Goddesses in Everywoman

(avery) #1

124–125; parents, 118–120; psychological difficulties, 126–127, 302;
relationships with men, 123–124; relationships with women, 121–122;
relative power of, 23; rituals and worship, 108–109; sexuality, 122;
significant others, 301; in solitude, 117; strengths, 302; as temple
hearthkeeper, 112; as virgin goddess, 35–45; ways to grow, 127–131; as
wise old woman, 112–113; work, 121
“Hetaira woman,” 230
Himeros, 234
Hippolytus, 63, 237
Hippomenes, 69, 72, 73, 235, 290, 294
Homer, 139, 160, 168, 197, 233, 234, 236, 240
The Homeric Gods, 84
Hormones, effect on goddess activation, 29–30
Horn, Frances, as Artemis woman, 66


Hunt, Goddess of. See Artemis
Husbands. See Marriage
“The Hymn to Aphrodite,” 108
“Hymn to Artemis,” 47
“Hymn to Demeter,” 168, 197


Identification with goddesses: Aphrodite, 254–255; Artemis, 66–67; Athena,
100–101; Demeter, 188; Hera, 158–159; Hestia, 126–127; Persephone,
215–217
Identification with men, as Athena pattern of behavior, 39
Iliad, 264
Inaccessibility, in Artemis woman, 69–70
Inanna, 20
I Never Promised You a Rose Garden, 203
Infant-mother bonding, 13–14
International Association for Analytic Psychology, 9
Invoking goddesses, 32–33
Inward-focused, Hestia woman as, 110–111, 113–114
Iodama, 90
Iphigenia, myth of, 70–71
Iris, 170
Ishtar, 20
Isis, 20
I Want It All Now, 66


Jason and the Argonauts, 77, 162, 163


Goddesses in Everywoman
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