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During this time before she left the planet and rejoined Osirīs in Orion, she used her magical abilities to transmute restored seed potentials until they germinated with creative renewal potencies to become seedlings of hope for better tomorrows throughout the land. Osirīs also had an abode in Sumeria where he was known as the god Lugalbada, a post-diluvian shepherd king and hero of Sumerian myths. Today a fully restored and transformed Osirīs has returned from Orion to reunite with his soulmate wife Isīs Nisun and son Horūs, both of whom preceded him to the Earth. Osirīs plans to reprise his roles as both the Instrument of Divine Law and the Benefactor of Humanity, bringing the blessings of Heaven to Earth during this time of dimensional threshold transitions. Horūs (Har, Haroeris, Harsomtus, Harsiese) was an Egyptian Ra god of light who journeyed daily from horizon to horizon, his falcon eyes of wisdom representing both the sun and the moon. As Horus, he was mentioned in the Pyramid and Coffin texts, as well as, depicted on pre-dynastic monuments and Egyptian sculptures. Revered from around 3000 BCE until around 400 ACE, he was typically portrayed either as a Falcon, his primary Animal Totem, or, with a falcon head and human torso. Horus was also represented as a decoratively stylized human eye with elongated falcon cheek lines called "Eye of Horus". Amulets bearing his image as a child being suckled on the knee of his mother Isīs were used for protection against lions, crocodiles, lions, snakes, and other predatory animals. When he travelled with his parents Isīs and Osirīs to sojourn at their abode in Sumeria, he gained reknown as the epic Sumerian hero king, Gilgamesh (Gilgame) who was also a noted builder and judge.
As the son of Isīs and
Osirīs, he fulfilled the spiritual promise of his parents by battling with Seth
for eighty years and ultimately defeating him and his army of conspirators who
sought to siphon off the divine energies of humanity and use them to shape
reality to suit their own murky designs and gloomy purposes.
In some of the ancient Egyptian traditions, the Shamanic Healer, Primordial Waters Heket was referred as his soulmate wife in his manly Haroeris aspect. When Horus left the Earth to Orion to join his parents Osirīs and Isīs, Heket remained behind on the planet where she was later know as Rota, one of the Valkyrie warrior goddesses. Recently returned to Earth from Orion, Horūs was instrumental in helping this local universe transmutate poisonous thought adjustments and toxic emotional conditionings. Horūs continues to act as a bridge between the celestial and terrestrial realms and further assist in the creation of Heaven on Earth, until all of his Lemurian kin are restored to the glory of their former twelfth dimensional, divine light matrix. Hźket (Heket, Frog Shamanka) was an Egyptian Primordial Waters goddess concerned with naissance, originations, beginnings, and dawnings. Mentioned in the Pyramid Texts, she facilitated the final transition, birthing stages of labor, only remnants of her sanctuaries exist today. A Shamanic Healer, Hźket was often found on childbirth amulets, charms, and talismans represented symbolically as a Frog, her primary Animal Totem. She was also depicted as a woman with a frog head. In some of the ancient Egyptian traditions, she was referred to as the soulmate wife of Haroeris, the manly aspect of god Horūs. When Horūs left the Earth to Orion to join his parents Osirīs and Isīs, she remained behind on the planet were she was later know as one of the Valkyrie warrior goddesses.
As Rota, she was a Norse,
Icelandic, Germanic valkyrie goddess. She was a shield maiden messenger who
ensured that justice was rendered, that the Nine Noble Virtues were adhered to,
and that constructive productiveness was furthered... Go back
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