★ 【ねこのけだま】 「 ロウ 」 ✔ republished w/permission ☆ follow our YT interview show!
seen from China
seen from Germany
seen from Italy
seen from Singapore
seen from China

seen from Indonesia
seen from Japan
seen from Indonesia
seen from Russia

seen from Russia

seen from United Kingdom

seen from Germany
seen from Maldives
seen from Malaysia

seen from United Arab Emirates
seen from China

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Norway
★ 【ねこのけだま】 「 ロウ 」 ✔ republished w/permission ☆ follow our YT interview show!

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.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
Louhi, Witch of North Farm: A Story from Finland's Epic Poem The Kalevala illustrated by Barbara Cooney, 1986
Mythology Musing – Finnish Magic & The Realm of Tuonela
Finland’s approach to the supernatural is different. In the Finnish national epic, the Kalevala, magic isn't about wand-waving; it's about singing. It’s about knowing the true origin words of a thing to control it.
The underworld, Tuonela, is the dark realm of the dead where heroes face their ultimate demise and are sometimes resurrected through ancient, magical laments (Moine, 2017). And then there's Louhi, a powerful witch-queen and Mistress of the Northland, whose immense magical powers rival the greatest male heroes of the epic (Luthy, n.d.).
Finnish lore treats death and the supernatural not as an infection, but as a primal force of nature that can be commanded if your voice is strong enough.
Lemminkainen's mother collects his dismembered body and sings to Suonetar, a deity of healing, blood and veins, to beseech her aid in resurrecting her son:
Come and give us thine assistance, Harness thou thy fleetest racer, Call to aid thy strongest courser, In thy scarlet sledge come swiftly, Drive through all the bones and channels, Drive throughout these lifeless tissues, Drive thy courser through each vessel, Bind the flesh and bones securely, In the joints put finest silver, Purest gold in all the fissures.
(Kalevala, Rune XV)
Lemminkäinen's Mother, by Akseli Gallen-Kallela - Finnish National Gallery / Hannu Pakarinen, Public Domain.
The concept of "singing the true name of a thing" to bend reality is essentially audio necromancy. Whether you're locked in a digital audio workstation at 2 AM, tweaking a darkwave synth patch to find the exact resonant frequency that makes your chest vibrate, or singing along with Def Leppard at the top of your lungs, you are channeling a bit of that Kalevala magic. Sound is power.
Lönnrot, E. (1849). Kalevala: The Epic Poem of Finland. Translated by John Martin Crawford (Project Gutenberg).
Tuonela - Underworld (Wikipedia)
Louhi & The Kalevala (Wikipedia)
Moine, A. (2017). Des mots et des corps.
Luthy, M. J. (n.d.). The Meanings of Names in the Finnish Kalevala Epic.
hackers,exploiters,myths,urbanlegend
My art style
NOT FORSAKEN 😭😭
ENGL: Drawings of these myths or hacker or whatever
ESPA: dibujos de estos mitos o hacker o no se
-----------------------------
Les juro que he dibujado muchos
I swear I've drawn many
Extra drawing/dibujs extra
⬇️
El dibujo fue creado antes de que dibuje al principio
The drawing was created before I drew at the beginning
(si no sabes de esto imágen[⬆️], es que Smile es un mito junto con Noli que capaz es un ayudante(?), y pues hay un canal de Smile en Youtube 👀)
(if you don't know about this, image[⬆️], it's that Smile is a myth along with Noli who is perhaps an assistant(?), and there is a Smile channel on Youtube 👀)
Winter Caravan 2025 Main & Fukui Venue Visuals

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.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
Partha, could you please come get your father... he's being embarrassing again 😭
Also Mashu looks so pretty in that outfit! Slay ❤❤
Louhi meet Simo Häyhä!?