Looks like hard work eh?
Well it was, all three months of it.
You had a whole team of guys, heavy equipment, cranes, ropes, horses, tractors, a decent paycheck and then a good chunk of the year off of the job.
We are working the whole year around in jobs we don't like, with people we don't trust, for bosses that don't care about us, with the effort and energy that people once put into seasonal work that could cover them all year.
We are KILLING ourselves. For what?
πHyperborean Radio (Uncensored)π²
Well it was, all three months of it.
You had a whole team of guys, heavy equipment, cranes, ropes, horses, tractors, a decent paycheck and then a good chunk of the year off of the job.
We are working the whole year around in jobs we don't like, with people we don't trust, for bosses that don't care about us, with the effort and energy that people once put into seasonal work that could cover them all year.
We are KILLING ourselves. For what?
πHyperborean Radio (Uncensored)π²
β€15π―11π2
Many people in the past by modern standards would be "Unemployed".
They would work three to six months sometimes a few years in a larger town or area and then go back home and use the money to enrich their community. Funding festivals, niceties and often bringing trades and skills that they had learnt in the larger more affluent areas.
The Goal was Never to devote their life to a career or a job. Such things were a means to an end and were done only as long as they were needed. Thus on their ancestral land they were able to be part of their community, growing much of their own food, maintaining their own homes, spending time with family and resting. Most people in truth don't wish to be rich, they simply wish for the kind of freedom we had before we were supposedly released from daily drudgery.
Many may decry such a lifestyle, as lazy, or mention we may lack certain modern amenities. To them I point and ask "Which has more value? The miles of 'car graveyards', government contracts to generate goods which will be tossed into the trash one year after manufacture, or time? The time with family, the time with a clan well built, time with communities and the ties which bind.
πHyperborean Radio (Uncensored)π²
They would work three to six months sometimes a few years in a larger town or area and then go back home and use the money to enrich their community. Funding festivals, niceties and often bringing trades and skills that they had learnt in the larger more affluent areas.
The Goal was Never to devote their life to a career or a job. Such things were a means to an end and were done only as long as they were needed. Thus on their ancestral land they were able to be part of their community, growing much of their own food, maintaining their own homes, spending time with family and resting. Most people in truth don't wish to be rich, they simply wish for the kind of freedom we had before we were supposedly released from daily drudgery.
Many may decry such a lifestyle, as lazy, or mention we may lack certain modern amenities. To them I point and ask "Which has more value? The miles of 'car graveyards', government contracts to generate goods which will be tossed into the trash one year after manufacture, or time? The time with family, the time with a clan well built, time with communities and the ties which bind.
πHyperborean Radio (Uncensored)π²
β€βπ₯17π2
Everyone talks about bringing industry back to our lands, our people. Well my friends this is what true industry looks like.
Bring back craftsmanship.
Not Industrialization.
πHyperborean Radio (Uncensored)π²
Bring back craftsmanship.
Not Industrialization.
πHyperborean Radio (Uncensored)π²
β€βπ₯9π8π―3
Anybody else realize how weird reading a book is?
You stare at slices of trees and skin inscribed with runes and symbols and hallucinate vividly.
-
πHyperborean Radio (Uncensored)π²
You stare at slices of trees and skin inscribed with runes and symbols and hallucinate vividly.
-
A Little Girl Reading by Johan Gudmundsen-Holmgreen 1900πHyperborean Radio (Uncensored)π²
β€βπ₯14π€3
New Broadcast! -Hyperborean Radio (Uncensored)-
This thing on?... Ah Let's See..... There We Go 369 kHz Jeff and Ike in The Morning. Your Roughneck Pagan Uncles, You Wish You Had and are Glad You Donβt! Speaking of Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Homeland. As well as perhaps most importantly; the truths we all know but others fear to whisper.
Runesmithing:
Runes! How are they created? How are they used? AND! How much does they influence your everyday life? For they are everywhere and more powerful than you might think.
New Episodes Wednesday's at 6 AM EST
or Join Patreon for Early Episodes
Listen on your favorite platform or
Spotify
Apple Podcast
Podcast Addict
Podbean
HyperboreanRadio.Com
This thing on?... Ah Let's See..... There We Go 369 kHz Jeff and Ike in The Morning. Your Roughneck Pagan Uncles, You Wish You Had and are Glad You Donβt! Speaking of Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Homeland. As well as perhaps most importantly; the truths we all know but others fear to whisper.
Runesmithing:
Runes! How are they created? How are they used? AND! How much does they influence your everyday life? For they are everywhere and more powerful than you might think.
New Episodes Wednesday's at 6 AM EST
or Join Patreon for Early Episodes
Listen on your favorite platform or
Spotify
Apple Podcast
Podcast Addict
Podbean
HyperboreanRadio.Com
β€8
The Importance of Runestones
Runestones are some of the most iconic objects in all of Europe. Their depictions of Knotwork, Wyrms, Gods and Men decorated with those mysterious letters known as Runes; which inspire art and speculation among academics and the average populace to this day.
