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Vaelis

Vaelis was a major goddess in the Thauzunian Orthodoxy, associated with desire, attraction, and motivational drive. In pre-Fall belief, Vaelis did not represent indulgence or pleasure alone, but the force that compelled action. Desire under her domain was understood as neither virtuous nor corruptive by default; it was the engine that drove ambition, attachment, and pursuit.
  Orthodox doctrine framed desire as necessary but dangerous when unbounded. Vaelis governed attraction toward objects, status, connection, and experience. Without desire, stagnation occurred; without regulation, instability followed. Pre-Fall teachings emphasized channeling desire into productive systems rather than suppressing it. The Orthodoxy treated denial of desire as unrealistic and mismanagement of it as destabilizing.
  Vaelis was closely associated with ambition, competition, and personal drive within institutional frameworks. Her influence was evident in career advancement, territorial expansion, and social ascent. Desire that aligned with structure was considered useful; desire that bypassed process was considered corrosive. Vaelis reinforced the idea that motivation had to be shaped rather than eliminated.
  No knowledge of Vaelis survives into the post-Fall era. There are no remaining references to her name, symbols, or associated doctrine in modern Vey’Zari culture. The Thauzunian Orthodoxy itself is unknown, and with its disappearance, all structured understanding of Vaelis vanished. She is not remembered, worshiped, or adapted into later belief systems.
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