When Boundaries Are Crossed – Hospitality, Power, and Consequence

Boundaries are found throughout mythological sources. I have found some that are blatant and others that sit softly in the background, so quietly that I miss them if I’m only looking for the obvious moments. After working with these stories for as long as I have, I don’t really experience those boundaries as rigid rules anymore. They feel more like agreements people understood without needing them spelled out, the kind you only really notice when someone breaks them and the whole atmosphere shifts.

Hospitality is where I tend to feel this most clearly. I always come back to it because it’s so recognizable today. A host offers space, food, and protection for the duration of the visit. A guest accepts that space with a kind of awareness that good behavior is expected in return, even if it isn’t spoken aloud. There’s a balance there, and I don’t think it’s accidental that so many of the stories lean on it. Norse mythology is filled with instances of balancing powers, concepts, and entities. Take for example, Hrungnir (HROONG-neer) in Ásgarðr (AHS-garthr). In reading the story, I don’t just see a confrontation. I see that moment where Hrungnir crosses from being a guest into a jerk and how it changes the energy in the hall. I’ve felt that in real life, sitting at my own table, when the tone of a room changes and something has tipped the scales. By the time Þor steps in to correct the situation, it is too late to negotiate or deescalate. It the natural end of a boundary that’s already been pushed too far.

What’s harder, and more honest, is that it isn’t just the Jötnar who do this. The gods cross those same lines, and they do it knowingly. Oðinn (OH-din), especially, moves through boundaries that do not suite his agenda like ripping paper. He enters spaces in disguise, lies about who he is and what he wants, takes what isn’t freely given, and then turns around and speaks about the responsibilities of guest and host in Hávamál. I’ve spent a lot of time with that contradiction. It reads to me as hypocrisy as well as someone who understands the system well enough to bend it when he wants to. That doesn’t make it clean or honorable, but it is effective. The aftermath of his actions is a building reputation that he is not someone to be trusted, or believed.

Loki (LOH-kee) feels different, but not separate. In Lokasenna, he forces his way back into a space he’s been excluded from and then strips it apart from the inside. That’s not random chaos anymore. It’s what happens when something has been building for a while and finally breaks the surface. The boundary of acknowledged kinship didn’t fail in that moment. It had already been weakened by a multitude of actions by the other gods, and after reaching his breaking point – Loki just made it visible.

Even Þor, who I tend to think of as a mix of hero and chaotic good, crosses into spaces where he isn’t invited. He travels outward from Ásgarðr but we don’t know why. When he goes into Jötunheimr (YO-tun-hame), he carries all of that force with him. He is looking for a fight at every turn turning him more into a bully rather than the hero. I understand why he does it in a very abstract sense, but I also don’t think the stories ignore what that kind of crossing does. Entering someone else’s space like that always shifts the balance, whether the intention is protection or not. If he had stayed home and focused on defending rather than seeking trouble – would we have had the amount of conflict he stirred up? Would the events of Ragnarök come to pass at all?

And then there’s Týr (TEER), this one always sits a little heavier with me. When Loki’s children by Angrboða are brought to Asgard, Fenrir is the only one that stays among the gods. As he grew, Týr took on his care and training – thus entering a relationship of foster father to foster son. You may disagree if you like, and we don’t have the in-depth explanation of their connection, but it is telling that Týr is the only one that Fenrir trusts enough to play the final round of his binding. Fosterage isn’t just proximity. It’s trust and relationship. When Týr places his hand in Fenrir’s mouth, I feel the weight of that agreement being broken in real time. The words, however short, strike images in my head of how heart breaking this must have been for both of them. Týr violated trust and broke the bonds of honor, a trait he is renowned for. Fenrir learns that the words of the gods are hollow if you do not fit their mold. He must harm the man who raised him to complete the circle. I picture them locked in a gaze between them, sorrow in both of their eyes as they recognized what must happen. The loss of Týr’s hand is immediate, but it’s not the only consequence. Something deeper fractures there, and it doesn’t resolve neatly. It carries forward to the end.

When I pull back from the stories and look at the world they came from, those boundaries start to feel even more grounded. Norse society had very real layers of power. There were differences in status, in protection, in who had a voice and who didn’t. Law codes like Grágás weren’t abstract ideals. They laid out expectations around hospitality, compensation, and consequence in a way that people actually lived by. If a host failed, that mattered and should a guest cause harm, that mattered too. If those lines were crossed in a serious way, the consequences could be severe. Fines, loss of standing, loss of land and belongings, even outlawry, which meant being cut off from the protection of the community entirely.

