Daughter of Aje

@stillimarise-blog

Art | Healing | Culture
🌍
Avatar

Orisha Rulers of the Zodiac

An Orisha is a spirit that reflects one of the manifestations of God. Being four hundred and one of them in total, each playing a role within the Yoruba pantheon, twelve of them can be equated to the twelve signs of the Zodiac along with their respective houses. The following is a brief summary of each Zodiac House along with the Orisha that is associated with it.

The first house of the Zodiac is the home of the Ascendant, and symbolises the acting self and how your personality appears to others. The ruling planet of this house is Mars, which is also the Roman God of war, making Ogun the warrior god the Orisha equivalent. Like Aries, Ogun possesses assertive and aggressive characteristics, and is the patron deity of soldiers, police officers, surgeons, railroad workers, welders, body builders, or anyone employed to work with iron and steel. Like the blacksmith who molds his creations to perfection, the first house deals with molding the inner and outward Self and realizing your highest potential. Taurus is the ruling sign of the second house, which is said to be the house of possessions. This should not only be understood as material possessions but also as traits and characteristics that we value about ourselves. The ruling planet Venus is also the Roman goddess of love, whose Orisha equivalent is Oshun. Oshun is the goddess of fresh water (as opposed to the salty, ocean waters of the goddess Yemoja), sensuality, prosperity, love, and fertility. Oshun is presented as a beautiful young woman who is widely loved for providing protection and needs for the poor and healing the sick. The third house is ruled by the cosmic twins Ibeji, the Orisha equivalent of Gemini. This house deals with communication and the way you think and operate mentally. An emphasis is put on siblings within this house which is properly represented by the twins, along with short journeys and writings. Ibeji also represents duality and balance; the yin and the yang found within all life. Though presented as twins, Ibeji is actually one Orisha. To the Yoruba people, twins are considered sacred and are said to be one soul inhabiting two bodies, linked together by destiny for life. The fourth house of the Zodiac is ruled by Cancer and deals with issues surrounding the home life. Cancer is known for being maternal, protective, nurturing, and instinctive, qualities shared by the Orisha Yemoja, the goddess of the ocean and mother of all the Orisha. She is the patron spirit of women, especially pregnant women, whose name is a contraction of the Yoruba words “Yeye omo eja” which means “Mother whose children are like fish”, representing the vastness of her motherhood. Her ebb and flow of the tides of the ocean are a result of the moon which is the ruling “planet” of the fourth house. The fifth house of the Zodiac is the house of creativity and pleasure, ruled by the sign Leo. This house deals with gaining pleasure through acts of creation, artistically and even procreation i.e. the creation of offspring. The Sun, the ruling “planet” of the fifth house, is a symbol of creative energy, illumination, and knowledge, all of which the Orisha of wisdom, knowledge, and divination Orunmila reflects. It is Orunmila’s duty to record the destiny of individuals at the moment the breath of life is given to them by Yoruba creator Olodumare, who creates because it brings Them pleasure to do so. The Orisha Eshu is the ruler of the sixth house, the equivalent to the sign Virgo. Health, work, and service are central to the sixth house, which is ruled by the planet Mercury, the messenger of the gods within the Roman pantheon. Eshu is the Orisha that stands at the crossroads between the physical world and the spirit world, whose duty is to be the intermediary between man and the Orisha. Therefore, when one wishes to call upon the Orisha, he or she first gets permission from Eshu. This is symbolic of clearing and preparing the mind to receive whatever message the Orisha have for you. Oba is the Orisha of marriage and personal transformation, making her fit to be the ruler of the seventh house, the house of partnership. Oba was the first wife of Shango who tended to his castle and everything that he requested, making her the ideal wife before being tricked by her sister Oya into trying to ensnare Shango with witchcraft. After this betrayal she fled to the cemetery in which she went through a transformational journey into her true power. This house is about expediating our life’s purpose through partnerships, whether that partnership be marriage, business relations, contracts, and/or treaties. Through these partnerships we learn a great deal about ourselves, transforming and enhancing our lives, making them fuller and bringing us balance on the scales of Libra. Oya, the goddess of winds and storms, is the equivalent to Scorpio and is the ruler of the eighth house which is the house of transformation, regeneration, death, sex, and rebirth. She is the powerful force in nature that can change the face of the Earth, embodying the tornadoes and twisters that uproot trees and houses with her destructive winds. This powerful Orisha is also responsible for carrying the spirits of the newly departed to the spirit world. The ninth house is the house of philosophy and is ruled by the philosopher Sagittarius and the planet Jupiter, the king of the gods within the Roman pantheon. Obatala, the father of all the Orisha, would therefore be the Orisha ruler of this house. Obatala is said to be the Orisha of purity and was sent by the Supreme Being Olodumare at the beginning of time to form the Earth along with construct the bodies of humans. Obatala completed his construction of the bodies he created by adding heads to them, therefore becoming known as the owner of heads. The head is symbolic of intelligence, higher education, and deeper understanding, all which the ninth house represents. The tenth house is the house of public life and social status, being ruled by Capricorn and the planet Saturn. The aspects within this house deal with how you manifest your individual role within society and your work place, along with the energies and challenges you’ll face meeting your career goals. The Yoruba associate the planet Saturn with Babalú-Ayé, the Orisha of disease and healing. Also known as the “Wrath of the supreme god”, Babalú-Ayé’s job is to punish individuals for their transgressions, but also to heal epidemics like small pox. The house of friends and membership, the eleventh house of the Zodiac is ruled by the planet Uranus and the sign Aquarius. Aquarius is associated with rapid social change, upheaval, and rebellion, traits that all reflect Shango, the warrior Orisha of thunder, lightning, and fire. Once a living king on Earth, Shango is known for working miracles after his death, elevating him to the status of Orisha. Shango is also the brother of Babalú-Ayé, the Orisha ruler of the tenth house. The work in society represented within the tenth house is expressed through the individual in the activities associated with the eleventh house, the planets and energies indicating how group associations and friendships will operate in your life. The twelfth house of the Zodiac is ruled by Pisces whose Orisha equivalent is Olokun, the god of the ocean floor. This house is associated with self undoing and confinement, which is reflected in Olokun being chained to the ocean floor by seven chains. As this house deals with the unconscious and things beyond the physical plane, Olokun’s aspects are expressed within the astral, the subconscious, and altered states of consciousness that is experienced during meditation, initiation, and spirit possession. Deep and mysterious is this house of the Zodiac, just like the bottom of the ocean; an old Yoruba proverb says that nobody knows what lies on the ocean floor. Olokun is said to be the owner of the Mysteries, and sparks within our being the genius that activates our super subconscious. Peace, Love, & Balance

