top of page
Search
emilwshellborn

Vaccinations from a Norse Perspective

Updated: Feb 24, 2022

Sacred Body and Freedom of Choice

In Norse culture, the body of a man is sacred and under his sole and exclusive control as well as jurisdiction. Freedom of choice with respect to a man’s body is an irrevocable aspect of his masculinity, warrior ethos, and innate natural freedom secured over the millennia by the sacrifice of his ancestors. Violation of a man's body by any mean is undeniable emasculation as well as a loss of status and standing as a free man.


Natural Resilience of Men as a Tenant of Evolutionary Biology

Óðinn created men as sacred beings naturally resilient to environmental factors. Such natural strength and resilience, including to diseases, is linked to a man’s physical, mental, and spiritual fitness, and thus, part of a man’s traditional identity as well as fundamental evolutionary traits and characteristics critical to species survival. In keeping with this historic, cultural and irrevocable doctrine, any medical treatment or procedure a man would elect to accept as his sole informed prerogative shall remain natural and shall follow the laws of nature, specifically excluding gene therapy (including but not limited to RNA messenger vaccines), or non-human interventions (including but not limited to robotic and AI procedures, or animal-based treatments such as Adenovirus vector vaccines).


Norse Lore, Traditions, and Ancient Texts

These beliefs are consistently mentioned many times in the historical, cultural and spiritual texts of Heathenry, including sacred texts. Both Konungsbók Eddukvæða (Poetic or Elder Edda) and Snorra Edda (Prose or Younger Edda), Íslendingasögur (Sagas of the Icelanders), as well as various sacred texts including the Skjǫldrinn Covenant of 748. Of particular note in Eddukvæða is the penetration of Óðinn’s body by a foreign object, namely a spear, as a coerced act for the purpose of a greater good, namely in this case the learning of magics and wisdom, greatly stigmatized and seen as submission, emasculation, and thus weakness.




6 views0 comments

Comments


  • Web of Wyrd YouTube
bottom of page