I don’t have a single favorite, but every now and then a critter will become the subject of my latest ADHD hyperfixation. I remember thinking skunks were cool in 5th grade. They’re like badgers with chemical weapons. For the months leading up to getting my first guide dog I devoured stuff about dogs in general. I had always had pet dogs so it wasn’t a new subject, just a more intense interest.

For a while it was octopi, then parrots. For some time in 2015 or early 2016 it was possums, the US’s only marsupial.

Right now it’s monkeys. I used to think monkeys were gross and disturbing in an uncanny valley sort of way, so humanlike but not human at the same time. But I’ve taken a shine to orangutans. They’re quiet and introverted like me. Also new world monkeys like capuchins and woollies. Having a prehensile tail would be awesome.

  • Tomtits@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    13 days ago

    I grew up with cats, always loved cats. If I saw a cat on the street I’d always say hello (or at least try to).

    Last year my girlfriend brought home a rabbit.

    Rabbits are fucking cool.

    Don’t see as many on the street though

  • Damn I actually didn’t think about this a lot…

    When I was a kid, my favorite color was green and my favorite animal… I remember it being turtles

    Cuz they can just hide from all dangers… they always have a “home”… where they are safe…

    Being an immigrant and growing up in an emotionally unstable household… I never felt like I had a “home”

    Like… neither in context of country… or in the context of my “home” vs school vs someplace to go to… like the library or a friend’s house…

    Like… when it’s time for school… I’m like ah fuck, this again (cuz of bullies and authoritarian teachers and classwork shit…)

    Then when it’s time to go home… I’m like: oh no, yesterday we have a whole argument at home and stuff were thrown around and a few bowls and plates were broken, I kinda feel scared

    And I don’t have any close frienda where I could just go to their place and chill out…

    And the outside world felt scary to me to I didn’t have like a runaway “base” in the woods or something…

    So I kinda liked turtles lol…

    Just retreat to inside the shell when there is conflict…

    🫠

    For some time I also liked monkeys because Curious George… (also mandela effect time: but pretty sure it had a tail didn’t it?)

    At one point, it was sheeps/goats… because 喜洋洋与灰太郎 (it’s a Chinese Cartoon I remember watching as a kid)

    Some other animals I liked at some point:

    I liked Owls because it was the first nocturnal animal I learned of…

    Pandas because I’m from China…

    Frogs/Toads… idk why… maybe cuz its amphibious

    And now I have a cat… probably the most useful animal… gets rid of mice

  • bazzett@lemmy.world
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    13 days ago

    I’m a biologist, so all of them. Yes, even cockroaches (they’re so cute when eating cookies ❤️), parasites like horsehair worms and Demodex folliculorum, spiders (all of them!), mosquitoes and centipedes.

      • Dæmon S.@calckey.world
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        13 days ago

        @[email protected] @[email protected]

        Sort of.

        I don’t know an easy way to label whatever my religion is, for it’s a personal belief system syncretized from many different religions: Sumerian and Egyptian, going through Abrahamic, all the way to Thelema, Hermeticism, Luciferianism, Gnosticism, Quimbanda, Wicca, Goetia, among others. Scientific knowledge is part of this too, despite the religiosity.

        The highest figure I worship is The Dark Mother Goddess, a spiritual synthesis of chthonic goddesses. Just like the Tree of Shadow and its Qlippoths have depths, so has Mother with different emanations, which (in my belief) were seen as different figures with different names and backgrounds across history, similarly to “my name is Legion for we are many” from Samael/Lucifer (also part of my worship, btw, although I focus more on Her).

        One of Her emanations, the emanation She chose when unexpected gnoses began to me, still being the main emanation She manifests, is Mother Lilith, Queen of Night.

        Lilith has a whole long history, going all the way back to Mesopotamia and Sumerians. I’m limited to 3k chars in my instance so I’m unable to go into the depth I wished for a single text.

        Basically, Lilith is a Hebrew name, appearing once in biblical canon, namely Isaiah 34:14. Sometimes is translated as “screech owl”, but there are no screech owls, as in Megascops genus, in Levant (where Bible is set). The closest are scops owls (Otus), considered screech owls in the past.