I sit with that sometimes and think about how different that looks on the surface compared to now, and how similar it actually feels underneath. We still have layers of power, they just show up differently. I see it in institutions, in social spaces, in who gets the benefit of the doubt and who doesn’t. I see it in whose boundaries are respected without question and whose are negotiated or dismissed. And when those lines are crossed, the consequences still ripple. Maybe not in the same formal way, but they show up in trust, access, and the way relationships shift.

This is also where I’ve had to get very honest about how differently people understand boundaries to begin with. I don’t think we all read those unspoken agreements the same way. Neurotypical expectations around tone and space can feel invisible if you’re not wired to pick up on them, and I’ve seen how quickly that can create tension both in my personal life and professional. I’ve had moments where I thought something was clear, and it absolutely wasn’t to the other person. Or the other way around. That doesn’t erase the boundary, but it has started to alter how I approach it. I’m learning that if I want something respected, I have to be willing to name it, not just assume it’s understood. That isn’t an easy lesson when you are brought up never to veer from the established rules.

When I look at what’s happening more broadly right now, it’s hard not to see the same patterns playing out on a much larger scale – especially in the USA. Boundaries that were meant to hold structure, legal, social, even ethical, are being tested and, in some cases, openly pushed aside with no regard to their value. I see religion being used to justify that in ways that feel familiar in the worst way. Not because belief itself is the problem, but because it’s being used to reinforce power to a select few and to excuse crossings that would otherwise be questioned. History has done this before. That part isn’t new. But living through it, watching it unfold in real time, that’s a different experience. One I had hoped to never see.

What I keep coming back to, both in the stories and in my own life, is that crossing a boundary is never just a single moment. It doesn’t end where it happens, even when it looks like it does. There’s always something that carries forward from it, something that settles into the structure and changes it, even slightly, which alters the narrative in monumental ways. When I think about how all of this fits into practice, this is where it lands for me. Not in trying to avoid every misstep or hold every line perfectly, because that isn’t realistic, but in paying attention to what happens when those lines are crossed. In deciding how I’m going to respond to that shift. Sometimes that means reinforcing a boundary more clearly than I did before. It could mean stepping back from a space that no longer feels steady even if I miss the people who inhabited that space. Or just acknowledging that something has changed and letting that aid me in figuring out what I need to do next.

The stories don’t give me clean resolutions when the agreements are broken, they give me aftermath. They give me visible consequence that lingers. And honestly, that’s part of why I trust them. Because that feels a lot closer to how things actually should work today if only those abusing those agreements could recognize the pattern and correct their course before it’s too late.

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New Podcast Episode Available

Good morning,

My new podcast episode: Categories of the Cosmos in Norse Mythology (Norse Genealogy) Part 5 is now available for your listening pleasure.

This longer episode brings to a close the Jötnar genealogy mentioned in the source material. I move pretty quickly through figures who appear briefly, sometimes only once, yet still shape the mythology through impact, challenge, or presence rather than inheritance. I may have mispronounced some of the names and for that I apologize, English is barely my first language. If I forgot any of the other Jötnar, and they didn’t appear in other episodes, please drop me a comment and I will see where I can squeeze them in later.

I still haven’t covered the Aesir line, but that will be an episode for a later date (probably June-ish). I’m hoping to start getting back into concepts and UPG on the regular now that I have set the stage for some of the main characters.

Links for the longer podcasts and rambling shorts are below. Go take a look and subscribe for new posts.

Patreon page: https://www.patreon.com/cw/RamblingsfromVanaheim
YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCAeOKGtMPDBxVpDEVTuVqow
TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@agvanidottir

Between the Named and the Forgotten – Edge Beings in Norse Cosmology

As you begin to spend enough time with the old material, you start to get comfortable with it in an unusual sort of way. It’s slippery, like when you think you’ve finally figured out how a system works, only to realize the system has been side-eyeing you the entire time. Welcome to Norse Mythology.

