Monday, December 8, 2025

The age of ice and gravel

 

Credit: Gktambe

I admit I never heard of the Amarnath Cave Temple before. It´s a quite literal cave at a high altitude in the Indian-controlled part of Kashmir where Hindu pilgrims worship a gigantic ice stalagmite, believed to be a natural manifestation of the god Shiva. 

The pilgrimage is rather large. It´s also rather dangerous. Thousands of Indian soldiers and police officers try and protect the pilgrims, who are attacked by Islamist terrorists on a semi-regular basis. Kashmir is majority-Muslim and the jihadists fight for the entire area to be merged into Pakistan.

None of this will be a problem if climate change simply melts the glaciers in the Himalayas, but I´m digressing. 

Find Shiva within you, ye pilgrim brethren! 

Hittar inte hem?

 




"Current mood"? Thomas Di Levas nya singel och en exeges från Dill-Eva himself. Känner mig ibland ungefär lika förvirrad, fast på ett mindre "flummigt" sätt. Vilket kanske är ännu värre på något sätt...

!!!

 

- Slutsnackat!

Okej, det här var oväntat. Har det varit statskupp på Aftonbladet över helgen? I så fall åt rätt håll. Får se hur länge kuppmakarna klarar av att hålla ledarsidan...

Varför är vänstern så tyst om övergrepp om barn?

Beasts of their Lord?

 


Of course animals are religious. They worship their lord. You know, Pashupati...

The weekly Shiva

 


Pashupati again! But this time, there are both Holarctic and tropical birds surrounding him...

Bing AI strikes again, right? 

Sunday, December 7, 2025

Lussiferda: Nightmare before St Lucy´s Day?

 


I think it´s quite obvious that the names "Lussi" or "Lusse" are derived from Lucia (Saint Lucy), since the demon is supposed to roam on December 13. Which just happens to be, you know, the feast day of said Lucy. That an ogress is named after a Christian saint is piquante, to be sure, but that´s how folklore works: through free association. Today, the connection between the female demon and the Christian martyr looks very strange, but there you go!

Can you tell me about Lussi or Lusse?

Sure — here’s a fairly comprehensive look at Lussi (sometimes “Lusse,” “Lussekäringen,” or “Lussegubben”) — a female (or sometimes male in variant legends) folkloric figure from Scandinavia — what we know, what is uncertain, and how she’s changed over time.


🌒 Who/what is Lussi

  • Lussi is — in older Scandinavian folk-belief — a malevolent female spirit or “witch”-like being associated with the dark midwinter period. Store norske leksikon+2Haugalandmuseet+2

  • She is said to ride through the air in the night, often on a horse, a crooked broom, or a “iron-cart” (jernkjerre), accompanied by a host of other spirits or beings called Lussiferda — a ghostly or demon-ridden group that resembles the more widely known motif of the Wild Hunt / “Oskoreia.” Store norske leksikon+2Uppsala Universitet DiVA+2

  • The night associated with Lussi is called Lussinatt (or Lussi-langnatt) — the eve of December 13 (under the old Julian calendar this was considered the longest night of the year). Haugalandmuseet+2Store norske leksikon+2

  • In some variants, especially in certain regions, there is a male counterpart: Lussegubben (“Old Man Lusse”). Uppsala Universitet DiVA+1

So Lussi is less like a saint or local guardian, and more like a dangerous liminal-power, a “winter-spirit / demon-queen,” marking the boundary between the ordinary and supernatural during the darkest time of the year.


📆 What is Lussi’s Night / What does she “do”

According to folklore, during Lussinatt and through the following period before Yule / Christmas:

  • Lussi and her entourage roam the countryside, often by night, and look for households or individuals who haven’t completed their preparations for the winter holidays: spinning, baking, brewing — the necessary tasks for food and warmth. If those tasks aren’t done, she punishes the household. sciencenorway.no+2Haugesunds Avis+2

  • She is especially dangerous to disobedient children — tales say she could come down chimneys and abduct naughty kids. scandinavianarchaeology.com+2Uppsala Universitet DiVA+2

