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5/9/2025, 1:23:37 PM
>>49386877
in Shinto mythology, Haniyasuhime and her siblings were born when the kami of fire burned his mother to death while being born. While Keki-sama is most apparently Haniyasuhime manifest, she has elements of her siblings, and sometimes the siblings were seen as a kind of a single whole. They are all kami related to the needs of early civilization, like clay and soil, water, reeds and gourds They're also worshipped as kami of protection against fire, because clay, water and reeds and gourds were used in firefighting efforts.
The fiery and deathly origin of Haniyasuhime and her siblings are thought to be related to two things. First is the volcanic soil of Japan itself, which is renewed by violent, fiery processes. Second is that early agriculture in Japan was done by burning down forests. Thus the Japanese would have seen their civilization as being born out of not only creation, but also destruction, and built on a very fragile base.
What does this have to do with the topic of "sex with Keiki"? Let's be realistic about it. She's a deity, anon. She's of course nurturing and motherly, but her womb carries civilization itself, not human babies. Her anger reduces fields and forests and cities to ashes. She exists interlinked and above this world, in soil, clay, tools, agriculture, craftsmanship and everything that has been built upon these humble foundations. In some shrines, these days Haniyasuhime is worshipped as the kami of "all growth and progress". I think she has become something like that. We have come a long way from putting down hut fires with water and wet reeds, smothering embers with clay, or burning down forests to grow buckwheat. But the fundamental truth exists: all civilization is fragile, needs constant mindful renewal and is built on fundamentaly destroying something to create something else.
I don't think you really understand what "sex with Keiki" would be like, anon. Trying to intimately merge with something like her is like trying to fit an ocean into a bottle. Best you can manage is to try to find some arts & crafts auntie who has a manageable amount of Keiki-nature in her.
in Shinto mythology, Haniyasuhime and her siblings were born when the kami of fire burned his mother to death while being born. While Keki-sama is most apparently Haniyasuhime manifest, she has elements of her siblings, and sometimes the siblings were seen as a kind of a single whole. They are all kami related to the needs of early civilization, like clay and soil, water, reeds and gourds They're also worshipped as kami of protection against fire, because clay, water and reeds and gourds were used in firefighting efforts.
The fiery and deathly origin of Haniyasuhime and her siblings are thought to be related to two things. First is the volcanic soil of Japan itself, which is renewed by violent, fiery processes. Second is that early agriculture in Japan was done by burning down forests. Thus the Japanese would have seen their civilization as being born out of not only creation, but also destruction, and built on a very fragile base.
What does this have to do with the topic of "sex with Keiki"? Let's be realistic about it. She's a deity, anon. She's of course nurturing and motherly, but her womb carries civilization itself, not human babies. Her anger reduces fields and forests and cities to ashes. She exists interlinked and above this world, in soil, clay, tools, agriculture, craftsmanship and everything that has been built upon these humble foundations. In some shrines, these days Haniyasuhime is worshipped as the kami of "all growth and progress". I think she has become something like that. We have come a long way from putting down hut fires with water and wet reeds, smothering embers with clay, or burning down forests to grow buckwheat. But the fundamental truth exists: all civilization is fragile, needs constant mindful renewal and is built on fundamentaly destroying something to create something else.
I don't think you really understand what "sex with Keiki" would be like, anon. Trying to intimately merge with something like her is like trying to fit an ocean into a bottle. Best you can manage is to try to find some arts & crafts auntie who has a manageable amount of Keiki-nature in her.
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