It starts with the source material. You move through the tales in the Poetic Edda, then into the Prose Edda, and somewhere along the line your eyes start to cross. We want things to follow a pre-established timeline that is easily followed. Start at point A and by the time you get to point Z everything fits neatly into order, but that’s not how it really works. Myths compress timelines, and sometimes the roles and names of characters shift in a way that leaving you feeling like you’re standing on quicksand. You try to do your due diligence and learn early languages, declensions, cases, and figure out whether the person mentioned is a distinct figure or just another title-like descriptor -it’s frustrating, especially when people don’t agree. Then you hit the moments where someone is mentioned, a story is hinted at, a place is quietly assumed in the background and you can’t for the life of you figure out where the hell it came from or why it was worth mentioning at all. This is where we will find names that exist almost on the edge of the cosmos. Liminal beings, outdwellers, edge beings whose presence was worth noting but not explaining.

You’ll catch it if you’re paying attention. A name slips in without ceremony, attached to a moment that feels like it should carry more weight than it’s given. There’s no pause to introduce them, no helpful aside to ground you, no tidy explanation waiting a few lines later to make it all make sense. The text simply keeps moving, completely unbothered, while you’re left sitting there thinking, “Wait… who was that, and why did that feel important?” The authors had to have included them for a reason, right? You’re left with the feeling that something important has been lost with no way to give it its assigned place. The text almost suggests there’s a mystery to solve but then shifts gears midstream and becomes quieter. Rather than an impetus to follow the clues it ends up more like brushing up against something just outside your line of sight—close enough to notice, but not something you’re invited to fully turn and face.

Take Fjölsviðr in Fjölsvinnsmál. He’s not just standing around looking decorative—he’s guarding a threshold, answering questions, holding knowledge like it actually matters, which, let’s be honest, usually means we should pay attention. The sources have several instances where knowledge-seeking drives a narrative and fills out the cosmology itself. The entire exchange has weight, and you can feel that you’re brushing up against something important. When the poem ends Fjölsviðr apparently clocks out for the rest of eternity. No follow-up or extended lore. No “Fjölsviðr: The Sequel.” Just that one moment, forwarding a narrative, and then he’s gone, like being part of your neatly organized notes was beneath him.

How about Hrimgrímnir in Skírnismál? His name shows up in a threat used against a woman who refused the suit of a fertility god. We get the name, the implication, and a polite cosmic shrug. Do we get a story explaining why? Of course not. But based on the reaction of the woman threatened we get a sense that whatever is being invoked is not something you want to casually run into on a bad day.

Then there’s Sökkmímir, who shows up near Mímir’s well. A place already recognized as a big deal considering that well is tied to wisdom, sacrifice, and Óðinn doing things that probably should have come with a warning label. He matters enough to mention in the first place but then…nothing. Instead, Sökkmímir just exists there. Close enough to matter in a lost context and elusive enough that you’re not invited any further in.

Moving further through the lore, even Vafþrúðnir—who really should come with a full series and a companion guide—ends up doing something similar. He steps into the narrative with his own small book of the Poetic Edda, trades knowledge with Óðinn on a level that makes it very clear he is not just some passing figure, and then disappears neatly once his role is fulfilled. The beginning of the interaction starts with Frigga warning Óðinn that Vafþrúðnir is not someone to be played with. It is set up from the beginning that he is someone to be feared. But after the exchange there is no lingering, no extended arc, no continuation of the tale. Just a perfectly executed moment, and then off he goes.

These figures tend to show up right where things get a little strange—where a story leans into uncertainty, where a boundary is being approached, where the tone shifts just enough to make you sit up a little straighter and pay attention. And while it looks random at first glance, it isn’t.

Fjölsviðr isn’t just a character; he stands at a threshold, deciding what crosses and what doesn’t. Hrímgrímnir isn’t just a name; he defines consequence, something waiting beyond a line you probably shouldn’t step over lightly. Sökkmímir lingers near a place of deep knowledge, close enough to suggest something more but distant enough to keep it out of reach, while Vafþrúðnir speaks from somewhere older and wider, just outside the comfortable boundaries of the story.

They don’t anchor the world the way the more familiar figures do. They don’t build out into long narratives or come back around for character development. They show up where the edges are and hold them.

