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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Just as the moon was fading
Amid her misty rings,
And every stocking was stuffed
With childhood’s precious things,

Old Kriss Kringle looked around,
And saw on the elm-tree bough,
High hung, an oriole’s nest,
Lonely and empty now.

“Quite a stocking,” he laughed,
“Hung up there on a tree!
I didn’t suppose the birds
Expected a present from me!”

Then old Kriss Kringle, who loves
A joke as well as the best,
Dropped a handful of snowflakes
Into the oriole’s empty nest.

-Kriss Kringle
By Thomas Bailey Aldrich
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All hail the King of the North!!
He returns to us for tribute of sweets and milk to sustain him on his odyssey across the land.
Make way for him!
Bring forth the children!
Make merry with jubilee!
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I have returned!
A brief hiatus, celebrating the Yule season with family and friends, is much needed to calm the mind, recenter focus, and bolster resolve.
I hope that your winter season has been as restful and meaningful as mine.
I also have hope that this year will be prosperous and full of growth for the Hyperborean tribes.
Good things to come!
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Channel photo updated
The channel photo is hand made art by the very talented artist Arnau De Castro of Londor Artworks.
You can find his works at https://instagram.com/londor_artworks?igshid=YmMyMTA2M2Y=.
Give the man’s site a visit. You won’t be disappointed 👍🏻

This art was gifted to me by the Lore Keeper at https://t.me/hyperboreanradio and I was awestruck and speechless when shown the gift.
It has symbolic meaning to my life events, as well as spiritual, heritage and physical meaning.

Quite possibly one of the greatest gifts I have ever received, other than becoming a father.
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Here is the full version.
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8th century Pictish brooch from from the St Ninian's Isle Treasure, Scotland.
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Baldr the Beautiful rising
By Ludwig Fahrenkrog
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A Midsummer Night’s Dream
Gustave Doré, 1870
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“The Romans asked them what right they had to demand, under threat of war, territory from those who were its owners, and what business the Gauls had in Etruria.
The haughty answer was returned that they carried their right in their weapons, and that everything belonged to the brave.”

- Livy on the Celts, Titus Livius, The history of Rome
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Spellbound Lore

We are a people who live by stories.
Since the dawn of time, we have been telling stories and passing them on to our children so that the tales never die. Stories of gods, heroes, adventure, romance, magic and others to explain our place in the world.
There is true magic in lore, not by virtue of words and letters, but by the sheer act of telling the story and bringing it to life.

I would encourage everyone to learn lore that stems from your ethnic background, and specific tribe. Breathe life into the tales, and give them to your tribesmen, sons and daughters.

Magic exists and an obvious way to see it firsthand is by telling stories to others. You can see it in their eyes and expressions.

Storytelling is one of the most sacred acts of our people, and one of the greatest gifts we can bestow.
Share our lore Hyperborean, our story is too important not to tell.
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Daedalus and Icarus
by Lord Frederick Leighton.
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The National Wallace Monument towers high above the city on the summit of The Abbey Craig, Scotland.
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Returning from the City
Alexei Korzukhin, 1870
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Here is the back of an ancient Greek mirror (2nd-1st Century BC) allegedly depicting Aphrodite preparing to hit Eros with a sandal as punishment for breaking a vase.
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Etruscan Pendant (700-650 BC), with a large equilateral cross of concentric circles flanked by four small right-facing tetra-gammadions among its symbols from Bolsena, Italy.
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Neolitic Lovers of Valdaro, Mantova, Italy.

Two skeletons (6000 years old) called Lovers because of their seeming embrace, found in February 2007 during the excavation of a Roman Villa in San Giorgio di Mantova (Lombardia, Italy).
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"Maiden with a laurel wreath"
by Henry Ryland
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Brian, one of the Sons of Tuireann in Celtic lore, seizing the pigskin of the Greek king Tuis.
Illustration from Celtic Myth, Legend, Poetry & Romance, by Charles Squire
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