Celebrating the Spring Equinox as a Norse Pagan

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  • Опубликовано: 19 дек 2024

Комментарии • 15

  • @ransomdavid6752
    @ransomdavid6752 3 года назад +6

    Thabks for sharing this, I felt Freyr's presence at the end, very powerful!

  • @kattnoble4244
    @kattnoble4244 3 года назад +2

    Found another beautiful heathen to follow. Thank you for your video!

  • @Steve_pagan
    @Steve_pagan 2 года назад +1

    Such a lovely video, I particularly like the cleansing water ritual by the stream it looked so calming and connected.

  • @fannymaresu3111
    @fannymaresu3111 3 года назад +3

    That's beautiful. And your videos are better and better every time !😍🥰🤩

  • @Starladymarilyn
    @Starladymarilyn 3 года назад +2

    Thank you for the video

  • @DaliwolfBacon
    @DaliwolfBacon 3 года назад +3

    Thank you for making this video. I am in Wisconsin, and I am new to the Norse Path. This was very informative and helpful!

  • @jodyhakala-ristow7014
    @jodyhakala-ristow7014 2 года назад

    Thanks you for sharing your great nature space and ideas.

  • @ryanorionwotanson4568
    @ryanorionwotanson4568 Год назад

    I just watched a stj video on how Freya may have been Ostara, connecting Freyr to Easter Ostara celebration makes sense, maybe Ingvi Freyr's sister was called Ostara Freya?

  • @peramberntsson9101
    @peramberntsson9101 2 года назад

    😍

  • @jodyhakala-ristow7014
    @jodyhakala-ristow7014 2 года назад

    Hail Freyr: sunshine, ☔️ rains,
    Freyr (Old Norse: 'Lord'), sometimes anglicized as Frey, is a widely attested god in Norse mythology, associated with sacral kingship, fertility, peace, prosperity, and virility, with sunshine and fair weather, and with good harvest.
    Another
    FREYR
    “Freyr” by Johannes Gehrts (1901)
    Freyr (pronounced “FREY-ur;” Old Norse Freyr, “Lord;” sometimes anglicized as “Frey”) is a god who belongs to the Vanir tribe of deities. He’s also an honorary member of the other tribe of Norse gods, the Aesir, having arrived in their fortress, Asgard, as a hostage at the closing of the Aesir-Vanir War.
    Freyr was one of the most widely and passionately venerated divinities amongst the heathen Norse and other Germanic peoples. One Old Norse poem calls him “the foremost of the gods” and “hated by none.”[1] The reasons for this aren’t hard to understand; their well-being and prosperity depended on his benevolence, which particularly manifested itself in sexual and ecological fertility, bountiful harvests, wealth, and peace. His role in providing health and abundance was often symbolized by his fylgja, the boar Gullinborsti (“Golden-Bristled”),[2] and by his enormous, erect phallus.[3]