Intro Post
My name is Judas
I'm an adult
I use he/him pronouns
This is a sideblog, my main is @system-error404-notfound
My Interests
Hellenic paganism
All types of divination
Urban witchcraft
Who I Actively Worship
Apollon
Ares
Hermes
Hestia
Peter Solarz
art blog(derogatory)
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
taylor price

Andulka

romaā

almost home
Stranger Things
Xuebing Du
tumblr dot com
Misplaced Lens Cap
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
wallacepolsom

Discoholic šŖ©

Janaina Medeiros
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
hello vonnie

seen from United States

seen from Malaysia

seen from Indonesia

seen from Ireland

seen from Hungary
seen from Germany

seen from Norway
seen from United Kingdom
seen from T1

seen from Belgium
seen from United States
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seen from Malaysia
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@error404-witch-not-found
Intro Post
My name is Judas
I'm an adult
I use he/him pronouns
This is a sideblog, my main is @system-error404-notfound
My Interests
Hellenic paganism
All types of divination
Urban witchcraft
Who I Actively Worship
Apollon
Ares
Hermes
Hestia

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Hermes :>
Hand Crafting Ideas for Offerings/Devotional Acts
I wanted to make a list of ideas for those who don't feel like drawing or painting, but still wanted to create on behalf of their Gods!
ā¢Make fake flowers for them out of paper/tissue paper
ā¢Cross stitch/Embroider them something they're associated with. Im embroidering a teapot for Hestia!
ā¢Needle felt their sacred animal
ā¢Devotional Jewlery Making (necklaces, bracelets, earings, prayer beads, ect.)
ā¢Sculpt clay figures of your Gods/animals
ā¢Make a polymer clay keychain/coin that reminds you of them so you can have them with you everywhere you go
ā¢Making little trinkets/offering plates/dishes out of resin
ā¢Wood carve their sacred animal
ā¢Woodburn an offering plate or a pendulum board. You could also woodburn a box to keep their offerings in
ā¢Make candles/wax melts for your Gods with scents curated to them!
ā¢Make incense cones! They're surprisingly easy!
ā¢Make bath bombs to take a devotional bath
ā¢Make a specific soap to wash before prayer
ā¢Make a diorama for their altar. I use foam/cardboard/and plastic trash for dioramas!
ā¢Crochet/Knit an altar cloth! For more advanced, make a stuffed animal, veil, or devotional clothing
ā¢Printing pictures/find magazines and make a physical collage of your God/their symbols/things you associate with them
ā¢Build a mini temple for you Gods out of popsicle sticks or legos
ā¢Take pictures of things you associate with, whether it be part of nature, animals, cozy places in your home, bodies of water, sunsets, ect.
ā¢Start a little scrapbook of your deities
I was super inspired to make this because of the ask @khaire-traveler received the other day where they suggested origami for Apollo!
DIONYSUSš·šš
Hi!! Im thinking about adding Athena to my practice but I'm a bit lost on where to start and exactly what I can offer/do for her. Any advice?? Tysm in advice
Okay so, I talk about universal offerings in my post about food offerings thatās in my pinned, which is a good starting point.
Offerings do not need to be personalised but I do understand the want to make them that way, as it can feel like youāre closer to the deity. But itās not a requirement.
That said, here is a list of offerings to Athena and things sheās associated with, and here is a list of subtle worship to her. You can also offer jewellery and clothes. I am working on a post about non academia-related offerings and devotional acts to Athena but Iām super busy at the moment so itāll take a while.
For where to start more generally, Iād recommend reading her theoi.com page, noting down any epithets that resonate with you, reading the Homeric hymns, and checking out some of her myths. Looking at her domains can help you with coming up with devotional acts as they can be literally anything that falls under a domain.
For Athena, I also think it could be really useful to read The Iliad and The Odyssey because she plays quite a major role in both. I usually only say that for heroes but I think itās applicable to Her. If you can afford to buy them, the Robert Fagles translation is probably best, but the Iliad I read for my classics course was E.V Rieu and itās very easy to understand. If you canāt afford to buy them, they can be read on Perseus Library.