Yet most Runestones, if not all, serve a rather familiar and heartwarming purpose. They are memorials to the dead, what are sometimes called a Wayside Shrine. -For example the one pictured above reads :
Some of the most famous Runestones have depictions of deities, the Jelling Stones depict a Crucified Jesus Christ entwined in knotwork, while the Hunnestad Monument is often thought to depict Hyrrokin, a Norse Giantess and speculated funerary deity. Both monumental sets of Runestones were placed as a way to honor the raisers dead loved ones.
These days we don't commonly raise Runestones in honor of our loved ones, or even the standing stones of Pre-Christian Europe... Yet... We still perform this treasured act of honoring the dead. Park Benches, Street Signs, Crosses at the side of the Road and Grand Statues show the names and faces of loved ones that have passed on to the Realms Beyond. For never has something been more treasured to our people and our Gods, than our family and friends.
-
Image: A Fallen Runestone at Korpbron in Juresta, Sweden 1899
π§ββοΈHyperborean Radio (Uncensored)π πΌ
Runestones are some of the most iconic objects in all of Europe. Their depictions of Knotwork, Wyrms, Gods and Men decorated with those mysterious letters known as Runes; which inspire art and speculation among academics and the average populace to this day.
Yet most Runestones, if not all, serve a rather familiar and heartwarming purpose. They are memorials to the dead, what are sometimes called a Wayside Shrine. -For example the one pictured above reads :
βSandar raised the stone in memory of Joar, his kinsman. No one will bear a more able son. May Tor safeguard.β- Many of the Runestones are attributed specifically to the commissioners beloved dead whether they be Fathers, Mothers, Siblings or other Kinsmen or Companions. Due to many of the extant stones being from the Viking Age they are often Christian in reference invoking the The Christian God, though a fallen one photographed in 1899 specifically calls on Thor/Tor to safeguard the soul of the dead. Some of the most famous Runestones have depictions of deities, the Jelling Stones depict a Crucified Jesus Christ entwined in knotwork, while the Hunnestad Monument is often thought to depict Hyrrokin, a Norse Giantess and speculated funerary deity. Both monumental sets of Runestones were placed as a way to honor the raisers dead loved ones.
These days we don't commonly raise Runestones in honor of our loved ones, or even the standing stones of Pre-Christian Europe... Yet... We still perform this treasured act of honoring the dead. Park Benches, Street Signs, Crosses at the side of the Road and Grand Statues show the names and faces of loved ones that have passed on to the Realms Beyond. For never has something been more treasured to our people and our Gods, than our family and friends.
-
Image: A Fallen Runestone at Korpbron in Juresta, Sweden 1899
π§ββοΈHyperborean Radio (Uncensored)π πΌ
β€9β€βπ₯2
Media is too big
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
Our Nature's Mark
A Video Ike Created Years Ago (2019) to Bring pride to the diversity of our tribes, pelts, iris' and builds.
Our "Mark of the North".
βοΈHyperborean Radio (Uncensored)βοΈ
A Video Ike Created Years Ago (2019) to Bring pride to the diversity of our tribes, pelts, iris' and builds.
Our "Mark of the North".
βοΈHyperborean Radio (Uncensored)βοΈ
β€βπ₯10
Norse Lore According to AI & What it Reveals
As an experiment I ran over 100 Figures from "Norse" Lore through an AI generator, using only their name and a dark fantasy theme. The results are a diagnosis of contemporary Norse Paganism and its' impact on culture.
Most of the lesser known figures became mere generic beings often with flailing tendrils and horns. While others were influenced by popular conceptions and false parallels. Odin is rendered a generic dark wizard, because that is how most end up depicting him, Thor and Loki both are heavily influenced by Marvel, Ymir is more based on Attack on Titan, Baldr on Balders gate, while Freya and Frigg have no discernable traits becoming generic Viking Babes.
Gods like Modi and Sunna are influenced primarily by outside forces, not misconceptions of culture but quirks of language. Modi Son of Thor is presented as Modi the Prime Minister of India, while Sunna is more influenced by Sunna Islam than the deity in question.
Celestial Gods such as Nott
Gods that are often an afterthought have been rendered so generic as to be seen as undefined and forgotten within the culture. Bragi The Skald, Andhrimminir the Cook, Gefjun Maker of Denmark, Thrudr the Strong are all so obscure as to be meaningless to the current state of things. Even Heimdall a popular deity is rendered as a House, not a God.
