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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Forwarded from THE OLD WAYS (Velesa37)
The custom of decorating the wayside shrines with colorful ribbons is an ancient Slavic practice predating the introduction of Christianity. Various locations in Poland. I know that in Russia during spring time it was an old tradition for the whole family to come visit the deceased loved one at his/her gravesite. The family would bring food and drink and eat and drink together with the dead a family member, and introduced to the dead family member all of the newly born children and tell of all the news in the family. This was part of the Slavic ancestor veneration tradition.
GABRIEL’S HOUNDS

In the company of the Wild Hunt, accompanying ​​​​​​the gods and their entourage are a spectral pack of dogs known as Gabriel’s Hounds. Running or flying with reckless haste in the night sky of Northern Europe, these canines which are also known as Gabriel’s Rachets, are associated with stormy or bad weather.
SEVEN WHISTLERS

A Group of seven phantasmal birds who upon being spotted is feared by Sailors, fishermen and mining crews across Britain.
In 1862, locals in the Northumbrian village of Hartley proclaimed to have heard the seven whistlers the night before a pit disaster which claimed the lives of 204 miners.
Normally occurring at night, the Seven Whistlers ring out unearthly cries and are said to be an omen of death. According to some witnesses, there are actually six in the group and continually fly throughout the night in search of the seventh, and when they are reunited, the world will come to an end.
Aino-taru Triptych by Axél Waldemar Gallén.

From the Finnish epic the Kalevala.
Aino was Joukahainen's sister who was promised to the old and wise Väinämöinen in marriage after Joukahainen lost a magic singing match against Väinämöinen. Aino instead decides to drown herself.
In one of the tales of Frau Holle, a widow has a lazy daughter, Pechmarie, and a hardworking stepdaughter, Goldmarie. When a spool falls into the well, Goldmarie jumps in and comes to the land of Frau Holle, where she shakes the beds so that it snows on earth.

When she wants to go home again, she is richly blessed with a shower of gold for her diligent work. The envious stepsister wants to do the same and also jumps into the well. But because she is unkind & lazy, Frau Holle showers her with tar.
“We must not look at goblin men,
We must not buy their fruits:
Who knows upon what soil they fed
Their hungry thirsty roots?”

-The Goblin Market, Christina Rossetti
Allegory of Music – Paul Quinsac (1858-1929).
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In the folklore of the Anglo-Scottish Borders, the 'Brown Man of the Moors and Mountains' is a dwarf who serves as the guardian of wild animals. His dress is brown like winter bracken, has frizzled red hair and eyes that glow.

Illustration by Amanda Moffet
Atlas
Unknown artist
Nereids – Eduard Veith (1858-1925).
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Prince Arthur and the Fairy Queen . (c. 1788) By Henry Fuseli.
A Dance to the Music of Time (1634-1636)

Nicolas Poussin
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Well murals like this one can be found in most towns and villages in the Peak District and Derbyshire (England) between the months of May to September.
Wooden decoration in the staircase of the Reichstag in Berlin (1910s)
The Pearls of Aphrodite – Herbert James Draper, 1907.
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Hail the old gods. May they be with you in whatever stage of your journey you may be in.