♀ | Femininity and Venus through the lens of Vedic Astrology
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VENUS IS ALSO NOT AS SOFT & GENTLE AS PEOPLE THINK
PLANTS - SUGAR/GLUCOSE - VAG FLORA IS RULED BY VENUS
VEDIC ASTROLOGY MASTERLIST
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♀ | Femininity and Venus through the lens of Vedic Astrology
↓ | More to read:
VENUS IS ALSO NOT AS SOFT & GENTLE AS PEOPLE THINK
PLANTS - SUGAR/GLUCOSE - VAG FLORA IS RULED BY VENUS
VEDIC ASTROLOGY MASTERLIST
I need yall to understand something.
Asuras. And Devas. Are the same. They're the SAME class of celestial beings. Only difference is that they don't have the same mother, one of them have a bad reputation and the other.... Got the amrit.
Treating Asuras like Rakshasas is very misdirected. They are NOT synonymous at all. Rakshasas are NOT celestial. They are terrestrial. Asuras ARE celestial, their half-siblings being the Devas.
The Celtic Goddess Danu - the Mother Goddess, the goddess of and manifest divine waters. The waters that fell from heaven to create the sacred river, Danuvis or the Danube.
The Tuatha De Danaan are translated as "The Children of Danu."
There are similarities here between this Ganga and the forming of the Ganges. But more notably, Danu from Hindiusm - the primordial mother goddess of ancient/first old waters - liquid. There is also a river named Danu in Nepal.
She is the mother of the Danavas, a larger category of the Asuras - celestial/supernatural beings of god like powers, but calling them gods exactly is incorrect. Asuras and Devas are larger in some ways than that - celestial/cosmic beings of princely domains/abilities is slightly more accurate, but for all intents an purposes. There are more similarities between Celtic and Vedic/Hindu culture/myths.
Why?
Well, recent research has shown Celtic genetics shows paternal and maternal ancestry from ancient India (R-M269 deriving via R1b, and H & U haplogroups) - is it really that weird then we see echoes of the ancient Indian epics echoed throughout other parts of the world, especially with the history of Eurasian/South Asian trade, migration, and more?
There is a story well known in the South Asian stories, but let's talk about the similar Celtic one. A tale of how a hero has to build a causeway across the waters to reach his foe, and how his wife must outsmart her captor/villain.
Some Indians are already nodding their heads. We begin with the Celtic hero: Fionn mac Cumhaill, a hero who is born just after his father dies.
Does this sound somewhat familiar?
Well, here we have Rama, born to Dasaratha, who is cursed to die soon as his son leaves him. His father dies as soon as Rama is exiled from Ayodhya.
Finn goes on to study with poets, warriors, and hunters in the forest of Sliabdh Bladma.
Rama goes to the forest hermitage where he learns similar arts under Vasitha.
Finn later in his youth goes on to destroy the fire breathing demon Áillen of the Tuatha (Children of Danu analogous of Aditi here btw) who destroys the capital of Tara every year on Samhain (a celebration very similar to the Indian Pitru Paksha btw)
Rama as a teen kills the Asuras attacking the hermitage - the enemies of the Devas (children of Aditi), interestingly enough just like I've talked about in the Norse (how you have two bodies of celestial/god beings - Aesir and Vanir), the Greeks have it, there is also a flipping that happens in a lot of these ancient cultures.
Aesir and Asura come from the proto indo European asr - but in one group one is good, the other bad. However in the Iranian - Zoroastrian, there is a reverse. The Ahura (Asura) are GOOD and the Devas are bad (down to including Indra from South Asian mythology), and in the Celtic we see something similar - a flipping of roles.
Rama, Sita, and her protector Lakshmana were all in exile together in the forest. The demon king Ravana sends a golden deer to tempt/seduce and lure away Sita from Rama but it is really the demon Maricha in disguise. Sita is tricked and ends up sending her protector to Rama, leaving herself vulnerable, and thus abducted by Ravana who wishes to marry her and this leads to a war in where Rama eventually gets her back also, kidnapping of a women sparking a war? OH HI, HELEN OF TROY. HI.
Fionn meets his wife Sabadh while hunting, and guess what? She is turned into a deer by a druid she refuses to marry. She returns to her true form once in Fionn's home and they marry...only she's turned into a deer again by the druid Fear Doirich when Fionn was off at war, and Fionn must spend years searching for her. Wow. Coinky dinky dinky.
Now to the original part of my talk here, the causeway in Ireland was built by Fionn to travel to battle a giant. Rama Setu, his causeway, was built by Rama's army so he could enter Lanka to do battle there - (Sri Lanka).
The Celts also have four major cycles of time just like the Vedic Indians did. The tricky thing here is that linguistically, PIE (proto Indo European) has been shown to be behind a lot of story/cultural influences as it spread through Europe/Asia, but...the thing that's hard to account for here is how geo-located Ramayama is in/to India, so why do specific echoes of it show up in Celtic mythology so much so?
Yay comparative mythology and echoed storytelling/beats tropes across the world.
I love how Mitra challenges the way we typically see Asuras cuz Mitra is an Asur (atleast in the Vedic times) but he's also a Sun deity whose physical features deter from every single stereotype an Asur is faced with.
I love when Asurs in myths aren't the stereotypes we see in modern adaptations (which also lowkey give me racist/colorist vibes lmao)
LMFAO no but I like to imagine there are enough deities who'd somewhat act like the Asurs, like Varuni for sure because of obvious reasons.
Also personal headcanon, but I imagine the Devtas and Asurs to not be too much different in looks, like yeah there are differences ofcourse like maybe the teeth or eyes or something but at the end all of them looks pretty much normal.
Mitra is the epitome of that I mean XD he looks like Sura but acts like an Asura lol
IKRRRRRRR THE MYTHS ARE SO MUCH BETTER PORTRAYING THE ASURS LIKE
I know those modern day adaptations would cry if the ACTUALLY go through them properly.
There are so many Asurs who were like GOOD like actually good. And like it's not even that hard to potray 😭😭
Shachi is an Asur and she's one of the Matrikas, some of the most important Goddesses. And people are out there making all the Asurs villains 🤌🤌
The racist thing is so true omgggg they pretend as if the Asurs are some foreign people all evil and bad looking like WTF DO YOU ALL FORGET THE DEVTAS AND ASURAS ARE BROTHERS LEGIT BROTHERS.
It pisses me off so much ksjshshsbddv smh
Anyways all that matters is Mitra is the middle ground between Asurs and Devtas sksjdhdhd
Asuras, "Lifeline"
made this for my wife @tideskorn of her asura :)
Heyo
Do you know any Asura that are safe to work with ?
Hello, The only Asura I have personally known is Varuna and he's fine to work with, as long as he is approached with respect. However, do your own research as well, as it's a complex subject.