Chamomile Kemetic (A’Aqyt) · @teagarden
140 followers · 121 posts · Server pagan.plus

This year I am hoping to work more with the spirits and hone my personal craft. Since the pandemic, the gods took a huge role in my life to help get me through the survival mode. This year I want to try and incorporate more magic, more craft, more spirit oriented things. WHILE still trying to maintain a work-life balance. Super important to learn this lesson while I can.
So hoping to share some of my craft and some fun things over on my channel throughout the year.

#witch #witchcraft #magic #spirits #artDigital #art #bear #bee

Last updated 3 years ago

Chamomile Kemetic (A’Aqyt) · @teagarden
133 followers · 116 posts · Server pagan.plus

Deities have such an interesting connectivity. They give, take, nurture, harm, and more to each other. The Ancient Egyptian deities go a bit further and sometimes melt into each other, like colors in a paint palette. I find this aspect extremely intriguing and frustrating. How do you know exactly which manifestation you are connecting with? Does it really matter in the end? Are all Khnums of varying combinations still KHNUM proper? All valid questions to think on and figure out for oneself.

This image I am sharing was a commission for a kemetic practitioner. They experienced the vulture goddess Nekhbet very differently than others. They received her as Raet, the female Ra and the personification of the sun. The illustration features her three gods and how their relationships unfold. Ptah who cares for Amun-Ra. Nekhbet who brings life and rejuvenation to Amun-Ra. And Amun-Ra who is a bit detached and aloof in the sky. These are the very specific to them, manifestations of their deities. Which I think really highlights how personal and interconnective deities can be.

#Kemetic #kemeticpolytheism #kemeticism #Pagan #paganism #mythology #egyptiangods #art #artDigital #deities

Last updated 3 years ago

Chamomile Kemetic (A’Aqyt) · @teagarden
99 followers · 87 posts · Server pagan.plus

Heru-sa-Asetis commonly known as Horus the Younger. He is the child of Aset (Isis) and Wesir (Osiris), though sometimes it is Min who is his father. Heru-sa-Aset is a kingly deity who contends with Set over the throne of Egypt.
Heru is depicted mostly as either a child or as a hawk headed man. He is fair and victorious in all that he does. But his myth begins when he is a sickly child. He is born vulnerable and is hidden away in the marshes by his mother. He is constantly under the threat of death either by his uncle or the stinging of scorpions, or eaten by animals. It is through the generosity of other deities that Heru makes it into adulthood. He then takes on the role of avenger of his father and defeats Set. Heru-sa-Aset becomes the king and rules. His myth is one of survival and vulnerability. He did not choose what he came into but he did resolve it. That is the strength of Heru-sa-Aset.

(art is from a commission)

#horus #artDigital #Pagan #mythology #kemeticpolytheism #kemeticism

Last updated 3 years ago

Chamomile Kemetic (A’Aqyt) · @teagarden
96 followers · 82 posts · Server pagan.plus

Welcome Wepwawet!
Wepwawet is a jackal headed deity. He is the ‘Opener of the Way’ and aspected with Yinepu (Anubis). Wepwawet is often depicted with a shield, bow, or khopesh denoting his warrior roles. He can sometimes wear the double crown, connecting him to kingship, or other hats. One aspect is his role in pregnancy-labor, where he ‘opens the way’ for babies to be born. In this role he wears the cow uterus headdress.

#artDigital #Pagan #mythology #kemeticpolytheism #kemeticism #Kemetic

Last updated 3 years ago