What happened NEXT destroyed her. #history #arthistory #paintings #psyche #cupid #greekmythology
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Long before modern fairytales, in the heart of Roman mythology, there lived a mortal princess named Psyche. Her beauty was said to rival that of Venus, the goddess of love and beauty herself. So striking was Psyche's appearance that worshipers abandoned Venusās temples to admire the mortal girl instead. Enraged by the insult, Venus devised a cruel plan: she ordered her son, Cupidāthe god of love and desireāto make Psyche fall hopelessly in love with a hideous creature. But when Cupid saw her, he was stunned. Instead of carrying out his motherās orders, he disobeyed them entirely. He fell in love. They say it was because he let loose of his arrow, shocked by her beauty that it ended up piercing him.
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To protect their forbidden love from the wrath of the gods, Cupid arranged for Psyche to be taken to a magnificent palace, invisible to all but her. There, he visited her only under the cover of night. She never saw his face. All she knew was the warmth of his voice and the tenderness of his touch. He warned her never to look upon him, and for a while, she obeyed. But love mixed with mystery can be unbearable. Psycheās sisters, jealous and curious, fed her doubts. āWhat if heās a monster?ā they whispered. One night, Psyche gave in. She lit a lamp while he slept and saw, not a beast, but the god of love himselfāradiant and divine. In her shock, a drop of oil fell from the lamp and burned his skin. Cupid woke, betrayed, and fled. She had broken his one rule: donāt look.
From there, Psycheās journey turned from romance to survival. Stripped of her lover, cast out by the gods, and left to wander, Psyche searched the earth for Cupid. Venus, enraged by the mortal girlās defiance and beauty, gave her a series of impossible trials. First, Psyche was forced to sort an enormous pile of mixed seedsāonly with the help of compassionate ants did she succeed. Then she was ordered to collect golden wool from vicious rams, fetch icy water from the deadly River Styx, and finally descend into the underworld to retrieve a box from Persephoneāwhile resisting the temptation to open it. But again, curiosity prevailed. Inside the box was not beauty, as she had been told, but a deadly sleep. Psyche collapsed.
It was Cupid who found her, and his love had not faded. Moved by her perseverance, Jupiterāthe king of the godsāintervened. He granted Psyche immortality, declaring that true love, tested and proven, was worthy of the divine. Psyche was welcomed into Olympus, and even Venus begrudgingly accepted her. Their wedding was held in the heavens, and their daughter, Voluptas (Pleasure), would symbolize the union of the soul (psyche) and desire (eros).
But this myth is not just a love storyāitās an allegory. Psycheās name literally means āsoulā in Greek, and her journey mirrors the soulās path through suffering, curiosity, and trials toward transcendence and union with love. Her defiance of divine instruction, her fall, her endurance, and her eventual elevation reflect a deep truth that still resonates today: love is rarely easy, often painful, and always transformative. It forces us to face the unknown, to take risks, and sometimes to suffer for what we want to understand. Itās a story as old as time and as relevant as ever.
So why are we drawn to forbidden love? Perhaps itās because we, like Psyche, are all a little curious. We want to see the face behind the mystery. But as this myth reminds us, sometimes the truth changes everything. And in love, one glimpseāone candleācan ignite a curse, or light the way to something divine.
Because the heart is DECEITFUL.
-Jeremiah 17:9
Yall for him I would šš( he dgaf about me tho)
Love is a double edged kinfe
Gahhh! If I get 300 likes Iām going to confess to my crush.Taking notes from psyche š«£