X. Galdrastafir og Bindrúnir — Magical Staves and Bind-Runes
The Written Will
Beyond the Elder Futhark runes themselves, the Northern practitioners developed complex magical symbols called galdrastafir (magical staves) and bindrúnir (bind-runes) — visual spells drawn, carved, or painted to manifest specific outcomes.
Galdrastafir (Magical Staves):
These are primarily Icelandic in origin but have spread throughout Northern practice.
Ægishjálmur (Helm of Awe)
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- Appearance: Eight-armed radiant pattern (simplified above)
- Purpose: Protection in battle, instilling fear in enemies, invincibility
- How to use: Draw on forehead, carve on weapons, paint on shields
- Modern use: Draw before confrontations, job interviews, legal matters
- Material: Lead was traditional, but ink, charcoal, or visualization works
Vegvísir (Runic Compass)
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Radiant eight-pointed symbol with runic elements
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- Purpose: Never lose your way, guidance, safe travel, finding your path
- How to use: Carry while traveling, draw before important decisions
- Modern use: GPS of the spirit, finding life direction
- Note: Not ancient Viking (appears in 1860s grimoire) but powerful nonetheless
Gapaldur and Ginfaxi (Wrestling Staves)
- Purpose: Victory in wrestling/competition
- Gapaldur: Worn under right heel (to cripple opponent)
- Ginfaxi: Worn between brows (to instill fear)
- Modern use: Competition, sports, debates, any contest
Lukkustafir (Lucky Stave)
- Purpose: General good fortune, luck
- How to use: Carve on wood or paper, carry as talisman
- Materials: Oak or ash wood preferred
Draumstafir (Dream Stave)
- Purpose: Good dreams, prophetic dreams, dream protection
- How to use: Draw on paper and place under pillow
- Herbs to combine: Mugwort, lavender
Þjófastafir (Thief Stave)
- Purpose: Catch thieves, protect property, make stolen items return
- How to use: Draw above doorway, in wallet, on valuable items
- Ethics: For protection, not theft
Bindrúnir (Bind-Runes):
Bind-runes combine multiple runes into a single symbol, creating a custom sigil for specific intentions.
How to Create Bind-Runes:
1. Determine your intention (be specific)
2. Choose runes that align with your goal:
- Fehu (ᚠ) — wealth, prosperity
- Uruz (ᚢ) — strength, vitality
- Thurisaz (ᚦ) — protection, defense
- Ansuz (ᚨ) — communication, wisdom
- Raido (ᚱ) — journey, travel
- Kenaz (ᚲ) — knowledge, inspiration
- Gebo (ᚷ) — gift, partnership
- Wunjo (ᚹ) — joy, harmony
- Hagalaz (ᚺ) — disruption, transformation
- Nauthiz (ᚾ) — need, constraint, necessary action
- Isa (ᛁ) — ice, stillness, binding
- Jera (ᛃ) — harvest, cycles, reward
- Eihwaz (ᛇ) — protection, connection to spirit
- Pertho (ᛈ) — mystery, divination, hidden things
- Algiz (ᛉ) — protection, higher self
- Sowilo (ᛋ) — sun, success, victory
- Tiwaz (ᛏ) — justice, honor, victory
- Berkana (ᛒ) — birth, new beginnings, growth
- Ehwaz (ᛖ) — movement, partnership, trust
- Mannaz (ᛗ) — humanity, self, community
- Laguz (ᛚ) — water, intuition, flow
- Ingwaz (ᛜ) — fertility, internal growth
- Dagaz (ᛞ) — dawn, breakthrough, transformation
- Othala (ᛟ) — inheritance, home, ancestry
3. Overlay the runes sharing common lines where possible
4. Simplify if too complex (aesthetic matters)
5. Charge the bind-rune:
- Speak each rune's name three times
- State the overall intention
- Breathe life into it (three breaths)
- Anoint with oil or blood-substitute
- Carry, wear, or place where needed
Example Bind-Runes:
For Protection:
- Algiz + Thurisaz + Tiwaz
- Combines defensive protection, boundary, and righteous justice
For Prosperity:
- Fehu + Jera + Dagaz
- Wealth + harvest reward + breakthrough/dawn of new prosperity
