33 terms found
The division of Elder Futhark into three groups of eight. Freya's Aett (1-8), Heimdall's Aett (9-16), and Tyr's Aett (17-24). Each aett represents a different level of consciousness and life area.
The rune of protection, defense, and spiritual connection. Associated with elk antlers or sedge grass. Symbolizes divine protection, intuitive warning, and spiritual awakening.
The rune of communication, wisdom, inspiration, and divine messages. Directly connected to Odin. Represents the power of speech, learning, and spiritual knowledge.
Birch tree, fertility, growth, and new beginnings. Represents feminine energy, motherhood, nurturing, and nature's regenerative power.
Combining two or more runes into a single symbol. Used for creating purpose-focused talismans. The combined runes' energies amplify each other.
The rune of daylight, awakening, breakthrough, and transformation. Symbolizes the transition between night and day. Represents a leap of consciousness and dawn of a new era. Cannot be reversed.
The practice of drawing a single rune each morning for guidance about the day's energy. A simple but powerful daily spiritual discipline. Ideal for building personal connection with runes.
The rune of horse, partnership, trust, and progress. Symbolizes harmony between horse and rider. Represents loyal partnership, physical movement, and mutual trust.
The oldest and most widely used runic alphabet. Used by Germanic peoples from 2nd-8th centuries CE. Consists of 24 runes divided into three groups of eight (aetts). Named from the sounds of the first six runes: F-U-Þ-A-R-K.
Vibrationally chanting or singing rune names or sounds. A type of vocal magic. Used for meditation, ritual, and rune activation.
The rune of gift, generosity, partnership, and balance. Symbolizes mutual exchange, balance in relationships, and the giving-receiving cycle with the universe. Cannot be reversed.
The rune associated with fertility god Ing/Freyr. Symbolizes inner potential maturing, completion of a period, and new life sprouting. Cannot be reversed.
The rune of ice, stillness, pause, and patience. Indicates freezing of movement, suspension of a process, and time for introspection. Cannot be reversed.
According to Norse mythology, Odin sacrificed himself by hanging upside down on Yggdrasil (World Tree) for nine nights to gain the runes' wisdom. This sacrifice symbolizes the sacred origin of rune knowledge.
The rune of inheritance, ancestral homeland, clan wisdom, and rootedness. The last rune of Elder Futhark, symbolizing the completion of the cycle and values passed through generations.
The rune of journey, movement, rhythm, and the right path. Encompasses both physical travel and spiritual journey. Indicates right timing and understanding life's rhythm.
Drawing a rune upside down. Indicates blockage, delay, or the shadow side of the energy. Some runes (like Gebo, Isa, Jera) cannot be reversed.
Reading method of scattering rune stones on a cloth. Interpretations are made by analyzing stones' fall positions, proximity to each other, and orientations.
Runes are traditionally carved on wood, stone, bone, or clay. Crystal, glass, and ceramic sets are also common today. Material choice relates to personal connection and energy compatibility.
Physical meditation done by shaping the body into the rune symbol's form. Similar to yoga poses. Aims to internalize rune energy through bodily experience.
Meditation practice focusing on a single rune. Deep contemplation on the rune's shape, sound (galdr), and meaning. Can work with a different rune each day.
The most basic rune reading method. Three runes are drawn in Past-Present-Future or Situation-Challenge-Action formats and interpreted left to right.
The rune representing Thor's hammer, protection, and defensive power. Associated with giants (jötnar). Symbolizes the power to overcome obstacles and protect boundaries.
The rune associated with justice god Tyr. Honor, sacrifice, legal matters, and courage. Its arrow-like shape symbolizes the right direction and determination.
The rune of joy, happiness, harmony, and completion. Represents wish fulfillment, sense of community, and inner peace. The closing rune of the first aett (group of eight).
A modern addition, not in traditional sets. Represents destiny, the unknown, and universal mysteries. Some readers use it, but its historical validity is debated.