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mythology
Mythology encompasses the traditional stories, legends, and archetypal narratives that cultures use to explain the world, human nature, and spiritual truths. These stories persist across time through retellings, adaptations, and reinterpretations. In the Psycheverse: Psyche reclaims mythological and fairy tale figures—especially women and outcasts—from their sanitized or demonized versions, revealing the psychological depth and spiritual rebellion they embody. She reads these stories through trauma, authenticity, and resistance to control, treating them as maps for understanding consciousness and personal transformation.
17th century America
The Connecticut witch trials were a series of witch hunts that occurred in colonial Connecticut between 1647 and 1697, predating and extending beyond the more infamous Salem witch trials of Massachusetts. In the Psycheverse: Psyche treats the Connecticut trials as a crucial precedent to Salem, examining how early American Puritan hysteria, occult accusation, and systemic persecution functioned in 17th-century colonial life. The Hartford panic of 1662 serves as a focal point for understanding how spiritual anxiety and community paranoia became weaponized against the vulnerable before Salem canonized witch trial mythology.
Abrahamic religions
“Remember in the olden days when you used to go through Greek mythology books you used to see a lot of big women.”
— Unknown Speaker 1in Rediscovering the Beauty of Rubenesque Figures
“that was a rumor. It was an urban legend. So remember that. I'm coming from urban legend cry, you know, mythology.”
“The horse is is a kind, intelligent beast that has frequently been associated with perpetuous events. In Chinese zodiac, horse people are friendly, adventurous, and passionate. In Greek mythology, the winged horse Pegasus was the source of inspiration and poetry.”