.
     Legends are clusters of ideas, or stories passed along by people who generally belive what they hear to be true, typically because they come from culturally uncontestable sources.  Some people regard legends as rumors as they propel an almost unbelievable fascination in our bneliefs, but when legends become popularized and live on, their story has some clear function in our society, or it would not persist.  The legend of the West, that of Bigfoot, or Sasquatch is a fascinating modern 'urban' legend which persists as a legend of the West.  In this constellation of motifs and narratives, one central idea continues to emerge:  alive in the mountains of the West is a kind of primate creature with shaggy hair and primitive build, one who is reminiscent of gorillas or larger apes but who apparently has come kind of social system like our own.  Many Bigfoot stories depict the creature as angry, and prone to acts of revenge, because people won't leave it alone.  Things like throwing rocks into campgrounds, and at cabins in the night.  They also do what is often called a tree knock where big sticks are banged against trees making a loud echoing bang.  In folklore itself, however, what is more interesting is what function such a character plays in the Pacific Region, whether or not it expresses something important in the culture.  Going as far back as Beowulf, "there is a wealth of 'wild man of the forest' stories in medieval woodcuts, in tapestries, and even in statuary.  The wild men are depicted as covered with wavy, unruly hair, matted with twigs and bits of grass and leaves; the wild women are a bit less hairy and very voluptuous.  They are shown as intruding on the affairs of civilized human beings by angrily rushing out of the woods to kidnap people. 
.....But in all cases, they actually pictorialize a clash between the civilized and cultivated world and the uncivilized, uncultivated world.  Suffice it to say, this saga is perhaps as old as the Gilgamesh epic.  The beast act to embody a condition of human existence against which ethos measures itself, and bares little meaning without.

                                         "Nothing ever becomes real until it is experienced(Keats)."   
     
     The experiences in my back yard have let me to believe that Bigfoot is real.  Nothing but an experience like I have documented lately could have made me a believer.  If you have learned or considered anything of value from my experience, may my departing words excite a new wonder in your soul.  
     The temporal march from past ot present, as cultural ideologies continue, reveals a weaving of our beliefs of the unknown and the discovered.  The threads of curiosity and our pursuit of knowledge stream together as we dream of finding something better.  No broken promises, or shattered dreams, just fulfillment.  Finding Bigfoot is the dream, and the fulfillment of this fabled blog.  Whether an idea or a living creature, the search for Bigfoot both literally and metaphorically has always been a mix of destingy and destination for the explorer.  By exploring for Bigfoot, we acknowledge the primitive, past, and inner fear of our psyche.  We seek to discover ourselves much like we wish to discover Bigfoot.  After all, when the day comes when Bigfoot is officially found, unrecognized and unclassifiable, then it will be the day humans learn we have big, very big footprints to fill.   

Monday, May 25, 2015

My neighbor just had a baby Bigfoot go through her front yard!  I got this picture by sheer luck, as I was already taking a picture of my bike so I could sell it.  I was moving so fast, all I saw was a blur, but likely it stopped to eat something in her yard.  I could not see what it ate, but I suspect it to be some of her tomatoes she brings me once in a while.  Imagine the luck of having a Bigfoot family living so close to my house.  Enjoy what may be the only picture of a baby Bigfoot around. 

Tuesday, May 19, 2015


Something really exciting folks.  Took the dog out for a bathroom visit, and walked around the backyard.  Looking for broken branches or signs of Bigfoot in my backyard , and I see what looks like his footprint.  Now, I am no expert at this kind of thing so anyone who sees this footprint let me know if I got his print.  I think it is a Bigfoot print because I have seen him, but have not see a bear in a long time.



Thursday, May 14, 2015

He is in my backyard again! I cant see him, but can smell and hear him. It sounds like he is moving brush and sticks around. Now a bunch of dust and dirt is making a cloud around a cluster of trees. Why is he digging back there. Oh no, I hope he's not going to dig a toilet in my backyard. What can I do to keep him from using my backyard as a restroom. Maybe I can go mark my territory like a dog. Although, I don't want to make him mad like I am challenging him. He is so good at staying behind those trees. I got my camera, and if he shows himself I'll take a photo.

Friday, May 8, 2015

I saw Bigfoot in my backyard last week.  No really, the big guy walked right through.  I was in my spare bedroom replacing the screen on the window(stupid dog), and I heard the back brushes move so I looked up and there he was.  Now, Bigfoot doesn't wear any cloths so I know it was a male.  Sorry, but he wasn't shy about it so I thought I would mention it.  The worst part was I was totally scared.  I mean the scariest I've ever been.  I reached into my pocket and grabbed my phone and took this picture.  bigfoot photo: bigfoot between the trees bigfootincentergoinguphill.jpg