…the Other Side of the Story
Version 3 of the divine feminine app will have a Goddess library: a proprietary haven to protect and cherish the many women (and a few men) who have spent their lives researching the Goddess and the divine feminine coming back to balance in the world, categorizing and preserving their work.*
Temples and areas that Hathor was worshipped:
“The Goddess Isis-Hathor, whose worship assimilated that of Ua Zit, the Cobra Goddess of Egypt, was well known in certain sections of Sinai and Canaan. Even as early as the Second Dynasty, some of these places are believed to have been seaports or even colonies of Egypt.” — Pg. 206 When God Was a Woman by Merlin Stone.
The Goddess repository will not only offer the work of these pillars such as Merlin Stone, Marija Gimbutas, Layne Redmond of When the Drummers Were Women, but will also offer contemporary scholarly work such as Tahya who has produced a 21st century systrum inspired by the ancient Egyptian systrum where musician-priestesses of Goddess Hathor played a prominent role in society.
*Featured graphic on top of post is from Tahya’s presentation.

Resources will be tiered offering first peer-reviewed, classics as well as current offerings to expand your divinely feminine knowledge such as:
*Learn the Goddess stories of Rhiannon, Persephone, Demeter, Hathor, Isis, Nephtys, Ishtar, Yemaya, Saraswati, Kuan Yin, Diana, Brigid, Ceredwyn, and the Lady of the Lake. Sacred U. Return of the Divine Goddess online course.
*Desirée Dunbar is Creator of The Secret Garden Society & Divine Feminine Activator for Women Worldwide…. past life recall as a priestess of the rose path with Mary Magdalene, Isis and Hathor.
Why Do We Need Something Different than Mainstream?
What you get when you search Hathor on Google.com
- AI Overview
- Wikipedia
- Britannica
- Pyramids Sound and Light Show – Egyptian commercial venture to provide sound and lighting
- Rosicrucian Egyptian Museum – which has this 3 paragraph post:
Hathor was one of the forty-two state gods and goddesses of Egypt, and one of the most popular and powerful. She was goddess of many things: love, beauty, music, dancing, fertility, and pleasure. She was the protector of women, though men also worshipped her. She had priests as well as priestesses in her temples.
Her center of worship was Dendera, and her veneration began early in Egypt’s history, possibly in the Predynastic Era. She was the daughter of Ra and was sometimes called “The Eye of Ra” (a title shared with Bast and Sekhmet, among others) in her role as the sun god’s defender. As the wife of Horus, she was associated with the mother of the pharaoh in her role as Horus’s nurse, and also with the wife of the pharaoh in her role as Horus’s consort.
In her role as goddess of beauty, she was the patron of cosmetics. Wearing cosmetics was seen as a form of worship to Hathor, and offerings of mirrors or cosmetic palettes to her were common. Every year, her statue would be carried in a boat to Edfu to be reunited with Horus. A festival celebrating their union would then begin.
Compare this to what is found in Merlin Stone’s When God Was a Woman book:
“As I began to read other myths that explained the creation of life, stories that attributed the event to Nut or Hathor in Egypt”, pg. 7
“…those heathen idol worshipers of the Bible had been praying to a woman god – elsewhere known as … Innin, Inanna, Nana, Nut Anat, …Hathor – the many-named Divine Ancestress.” Pg. 9
“… Diodorus wrote at great length of the worship of the Goddess Isis ..who had incorporated the aspects of both Ua Zit and Hathor. … recorded what we today may find a most startling description of the laws of Egypt, explaining that they were the result of the reverence paid to this mighty Goddess. … archaic system of mother-kin, with its preference for women over men in matters of property and inheritance, lasted down to Roman times.” Pg. 36
Goddess Hathor … so much more than the Goddess of cosmetics.
Get the other side of the story on the divine feminine app.
Since 2016, collecting Circles, events and resources with almost 11,000 faces of the Goddess.
*Looking for an investor to make Version 3 happen.
2 Comments
Thank you for including the 21st-century sistrum aka Ceremonial Systrum™ (and me) as part of your introduction to this valuable resource ~ i.e., Version 3 of the divine feminine app with Goddess library! This is exciting and deeply needed. We need all the tools of empowerment we can “get our hands on” at this critical time.
THANK YOU ~ THANK YOU ~ THANK YOU
for all you do to uplift and shine a light on the Goddess
May Hathor, Mistress of Music,
Lady of the Systrum
bring melody, harmony,
vibrant good health, peace & love
into your life and sing your praises!
✨ sššt sššt sššt sššt ✨
—
Tahya | Dancer, Drummer,
Independent Researcher & Designer of the Ceremonial Systrum™
Yes! thank you Tahya and for your work. <3