Apollo, the most handsome Greek God, spat in her mouth: Who is Kassandra?

She announced the disaster that came on a horse, but no one listened to her.

Kassandra is the rumored daughter of the Trojan King Priam and Hekabe. Kassandra is also a hero of Greek mythology. She lived through the war and lost her brother Hector and boyfriends in the war. She tried to warn her surroundings because of the danger that the Trojan horse would bring, but she did not listen.

Cassandra or Kassandra in Greek mythology was a beautiful Trojan priestess dedicated to the god Apollo and fated by him to utter true prophecies but never to be believed. In modern usage her name is employed as a rhetorical device to indicate a person whose accurate prophecies, generally of impending disaster, are not believed.

Kassandra's greatest desire was to know the future and become a nun. As soon as she saw the god Apollo (aka Phoibos), he desired this beautiful girl and made an offer to her; If Kassandra was with him, he would give her the ability to see the future.

Kassandra accepted this offer. Apollo spat in Kasandra's mouth, and Kasandra had the ability to see the future. But she was not with Apollon. Her desire to be a virgin nun outweighed her promise to Apollo. According to a rumor, she had no intention of being with Apollo from the very beginning, she just tricked Apollo to get the ability to see the future.

Apollo was very angry at this and cursed Cassandra. According to the curse; Kassandra would see the future, but she would not make anyone believe it. And the real heavy blow; she was never going to be a nun, she. She, on the contrary, would be humiliated as a woman.

It really did, she. Although she saw the Trojan War and the result of the war, she could not convince anyone that what she saw would happen. She had to watch the war begin and end with desperation.

In psychology, the state of not being able to convince others of the future despite warning others and telling the truth is called the Kassandra Complex.