I was just wondering, is it possible for a being/spirit such as Kali or Shiva to make the legion of servitors Qayos gave us more powerful? Would entities be able to do that?
I was also wondering whether is it possible for me to send the servitors to Shiva so maybe Shiva could teach them something or if I want a message to be delivered to Shiva by just commanding the servitors?
Technically yes, a God if they so choose or even yourself through a different method could make them living beings rather than servitors or for some who got thoughtforms. However, it also depends on what you mean by more powerful, as in train them or whatever people define powerful as.
Hqil to thee,
Bexomibg living God’s and goddesses of balg.
Note that kateryia also wrote a full blown guide on that, so shiva would find himself studying just like we study.
And keep in mind, shiva when awoken has a different mind and mental state than the normal, meditation shiva we know from the “dreamed world” - creation myth of the Sanskrit liniagr.
That is interesting, but I’m not sure I get the full association you were making. I’ve googled it up though, perhaps the rest will be revealed. Peacocks and weapons tho. I can certainly find some resonance there.
I tend to be more of a healer than war maker but. Goodness knows, I wouldn’t want to face me on a good day, in a fight lmao. The bad days, I’d probably not even fight!
You’ll have to forgive, I am still a noob and try not to jump to conclusions- I prefer to over clarify rather than misunderstand! (When I can, I’m still human and make dumb ass assumptions some if not most days- but I do try to limit it, when I am aware that I might be doing it, or am at risk for doing it)
“They’re called the little folk. The Whisps and Fae. The Dryads and unseelie.”
quote:
Georg Christoph Eimmart the Younger (22 August 1638 Regensburg – 5 January 1705 Nürnberg), a German draughtsman and engraver, was born at Ratisbon. He was instructed by his father, Georg Christoph Eimart the Elder (1603-1658), who was also an engraver, a painter of portraits, landscapes, still-life, and historical subjects. He studied at the University of Jena from 1654-1658.[1] Eimmart the Younger resided at Nuremberg, where he died in 1705. He engraved some plates for Sandrart’s Academia, and some small etchings of ruins, buildings, and vases, ornamented with figures, which have considerable merit. He was also a mathematician and astronomer, and published in 1701 Iconographia nova contemplationum de Sole.
His mother was Christine Banns (?-1654), daughter of an Austrian toll manager, Damian Banns. On 20 April 1668 he married Maria Walther, daughter of the weighmaster, Christian Walther. His daughter Maria Clara Eimmart (1676–1707) was a designer and engraver as well. She usually worked with her father. She married the astronomer, J. H. Müller, and died at Altdorf in 1707.
He established the first astronomical observatory in Nürnberg.[2] The lunar crater Eimmart is named after Georg Christoph Eimmart the Younger.