Showing posts with label finnish. Show all posts
Showing posts with label finnish. Show all posts

Saturday, June 4, 2011

FINLAND'S DEVA & MY PAST LIFE IN 900'S FINLAND

I am reading a Finnish book online at the moment, it was written in 1913 by Pekka Ervast, a Rosicrucian and Theosophian who wrote wonders about the Finnish nation, our History and Culture in spiritual light.

This Book is called Newly Born Finland ( Uudesti Syntyvä Suomi ) it discusses the Deva, the Protective Spirit, the National Spirit of Finland.

I've reached Chapter 3. Where he writes that old Finnish souls from our Golden Age begun to reincarnate back to Finland around 1900. Before this they had traveled the world, being born in India, China, Italy, France and Germany learning from other Cultures. And Being born back to Finland at the time when Finland ( though writing this he didn't know just how right he was ) was raising its head from being oppressed for quite many years, generations. He writes how Finnish people had to hold on to their nature, Finnish nature during this oppressive time and that took a lot of energy, hence the quiet era where not a lot of Finnish Culture was known in Europe and beyond. But as 1900 begun and old Finnish souls from the golden age returned we begun to see such people as Sibelius where he in 1900-1902 breaks through to International Stage.

Why I find this interesting is that have intuitive knowledge of having other lives in Finland, knowledge that I come back from time to time check up on Finland. This is interesting as I just recently had Clearing done on my Akashic Record, two lives to be exact, and one of them was in 900th Finland, the woman who did this Clearing told me I lived in the Oulu area in 900's and I was the Shaman of the tribe.


I channeled my Higher Self this morning ( I'm going to use the term "her" as I am a woman in this life time, but in Finnish him and her are represented by one word "hän" which means both genders ) considering my earlier life in Finland. I asked her if I had an earlier life in Finland, she answered yes. I asked if I had been a Shaman, she answered yes. I asked if I had lived in 900's, she answered yes. I asked if I had lived in Oulu area, she answered yes. I asked if I had been a man or a woman, she answered man. I asked her to show me an image of myself from that time, and saw immediately a man sitting on a rock seat fire in front of him and early night, he had longer hair that had natural dreads mixed in his hair from time to time, he had a short beard, and he was thin, I got the mental image he didn't, I didn't eat a lot. But I saw muscles in his legs so he wasn't sickly thin. I asked her what happened in that life time that had lingered with me before the Akashic record was cleared, she told me the earth changed, I tried to see but she told me it wasn't a catastrophe, but subtle change in the earth, crops didn't grow as they use to. I had tried my best with the knowledge that I had to make the ground fertile, she told me I did what I could but something’s are meant to happen.
I then asked her is there something she'd like me to know, she showed me kissing the forehead of a young girl, platonic kiss and she told me I passed on my knowledge to the girl, what I knew of incantations and medicines.

This self-exploration was brought on by the Ervast book, and I am thinking there are many more to read on the matter of Finns and our Golden Age, The Kalevala and Finnish Spirituality. But these are my thoughts for now.

Love, Light and Joy!
Niina

P.S: For more Finnish Spirituality click on some of the Tags for this entry below.

Monday, May 23, 2011

THE MAGIC SPELLS/INCANTATIONS OF THE FINNS

Are you interested in the Esoteric and Magical history of the Finns?
The Vikings, according to Viking Sagas, also made some raids into Tavastia. Here is an account of Olav the Holy raiding the coast. This may be either in Tavastian or "Finnish" territory:

"Then he (Olav) sailed to Finland, landed and pillaged there, but all of the locals escaped into the forests and took all their possessions with them away from the area/region. The king ventured far inland and through some woods; there were valley regions called Herdalarna. They took some property, but no men (Slaves? Prisoners?). When evening drew near, the King began his way back to his ships. But when they returned to the woods, they were confronted by men from all sides, and harrassed and shot at fiercely. The King told his men to take cover/protect themselves. But before they could get out of the woods, he had lost many men and several were wounded. He arrived at the ships in the evening. In the night, the Finns created a great storm with their witch-craft. But the king ordered to lift up the anchor and raise the sails, and they travelled along the coast during the night. The King's good luck was then, like so often, more effective than the witch-craft of the Finns. They managed to sail along the coast of Balegard and then out to sea. But a band of Finnish warriors followed them on land as the king sailed along the coast." ~http://www.allempires.com/article/index.php?q=Viking_Age_Finland
The Finns have been known for their ability to raise fog, stop blood flow in wounds and singing people to sleep.
With magical time in mind you might want to check out this book: The Magic Songs of the Finns. Link update 08/23 1/2 https://sacred-texts.com/neu/ms1/index.htm
2/2 https://sacred-texts.com/neu/ms2/ms201.htm
"Since the time immemorial the Finns have used incantations, or Magic Songs. It’s unknown when or how this tradition of magic first came to be, but already in pre-historical times they were widely used in all areas of life. The 639 spells and charms contained in this book were collected in the 19th century from the rural areas of Finland and Karelia, shortly after which this old esoteric tradition became extinct. They were first published in year 1880, and translated into English in 1896 as a part of larger folkloristic study, but have never before been published as an independent work."
THE MAGIC SONGS OF THE FINNS.
1. Preliminary Formula
2. Defensive Measures
3. Against Envy
4. Vengeance Formula
5. To Discover the Cause
6. Reparation for Harm
7. Against Inflammation and Angry Symptoms
8. Expulsion Formula
9. Posting Formula
10. Pain or Sickness Formula
11. Reproaching Formula
12. Falling into Ecstasy
13. In Distress
14. Boasting Formula
15. To Still Violence
16. Menacing Formula
17. Exorcisms
18. To Make Fast

