Forwarded from Shayne H 🇦🇺🇦🇺
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Kitten has a second life! ❤️
Never ever give up even when the odds are stacked against you and all hope is gone, LIFE WILL FIND A WAY !.
Never ever give up even when the odds are stacked against you and all hope is gone, LIFE WILL FIND A WAY !.
❤21😢2
I was walking my pup downtown this morning. It was nice and quiet, nobody out anywhere. I was looking at all the seasonal decorations and thinking that regular people have no idea how Pagan we still are. They don't realize that everything they are doing comes from our Folk traditions. Pagan decor everywhere. And not a picture of jesus anywhere. So then I was thinking about how christianity looks in other cultures. Do african and middle eastern christians have holly and yule trees everywhere also?? Of course not. Because those things are European and have nothing to do with christmas. Just one more thing that should prove that Europeans are not and can never really be christian
❤15
Forwarded from Make Europa Snow 🤍❄️🧬
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This was BEFORE the mass invasions of n0n-whites invading Sweden.
Sweden was Majority beautiful and White like a White Nation should be, let's get it back to Sweden being Swedish again 🇸🇪
Sweden was Majority beautiful and White like a White Nation should be, let's get it back to Sweden being Swedish again 🇸🇪
❤18
Forwarded from Aryan Paganism, Traditions and Art (APTA)
In theory it is entirely possible to construct a chronological history of a tribe. This task would be accomplished by knowing the sacred places within the tribe’s geography and all of the stories that are related to these places. By identifying the before and after of the stories and then arranging them on a time scale, one could project a chronology.
V.Deloria
V.Deloria
❤4
Forwarded from The Fyrgen • ᚫᛚᚢ:ᚢᛚᚫ
I've been asked for more updates regarding my homesteading, and this seems like a good topic to kick the year off with. I stand firmly by my belief that self-sufficiency (or, better still, autonomous communities) are the foremost workable solution we dissidents have at our disposal.
So what's been going on at The Fyrgen?
I'll be honest with you: not a great deal of homesteading. Whilst my professional work began quietly in 2023, in the Spring I took on a new, second business and work overwhelmed me for the rest of the year. I saw it as an opportunity to make my family more financially secure and conceded to work long hours in the short-term so that in the long-term we'd be able to invest in our property - in tools, renovations, and perhaps livestock.
In addition to this, I've become more musically creative again, rehearsing, performing and composing with two of the bands I'm in.
My experience this year has taught me something very important, which I think can serve as very useful advice to those of you aspiring to homestead in the future:
It's no use buying or building a homestead if you don't reserve time for working on it.
I've written on this channel in the past about what sort of job/income opportunities there are in rural areas, but in doing so I neglected to mention that if you're having to work full-time to earn the money required to pay the mortgage and bills on your home, then you'll be left with little time to commit to the demanding task of creating a self-sufficient homestead, which kind of defeats the point, right?
So with that in mind, my advice is this: Don't bite off more than you can chew/afford. You might be able to get a mortgage on a rural property with a bit of land, but that might mean you have to work to pay the mortgage rather than work your own land. A full-cost, ready-built house/farm is only really feasible for the following types of people:
• Those who are fortunate enough to have already paid off their mortgage.
• Those who have a spouse/partner/son/daughter who can take on many of the homesteading tasks while you pay the bills.
• Those whose paid job is non-demanding, allowing them plenty of free hours to work their own land.
• Workaholics with no other hobbies, who are happy working a 9-5 and then picking up tools for an evening's homesteading.
• Varg Vikernes, who earns a small fortune each month from royalties for music he made 30 years ago.
For the rest of you, I honestly think the best course of action is to 'do a Woodlander' - buy a patch of land and build your own humble (or not-so-humble in Woodlander's case) dwelling without taking on debt. If you're able to live extremely frugally then you might not need a job at all, or to only work part-time, leaving you plenty of time for homesteading. Others I know rent/borrow land from a friend at a very low rate and live in caravans whilst working part-time and homesteading.
For me the homesteading journey is going to be long and slow, but such is the weave of my wyrd.
So what's been going on at The Fyrgen?
