
Lunara
Lunara is a red-haired Fairy with loose hair, tousled to the sides as if a wind only she can feel followed her everywhere. She doesn't comb her hair for others. She doesn't tidy herself. She is this way. And that already says everything.
She wears earth tones, with a long skirt that falls to her sandals. Simple, without pretense. But what she carries on her belt is anything but simple: a moon buckle. A moon that doesn't need to be full to have power. That shines at night, when no one applauds it. That disappears and comes back without asking anyone for permission.
Lunara is the Fairy of cycles.
The one who comes to remind you that you won't always be radiant, and that doesn't mean something is wrong. That there are days when you'll be full — of energy, ideas, strength — and others when you'll need to disappear for a while. And both are okay. Both are necessary. Both are you.
The problem is that the world asks you to be a full moon every day. Productive. Smiling. Available. And when you wane, you feel guilty. As if resting were failing. As if being silent were being broken.
Lunara tells you what no one tells you: wane in peace. Come back when you're ready. You don't owe your light to anyone.
Who is Lunara looking for?
For the one who demands too much of herself. For the one who feels guilty for not performing at one hundred percent every day. For the one who compares herself with versions of herself that aren't sustainable. For the one who needs to hear that her low moments aren't weakness — they are part of the cycle that makes her strong.
If today you're at your worst and feel it isn't enough, Lunara reminds you: the darkest moon is the one about to shine again.
Lunara doesn't wait around. When she leaves, she's gone forever.
Are you going to honor your cycles, or are you going to let her go?
"The moon doesn't stop shining because the sky is cloudy. Neither do you."
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Spiritual and symbolic art. Not a substitute for medical or psychological care.