  • Domestic animals could also behave oddly: in some lore, on Lussinatt animals are said to talk (a sign of unleashed chaos), and extra caution had to be taken for livestock. Haugalandmuseet+1

  • Because of this, Lussinatt was considered a dangerous, tabooed night. People often stayed indoors; many believed no work involving circular motion — like spinning, milling, kneading — should be done. Otherwise Lussi might strike back. Store norske leksikon+1

  • At the same time, it’s said that Lussi “checked” that preparations for Yule had been started (or properly done) — in that sense, she was a kind of “supervisor” of the winter turn. Haugalandmuseet+1

Thus Lussi embodies a winter-time reckoning spirit: threatening, wild, liminal — but connected to the period of transition (autumn → winter, harvest → Yule) and the necessary household work tied to survival.


🌀 Relationship to Other Myths: Wild Hunt, Perchta, Lucifer, and Saint Lucia

Lussi sits at a junction of many folkloric strands:

  • Her riding with a ghostly host is very similar to the Wild Hunt/Oskoreia motif — again emphasizing winter, spirits, and chaotic night-rides. Uppsala Universitet DiVA+2Store norske leksikon+2

  • In theological-Christian overlay, some lore associates the name “Lussi” with a corrupted form of “Lucifer,” or at least evokes demonic overtones — combining older pre-Christian folklore with Christian demonology. norwegianamerican.com+2Store norske leksikon+2

  • In modern Scandinavian tradition, there is also the Christian/commercial celebration of Saint Lucia's Day (Dec 13) — a festival of light, children, and hope. Over time, that light-bringing, peaceful Lucia tradition has largely replaced or absorbed older, darker Lussi-traditions (especially among urban populations). Universitetet i Sørøst-Norge+2Haugalandmuseet+2

  • Some folklorists view the Christian “Lucia” and pagan “Lussi” as representing opposing forces: light vs darkness, order vs chaos — both connected to the same date, the midwinter turning point. Haugalandmuseet+2sciencenorway.no+2

So Lussi can be seen as the shadow twin (or older pagan twin) of the light-bringing Lucia, a living trace of older pre-Christian midwinter beliefs.


🌑 Meaning and Function: Why Lussi Matters Mythologically

Lussi — and nights like Lussinatt — reflect a set of mythic motifs common across Europe:

  • Liminal time and space: the longest night of the year; a transition between seasons, between light and dark.

  • Threshold morality: households had to complete critical work (spinning, brewing, baking) before winter truly set in — failing could bring chaos (symbolized by Lussi).

  • Community psychology: fear of winter, fear for children — embodied in a myth that enforces order, obedience, readiness.

  • Ancestral / spirit-world contact: with the wild night, wild spirits roam — reminding the living of the “other world.”

  • Dualism: light vs darkness: through the overlay with Lucia, the myth becomes one of redemption: after the darkest night, light returns.

In short: Lussi is a folkloric expression of winter-time anxiety, moral control, liminality and survival, transformed into mythic form.


⚠️ What we don’t know / What is uncertain

Because folklore changes over time — oral transmission, Christianization, local variation — many aspects of Lussi are fragmentary and inconsistent:

  • Descriptions of Lussi vary wildly — sometimes she is a hag with horns, other times more a “witch-queen.” Store norske leksikon+2Haugalandmuseet+2

  • In some areas, Lussi is entirely replaced by the Lucia figure — the “light-bringing saint” — making it hard to reconstruct the older beliefs reliably. sciencenorway.no+2Universitetet i Sørøst-Norge+2

  • The exact origin of the name “Lussi” is uncertain — some suggest connection to “Lucifer,” others argue for older pre-Christian spirit names. Store norske leksikon+2Haugesunds Avis+2

  • The boundary between actual folk belief, Christian demon-attribution, and modern reinterpretation is often blurred.

Thus, while we can draw a fairly rich outline, we can’t treat Lussi as a stable, uniform “myth.” She’s a patchwork, and that’s part of what folklorists find interesting.


If you like — I can dig up 3–5 old folk tales about Lussi (from Norway or Sweden) — ones that survived from 19th/ early 20th-century oral tradition — to show exactly what people told about her.
Do you want me to pull some of those for you now?