Avatar

It's painful to exist, as I am sometimes...

I find myself pleaing to be swollowed by this earth

Often hiding parts of myself, in order to free up some burdens

Only to be confronted by how much I need those parts in order to be whole...

Fearful that in order to be whole I must accept a more painful existence

Avatar

Mami Wata| Many know Mamiwata and think It is the sole form of Mami. The reality is that, there are so many MAMIs. The word Mami is the superlative form of MAMAN meaning “grand mother” in EWE. We have different forms of Mami such as Mami Wata, Mami Sika, Mami Apuke, Mami Ablor, Mami Densu…and all of them are governed by Vodu DAN “Snake Spirit”. It means, you can’t have your Mami shrine done without DAN. The MAMIs live in the sea. Because of their plurality, they are considered The Queen of the Sea Spirits. Mamis are very beautiful and everything with them must be clean, good looking and nice. Many who have Mami spirits with them are usually handsome/beautiful. However, many of those people are already married and have children in the Sea!!! It explains mostly why they find it difficult to establish a solid relationship in our Living World without the necessary initiation. To explain more, those who have a Mami spirit with them but are not initiated to that Mami, cannot have a balanced relationship even if they are officially married because the Mami Spirits are the most JEALOUS Spirits in the Universe.

Avatar
Avatar
raveneuse

Carlos Martiel, Subject, 11th Havana Biennial, Collective Behind the Wall, Havana, Cuba, 2012. 

Curated by Juan Delgado

“I lie in the fetal position on the seashore, several hooks attached to my skin by fishing wire hold me to the sea wall.”
Avatar

Sometimes I cry, just sob

I feel your presence and hear you grieving

I question myself, as I listen to our soft cries

Perhaps the reaper remains so close to this Black skin, allowing the two worlds to blend?

Avatar

This vessel absorbs galactic healing quicker than the speed of light.

Avatar

2015 Birthday Poem

This is for my daughter on her 23rd birthday

New African by e. Rocco Caldwell My daughter is a New African Not one of the old Africans A new African transcends The rhetoric of culture chains Refuse to get shortchanged On her piece of the American Pie A new African questions all ways The right and the left To know what it is they truly say For the Man doesn’t come only in a Confederate flag A new African has a plan Based on rhythm, exertion and on glass No New African ever sits on her A** A new African confronts, and never backs down Demands and presses the issue Turns olives into oil, and grapes into wine A New African sees the beauty In her black skin…. And tips her head back And leaves with a white grin….

Avatar

Black Woman’s Burden

This past summer, I terminated an unexpected pregnancy With the mindset that this would ultimately be my choice Went through the steps; made the appointment Through the tears, I still knew I’d get to the other side Close Eyes

Can’t shake this sadness That kind of nagging feeling - A sticky pain, gathered at the center of my chest I sometimes forget to breath Deep Breaths

A multitude of burdens These BIRTHRIGHTS The source of my grief Exhale

The unnerving truth is buried underneath the praises of our abusers Our trauma became a trophy, the father of gynecology A history corroded, reminiscent to the cruel dismemberment of Black women’s bodies How was this my choice – To end the beginnings of life, when I fight to survive A legacy apathetically blood stained and non-consensually painted- unavoidably and subconsciously taint my perspective

I don’t have anything left to give – Genocide on the heels of eugenics and infanticide Foremother’s lost to unmarked graves Took my body, but it wasn’t enough Degrading what remains of our voices Inevitability, I will be labeled as a– bitter ass bitch, unloved, and unwanted by the world

This is my pro-choice movement We cain’t ever be that angry… But I’m MAD as fuck

CCmarie.

You are using an unsupported browser and things might not work as intended. Please make sure you're using the latest version of Chrome, Firefox, Safari, or Edge.