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A drawn stick figure of Apollo is better devotional work than AI generated "artwork" of Apollo.
Four of Swords. Art by Jesse Lonergan, from The Unveiled Tarot.
Fuck it, Dionysus smoking a blunt
Subtle worship for Hestia
-Dedicate your favorite cup to her
-Make yourself a hot drink
-Make your bed
-Clean your room
-Learn to knit or crochet
-Bake

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Iām looking into miasma again (previous research here, here and here) and the more I read, the more Iām struck by the gap between ancient texts and modern interpretations. Among Hellenic polytheistic communities, miasma is generally defined as the ickiness of mortal life, as in this explanation by Elani Temperance:
Miasma occurs whenever the space or person comes into contact with death, sickness, birth, sex, excessive negative emotions and bodily fluids. It also comes from a lack of contact with the Hellenic Gods. [ā¦]Ā The most important things to remember about miasma is that it holds no judgment from the Gods, and that everyone attracts miasma. Itās a mortal, human, thing.
Or in this similar one by shipping-the-gods:
Miasma translates to the vague word āpollutionā, but it isnāt as bad as you might think. Itās just the everyday things we hold onto throughout our lives as humans. It is humanness, and nothing to ashamed of or scared of.Ā
If these definitions were historically accurate, we would expect to find a number of ancient texts describing purification from miasma before a ritual. However, I went through all instances of the word āmiasmaā in ancient texts, usingĀ the TLG Text Search tool, and to my surprise, this usage does not appear a single time. Let me repeat that: there is not a single text in which a regular person purifies themselves of miasma before a ritual. All attested purifications from miasma are expiatory rituals designed for criminals.
Instead of miasma beingĀ āeveryday thingsā of which the presenceĀ āholds no judgement from the Godsā, in ancient texts it has the following causes (excluding fragmentary texts and passages with vague context):
murder (by far the most common, mentioned by ten authors)
murder of a family member
murder of fellow citizens
murder of animals (only in Plutarch)
abandonment of a person to death
eating human flesh
incest, both contemplated and acted upon
adultery
refusal of suppliants
crime against a member of the priesthood
dedication of plunder taken from Greek people to the Greek Gods
taking offerings from temples
death in a sacred space
non-specific crime
using bad language (only in Charondas)
In the above contexts, miasma is often coupled with the wordsĀ į¼ĻĪµĪ²Ī®Ļ (impious),Ā į¼ĪŗĪ±ĪøĪ±ĻĻĻ (impure) andĀ į¼Ī½ĻĻĪ¹ĪæĻ (unholy). Itās also worth noting that there are no mentions of miasma in the poetry of Homer or Hesiod; its earliest appearance is in Aeschylusā plays.
The only causes which overlap to some extent with modern understanding are the following:
natural death and funerary rites
pollution associated with birth and death (mentioned by Diogenes Laertius in the phrase ādeath, birth and all miasmaā, though it should be clarified that this is in relation to Pythagoreanism, not to the mainstream cult)
certain diseases, disabilities and disfigurements (explainable by the fact that illness and physical deformities were considered to be signs of moral failure)
In summary, what ancient texts tell us is that miasma is not a morally neutral and inherently human occurrence. Its most normal cause is death, and possibly also birth; but more commonly, miasma is caused by (what the Ancient Greeks considered to be) severe physical impurity and by crime, specifically crimes against another person, especially one of the same family or social group, and crimes against the Gods.
Nevertheless, as Iāve discussed in previous posts,Ā the impurities described at the beginning of this post do exist in Hellenic polytheism; the term for them is not miasma but lyma, a mild form of spiritual (and physical) pollution that can simply be translated asĀ ādirtā. From Homer onwards, itās lyma, not miasma, that ancient people purified themselves of before ritual.
So how did this confusion arise? How did the current definition of miasma, as used by Hellenic polytheists, come to be? I would point in part towards Christian and Christian-influenced texts, which understand miasma as a softer, less specific kind of impurity; in 2 Peter 2:20, for example, it refers to worldly things, as opposed to the holiness of God. Itās also worth noting that of the 923 occurrences of the wordĀ āmiasmaā in Greek literature, over 600 are found in Christian texts.
But beyond ancient interpretations, I would also point towards the nature of the modern Hellenic polytheistic community. Since many worshippers donāt have access to scholarly resources, and even fewer can read ancient texts in their original language, much of the information found online is essentially from a handful of (often simplified) sources. As that information travels, it gets reinterpreted and expanded upon via UPG, while still being presented in an authoritative manner. Somehow, along the way, we decided to call all spiritual pollution miasma; somehow, along the way, we assumed that miasma was caused by mortality; somehow, along the way, we interpreted it not as a defilement but as a distraction from worship. In short, somehow, along the way, we created for ourselves a whole new definition of spiritual pollution which has almost nothing to do with the ancient understanding of it, and yet which is almost universally accepted among modern worshippers.
This is not inherently a bad thing; in fact, I find it quite fascinating. I would still highly encourage my fellow reconstructionists to use the ancient definitions of miasma and lyma in their worship - because we strive to be close to our religious ancestors, because these terms preserve a nuanced view of pollution which is lost in the all-encompassingĀ āmiasmaā, and because they lessen the otherwise strenuous expectation that we should go through elaborate purifications before each ritual. But if the neo-definition of miasma, or your personal definition, suits your own practise better, Iāll not be the one to stop you from using it.
What this topic does highlight is how easy it is for what is essentially UPG to get widely accepted by the Hellenic polytheistic community. Our religion is growing and thriving, and as it develops, new understandings naturally arise - which is great! But itās just as important that, as a community, we strive towards giving an honest representation of what is new and what is historical, so that each individual may make an informed choice of what suits their practise best.
Gentle reminder that any offering is a valuable offering
I speak from experience when I say that there are plenty of things which can prevent you from doing some "easy" offerings. That doesn't make your practice lesser in any capacity.
Judging "value" of an offering is purely subjective. You can't know everyone's unique circumstances, whether that be where they live, their disabilities, the avaliablity of materials, and many other such things. You can't really view it from an objective standpoint, something that is easy to you might be nigh impossible for someone else.
disabled worship is beautiful worship!
neurodivergent worship is beautiful worship!
mentally ill worship is beautiful worship!
just wanna give a shoutout to any ares worshippers out there feeling some stress and anxiety right now <3 discourse is temporary, the gods are forever :)
sorry to have to tell you this but if a stranger comes to your inbox or slides in your DMs asking you for your money with some sob story, no matter how tragic and convincing the story is, they are a scammer ā especially if the story is obviously copied and pasted, formatted in the exact same way as the other 100 bots in your inbox
Wait, really? I was told the people who vetted these campaigns were legit.
This post explains it well, but to put it simply, you cannot trust strangers on the internet. Just because someone says something is legit doesnāt mean it actually is. Anybody can say anything online. Just because you see something someone claims is āevidence they are legitā doesnāt mean itās not fake either. The number 1 rule of internet safety, never trust strangers, especially those in your inbox / DMs asking you for your money. Always assume they are all scams for your own safety

