General Info
I Am Here For: |
To Meet People |
Marital Status: |
Single |
Children: |
N/A |
Education: |
N/A |
Religion: |
N/A |
Smoke: |
No |
Drink: |
No |
Occupation: |
N/A |
Body Type: |
N/A |
Height: |
N/A |
Ethnicity: |
White / Caucasian |
Languages: |
German, English |
Sexy Stuff
I Am Looking For: |
Just Looking |
Sexual Fantasies: |
A Beach, Toys, Massage Oil |
Sex is Best: |
Passionate, Loving, Wild, Kinky, In a Relationship |
Cybersex: |
N/A |
I Want You To: |
N/A |
Cybersex Personality: |
N/A |
My Web Gifts
A gift from uname
Note:
Content:
Sent
12/12/2012
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CandraWlf_Brujah's Scoop
About me:
Myspace Layouts - Myspace Editor - Hot Comments - Image Hosting
hmmmm lets think about that one very carefully. hmmmm who am I??? I believe to describe a person is very hard cause online everyone can be and act the way one want to. I'm a normal human being with a mask on like everyone else online none know who is behind it unless one take time to find out and the mask slowly falls with feelings hurt, happiness, smiles, tears, and madness. Anything someone could have sometimes living in shadow and sometimes in the light going through hard times and good times. Sometimes I am all alone and sometimes I'm in a crowd, I have my good days, and my bad days. Mysterious and easy, smart and domb, magor and naive I can be the nicest person on eart helping everyone giving everyone they..re time and I can be arrogant, stuck-up, ignorant, mean and provocating at times. I have my good and bad parts, my humor and my serious parts... but I think all that makes me human. And the best way is if u wana know something about a person everybody should take they..re time to get to know someone in honesty and no games that for me is a perfect start to know someone in and out.
Ravens, and to a lesser degree Crows, are very magickal creatures.
Raven with her plumage as dark as the void between the stars, is a citizen of the afterworld.
She travels between the worlds of the living and the dead.
Being native to both worlds, Raven naturally has great knowledge and Power to effect transformations.
Raven is associated as a Wicca symbol because of this power to move between the worlds, and create
new realities as she chooses.
According to the Medicine Cards: The Discovery of Power Through the Ways of Animals,
"If Raven appears . . . you are about to experience a change in consciousness. ... Raven
is the messenger that carries all energy flows of ceremonial magic between the ceremony
itself and the intended destination.
Celtic Animal Symbols: Birds
The Raven ravenBecause of their dark coloring and gruesome dietary habits,
ravens were emblems war and death, and sacred to the gods and goddesses of the battlefield, most
notably the warrior-god Bran and the war-goddess Morrigan. The raven acted as psychopomp, tasked
with escorting the souls of the dead into the Otherworld. The ravens were sometimes viewed as the
reincarnation of slain warriors and heroes. Due to their close relationship with the gods, ravens
were used for divinatory purposes and considered quite literally as the voices of the
gods- the Otherworld deities Lugh and Midir are both accompanied by pairs of magical ravens.
(This symbolism is echoed in Norse mythology, where the raven is the messenger of the father-god Odin)
Images of three interlinked ravens are emblems of the triple goddesses of sovereignty,
particularly the Morrigan.
The raven was closely associated with the cult of the horse, and with the triple-goddesses of sovereignty.
As Badb Catha, “battle-crow,” the raven was one of the three aspects of the war goddess Morrigan. Ravens
often appear as evil omens on mythological tales, especially when appearing in threes or from the sea.
The Swan The swan was revered by the earliest Celts who associated them with the sun, bearers of the
chariot of the sun god. Numerous Celtic legends involve magical maidens who transform into swans;
these are identifiable through the magical chains of precious metal they wear. Perhaps the most
famous Celtic swan-tale is of the children of Lir , the Irish sea-god, whose children are magically
transformed into swans by their jealous stepmother. Many Celtic goddesses could likewise shapeshift
into swan form;the swan was the sacred bird of Angus, the Irish god of love. CraneThe crane was
sacred to early Celts, who left behind many votive images of the bird. Manannan Mac Lir,
the Irish god of the sea, who had a magical bag made from the the skin of a crane who was
his lover magically transformed. The underworld god Midir owned three cranes to guard his
home, and to see three cranes is an omen of death. The crane was also an emblem of envy,
and Irish legend has many stories of women transformed into cranes by rivals. The crane
also features in Christian legends, where transformation into a crane is a common
punishment for disrespecting a saint or as penance for a variety of sins
The Raven
he associations connected with the raven were numerous. In many cultures, the raven was
well-known as a carrion bird and a bird of prey,16 and the Germanic symbolism connected
to the raven was related to this natural aspect of the bird. Ravens were a symbol of sacrifice,
for they were known for "receiving and rejoicing over sacrificial victims."17 The raven was
associated with Óðinn's familiars, Huginn and Muninn (Thought and Memory), and thus was "a source
of wisdom and prophetic knowledge,18 most particularly where such knowledge concerned omens of war.