♠ WORDS OF HEALING POWER.
19. For Stings of Wasps, Gadflies and other Insects
20. For Sickness caused by Elf-shots, sudden Strokes, etc.
21. For the Toothache
22. For Wounds caused by Hiisi
23. For Whooping Cough
24. For Injuries caused by Kalma
25. When torn by a Bear or a Wolf
26. For Contusions from a Stone
27. For Syphilis
28. To remove Tumours, Abscesses, Boils
29. For Snake Bites
30. For Gout or Heartburn
31. For cutting off Excrescences
32. For Contusions or Lesions
33. For the Hiccough
34. For Sprains
35. Against Nightmare
36. For Frostbite
37. For Stitch or Pleurisy
38. For Contusions from Trees
39. For Cancer or Whitlow
40. For Injuries from Iron
41. For Rickets, Atrophy
42. For Injuries caused by Spells
43. Against the Plague
44. For Thrush
45. For Pain in the Eye from Particles of Chaff
46. For Disease in the Eye
47. For a Lizard’s Bite
48. For Laceration by a Wolf
49. For the Pains of Child-birth
50. For the Itch
51. For Skin Eruption
52. For Burns
53. For Scalds
54. For Injuries from Copper
55. For Hemorrhage
56. For Dropsy
57. For Cough
58. For Colic

♠ FORMULÆ.
59. Divination Formula
60. For a Bite from a Horse
61. To make a Horse stand still
62. Against Mice
63. Against Spiders
64. For a Cross-bow Man
65. For a Best Man
66. Against Grubs, Slugs, etc.
67. For catching Hares
68. For Fishing
69. Against Bears
70. To protect Cattle
71. A Spear Charm
72. For Dogs
73. For taking Ermines
74. To make Yeast rise
75. To charm Snakes
76. Court of Justice Charm
77. For Sheep
78. For Bathing Children
79. To quiet a Child
80. To excite Love
81. To alienate Love
82. To take Redstarts
83. For Fowling
84. For making an Artificial Decoy Bird
85. Against Bugs
86. Against the Cowhouse Snake
87. For making Vapour
88. A Milk—charm
89. Hunting Charm
90. Against Forest Fires
91. An Ale Charm
92. For catching Squirrels
93. Against Sharp Frost (Pakkanen)
94. A Snake Charm
95. Against Rust in Corn
96. Gelding Charm
97. Frog Charm
98. To drive away Rain
99. On going to the Wars
100. To exorcise Wolves
101. Charm to recite over Salt
102. For Health
103. Against Cockroaches
104. To lay the Wind
105. To lay a Whirlwind
106. To be recited over Water
107. For a Journey by Water
108. Trap Charm
109. Ointments

♠ PRAYERS.
110. In the Morning
111. Treasure Seeking
112. Against Elf-shots
113. Against Wasps
114. Against Toothach
115. For Horses
116. When Gored by an Ox
117. At a Bridal Procession
118. For catching Hares
119. Against Cabbage Grubs
120. For Fishing
121. Bear Hunting
122. Against a Bear
123. To Benefit Cattle
124. At the Assizes
125. To incite a Dog
126. To silence a Dog
127. When Shooting Rapids
128. When in Great Pain
129. To Charm away Strumous Swellings on the Neck
130. While Sowing
131. To Stupefy a Snake
132. To Increase the Yield of Milk from Cows
133. To excite Love
134. To Wean a Heart from Another’s Love
135. When Excising Superfluous Flesh
136. For Catching Birds
137. On Gering to Bed
138. Starting on a Journey
139. Hunting in the Forest
140. For Sprains, Injuries of the Bone or Sinews
141. When Butted by a Ram or a He-goat
142. Brewing Ale
143. For Good Luck
144. Squirrel-Hunting
145. Against Nightmare
146. Against Swellings and Scab
147. Against very Sharp Frost
148. For Catching Reindeer
149. For Pleurisy or Stitch
150. To Throw a Spell over a Gun
151. Setting Traps
152. For a Good Sleighing Road
153. For Catching Foxes
154. Against Injuries from Spells
155. For Trapping Sea—otters
156. To Drive away Rain
157. When Charming the Sick
158. Castration
159. Preparing a Bandage
160. Against Bits of Chaff, etc., in the Eye
161. For the Pigs
162. In War Time
163. Preparing for War
164. To Make Snow-skates
165. Against Incantations
166. For the Pains of Child-birth
167. Setting Up House
168. For Skin Eruptions
169. For a Healing Bath
170. For Making Edged Tools
171. Against Damage from Fire
172. To Bewitch Fire
173. In Making an Offering
174. To Recover Stolen Property
175. To Guard against Thieves
176. When on the Look-out
177. To Staunch Blood
178. When Travelling by Water
179. To Fortify Water
180. Against an Enemy at Sea
181. When Using Salves
182. For a Good Crop

♠ ORIGINS OR BIRTHS.
183. The Origin of Wasps
184. Of Snails
185. Of the Tooth-worm
186. Of the Pike
187. Of the Horse
188. Of the Elk
189. Of Ague
190. Of the Seal
191. Of Men
192. Of the Cabbage-worm
193. Of the Bear
194. Of Courts of Law
195. Of the Cat
196. Of Stone
197. Of Cancer or Whitlow
198. Of the Dog
199. Of the Birch
200. Of the Raven
201. Of Swelling on the Neck
202. Of the Viper
203. Of the Snake
204. Of Flax
205. Of the Cowhouse Snake
206. Of the Earth-elf or Skin Eruption
207. Of the Sorcerer (noita)
208. Of Arrows
209. Of Ale
210. Of Sharp Frost
211. Of Stitch or Pleurisy
212. Of Trees
213. Of Cancer
214. Of Iron
215. Of Rickets, Atrophy
216. Of Injuries caused by Spells
217. Of Rust in Corn
218. Of Scab
219. Of the Pig
220. Of Particles of Chaff in the Eye
221. Of the Lizard
222. Of the Wolf
223. Of Salt
224. Of the Oak
225. Of the Titmouse
226. Of Fire
227. Of Copper
228. Of Water
229. Of a Boat
230. Of a Net
231. Of Brandy
232. Of Salves
233. Of Gripes, Colic, Constipation
http://www.paganarchive.com/magic-songs-of-the-finns.html

Love, Light and Joy!
Niina

Friday, October 29, 2010

KALEVALA STUDIES PART 1 - POEM 50

At Merimiehenkatu 31 every other Thursday ( you can join any thursday you wish ) a two hour Kalevala study is held "The New Age Key to Kalevala" is the title. Yesterday was the first time, first session...

