Júgrín
Júgrín, commonly known among the Wylden as the "Thoughtcrafter", is the Súðár goddess of mind and consciousness, and along with her twin sister Reynja, is considered foremost among the Súðárín gods. In Tallað, her name translates as "Thinking One".
Júgrín is mother to the Súðár Mellín, goddess of memory.
Divine Domains
Júgrín is the goddess of mind, consciousness, and thought.
Physical Description
General Physical Condition
The Thoughtcrafter is rarely (if ever) to be seen outside the councils of the gods, where she offers wise advice to her peers. When beheld by mortal eyes, she is physically identical to her sister, save that Júgrín has ice-blue eyes and a more orderly coif of light brown hair.
Personality Characteristics
Motivation
Like all the gods of Creation, the Thoughtcrafter's highest motivation is to experience their creation. In her specific case, it is the growth of thought and enlightenment, among the creatures capable of such, that she most enjoys. For this reason, she is known among the gods to be particularly intrigued by the Aisling, and the manner of their life within the Veil of Sleigh Aisling.
Likes & Dislikes
As the deity most responsible for the ability for some creatures to think and reason (and remember, by way of her daughter Mellín), Júgrín finds anything that restricts the ability to think and grow distasteful, such as oppression, subjugation, or institutionalized ignorance and illiteracy. She also shares her twin sister's dislike of anything that is abusive or destructive of life, though not to the same potentially violent degree.
Social
Family Ties
She is the twin sister of Reynja Lifemother, and mother of Mellín, goddess of memory.
Mannerisms
The Thoughtcrafter is more reclusive than her sister, and rarely entered the mortal world even before The Godswar and subsequent declaration of The Balance. Since that time, she never does so, leaving the few Riverseers and Stonespeakers with whom she has spoken in communion as the only mortals who can speak of her manner, which they invariably describe as calm, reassuring, and wise beyond measure.
Comments