Showing posts with label Gerðr. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gerðr. Show all posts

Sunday, December 18, 2011

Runes 101 – Runes in Mythology 6


Last week, one of the runes I drew was Ingwaz – the Rune of the god Freyr and I mentioned that Freyr surrendered his sword to his friend and servant Skínir so that Skínir would get the giantess Gerðr and bring her to Freyr to be his wife.  What I didn’t tell you was how exactly Skínir accomplished that ask.  He used Runes.  Today, in the sixth installment of my Runes in Mythology series, I will, because it shows how Rune magic was perceived in the mythology.

You see, one day, although he wasn’t supposed to, Freyr sat in Hlidskjálf, Odin’s high seat in his hall Valaskjálf.  From this seat, Odin can see everything in the nine worlds.  As Freyr sat in Odin’s seat, he looked to the north and spotted a great hall in Jotunheim, a hall which belonged to Gymir.  Coming out of the hall was a beautiful maiden – Gerðr.  Immediately, he was love struck and Skínir, at the request of Freyr’s father Njörd and step-mother Skadi (also a giantess) got Freyr to confess the reason for his mood.

Freyr told him about spying Gerðr and then asked Skínir to go to her and convince her to meet with him.  He agreed to give Skínir his sword and the horse that that would carry him through the darkness and over magical, flickering flames.  With these items in hand, Skínir set off on his journey.

When he arrived at Gerðr’s hall, two hounds stood guard at the gates.  Skínir asked a local herdsman how to get past the dogs, but the man was unwilling to help him.  Determined and realizing his fate was set long ago, he rode to the hall, set his horse to graze and Gerðr, hearing all the noise of the barking dogs and the yelling between Skínir, told her servant to invite him in.

Once inside, he presented her with eleven apples of gold and told her of Fryer’s desire for her.  She refused the apples and assured him she would never settle down with Freyr.

Next, Skínir gave her Daupnir, the magical arm ring.  Eight rings, just like it, dropped from it every ninth night.  Again she refused Skínir’s offering.

When gifts didn’t work, he resorted to coercion.  Brandishing the sword from Freyr, he threatened to slit her throat with it if she didn’t agree to meet Freyr.  She didn’t cave to his threat of force against her.

Skínir set down Freyr’s sword, grabbed his own magical staff and began to cast Rune spells on her.  He told her he would tame her, she would go to a high tower where no man will ever see her again and just sit there looking through bars out over the world.  All food would seem vile to her.  Unbearable desire, rage, and longing would torture her.  No matter what she did, she wouldn’t be able to escape her fate.  Spiteful spirits would pick at her.  Then, she would creep through the halls of the frost giants without choice, her body would shake as she cried and she would be very sad.  She would spend her life with a three-headed giant and never sleep with a man.  She would be driven crazy by her unfulfilled lust and sadness and then cast away like a thistle at the end of the harvest.

Skínir told her how he traveled into the forest to get a potent branch to fashion a wand and showed it to her as he proclaimed that Odin and Thor were mad at her and Freyr would hate her; she had unleashed the gods’ fury.  He began to chant to the frost giants and forbid them from pleasuring Gerðr.  Hrimgrimnir was the giant who would have her near the gates of Hel and she would have only goat urine to drink.  Then, he carved three Runes on her – unbearable desire, loathing and raving.  Once the Runes were carved, Skínir told her he could erase them if she gave him a valid reason for doing so.

By this point, Gerðr was trembling with fear and conceded.  She offered Skínir mead and assured him that she would meet Freyr at the forest called Barri in nine nights and give herself to him then.

Monday, December 12, 2011

The Random Draw

Today, I find myself at a crossroads of sorts.  There are a number of things about which I want to ask the Runes for guidance and clarity.  Since I can't decide, I turned the tables on the Runes.  I asked them to show me what they wanted me to know and promised I would figure it out.  The catch is that I can figure out only what the draw means for me.  So, you will have to see if and how it fits your situation.  The three Runes I was given are Laguz, Ingwaz/Inguz, and my favorite - Jera.

Laguz is the Rune of the Sea, of Flow and Intuition.  I found it quite amusing that the new age interpretation for this Rune includes living without understanding or evaluating things and that it is a Rune of intuition.  A challenge, perhaps, for my request to have the Runes show me what they want me to see and the promise that I will figure out to what they refer.  Maybe they don't want me to see anything at the moment.  To be sure, traditional meanings related to Laguz refer to the mysterious depths of the sea and liken it to the subconscious mind.  Okay, so maybe the Runes are telling me that they don't need to tell me, because I already know it on some level.  A cleansing, reevaluation is called for.  I should look at what I have and, if I move things around a bit, I will see more clearly what I need to know.

The challenge around this mystery is Ingwaz/Inguz and relates to the Norse god Freyr, the god of fertility and plenty.  That Freyr was brave and passionate cannot be doubted.  He is the god who fought and was killed by Surtr, the fire giant, in the final battle.  Looking at why he was killed reveals his passion.  He fell so deeply in love with the giantess Gerðr that he gave his sword to his servant Skínir to get him to go and bring Gerðr to him to be his wife.  Thus, Freyr did not have his sword, then, when he came up against Surtr at Ragnarök.  While passion drives me most of the time the message I get from this is that passion must be guided by practicality and planning.  Whatever your "sword" is, don't be too quick to give it away.


The action comes from Jera, the Rune of the Harvest.  This reminds me that everything has a process through which it must travel to fruition.  Hard work, good planning and judgement are required here to complete the cycle successfully.  The best part of this Rune lies within the traditional interpretation, which claims that if the investor (aka me or you) benefits, the community will benefit.  This is a worthwhile venture.


Have you figured out how this applies to your life?  Because now I know that an idea that popped up for me a few days ago is one worth pursuing and that I must continue my lifelong quest to be a writer.  I hope you can see how this applies to you and that we all have success with turning our dreams and ideas into reality.