Kalevala begins and ends with immaculate birth, just like many, many, holy books before and after it. This is what we focused on in the first Kalevala study session.
Kalevala should be seen as a guide to inner enlightenment in a form of legends, heroics, actions and mythology.
All these poems should be taken inwards, as inner experience towards bettering our nature deeply.

The teacher Kauno Mannonen talks about how Väinämöinen present our Divine Will, Ilmarinen our Higher Emotions and Joukahainen our Reasoning inside us and Aino our Emotional Side, and Marjatta the extreme of our emotional nature.With these in mind when their lives are stated we see a whole New Kalevala open between the lines before our eyes.

When you read it is important what insights and ahaa-moment you get from reading it - those are your personal truths, what you need to learn right now from the Kalevala.

And we begin at the end...

We sit in the grand room with egyptian pillars going to the ceiling that holds the map of constallation, we sit in the middleof the room in a circle of chairs with one candle burning at the center on child tall candle holder. The walls around us have old white and blue Kalevala motifs and paintings which set the mood well.

Runo / Poem 50
MARJATTA
 
1 Marjatta, the beautiful,
For a long time grew at home
In her high-born father's house,
In her loving mother's chambers.
Five fine key chains she wore out,
And she wore out six good key rings
Of her father's many keys
Shining, jingling from her girdle.
9 And she wore out half the doorsill
With her brightly colored skirt hem, 10
Half the lintel overhead
With her smooth and silken ribbons,
Half the door jambs with her sleeve ends,
And the floorboards with the heels
Of her shoes with fancy uppers.
17 Marjatta, the beautiful,
She the little, dainty maiden,
Kept her virgin state untarnished
And her beauty all unblemished.
Always ate the nicest fish 20
And the softest pine bark bread;
Would not even taste of hen's eggs,
Hens that chanticleer had mounted;
Would not eat the flesh of ewes,
Any ewe a ram had mounted.
27 Even though her mother asked her,
She refused to do the milking,
And she said so in these words:
"No girl such as I would do it,
Touch the teats of any cow, 30
Any cow a bull had mounted -
It can't be unless the calves
Or the heifers trickle milk."
35 When her father ordered her
To hitch the stallion to the sleigh,
She would not hitch up the stallion.
When her brother brought a mare,
She said: "I won't hitch a horse,
Any mare a stud has mounted-
It can't be unless the foals 40
Or the month-olds do the pulling."
43 Marjatta, the beautiful,
Always living as a virgin,
As a slender bashful maiden
Lovely with her braided hair,
Had become a shepherdess
With a flock of sheep around her.
49 On the hill the sheep were grazing,
On the ridge the lambs were playing,
While she, roaming in the clearings, 50
Brushing lightly through the alders,
Heard a golden cuckoo calling,
Silver cuckoo sweetly singing.
55 Listening, she gazed about her,
Sat down in a berry patch,
Resting on the sunny hillside.
There she calls back to the singer:
"Sing, O sing, you golden cuckoo,
Call out loudly, silver cuckoo,
Let your clear-voiced notes ring out. 60
Saxon strawberry, tell me, tell me:
Shall I long go woolly-headed,
Long time as a shepherdess
On these wide and open clearings,
In these vast and leafy woodlands;
Summers two, or five, six summers,
Maybe even for ten summers,
Or perhaps it will be sooner?"
73 Marjatta, the beautiful,
Stayed a shepherdess too long. 70
It is hard to be a shepherdess,
Overmuch for any girl-child.
Snakes are slithering in the grasses,
Lizards wriggling here and there.

This is where we breaked to consider what was just read. As this is a myth and legend form it goes to show the excessiveness of the point that Marjatta is a virgin and how pure she has to be to bare a Christ Consciouness / Christ Self.

