Browsing the fat liberation section of tumblr makes me a lil emotional because every time it makes me remember that Dionysos wants me to be fat because it means i'm enjoying life, and idk its just beautiful
styofa doing anything

Kaledo Art
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shark vs the universe

izzy's playlists!
Sweet Seals For You, Always
dirt enthusiast
Not today Justin

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祝日 / Permanent Vacation

Janaina Medeiros
ojovivo
trying on a metaphor
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
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#extradirty
hello vonnie
DEAR READER

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@an-stoirm
Browsing the fat liberation section of tumblr makes me a lil emotional because every time it makes me remember that Dionysos wants me to be fat because it means i'm enjoying life, and idk its just beautiful

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This tweet means a lot to me.
It’s probably a really cool and good sign that this post I made in 2014 is going around again, right?
Áine, Rowan Kal, 2026, digital painting
ᚐᚏ ᚐᚔᚅᚓ
Use your PTO

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The Irish Mythology Tarot ~ King of Swords, Manannán Mac Lir
I’ve finally finished drawing the suit of Swords for the revamped Irish Mythology Tarot! Owners of my original deck will notice that this is a revamped version of the artwork for the Emperor because I’m shuffling around a few of the characters now that I’m working with a wider range of cards.
The original drawing of Manannán is one of my favourite things I’ve ever made, so I really enjoyed updating it to suit my current style.
If you’d like to join the mailing list for the eventual physical deck, you can do so here.
I’ll be posting more cards next week! So excited for everyone to see them!
masculine energy this feminine energy that. well i’m out of energy
need me some of this "renewable energy" I keep hearing about
if I very gently explain to you that science and a basic scientific understanding at the population level is valuable and necessary for global society to function AND that the desire to eradicate spirituality in service of science is a very political, often imperial and colonial undertaking, and you go “nuh uh it’s not that deep also you’re stupid” like I dunno. maybe you deserve to get punched a little bit
As someone who is kinda new here, I too want to jump on the Laeg bandwagon (bandlaegon?)! Do you have a handy summary post that explains Who Even Is This Guy and Why Should I Care?
I probably do, but I can't find it, and I'll take any excuse to talk about Láeg, so let's just start again.
Who even is this guy, and why should I care?
Láeg mac Ríangabra, also sometimes spelled Lóeg, Laogh, Laoi, and pretty much any variation thereupon, is Cú Chulainn's charioteer, companion, and closest friend. In some texts, he appears to be his foster brother. In later texts, the relationship looks more like a sworn brotherhood situation. (I wrote an article about that.)
The name Lóeg or Láeg literally means "calf" and figuratively means "favourite, darling" ("Mo lao thú" is used in Caoineadh Airt Uí Laoghaire, for example). "mac Ríangabra" is ostensibly a patronymic, and in two texts we see his parents, Srían or Rían and Gabar. However, since it appears to mean reins-of-a-horse or path-of-a-horse, I believe this 'patronymic' was originally just a descriptive epithet meaning charioteer, which at some point was reinterpreted as a personal name and parents created to match. This would explain why we get so many charioteers called mac Ríangabra, only some of whom are ever explicitly given a familial link to Láeg.
(Note. Under the entry for Lóeg, eDIL suggests an uncertain meaning "calf of the sea-horse" for his name. I've absolutely no idea where they get that, but I think it's wrong, so ignore that; it's probably based on a weird reading somewhere and doesn't take into account all the texts.)
Why is he called calf? Or perhaps we should ask: why is he called Beloved? What does this tell us about the role the earliest authors thought he played in these texts? I don't know. I'm normal about it though.
He is the most well-developed charioteer in medieval Irish literature, in part because he he gets more screentime than all the rest put together. He is Cú Chulainn's only companion throughout the majority of Táin Bó Cúailnge, as well as large parts of other stories (Tóruigheacht Gruaidhe Griansholus, Oidheadh Con Culainn, etc), meaning that their relationship plays a significant role in these texts. Analysing Láeg can, for example, tell you a lot about the different recensions of the Táin. (I wrote an article about that.)
