La Llorona

Also called: The Crying Woman, the Weeping Woman, or the Wailer. She’s a vengeful ghost in Hispanic American folklore who’s said to roam near bodies of water mourning her kids whom she drowned in a jealous rage after discovering her husband was unfaithful to her. Whoever hears her crying either suffers misfortune, death, or their life becomes unsuccessful in every field.

The Full Story:

A beautiful but poor woman (often named Maria) falls in love with a wealthy man (either a Spanish conquistador or a nobleman). After bearing him some kids, the man rejects her. This was either to marry a woman of his own high social class or because he had grown tired of her.

Well, our girl Maria didn’t handle this too well. In a fit of blind rage, & despair, Maria drowns her kids in a river to hurt the man who abandoned them. Immediately realizing what she’d done, she spends the rest of her life (& afterlife) wandering the riverbanks, dressed in white, wailing: “Ay, mi hijos!” (“Oh, my children!”)

Before the Spanish arrived, Aztec mythology spoke of Cihuacoatl, a goddess who abandoned her son at a crossroads. She was often heard at night, wailing, & shrieking through the streets of Tenochtitlan. The earliest documentation of La Llorona is traced back to 1550 in Mexico City.

The legend of La Llorona is traditionally told throughout Mexico, Central America, & northern South America. Many scholars link La Llorona to Malintzin (La Malinche), the indigenous woman who served as an interpreter & mistress to Hernan Cortes.

In Mexican history, she’s a complicated figure. She’s seen by some as the “mother” of the Mestizo race & by others as a traitor. La Malinche is considered both the mother of the modern Mexican people & a symbol of national treachery for her role in aiding the Spanish.

La Llorona is a soul denied entry into Heaven until she finds her kids. She serves as a “living” (or undead, depending on how you look at it) example of the Stations of the Cross gone wrong. A figure of eternal penance who cannot find the absolution of the Church. Because her sin (infanticide) is so grievous.

Unlike the Lavandieres, who are often punished for working on a holy day (the Sabbath. Also check out our post about the Lavandieres.), La Llorona is punished for her passions. She’s a more visceral, emotional figure, representing the “shattering family” rather than “forbidden labor.”

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Donate yearly #1550 #AztecMythology #CentralAmerica #Cihuacoatl #Crossroads #HernanCortes #HispanicAmericanFolklore #Infanticide #LaLlorona #LaMalinche #LesLavandieres #Malintzin #Mestizo #Mexico #MexicoCity #NorthernSouthAmerica #Spain #Spanish #SpanishConquistadors #StationsOfTheCross #Tenochtitlan

It's the Day of Hermes aka Mercurius Day aka #Wednesday! 🐏

For #NativeAmericanHeritageMonth I'm introducing Native American deities 🌎

#Yacatecuhtli is a patron god of commerce and travellers in #AztecMythology. His symbol is a bundle of sticks because merchants carried a cane as they moved from village to village peddling their wares. Sprinkling them with blood from their ears in Yacatecuhtli's honour should guarantee success & protection on their journeys.

@mythology #DayOfHermes #Mythology

It's the Day of Selene / Luna's Day / #Monday! 🌛

For #NativeAmericanHeritageMonth I'm introducing Native American deities 🌎

In #AztecMythology, Tecciztecatl is the moon. #Tecciztecatl insisted on becoming the sun but at the last moment hesitated. Angry at Tecciztecatl, the gods threw a rabbit at him leaving an imprint of the rabbit's shape and dimming his brightness so much that he can only be seen at night.

🎨 mytforskare
https://mytforskare.tumblr.com/post/61669205506/this-here-is-metztli-the-moon-god-tlalocs

@mythology #DayOfSelene #MoonMonday #mythology

It's the #DayOfHelios / Sol's Day / #Sunday! ☀️

For #NativeAmericanHeritageMonth I'm introducing Native American deities 🌎

According to #AztecMythology, Earth and its beings had been created five times and were ruled by five different suns. Tonatiuh's appearance as the fifth and final sun took place in the city of Teotihuacan. #Tonatiuh rose weakly and did not move until the wind god #Ehecatl blew Tonatiuh into motion.

🏛️ 1350–1521 CE, Tenochtitlan

@mythology
#DayOfHelios #mythology

Have a beautiful #DayOfDionysos 🍷

For #NativeAmericanHeritageMonth I'm introducing Native American deities 🌎

Āhuiatēteoh or Mācuīltōnalequeh are a group of five #Aztec gods of excess and pleasure. #Mācuīltōchtli (Five Rabbit) is the god of drunkenness. In #MexicanMythology, rabbits are associated with pulque (agave wine) and the "400 rabbits" are a group of divine #rabbits who meet for frequent drunken parties.

🎨 Gibran Valverde
https://www.instagram.com/gibger28/

@mythology #mythology #AztecMythology

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School project. 14 nearly 15 hours total time. Yeah uh my October was packed with this drawing alone, i better get a good grade on this…

#art #schoolproject #artschool #digitalpainting #digitalart #procreate #14hours #aztecmythology

Today's tarot insights are bathed in the moonlight of Coyolxauhqui, the Aztec moon goddess. Dive deep into the messages of I The Magician (reversed), VII of Cups, and X of Swords, and see how they resonate with her illuminating tales of balance, choices, and challenges.

https://ancientpathwayswitchcraft.com/2023/10/30/moon-dance-tarot-insights/

#AztecMythology, #Coyolxauhqui, #ITheMagician(reversed), #SpiritualGuidance, #TarotInsights, #VIIofCups, #XofSwords

Dancing with the Moon: Tarot Insights from the Aztec Realm (10-30-23)

Today's tarot insights are bathed in the moonlight of Coyolxauhqui, the Aztec moon goddess. Dive deep into the messages of The Magician (reversed), VII of Cups, and X of Swords, and see how they resonate with her illuminating tales of balance, choices, and challenges.

Ancient Pathways Witchcraft

Greetings, myth lovers! Join us next #Monday for our theme BEACHES & SHORES 🏝
Which myths are about or take place at the beach or shore? Tell us the #story in your toot and use the hashtag #MythologyMonday for boosts!
Your host @aimeemaroux is looking forward to your toots with summery beach #stories 😎

🎨 Maui hauls up the land, Anderson (1969)

#mythology #folklore #folktale #legends #Storytelling @mythology @folklore @folklorethursday #NorseMythology #GreekMythology #EgyptianMythology #CelticMythology #AztecMythology #HinduMythology @TarkabarkaHolgy @juergen_hubert @curiousordinary

“What are you doing?”

“Coyote stuff. You wouldn’t understand.”

*Starts making out with a voluptuous human woman backdropped by loud party music, dancing, and petty brawls*

#coyote #huehuecoyotl #aztecmythology

Greetings, myth lovers! Join us next #Monday for our theme REVENGE 🗡️
Which myths are all about revenge? Tell us the #story in your toot and use the hashtag #MythologyMonday for boosts!
Your host @aimeemaroux is anxiously awaiting your toots with dramatic revenge #stories 😳

🎨 Medea, sculpture by William Wetmore Story, dated 1868–1880 CE

#mythology #folklore #folktale #legends #Storytelling @mythology @folklore @folklorethursday #NorseMythology #GreekMythology #EgyptianMythology #CelticMythology #AztecMythology #HinduMythology