79 There's no slithering snake, no lizard,
But a berry calling from the hillside,
Lingonberry from the heath:
"Come, good maiden, come and pluck me,
Rosy-cheeked one, come and reap me,
Clear-voiced maiden, come to pick me, so
You, the copper-belted, choose me,
Now before a slug devours me,
Ere the black worm comes to eat me.
A hundred come to look me over,
A thousand just to sit beside me,
A hundred girls, a thousand women,
And the children without number -
None would touch me, no one pick me."
95 She went up to see the berry,
Pick the reddish lingonberry, 90
Pluck it with her dainty fingers,
With her slender hands so lovely.
101 She found the berry on the hill,
Red lingonberry on the heath.
It's a berry in appearance,
Lingonberry by the shape,
On a tree too high for picking
Yet too low to climb up after.
107 From the heath she snatched a stick,
With it knocked the berry down. 100
Then the berry started climbing
Up onto her lovely shoe top,
From her shoe top to her knee,
From her white knee to her apron.
115 Then it moved up to her waistband,
From the waistband to her bosom,
From her bosom to her chin,
From her chin up to her lips.
Then it slid into her mouth,
Tumbled quickly to her tongue, 110
From her tongue into her throat,
From her throat into her stomach.
123 After that she was contented,
And she felt herself fulfilled.
Then she put on weight, grew stouter.
127 So she let her waistband out,
Lounged about without a belt;
Went in secret to the sauna,
Doing hidden things in darkness.
131 And her mother pondered, wondered: 120
"What is wrong with our Marjatta,
With our good, home-loving chicken,
Since she let her waistband out,
Started dressing without a belt;
Going in secret to the sauna,
Doing hidden things in darkness?"
139 Here a child began to speak,
A little infant to explain:
"This is wrong with Marjatta
This indeed the matter with her - 130
She roamed as a shepherdess too long,
Lived too long among the cattle."
145 She bore her hard womb, her full belly,
Carried it for seven, eight months,
Bore it altogether nine months,
And, according to the old wives,
Halfway through into the tenth month.
151 So upon the tenth month then,
The virgin's birth pangs came upon her;
The contractions of her womb 140
Wrack her in an aching anguish.
155 She asked her mother for a sauna:
"O my mother, my beloved!
Make a warm place ready for me,
Warm room for a maiden's refuge,
Room for a woman's safe confinement."
161 But instead her mother burst out:
"Woe to you, you whore of Hiisi!
Tell me whose bed partner are you,
Married man or unmarried?" 150
167 Patiently the maiden answered:
"Neither married man nor unmarried.
I went berrying on the hill,
Went to pick a lingonberry.
Eagerly I took the berry;
Next I put it on my tongue
And it slid into my throat
And slipped down into my stomach.
That contented and fulfilled me,
And from that my womb was full." 160
179 She asked her father for a sauna:
"O my father, my beloved!
Make a warm place ready for me,
Small room for a weak one's refuge,
Where a girl may bear her birth pangs."
185 But her father answered curelly:
"Go away, you whore, you hussy,
Shameless hussy fit for hellfire
To the rocky caves of bruin,
Stony chambers of the bear; 170
There, you whore, to do your birthing,
Yean your young, you hell's own hussy."

We break again to talk about this, the immaculate conception. Of course in reality a man is needed to have a baby BUT what does it mean to be so pure to give birth unaided? See sauna was where birth was given for a long time Finland, and other nordic countries as well.

On the other hand we talked how Jesus as well said, if you follow me your family will be the first to condem you. Here happens the same, Marjatta's family doesn't approve of her spiritual endeavors and calls her names and don't want her around anymore - I'm sure many can relate how their family took their new state of spirituality.

193 She replied, thus prophesying:
"I'm no whore fit for hellfire,
I'm the bearer of the Great One,
Deliverer of the Sacred Birth,
Man-child who will rule the rulers,
Even rule old Vainamoinen."
201 Now the girl was in dilemma,
Where to go, where find refuge, 180
Whom to askabout a sauna?
Then she said to her small handmaid:
"Piltti, smallest of my maids,
Best of all my hired helpers,
Go and find a sauna for me;
Ask the villagers of Sedgebrook
Where a weak one may find comfort
And a girl may bear her suffering.
Go on quickly, hurry, hurry,
For the utmost speed is needed." 190
213 Said the little serving maid:
"But of whom shall I inquire,
Beg to give you this good comfort?"
217 Said Marjatta: "Ask of Ruotus
Living on the edge of Sedgebrook."
221 Piltti-ready to obey,
Willing without any urging,
Nimble with no need of orders -
Went out like a whiff of mist,
Like a puff of smoke outdoors; 200
Picked her hem up in her hand,
Held her clothing in her fist
As she ran and hurried on
Toward the home of ugly Ruotus.
Hills were ringing as she went,
Mountains quaking as she climbed them,
Pine cones bouncing on the moorland,
Gravel flying on the marshes.
She arrived at Ruotus' house,
Went into his log-built cabin. 210
237 Ugly Ruotus sat at table,
Eating, drinking like the great ones,
Dressed up in a linen shirt,
In a shirt of purest linen.
241 Ruotus grunted from his feeding,
Snarled .out from behind his dish:
"What are you saying, you mean creature,
Running round here for, you wretch?"
245 And the little Piltti answered:
"I am asking for a sauna, 220
Sauna from the Sedgebrook village
Where a poor girl might find comfort,
And the help is badly needed."
251 The ugly wife of ugly Ruotus
Comes in with her arms akimbo,
Flounced about where the floorboards meet
In the center of the floor
As she questioned little Piltti:
"Who's the one you want the bath for,
Who is it you're sniveling for?" 230
259 And the little Piltti answered:
"I am asking for our Marjatta."
261 Said the ugly wife of Ruotus:
"There's no sauna here for strangers
At the mouth of sedgy brook.
There's a bath on Burntover Hill
In a horse barn in the firwood
Where the whore of Hell may lie-in,
Bad one go to bear her child.
When the horse blows out its breath, 240
Let her take her sauna there."
271 Little Piltti ran back home
And repeated what was told her:
"There's no bathhouse in the village,
No sauna there at sedgy brook.
Ruotus' mistress said these words:
'There's no sauna here for strangers,
At the mouth of sedgy brook.
There's a bath on Burntover Hill
In a horse barn in the firwood 250
Where the whore of Hell may lie-in,
Bad one go to bear her child.
When the horse blows out its breath,
Let her take her sauna there.'
So it is, that's what she said,
Ifs all the answer I received."

Who is this Ugly Ruotus?
The neighbours, their ugly condeming of Marjatta in her new state of existence, while she is to enlighten with this new light, with "Christ Consciouness". Ugliness comes in many forms, unaiding, words, thoughts, shying away from the new light.
There is much to think here of what and who condemns you on your path to enlightenment?
Why this is not an easy path to walk but a hard one?

