Sila (SEE-lah)
Amerindian Deity
Sila
Sila is the breath of the world—the invisible force behind the wind, the weather, and the wisdom of silence. To the Inuit, Sila is not a being to be summoned, but a presence to be acknowledged: the consciousness in the cold, the rhythm of breath shared by humans, animals, and land alike. Existing beyond gender or form, Sila permeates all things, guiding through intuition and balance rather than speech or display. It is both spirit and space, the stillness behind the storm and the whisper in a hunter’s ear.
In the vast and unforgiving Arctic, Sila is the measure of survival and harmony. They reward humility, punish arrogance, and teach through natural consequence. Sila does not punish with wrath but withdraws, leaving absence where guidance once was. They are the sacred air that teaches through presence and pause.
Physical Description
General Physical Condition
Rarely assuming a humanoid form, Sila may at times manifest as a translucent figure of shifting air and ice, barely visible against the snow-covered horizon. When perceived in a more defined shape, Sila appears as a tall, serene person with smooth features that shift between masculine and feminine, clothed in windswept robes of mist and white fur. Their eyes are pale and unblinking, like the reflection of sky on frozen sea. Their body seems both solid and ephemeral, as if woven from breath and frost.
Mental characteristics
Sexuality
Sila's sexuality is diffuse and ambient, like weather—present, influential, yet without directed desire. They are drawn to stillness, to patience, to those who listen more than speak. Love with Sila is an attunement, a quiet aligning of breath and will. Their intimacy is rare and wordless, felt in the hush between blizzards or the shared warmth of survival. With them, connection is elemental—rooted in balance, not possession.
Lineage
Family Tree
Species
Ethnicity
Realm
Date of Birth
Evos Todhchaí
Gheydh
Gheydh
Children
Sex
Fluid
Sexuality
Celestiaphilic
Ruled Locations