Death and Dagaz

I recently declared that I wanted to embrace the idea of memento mori. The universe obliged. An old ring from childhood reappeared, a skull that I can carry on my hand, a silent and implacable reminder of mortality and perhaps the freedom that comes when one is released from the illusion of eternal existence.

It is important not to trivialise mortality in the name of spiritual or philosophical reflection of course. There are others far more qualified to write about the subject than I. Nevertheless, mortality has been a leit-motif throughout my life and it is a theme that figures importantly for me. Thus I am moved to write.

Death provokes fear. Fear provokes the desire to escape the threat of death. Since we are unavoidably mortal, fear therefore resorts to the deployment of belief as a bulwark against our inevitable demise. This is the essence of what in psychology is known as Terror Management Theory. In order to manage our terror in the face of the awful dark horizon we construct beliefs which simplify the world for our brains, reduce it to digestible symbols that paper over the screaming horror of our infinitesimal powerlessness before the frightful majesty of creation.

Hence, when we make the commitment to live a spiritual life and embrace the horizon of the unknown, we offer ourselves up to a state of tremendous vulnerability. It is here that the double nature of mythology, on one hand door, on the other refuge, is revealed.

Myth is a door. What is a door? A door is an opening in a wall through which we may pass. The door is an invitation into a larger world beyond the limits of the walls we immediately perceive. Even when closed, it is a constant reminder to us of a bigger picture: there is more to be experienced than just our immediate existence.

What lies through the door? It could be anything. A larger world, a different perspective. It could be dark or light, joyous or miserable. It could be a cul de sac or a road that ever ends. Likely enough all of these things await those that step through the door that is called myth.

For where the myth itself is done, safe, secure in its form, recognisable in its character, shaped and regulated by convention, the world that awaits us on its other side is wild, unpredictable, untameable. It is one thing to read about the fury and ecstasy that Odin inspires; another to be swept into a tide of poetic frenzy. It is one thing to praise Jord’s bounty; another to sink your hands into the soil, to plant a tree, to be lost in wild country, to be tossed by storm or tremor.

How does myth open itself? How do we step through? It opens itself when we slow down, when we listen to our heart beating, when we give space for its secrets to give themselves. When we open ourselves to uncertainty, when we put aside our fear of death and the need for control and faith that this fear impels.

Myth is by itself mere words. It can be justified only by the worlds into which it opens. Myth is not property, cultural, intellectual, or otherwise. Myth is a seduction, a lover, an agent provocateur set on unsettling our settled, death denying articles of faith. Myth is always in motion. It is a verb, an action carried out endlessly by the horizon of mystery – Runa – herself.

And so those that want to control myth, to make it dead, predictable, to make it into property, to make it into a rigid template for the construction of stale identity – these we accuse of impiety. If we use myth as nothing more than a vehicle for mere belief – and not as an opportunity to open our spirits to the unknown – then we blaspheme.

I am not afraid, therefore, to declare that it appears that many Heathens blaspheme against their own professed faith without so much as realising it. Yet such folk should not be blamed, unless of course they know better but are too cowardly to embrace the dare of the door. Unless of course, though knowing better, they bar the door up and declare that it is the thing to be worshipped, not the infinite magic that glowers beyond it.

Yet myth is also a refuge. For if we were to stand, naked and purged, before the raw intensity of this mystery-woven universe without any railing to grasp then we would be swept away in the torrent. The universe is so incredibly vast, and often as cruel and arbitrary as she is loving and rational, at least from the narrow glimpse of her secrets that we mere mortals are afforded.

How then are we to cope with true piety – with steeling ourselves against our fear of death and stepping through the door of myth? What protection might we give ourselves?

Myth is redolent with symbolism, with endless layers of associations, connections, refractions, reflections. We find ourselves making sense of the world in the truisms of Havamal, or putting words to the ineffable art of creation when we invoke the subterranean skulduggery of Bolverkr. In the rune poems we find endless fractional images of reality, metaphors which offer moments of order and sense in this vast chaotic carnival of life.

Thus myth invites us to shed all form and embrace the pure unknown, and myth provides language and sense for us to recover and integrate the experiences we find beyond the mythic door. When too distilled our experience becomes, myth offers a refuge, a stable retreat and ward. It helps us to recover from the shock of being finite in this infinite cosmic passion play.

And thus is the art of the alchemist, the magician, the saint, the shaman: to move back and forth across the very threshold of myth. To step out into the unknown, to drink its thick, roaring waters; and then to step back into the warm embrace of mythic refuge, to clothe oneself in the images and metaphor, the traces and patterns which are ultimately inspired by the Unknown and which help us to integrate the Unknown into our finite forms.