And being a charioteer encompasses more than just driving Cú Chulainn around: depending on the text it involves driving, navigation, and geographical knowledge, yes, but also legal advice, treating Cú Chulainn's wounds, fighting on his behalf or alongside him, making camp, taking messages and serving as go-between, inciting Cú Chulainn, restraining Cú Chulainn, dressing him in his armour, and probably more.
It's a lifelong relationship, though its nature shifts according to the text. In one version of Compert Con Culainn, he and Cú Chulainn are raised together from infancy, while in Tóruigheacht Gruaidhe Griansholus, he swears eternal friendship to Cú Chulainn after being defeated by him in single combat. In the early medieval story of Cú Chulainn's death, he dies just before Cú Chulainn himself does, hit by a spear meant for Cú Chulainn; in the early modern tale, he survives, and is the one to bring the news back to Ulster. (I wrote an article about that.)
In one group of manuscripts of Oidheadh Con Culainn written in Cork, Láeg holds Cú Chulainn's hand as he dies. (I have a forthcoming book chapter about that.) Cú Chulainn's wife Emer describes the three of them as living together in one dwelling place.
And his friendship with Cú Chulainn goes beyond the living, human world. In Serglige Con Culainn, he travels to the Otherworld on Cú Chulainn's behalf. In Síaburcharpat Con Culaind, St Patrick summons Cú Chulainn's ghost from Hell and Láeg is with him, demonstrating that they're together in the afterlife. In Tóruigheacht Gruaidhe Griansholus, he expresses a desire to be buried with Cú Chulainn.
(Sometimes people come up to me at conferences and say, a little nervously: "So, how do you interpret this relationship? I mean, is this queer?" This usually gets them a longer answer than they expected. I am extremely open to homoerotic readings. I also don't believe erotic elements are necessary for queer readings. At the moment, my approach to writing about friendship is both very aromantic and very informed by queer theory: I believe in dismantling gendered and heteronormative assumptions about how relationships are structured, and I also believe that friendship can be profound, intimate, physical, etc, and that it is vitally important not to replace heteronormative paradigms with amatonormative ones. I wrote a blog post about this. Ultimately, I believe that Cú Chulainn and Láeg are Weird About Each Other. I don't believe their relationship maps neatly onto any modern labels or divisions, encompassing as it does a very particular blend of service and intimacy, hierarchy and equality, friendship and violence, which is specific to a medieval warrior-charioteer sworn brotherhood setup; I think it would be reductive to suggest that it did. But I do have a picture of them kissing on the wall of my study, which a Tumblr mutual gave to me. I contain multitudes.)
He is in almost every text that Cú Chulainn is in, from the very early tales to the very late ones. His absences are notable, and often 'corrected' in later reworkings: he is not present in Aided Óenfhir Aífe, the early tale of how Cú Chulainn kills his own son, but he is present in the early modern story, Oidheadh Chonlaoich, because clearly his absence struck them as unlikely.
You would think, then, that this character who shows up in such a large number of texts and plays such an important role in them would have received some scholarly attention, and you ... would be wrong. In autumn 2018, I set out to answer a question I thought was simple: "What province is Láeg from, and if it's Ulster, why isn't he affected by the debility during Táin Bó Cúailnge?" I discovered that nobody had written anything about this, or, really, anything else about him. Even detailed character studies like Doris Edel's Inside The Táin scarcely mention Láeg (I think he warrants three or maybe four mentions in the entire book).
So, two years later, I started an MA looking specifically at Láeg, because if nobody was going to give me the answer, I decided to find it myself. Everything I've done since has really cascaded from that.
This doesn't mean there has been absolutely no attention paid to Láeg -- for example, I found out that he survived in Oidheadh Con Culainn because it was discussed in passing in Joseph Falaky Nagy's book Conversing with Angels and Ancients, and Alf Hiltebeitel published an article about the role of the charioteers in Comrac Fir Diad back in 1982, 'Brothers, Friends and Charioteers: Parallel Episodes in the Irish and Indian Epics'. (Did you know: if you google that article trying to get the original pub date, the AI summary will link you to my article about Láeg instead? Because I cited it and mine's Open Access, I guess. Hate that this suggests the AI has ingested my research, but such are the perils of OA publishing.) But there is shockingly little considering how significant a role he plays, and he is often overlooked in contexts where he should have been mentioned, such as in Julia Kühns' summary of the plot differences between the two death tales, where she doesn't appear to notice Láeg's survival.
