Monday, 27 January 2014

slave baruti wrote...



My slave baruti wrote this beautiful letter:

Humblest greetings Supreme Goddess and adored Queen,

Please permit Your obedient and utterly submissive servant and slave to express his deepest gratitude for bringing me under Your divine spell today in such a paramount manner.
Feeling my utter helplessness and the firework You whipped up with Your lips and tongue sealed my unconditional surrender to Your Magic, which You could have established even further by making me lick the Sole of Your Shoe again, thus ascertaining that my station is lower than the lowest part of Your Divine Body.
In order to better explain my sensations, kindly allow me a quote from the American author Elise Sutton:

“Subspace is a place of absolute surrender and a place where the female rules supreme. It is a magical place within the psyche of a man where he worships a woman with his spirit. It is powerful and it is beautiful. For only a man who surrenders his will to a woman and enters the
submissive zone, can fully see a woman in all her beauty and glory.”

Having been plunged into this kind of state, i find it difficult to find words adequately expressing myself and to describe the limitless Power You are wielding over me.
Omnipotent Goddess Yanara, You graciously grant me to feel the deepest gratitude and humility, servile adoration and submissive worship for Your August Personality that i shall always be trying to express surrendering myself to Your Supreme Power in absolute obedience.

Your most humble and deeply indebted servant and slave

baruti

Monday, 13 January 2014

Goddess Yanara's Whip



Goddess Yanara prefers to appear in public with Her whip, and not like most pharaos with 'crook and flail'.


History of the Egyptian whip

The Pharos' Crook and Flail
I have read on many reputable web sites including wikipedia.org that whips can be traced back to ancient Egypt. As evidence they sight the fact that the Pharos carried whips to signify their position and dominance over the people. Unfortunately this couldn't be further from the truth. While I don't dispute the fact that ancient Egyptians used whips and I will show evidence of that later in this article. However the items the Pharos carried for ceremony where not whips. Before I go any further let's define what a whip is. According the Webster's Dictionary a whip is defined as "an instrument consisting usually of a handle and lash forming a flexible rod that is used for whipping". Further more it defines a bullwhip as "a rawhide whip with a very long plaited lash". So we can safely say that a whip consists of a single tail that varies in flexibility. What the Pharos carried where called a "crook" and "flail". It's pretty hard to confuse the crook for a whip. In case you don't know, the crook is the one that looks like a walking stick. But the term flail has been confused here as being synonymous for whip when in fact it is not. If we go back to the trusted Webster's Dictionary and look up flail we get the following description "a hand threshing implement consisting of a wooden handle at the end of which a stouter and shorter stick is so hung as to swing freely".
So we can safely say that a flail is basically a nunchuk. Two pieces of wood connected by a flexible joint. I doubt this design would ever produce a sonic boom. Some might argue that a flail is a device used for whipping people. We all know that some people do partake in different forms of flagellation either self inflicted or inflicted by others. But the crook and flail carried by the Pharos signified something entirely different. The crook signified the control of livestock like sheep and the flail signified the control of produce specifically grain. This type of flail was used for crushing grain. Could it have been used to hit people? Of course it could. So could the crook for that matter, but in this case the symbolism was that the Pharos controlled the land and the livestock, both symbols of wealth and life. Of course this is a simplification but accurate none the less.