Faces of the Goddess and Anna Nicole Smith

Posted By on April 25, 2011

Faces of the Goddess and Anna Nicole Smith

Today’s civilization is engaging from the patriarchal community we have lived

under for thousands of years to a more gender balanced society. We are finding a

balance of the aspects known as the god and the goddess. This means that since

the Goddess has been hidden from us for thousands of years, the face of the

Goddess is being shown to us in many ways to remind us of the distinct aspects

that the Goddess can portray.

Over the last two decades, we have been shown several faces of the Goddess

through public figures who received adequate media coverage to show the world

their single face of the Goddess.

We were shown the Goddess of Love straight through Princess Diana. She was the embodiment

of pure, unconditional love. She spread love to everyone she met. Princess Diana

touched those who were normally ignored by community – Aids patients and starving

children, for instance. Those that she touched were never the same again. Her

love changed their lives forever. When Diana died, our world lost a very needed

aspect of the Goddess. Ten years after her death, we still hold a place in our

hearts for this Love Goddess.

The next face of the Goddess was shown to us by Terri Schiavo, the brain damaged

woman whose husband fought for many years to have her feeding tube removed. She

embodied the Victim Goddess. She was victimized by her husband, the curative

community and the American judicial system. Her victimization could have gone

unnoticed, as many other cases are daily, but in order to show the Victim face

of the Goddess, she was brought to the attentiveness of the world who watched her

die a horrible death over a two week period.

Now, we are being shown the Wild Woman Goddess straight through Anna Nicole Smith. Anna

Nicole has all the time lived life to the fullest. She never cared what others opinion

about her. She enjoyed life in all it’s aspects. She flaunted her charm and her

sexuality. She drank too much, ate too much and took too many drugs. She did

everything to excess. She loved life and all that it had to offer. She lived

more in her short life than ten population normally do. Anna’s portrayal of the Wild

Woman Goddess is to remind us to live life to the fullest, because it is all too

short.

I am grateful for these women who agreed to portray the many faces of the

Goddess straight through their short, traumatic lives. It is my intention to learn the

lessons that these women embodied for us so their efforts were not in vain.

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