I’ll admit, my first instinct was to try and wrangle all of this into something tidy. Track the names, build connections, smooth it out into a system that made sense from start to finish. Honestly? A lot of heathens try this at some point in their journey. There’s a certain satisfaction in that kind of work, especially if you’re used to dealing with material that rewards organization and persistence. The problem is, the more you try to force these figures into that structure, the more they resist it. The ends don’t meet, and the puzzle pieces refuse to form a complete picture. They don’t expand the way you expect them to. They don’t behave like missing pieces waiting to be slotted into place. If anything, they start to feel flatter the harder you push them toward the center. The lines blur in a way that makes your eyes cross and has you reaching for ibuprofen.

Then, you let go of the boundaries. The blurred lines begin to feel like wide areas of possibilities rather than frustrating contradictions. Instead of feeling like unfinished notes, they settle into intentional placements—markers that tell you where the story is brushing up against something larger than it has time to explore, or maybe permission to. And yes, there is the very real possibility that there were more tales and detail that Snorri chose to deliberately ignore. The gods know we lost a LOT of texts in the 17th century to a sunken ship in the Atlantic Ocean, then followed by the fires of Copenhagen. The trunks on that ship could have contained more law books or land grants – or may have held tales long forgotten and now lost forever. Thus creating its own liminal plane of what might have been.

Not everything needs to be named, defined, categorized, and filed away to be meaningful. Some presences are felt in passing, in the slight shift of attention, in the sense that you’ve stepped just outside of what you can comfortably explain. Nothing dramatic, nothing that demands a grand declaration. This is where the beauty of “what-ifs” and UPG begin to gain value. They keep the material alive rather than stagnant. Those brief mentions stop looking like gaps to fix and start behaving more like edges you’re allowed to approach but not cross completely. You can circle them, sit with them, let them exist without immediately turning them into something else. There’s absolutely a place for structure. Especially in modern pagan spaces where we’re all trying to piece together something workable from fragments that may not have been meant to survive this long in the first place. But still, not everything in these sources feels like it’s asking to be rebuilt. Some of it feels like it was always meant to remain just slightly out of reach—not as a flaw, but as part of how the world was understood. Not everything was centered. Not everything was explained. Some things existed at the edges because that’s exactly where they belonged. So maybe these figures aren’t forgotten. They are there to inspire wonder, a little consternation, and maybe a healthy dose of caution. There is no need to force your way through to see them. Allow your gaze to drift out of focus and be present with the space. Just… don’t be surprised if something is looking back.

“The Weight of Silence – What the Sources Don’t Tell Us About the Turning Year”

Have you ever noticed after spending enough time with the old material that there’s a particular kind of quiet you run into contemplating the words and stories. There are names to learn, stories to follow, connections to trace, and it’s easy to assume that if you just keep reading long enough, the structure will eventually reveal itself. A pattern previously undiscovered will click into place, setting your spidey-senses tingling, and a long lost answer will manifest.

Then, it’s gone in a puff of smoke leaving you frustrated and wondering whether the whole thing was imagined.

When you move between sources like the Poetic Edda and the Prose Edda, what starts to stand out is not just what is there, but what isn’t. Stories unfold, lineages twist into one another in ways that feel like they should resolve if you just follow them one step further, and the world behind them keeps moving like something just slightly out of sync with the page. Every now and then, something clicks. A name echoes another. A relationship almost lines up. A detail from one section nudges something you read earlier and your brain lights up like, “Oh. Oh I see what you did there.”

And then… no. No, you don’t.

It slips. Not in a dramatic, table-flipping way, just enough that when you go back to trace it again, the shape isn’t quite the same. What felt like a solid thread turns into a “well… maybe?” and suddenly you’re staring at the page like it personally betrayed you. Which, honestly, feels a little rude.

Sitting with that long enough starts to change the question whether you want it to or not.

It stops being “what am I missing?” and starts leaning toward something a bit more uncomfortable. What if nothing is missing. What if this isn’t broken. What if we’re the ones trying to force something living into a format it was never meant to stay in?

The Poetic Edda and the Prose Edda give us what was written down, which is incredibly valuable, but also… let’s be honest for a second. What we have is what made it to parchment after generations of people telling, retelling, adjusting, forgetting, remembering differently, and probably arguing about it over food at some point. By the time it was written, it had already lived a thousand slightly different lives. So treating it like a perfectly preserved, single-version system starts to feel a little like trying to pin a shadow to the ground and getting annoyed when it moves.

