Cuchavira (koo-cha-VEE-rah)
Mesoamerican Deity
Cuchavira (a.k.a. Centeotl (Mexica))
Cuchavira is the goddess of rainbows and renewal, appearing after storms to mark transition and healing. Among the Muisca, she is a gentle spirit who bridges the chaos of nature with the restoration of order. She comforts, restores, and blesses, especially after floods or illness. Farmers and midwives revered her as the quiet breath between pain and growth.
She teaches that after destruction comes clarity, that beauty and grief can coexist. Her signs are subtle—an unexpected rainbow, a moment of stillness, a child born during rain. She asks not for worship, but recognition, and her power lies in the way she mends what others break.
Physical Description
General Physical Condition
She manifests as a young woman with luminous skin that shimmers with spectral hues. Her garments flow like mist, and water beads along her arms. Her gaze is soft, with irises that shift color like sky after a storm.
Mental characteristics
Sexuality
Cuchavira is drawn to those who seek healing, not escape. Her intimacy is slow and nurturing. She loves like rainfall—cleansing, soft, and patient, touching even the wounded without judgment.
Lineage

Species
Ethnicity
Other Ethnicities/Cultures
Realm
Date of Birth
Evos Todhchaí
Gheydh
Gheydh
Children
Sex
Female
Sexuality
Celestiaphilic