Folk Wisdom & Ways
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A channel sharing wisdom, lore and more.🌲Focusing on Northern European animistic polytheism and folk ways.
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Forwarded from Project Veritas
Courage is contagious - if you’re on the inside of a corrupt organization, contact us right now VeritasTips@protonmail.com or on Signal 914-653-3110

We will help you tell your story.
I have no direct ancestry to Wallace- he had no children. I am a direct descendant of Graham.
Forwarded from NewEarth Horizon (James Wallerstedt)
Herd Culling and The Jab

At last night's Arise Freedom Tour event in San Diego, Sacha Stone said, "If you think the COVID situation has been strange so far, fasten your seatbelts for the next few years," suggesting that intentional DNA modification and herd culling per The Jab will create some level of zombie apocalypse in our midst, while another major element of society remains on an ascending timeline.

From the days of JD Rockefeller until today, Big Oil's top honchos have been Cabal kingpins along with leadership of the global banking, investment, insurance, pharmaceutical and war sectors. Thus, Big Oil's leaders usually know the score re: whatever Problem->Reaction->Solution scripts are in play.

That as intro, here are notes about the current state of HR "succession planning" in the oil & gas sector, indicating that upper management is asking execs to "...go through and look at the staff that have received the vaccines, and they're planning to have to replace them all within the next three years" -

https://www.bitchute.com/video/gQTgB2wpheDU/
Nature is growing like crazy at the moment and i needed to walk around in nature and talk about liminal places in heathenism/paganism. Liminal places are places that connect different worlds, places where worlds touch eachother. In this video i show you some examples of liminal places and talk about them. Enjoy, folks🙂. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nhabi4vNWyU
Forwarded from Hilltop Homestead
Forwarded from Wäinölä 🇫🇮
A child knows what is sacred.

Photo from Mõisamaa hiis (sacred grove) in Estonia by Paavo Eensalu.
Forwarded from Wäinölä 🇫🇮
Offerings in the sacred grove of Tammealuse hiis.

Photo: Andres Ehrenpreis (2016)
Forwarded from Western Heritage
The ruins of the 13th century Castle Coeffin built on the former site of a Viking fortress, located in Scotland.
Forwarded from THE OLD WAYS (Velesa37)
Midsummer’s Dream

“During the period of the summer solstice, the days are so long that it was once believed the sun was standing still. Again the people were nearing the divine: the sun god and the great goddess, pregnant with the powers of heaven, were seen in the ripening grains and the fruits of the forest and field. The mighty thunder god, Thor, who brings the summer storms, was also there. Dancing elves and throngs of ethereal sylphs and fiery salamanders appeared as well. And as usual when the numinous nears, humans fall into ecstasy.

Elements of the archaic summer solstice customs have been retained throughout the agricultural regions, and if we reached into the deep layers of our own souls, we could paint a reasonable picture of what the celebrations were like. Like the winter solstice, the summer festival lasted a full 12 days. The people took in the fullness of the light and the power of the fire and enhanced their experience with the solstice fire, with fire walking, with burning brooms and torches, and by rolling wheels of fire down the mountains and hills. With the fire they celebrated the Apex of the year but at the same time they celebrated death, the sacrifice of the sun god, of fair Balder, as he is called in Scandinavia.

In Wales and elsewhere nine types of wood were gathered for the solstice fire. Either respected elders or a young couple lit the fire. Dried mugwort, the healing and ‘hot’ herb, which played a sacred role in midsummer festivals all across the northern hemisphere, was placed on the fire, creating a raging and high violet-colored flame. The celebrants jumped through this fire one after the other or holding hands; the goddess herself - Frau Holle, Artemis, Diana, or whichever name she was called by - was present in the mugwort. They jumped over the purifying flames wrapped only in a mugwort girth with a wreath of ground ivy in their hair and vervain in their hands, leaping from one season through to the next. The companion and paramour of the goddess, the thunder God with the mighty hammer, was represented in the ground ivy and the vervain.

The people of today, who largely shield themselves from nature, find it difficult to comprehend the ecstasy of Midsummer, of being unconditionally swept along with the natural occurrences. As recently as the middle ages, the most incredible rumors could be heard. It was if one had stepped into a painting by Hieronymus Boesh - the sun produced three springs, water turned to wine, elves disclosed hidden treasure, horses could talk, music sounded out of the mountain, and ghost processions, water nymphs, and fairies became visible. White maidens revealed themselves or else asked to be released from confinement, dwarfs celebrated marriage, serpents honored there King, the fern bloomed at midnight and carried seeds (which bestowed invisibility and wealth on the one who found them ), crabs flew through the air, and the Bilwis rode a fiery buck over the fields.

What kinds of visions are these? They are pictures of the inner realm of nature. Were they induced by the henbane beer that was drunk in copious amounts? Was the endless dancing, the hours upon hours without sleep responsible? Or maybe it was the hallucinogenic mushrooms, such as bell caps, haymaker’s mushroom, liberty caps, fly agaric, and others, that transported the people? After all, in the Middle Ages, Saint Vitus’s day (June 15 ) was considered the beginning of midsummer - ‘here the sun will go no higher!’ – and St. Vitus is the patron saint of mushrooms. The Slavs say that he is accompanied by good gnomes who help the mushrooms grow well.

…For many years it was believed that witches picked their herbs at the summer solstice, and that they did it naked in the middle of the night. The farm women also made a bouquet of Midsummer herbs, a summer solstice bundle, from one of the countless versions of nine herbs – a magic number.