For Love:
- Gebo + Wunjo + Kenaz
- Partnership + joy + passion/fire
For Healing:
- Uruz + Berkana + Sowilo
- Strength + growth/renewal + solar vitality
For Safe Travel:
- Raido + Algiz + Ehwaz
- Journey + protection + horse/vehicle
Charging and Activating Staves:
1. Draw or carve with intention
2. Color with appropriate substance:
- Red: Blood-substitute (wine, ochre) for power
- Black: Ink, charcoal for binding/protection
- Gold/Yellow: For solar/success work
- Blue: For peace/healing
3. Speak the galdr (incantation):
- State what the stave is for
- Repeat three or nine times
- Use rhythmic, chant-like delivery
4. Breathe life (önd) into it — three or nine breaths
5. Offerings — give something in exchange (mead, herbs, coin)
6. Placement or carrying as appropriate
Where to Place Staves:
- Above doorways — protection, blessing
- Under threshold — ward, barrier
- In wallet — prosperity
- Under pillow — dreams
- On body (temporary) — personal power
- On tools — empowering objects
- In vehicles — safe travel
- In grimoire — recording your work
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XI. Öndvegissúlur og Helgidómur — Sacred Space and Altar
Creating the Temple
Even the most practical of Norse folk understood the importance of sacred space — the vé (holy place), the household altar, the high seat pillars that anchored a homestead to the gods and land spirits.
The Household Altar (Altari):
Location:
- Ideal: Facing north (direction of mystery, Niflheim, the unknown)
- Alternative: East (dawn, new beginnings, Ásgarðr)
- Practical: Any quiet corner where you won't be disturbed
- Modern: A shelf, table, or dedicated space; size matters less than intention
Base Setup:
Cloth (Dúkur):
- Color based on intention:
- White — all-purpose, purity
- Red — strength, passion, gods of action
- Green — land spirits, growth, prosperity
- Black — shadow work, Hel, ancestors
- Blue — peace, water, seiðr work
Candles (Kerti):
- At minimum: One white or beeswax candle
- Traditional: Two candles (representing sun and moon, masculine and feminine)
- Advanced: Colors for different gods/intentions
- Always: Fire-safe setup, never leave burning unattended
Offering Bowl (Blótskál):
- Wood, ceramic, or horn (avoid plastic)
- For pouring offerings: mead, water, wine, milk
- Empty and refresh regularly (never let offerings rot)
- Pour offerings outside to earth or into living plant
Offering Plate (Diskur):
- For solid offerings: bread, cakes, fruit, salt
- Remove within 24 hours (let birds/animals eat, or bury)
Images or Symbols (Goðamyndir):
- Statues, pictures, or symbols of deities you work with
- Can be simple: a stone for each god, drawn symbols, printed images
- Not required if you prefer an aniconic (symbol-based) practice
Representation of Elements:
- Fire: Candle or oil lamp
- Water: Bowl of fresh water (change daily)
- Earth: Bowl of salt, soil, or stone
- Air: Incense, feather, or opening window during ritual
Specialized Altar Tools:
Völva's Staff (Seiðstafr):
- Tall staff, traditionally with metal finial
- Represents authority, connection between worlds
- Used in seiðr trance work
- Modern: Any tall branch or wooden staff that feels powerful
- Decoration: Carve runes, wrap with wool, add bells or feathers
Hammer (Hamar — Thor's Hammer):
- Replica Mjölnir or actual small hammer
- Used for blessing (hallowing)
- Trace hammer sign over things to bless or protect
- Represents Thor's protection
Horn or Chalice (Horn/Bikar):
- For ritual drinking (mead, ale, juice)
- Drinking horns are traditional
- Pass clockwise (sunwise) if sharing in group
- Pour remainder as offering
Wand or Staff (Töfrasproti):
- Smaller than völva's staff
- For directing energy, tracing runes
- Wood from sacred trees: rowan, ash, oak, birch
- Length: forearm or full cubit (elbow to fingertip)