i'll be posting my stuff on here from now on too

#dc comics#dc#batman#bruce wayne#dick grayson#batfam#tim drake#dc fanart#batfamily



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i'll be posting my stuff on here from now on too

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
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Alethe Attendant of the Sacred Ibis in the Temple of Isis at Memphis, 1888 - oil on canvas
— Edwin Long (England, 1829–1891)
Mama Isis with her newborn Horus. The most sincere and pure love
Made some Roman Version designs for Isis, Ruru and Anubis 🙌🏽✨
The goddess, Isis and her baby, Horus

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b-set
NEW GODSLAVE⚡️NEW PAGE⚡️⚡️
The night of Ausir's (Osiris') murder.
GODSLAVE is about a girl tricked into working for an Egyptian God, ending up in the middle of a Pantheon Family Feud!
Edith fights monsters and gods in the modern day, and struggles to learn about who she’s really working for.
Read from the beginning here 🌞 Support on Patreon⚡️ Get the books 🔸 Check out the itch.io ☀️
🌈 The Netjeru and Queerness: Divine Diversity in Ancient Egypt
As Pride Month arrives, many modern pagans and Kemetics find themselves asking: What place does queerness have among the Netjeru?
The answer is more nuanced than a simple modern label. Ancient Egypt did not categorize sexuality and gender in the same ways we do today. Yet when we look at the myths, symbols, and nature of the gods themselves, we find a divine world that is often fluid, transformative, and resistant to rigid boundaries.
The gods of Kemet regularly transcend the limits that humans experience.
Aset becomes a bird and a woman. Ra becomes Khepri, Ra, and Atum in a single day. Djehuty is both moon and wisdom, both divine speech and divine record. The Netjeru shift forms, merge identities, and embody multiple truths simultaneously.
The divine is not limited by a single shape.
One of the oldest goddesses of Egypt, Neith was described as a creator who existed before the world itself. In some traditions she is said to have brought forth creation without a partner.
She is warrior and mother, creator and protector. Neith reminds us that divine power does not always fit neatly into expected roles.
The story of Aset is one of persistence, magic, and transformation. Through knowledge and determination she changes fate itself.
For many queer practitioners, Aset represents the sacred ability to become fully oneself despite obstacles. Her myths celebrate self-determination, resilience, and the power to reshape one’s destiny.
The moon is never static.
Khonsu appears as child, youth, traveler, healer, and protector. Each month he changes form before our eyes while remaining entirely himself.
For many modern devotees, Khonsu’s cycle can be a reminder that change is not the opposite of authenticity. Growth is part of being alive.
Perhaps the most important Kemetic concept for Pride Month is not a particular deity but Ma’at itself.
Ma’at is truth, balance, rightness, and the proper order of the world.
Living according to Ma’at means living truthfully. It means rejecting falsehood and honoring what is real.
For many queer Kemetics, embracing one’s authentic identity can be understood as an act of Ma’at: choosing truth over concealment.
The ancient Egyptians left us no single doctrine about modern LGBTQ+ identities. What they left instead is a rich spiritual tradition filled with transformation, multiplicity, creativity, and divine complexity.
The Netjeru appear as animals and humans. They are one and many. They change forms. They merge. They reveal hidden names and hidden truths.
The gods themselves remind us that the sacred is often larger than the categories we try to place around it.
This Pride Month, may the Netjeru bless all who seek to live in truth.
May Aset grant courage.
May Djehuty grant wisdom.
May Khonsu light the road ahead.
And may Ma’at guide us toward a world where every soul can stand openly in its truth.
𓋹 Pride is not the opposite of devotion. Living truthfully can itself be an offering.