Test the *Tibetan* tree spirits

 


Sure wonder what Hindus and Buddhists think of fog at burial places... 

Can you tell me about the Tibetan lore?

Tibetan lore connects fog, mist, and vapor very strongly with spirits, ghosts, elemental beings, and the intermediate state. Graveyards (dur khrod, chod places, or dur sa) are especially associated with these phenomena. The idea is that fog is a visible sign of the movement of subtle beings and a symptom of the veil thinning.

Here is a clear, accurate overview.


🏔️ 1. Fog = the movement of subtle beings (’dre, gdon, gshin)

In Tibetan cosmology, the world is filled with subtle beings who are usually invisible:

  • ’dre (ghosts, revenants)

  • gdon (malevolent spirits)

  • srin / dre nag (cannibal spirits)

  • gshin (restless dead)

  • tsen (red warrior spirits)

  • klu (naga-like water spirits)

  • lha / lha mo (deities)

When fog or mist appears around cemeteries, cremation grounds, or charnel places, it is often understood as:

the movement of beings from the intermediate worlds becoming visible to human perception.

Fog is seen as the “carrier” of spirit-activity.


🦴 2. Charnel-ground symbolism: fog as the veil between samsara and liberation

Cremation grounds (dur khrod) are one of the most important symbolic environments in Vajrayāna and especially in tantric and Dzogchen practices.

In these places:

  • fog and smoke intertwine

  • forms dissolve quickly

  • boundaries are uncertain

This environment symbolizes:

  • impermanence

  • the dissolution of ego

  • the emergence of primordial awareness

Fog makes the charnel ground a liminal zone where the yogi faces the raw truth of samsara.


☁️ 3. Fog in the bardo (intermediate state)

Tibetan texts describe the bardo of dying and waking in terms of:

  • mist

  • smoke

  • fog-like luminosity

  • clouded perception

These phenomena represent:

  • the dissolving of the elements

  • the loss of bodily clarity

  • the mind entering a subtle dimension

Thus, fog in a graveyard resonates with the actual phenomenology of the bardo.

There is even a traditional saying:

“When fog rests on the burial ground, the bardo beings are wandering.”


👻 4. Fog as a sign of 'hungry ghosts' (preta) activity

In Tibetan folk explanations:

  • dawn fog over graveyards

  • drifting low mist in valleys with burial sites

  • fog emerging suddenly in ritual places

is considered a sign of hungry ghosts or blighted spirits moving in search of offerings or warmth.

This is why offering rituals (’don bslu) often take place in fog-prone areas — because “the beings can see the offering smoke as a path.”

Fog + smoke = highway for spirits.


5. Fog and the activity of dakinis

Although wisdom dakinis are luminous and not associated with fog, worldly dakinis and elemental dakinis (rlung mkha’ ’gro, wind/sky-going spirits) are sometimes linked with:

  • sudden fog

  • shifting mists

  • changes in wind direction

Especially in remote places, the appearance of mist is interpreted as a dakini “covering” the landscape to:

  • hide it,

  • protect the yogi, or

  • signal presence.

This is why:

Fog in remote valleys is considered a sign that the dakinis are active or traveling.

But these are usually worldly or intermediate dakinis, not enlightened ones.


🔥 6. Fog at cremation grounds: link to wrathful deities

In tantric iconography, wrathful deities (Heruka, Vajrakilaya, Simhamukha, Takkiraja, etc.) arise in:

  • smoke

  • fog

  • storm clouds

  • charnel vapors

These represent the manifestation of nondual wisdom within the turbulent, transitional space.

Thus, fog in graveyards is seen as symbolically:

  • the descent or presence of the wrathful deities,

  • the “arising of the wisdom of destruction.”


🌬️ 7. Natural causes understood mythically

Tibetans recognize the natural cause of fog (cold air condensing moisture) but interpret it symbolically:

  • Cold air = interference of the wind-element spirits (rlung-gi lha)

  • Moisture = naga or water spirits (klu) rising

  • Fog = “breath” of the earth-spirits released

So natural and supernatural explanations coexist.


