The Frithstead
1.29K subscribers
1.42K photos
67 videos
13 files
1.16K links
An independent publishing & educational organization preserving & advancing the native Germanic faith of Sedianism & the American folcsida, serving as a hearth of study & cultural continuity shaping the spiritual, mental, emotional, & physical self.
Download Telegram
Forwarded from The White Pill
Media is too big
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
This is how to make ghee, which is good for all you preppers, survival types and those who like to go camping.

1) it won't go rancid
2) can be stored at room temp
3) lactose intolerant people can often eat it
Our ladies are the glue that holds our folk together

https://t.me/TheFrithstead
Take the time to build real life. Devote yourself to relationship. Share love together. There is no greater feeling than that of growing old with someone.

https://t.me/TheFrithstead
Luck

Besides honor, man needs something which in the ancient language is called luck; our translation, however, which draws the sense of chance into the foreground, fails altogether to indicate the true force of the word. The associations of the modern term, stressing the sense of chance or fortune, all run counter to the spirit of ancient culture, and there is no other way of reaching a full understanding than by patient and unprejudiced reconstruction of Teutonic psychology. Whichever way we turn, we find the power of luck. It determines all progress. Where it fails, life sickens. It seems to be the strongest power, the vital principle indeed, of the world.

― Vilhelm Grønbech, The Culture of the Teutons: Volume 1

https://linktr.ee/TheFrithstead
Grow your own food

https://t.me/TheFrithstead
The Wolf Age

You’ll do well to remember the Helþing, where pronouncements of judgments are made over the dead.

Retain your morals and sense of honor; keep your integrity strong and Oaths sacred, for it is Wóden himself who consecrates our binded words.

Source:
Helþing - Based on Our Father’s Godsaga ch. 38, Investigations into Germanic Mythology vol. 1 ch. 69-71, Gylfaginning 3, 15, 17; Grímnismál 29.

Oaths - Orvar-Odds Saga ch.24.

https://t.me/TheFrithstead
Luck (is spiritual)

Once, when the Britons were attacked by the king of the Northumbrians, they had taken a whole little army of monks with them, and placed them in a safe spot, to pray during the fight. King Æthelfrith, with practical sense, first sent his men to cut down the monks, and then proceeded to deal with the warriors. “If they call on their god to help them against us”, he said, “then they are fighting against us, even though they use no weapon, since they oppose us with their prayers.” Granted that such prayers were actually addressed to God, Æthelfrith yet knew that even though the strong words made a slight detour, they would certainly end in the men for whom they were intended.

― Vilhelm Grønbech, The Culture of the Teutons: Volume 1

https://t.me/TheFrithstead
Our first, and most important, step forward - grow our families
Forwarded from THE OLD WAYS (Velesa37)
Forwarded from THE OLD WAYS (Velesa37)
These are images of various ethnic groups of indigenous white people. I’ve only included some, and not all, because there are just too many to list. The world needs to be reminded that just like there are Native Americans, and other native/indigenous peoples, there are also native Europeans. People of the world were brainwashed to view white people as being associated with Christian western civilization, but that’s a wrong way of identifying white ethnic groups. White ethnic groups are no less indigenous than any other indigenous people around the world. I think this awareness must be put out into the world
1
Primary versus Secondary sources
Luck (the power of, in spoken word)

A good word at parting is a gift of strength to the traveller. When the king said “Good luck go with you, my friend,” the man set out carrying a piece of the king's power in him. “Luck on your way to your journey's end, and then I will take my luck again,” is a saying still current among the Danish peasantry. A good word given on coming to a new place meant a real addition to one's luck. When Olaf the Peacock moved into his new homestead, old Hoskuld, his father, stood outside uttering words of good luck; he bade Olaf welcome with luck, and added significantly: “This my mind tells me surely, that his name shall live long.” Orðheill, word-luck, is the Icelandic term for a wish thus charged with power, either for good or evil, according as the speaker put his goodwill into his words and made them a blessing, or inspired them with his hate, so that they acted as a curse. There was man's life in words, just as well as in plans, in counsel. Thoughts and words are simply detached portions of the human soul and thus in full earnest to be regarded as living things

― Vilhelm Grønbech, The Culture of the Teutons: Volume 1

https://t.me/TheFrithstead