It’s also my favorite number (18!) and was the first face of the goddess I met on my spiritual journey, making it feel very special and resonate to me. ![]() ![]() The keywords are “Cosmic mother”, “The beginning”, and “The void”. She’s holding a red rose and the symbol around her head looks like a moon with stars on it too. She has big hoop earrings in the shape of stars, along with a necklace with an ankh and one with a coptic cross. The card features a voluptuous black woman with a serious look on her face, wearing a tan romper and black jacket with stars on it. My favorite card visually is The Black Madonna. Plus, it’s a very colorful deck, making it perfect to use the cards on an altar. I just love the font used for this deck! The beauty of the script adds to the flowing, intuitive energy of the deck. And then there are three key words surrounding the goddess on each card. There’s a symbol encompassing the image of each goddess, adding to their sense of divinity and giving more insight into the unique power of the goddess. It’s nice and easy to learn which goddess is on the card, as the number of the card and name of the goddess is featured in the upper lefthand corner. Kali looks like a blue-haired badass sticking her tongue out wearing her crop-top and jacket with skulls all over it Pachamama is portrayed as a down-to-earth indigenous activist in blue jeans with beautiful gold jewelry on while Sulis Minerva has wavy, long auburn hair, braided around the crown, with a one-shouldered blue dress that shows off a solar tattoo on the uncovered arm. There isn’t a one-size-fits all for the goddess, but rather many, many representations of her different attributes, reflected in a variety of looks, lessons, and energy.įor instance, the card portraying the ancient Greek goddess Artemis doesn’t show an ancient image of her clocked in a tunic, but features a tan, brown-haired woman in a wheelchair wearing an athleisure dress with her bow and arrow primed. ![]() In turn, this has opened me to remembering the divinity in women I see out and about and how the goddess is within us all always, even in the ordinary and mundane moments of life. Using this deck so far, I have loved Grant’s illustrative approach because when I flip over a card, I see women of all shapes, sizes, ethnicities, and cultural backgrounds staring back at me in a way I might see them out in public.
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