Summary

In Tibetan lore, fog in graveyards signifies:

  1. Movement of spirits (’dre, gdon, gshin).

  2. Activity in the bardo.

  3. Presence of worldly dakinis or elemental sky-spirits.

  4. Liminality of the cremation ground as a tantric site.

  5. Manifestation of wrathful deities in their symbolic environment.

  6. Conditions under which offerings to the dead or spirits are especially potent.

In short:

Fog in a burial ground is a sign that the veil between worlds is thin, and that subtle beings or forces are moving.


If you’d like, I can also explain:

  • how Tibetans interpret sudden clearings of fog

  • how this relates to smoke offerings and gSur rituals

  • connections between Tibetan fog folklore and Chinese or Mongolian spirit beliefs

  • or compare Tibetan “burial fog” with Celtic or Germanic beliefs.

Is there a connection between spirit activity and the phases of the Moon?

Yes — in Tibetan, Indian, Himalayan, and many Eurasian traditions, the Moon’s phases are directly linked to the activity, visibility, and strength of spirits, ghosts, and subtle beings. The associations vary by tradition, but there are strong and consistent patterns.

Below is the clearest cross-cultural explanation, with Tibetan and Indian details emphasized.


🌙 1. Tibetan Buddhist & Bön Traditions

Full Moon (15th lunar day)

Increased activity of deities, dakinis, and powerful spirits.

  • Wisdom dakinis are especially active.

  • Oath-bound worldly spirits (gzhi bdag, gnyan, tsen) patrol or “check in” with vajra commitments.

  • Rituals for protection or empowerment are considered strongest.

  • Ghosts and negative spirits (gdon, ’dre) become less active, because the full moon light is purifying.

Summary: Full Moon = deities and dakinis, less ghost activity.


New Moon (30th lunar day / dark moon)

Maximum activity of ghosts, wandering dead, and malevolent spirits.

In Tibetan belief:

  • The boundary between worlds is thinnest.

  • Hungry ghosts (yi dwags) are most restless.

  • Cemetery spirits (gshin, dur bdag) wander further from the grave area.

  • gDon-causing spirits cause illness more easily.

  • Oracles (lha pa) avoid unprotected trance work because the atmosphere is “unclean.”

This is also the prime night for exorcistic rituals:

  • gTor-zlog

  • Phurba rites

  • Chöd (because you face the “peak of samsara’s turbulence”)

Summary: New Moon = ghosts strongest, deities quiet.


Waning Moon

Negative forces increase as light decreases.

Tibetans say:

“As the Moon empties, the spirits fill.”

This refers to:

  • increased activity of disease-causing spirits

  • higher risk of encountering wandering dead

  • more vivid dreams of ancestors or ghosts


Waxing Moon

Light increases → positive beings more active, ghosts subside.

  • Good for long-life practices

  • Good for attracting deities

  • Fewer obstacles from spirits

This rhythm is incorporated into all tantric calendars.


🇮🇳 2. Indian & Himalayan Traditions

India has similar patterns, especially in Śaiva, Śākta, and folk Shamanic lineages.

Amāvasyā (New Moon)

Considered the night of:

  • bhūta (ghosts)

  • preta (wandering dead)

  • piśāca (flesh-eating spirits)

  • yakṣa / yakṣiṇī (in their dark forms)

Shamans (ojha, jhākri) often avoid forests and liminal zones on this night.

Rites for:

  • Śmaśāna Kālī

  • Bhairava

  • Dhumavati

  • Pretas and ancestors

are strongest on the dark moon.

In tantric texts:

“The new moon is the mouth of the spirits.”

Pūrṇimā (Full Moon)

Associated with:

  • deities

  • illumination

  • blessings

  • dakinis in their peaceful forms

  • prosperity rites

Ghosts are said to be dispersed by moonlight.


🏔️ 3. Nepali, Mongolian, and Siberian Shamanic Beliefs

Across the Himalayas and the Eurasian steppe:

  • New Moon → souls wander, ancestral spirits are close

  • Full Moon → helper spirits, celestial beings, and sky gods are active

  • Waning Moon → spirits of illness grow stronger

  • Waxing Moon → healing and blessing spirits increase

Siberian shamans explicitly say:

“On the dark moon, the lower spirits emerge from the earth.”