289 Marjatta now broke down weeping:
"I must go now as a hireling,
As a boughten slave of yore
Yonder to Burntover Hill, 260
To the clearing in the firwood."
297 Then she gathered up her skirt,
Holding up her hem for running;
Took a slapper for some shade,
Lovely spray of leaves for shelter.
On she ran despite her pains
To the horse barn in the firwood,
To the barn on Tapio's hill.
305 She says these words, these sentences:
"Come, Creator, be my refuge, 270
Be my help, thou Merciful,
In these toils, these times of sorrow.
Come relieve me from my labor,
Free a woman from her womb-ache
Lest she sink beneath her burden,
Perish in her painful labors."
315 When she got there to the horse barn,
She besought the good horse meekly:
"Let your breath blow over me,
Puffing vapor on my belly; 280
Breathe out sauna heat to warm me
That this weak one may be strengthened,
For my need is very urgent."
323 Then the good horse breathed on her,
Draft colt breathes out in deep puffs,
Puffed out sauna vapor on her,
On the belly of the sick one.
Where the good horse huffed out heavily,
Vapor rose, as wlien thrown water
Hits the hot stones in a sauna. 290
329 Marjatta, the lowly maiden,
She, the holy little maiden,
Took that sauna bath with pleasure
As the vapor soothed her belly.
She brought forth a little infant,
Bore a sturdy little man-child
On the soft hay of the manger,
In the manger of the long-mane.
337 Then she washed and swaddled him,
Took the man-child on her knees, 300
Held her son upon her lap.
341 But she hid him from the people,
Cared for him, her lovely one,
Golden apple, staff-of silver.
At her breast she suckled him,
In caressing hands she held him.
347 Set the babe upon her knees,
Held the infant on her lap.
She began to stroke his head
And to smooth his infant hair. 310

Born in a stable - sound familiar? It is in many immaculate birth myths - why? Why is this picture painted everywhere? Why among docile farm animals is our Christ Consciouness birthed? Do reply to this. :)
Is it because we are the last, highest step of animals before the next realm of spirit and angels? Is it that we are still in a physical body even though we are enlightened - among docile creatures that still lack a skill to be aware of themselves like the awakened do?

351 From her knee he disappeared,
From her lap the child had vanished.
353 Marjatta, in agony,
Rushes out to search for him,
Her little boy, her precious one,
Golden apple, staff of silver,
Searching under milling millstone,
Even under running runner,
Underneath the sifting sieve,
Underneath the carrying bucket. 320
She went searching everywhere,
Shaking trees and spreading hay,
Picking through the slender haystalks.
365 Long and everywhere she sought him,
Sought her little son, her dear one;
Searched on hills and through the pine groves,
Under stumps and through the heather,
Over every heathery moorland,
Brushing through the undergrowth,
Digging under junipers, 330
Even straightening out tree branches.
373 She is pondering as she goes,
As she wanders here and there.
On her way Star comes upon her;
Bowing down to Star she says:
"Oh Star, God's creation!
Do you know my little boy,
Where he is, my golden apple?"
381 Star responded to her meanly:
"If I knew I would not tell you. 340
It is he himself who made me
For these trying times of evil,
To shine out in the cold up here
And to twinkle through the darkness."
387 She is pondering as she goes,
As she wanders here and there.
On her way Moon comes upon her;
Bowing down to Moon she says:
"Oh Moon, God's creation!
Do you know my little boy, 350
Where he is, my golden apple?"
395 Moon knew how to answer her:
"If I knew I would not tell you.
It is he himself who made me
For these trying times of evil,
Put me here to keep night vigil
And to sleep away the daytime."
401 She is pondering as she goes,
As she wanders here and there.
On her way Sun comes upon her; 360
Bowing down to Sun she says:
"Oh Sun, God's creation!
Do you know my little boy,
Where he is, my golden apple?"
409 sun responded to her kindly:
"Certainly I know your son.
It is he himself who made me,
Created me for these good times,
Put me here to jingle golden,
Shed my showers of tinkling silver. 370
415 "Certainly, unhappy mother,
Well I know your little man-child.
But your son, your golden apple,
Has, alas, encountered evil:
Sunken waist-deep in the swamp,
To his armpits on the heath."

It vanishes, our Christ Consciouness  - why is this?
So we go we see the stars and the moon and we ask them, have you seen him? They say yes, but do not reveal it - why? But reveal he created them. Now comes the sun, the day, our spiritual wisdom and light and it reveals, yes I saw him and this is where he is. He is it the swamp, drowned to his armpits.
Now what is the swamp - it is water and earth mixed together.
What is water, is it purification, annoinment, clean enought to babtice with? What is this earth, our material or soil, fertile ground of growth?
So stuck is our Christ Consciouness armpit deep in a world of two things, divine and physical?

421 Marjatta, the lowly maiden,
Searches for him in the swamp;
There she found him in the fen
And from there she brought him home. 380
425 He was growing up so handsome,
Beautiful son of Marjatta.
No one knew what name to give him,
Knew the proper name to call him.
Mother would call him Little Flower,
Others call him Good-for-nothing.
431 So they hunted for a christener,
Looked for someone to baptize him.
An old man came forth to do it,
Virokannas to baptize him. 390
435 But the old man then objected:
"I won't christen one possessed,
Will not baptize this poor wretch,
Not until he's well-examined
And a judgement has been given."
441 Who should be the one to judge him,
To examine and to judge him?
Old reliable Väinämöinen,
Eternal knower, he was chosen
To examine and to judge him. 400
447 Väinämöinen gave his judgement:
"Since the boy came from a fen,
Sired by a berry of the earth,
Let him be put in the earth
There beside the berry patch,
Or then taken to the swamp,
Hit on the head there with a club."
455 But the boy, the half-month old one,
Fortnight infant, cried out boldly:
"O you miserable old man, 410
Miserable old man, you stupid,
What a muddle you have made
Of both judgement and the law:
Not for greater crimes committed
Nor the stupidest wrongdoing
Were you taken to a fen,
Hit on the head there with a club
When you yourself as a younger man
Pledged the daughter of your mother"
As a ransom for your own head 420
Just to save yourself from danger.
469 "And again you were not punished,
Were not taken to a fen
When you as a younger man
Drove those gentle girls distracted
To their deaths beneath the waves
On the black ooze of the bottom."
475 So the old man baptized him,
Gladly christened this good child,
King and lord of all Karelia, 430
As the guardian over all.

