The Goddess & Her Consort
Goddess worship traditions and the divine feminine in cuckolding.
Reclaiming the Cuckoldress From Porn Into the Sacred
The cuckoldress exists in contemporary culture almost exclusively as a pornographic figure. She is the woman in the video — confident, commanding, sex
Inanna's Descent: The Husband Who Dies So the Wife Can Live Fully
The oldest surviving literary narrative about a goddess's erotic sovereignty comes not from Greece but from Sumer, inscribed on cuneiform tablets dati
Hephaestus Built the Bed: The Sacred Masculine as Creator Not Controller
Hephaestus is the most underread god on Olympus. He is lame, cast from heaven at birth — by Hera in one version, by Zeus in another — and landed in th
Guinevere and the Round Table: The Queen's Desire as Kingdom
Guinevere's love for Lancelot is the organizing crisis of the Arthurian cycle. It is not a subplot. It is not an unfortunate complication in an otherw
Goddess Worship in Practice: What It Looks Like in a Real Marriage Not a Temple
Goddess worship as a relational practice is not about altars, incense, or neo-pagan ritual — though none of those are excluded for couples who find th
Why Every Goddess Had Multiple Lovers and What That Means
The catalogue is relentless. Aphrodite: Ares, Hermes, Dionysus, Adonis, Anchises, Poseidon. Inanna: Dumuzi, the gardener Shukaletuda, the unnamed part
The Divine Feminine Across Cultures: Always Plural Never Contained
The sexually sovereign goddess is not a Greek invention, a Sumerian anomaly, or a product of any single cultural imagination. She appears across every
The Cuckoldress as Archetype: From Myth to Living Practice
The cuckoldress — the woman who maintains erotic relationships outside her primary pair bond with her partner's knowledge, consent, and active partici
The Consort's Role: Serving the Divine Feminine Without Losing Yourself
The consort of the goddess is the most misunderstood figure in comparative mythology. He appears, from the outside, as a supporting character — the hu
Aphrodite's Marriage: Why the Goddess Chose the Builder and Loved the Warrior
The goddess of desire married the god of craft. She did not marry the god of war, though she loved him. She did not marry the king of the gods, though