When I’m good, I’m very good, but when I’m bad, I’m better.
— Mae West

Why Lysistrata?

Lysistrata (in ancient Greek Λυσιστράτη / Lusistrátê, literally means "the one that loosens the army", of λύω / lúô, "to untie" and στρατός / stratos, "the army"). It is an ancient Greek comedy by Aristophanes, originally performed in classical Athens in 411 BC in which women are instrumental in ending the war between Greek city states.

Several situations show this desire to reverse the roles in a society that proclaims that "war is the business of men and the house, that of women. In Lysistrata, Aristophanes imagines for women an effective slogan: "To stop the war, refuse your husbands."

Women understand that the feminine and the masculine are only ONE unit that must move towards the peace of soul, mind and body. We are only ONE; we are all in one body, in one soul, in one mind. Lysistrata is a concept to remind us who we really are.

Far from all the clichés. Far from all the fears, all our lacks, all our internal sufferings which are the consequences, we are only ONE, even if we are different in appearance. We are Unity in reuniting us. We are the totality of everything. We are life; the universe reunites us. I am masculine and feminine, alpha and omega, in one body, in one mind, in one soul, in a reunited ONE. In all conscience. Because it has always been so. We had it right, but unfortunately forgot, because our body and our ego has counted more than our soul.

Lysistrata was born from this awareness. We are only ONE. Masculine and Feminine, Alpha and Omega in themselves, in full consciousness, reunited.

It is only in the abandonment of the fears, the fears of childhood, the immaturity, the unconsciousness of who we truly are that we can achieve. To be truly what we are. Luminous beings, whole, without fear, without all those negative emotions that cut us off from our true being.

Finally, after the abandonment, this moment or this courage, of the deepest of oneself, this cry, this anger, this love of oneself, of others, of the world, of life, emerges from the darkness, we finally breathe. This first breath of birth. Or rather, the second breath. The one where we are fully aware. True birth, where we truly decide to be who we are, who we really are. Life, the real life is there. It is that of Lysistrata.

A ring was the best symbol to represent, what me, what we, what you or what they have to remember and what they must feel in themselves to stand up in full awareness and to finally decide what they really are - free beings, the reunited masculine and feminine in ONE, the united alpha and omega in ONE, the essence of the accomplished being, the essence of the being in spiritual ascension.