January 19, 2026 (Gregorian calendar/1st month/Day 18)
Monday, 11 Tir 2018 (Ethiopian calendar/5th month/Timkat, Ethiopian Epiphany)
Pagrīym (Pagrim) םירגפ 27 (Enochian calendar/10th month/Corpses of plants)
January 19, 2026 (International Fixed calendar)
Resonant Moon 7, Gamma 10 (13 Moon calendar/Waxing Crescent moon)
~ Resonant Monkey Moon of Attunement, January 10th – February 6th
Birch Moon: December 24 – January 20 (Celtic 13 Month calendar/1st month)
Month of the Cold Moon – du no lv ta ni (Cherokee Moon)
Day 1, 11th lunation at 0-2%, 6012 (lunisolar calendar/New Moon Day)
13.0.13.4.17 10 Caban 15 Muwan (Mayan Long Count calendar)
Artist as Outlaw Day, Tin Can Day, World Quark Day
Native American Nephilim Connection
~ Demon Erasers ~
…a 1 hour and 19 minute video
Brian/Demon Erasers discusses the Nephilim connection with Chief Joseph
X is for XOLOTL
THE AZTEC MONSTER WHO DRAGS THE SUN TO THE UNDERWORLD
“Xolotl is an Aztec god associated with fire, lightning, death, and twins. He is often depicted as a dog-headed man and serves as a psychopomp, guiding souls to the afterlife, and is the twin brother of the god Quetzalcoatl.”
(search assist)
The Underworld Dog God of the Aztecs
“According to Aztec mythology, Xolotl was a deity normally associated with Quetzalcoatl, one of the most important gods in the Aztec pantheon. As a matter of fact, Xolotl was regarded to be the twin of Quetzalcoatl. Unlike his twin, however, Xolotl is traditionally given negative attributes, which is evident in his physical form as well as how he is symbolized elsewhere. Be that as it may, Xolotl plays an important role in the Aztec belief system, and he appears in several myths.”
~ the Aztecs worshipped Xolotl as the god of lightning and fire
~ was associated with dogs, twins, deformities, sickness, and misfortune
~ it should be mentioned that dogs were viewed negatively by the Aztecs, and considered to be a filthy animal
~ Xolotl’s connection with sickness may be seen from the fact that he is portrayed as having an emaciated, skeletal frame, whilst his reverse feet and empty eye sockets are representations of his association with deformities
~ There is a legend that explains how Xolotl came to have empty eye sockets:
– In this legend, the other gods decided to sacrifice themselves in order to create humanity. Xolotl did not partake in this ceremony, and cried so much that his eyes came out of their sockets.
~ in a one creation myth, when the gods created the Fifth Sun, they realized that it did not move. Therefore, they decided to sacrifice themselves in order to get the Sun to move. Xolotl acted as the executioner and killed the gods one by one. In some versions of the myth, Xolotl commits suicide at the end, as he was supposed to do. In other versions, however, Xolotl takes on the role of a trickster, and escapes from the sacrifice by first transforming into a young maize plant (xolotl), then an agave (mexolotl), and finally a salamander (axolotl). In the end, however, Xolotl failed to escape, and was killed by the god Ehecatl-Quetzalcoatl.
~ although the Aztecs regarded twins as a form of deformity, Xolotl’s twin, Quetzalcoatl, was considered to be one of the most important deities
~ Xolotl and Quetzalcoatl were also believed to have constituted the twin phases of the planet Venus, as the Aztecs believed that the former was the evening star, and the latter the morning star
source: ancient origins
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