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I donāt normally make posts like this, but I needed to say something.
I keep seeing posts about how things like flamin hot cheetos are a lazy offering, but honestly, if I was still able to eat them, that would be a perfect offering for Lord Hephaestus.
I specifically wouldnāt offer them currently, because I canāt eat them, donāt have them around, and it wouldnāt be much of a sacrifice for me to give up something I couldnāt have anyway.
I donāt offer my tap water to the Gods because my tap water isnāt safe to drink, it has to be boiled to be safe. I do offer the safe drinking water I have through. Because that is a sacrifice for me. I donāt offer fresh fruits/veggies because I physically canāt eat them. Thereās no sacrifice. I do offer from snacks and meals I can eat. Because that is a sacrifice for me.
Iām physically disabled, specifically, Iām bedridden, use mobility aids full time if Iām out of bed, and often go weeks without leaving my apartment, especially through the long winters here. I physically cannot get to the outdoors, even if I wanted to, many days. I have in home care attendants for over 40 hours a week (not including additional respite). I have high physical care support needs, and need assistance with every one of my activities of daily living (showering, dressing, cleaning, meal prep, transfers, etc).
Many of my conditions are made worse with movement, some of them cause irreparable damage to my body literally any time I move. So when I physically do something, literally every muscle movement, it is a sacrifice. Digital offerings included (to be clear, I never have and never will include AI in any part of my lifeā Iām talking about my digital drawings, poems, and collages). I canāt even sit up in bed most days, so yeah, a poem I had to use speech to text to write IS sacrifice for me.
So much of how my practice used to look, and ideally how I wish it could look, is completely inaccessible to me at this point in my life. But Iām still just as devoted to the Gods. Iām not being lazy, Iām doing everything I physically can do. I feel like people might not understand the feeling of not only losing the ways in which you connected spiritually for well over a decade and having to try to find ways to adapt for your bodyās limitations; but also the feeling of being put down by others in your community, even unintentionally, for you doing the best you can.
You might say āwell of course disabled people donāt count!ā But when you specifically say that specific ways in which I practice are āwrongā, it does hurt, it does ostracize me from my community, and it does make me feel ashamed to be disabled. It also dismisses how real the sacrifices I do make are.
How I practice my faith is between me and the Gods. If you donāt like that, you donāt need to be on my blog and can block or unfollow.
Thank you so much gods, because when I felt my heart breaking with sadness at seeing that I was being left out, being excluded and being ignored, they held my heart and watched over it so that I did not feel the pain, only a calm and deep peace. Listening to the Orphic hymns helped a lot.
You are not alone. They care about you even when you feel like no one else does, and they will comfort your broken parts.