🧩 4. Why the Moon matters to spirit activity (traditional reasoning)

Traditional cosmology sees spirits as influenced by:

Light / luminosity

  • Ghosts fear or dissolve in light.

  • Deities and dakinis travel by or as light (od zer).

Water (Moon = controller of water)

Spirits are closely linked to moisture, fog, mist, and breath — all of which fluctuate with lunar cycles.

Atmospheric energetics (rlung / prāṇa)

Internal winds mirror outer winds; when lunar energy is low, internal winds become unstable — making encounters with spirits more likely.


Concise Summary

Full Moon:

  • Deities, wisdom dakinis, blessings at their peak

  • Ghosts and malevolent spirits weakest

New Moon:

  • Ghosts, hungry spirits, wandering dead strongest

  • Wrathful rites most effective

  • Deities least active

Waning Moon:

  • Negative spirit activity increases

  • Good for banishing rituals

Waxing Moon:

  • Positive beings more active

  • Good for healing, wealth, and protective rites


If you’d like, I can also explain:

  • how lunar phases affect chöd visions

  • why wrathful deities are invoked on the new moon

  • how Tibetan sky burial rituals are timed with lunar phases

  • or how the Moon affects dream yoga and encounters in the dream bardo.

Are gods and wisdom spirits strong on full moon nights even if it's clouded and the Moon isn't visible?

Yes. In Tibetan, Indian, and Himalayan traditions, the strength of gods, deities, and wisdom dakinis on full-moon nights does not depend on the Moon being physically visible.

The reasoning is both cosmological and ritual-practical:


🌕 1. The lunar phase is an energetic condition, not a visual one

From a traditional perspective, the Moon’s tithi (lunar day/phase) is what matters.

A tithi is defined by the relative angular position of the Sun and the Moon —
not by what your eyes can see.

So even if:

  • the sky is cloudy

  • it is raining

  • there is fog

  • the Moon rises late

  • or you cannot see it at all

the energetic condition of the full moon is still present.


🌙 2. Tibetan view: visibility and “luminous energy” are different

Tibetans distinguish between:

  • snang-ba — what appears visually

  • ’od gsal — intrinsic luminous power

Full moon rituals (tsok, dakini pujas, protector offerings, empowerment practices) are held even if the moon is totally hidden.

Why?
Because deities respond to the lunar condition, not visibility.

Monasteries do not postpone full moon rituals because of clouds — the sacred calendar is lunar, not weather-based.


🌸 3. Indian Tantric view: “Moonlight” is symbolic and energetic

In Śākta and Śaiva tantric cosmology:

  • The Moon is a reflector of soma (cosmic nectar).

  • On the full moon, soma is “full” regardless of cloud cover.

  • Dakinis, devatas, and higher beings draw on this subtle lunar nectar, not physical photons.

So clouds do not block the power of the full moon.

The same idea appears in Kashmir Śaivism:
“The full moon of consciousness is never obscured, even when hidden by clouds.”


🕉️ 4. Ritual timing confirms this

If visibility mattered:

  • Tibetan monasteries would delay tsok feasts

  • Indian tantric temples would postpone pūrṇimā rites

  • Nepalese shamans would shift ancestor rites

But they never do.

The calendar is astronomic, not optical.


🔥 5. Contrast with ghosts and dark-moon spirits

Ghosts and malevolent spirits are believed to gain power on the dark moon even when the night is clear. Again, because:

It’s the phase of the Moon that affects them, not how much light reaches the eyes.


Short answer

Yes.
Gods, deities, and wisdom dakinis are just as powerful on the full moon even if clouds completely cover the Moon, because their strength depends on the lunar phase, not its visibility.


If you'd like, I can also explain:

  • why ghosts and negative spirits prefer darkness even during waxing moons

  • how lunar phases affect subtle body winds (rlung)

  • how Tibetan dream yoga changes depending on lunar days

  • why many empowerments must occur only on full moons.

Test the tree spirits (part 2)



Part 2 of 2 (I hope!) about cemetery-related folklore c/o the all-knowing AI algorithmus...

