BC Neanderthal Mindset
2.04K subscribers
2.83K photos
19 videos
170 links
Civilization comes at a cost.
The price is steep, all things good and mighty surrendered, virility, wildness, risk. It costs our Strength, our Courage, our Wisdom, our mastery of self and most of all our honor and nobility.

[email protected]
Download Telegram
Our people seem to carry that natural characteristic of innocence and wonder about the world with us.
It starts from conception and for most of us, remains a part of who we are until we pass into the next realm.
We maintain that childlike outlook and it is not until we are influenced by cityscapes, multiculturalism, modernity and other non-Hyperborean ideals that we fall out of sync with our natural selves as people of the North.

The art we create, the music we make, our lore, and our environment bring to life the way we see and interpret the world around us.
It is puzzling that we are hated for bringing beauty to an otherwise desolate world, but this becomes clear after realizing Hyperborean culture is the most sought after by other jealous tribes bar none.
๐Ÿ”ฅ10โค6๐Ÿ‘3๐Ÿ‘2
Other tribes despise our simplistic approach to this realm, but this is a misunderstanding.
We are not a simple-minded folk, but take stock in the reality that simplicity is bliss. Less distraction means getting more out of life and focusing on the important things. A natural lifestyle brings enrichment, peace, and harmony into our lives and is contagious within the tribe.

Distractions by media, jobs, and other adulthood obligations put us out of sync with our natural state as wildfolk. Those things are foreign to a wilderness setting and will confuse creatures that call the woods as home.
That is where we come from and where we need to get back to.

If our people are left alone, we will always default back to ethnic and natural faith. That is both childlike and feral, innocent and savage, pagan and primal.
That is our most natural state of being, and how we are intended to be.
๐Ÿ”ฅ15๐Ÿ‘5
Lady of the Lake, from The Faeries
By Alan Lee
โค13
โ€œThe whole race, which is now called Gallic or Galatic, is madly fond of war, high-spirited and quick to battle, but otherwise straightforward and not of evil character.
For at any time or place and on whatever pretext you stir them up, you will have them ready to face danger, even if they have nothing on their side but their own strength and courage."... 

Strabo, Roman historian.

"We have no word for the man who is excessively fearless; perhaps one may call such a man mad or bereft of feeling, who fears nothing, neither earthquakes nor waves, as they say of the Celts"

Aristotle
๐Ÿ”ฅ24โค4
Night
Arnold Bocklin, 1895
Many thanks to the lads at https://t.iss.one/hyperboreanradio.
Many of our discussions go in-depth about our nature as wild folk and how to better understand ourselves through a pagan lens. Knowing our nature better allows for more natural living and embracing our role as people of the North.
Our friend over at BC Neanderthal Mindset wrote a few wonderful and deceptively deep posts over the last couple days that really flow well together in roughly encapsulating the spirit of the Hyperborean people and we would strongly encourage you to read them all back to back.
Part 1: Innocence
Part 2: Simplicity is Bliss
Part 3: Fearless

Thank you for your inspiring words. -CG
Hyperborean Radio (Uncensored)
โค1
Happy Fatherโ€™s Day everyone. If you still have yours, let him know how much he means to you.
A father may only be a dad for a short while, but he is a childโ€™s hero forever.
If you are a father yourself, know the blessed responsibility you bear upon your shoulders. No calling will seem greater and no role will be as fulfilling.
โค25๐Ÿค”2๐Ÿ‘1
This media is not supported in your browser
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
The riddle of steel.
One of the most important lessons a father can impart upon his sons.

It is the hand (person) that wields the sword that gives it lethality and power, not the steel itself. It comes from true conviction and belief from the one that wields it.

Such is the riddle of steel.
๐Ÿ‘8๐Ÿ”ฅ4
Spring Scattering Stars
Edwin Howland Blashfield
๐Ÿ‘8
The Greek hero Orpheus was said to have been given his lyre by Apollo himself. Orpheusโ€™s singing and playing were so beautiful that animals, trees and rocks moved about him in dance.

After his wife Eurydice was bitten by a snake and traversed to hades, Orpheus set out to win her back. His music so swayed Hades king of the underworld, that Eurydice was granted passage with him back to the world of the living.
๐Ÿ‘1
The Winged Victory of Brescia.

The winged goddess Victory would have set her foot on the helmet of Mars, while inscribing a shield with details of the latest Roman victory for all to see.
Pictured is her discovery on 29th July 1826 with employees of the Museo Patrio in Brescia.
Victory was found intentionally hidden between two walls of the temple.
โค14