So, the three articles I've published about Láeg so far, as well as my forthcoming chapter and various conference papers, have significantly raised his academic profile and I think I have single-handedly doubled the amount that's been written about him. It's amazingly easy to become the world expert on a medieval Irish character; you just have to pick somebody that nobody else cares about.
Why has Láeg barely been discussed? Well, aside from the lack of literary and character-led analysis in our field in general, it is probably substantially a class thing (why would we write about a servant when we could write about a warrior) and, relatedly, treating him as an extension of Cú Chulainn -- just another weapon in his arsenal. And, sure, they're deeply intertwined and Láeg-without-Cú Chulainn is something of a shadow... but he is still a separate person, as evidenced by his appearance in a bardic poem set after Cú Chulainn's death. It's also partly that his role develops significantly in late tales, but scholarship has hitherto focused more on early material. But that doesn't excuse the Táin Bó Cúailnge scholarship, where there were plenty of chances to talk about him!
I still don't know, for the record, what province he's from. It's very ambiguous. He may have a link to Connacht, via a connection with Cét mac Magach, but that might just as easily be a Charioteer Connection via complicated textual garbling. He may have a link to the Otherworld: his parents might live on an Otherworldly island, or hang out at Síd Truimm. He is, however, quite probably a similar age to Cú Chulainn, which might be why he doesn't suffer under the debility during TBC. (Or this might also be a class thing. "Men of Ulster" is not men in the broad sense, it is far more specific than that.)
But I haven't exactly answered the question of why we should we care about Láeg. I suppose the answer is: because without him Cú Chulainn would be nothing. He would never have made it to the fight in the first place; he would not have his weapons; he would made poor choices and lost his legal status; he would be unable to win certain combats; he would have died on his grand European tour when he was fifteen; he would be wounded with nobody to bandage him up; he would be alone, he would be lost, he would be considerably less interesting. And instead we have This Guy. And at first glance you think that he is the ordinary one, there only to reflect Cú Chulainn's light. But once you start looking at him, you start to realise... he's an absolute freak.
He goes to the Otherworld, and then comes back. He fights a hundred warriors using Cú Chulainn's own weapons because Cú Chulainn is asleep at the time. He plays board games with Cú Chulainn in a moving chariot, holding the reins while sitting with his back to the horses and not looking where they're going. He can turn them invisible. He can see people from the Otherworld when Cú Chulainn can't. He is so weird and I love him so much.
Anyway. I could talk about Láeg until the cows come home. I already wrote a 27k MA thesis about him, and he's a big part of my PhD. But hopefully the above provides a brief introduction to why this is my conference t-shirt:
I have received many compliments on it. I'm thinking of making a follow-up that has the dates and titles of my articles on the back, like a band's tour t-shirt, but I think I need a few more articles before I can make that work.
Hellenic Pagans when they're trying to do actual research on their deities but they just keep getting stuff for Lore Olympus, Hades game, Epic the Musical, etc:
Theistic Satanists, Luciferians and other people who work with demons when they're trying to do actual research on their guides but keep getting stuff for Helluva Boss:
Norse Pagans and Heathens when they have to sift through 5 different layers of Nazi bullshit just to find a single credible source that isn't bigoted:
Celtic Pagans who are trying to research their deities but keep just finding repackaged Wiccan traditions that aren't historical at fucking all:
Kemetic Pagans trying to find actual quality historically accurate information about Ancient Egyptian Religion but just keep running into stuff that Victorian "scholars" just made the fuck up:
Roman Pagans watching people treat their religion like it's basically just Hellenic Polytheism but slightly to the left when it's so much more complex than that:
Slavic Pagans trying to find a single fucking credible source on their religion and find another person who also practices it:
I'm sure there's way more things like this but I can't think of them rn. We should all kiss about this btw

