"The psyches and souls of women
also have their own cycles and seasons
of doing and solitude,
running and staying,
being involved and being removed,
questing and resting,
creating and incubating,
being of the world and
returning to the soul-place."
The Three Fates by Alexander Rothaug (ca. 1910). Jack Kilgore Gallery |
The Moirae determined and guided the moira—literally the “portion” or “allotment”—that every mortal received when they were born.
As ambiguous goddesses of fate, the Moirae naturally also knew the future and were sometimes regarded as prophetic or oracular figures.
The Moirae frequently appeared in ancient literature, art, and inscriptions and played a role in other myths.
The spinning wheel has many layers of meaning - the wheel of time and fortunes, of birth, life and death, of the passing of the seasons, of the cycles of things, and the creation of form from chaos.
In Hopi and other mythologies, Grandmother Spiderwoman gives advice, weaves a magic web, provides therapeutic cures, and is the wisdom keeper.
It is empowering for women to recall such archetypes of our abilities to weave our destinies.
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