(Art Essay) The Rise and Fall of Dragon Consciousness by Claire Dorey

The Whore Of Babylon Collage by Claire Dorey

When Sophia, a divine, female light Being, representing wisdom, fell into the Great Dragon of Darkness, it was a fall from grace. Seeking knowledge beyond Christian doctrine, was considered a descent into the chaotic darkness.

In Quantum, the ”dark state“ does not absorb or emit light particles. In mythology Dragons represent chaos and this aspect resonates with scientific theory, where chaos and order entwine. One cannot exist without the other.

The Outer Darkness is a Dragon

In Book Four, chapter 126 of the Gnostic Text, the Pistis Sophia, meaning “faith and wisdom,” there are Dragons.

In this chapter, Jesus compares the Outer Darkness, surrounding the entire world, to a Great Dragon, whose tail is in his mouth [1].

The Ouroboros is a symbol of “the devouring of self” and eternal cycles of destruction and creation. Within this paradox of opposites there is resolution, unity, and perpetual change. [2]. In the Pistis Sophia this paradox is described as “the chastisements of the Outer Darkness” and the “righteous body,” where the light and wisdom reside. Simplified, this means good and evil.

Yet there is wisdom in darkness. Darkness is where consciousness, fertility, transformation and self knowledge seed. Persephone, Inanna, Kali, Isis, Hecate, Nyx, the underworld sun Goddess, psychotherapists, scientists and shadow workers tell us this is so.

In Quantum, darkness is a hidden state within the invisible universe, the understanding of which could unravel the mysteries of existence. In mythological terms, this is the cauldron and cosmic brew. In spiritual terms, this is universal consciousness, and the womb at the heart of the universe. In terms of the underworld sun Goddess, this is where the sun goes at night.

Evil forces

This Dragon represents “evil forces,” so we must analyze these words. I propose “evil forces” means universal forces that were not understood, ones outside of patriarchal control, embraced by Paganism, suppressed by monotheism. In the Pistis Sophia this included astrology.

These texts are a hybrid of Egyptian cosmology, embryonic Christian theology, Hellenic Paganism, and Hermetic magic. For a flavor of Roman/Egyptian astrology, check out images of the Zodiac at Dendera, Hathor’s Temple. The Pistis Sophia was written in Egypt, circa 3rd or 4th Century CE, possibly during the life span of Neoplatonist, female scholar, Hypatia, when Egypt was part of the Roman Empire, at a time of conflict between Pagans and Christians.

So what is down there in this Dragon who personifies evil forces? In the twelve levels, dungeons, wombs, or astrological houses, there are Pagan deities, zodiac signs and malevolent rulers, including seven-headed rulers.

Seven heads

The ruler, I’m focusing upon, is the seven-headed Dragon. Through it we enter a lineage of wisdom held by the seven-headed, Hydra; and from the Book of Revelation, the seven-headed Whore of Babylon, and the seven-headed Dragon, identified as the Antichrist; the seven-headed sea-dragon, Lotan,  mentioned in Ugaritic texts; and the Mesopotamian, multi-headed serpent Tiamat, whose body was cleaved in two, creating heaven and Earth, a contradiction to the Genesis creation myth.

This suppressed wisdom merged with Sophia’s wisdom. This is Dragon Consciousness, source of primordial power, medicine and magic, spiraling within the Earth, cosmos and self.

Dragons and wisdom apples

Anne van Leeuwen suggests Dragons are the guardians of the Earth “who have left our consciousness, because it was not safe for them to be here.

That the serpent in the Garden of Eden is a Dragon is a matter of interpretation, however in this story there are definitive links to “evil” serpent energy and female power.

In ancient Greek, drákon means “serpent” or “enormous snake.” Similar scenes to the Garden of Eden appear in early Greek art, where the hundred-headed Dragon-serpent, Ladon presides over the golden apples, and according to Robert Bowie Johnson,

“..the serpent enlightened, rather than deluded, the first couple [Hera and Zeus] in paradise.” [ 3]

Heroes, female lineage and decapitation

Hero cultures are threatened by female lineage. In Greek mythology, the seven-headed, venomous, female, Hydra represents evil, in need of beheading, by a male hero. As the Lernaean Hydra, her heads regenerate. Echidna a half-snake, half-woman was Hydra’s mother. Depending upon the source, Echidna’s mother was the sea monster Ceto or Gaia, Earth Goddess, mother of all life. Ceto was mother of the snake-haired Medusa, who was careless enough to be raped, rendering her evil, after all this was a rape culture, so was also in need of decapitation, by a male hero.

