James Kuhn is an artist with a thousand faces! Every day this year, Kuhn has created 365 wonderful masterpieces, and then shared them via his myspace and flickr pages.
Welcome to our little blog. I write about anything creative; Art, photgraphy, music, literature and writing, as well as some of my other interests. It's also a place for my little cat Jet to share his "mews".
"Chin up. Put your shoulders back. Walk proud. Strut a little. Don't lick your wounds: celebrate them. The scars you bear are the signs of a competitor. You're in a lion fight... Just because you didn't win doesn't mean you don't know how to roar."
Book Before Bedtime
Writing
"Writing is a solitary occupation. Family, friends, and society are the natural enemies of the writer. He must be alone, uninterrupted, and slightly savage if he is to sustain and complete an undertaking." Jessamyn West
Bastet, daughter of the sun god Ra, wife of Ptah, and mother of Mihos, is an ancient Egyptian goddess who is still greatly revered by many today. Bastet is the Sacred Cat and her name means devouring lady. She is depicted as having the body of a woman and the head of a domestic cat. She holds the sacred rattle, Sistrum, and she possesses Utchat, the divine, all-seeing eye of Ra.
Her worship began around the year 3200 BCE during the second dynasty in northern Egypt and her city is Bubastis. She became a national deity when Bubastis became the capital of Egypt in about 950 BC. There, and in many other ancient cities, Egyptians celebrated Bast’s feast day, October 31st, with great joy and enthusiasm honouring their goddess, their protectress. Temples honouring Bastet were found at Bubastis, Memphis-Sakkara and Dendera.
Related to Neith, the Night Goddess, Bast symbolized the moon in its function of making a woman fruitful, with swelling womb. She was also the Egyptian Goddess of pleasure, health and healing, music, dancing and joy, the sunrise and associated with the Eye of Ra, acting as the instrument of the Sun God's vengeance. She also protected humans against contagious diseases and evil spirits. The people of ancient Egypt turned to Bast for protection and for blessing, as she was a renowned and beloved goddess.
She was the protectress of women, children, and domestic cats. Cats were demigods in ancient Egypt. Cats, as manifestations of Deity, were sacred; they protected the grain from mice and rats. Killing a cat was punished with death.
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