Seiðr I
Seiðr (which
is sometimes anglicized as seidhr, seidh, seidr, seithr,
or seith) is an Old Norse term
for a type of sorcery which
was practised in Norse
society during the Late Scandinavian Iron Age.
Much speculation but little fact has
been written of Seidr craft or trance magic of the ancient Nors. Trance Magic
is a misleading term and should be placed in its proper perspective. There are
many who claim that the shapeshifting ability of the ancients was no more or
less than visions that took place during unconscious or "trance"
states. This attitude should be discounted as a lack of understanding of the
principles involved.
Trance is only the first of the states
required for learning to effect a "sending". The trance condition is
necessary for novice volva or vitki in order to learn effective use of
Seidr magic but it isn't the whole of the craft. Blocking out "real
world" distractions is a paramount skill. Without it little can be
accomplished in the shadow realms. It is useful to clear the mind and enhance
the shaman's ability to focus and visualize the desired conditions.
Ideally, the practitioner should be able to achieve a trance state by will
alone. To attain the mental dispelling necessary for this feat sometimes
requires years of practice. However, with the judicious use of certain
techniques most novices can develop a basic trance state within weeks of
beginning their training. The techniques include repetitive sound, visual
focus devices and a variety of herbal substances. A few of the less
dangerous techniques are included here.
As with all
disciplines Seidr magic has many levels of expertise. In the most basic level
the practitioner is able to project images into the minds of susceptible
individuals that are interpreted first as dreams and later as real events. In
more advanced students the projected image takes on a physical reality and in
the adept can become a true reality. The substance of our world and
the extradimensional worlds that surround it are more or less mutable.
That is, we can by focusing will, cause both apparent and real changes in the
fabric of our existence. Most practitioners begin with little or no
ability to shape or shapeshift. Their arena is limited to the space
inside their minds. Now, that is a wide space indeed, but nothing
when the true vastness of reality is considered. The true art of
Seidr lies in the ability to create shapes in your head and impress them on the
outside world.
Seiðr - the old Nordic form of shamanism
article
by Annette Host
Traditionally, the practitioners
of seiðr used a unique combination of staff and ecstatic song as
means for the soul to journey. Seiðr is described in late Viking age
sources, but origins much earlier in fertility cult and early shamanism.
The mystical core of seiðr is
inseparable from the wild nature. Therefore a key part of our work is
connecting our practice with the power of the land: “Sitting out” alone with
our staff between hills and trees, the songs of earth and wind will blend with
our own songs, and dusk and darkness will teach us to see. In this way
our seiðr takes takes root in our own landscape and time.
One of the greatest gifts the
ancient seiðr tradition has to offer practitioners of today is a
skillful way of dealing with power, expressed in the Norse term ergi, with
hints of parallels to tantra.Seiðr can profoundly inspire our shamanic
work, we become freer to choose the right ritual tool for the right task, and
we deepen our experience of the power of earth.
Seiðr - the written sources
The old written sources about seiðr are found in the Edda and the sagas, and
often it is not at all clear if they describe myth or this reality or both.
Some key points in the seiðr practise are never mentioned, and the descriptions
are often heavily biased. I will briefly introduce here the bare bones of
seiðr, enough for a basic understanding.
In its blooming days, a thousand years
ago and more, the Northern shamanic tradition of seiðr was practised mostly by
women, called volvas, seiðr-wives, sp -wives, or wise women. The volva is often
described as being past her fertile years, and unlike other women she has no
clan- or lineage-name. The seiðr has its roots in the fertility cult around the
goddess Freya, and the ceremonial form of a seiðr seance is quite unique. The
volva does her shamanic work sitting with her staff on a highseat, or platform,
a seiðrhiallr. The staff is important, but it is never said what for. The volva
is surrounded by a circle of people, who sing the seiðr songs, the
spirit-calling songs, the magic chants, but no chants are written down. It is
this ecstatic song which changes her state of consciousness, carries her into
trance on a journey. When the song ends, and the volva is still suspended
between the worlds, she is in a state to prophesy, to divine, to answer
questions about future and fate, receiving her knowledge from the spirit
realm.
Seiðr has been used mainly for
divination, but in some accounts the volva's close link to Freya and the powers
of fertility shines clearly through: In the story of Thorbi"rg Lillvolva,
the volva is called because of the famine and the barrenness of the land. In
Landn mab¢k another volva gets named "Filler of the Sound" because
she made the herring return to a fjord they had disappeared from. The seiðr is
thus used to bring plenty, to restore balance between people and nature.
