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DE16medd.bsky.social

12.- Huixtocihualt diosa que precede la sal y el agua salada, hija de Tlaloc y Chalchiuhtlicue, hermana mayor de los tlaloques #Huixtocihuatl#godness#prehispanic#diosesprehispanicos#Teoctubre2024#Teoctubre#Inktober#inktober2024

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Ccerapio.bsky.social

la planta tenía un papel en los rituales de la fiesta religiosa mexica del mes Teculhuitontli, donde se celebraba a la diosa de la sal Huixtocíhuatl, cuyo color era el amarillo, y a quien se ofrecía como sacrificio una mujer.

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By featuring Huixtocihuatl and Huitzilopochtli, this picture book celebrates the rich tapestry of Mesoamerican culture and mythology, offering readers a glimpse into the spiritual beliefs and legends that have shaped civilizations for centuries.

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TLswordsjew.bsky.social

here is my hex on rapists and sexual abusers. feel free to use it for healing and vengeance. theswordandthesandwich.substack.com/p/halloween-...

My curse on these bastards:
May every organ they use to hurt another wither: may the cruel tongue lose its power of speech, the genitals their ability to pierce or to accept, the hands that claw and grasp go weak and falter, the legs that carry them to prey lock and refuse to move. May they feel every pain they have inflicted, in dreams and in waking. May they never find respite. May every harm they do redound on them a hundredfold and a thousandfold.

A ritual to let go:
Take a silver fish (it is best if it is a saltwater fish but any fish will do; canned sardines are fine, but the larger the fish the better) and cut it into pieces. It is essential to preserve the silver skin. Carry the scraps of skin to a garden or a plot of land in which plants may be grown. Bury the fish and, above it, plant the seeds of a climbing vine. I recommend clematis, ivy or trumpet vine: these seeds are easy to obtain and very cheap.
Say to the vine seed: As you grow, I rise. As you climb, I leave the pain behind. As the silver skin of the fish turns to earth, I turn my pain to earth. As you consume and devour what is left behind, water and flesh, consume and devour my pain, and take it from me. As you cling and climb, I will part from my pain. Hold it for me in your green hands, take it from me, and grow in strength as I grow in strength.

For vengeance:
Carry two handfuls of coarse salt in your pockets for a day and sleep with it under your pillow (I recommend using a cloth bag but a Ziploc is fine). The next day, take the salt and go to a plot of land that is fallow and unused; if no empty lots are nearby, find an area paved with black asphalt.

Scatter the salt in two lines, reserving a pinch to complete the ritual.
Walk between the two lines, saying: 
As salt draws the water from the earth, I draw joy from your heart.
As salt dissolves in water I dissolve your joy.
As roots wither in the presence of salt may your joy wither. 
As salt makes hunger and thirst, so I hunger and thirst for vengeance.
As you have hurt my body and my spirit I bind you with salt and I bind you with pain. In the name of  Huixtocihuatl goddess of salt and sister of the rain gods I bind you and condemn you.

Draw your fingers across the lines of salt and break them. Turn away from them and throw the pinch of salt over your left shoulder. Do not look behind you as you walk away.
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