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。゚゚・。・゚゚。
゚. May will bring blessings.
゚・。・゚
Important Facts about Bealtaine from an Irish Celtic Reconstructionist
Spelling and Pronunciation
OI. Bealtaine (Bell-tin-Na) has more recently been written as I. Beltaine or Anglicized Beltane (Bell-tain). In the Cormac Glossary it is said to derive from the deity Bel and OI. 'Tene' meaning fire.
Dates
Most Reconstructionists celebrate Bealtaine on April 30th-May 1st, sundown to sundown. Iron age Irish (and other Celts) structured their days from sunset to sunset so while we now track this time as stretching over two days, they would have seen this period as one single day, being the first day of the month of May by the Gregorian calendar. Some Reconsructionists might prefer to celebrate by the Julian calendar which would place this holiday on May 13th-14th (by the Gregorian calendar), still of course from sundown to sundown. In the most traditional sense this holiday would have been celebrated when the livestock was moved from the winter grazing fields out to the summer grazing fields.
Importance in Mythos
Most mythological reference to this holiday comes in the form of the movement of peoples or invasions of peoples.
The mythological invasion of Partholon and his people occurred on Bealtaine and the plague that wiped them out also began on that date and lasted a week. The Tuath De Danann are said to have arrived on the island on Bealtine as well and lastly the Sons of Mil are said to have invaded on this date also (Macalister, 1940).
In later times when Christianity had made its mythologies the way of the land and the old deities were moved to the status of Fae this idea of movement and invasion seems to have persisted. Traditions hold that this date is a dangerous time for mortals as the aes sídhe are moving amongst the daoine sí and may stop by unsuspecting homes to ask for butter or perhaps some water, but if this request is granted they will steal the homes luck for the year.
I will make a note here that while the Cormac Glossary notes the deity Bel there is no Celtic/Gaelic deity of this name (though there is a Mesopotamian one) and this seems to cause a lot of confusion, especially when it comes to Wiccancentic ideas and articles. Cormac was likely referring to the Celtic/Gaelic deity Belenus NOT the Mesopotamian Bel. Belenus/Belenos was associated with the sun and healing and during the Gallo-Roman period was often noted to be the Gaelic Apollo. There is evidence to suggest that Belenus/Belenos was known throughout the Celtic/Gaelic world, though we don't have any specific information about how prominently he was worshiped in Ireland itself it is relatively safe to assume that the Iron age Irish would have known who he was.
Celebration Traditions
Like on Samhain, at the opposing 'end' of the year livestock were transitioned from one grazing area to another. While on Samhain, when the 'dark' half of the year begins and the livestock are moved in from summer grazing to winter grazing, Bealtaine is the opposite. It begins the 'light' half of the year and livestock are moved from the winter grazing out to the summer pastures. At both holidays to ensure healthy animals and protect them from any malicious factors great bonfires were built (most notably on the hill of Uisneach) and livestock would be driven between them.
There seems to be a traditional emphasis on the protection of homes, barns, livestock, peoples, and crops. Generally this seems to be a time when warding against ill luck for the community became a focus. Yellow, specifically yellow flowers (primrose, gorse or hawthorn blossoms), appear to have played a role in this as they have been used to decorate, but when exactly this tradition originated is unknown. The healing wells of Ireland and specifically the dew on the morning of Bealtaine have been thought to be important. Some traditions hold that the dew, when washed with will bring beauty, while others think if drank by the milk cows it would cause them to produce more, but again the origins of these traditions are relatively unknown.
Samhradh buí na nóiníní gléigeal, thugamar fhéin an samhradh linn, Ó bhaile go baile is chun ár mbaile ’na dhiaidh sin, thugamar fhéin an samhradh linn Bábóg na Bealtaine, maighdean an tsamhraidh suas gach cnoc is síos gach gleann cailíní maiseacha, bángheala gléasta, thugamar fhéin an samhradh linn Tá an fhuiseog ag seinm is ag luasadh sna spéartha, beacha is cuileoga is bláth ar na crainn, tá’n chuach’s na héanlaith ag seinm le pléisiúr, thugamar fhéin an samhradh linn Tá nead ag an ghiorria ar imeall na haille, is nead ag an chorr éisc i ngéaga an chrainn, tá mil ar na cuiseoga is na coilm ag béiceadh, thugamar fhéin an samhradh linn. Tá an ghrian ag loinnriú`s ag lasadh na dtabhartas, tá an fharraige mar scathán ag gháirí don ghlinn, tá na madaí ag peithreadh is an t-eallach ag géimni thugamar fhéin an samhradh linn.
Golden Summer of the white daisies, we bring the Summer with us, from village to village and home again, and we bring the Summer with us. Beltaine dolls, Summer maidens Up hill and down glens Girls adorned in pure white, and we bring the Summer with us. The lark making music and sky dancing the blossomed trees laden with bees the cuckoo and the birds singing with joy and we bring the Summer with us. The hare nests on the edge of the cliff the heron nests in the branches the doves are cooing, honey on stems and we bring the Summer with us. The shining sun is lighting the darkness the silvery sea shines like a mirror the dogs are barking, the cattle lowing and we bring the Summer with us.
Blessed Bealtaine 🔥🔥🔥
the physical body is also a spirit and not enough people want to acknowledge that. spirit work isn't just about the intangible
I have a lot of questions for people whose animisim extends to everything but their own body if you identify as an animist but seriously view yourself as a spirit residing in an entirely spiritually dead hunk of flesh, that baffles me
bc wdym you don't see the little cells in your body as sacred and spiritual??? do you understand how many really cool and intelligent little guys r keeping up ur body thru these really cool processes and making up your entire body with teamwork

