What happened to the ritual video you had up on here? The one for confronting subconscious trauma, forcing it to surface, and journeying through it to overcome it.
I was making a goblin traveling merchant and I wanted them to play a instrument. It was for them to past time during travels and attract customers. Yeah I found the instrument for them.
Kom Austri, Kom Vestri, Kom Sudri, Kom Nordri, and also Kom Sunna, Kom Mani, Kom Earda, Kom Laguz, and finally Kom Mannaz, Ingard Mannaz. This is how I’ve been calling it all in for the last year. The directions, the sky (sun and moon), the earth, and waters and finally the Mannaz - the humanity, coming into the self as the final direction.
Sigurboði Sigrdrífumál Lay of Sigridrifa Lengi ek svaf, - Long I slept Lengi ek sofnuð var, - Long I lay sleeping Löng eru lýða læ; - Long are people’s grief Óðinn því veldr, - Odin then said Er ek eigi máttak - that I couldn’t break Bregða blundstöfum. - heavy sleeping spells Heill dagr - Hail Day Heilir dags synir! - Hail Sons of Day Heil nótt ok nipt! - Hail Night and her Daughter Óreiðum Augum - Unwrathful eyes Lítið okkr þinig - look upon us Ok gefið sitjöndum sigr - and grant us victory Heilir æsir! - Hail Gods Heilar ásynjur! - Hail Goddesses Heil sjá in fjölnýta fold - Hail to the abundant fields Mál ok mannvit - Speech and wisdom Gefið okkr mærum tveim - give to us Ok læknishendr, meðan lifum - and healing hands with life Bjór færi ek þér, - Beer I bring thee Brynþings apaldr, - tree of battle Magni blandinn - Mingled of strength Ok megintíri; - and mighty fame; Fullr er hann ljóða - charms it hold Ok líknstafa, and healing signs, Góðra galdra - spells full good Ok gamanrúna. - and gladness-rune
I had read this too, most people still don't know about it and the boycott is still the same today. I don't know of such vehement rootlessness among young people anywhere except among the Indians. It's good that traditions are flourishing again. The connection to the Scythians is obvious :)
Referring to "Blót": Old English blod "blood, fluid which circulates in the arteries and veins," from Proto-Germanic *blodam "blood" (source also of Old Frisian blod, Old Saxon blôd, Old Norse bloð, Middle Dutch bloet, Dutch bloed, Old High German bluot, German Blut, Gothic bloþ), according to some sources from PIE *bhlo-to-, perhaps meaning "to swell, gush, spurt," or "that which bursts out" (compare Gothic bloþ "blood," bloma "flower"), from suffixed form of root *bhel- (3) "to thrive, bloom." But Boutkan finds no certain IE etymology and assumes a non-IE origin. There seems to have been an avoidance in Germanic, perhaps from taboo, of other PIE words for "blood," such as *esen- (source of poetic Greek ear, Old Latin aser, Sanskrit asrk, Hittite eshar); also *krew-, which seems to have had a sense of "blood outside the body, gore from a wound" (source of Latin cruour "blood from a wound," Greek kreas "meat"), but which came to mean simply "blood" in the Balto-Slavic group and some other languages