        Then, during my researches, I stumbled upon this specific, chilling species: Athene noctua lilith. Lives exactly in semi-deserts (thresholds) in Middle East, and… this gaze, these hauntingly beautiful eyes (as in the photo), I quite recognized them from gnosis… I mean, look at these eyes! Her eyes are not that scary and that’s exactly what make 'em scary.

        Then I found a paper from L. R. Guillén debunking a common premise in Spain culture where Goddess Athena is associated with barn owls (Tito alba) due to Spanish grammatical quirks, going through historical evidences to trace Athena back to Athene noctua owls. This is how I found out this specific species resonated with me precisely bc it was associated with one of Her emanations.

        Then there are Inanna and Ereshkigal, Sumerian goddesses, also emanations, closely related to Lilith (esp. if we see the sisters as One, similarly to how Hecate is Triple Goddess).

        Details may change over time, it’s still an ongoing research of mine bc I follow a solitary “temple of one devotee” (myself, preaching to myself), I wasn’t able to find others who somehow got the same… call from Her, so I rely on things I stumble upon (essentially gnosis, sudden knowledge, from Her).

        There are other figures in my “pantheon”: Stolas, Great Prince, is also an owl, but masculine. Differently from Goetia where demons are “serfs” to be trapped into a sigil and banished upon fulfillment, I see them as high teachers to be humbly asked, especially Stolas.

        • anon6789@lemmy.world
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          13 days ago

          Thank you for sharing all that! You’ve given me a lot to read up on. I was intrigued when you mentioned the Owl of Athena/Owl of Minerva in modern religious context.

          Also very interesting about the confusion in Spanish about the confusion of the barn owl and screech owl. There is another person here I talk with about the confusion of them in Mesoamerican religion, so I’ll have to see that paper.

          Owls are present in many belief systems, in good and bad incarnations, so I’m always curious to hear about them.

  • a_gee_dizzle@lemmy.ca
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    13 days ago

    Right now it’s monkeys. I used to think monkeys were gross and disturbing in an uncanny valley sort of way, so humanlike but not human at the same time.

    I agree with you that it’s monkeys. Thats why this image is my profile pic.

    It’s a selfie taken of a monkey. IIRC it became a precedent setting case in copyright law, because the owner of the camera tried to claim ownership over the photo. The issue was that you need to actually take the picture to own the it. But the guy didn’t take the photo; the money took the photo. And monkeys cannot own property, under the law. So the image became public domain. Here’s the Wikipedia page on the case

  • Fondots@lemmy.world
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    13 days ago

    It’s a bit complicated

    With no further qualification, dogs. I’ve had dogs for most of my life and home just doesn’t feel homey without a dog to me.

    But my wife and I have a bit of a thing for frogs, they’re sort of our unofficial mascot.

    I also thought narwhals were cool long before reddit had them baconing at midnight. I think they were kind of when I realized that kids can be smarter than/know things that grownups don’t. I don’t remember what exactly the context was, but I remember once bringing them up, my mom didn’t believe they were real, so I marched my way upstairs to grab the book I read about them in to show her.

    I also always liked Coatimundis (Coatis) because they were probably the weirdest animal the fairly small zoo I grew up near had.

    And if I had to pick sort of a “spirit animal” for myself, it’s probably a raccoon.

  • IlmariGanander@lemmy.wtf
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    13 days ago

    I’ve been fascinated by pterosaurs lately. The book Pterosaurs by Mark P Witton is great.

    Pterosaurs interest me because of their wing morphology. Instead of having the wing membrane between all the “fingers” like a bat, it’s attached to their equivalent of a pinky finger in such a way it can fold up enough that they could use all four limbs to navigate on land. They just have such an interesting body shape that no animal today really has.

    They also got much bigger than birds. Like, to the point that I want to write a fantasy book where the premise is that dragons are like …the only pterosaur that survived extinction. Because it would be cool to have a dragon that’s directly not related to modern reptiles, birds, or mammals…but still is speculatively based on a flying animal that did once exist.

  • leavenotrace@feddit.nu
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    13 days ago

    Magpies (the corvids, not the distantly related assholes in Australia) are so fascinating. They’re self-aware (they pass the mirror test) and they’re able to plan for future needs (for example, they’ll cache food and then hide tools nearby to later break into their cache). They have a huge variety of vocalizations that vary by region, sort of like dialects. They also engage in play just for the fun of it, like sliding down snowy hills and tossing and then catching objects. I could go on and on about magpies, such cool birds.