Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ
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YOU ARE THE REASON

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let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open

Discoholic 🪩
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
we're not kids anymore.
Game of Thrones Daily
Stranger Things

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almost home

Kiana Khansmith
Sweet Seals For You, Always
$LAYYYTER
Monterey Bay Aquarium

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hello vonnie
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
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@gpunfdbl
🔥 SEKHMET — THE POWERFUL ONE 🔥
Sekhmet, the Lioness of Ma’at, is the sacred fire of transformation, courage, and divine balance. She teaches us that emotions are not weaknesses they are powerful energies meant to awaken wisdom, healing, and purpose.
In Ancient Kemet/Afrikan, Sekhmet was honored as the fierce protector of truth, the healer of the people, and the destroyer of chaos. Her fire was never meant for destruction alone, but for restoration, discipline, and spiritual awakening.
🦁 She reminds us:
Anger can become protection.
Pain can become wisdom.
Passion can become purpose.
Consciousness brings balance.
Sekhmet does not ask us to suppress our emotions. She teaches us to master them with clarity, strength, and alignment with Ma’at truth, harmony, and divine order.
✨ “Emotional power becomes sacred when guided by wisdom.” ✨
Kings & Queens the world will always have noise. Expectations. Judgement. Opinions.
The ancient Kemeticians understood that your inner sacred space was your most powerful possession. Ma'at truth and balance begins within.
Protect it like the sovereign you are.
Your peace is not negotiable. Your healing is not up for debate. Your sovereignty was never theirs to take.
Stay in your bubble. 👑
Ase. 🌟
How is it that we had not been taught — that it had not been a standard feature of American history— that Memorial Day, this most American of holidays, the unofficial start of summer, a day when the most observant among us will go to the cemetery and leave flowers on headstones or hang a flag in honor of those who sacrificed their lives in the military, actually began with African-Americans in the ashes of the Civil War?
The holiday we now call Memorial Day was first observed on May 1, 1865, in Charleston, SC, where thousands of newly freed slaves marched, prayed and laid flowers in gratitude to the fallen Union soldiers whose sacrifice had helped secure their freedom.
That spring, after the Confederates had evacuated Charleston at the end of the war, black residents cleaned the site of a mass grave of 257 Union soldiers. The laborers sifted through the rubble, dug out the bodies and gave the soldiers a proper burial.
That May 1, nearly 10,000 souls, most of them formerly enslaved black people, joined by union troops and northern white missionaries, gathered to dedicate the burial ground and to honor the fallen. Among the former slaves were 3,000 black children, like those pictured here, who would become among the first African-Americans permitted to attend school in the South with the opening of Freedom Schools.
The people sang hymns and spirituals and prayed. They laid flowers on the gravesite. The New York Tribune described it as “a procession of friends and mourners as South Carolina and the United States never saw before.”
In their reverence for the ideals of liberty, they claimed their right to a country that they and their ancestors had built without pay. But this exclusion from the American narrative meant that few people over succeeding generations realized their contribution to something so indelible.
It is a tragedy that so much of our country’s true history has been withheld from us — we don’t know who we are as a nation, don’t know what we’re celebrating, don’t know how we got to where we are, and thus we don’t know how to fix what ails and divides us. It’s time that we learn our history and act upon it for the salvation of our democracy.
Mohamed Kamara founded InovCares after losing his sister and aunt to preventable pregnancy-related complications, creating a virtual gynecology platform focused on closing gaps in maternal healthcare for women of color. The model emphasizes culturally competent care and system-level change to ensure patients are heard, supported, and properly treated.
Her name was Rosa Lee Ingram. She was a Black sharecropper in Georgia. When a white neighbor attacked her and her sons, she fought back. And the state of Georgia sentenced her to death for it. 🔥