Väinämöinen, the hero of our stories, our Divine Will/Spirit, he judges the child to be returned but to death - why? Why would our Divine Will behave this way?
Let me ask it this way, have you ever shouted at the skies, give me sign, or I am done, through!
If this child truly is to be Väinämöinen successor why does he judge the infant this way?
And the two week old baby speaks. Proves it is the successor, Our Divine Will or Our Spirit is followed by our Christ Consciouness our Enlightenment. It speaks up, defends itself, proves it is what evryone else say it is.

479 Vainamoinen, shamed and angry,
Walked away down to the seashore.
There he sang his last enchantment:
Conjured up a copper boat,
Closed-in vessel decked with copper.
487 There he sat, steering seaward
Out upon the clear sea surface.
As he sailed he went on speaking,
And he said as he was leaving: 440
"Let the rope of time run out-
One day go, another come-
And again I will be needed.
They'll be waiting, yearning for me
To bring back another Sampo,
To invent another harp,
Set a new moon in the sky,
Free a new sun in the heavens
When there is no moon, no sun
And no gladness on the earth." 450
501 So old Vainamoinen sailed,
Sailed out in his copper vessel,
In his winged copper boat,
To the upper worldly regions,
To the lowest levels of the heavens.
507 There he halted with his vessel,
Rested weary in his boat.
But he left his harp behind,
Graceful instrument to Finland,
Joy eternal to the nation 460
And the great songs to its children.

It's still a mystery to me why Väinämöinen would be angry or shamed - our Dvine Will, our Spirit would not feel this, so is this for show, for the people, to emphasise his return? Perhaps he does feel shame at the airing of his dirty laundry this way?
But he leaves, promising to come back when there is no moon, no sun and no gladness on earth.
This is where finnish language comes to play, "kuu" meaning moon has similarities to the word death "kuol". So perhaps it can be interpeted that there will be time when our Divine Will will return in strenght is when death has been forgotten, when people no longer know what it is, don't know what happens at death at the "Night" of our existence. Return when also our sun no longer shines, our spiritual Light our spiritual fire no longer burns, and when gladness, joy is missing.
Sound familiar?

What is this Sampo he comes to usher forward in us?
Let's investigate a little. From: Kauno Mannonen's "Uuden Ajan Kalevala Avain." On pages 83-84.
Sampo can be interped as our Ethereal Body our spirit vessel that we forge life by life better and perfect. When it is our time rise up as we ascend (like jesus did) this Sampo will be our vessel.
Samboo in Sankrit mean Highest Awakening. Tibetian word Sangfu means secret source for all happiness, hungarian Sampog means Father God and Buddisht Samboodha means Highest Knowledge, Wisdom.

And this is where we ended the studies, looking at the epilogue as this was given as inner knowledge, not learned from someone, but gathered as inner wisdom not a physical heroics but is wisdom from our inner knowledge.

Epilogue
513 Now I ought to shut my mouth
And tie my tongue up tightly,
Stop the singing of the song
And the echoing of my voice.
Even a horse will lose its breath,
Winded by too long a journey,
And a scythe will lose its sharpness
After cutting hay all summer;
Water wearies of long running 470
Through the windings of the river,
And an ember will die out
After burning all night long.
So why should a poem not weary,
Fragile verses tire of tinkling
Through the long delights of evening,
From the songs at set of day?
529 So I've heard it as a saying,
But there is a different version:
'Not even the swiftest rapids 480
Ever runs out all its water,
Nor does any expert singer
Ever pour out all his wisdom.
To hold back a song is better
Than to cut it short halfway.'
537 So I'll cease and stop and end it,
In a ball I'll wind my verses,
Twist them in a tangled skein;
Put them in the storehouse loft,
Bolted there in bony locks 490
That they cannot be released,
Never, never be untangled
Till the bones themselves are loosened,
Teeth pulled out and jaws pried open
And the tongue be freed once more.
549 What of it then if I warble,
Babble out a string of verses,
If I sing in every valley,
Wail about in every firwood?
My mother's dead, my own one sleeping, 500
So my dear one is not listening ,
Nor my loved one here to teach me.
Only fir trees listen to me,
Only pine boughs left to teach me;
Tenderness I get from birch leaves
And caresses from the rowan.
561 I have been without a mother-
As a little boy I lost her -
Like a lark on stone abandoned,
Like a small thrush on a cairn; 510
Left to sing there as a lark bird,
To complain there like a thrush
In the cold care of a stranger,
Mercy of a mean stepmother:
Put me out, a helpless orphan,
On the wind side of the house,
Coldest corner of the cabin
For cold Ahava to take me,
For the wind to blow away.
575 Like a lark I strayed afar, 520
Like a wayward bird I wandered,
Hovered about here and yonder,
Felt the bite of every wind,
Learned to know each raging gale,
Shivering, crying in the cold.
583 Now indeed there's many a one,
Many a one who scolds at me,
Speaks to me in angry accents,
Sharply in a voice unfriendly.
Someone finds fault with my voicing, 530
Someone curses out my accent;
Someone says I'm out of rhythm
And my singing's out of tune,
That I sang too much and badly,
That my verse is badly turned.
593 Do not think it odd, good people,
That a child should sing too much,
Such a little one pipe badly.
I have never been instructed
Nor have learned in wizard lands, 540
Borrowed charm-words from outsiders
Nor my spells from far-off places.
601 All the others learned from teachers,
But I could not leave my home;
As my mother's only helper,
Could not leave her there all lonely.
So at home I learned my lessons
Under the rafters of our workroom,
There between my mother's distaff
And my brother's pile of whittlings, 550
Even that when I was little,
Small boy in a ragged shirt.
611 But however that may be,
I have skied a trail for singers,
Skied the trail, snapped the brush tips,
Broke the branches, showed the way.
That way now will run the future,
On the new course, cleared and ready
For new poets of greater power,
Singing songs of mightier magic 560
For the rising younger people,
For the new and growing nation.

