Hermes Trismegistus, Pure Teacher of Teachers, Holder of the Key of Keys, He Who Unlocks All Doors
After you are done with this, you can meditate on Thoth's Sigil in the Temple of Zeus. Let yourself be immersed and receive energy from Thoth.
It's important to meditate on yourself after the Ritual calmly for a few minutes.

सत्: SAT, real, true, truthful in Sanskrit.
The Symbol that Encapsulates the Sigil: The Shen Ring, Egyptian Hieroglyphic language. The Shen also survived in Chinese tradition as a glyph for Spiritual Force, Divine Force, and God.
The Ancient Greek letters for Thoth's Name in arrangement.
Thoth (Egyptian: Ḏḥwtj, Coptic: Thout) is the Egyptian God of wisdom, writing, magic, and the moon. He is the inventor of hieroglyphs, the scribe of the Gods, and the judge who records the weighing of the heart in the Hall of Ma'at. The Greeks identified him with Hermes and named him Hermes Trismegistus ("Thrice-Great Hermes"), attributing to him the authorship of the Hermetic Corpus: foundational texts of Western esotericism covering alchemy, astrology, and theurgy. Clement of Alexandria (2nd c. CE) recorded that the Egyptians attributed 42 sacred books to Thoth, covering all knowledge necessary for civilization. The distinction between anamnesis (soul-remembrance, Platonic recollection of eternal truths) and mneme (ordinary memory) is central to Thoth's role as the God who returns the soul to what it already knows.
(Sources: Boylan, Thoth: The Hermes of Egypt, 1922; Fowden, The Egyptian Hermes, 1986; Clement of Alexandria, Stromata VI.4; Plato, Phaedrus 274c-275b)
Seshat (Sšꜣt, "She Who Scribes") is the consort of Thoth and the Goddess of writing, measurement, architecture, and the recording of sacred knowledge. She is depicted wearing a seven-pointed star above her head and holding the tools of measurement. She recorded the years of a Pharaoh's reign on the leaves of the sacred Ished tree. Together, Thoth and Seshat form the divine partnership of all wisdom: he speaks, she records; he reveals, she preserves.
(Sources: Wilkinson, The Complete Gods and Goddesses of Ancient Egypt, 2003)