It was 1947. Her neighbor came onto her land, violent and threatening. Rosa Lee and two of her sons defended themselves. He died. Within weeks, all three of them were convicted of murder and sentenced to death by an all-white jury that deliberated for less than 30 minutes.
The sentence was later commuted to life in prison. Rosa Lee spent 12 years behind bars for the crime of protecting her children.
Her case drew international attention. The Civil Rights Congress, Paul Robeson, and activists across the world demanded her release. The United Nations received a petition on her behalf signed by thousands.
She was finally released in 1959. She never received an apology. She never received justice. She received her freedom 12 years late, and history gave her silence.
Her name belongs in every conversation about the right of Black women to defend their own lives. Share this so her name is never forgotten. 💛
The Willie Lynch Letter
The William Lynch speech, also known as the Willie Lynch letter, is an address purportedly delivered by a William Lynch (or Willie Lynch) to an audience on the bank of the James River in Virginia in 1712 regarding control of slaves within the plantation.
Greetings Hemispheres 🌍
This image bridges two worlds often seen as separate… yet perhaps they were never divided at all.
On the left, the womb and unborn child represent the biological matrix of life, the sacred chamber where form is conceived, protected, nourished, and brought into being.
On the right, the Egyptian Ankh, often called the “Key of Life” mirrors this same principle through symbol and sacred geometry. In esoteric and alchemical traditions, this is more than coincidence.
The upper loop of the Ankh echoes the womb.. the vessel of gestation, potential, and creation. The cross beneath represents manifestation into the material realm, incarnation, embodiment, life taking shape through matter.
Ancient wisdom traditions understood something modern consciousness often forgets.. The body itself is symbolic. A living map of cosmic principles. A bridge between spirit and form.
Alchemy was never only about turning metals into gold. It was about transformation within the human vessel.
Every idea, healing, awakening, relationship, or vision must first pass through an unseen phase of incubation before it can manifest outwardly.
The womb becomes both literal and symbolic… a reminder that all creation requires patience, nourishment, protection, and inner gestation before birth into the world.
The Ankh therefore becomes more than a symbol of immortality. It becomes an operative key, a reminder that consciousness itself creates through cycles of conception, development, and emergence.
David E. Rogers has officially launched Black Blocks, a board game that teaches financial literacy through Black history.
His Black-owned educational company designed the game for players ages 12 and up. It features stories of Black financial pioneers such as Madam C.J. Walker, Booker T. Washington, and Althea Gibson.
Beta testing in Black communities led to more family discussions about money. Keisha Williams, a beta tester from Atlanta, said: "My 14-year-old daughter learned about Maggie Lena Walker and asked to open her first savings account the next day."
Rogers said, "For too long, financial education has ignored the unique challenges and triumphs of our community." He added, "Black Blocks celebrates our financial pioneers while teaching the next generation practical wealth-building strategies that honor our heritage and secure our future."
"20,000 people showed up to watch one Black man die."
Read that again.
Twenty thousand people.
Not for a championship game.
Not for a parade.
Not for a famous speech.
Twenty thousand people gathered in a small Kentucky town because a young Black man was about to be executed.
His name was Rainey Bethea.
He was only 25 years old.
And on August 14, 1936, his death became one of the most shocking public spectacles in American history.
The photographs are difficult to look at.
The crowd stretches as far as the eye can see.
Men in suits.
Women in dresses.
Children sitting on shoulders.
People climbing rooftops and trees for a better view.
Vendors sold food.
Souvenirs were purchased.
Some people treated the day like a festival.
Think about that for a moment.
A human being was about to take his final breath...
and thousands of people came to watch.
Today, many Americans have never heard Rainey Bethea's name.
But in 1936, newspapers across the country couldn't stop talking about him.
Bethea was convicted in the assault and murder of 70-year-old Lischia Edwards in Owensboro, Kentucky.
The crime horrified the community.
People demanded justice.
But what happened afterward created a different kind of controversy.
Because the execution itself became bigger than the crime.
Reporters flooded into town.