So what does all this mean? Well AI is programmed to recognize words and images so as to build based on text prompts. A generic prompt of a name shows the current standing of these divinities within paganism and the wider culture. What it shows is that most of these deities are forgot, pushed aside or neglected. The most popular figures are far more influenced by fantasy and Pop Paganism than any amount of actual veneration or practice. And these names are but a fraction of the breadth of the Lore. How much more has been buried or ignored? How influenced is the general practice of most pagans influenced more by Popular Culture than any actual Lore or customs?
I suppose the question is.. how genuine is the supposed Pagan revival when nearly all the deities lay ignored or reshaped for "Modern Audiences"? - I.M.Knosp
-
Thank you To Aethelwulf Art for Constructing the graphic from my Images.
-
βοΈHyperborean Radio (Uncensored)βοΈ
As an experiment I ran over 100 Figures from "Norse" Lore through an AI generator, using only their name and a dark fantasy theme. The results are a diagnosis of contemporary Norse Paganism and its' impact on culture.
Most of the lesser known figures became mere generic beings often with flailing tendrils and horns. While others were influenced by popular conceptions and false parallels. Odin is rendered a generic dark wizard, because that is how most end up depicting him, Thor and Loki both are heavily influenced by Marvel, Ymir is more based on Attack on Titan, Baldr on Balders gate, while Freya and Frigg have no discernable traits becoming generic Viking Babes.
Gods like Modi and Sunna are influenced primarily by outside forces, not misconceptions of culture but quirks of language. Modi Son of Thor is presented as Modi the Prime Minister of India, while Sunna is more influenced by Sunna Islam than the deity in question.
Celestial Gods such as Nott
(Night), Dagr (Day) and Dellingr are so obscure in culture as to have been rendered unrecognizable, Dellingr the Dawn God is made a kind of Fell Beast.Gods that are often an afterthought have been rendered so generic as to be seen as undefined and forgotten within the culture. Bragi The Skald, Andhrimminir the Cook, Gefjun Maker of Denmark, Thrudr the Strong are all so obscure as to be meaningless to the current state of things. Even Heimdall a popular deity is rendered as a House, not a God.
So what does all this mean? Well AI is programmed to recognize words and images so as to build based on text prompts. A generic prompt of a name shows the current standing of these divinities within paganism and the wider culture. What it shows is that most of these deities are forgot, pushed aside or neglected. The most popular figures are far more influenced by fantasy and Pop Paganism than any amount of actual veneration or practice. And these names are but a fraction of the breadth of the Lore. How much more has been buried or ignored? How influenced is the general practice of most pagans influenced more by Popular Culture than any actual Lore or customs?
I suppose the question is.. how genuine is the supposed Pagan revival when nearly all the deities lay ignored or reshaped for "Modern Audiences"? - I.M.Knosp
-
Thank you To Aethelwulf Art for Constructing the graphic from my Images.
-
βοΈHyperborean Radio (Uncensored)βοΈ
β€βπ₯9π¨4β€3π1
This Weeks Episode - Runesmithing:
Runes! How are they created? How are they used? AND! How much do they influence your everyday life? For they are everywhere and more powerful than you might think.
Listen on your favorite platform or
Spotify
Apple Podcast
Podcast Addict
Podbean
HyperboreanRadio.Com
Runes! How are they created? How are they used? AND! How much do they influence your everyday life? For they are everywhere and more powerful than you might think.
Listen on your favorite platform or
Spotify
Apple Podcast
Podcast Addict
Podbean
HyperboreanRadio.Com
β€4π€3
All Fathers Day
Allfather:
"You might know him as Dad."
This role is of such sacred value that Holy men and Priests even take the title of "Father" in a bid to subvert the True Fathers authority seeking to take the place of patriarchs or Allfathers from the multitude of clans of Hyperboreans.
We must not allow the weaklings who masquerade as holy men to fool us again.
Be the Man Your Family Needs and remember to thank your Father today!
-
Happy Fathers Day!
From,
-J.A.Coburn & Hyperborean Radio
π Hyperborean Radio (Uncensored)π§ββοΈ
Allfather:
The Head, Chieftain or Patriarch of a given tribe typically in reference to a god; this would vary tribe to tribe.
But Fathers Day is about the True Father the one in whom the divine manifests itself as head of the family serving as Spiritual Leader or "Priest" of his family, guide, teacher, protector, the immovable stone upon which the family is built. "You might know him as Dad."
This role is of such sacred value that Holy men and Priests even take the title of "Father" in a bid to subvert the True Fathers authority seeking to take the place of patriarchs or Allfathers from the multitude of clans of Hyperboreans.
We must not allow the weaklings who masquerade as holy men to fool us again.
Be the Man Your Family Needs and remember to thank your Father today!
-
Happy Fathers Day!
From,
-J.A.Coburn & Hyperborean Radio
π Hyperborean Radio (Uncensored)π§ββοΈ
β€13π€1