BC Neanderthal Mindset
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Civilization comes at a cost.
The price is steep, all things good and mighty surrendered, virility, wildness, risk. It costs our Strength, our Courage, our Wisdom, our mastery of self and most of all our honor and nobility.

BCNMindset@proton.me
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One of the greatest things that the otherworld brings is reunion.
It is a beautiful place of everlasting summer where residents dance in true bliss, and have no wants.
Fathers rejoin with daughters, brothers together again at long last, and mothers who can embrace their children once again.
A true happiness is being reunited with family separated by death.
Our ancestors wait for us and will have much to talk about if we squander our time in this realm.
Make them proud to welcome you home.

The meadow of the ancestors looks like this world… only more.
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The Capel Garmon Firedog, found in Wales dates to 50BCE-50CE and is made from 85 seperate pieces of wrought iron, originally it would have been one of a pair standing on either side of a chief's hearth.

It appears carefully placed and it’s unbroken state suggests that it was either deliberately buried as an offering to the gods or hidden for future retrieval.
This fits into a long-established tradition of depositing metalwork in Welsh lakes, rivers and bogs during the Bronze and Iron Ages.
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Aurora and Cephalus
ca. 1810
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Ophelia
by Pascal Adolphe Jean Dagnan Bouveret,
1909
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Autumn
by Herbert James Draper
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Mercury Tying His Sandals
Jean-André Delorme, 1881.
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Fingal Sees the Ghosts of his Forefathers by Moonlight
Nicolai Abildgaard, 1782
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‘In that moment, like a tidal wave that covers the land and tears apart everything in its path, all knowledge was revealed to Finn.
He heard the muttering of the trees and the songs of the stars. He felt the beating wings of every bird in the sky. The great beasts of the seabed gazed into his eyes; sun-fire burned in his blood.
He knew every mind’s desire, every heart’s secret. He witnessed the birth and death of gods.’ 

- From The Salmon of Wisdom
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Photo of an open air school in 1957, Netherlands.
It was thought that classes could be taught in forests so that students would benefit physically and mentally from clean air and sunlight.

Personally, I would get rid of the wall and desks. And the floorboards. And the chalk.
Feel the forest beneath your feet, take in the beauty and sounds of a true master at work… Mother Nature.
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Honor and Blood

The measure of worth in a person and their folk is deemed Honor.
It comes from within and is shown by nobility in word and deed. To be honorable is to be just and virtuous; even more, it is to value these characteristics in oneself, one’s tribe and kin.
We measure how a person remains honorable to gauge their worth, and how our folk values a person. People who do not value honor and the tribe have no real worth because they themselves are dishonorable.
Our shared biospirit renders our people honorable as a core principle, but we must live according to its pull to bring that honor to fullness.
Foreign creeds and values (multiculturalism, miscegenation and the like) suppresses the natural nobility that is passed down to us from our ancestors. In that way, honor is being true to our people, our gods and ourselves.
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To be truly honorable, we must heed the voice of our ancestors and embrace the way of our people.
In ethnic faith.. our way of life, and our gods are bestowed and inherited as gifts from our forebears. This inheritance and endowment is not to be cast aside or squandered on other people or tribes, but used for the benefit of those within our shared biospirit.
Our way is not defined by hating other people or tribes, but neither is it a way of blind acceptance or universalism. Our way arose organically along with our people to sustain us spiritually, socially and mentally, for we share the blood of our ancestors and of the gods.
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