No other god form, spirit or deity is as associated as modern vampire mythos as is Lilith, she is mother of the night and all who inhabit it from demons to vampires. Her history begins in ancient Sumer / Babylon as a type of succubus vampire spirit called the Lilitu, to the rebellious and assertive first wife of Adam in the jewish text the Zahor. Then she was deified as a goddess and introduced to the western world in 1809 in Goethe’s play Faust and evolved into a modern icon of feminine empowerment. She is the symbol of the first rebel not conforming to the divine plan and is the mother of creatures of the night.
Her colors are red, black and purple and her feast day is said to be October 26th, the day she was cast out of the Garden of Eden. Her totem animals are the owl, emblematic knowledge, the lion due to her strength, authority and fierce independence, the snake for knowledge and the peacock who can ingest poisonous animals representing the transmutation of darkness to beauty. Lilith often appears as a bat winged succubus or a red haired nude with pale skin and a yellow and orange snake draped around her. She also a survivor and has the powers of regeneration.
Lilith stands fiercely independent and whispers echo she chooses her devotees for their solitary nature rarely building temples or shrines in her name, but individual devotees can make an altar to her if it is not shared with other deities. Work with her is on a one on one basis and she is empowering shadow work for self intragation, cultivating self-expression and authenticity, and in the celestial realm she represents seduction and allure. The “Children of Lilith” are her devotees and she chooses daughters who need work on themselves or represents her characteristics, even rarer when she chooses a sons of Lilith who must embrace his divine feminine deeply to resonate with her.
Read more less