-eng- Mommy-goddess Of Unconditional Love -wow-... Repack -

Characters like Ragyo Kiryuin ( Kill la Kill — inverted as abusive), Queen Marika ( Elden Ring ), or even benevolent AIs in sci-fi (e.g., The Culture's Minds) are analyzed as "Mommy-Goddess" figures. The -ENG- tag appears in fanworks analyzing their maternal divinity.

Where this goes wrong is in codependent or abusive dynamics: a "Mommy-Goddess" who demands worship in return for love, or who uses unconditional acceptance to trap someone in dependency. Real unconditional love is free. It does not say, "I love you only if you call me Goddess." It says, "I love you. Period. Now let's grow." -ENG- Mommy-Goddess of Unconditional Love -Wow-...

These were the first depictions of the divine feminine. In ancient Crete, the Minoans worshipped a mother goddess whose serpents represented the cyclical nature of life and death. In Sumer, Inanna and later Ishtar reigned as queens of heaven and earth. But it was perhaps the Egyptian goddess Isis, the "Great of Magic" and the quintessential mother, who cemented the archetype of the Mommy-Goddess of Unconditional Love . In the myths, she literally reassembles the scattered body of her husband Osiris, refusing to let death have the final say. This is the core of the archetype: the fierce, relentless refusal to abandon her own. Characters like Ragyo Kiryuin ( Kill la Kill