I feel the land called me to the UK, and since I got here I’ve been trying to learn a language to understand it.
It seems to me that it’s difficult to pin down the spirit/god/entity/weird/other when the never-ending journey is trying to understand it in the first place.
One of the things I like about Fencraft is the emphasis on mystery, fragments, shadows, and not necessarily knowing everything about something as more reconstructionist paths aim for.
So perhaps it is not about defining what the Landweird is, but the emphasis on seeking its voice and catching glimpses of what it could be.
So it’s not exactly a case of “the deity that we revere” (or even understand) but “this is the voice we are seeking to hear.”
no subject
It seems to me that it’s difficult to pin down the spirit/god/entity/weird/other when the never-ending journey is trying to understand it in the first place.
One of the things I like about Fencraft is the emphasis on mystery, fragments, shadows, and not necessarily knowing everything about something as more reconstructionist paths aim for.
So perhaps it is not about defining what the Landweird is, but the emphasis on seeking its voice and catching glimpses of what it could be.
So it’s not exactly a case of “the deity that we revere” (or even understand) but “this is the voice we are seeking to hear.”