Praise be to the Goddesses among us!
- Gary Moller

- Oct 19
- 2 min read

Throughout history, every civilisation has honoured the Goddess. She is the giver of life, the keeper of balance, and the embodiment of strength wrapped in grace. From Hine-nui-te-po to Isis, Athena to Freyja, and to Mary, the Goddess stands as a symbol of divine femininity — beauty, wisdom, compassion, and quiet power. She reminds us that true strength doesn’t roar; it sustains.
In the Freeranger philosophy, we see the Goddess not as myth but as mirror. She is the force that keeps families, communities, and nations alive. Every time a woman nurtures, heals, or rebuilds, she channels the ancient power of the divine feminine. She may be a mother, a teacher, a healer, a leader — often all at once — and she carries within her the wisdom of generations.
Modern society, in its rush to flatten and sterilise everything, has lost touch with this sacred balance. It mistakes sameness for equality, progress for wisdom. It celebrates intellect but ignores intuition; it builds empires yet forgets who gives birth to the next generation. The Freeranger way calls us to restore that balance — to honour the masculine and the feminine as complementary forces that sustain life, not competitors locked in struggle.
The Goddess and the Tribe
In every healthy tribe, men and women stand side by side, each fulfilling vital roles that interlock like the roots of an ancient forest. Men are protectors and providers, but it is the woman — the Goddess — who gives the tribe its continuity and moral centre. When the feminine is revered, the tribe thrives. When she is diminished or desecrated, the tribe withers.
I once spoke with an Armenian man living in Dubai who told me the story of his people. During the Armenian genocide, millions perished — mostly men. Yet within a single generation, the women who survived had borne and raised enough children to not only restore the population but to grow it. These women, many widowed and broken, refused to surrender. They rebuilt their nation through sheer will and love. That is Goddess energy in action — creation overcoming destruction, life triumphing over despair.
Restoring the Sacred Balance
We must teach these truths again — in our homes, schools, and institutions. Our children should grow up knowing that femininity is not weakness and masculinity is not brutality. Both are sacred and necessary. This is the law of balance that governs all life: sun and moon, day and night, giving and receiving, creation and destruction.
To live the Freeranger way is to protect this balance. It’s to honour the women who carry life, wisdom, and compassion into every corner of our world. It’s to recognise that without them, there is no healing, no renewal, and no future.
So praise be to the Goddesses among us — the mothers, daughters, sisters, and partners who hold families together and mend what is broken. They are not relics of ancient mythology but living embodiments of creation itself.
When we honour them, we honour life.
Walk gently. Live truthfully. Protect the sacred balance — that is the Freeranger way.







Thank you for appreciating the divine feminine. There are other aspects of goddesses which balance the benign ones you mention. Diana the huntress with her bow and arrow, and many-armed Kali the bringer of death are just two that come to mind. Goddesses had power over life AND death. Some believe this is why women are so denigrated and controlled - we are feared as the bringers of life and death and we bleed but do not die....
Excellent thoughts; thanks for the insights . . . .