Saturday, October 25, 2025
More About Goddesses: Mama Quilla:The Radiant Lunar Mother of the Inca (New Essay)
In the luminous pantheon of the Inca civilization, few figures shine as gently yet as powerfully as Mama Quilla, the goddess of the moon. Revered as the consort of Inti, the Sun God, and the sister-wife of Viracocha’s divine children, she embodied cycles of time, fertility, and feminine power. To the Inca people, Mama Quilla was not merely a celestial body but the very essence of womanhood—protector of wives, mothers, and the tides of human life itself.
Historically, the Inca regarded Mama Quilla as one of the three great deities of their empire, alongside Inti and Pachamama (the Earth Mother). Her worship stretched across the Andean highlands, and her golden temples gleamed in the ancient capital of Cusco. The priests and priestesses of the moon observed her phases closely, marking them as divine rhythms by which to guide agriculture, ritual, and governance. The lunar calendar, vital to planting and harvest, was dedicated to her. Each full moon was a celebration, when offerings of silver—her sacred metal—were made to honor her reflected brilliance and to maintain harmony between the heavens and the earth.
Mythologically, Mama Quilla was said to weep tears of silver that fell to the earth as moonlight, explaining the presence of the precious metal in Andean mines. Her tears were symbols of compassion and sorrow—mourning the pain of the world while illuminating its darkness. As Inti’s counterpart, she balanced the harsh light of the sun with her cool reflection. Their divine union represented the duality that structured Incan cosmology: male and female, day and night, order and renewal. The Inca viewed such complementarity not as opposition, but as a sacred balance, a principle deeply embedded in their social and spiritual lives.
Mama Quilla also served as a protector of women, particularly those wronged or abused. Legends describe her defending mortal women against injustice, and rituals invoking her were performed for healing and reconciliation. In this role, she symbolizes the sanctity of emotion, the power of empathy, and the endurance of cycles—birth, death, and rebirth. Her monthly waning and waxing mirrored the phases of womanhood, reinforcing the spiritual connection between human and cosmic rhythms.
As an archetype, Mama Quilla continues to instruct us today. She teaches the value of reflection—how to shine light not through dominance, but through receptivity and grace. While Inti blazes with outward energy, Mama Quilla glows through inward wisdom. She embodies emotional intelligence, intuition, and the strength found in gentleness. In a world that often glorifies solar qualities—speed, productivity, and conquest—her lunar nature reminds us to honor introspection, cycles of rest, and the quiet power of nurturing.
In archetypal terms, Mama Quilla represents the feminine principle of renewal, reminding humanity that illumination arises from darkness. She shows that beauty and meaning often emerge through change, loss, and restoration. As the Inca once looked to her to guide their seasons and ceremonies, we too can look to her as a guide for our inner seasons—recognizing that every waning is followed by a waxing, and that the moon’s light, like compassion, never truly disappears.
Saturday, October 11, 2025
Marriage With the Goddess (new poem)
Marriage With the Goddess (New Poem)
by Tim Kavi
across the veils of time and space,
in a still and sacred place,
I beheld your face—
the moon’s own grace.
when silence sang across the void,
and light and shadow intertwined,
our vows were written in the mind
of heaven, not destroyed.
what words suffice for such a flame?
when yin calls yang by secret name,
and breath to breath, our souls align—
a kiss becomes the grand design.
no thread of history could weave
the pattern fate had dared conceive;
yet in your lace, the cosmos stirred,
the stars themselves became our word.
no utterance was ever truer
than your love—
a river to my fire,
a whisper to my roar.
and still, eternal,
our union stands:
the goddess in my trembling hands,
the lover in my heart’s command—
one soul,
no matter what.
Labels:
goddess,
marriage,
opposites,
the Goddess,
the moon,
the Other,
wedding,
yang,
yin,
yin and yang
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