**#0382 The Naomi Lynn Tarot's and Fortune 🔮✨ teller and Dream catcher Visions and White Witch!

**#0382 The Naomi Lynn Star 💫 ✨ Tarot's and Fortune 🔮✨ teller and Dream catcher Visions and White Witch! I'm a Tarot card ♠️♦️ Reader and I also Make Spell books,witches Rune's and candle's and more and Im a Spiritual Walker and more since very young! ( This is a real picture I took in front of my house 🏡 in Milwaukee Oregon in May 2020 !from my cell phone anyways me and my kids and grandkids all have Fairy garden's so do you believe after seeing this picture?

Thursday, June 18, 2026

Ancient Egyptian burial practices were meticulous, 70-day rituals designed to preserve the body, protect the soul, and ensure a successful journey to the afterlife. The process involved advanced mummification, a Nile River funeral procession, and being laid to rest in a tomb alongside extensive grave goods.he cornerstone of Egyptian burial was mummification, which prevented the body from decaying so the soul (ka and ba) could recognize its physical form.Organ Removal: Embalmers removed the brain through the nose and extracted the chest and abdominal organs, preserving them in Canopic Jars. The heart was left inside the body because it was believed to be the center of intelligence and emotion.Dehydration: The body was packed and covered in natron (a natural salt compound) for about 40 days to dry it out completely.Wrapping: The shrunken corpse was treated with oils and resins, wrapped in layers of linen bandages, and fitted with a funerary mask. Amulets were placed between the wrappings for magical protection.Once the 70 days of preparation were complete, the funeral was a grand, emotional event.The Journey to the West: Because the setting sun represented the afterlife, processions traveled to the west bank of the Nile. They crossed the river on boats, carrying the coffin, canopic jars, and furniture.Mourning and Rituals: Female relatives and priestesses acted as the goddesses Isis and Nephthys, loudly mourning the deceased. Priests burned incense, poured milk, and performed the "Opening of the Mouth" ceremony on the mummy, symbolically restoring the deceased's senses to eat, breathe, and speak in the afterlife.The final resting place was critical for safeguarding the soul's eternity.till they awaken one day in another life and all the sames souls find the same souls no matter were there at .Tombs & Protection: While pharaohs built elaborate, heavily guarded structures like pyramids or rock-cut tombs in the Valley of the Kings, commoners were buried in smaller tombs or the hot desert sand, which naturally mummified the body.Grave Goods: Tombs were stocked with food, clothing, jewelry, games, and ushabti (magical servant figurines) that would perform manual labor for the deceased in paradise.The Final Judgment: Egyptians believed that in the afterlife, the soul had to pass through the Hall of Judgment. The deceased's heart was weighed against the feather of Maat (truth). If the heart was lighter, the soul was granted eternal life in the Field of Reeds.hese rituals included mummifying the body, casting magic spells, and burials with specific grave goods thought to be needed in the afterlife.

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Ancient Egyptian burial practices were meticulous, 70-day rituals designed to preserve the body, protect the soul, and ensure a successful j...