#symbology

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I made another thing. The Six Principles of Cordialityor How to live in a group harmoniously(note thI made another thing. The Six Principles of Cordialityor How to live in a group harmoniously(note th

I made another thing.

The Six Principles of Cordiality
or How to live in a group harmoniously
(note that this works only if everyone has this same mindset and follows these principles)

1. Maintain bodily acts of loving-kindness (lovingly do nice things for your group-mates)
2. Maintain verbal acts of loving-kindness (lovingly say nice things about/to your group-mates)
3. Maintain mental acts of loving-kindness (think nice things about your group-mates)
4. Share all things with your group-mates equally
5. Follow the 5 precepts (no killing, no stealing, no lying, no sexual misconduct, no intoxicants)
6. Maintain a noble perspective that leads to the elimination of suffering (make it your goal to reduce the suffering of everyone, you and your group-mates)


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Which one says “alertness: do not overindulge in sleep” to you?

 Gringotts by Skuggzi Via Flickr: Bank of England, Threadneedle Street, City of London. (Architect,

Gringottsby Skuggzi
Via Flickr:
Bank of England, Threadneedle Street, City of London. (Architect, Herbert Baker 1939) The bronze doors were sculpted by Sir Charles Wheeler.


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Yellow Lady’s Slipper (Cypripedium parviflorum)

image

Etymology:Cypripedium parviflorum, [from the Latin Cypris or Greek Kupris meaning ‘Venus’ and ‘Aphrodite’ respectively] + [the Latin pedisor Greekpedilon meaning ‘foot’ and ‘slipper’ respectively] [From the Latin parvi, meaning ‘small’] and [florum, meaning ‘plant’] 

Also called a Moccasin Flower, Wah-on-nay Moccasinun, Koo-Koo-Lee Moccasinun

What Are They and Where to Find Them: An orchid native to North America. One of numerous color variations of its kind. There are four main varieties which vary in color and shape. The plant is common and widespread in North America, it is legal to pick in most places. [There are, however, rare and endangered varieties of Lady’s Slippers, be cautious.] They can be found growing in mesic forests, woodlands, fens, prairies, and meadows, though I have found them predominately growing on the shady forest floors beneath Cyprus Trees. 

Native Medicine: [Warning: Do Not Try These Remedies Yourself, without doing the proper research] The Lady’s Slipper was used historically by Native Americans as a medicinal plant to bring down fevers, cure headaches, and ease cramps and labor pains. The Yellow Lady’s Slipper was the most commonly used. Drinking tinctures of Lady Slipper’s roots is said to ease insomnia, anxiety, and bring emotional calm. To do this the roots would be collected, dried, and ground into a powder. (The active chemicals in the plants [cypripedin] are said to taste and smell rather revolting though.)

Symbology: Considered to have a powerful feminine energy, and was used medicinally for distinctly female illnesses. Over the years they have come to represent death, distinctly the death of Native American tribes. In one poem “The Moccasin Flower” by Elaine Goodale Eastman, the flower represents isolationandpride in self. In Victorian “flower language” the lady’s slipper represents “capricious beauty”.

It can be said that this plant can be used in spells involving self-worth, focus, easing anxiety, determination, sacrifice, anddeath. Pink Lady Slippers can be symbolic of love andlust

Mythos: In old Anishinaabe lore (specific to Mackinac Island, MI and the Michilimackinac area) these flowers were said to be the slippers of the giant faeries that roamed the Great Lakes area in ancient times. They say, though, that when white men arrived to the land the spirits and faeries fled to the spirit world through the Great Arch on Mackinac Island and some of the faeries lost their slippers on their way through the portal. These slippers fell to the ground and became the Lady’s Slippers that grow there today. 

Another such Ojibwa legend goes that there was once a tribe that was visited by a horrible illness. Even the medicine man died. It was winter, when messages would not be able to be sent because of the dangers of the cold but the chief called his mizhiniway (messenger) to go retrieve medicines from a neighboring tribe to save their people. Unfortunately the messenger fell sick as well. The tribe was in despair. But then, the messenger, Koo-Koo-Lee’s wife declared that she would travel across the ice and bring back the medicines for her people. Days passed and one day they heard a woman’s faint crying “Koo-Koo-Lee, come a save me” and there was his wife, stumbling across the ice, her feet torn to ribbons by the ice and frostbite, but nevertheless holding the bad of medicines in her arms. They brought her inside and wrapped her feet. With the medicines the sick people of the tribe were healed but the messenger’s wife, thereafter known as Wah-on-nay, died from her injuries and upon her death the wrappings on her feet turned to little yellow flowers, the lady’s slippers. (Some say that the flowers came from the bandages and some say they sprouted from her footprints, in some tellings they are yellow and in others they are pink.) 

spiritsandsunflowers:

Did you know…

I offer Custom Sigilcrafting Services!


Head over to my website to learn more!

“The symbols seen on relics from Stone Age Europe are also found in caves throughout the rest of the world. The similarities suggest the marks are more than just random scribbles…”

⚡️️‍ READ EM AND WEEP ️‍⚡️This is June’s sticker club design for pride month!There’s sti

⚡️️‍ READ EM AND WEEP ️‍⚡️
This is June’s sticker club design for pride month!
There’s still time to pledge and receive this design in the mail :)
https://www.patreon.com/danneroni


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Not sure if anyone has ever said it but : tokyos chain is the anhk cross, an ancient Egyptian symbol of the existence for a life after death. Tokyo herself said that she believes that when she is dead she will continue living in her memories. What if these moments are exactly those memories?

 The second in a series of images I’ve been working on. Just been enjoying working on the deta

The second in a series of images I’ve been working on. Just been enjoying working on the details and choosing some new colors and imagery to play around with. I’m looking to improve and try and work on a narrative of my own rather than that of a book or film, hopefully i’ll find a groove with the imagery I choose to do and think up some better stuff to work on. But this is a start!
Might do a third and get some prints done, inbox me if you’re interested!

https://benmcleod.bigcartel.com/product/occult-aviary-two-print


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I have a brand new video up today on YouTube. Check it out for some insight into the sacred representational symbol of Sul'voth, as well as some info on working with Sul'voth!

Everything Everywhere All At Once

Spoilers for the first third of the movie I guess

The motif of the pig (stuffed piggy keychain, Jobu Tupaki’s pig on a leash, the pig tattoo that her parents hate) is because the pig is Joy’s animal in the Eastern Zodiac. She’s fond of the little critters and uses them for her own symbol. The piggy keychain on Waymond’s belt pack is specifically there to remind him of his little girl.

 ⚔️ You Shall Die By Your Own Sword ⚔️

⚔️ You Shall Die By Your Own Sword ⚔️


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