There’s this instinct that creeps in, especially once you’ve been at this for a while, to tighten your grip on the material. To protect it. To make sure you’re “getting it right.” To not accidentally step outside the lines of what’s been recorded. Which makes sense. Nobody wants to be that person just making things up and calling it tradition. At the same time… there’s a quiet little voice that shows up eventually and goes, “Okay, but what if the lines were never that clean to begin with?” Not in a rebellious, throw-the-book-out kind of way. More like… loosening your hold just enough to let the thing breathe a little. The stories don’t move anymore on the page. They’re fixed there. They’re not going to adjust themselves based on new experiences or new perspectives. But you will.

That “almost” feeling starts to matter in a different way. Instead of trying to force it into something solid, you can just… follow it for a minute. Let it be a possibility instead of a conclusion. What if that name didn’t always mean exactly what we think it does? What if a relationship that looks incomplete on the page made perfect sense in a version we never got? What if some of those gaps aren’t gaps at all, but places where variation used to live and we just didn’t inherit that part?

That’s where things start to feel alive again. In a way that sits right alongside it, like a second layer you can only really notice once you stop trying to nail everything down. This is usually the part where people get a little nervous, because this is also where UPG starts quietly knocking on the door. Rather than the wild, untethered kind that ignores everything that came before it, it’s the kind that grows out of actually engaging with the material long enough that it starts engaging back. The kind that says, “hey… have you considered looking at it this way?” and then just waits to see what you do with it.

You don’t have to accept every thought that comes through. Not every “what if” needs to settle into belief. Sometimes it’s enough to let the question sit there for a while and see what it does. There’s a difference between honoring the sources and holding them so tightly they can’t breathe anymore. One keeps them relevant. The other turns them into something you admire from a careful distance, like a museum piece you’re a little afraid to get too close to.

Stepping a little out of phase with the material doesn’t break anything. If anything, it gives it somewhere to move again. It nudges you out of that place where everything feels locked into a single version, a single interpretation, a single point in time that no longer shifts or responds. After a while, that quiet you run into starts to feel a little different. Not like something is missing… but like you’re standing just outside the place where it used to keep unfolding.

The Multi-Layered Earth Powers – Nerþus, Hreða, Erce, Fjörgyn, and Jörð

https://www.podbean.com/media/share/pb-ccbsw-1a99634

Hello, this is a long-form pagan podcast — listen like an audio journey.

 

I apologize for the slightly late posting again. This time of year is always a little rough for me so I am a little slower than normal. Today’s episode is covering several Earth centric goddesses and how the layer into the energies of the earth. I’ve woven together some lore, some UPG, and sprinkled in some what-if for those that like to explore. Enjoy!

 

Image courtesy of: www.freepik.com

Mud Season aka The Universe Refuses to Be Rushed

There is a very specific kind of betrayal that happens every year around this time in the Northern Hemisphere, and it always manages to catch people off guard no matter how many times they’ve lived through it. The calendar confidently insists that it is spring. The sun starts making longer, more convincing appearances. There might even be a day—or two—where stepping outside feels like a reward instead of a test of endurance.

And then, inevitably, you look down.

Mud. Everywhere.

Not the charming, aesthetic kind of earth that shows up in carefully curated gardening posts, where everything looks intentional and quietly magical. This is the full commitment version of mud. The kind that clings stubbornly to your shoes, creeps up the edges of your pants, and leaves you questioning your life choices halfway across the yard. It has weight to it. It has opinions. And there is no escape. It communicates, very clearly and without apology, that you are not in control of the timeline here and regardless of clothing choices you are utterly unprepared.

Early April has a way of doing this mud-encrusted thaw in many other parts of life as well. Things are stirring, you can feel it. There is movement and shifting, a definite sense that something is underway—but it is not happening in a way that looks impressive or even particularly coherent from the outside. It is not peak bloom nor a grand reveal. It’s the in-between stretch where everything is thawing, loosening, and trying very hard not to relapse into winter out of sheer stubbornness. Last frost-dates are still in the future. Planting in the ground is an exercise of futility as storms alternate between rain, tornado-force winds, hail, and sometimes even snow.

It is a threshold with no clearly defined boundaries. You can’t step cleanly from one season into another. Instead, it feels much more like standing in your entryway with one boot on and one boot off, holding a jacket you may or may not need, while the weather outside cycles through three different personalities in the span of an hour. And inevitably you will NOT have dressed for the occasion regardless. That is April.

