🫧I’ll show you off the scale🫧
TVSTRANGERTHINGS

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year

Origami Around

pixel skylines
Xuebing Du

if i look back, i am lost
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
RMH
KIROKAZE
Monterey Bay Aquarium
Three Goblin Art

oozey mess
trying on a metaphor
NASA
occasionally subtle

titsay
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
AnasAbdin

#extradirty
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia

seen from United States

seen from Germany
seen from United States

seen from Singapore
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Canada

seen from India
seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from Hong Kong SAR China

seen from United States

seen from China
seen from United States

seen from Germany

seen from United States

seen from India
@varunor
🫧I’ll show you off the scale🫧
Solar power warrior it’s a perfect match to me 💫
Seat of Spring Phoenix Doodles 🐦🔥
I’ll have the Drifter Deadlock meal
🐚 Yemoja - Mother of the Orisha 🫧
⛈️ Queen of Wakanda ⛈️
❄️ Ice Phoenix 🐦🔥
Cuca
A bogeyman developed from Spain and Portugal's tale of a dragon called Coco. In Brazil the monster has become a horrible beast, said to be a crocodilian woman with long blonde hair, Cuca. She abducts children who are never to be seen again, either stuffing them in a bag or swallowing them. It is said that when she becomes angry you can hear her coming from miles and miles away.
Pantheon: Brazilian
Domain: Bogeyman
Alternate Names: Coco, Coca
Character Traits: She preys on children who misbehave.
Visual Traits: Said to be a monstrous crocodilian humanoid with long blonde hair.
Symbolism: N/A
Sources: 1 2
Chalchiuhtlicue
The goddess of groundwater, opposite her heavenly consort Tlaloc. She is the goddess of all waters; rivers, oceans, springs, tears, storms, and important the water of the womb. At the time of birth the parents asked for blessings from the great goddess, sprinkling water and bathing the baby while praying to her. She was most importantly the Fourth Sun in the Aztec creation cycle, succeeding her husband Tlaloc after his destruction of the last sun by fiery rain, and being succeeded by Huītzilōpōchtli after she wept for so long that she turned all humans into fish.
Pantheon: Aztec
Domain: Water, rivers, oceans, motherhood, childbirth, healing, protection, fertility.
Alternate Names: Chalchiuhtlatonac, Matlalcueye.
Character Traits: She blesses all children and protects mothers, and while she is a healing force she can also summon horrible storms on those who wrong her.
Visual Traits: She is identified by the color blue-green, symbolizing water, and her large fanned out paper bark headdress (amacuexpalli) decorated with black spots of dripped rubber, representing rain. She usually has a river of water pouring from behind her or underneath her skirt, symbolizing birth.
Symbolism: Paper bark headdress, blue-green, scepter with yauhtli flowers as possibly incense, rattle staff (chicahuaztli), water flowing from behind/under her, seashells.
Sources: 1 2 3
Taweret - tꜣ-wrt
The great goddess, depicted as one of the most powerful animals the Egyptians knew: the hippopotamus. She is both a nurturing mother figure and a ferocious protector, worn as an amulet by mothers. Taweret is one of the few gods who had no dedicated temples, instead being used as a protective charm on the front of temples or a household name. Along with her sometimes consort Bes she is considered both a demon and a god. She is also associated with the flooding of the Nile and the Big Dipper constellation. Her worship survived as a cult goddess and spread even to places like Nubia and Crete.
Pantheon: Egyptian
Domain: Motherhood, birth, water, rivers, protection, fertility.
Alternate Names: Taweret, Tuart, Ta-weret, Twert, Thoeris, Taouris.
Character Traits: Predominately seen as a chaotic and powerful goddess who protects with power.
Visual Traits: Almost always in the form of a hippopotamus with the features of a lion and crocodile. Sometimes wears a modius crown or horned solar disk.
Symbolism: The sa symbol representing protection, the hippopotamus, apotropaic wand/birthing tusk.
Sources: 1 2 3
naughty or nice? 🎄
Oshun
Orisha of love, fertility, fresh waters, femininity, and beauty. In many stories she is venerated as one of the most important orisha, the most important female orisha of them all. Sometimes it is said that the male orisha sent to aiye (Earth) could not perform their tasks as they lacked feminine energy, and despite originally shunning Oshun they come to beg for her aid. She later comes to marry Shango, and in some stories Orunmila as well who teaches her divination. Without her the world has no beauty and no balance.
Pantheon: Yoruba
Domain: Love, fertility, beauty, water, wealth, prosperity.
Alternate Names: Ochún, Oxúm, Ọṣun.
Character Traits: She is motherly and sensual as well, a protectress, powerful, and can even sometimes be vengeful.
Visual Traits: Usually a woman of African descent adorned in yellow. Depictions of her often drown her in gold or have her next to bodies of water.
Symbolism: Identified most by the colors yellow, orange, gold, and white. Fans, mirrors, jewelry, anything gold or bronze, honey, and the sacred number five. Bodies of fresh water are sacred to her and are where offerings can be made.
Sources: 1 2
Ishtar - 𒀭𒈹
Ishtar is a goddess of love and war primarily. She is depicted in her stories unlike most other gods; she is thirsty for power and conquest. Almost all of her stories feature her acting almost mortal: getting Enki drunk to steal the mes tablets of power, destroying Mount Ebih for daring to be more beautiful than her, disrespecting her sister Ereshkigal and having to be saved by other gods. Her most famous appearance is in the Epic of Gilgamesh, where she is rejected by Gilgamesh himself and summons the Bull of Heaven to wreak havoc as punishment. She is a goddess of justice alongside her brother Shamash, and she is also a goddess known for her graphic sexual nature, especially with her husband Dumuzid. While her tales may seem unserious she was extremely powerful and notable for the region throughout its many people. She became syncretized with so many deities that there exist "Ishtar tablets" detailing each of them.
Pantheon: Mesopotamian
Domain: Love, war, heaven, fertility.
Alternate Names: Inanna
Character Traits: Power-hungry, immature, vengeful.
Visual Traits: Often depicted as a woman with a multi-horned crown, sometimes wings, and holding a rod-and-ring symbol, bow, or scepter.
Symbolism: The planet Venus, rosettes, rod-and-ring symbol, weaponry, six/eight pointed star, lions, doves, possibly the color green.
Sources: 1
Pele
Goddess of volcanoes, life giver of the islands of Hawai'i. She is known for her capricious nature, sometimes a bountiful and positive goddess, and sometimes showing her temper. It is said she journeyed there from far away, sometimes chased by her sister Nāmaka. She also has rivalries with another sister, Poli'ahu, goddess of snow, and is said to have contributed to the art of hula with her sister Hi'iaka. She lives on Kīlauea in a fiery pit called Halemaʻumaʻu, surrounded by other members of her family.
Pantheon: Hawaiian
Domain: Volcanoes, fire.
Alternate Names: Tūtū Pele, Pele-honua-mea, Ka wahine ʻai honua.
Character Traits: Her temper is a highlight in many stories, often showcasing her very human nature. She can be both a helpful goddess and a spiteful and destructive force.
Visual Traits: She can sometimes appear as a beautiful woman, but her appearance isn't usually very definite. In modern artwork she can be shown as a woman with hair made of fire or lava, sometimes adorned with lei.
Symbolism: Fire and volcanoes, the flora and fauna of Kīlauea, specifically the ʻōhiʻa lehua flower.
Sources: 1 2
hot take: jean needs to ditch the orange flames and green and make hot pink HER color 🐦🔥
God of Wine and Madness 🍇
Witch of the Evil Eye 🧿