The myth of St George, Britain’s Patron saint, slaying the Dragon to rescue a sacrificial princess, their trophy, embedded itself in the hero culture of the Christian Crusaders.

Decapitation was the preferred patriarchal way to truncate Dragon consciousness.

Dragons and female sexuality

So powerful is Dragon energy, Medusa’s decapitated head and deadly stare took on a power of its own. Patriarchal reversal meant Dragon consciousness was turned from the fertile and primordial to something evil, in need of truncating.

Perhaps the most powerful seven headed beast, cast into the chaotic Dragon of Darkness, into herself, is the Whore of Babylon, “the Mother of Harlots and Abominations of the Earth” (Revelation 17: 5 ( KJV)), which is both a city, and patriarchal concept, re-enforcing “female malevolence”. In Babylon the Goddess was worshipped; sacred sex was practiced; and female sexuality held divinity.

Even today, female sexuality is shamed, and city shaming is experiencing a resurrection.

Women inevitably “fall” in patriarchal religion. When Sophia fell into the Great Dragon [the astrological realm] she can only ascend by absorbing Christ’s teachings.

Women speaking too much

Perhaps the Pistis Sophia was not recognized by the Biblical canon because women held positions of power in debate. According to Tau Malachu, Mary Magdalene speaks twice as much as all the other [male] disciples in the Pistis Sophia [4]. According to Antonia Blumberg, women speak, “roughly 1.1 percent of the total words in the Bible.” [5]

Rising into Dragon consciousness

In mythology, and the journey into self, falling into darkness, battling demons, to rise again, is a common idea. In Egyptian mythology, the sun Ra battles serpents in the Underworld, rising again, each morning, through the body of Sky Goddess Nut. Even the 13th C Indian game, Moksha Patam [snakes and ladders], was designed to teach virtue and ascension.

The fall and rise of Sophia can be compared to the Sumerian myth of winged Goddess, Inanna descending into the “Great Below,” Kur, the Dragon of chaos, and abysmal dark waters, to confront the primordial underworld, symbolizing the reclamation of personal power.

Dragon’s Blood and women’s mysteries

From rebirthing consciousness in the watery, primordial darkness, to medicine, the Dragon is associated with the womb. In the 12th Century CE, a member of the Trotula of Salerno, and in a recipe book, from 1687 CE, attributed to Mary Goodson, Dragon’s Blood, a blood-red tree sap (sap rises), is recommended for treating menstrual issues [6].

So powerful is Dragon Wisdom, man has tried to truncate it, using a variety of tactics: mythology; religious texts, demonization; ownership; control; rape; separating consciousness from the divine within; outsourcing divinity to one god; decapitation. 

Dragon consciousness resides within us all. Practicing Kundalini can raise awareness of this dormant spiritual energy, coiling at the base of the spine. Merging with Universal consciousness, it reminds us we are connected to Ouroboric cycles of order and chaos.

References and citations

[1] Mead, G. S. R. – translation. Pistis Sophia, Book Four. Chapter 126. The Gnostic Society Library.  Chrēmaōrhttp://www.gnosis.org/library/pistis-sophia/ps131.htm

[2] Rioux, Jacinthe Roy. The Ouroborus: Wholeness, Paradox, Renewal. September 09, 2025. Kala Tales. Noir Kala.

https://noirkala.com/blogs/kala-tales/the-ouroboros-wholeness-paradox-renewal#:~:text=The%20Ouroboros%20thus%20becomes%20the,like%20the%20serpent%20consuming%20itself.

[3]  Bowie, Johnson, Robert.Garden of Eden Depicted in Ancient Greek Religious Art. 16 November 2021. Ancient Origins. https://www.ancient-origins.net/human-origins-religions/garden-hesperides-021562?fbclid=IwY2xjawNDqO9leHRuA2FlbQIxMABicmlkETB1Y3NqM0xrems5Q3p4OEFmAR5IxLpoNSiqDBjMiobwu1pJKNRqiQw7EQQVZCXymBdqeLDvTqjhJ-AnfDVo5A_aem_gsKe5TGRMajos1dYsJtsJg

[4] Malaci, Tau.  St. Mary Magdalene in the Pistis Sophia Dec 28, 2005. sophian.org. https://www.sophian.org/forum/viewtopic.php?t=501

[5 ] Blumberg, Antonia. This Is How Many Words Are Spoken By Women In The Bible. 04.20.2015. Huffington Post. https://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/entry/bible-women-words_n_6608282

[6] Reeves, Jessica. Dragon’s blood: fantastical and domesticised healing. Royal college of Physicians. 10 March 2022. https://history.rcp.ac.uk/blog/dragons-blood-fantastical-and-domesticised-healing


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