There is a quiet kind of pressure that sneaks in after the Spring Equinox, subtle enough that you might not notice it at first but persistent enough that it lingers. It suggests that you should be refreshed by now, you should be motivated, you should have emerged from winter with clarity and direction and a plan that makes sense. There is an unspoken expectation that you are ready to begin again in some visible, measurable way, as though we have all collectively agreed to behave like flowers on a schedule. Who, exactly, decided this?

The ground is soft in some places and stubbornly frozen in others. The underground water is doing whatever it wants, carving new paths with absolutely no concern for your timing. Nothing looks ready, instead it looks yucky and even in some areas – trashy. Yet everything is technically in progress. But if you were hoping for a clear signal to begin the next stage, forget it. That’s really the problem with this particular stretch of the season—there’s a lot of expectation, but not a lot you can actually do with it.

It’s not the moment for big starts or dramatic shifts, no matter how tempting that sounds after months of winter. It’s more like… general maintenance. The time to rearrange and get things moving just enough that when the mud begins to dry nothing gets stuck again.

You open a window when the air finally cooperates. You clean something small, mostly because you noticed it, or it finally annoyed you enough to address it, not because you planned to. You move things around slightly and then question all of your decisions halfway through. Is the flow right? Do you need to wash the walls again? Should you change the drapes? Nothing here is particularly impressive, but it is, unfortunately, a necessary part of this turning cycle.

Mud season is not here to inspire you.

It is here to slow you down just enough that you don’t get ahead of yourself. It reminds you that plowing through without a real plan is only going to mire you down in the muck. And that muck is sometimes really smelly.

Don’t worry though, more noticeable points of the season are coming. The ground will settle and begin to firm up again. Things will actually start to grow in ways you can see without squinting or praying that the green you see will live through the next frost. There will be events, markers, and moments that feel like they count for something as we move into the warmer season.

Right now just… isn’t that part.

This is the stretch in between where everything is warming up, loosening, and figuring itself out. You are allowed to do the same in both the spiritual and physical sense. There is no requirement to have clarity right now, and there is certainly no reward for forcing it.

As you check the wellies for holes, test those umbrellas against stink bug rot, and watch the weather apps in desperation hoping you have something for every season at hand on every single outing – don’t forget to take the time to enjoy the awakening of the earth and find your sacred breath.

Categories of the Cosmos in Norse Mythology (Norse Genealogy) Part 4

https://www.podbean.com/media/share/pb-3cdur-1a84b6b

🌿 Long-form pagan podcast — listen like an audio journey.

 

Hi there! I apologize for the slightly late posting. Today we are diving into another section of the Jötnar line. Sadly, or not, I didn’t manage to get all the way through it. So many new ideas and connections! We will get there, I promise. In the meantime, it’s a wild ride. I mispronounce things right and left. As I am not a native speaker of any Nordic language past or present – please be gracious. I did my best but some of those names I could barely get my tongue around, let alone past my lips correctly. Sheesh. Despite the stumbles, I hope you enjoy this list of rabbit trails I am hopping down. Perfect for spring, yes?

 

image: 

 

Cover of 17th century transcription of Snorri Sturluson’s Prose Edda

 

drumming background: 

 

drumming music – Sound Effect by Adinkra Audio http://www.pixabay.com

When Winter Steps Aside – Ostara, Ēostre, and the Changing of the Guard in Norse Myth

https://www.podbean.com/media/share/pb-9k8yt-1a5e265

There isn’t a lot of material available on Spring deities and practices for early Germanic, Anglo-Saxon, and Norse cosmology. But the Spring is still a time of transition that we mark. The Equinox is often referred to as Ostara in many traditions but what exactly do we do? It’s still cold, snowy, wet, and freezing temps are definitely a possibility. Why is it “Spring”? Well, let’s ramble along and see what we find.