In other words, the spiritual art, the art of stepping back and forth through the doors of myth, is the art of living on the threshold of death, which is the ever-present spectre of the Unknown in life. We can only taste the gush of our lifeblood if we are willing to shed it.

Yet we continually lose ourselves in the small doings of daily life, the invisible but compelling stories we tell ourselves: lose ourselves in a futile attempt to avoid facing death’s gaze. Therefore, to surround oneself with memento mori, with reminders of death, is to continually draw oneself back to the door of myth, and the Beyond, and to the refuge of myth, and the need to care for one’s finitude even amid infinity.

To those who dare to remember myth:
Drink deep of the Well!

To those who dare to remember death:
Dance joyous on the threshold!

To those who have ears to hear:

Carpe Diem!

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10 thoughts on “Death and Dagaz

  1. Herr Loki, this is one of the most brilliant essays you have written and I would like see it in print! It shows both soulful strength and pious vulnerability, two essential ingredients in the transformation of the human spirit into a higher state.

    Nietzsche wrote to a Christian Europe to wake its folks up from their dogmatic slumber. You are doing the same to the heathen “community”. Herr Loki, you are a Nietzschean heathen! And indeed there was a lot of Loki in Nietzsche, too, when he accused his compatriots of not being able to dance as well as the Italians.

  2. “Carpe diem” is a useful phrase in esotericism. It exhorts mortals to meditate on the nature of time – on how being is temporalised by time. In spiritual terms, the time of transformation is now. This is because the future can suddenly be nothing more than a rotting corpse.

  3. Thanks for your kind words! You have reminded me of Uncle Al:

    “I slept with Faith, and found a corpse in my arms on awakening; I drank and danced all night with Doubt, and found her a virgin in the morning.”

  4. Death as a door to the other side: awareness is important. There is a difference between crossing over with spiritual intent and simply being consumed by the power of the mysteries. Without higher purpose, all phenomena become “maya”, laying over awareness and dulling the inner light of the spirit, which upon death can truly radiate.

  5. This essay is nothing short of brilliant!

    The “Door” has always been an important metaphor for me and an old friend of mine, called Henrik. Death as a Door. Wow!

    Also the idea that Myth is a Form to be used as a Door – not an end in itself! – is a notion of paramount importance to be made more known amongst Heathens and Pagans. Well, and Christians, too. If Jesus Christ says that he is a “Door” and a “Path”, it makes little sense to worship a piece of dead wood on the wall, or to take the Bible literally, or to believe that someone else has died for your “sins”. “Christ is a whore and the Pope is a pimp.” (Beastianity) :-) Further, the fact that you free myth of ownership – by culture, gurus or churches / organizations – is a necessary step towards a more profound apprehension of our culture and other cultures. Those who control myths and the “stories” – the memes, as it were – are those who manipulate them (with intention or unconsciously) and consider themselves to be the truth owners. (Whether it’s the media, politicians, church leaders, dogma junkies or some fucked up gurus, is relatively unimportant.) We Chaos Heathens, I’d like to believe, give the myths back to its original creator: the Unknown or God(s). Western Magic – and all modern (neo-)pagan, (neo-)shamanic, (neo-)Voudoun or (neo-)Runic etc. systems are its derivatives – is of sound need of humbleness, of devotion, of Love.

    I really love and admire your way of seeing Runa, Heimlich Addlebert Loki! You are a true inspiration for all those, whose Wode is enflamed by your Words.

  6. “Árvekni” is the Icelandic term for awareness and is used by modern Icelandic heathens as a spiritual technique.

  7. Matt, you are talking about an identity that subverts all identities (social posturing and neurotic fixation), I am with you on that. Continuously sculpting, shedding old skins, but never departing from the primordial stream, embracing both lux and nox, abyssal crossing, fearless transcendence, crying and laughing in infinite space.

  8. Herr Loki, reading their discussions, I think the Icelandic heathens are referring to the Indo-European template of vipaśyanā meditation: insight into the nature of reality.

    In my opinion, the tantric appropriation of vipaśyanā, say in the Vajrayana Buddhism of Tibet, is useful for Asatruars. In lhagthong, meditation on the qualities of different deities (buddhas) is involved. I can imagine árvekni involving reflection on the spiritual meaning of the being and deeds of the Norse pantheon in accordance with traditional literature.

  9. Awesome article. We travel between the Realms,and I give Odin gratitude for the gift of the Runes.The sagas and eddas. A meditation of life and the heroic struggle! We drink from the Well and open ourselves to the mysteries of the World Tree where we can travel the Realms and connect with the Gods and our ancestors. Our myths are our invitation to higher consciousness!We give thanks to Odinfor our door to the Nine worlds. I raise a horn to you Mr. Loki! Thanks.

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