Want to know more? Read the lengthy Introduction, Foreword and Chapter 1 and page one of Chapter 2 of Pekka Ervast's original The Key to the Kalevala:
http://www.amazon.com/Key-Kalevala-Pekka-Ervast/dp/1577330218#reader_1577330218

Saturday, October 9, 2010

SPIRIT AND KNOWLEDGE FAIR PHOTOS

The Four Winds Concert

Opening the four winds and fifth on inside us all

 Kalevala Inspired - recycled clothing...
Juha Pentikäinen talks about a witch drums and the arctic people...

Kirsi Ranto introduces Hannu Piekkola who talked about Kalevala and the Constellations
 Main stage decoration - Bear's Scull
 Aquarian Age in astrological charts
 New Possibilities of Intyuition - EXCELLENT

The DVD

The author signed by book stating: "To A Great Finn".

The book is titled "The New Age Keys to Kalevala"

That is all for now, when I get released from the Four Winds trance I will go to more details.

Thursday, September 16, 2010

BEING FINNISH - WHY ARE YOU BORN WHERE YOU ARE NOW?

Aino by Akseli Gallen-Kallela
To begin I start with reincarnation - I believe we are born again and again to learn a predetermined lessons to figure out Who Am I. Where you are isn't the thing to focus on per say, except if you feel drawn to your countries spiritual history - because then there are things to consider:
  • You have been involved from the beginning of your human cycle in evolving this culture, especially spiritually.
  • You are drawn to the spiritual practice because there is something there that is very important for you to remember and learn.
  • It is one of your purposes to bring out the tradition, or information of the practices that can be beneficial to humanity now.
  • And myriad other reasons that you can understand deeply within yourself...
Little about why I feel drawn to my country's spiritual history:
When I was 18 my mother and my mother's twin sister took me to a lecture with them, the title of it was Being Kalevala (Kalevalalaisuus), if I recall right it was held by Matti Kuusi or Juha Pentikäinen - here is where my memory slightly fails on me. ;)
But what I do recall clearly is being thoroughly impressed how much old Finnish mythology intertwined with my spiritual view (even thought my spiritual view was only 5 years old) it was the truth to me, I knew it immediately.
From the Kalevala
After the loss of his first wife to Kullervo's curse, the disheartened Ilmarinen attempts to craft a new one from gold and silver, but finds the golden wife hard and cold. Dismayed, he attempts to wed her to his brother Väinämöinen instead, but the old sage rejects her, saying that the golden wife ought to be cast back into the furnace and tells Ilmarinen to "forge from her a thousand trinkets". Speaking to all of his people, he further adds:

    "Every child of Northland, listen,
    Whether poor, or fortune-favored:
    Never bow before an image
    Born of molten gold and silver:
    Never while the sunlight brightens,
    Never while the moonlight glimmers,
    Choose a maiden of the metals,
    Choose a bride from gold created
    Cold the lips of golden maiden,
    Silver breathes the breath of sorrow."
http://www.sacred-texts.com/neu/kveng/kvrune37.htm - Golden Bride in full text
The tale of the Golden Wife can be seen as a cautionary tale based on the theme where money cannot buy happiness and marrige and choosing your partner wisely. Having someone who looks good and is valueable but is cold and hard makes for a bad match. All the tales in Kaleva are to be throught through for their meaning to adapt to your life.
As impressed by it as I was... Life happened. Things got pushed to the back burner, they simmered there waiting.

Väinämöinen and The Maiden of The North by R.W Ekman
Being wiccan in a point of my development made Kalevala Mythology completely natural to me - it was after all very nature based, with god of the forest Tapio and goddess of the waters Wellamo, and so on...
But it wasn't till few years ago when I remembered Kalevala and felt frawn to it, I wrote a book, read Kaari Utrio, listened to Suo, studied finnish spiritual practises, god and goddess mythology.
The Fall and Winter have turned out to be the perfect times for studying Finnish Mythology, in the growing darkness the spirit of Finland rises from the ground with the mesmerizing mist and fog of the early morning. It dances over grass and water and calls you to remember. It is Fall again.

Yesterday - I read for the first time that there is a view of Finland in certain circles where they talk of Finno-Ugric language being the original language and early Finns having a grander history than what school teaches us. Naturally, I was intrigued!
"We came from the East and at the peninsula of Denmark we parted ways. The other group headed for South to Germany and middle europe, the other moved to North, aproximately 5000 years ago. [...] There are many studies that finnish language (old finnish) was the original language. These result have been made by Gustaf Kossina. Germans have gotten their culture from a higher culture called Urfinns, the original Finnish people. Reserched has showed connections to Russhian Monasteries and Great Britan's Royal Chronicals. Mannonen sees that Finns have never been a vast amount of people, but a spiritually magnificent one. 'Finns have brought their culture to where they have traveled. We have been a great nation, who has never buckled under depression.' 'We have had a more noble view of the world as Kalevala testifes. We were not a warring nation like the barbaric tribes. Instead we were the people who spread civilisation and culture... [...] Original finns and remained a clean bloodline, this has been studied by scientifically through our genes." ~Kauno Mannonen's interview in Minä Olen - Magazine 4/2010 (translation to english from finnish by yours truly)
This article, interview, above was several pages long, and has inspired me to seek more information about my countries spiritual history. Why? Because like I stated at the very beginning and in my own introduction to my history with Kalevala - It is meant to be. For one reason or another I have to learn as much as I can.
This almost makes me laugh, that I have to!
I do feel I have had many lives as a Finn, and as I feel most connected to Wellamo I feel there is history there as well. Luckily I have up to 90 years to figure this out. ;)