Is there any folklore about the wych elm (Ulmus glabra)?

Yes — the elm tree (Ulmus glabra / Wych Elm / Scotch Elm) has a lot of European folklore attached to it, though it is often overshadowed by oak, ash, and yew. The elm occupies a distinct symbolic niche: a tree of boundaries, the dead, and watchfulness. Below is the clearest overview.


🌳 1. The Elm as a Death-Tree (Pan-European Folklore)

Across Europe, elm trees were strongly associated with:

  • the dead and the underworld

  • cemeteries

  • graveyard guardianship

  • the path of the soul

In many regions, especially Britain and parts of Germany:

Elms were planted deliberately in graveyards because they were believed to “watch” the dead and keep spirits from wandering.

This is likely why the English name “wach-elm / wicht-elm” (old variants of “wych elm”) may have been associated with “watching,” “guarding,” or “witch,” depending on interpretation.

The elm was considered a sentinel tree.


⚰️ 2. Elm and Funerary Custom

In Britain

  • Elm was the preferred wood for coffins for centuries.

  • Some villages believed:
    “The elm chooses the dead.”
    If an elm split or fell suddenly, it foretold a death.

  • Elm groves were believed to be places where ghosts or spirits gathered.

In France

  • Elm avenues traditionally led to churches and graveyards as “paths of souls.”

In Germany & the Alps

  • The elm was a “Totbaum” (death-tree).

  • Spirits of the unbaptized dead were thought to cling to elms.

  • An elm standing alone at a crossroads was said to “hold” a wandering soul.


🌫️ 3. The Elm as a Boundary Tree

Elms appear at:

  • crossroads

  • village borders

  • meeting grounds

  • sacred groves

  • graveyards

  • places associated with oaths and judicial assemblies

This gives them a liminal function — just like ash (Yggdrasil) and yew (the death tree) — but in a quieter, more local way.

The Elm “watches”

A repeated theme:

  • the elm is a sentinel

  • it stands at thresholds

  • it marks transitions between worlds

  • it observes but does not act

This is why it is often found in folklore as a silent witness to supernatural events.


🧙 4. Witchcraft and the Elm

There is no single unified tradition, but regionally:

  • Elm wood was used in witches’ wands (less common than hazel or rowan, but present).

  • Elm bark was used in charms to summon or bind spirits.

  • Elm groves were avoided on certain nights because “witches held sabbaths there.”

The “wych” in wych elm is NOT related to “witch”, but in folk imagination the association developed anyway.


🌬️ 5. Spirits Associated with the Elm

Dryads / tree spirits

In some English and Celtic lore, elms had:

  • female spirits associated with sorrow or guardianship

  • watcher spirits who protected travelers on moonlit nights

  • in some regions, ghosts were said to hide in elms to avoid the moonlight

“Elm mothers” / “Elm wives”

In parts of Germany and Eastern Europe:

  • female nature spirits lived in elm groves

  • they were helpful or dangerous depending on how you approached the tree

  • elm spirits were invoked for lost children or wandering ghosts


🌕 6. Lunar and Night Associations

Elms had an unusual connection to the night:

  • They were believed to “drink the moonlight.”

  • Under an elm at full moon, visions were possible.

  • Fog under an elm (rare but possible) was considered a sign of spirit presence.

This ties the elm to dreams, omens, and night-watching.


🪵 7. Symbolism (Summarized)

The elm symbolizes:

  • guardianship

  • silent watchfulness

  • the dead

  • thresholds

  • ancestral memory

  • the movement between worlds

It is not as heroic as oak, nor as magical as ash, nor as death-bound as yew —
but it stands exactly at the crossroads between life and death, “watching.”


In one sentence

Folklorically, the wych elm is a guardian of liminal spaces — a watch-tree associated with graveyards, spirits, thresholds, and the subtle boundary between the living and the dead.


If you want, I can also explain:

  • how the elm compares mythologically to the ash, yew, and elder

  • whether elms appear in Norse or Celtic myths

  • how elm lore connects to the Wild Hunt or Krampusnacht imagery

  • the Indo-European background of “watching trees”

Just tell me which angle interests you.