June 29, 2026 (Gregorian calendar/6th month/Day 179)
Monday, 22 Sene 2018 (Ethiopian calendar/10th month)
Ḏabaḥ (Zabah) בח 6 (Enochian calendar/4th month/Offering of produce)
12 Sol, 2026 (International Fixed calendar)
Cosmic Moon 13, Gamma 3 (13 moon calendar/Full Moon)
~ Cosmic Turtle Moon of Presence, June 27th – July 24th
Oak Moon: June 10 – July 7 (Celtic 13 Month Tree calendar/7th month)
Month of the Green Corn Moon…De ha lu yi (Cherokee moon)
13.0.13.12.18 2 Etznab 11 Sek (Mayan Long Count calendar)
international mud day, log cabin day

Mythology rarely treats seers as blessed.
They are treated as necessary.
And often punished.
Across cultures, the seer appears again and again not as someone gifted with certainty, but as someone burdened with sight.
In Greek myth, prophets speak truths no one wants. In Norse tradition, the völva walks between worlds carrying knowledge even gods seek. In Celtic stories, wisdom often arrives through sacrifice. In ancient traditions, to see beyond ordinary reality was not comfort.
It was separation.
Look closely at the pattern.
The seer does not usually gain power through control.
They lose something.
Sleep.
Belonging.
Innocence.
Trust.
Many myths describe sight arriving through unusual means: isolation, descent, ritual, sacrifice, altered states, encounters with death.
The message repeats constantly. Knowledge changes the knower and this is where modern ideas often misunderstand the seer.
The seer is not someone who predicts lottery numbers.
The seer is someone who notices what everyone else is avoiding.
Patterns.
Cycles.
Consequences.
Truth before it becomes visible.
That is why seers are feared.
Not because they create outcomes.
Because they reveal them.
There is something deeply uncomfortable about being seen before you are ready and there is something lonely about seeing what others deny.
The archetype of the seer asks:
What do you do when you know something but no one wants to hear it?
Do you become smaller?
Do you silence yourself?
Do you wait for permission?
Or do you speak anyway?
Myth rarely rewards the seer but it remembers them because truth has a strange habit.
People reject it at first.
Then later call it wisdom.
The seer’s burden is not seeing the future.
It is living in the present with eyes open and that has always been a dangerous kind of magic.
1 Samuel 9:9 (1599 Geneva Bible)
(Beforetime in Israel when a man went to seek an answer of God, thus he spake, Come, and let us go to the [g]Seer: for he that is called now a Prophet, was in the old time called a Seer)
[g] So called because he foresaw things to come.
(Wycliffe Bible)
(Sometime in Israel each man going to counsel with God spake thus, Come ye, and go we to the seer; for he, that is said now a prophet, was called sometime a seer (for he, who now is called a prophet, before was called a seer).
(Dra)
Now in time past, in Israel when a man went to consult God he spoke thus: Come, let us go to the seer. For he that is now called a prophet, in time past was called a seer.
…I wanted to share a couple different translations with this one, just to see what different ones said. Pretty much the same, even with others I checked that I didn’t share.
*photo is mine
hope you have a great day!
thanks for stopping by!!

Leave a Reply