Before the Cross: The Draconian Ethic
We are all genetic descendants from the ancient world. The spirit is in our blood. It simply awaits activation through the heart and inner fire.
—Zzenn
Before the Church's shadow fell across Europe, a culture of people—both women and men—lived by a different rhythm. They were not witches or warlocks, but sovereigns. The women, known as Dragon Queens, bled with the moon and carried the ancient pulse of the world, while the men, their Dragon Kings, spoke to the trees. Both dreamt in serpents, keeping the Grail Current and the Sangréal bloodline alive. This was not a fringe group; they were the original culture, predating empires like Rome and even history as we know it.
The Draconian ethic that defined these people was more than just spiritual—it was a biological, royal, and cosmic heritage. These Queens and Kings were not cultists or rebels; they represented an ancient way of being that saw power in nature, blood, and a deep connection to the earth. It was this fundamental sovereignty and ancient ethic that the Church had to eradicate to establish its own authority.
The Draconian Ethic
In the Draconian world, women were not afterthoughts to men, nor were men born to dominate. The woman was the axis of power, holding the mitochondrial line—the unbroken blood of the gods passed from mother to daughter. Her womb was a portal, her blood a cipher. She carried in her body the serpentine gnosis that connected stars to soil, flesh to spirit, and cosmos to consciousness. The Grail Queen was both oracle and genetic gatekeeper, governing not by sword, but by sacrament, rites of union, and sexual magic. The serpent that rose in her spine was not sin; it was divine voltage.
The male counterpart, the Dragon King, was made by her. He was chosen and initiated by the Queen, his power derived not from conquest or council, but from her current—her energetic recognition and sexual rites. This was a system where eroticism, intuition, and nature were the source of order, and where authority came not from a rigid hierarchy, but from the Serpent Current awakened within. The Church needed this worldview to fall, and for the Dragon King's power to be transferred from the Queen to the dead law of the Cross.
War on Blood and Memory
The year 1203 marked a pivotal moment. Pope Innocent III, haunted by a power he could not understand, launched an Inquisition that targeted bloodline culture itself. The Cathars of southern France, remnants of the Dragon-imbued Grail culture, were deemed enemies. But the Inquisition didn't just hunt heretics; it targeted the people—especially the women and men who knew the old rites, the lunar cycles, and the herbal sacraments. It wasn't magic the Church feared; it was memory—the genetic and spiritual memory carried in their blood.
The men and women they called witches and warlocks were often descendants of the Dragon Queens and Kings—genetic carriers of the Grail blood and custodians of a culture older than Abraham. They lived where the land still whispered, knowing the language of roots and the corridors of the dream world. The Inquisition was not spiritual warfare; it was ethnic cleansing—a genocide of a culture rooted in the living current of the Dragon.
Sovereignty and Serpent Power
To understand why these people were feared, you must first understand the ethic they lived by. The Draconian ethic was rooted in sovereignty, not as a form of power over others, but as mastery over one's own body, mind, and spirit. It was the ethic of the awakened kundalini, the living womb, and the erotic psyche. This path taught that true authority came not from books or bishops, but from the Serpent Current that rises within. When honored, this psycho-emotional force aligned an individual with the Dragon Line of cosmic intelligence.
This ethic revered desire rather than shaming it, and it saw the body as an instrument of gnosis, not something to be separated from the soul. Through rites, sexual alchemy, and dreamwork, the Dragon people cultivated a path of individuation and spiritual sovereignty that the Church would never allow. What they called witchcraft was, in fact, the original priesthood.
The Return of the Dragon Line
What died in 1203 was not just a people—it was a worldview. The destruction of the Cathars was the scorched-earth eradication of a way of knowing and being. The Roman Church destroyed the embodied gnosis of a civilization that knew how to live without domination. But the burned path still exists, hidden in the body’s memory, a grief that is not ours and a fire in the bones that cannot be explained by modern life. This is the soulline—a deeper-than-blood transmission that calls the lost priests and priestesses back to their thrones.
The Inquisition never ended; it just changed form. Today, the Church no longer needs iron to silence the Dragon Line. Now it uses psychiatry, pharmaceuticals, and cultural programming. The woman who bleeds with the moon is called hormonal; the man who awakens his sexual power is called unstable. The Dragon Legacy is not a call to return to ancient rituals, but to awaken the serpent memory within modern people. It is a rebirth of an ethic that cannot be crucified, burned, or buried because it lives in the blood and breath of those who remember.
It needs only one thing: for you to stop apologizing for your power. The next Inquisition will not be fought with swords. It will be fought in the psyche—in your ability to claim your erotic knowing, your spiritual authority, and your intuitive truth without fear. The Dragon Line is returning, and they are not here to ask for anything. They are here to reign.
A Call to the Inner Dragon
The Wizzan Path is a call to awaken the dragon bloodline within the soul travelers of our time, but it's not merely a philosophy—it's a practice. To truly reclaim this ancient ethic, you must bridge the gap between history and your daily life.
Embrace Sovereignty: Reclaim your innate authority by questioning every thought, belief, and feeling of shame that is not your own. Your first step is to recognize the inner monarch who rules your personal kingdom. Practice setting boundaries that honor your inner truth and consciously make choices that align with your deepest knowing, not external expectations.
Reconnect with the Body: See your body not as an object, but as a sacred vessel of gnosis. Revere its natural cycles and rhythms. Practices like breathwork, sacred dance, or somatic exercises can awaken the kundalini, or "Serpent Current," that ancient witches and wizzans honored as a source of divine voltage.
Engage with the Shadow: The Inquisition taught us to fear what was dark or forbidden within ourselves. The Draconian ethic, however, sees the shadow as a source of hidden power and knowledge. Instead of shaming your desires or fears, approach them with curiosity. See the Trickster archetype within you as a guide that can playfully dismantle the old, rigid beliefs that keep you imprisoned.
Listen for Inner Dissonance: The Draconian ethic replaces the binary of "sin" with the concept of "dissonance." Instead of judging your emotions, listen to them. See feelings of discomfort, tension, or misalignments as a clear signal from your inner wisdom telling you that something is out of tune. By consciously listening and re-tuning, you begin to heal your soul and cultivate an ethics born of empathy and resonance.
Wizzan Temple exists to serve the inner path of dragons, witches, mystics, and seekers who are evolving within the soul realm. This is how you stop being a monument to a dying paradigm and instead become a living architect of a more conscious, authentic, and magically alive world.
—Zzenn
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