I will stop here as I have nothing yet to continue this on, but feel free to check out my entry of Kings of Finland.
Also people to research who were mentioned in the magazine article are:
Kauko Manninen
Pekka Ervast
Tapio Kaitaharju
Juha Pentikäinen  - books.google.fi Kalevala Mythology (especially page 225, 'Language & Cultural Identity')
Matti Kuusi

And these following mostly-neutral sites on Finno-Ugric history, if this topic has peaked your interest.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kalevala
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Finno-Ugric_languages
http://www.helsinki.fi/~jolaakso/fufaq.html - Frequently Asked Questions about Finno-Ugrian Languages

click for a bigger picture and easier read

But with this said, we cannot get too focused on one country, and one group of people. We have to remember that we are One, body, mind and soul, and though this school teaches us many things through many channels we have to remember to not take vain pride in just one thing (be it "my" country, "my" culture or "my" history). But recall that what is important and share.

Love, Light, Joy & Unity!
Niina

Tuesday, December 29, 2009

PHYSICS AND DEEPAK CHOPRA

I absolutely love quantum physics, here's some Deepak Chopra on the matter:

Tästä pääsemmekin hyvin erääseen Chopran lempiaiheista, nimittäin tietoisuuden salaperäiseen maailmaan. Hänen mukaansa me voimme muuttaa kollektiivista tietoisuutta ainoastaan muuttamalla omaamme. Eli tietoisuutemme luo todellisuutemme.
- Jotkut ihmiset haluavat muuttaa maailmaa. Meidän on kuitenkin lähdettävä liikkeelle itsestämme, sillä me olemme maailma - ja maailma on meissä, ei ulkopuolellamme. Mielestäni paras tapa ymmärtää kollektiivista tietoisuutta on epäjatkuvuuden käsite, koska vaikka maailmankaikkeus näyttää havaintotodellisuudesta käsin olevan jatkuva, se on kuitenkin on-off -ilmiö.
Tämä on-off, päällä-pois päältä -ilmiö, löytyy Chopran mukaan jokaiselta tasolta, aliatomaariselta, kvanttimekaaniselta, jopa mikroskooppiselta tasolta.
- Niinpä kysymys kuuluukin: mitä on off-tilassa? Me tiedämme on-tilan, se on energiaa, informaatiota. Entä sitten off-tila? Luullakseni lähes jokainen tätä tutkinut on nykyään sitä mieltä, että ensinnäkin se on kenttä, mutta ei informatiivisesta energiasta koostunut. Se on mahdollisuuksien kenttä.
- Toisekseen tässä kentässä on jotain, jota voimme kutsua ei-paikalliseksi korrelaatioksi. Jotain missä kaikki välittömästi korreloi kaiken muun kanssa. Ei-paikalliset korrelaatiot ovat luonnon aktiivisuuden kaikkein vaikuttavimmat ja hallitsevimmat aspektit.
Chopran mukaan tähän vihjasi ensimmäisenä itse Einstein. Hän kutsui sitä Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen -yhtälöksi, mutta tunsi kuitenkin olonsa sen kanssa epämukavaksi, koska se rikkoi suhteellisuusteorian lainalaisuuksia ja oli aika-avaruuden ja kausaliteetin tuolla puolen.
- Suhteellisuusteorian mukaan mikään ei tapahdu valoa nopeammin. Mutta jos on olemassa välitön korrelaatio, on olemassa myös samanaikaisuus. Tässä on kiistan ydin: suhteellisuusteorian mukaan valonnopeus on kattonopeus, kun taas absoluutissa kaikki korreloi välittömästi kaiken muun kanssa, joten puhumme tässä kahdesta eri ulottuvuudesta. Absoluutti, puhdas tietoisuus, on transsendentti, suhteellisen tuolla puolen. Se on välitön. Tämä on kentän toinen ominaisuus.
- Kentän kolmas ominaisuus on, että se laajenee nopeasti epävarmuuden tilassa. Ja mitä enemmän on epävarmuutta, sitä enemmän on myös luovuutta. Neljäs ominaisuus on juuri luovuus ja viides on se, mitä kutsumme tarkkailijavaikutukseksi. Eli kenttä pysyy kenttänä, ennen kuin on olemassa tietoinen tarkkailija. Kenttä ei silloin manifestoidu.
Chopra lisää, että tarvitaan tietoinen tarkkailija muuntamaan kenttä avaruudeksi, ajaksi, energiaksi, informaatioksi ja aineeksi. Universumi ei ole muuta kuin kvanttisoppaa, ennen kuin tarkkailija tekee siitä havaintoja. Nämä ovat hyvin mielenkiintoisia näkemyksiä hengen luonteesta, koska henki on juuri epäjatkuvuus.
Jokainen ajatusimpulssimme vaikuttaa tähän kenttään. Mutta kenttä on vuorovaikutuksessa itsensä kanssa luodakseen sen, mitä ajattelet. Maailmankaikkeus ajattelee kauttamme, ja me olemme koko universumin hologrammeja tai fraktaaleja. Chopran mielestä on illuusio ajatella, että on olemassa jokin pysyvä persoona. Sellaista ei ole.
Jo 1940-luvulla tiedemiehet saivat selville, että tarkkailijan odotukset voivat vaikuttaa yksittäiseen partikkeliin. Suuri yleisö on tästä täysin tietämätön, mutta on yhtä kaikki totta, että ajatukset vaikuttavat aliatomaarisiin partikkeleihin. Niinpä ajattelumme muokkauttaa kenttää tai - niin kuin jotkut sitä kutsuvat - kaikkiallista eetteriä.


Brilliant, isn't it!?

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