Photographers arrived.
Newsreel cameras rolled.
Hotels filled up.
Railroad tickets sold out.
By execution day, Owensboro had become the center of national attention.
Some estimates placed the crowd at more than 20,000 people.
Many had never seen an execution before.
Some simply wanted to satisfy their curiosity.
Others believed they were witnessing history.
But standing in the middle of all that noise was a young man who knew exactly what the day meant.
While thousands waited outside, Rainey Bethea spent his final hours preparing for death.
No social media.
No television interviews.
No chance to tell his side of the story to millions.
Just a jail cell and the knowledge that an enormous crowd was gathering to watch him die.
And perhaps the most unsettling part is this:
This wasn't the 1830s.
This wasn't some distant medieval era.
This happened in 1936.
Less than a century ago.
Cars filled the streets.
Radios played in homes.
Hollywood movies packed theaters.
Yet thousands still gathered to watch a public execution.
The event became such an international embarrassment that it helped bring an end to public executions in America.
Rainey Bethea became the last person publicly executed in the United States.
The practice died with him.
But the photographs survived.
The questions survived.
And the crowd survived in history.
Because when you look at those faces staring toward the gallows, it's impossible not to wonder what they were really there to see.
Justice?
Punishment?
Curiosity?
Entertainment?
Or something much darker?
History often tells us what happened.
Photographs force us to ask why.
And nearly ninety years later, that question remains uncomfortable.
On May 25, 1971, 18-year old Jo-Etha Collier was on her way home from her high school graduation in Drew, Mississippi when she was shot in the head by a white man.
https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/frontline/interactive/unresolved/cases/jo-etha-collier
Jo-Etha was walking down the street headed to the store with other youngsters celebrating the end of the school year. A green Ford passed by, a shot rang out and Jo-Etha slumped to the ground. She had been shot below the ear and was bleeding heavily; she died before reaching the hospital.
Jo-Etha was a most unlikely target for a killer’s bullet. Popular with her classmates, she had starred on the girls’ basketball and track teams and had received a specially created award for her school spirit. She had been planning to attend nearby Mississippi Valley State College in the fall.
Fannie Lou Hamer, who lived nearby spoke out against the senseless killing: "She was Black, that was the reason she was shot down,” Hamer said. “This is a tragedy not only for the Black people of Mississippi, but the whole nation.”
Murder charges were filed against Wayne Parks, 25, of Drew; his brother, Wesley, 26, of Memphis, and Allan Wilkenson, 19, of Memphis.
https://www.nytimes.com/1971/05/27/archives/negro-girl-is-slain-whites-held-in-south-negro-girl-is-slain-in.html
🌕 SEKHMET AND REVELATION 🔥
"When the Moon Reveals, Sekhmet Transforms."
As the Full Moon illuminates the night sky, hidden truths rise into awareness. In the wisdom of Ancient Kemet, Sekhmet is the Neteru of sacred fire, healing, protection, and righteous action. She teaches that revelation is not meant to create fear—it is meant to bring transformation.
🌕 What the Full Moon Reveals
What has been hidden comes to light.
Emotions rise to the surface for healing.
Imbalances become visible.
Intuition and inner wisdom are strengthened.
Truth can no longer be ignored.
🔥 The Path of Sekhmet
Reveal – Become aware of what has been hidden.
Recognize – See the truth clearly.
Accept – Face reality with courage.
Transform – Allow the fire of wisdom to purify and renew.
Restore Ma'at – Return to balance, harmony, and right order.
Six law enforcement officers from Rankin County and Richland, Mississippi, tort*red two Black men inside a private residence in Braxton in January 2023.
The group known as the Goon Squad entered the home without a warrant and initiated a prolonged a**ault on Michael Corey Jenkins and Eddie Terrell Parker.
Officers used tasers, racial slurs, and physical violence before sh**ting Jenkins in the mouth and forcing the victims to strip.
The perpetrators attempted to conceal the crime by destroying security camera footage and planting evidence at the scene.
Federal prosecutors charged the officers with numerous civil rights violations following an investigation into the incident.
In March 2024, a judge sentenced all six defendants to federal prison terms ranging from 10 to 40 years.
The Department of Justice continues to review the policies and practices of the Rankin County Sheriff’s Department in the wake of this conviction.