The Great Goddess of Teotihuacan (or Teotihuacan Spider Woman) is a proposed goddess of the pre-Columbian Teotihuacan civilization (ca. 100 BCE - 700 CE), in what is now Mexico. She is perhaps the veneration of the Virgin of Guadalupe, a creation figure. The Great Goddess wears a frame headdress that includes the face of a "green bird", generally identified as an owl or "quetzal", and a rectangular nosepiece adorned with three circles below which hang three or five fangs. The outer fangs curl away from the center, while the middle fang points down.
Portion of the actual mural from the Tepantitla compound which appears under the Great Goddess portrait -- the mural is laced with iconography from other creation myths - Annunaki, Egypt, Native America Spider Woman, Ancient Alien Theory, etc.
Spider Woman spins her web, forever creating and connecting everything as if String Theory - (String Theory Brian Greene - go to 14:14) -- vibrating and pulsating but always connected.
The Web is a metaphor for the Internet. Spider Woman has spun her tales and created the illusion. She is busy ... Watch her ... Prepare as you do for meditation ... ask her to come to you and show you ...
Saturn in Scorpio
Saturn rules Capricorn (December 21, 2012 - Mayan Prophecy)