I'll be honest with you: not a great deal of homesteading. Whilst my professional work began quietly in 2023, in the Spring I took on a new, second business and work overwhelmed me for the rest of the year. I saw it as an opportunity to make my family more financially secure and conceded to work long hours in the short-term so that in the long-term we'd be able to invest in our property - in tools, renovations, and perhaps livestock.
In addition to this, I've become more musically creative again, rehearsing, performing and composing with two of the bands I'm in.
My experience this year has taught me something very important, which I think can serve as very useful advice to those of you aspiring to homestead in the future:
It's no use buying or building a homestead if you don't reserve time for working on it.
I've written on this channel in the past about what sort of job/income opportunities there are in rural areas, but in doing so I neglected to mention that if you're having to work full-time to earn the money required to pay the mortgage and bills on your home, then you'll be left with little time to commit to the demanding task of creating a self-sufficient homestead, which kind of defeats the point, right?
So with that in mind, my advice is this: Don't bite off more than you can chew/afford. You might be able to get a mortgage on a rural property with a bit of land, but that might mean you have to work to pay the mortgage rather than work your own land. A full-cost, ready-built house/farm is only really feasible for the following types of people:
• Those who are fortunate enough to have already paid off their mortgage.
• Those who have a spouse/partner/son/daughter who can take on many of the homesteading tasks while you pay the bills.
• Those whose paid job is non-demanding, allowing them plenty of free hours to work their own land.
• Workaholics with no other hobbies, who are happy working a 9-5 and then picking up tools for an evening's homesteading.
• Varg Vikernes, who earns a small fortune each month from royalties for music he made 30 years ago.
For the rest of you, I honestly think the best course of action is to 'do a Woodlander' - buy a patch of land and build your own humble (or not-so-humble in Woodlander's case) dwelling without taking on debt. If you're able to live extremely frugally then you might not need a job at all, or to only work part-time, leaving you plenty of time for homesteading. Others I know rent/borrow land from a friend at a very low rate and live in caravans whilst working part-time and homesteading.
For me the homesteading journey is going to be long and slow, but such is the weave of my wyrd.
❤5👏2
Forwarded from Volksdeutſche Heidniſche Gemeinſchaft
It has been 132 years since J. R. R. Tolkien was born, and 51 years since he died. Intentionally or not (I think it was intentional, but I know lots of folks don't), this man — born in the Orange Free State of South Africa to English parents of Prussian-German stock — probably did more to save Germanic mythology and pre-Christian beliefs (despite his traditional Catholicism, or perhaps even because of it) and portray them in a positive, heroic light than any other single human being imaginable.
Others have attempted to ape his accomplishments, but none have come close to his world-wide impact.
Today, we honor this great man: a soldier, scholar, poet, and romantic. A man who loved his wife, his children, and his people deeply enough to devote his life to bringing new life to old myths and legends.
May he rest in well-deserved peace with his wife and children in the halls of his long-fathers of old...
Fer þú Tolkien hál!
𝕯𝖊𝖗 𝕬𝖉𝖒𝖎𝖓
🍺😇 🙏
Frodo lives!
Others have attempted to ape his accomplishments, but none have come close to his world-wide impact.
Today, we honor this great man: a soldier, scholar, poet, and romantic. A man who loved his wife, his children, and his people deeply enough to devote his life to bringing new life to old myths and legends.
May he rest in well-deserved peace with his wife and children in the halls of his long-fathers of old...
Fer þú Tolkien hál!
𝕯𝖊𝖗 𝕬𝖉𝖒𝖎𝖓
🍺😇 🙏
Frodo lives!
❤17
Forwarded from HapaPerspective 🇺🇸
Remember when people in the dissident right were acting like Elon Musk was secretly becoming redpilled and one of us, because “our meta-politics were just so good dude.” That’s what investing in this idea of a counter-elite-will-save-us leads to. Instead of become a more capable individual that can survive tough times, you sit on your ass crafting tweets all day, thinking you’re influencing the elites (elites that don’t give a damn about you) every time you post a meme.
No one is coming to save you.
No one is coming to save you.
👏12⚡2🤔1