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To get out of the habit of thinking of the Norse or Irish gods as being "gods of" stuff, try to think about what their occupations are instead.
Are they a chief or a king of something? Are they a protector of humanity? Are they skilled at magic and therefore could be considered a wizard, mage, or magician? Are they a warrior? Are they an entertainer? Are they a teacher?
And if you want to play this on advanced mode: Don't try to define the gods' occupations according to what they do in their myths. Think about what they do in relation to us and our societies right here and now, and in relation to the real world.
I know it's easy to blame Christianity for this, but if you want to put the blame anywhere, put it in the fact we overly-rely on the Greeks and Romans for "how to do polytheism." Just because they had "gods of stuff" doesn't mean everyone else did.
I've said this before, but people who bash pagans for worshipping "problematic gods" need to understand that gods aren't just powerful people, they are gods who personify various aspects of nature, society and consciousness, so all the stories about them have some allegorical elements. It's not just bad people doing bad things, it's gods that are personifying elements of nature, like Zeus being the fertile rains that impregnate the land and human life.
Also it's insane how people will suspend their disbelief in mythology for some things, but not everything. Like when Athena is born fully-formed from Zeus' head, or when Aphrodite is born from the sky's severed testicles that fell into the ocean, everyone acknowledges that there's some allegorical god-logic going on. But suddenly when a god does something problematic everyone's just like "Oh but this is actually completely literal and that god is an asshole and nobody should worship them". Like what happened to your suspension of disbelief all of a sudden? It seems to me that you just want an excuse to harass pagans 🤨
And this doesn't just apply to the Hellenic pantheon either by the way, it's just the easiest example. Stop treating the gods like random assholes, they are by definition so much more than that 😭