The raven could be an "unlucky bird" or a "bird of evil omen" for those doomed to die in battle,19
while at the same time several Viking leaders were known to bear the sign of the raven upon their
banners as a token of victory.20 In Old English, the raven was known as wælceasega, "chooser of
the slain,"21 and the equivalent term in Old Norse, valkyrja, was used to denote Óðinn's
handmaidens who selected the warriors fated to die, the Valkyries
Celtic Symbolism of Bear
Like Wild Boar, Bear is both female and male; however Bear’s powers are the same for both genders.
The Celtic people had two goddesses who shapeshifted into a bear, Andarta and Artio, names derived
from “Art,” the Celtic word for bear. The male counterpart of Bear is associated with King Arthur.
Art symbolizes the blending of intuition with instinct, which is in accordance with Native Americans'
belief. S/he represents primal power and autonomy. Art defends people with fierceness from all
dangers. S/he imparts the ability to use intuition to find truth. Strength or primal power and
intuition merge into one uniting star and animal powers under the auspices of this power animal.
Bear, a Powerful Pagan Symbol: Bear: Symbolic of Introspection, Primal Power,
Awakening Unconscious
Who I'd like to meet:
interesting honest people who dont believe in mind games
people from all over ! i like to make friends and meet new people who knows what will happen in the future right
i like open mindet people cus they know how to have fun.
Raven at the Men-an-Tol
The Men-an-Tol is one of Britain's smallest Megalithic standing stone sites,
but also one of the best known, set in the bleak Cornish landscape it's origins are
uncertain, but it was probably an Iron age tomb of around 4,000 years ago, recent research
shows it is also part of a stone circle..
The name Men-an-Tol is Cornish language for 'Holed Stone', it has in the past been also
known as the 'Devil's eye', and 'Crick stone' because of it's reputation for curing backache.
Children with Rickets and Tuberculosis were for for centuries passed through it's hole three
times naked and then through the grass three times anti-clockwise, or Widdershins.
Some quarters say the place protects from witchcraft yet many visitors are Witches and Wiccans.
Crow Stones
A storytelling of Crow’s flocks at the Callanish standing stones, also known as Calanais on the
Scotland’s Isle of Lewis.
The Megalithic site is older even older than Stonehenge, dating back to 3000BC.
If you like counting Crows this is a painting for you!
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More About CandraWlf_Brujah
My Other Profile/Website Links:
N/A
Interests:
a few this u find out by time cus it hmmm well belongs to the about me :)))
The Four Elements
I have been asked by a number of fellow Witches and Wiccan’s to produce sets of small paintings
representing the four elements of Earth, Air, Water and Fire to decorate the quarters of their Magick
circles or perhaps Temples.
The four elements have their own symbols as seen in the following paintings.
I have chosen some favourites to create a set of four here, and also placed one of the Witches
E cards I created from them here.
Each Element also represents a point of the compass, and also points on the Witches Pentagram
where they are joined by a fifth, Aether (spirit).
They have many correspondences, of which opinions can differ, I have supplied some of the most
commonly used and better known.
All paintings here are sold; they are 8 x 8 inch acrylics on canvas.
Element of Earth
The element of Earth is illustrated by an ancient Oak, the figure in the background is the
antlered Goddess Elen of the ways, put there by request.
Correspondences: North, Pentacle, Brown, Gnomes and Boreas
Element of Air
The power and mobility of the element of Air is illustrated with a tornado complete with lightning,
the atmosphere is charged.
Correspondences: East, Athame, Sword, Yellow & White, Sylphs and Eurus.
Element of Fire
The Element of Fire is illustrated by what could be a metal workers forge, whose patron deity is the
Celtic fire Goddess Brighid.
Correspondences: South, Wand, Red, Salamanders and the Notus.
The Element of Water
A serene but vast Ocean represents the element of Water.
My Favorite Websites:
www.guildwars.com
Music:
all kinds it has to feel right to like it
Movies:
horror, sci fiction fantasy
Books:
i got the new harry potter :) and i think i read it 2
i read wheni find time but mostly profiles ;)
Create a MySpace Music Playlist at MixPod.com
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