In some accounts seiðr is used for
harmful magic, to send somebody illness or misfortune. Here we must remember
that the literature is very biased, written by christian sholars often opposed
to this heathen practise. But of course the seiðr practitioners have been faced
with the same fundamental ethical choice between using or abusing power as
shamans are everywhere. What we can read between the lines is: If one can send
harm, one can also send healing. In short, seiðr can be used to gather and send
power.
The song
The seiðr song as portrayed in the literature is unmistakably shamanic and has
shown me a lot about magic singing in general. Song and chanting has been a
dimension in shamanic practise always and everywhere, and song shows up all by
itself for anyone who starts on the path of shamanism.
It is said that the seiðrsong was
ecstatic song. To me ecstasy means a state where you have let go so much of
ego, control, and convention that the power of the universe flushes through you
unhindered. And that is the first trait of shamanic singing: that you sing from
a source that is bigger than yourself, and let power flow through you as song.
In other words, the song is sung in an altered state of awareness, or in
trance. And when we start to sing like that, we can experience a marvellous
shift in our voice, our breathing and endurance, the power and effect of our
utterance. The song sings us.
There is a second trait of the ecstatic
song that makes it shamanic: the song has a definite purpose. We sing open the
doors to the otherworld. We sing out to our spirithelpers, so they may know
we're calling them. We sing to a tree to honour its beautiful power. We sing
the invisible threads between us and our spirithelpers stronger. We sing a
mound open, so we can talk with our ancestors. We sing pains and spirits of illness
away. We sing thanks to the plants we harvest.
This gets us to the third trait.
Shamanic songs or chants are not composed or constructed. They are found,
heard, gotten, when we are in-spired. They arrive, arise, unfold. And then they
burst from me, when I am full, full, and cannot contain them any longer. The
songs visit us. Sometimes they stay with us for a long time, sometimes they
leave again fast. Sometimes they have words, sometimes just sounds.
One of the first verses in Finlands
great magic song cycle "The Kalevala" expresses beautifully where the
magic songs live, where the source of power is:
"The Cold offered me Lays out there
The Rain sent me often Songs
Other Ballads the Wind brought me
The Waves carried them to the Shore
Birds shaped Words into Tones
Talking sounded from the Crowns of Trees."
The Rain sent me often Songs
Other Ballads the Wind brought me
The Waves carried them to the Shore
Birds shaped Words into Tones
Talking sounded from the Crowns of Trees."
The spiritual roots of the seiðr
The fertility deities Frey and Freya were members of a clan of gods and spirits called the Vanir. The earth centered Vanir-religion is a spirituality of peace and plenty, including sexuality and magic in the sacred realm. It is much closer to animism and non-duality than the later Viking gods, the Aesir, where the most well known are Odin, Thor, Balder. The Vanir goddesses and gods of fertility are inseparable from a vast omnipresent population of nature spirits, powers of fruitfulness, and elemental forces.
People of that time were always aware of
these beings. They were in daily communication and exchanged help with their
spirit neighbours, to ensure that both the land, the spirits and humans would
prosper. This is the spiritual foundation of the seiðr, and obviously the volva
works within an intimate relationship with nature: It is from there she draws
her power. Thus the volva represents the world view of this older, fertility
and earth oriented spirituality, and this shows in her seiðr.
The saga accounts often depict a
conflict between the old volva and a young man representing the newer, militant
Viking culture. The written sources testify that the men of the Viking age,
even before Christianity, experienced more and more difficulty with the
valuesystem personified by the volva, in fact it provoked them and enraged
them. Whereas women were the keepers of the old cult and spirituality, since it
allowed them more power and freedom.
It is tempting to read this conflict
exclusively as "male" vs. "female" values, men vs. women,
but if we do we're likely to miss the point. The heart of this conflict is the
choice between staying in harmony with nature, or trying to conquer and
dominate it. It was a vital choice then, it is a vital choice today, and it
will show in our shamanic work.
I've been practicing something similar to this for years and never knew about Seidr. It works. My path is non-theistic, though. Do you know of a term from the old language for the trance state?
ReplyDeleteI've been practicing something similar to this for years and never knew about Seidr. It works. My path is non-theistic, though. Do you know of a term from the old language for the trance state?
ReplyDeleteThank You for this.
ReplyDelete