 

Ramblings website:  https://ramblingsfromvanaheim.org/

 

image: 

eggs in a basket – Image by Emb37 = www.pixabay.com

 

drumming background: 

drumming music – Sound Effect by Adinkra Audio http://www.pixabay.com

 

 

Charming of the Plough – A Living Practice in a Changing World

You may have heard of it. A rite that involves the blessing of tools, often the tools of trade practitioners perform. I’ve seen the practice lumped in with Imbolc rites as well as performed it myself separate from it’s surrounding High Days. It can be the working of a larger rite or the main focus for the entire ritual. Many of us come to this after reading Tacitus or exploring early European traditions, yet the practice itself continues to evolve as we do.

Charming of the Plough centers around a small excerpt, written down by Tacitus, involving a veiled goddess by the name of Nerþus. She travels through the land in a cart drawn by oxen and is attended by priests and servants. She dwells on a remote island where no human is allowed to go. She visits right as the land begins to thaw for spring and lays blessings upon the tools that will move the soil and make way for a future harvest. The tools at that time would have been ploughs, axes, hand tools, etc.. During this time all weapons are sheathed and the people celebrate with feasts using some of the last of their stores. At the end of the festival, Nerþus returns to her island with the priests and servants. Her veil is lifted and she is bathed by her attendants. Once the bath is complete, the attendants, or servants, are offered as sacrifice for having laid their eyes upon the Goddess’ naked form. From this act the concept of reciprocity is complete.

For modern pagans, the “plough” rarely looks like a wooden beam drawn through soil. More often, it’s the tool that carries our daily work into the world. A camera, a keyboard, a set of carving knives, a well-worn journal, even the quiet routines that keep a household steady — all of these can become part of the charm. The spirit of the ritual lies not in agriculture alone, but in preparation. It marks that gentle shift from winter reflection into the slow beginning of action. I’ve seen keys laid down for blessing, art pencils, mixing spoons, and even a pair of new shoes. Each represented a part of participants’ lives that they wanted to receive blessings for the new season.

Charming of the Plough also invites a quieter understanding of sacrifice. Ancient accounts speak of offerings that feel distant from modern ethics, yet the underlying idea of reciprocity remains deeply relevant. Giving something back might look like tending the land that sustains you, dedicating time to a craft with intention, volunteering a few hours on a weekend, or offering gratitude before beginning a new project. The act doesn’t need to be grand. Often, it’s the small, steady gestures that carry the most meaning.

What makes this rite especially powerful is its openness. Under my “Rituals” tab I have two Charming of the Plough rites from years past, one is a more heathen centric form and the other following my old druid path through ADF. There isn’t a single correct way to observe it. Some people clean and bless their tools, whispering hopes for clarity and creativity. Some perform a type of awakening rite and request this dark-earth Mother to bless their endeavors as the new season unfolds. Others simply pause outdoors, acknowledging the land as it begins to wake again. Even a few moments of quiet reflection can become a form of charm — a way of aligning yourself with the season’s forward movement.

At its heart, Charming of the Plough is about relationship. Relationship with the earth, with the unseen currents that shape our lives, and with the work we choose to carry into the coming year. It reminds us that pagan practice isn’t confined to grand rituals or distant mythic landscapes. It lives wherever intention meets action — wherever someone chooses to begin again with awareness and care both with their tools and with themselves.

One of the things I’ve noticed over the years is how naturally this rite adapts to different climates and lives. In Northern Europe, early February may have carried that threshold energy. I’ve performed this rite in early & mid February. I’ve combined it with Imbolc, Dísablót, and even the Spring Equinox. I have found that I prefer to do this as a simple ceremony all on its own. And for many of us today, early March feels more honest — the first thaw, the subtle (and now noticeable) lengthening of daylight, the sense that plans are ready to move from imagination into motion. Timing the ritual to the rhythm of your own land keeps it rooted in relationship rather than rigid tradition. This works well as a preparation rite before Ostara.

As you step into this season, consider what your “plough” might be. What tools are waiting for your attention? What parts of your life feel ready to open new ground? Maybe take the time to cleanse your ritual tools, altars, and other tools of your mundane trade(s) as a way to reset and prepare for the much busier time of year ahead. There’s no need to rush it though. Like the land itself, the charm unfolds slowly, inviting you to step forward at your own pace.

I have another podcast on this subject releasing March 1st – the link will post here automatically on that day. Give it a listen and see if this is a practice you might enjoy adding to your repertoire.

In the meantime, start listening to the air around you. The signs are there and it’s time to feel that hope renew within again. So drink deep of this seasonal shift, and don’t forget to find your sacred breath.