Once again, Keri Kruspe has written a fantastic post for my blog. I was over the moon reading this post because it spoke to me. Many times I’ve tried to use runes and Keri, through this post, has shown me why I want to continue and has provided the perfect book to achieve rune usage.
Runes – An Ancient Oracle Tool
by Keri Kruspe
IT’S ALL BEEN RUNE’D
Recently I’ve taken the plunge and jumped into the Instagram pool.
Hey, that’s no small feat for me.
As I’ve mentioned in previous blogs, social media and I have a tentative relationship. I resisted adding yet another quiver in my communication arsenal, but at the urging of many of my (younger) friends, I decided to look into the matter.
Earlier in the year, I paid for a training program that included how to set up Instagram for authors and what was best to post (and when to post). So, I took an afternoon off and immersed myself into the hows and whys of this social beast.
One of the main suggestions the training gave was to have specific tropes to share – things that might be of interest to others instead of advertising my books all the time (boring!). Instantly I thought of sharing one of my favorite meditative techniques – consulting an ancient tool handed down to me by my favorite aunt about twenty years ago. In order to explain why the runes mean so much to me, I’d like to share a little bit about the woman who taught them to me.
My Aunt Jeanette was a formidable woman
My Aunt Jeanette was a formidable woman, someone who was way ahead of her time. She was my father’s older sister by eighteen months and ended up taking care of him when their mother deserted the family when he was a young preteen. Then, at the ripe old age of fifteen, she entered into her first marriage. I say first because the woman was married eleven times. The funny thing was she only had one child…out of wedlock…by a married man…in the 1940s.
Even though she was married often, I barely remember her with any partner. She was one of those women from the sixties who was dressed to the teeth…bouffant hairdo, nails polished and manicured, her make-up model perfect. Living in Nevada, my family worked in the casino business, and she proudly told me that she was one of the first female pit bosses in Las Vegas – probably around the 1960s.
Then, around when she turned forty-nine, she took a 180-degree turn in her life. She quit her job, her house, her perfect image, and left Nevada and her family to live in Hawaii. There she lived for the next twenty-five years. To make a living, she took various jobs – from being a greeter at the airport (complete with leis) to a metaphysical minister.
As a Metaphysical minister, she began to read tarot cards and would draw a rune at the end of her card reading. The purpose, she informed me, was to aid the Spiritual Warrior…the one whose goal was self-change.
The Runes
The runes are a tool to keep one on course, on track for strengthening your intuition.
You see, the runes are used as an instrument for getting in touch with a part of yourself that knows everything. It’s a method of guidance and self-counseling used to assist us in navigating the unfamiliar waters we find ourselves in.
Using the runes is like consulting an Oracle.
An Oracle does not give you instruction as what to do next, nor does it predict the future. It points your attention to those hidden fears and motivations that shape where you are headed in your life.
Once you acknowledge what those might be, it directs your attention to inner choices that may be the most important elements in deciding what you choose your future to be.
When she taught me how to use these aids, I really needed the help.
I was going through a rough divorce and found myself a single parent with a toddler, a tweenie and a fourteen-year-old. Being able to get in touch with that part of myself that had been buried for years was a godsend. I firmly believe my ability to go into silence and contemplate the suggestions the readings gave helped to ground me and keep me sane.
A brief history lesson on the runes…
Legend has it the runes are a gift from Odin, the principal divinity in the pantheon of the Norse Gods.
Believed to be even older than the New Testament, they are akin to the Tarot and the Chinese Book of Changes. The runes were commonly used in Iceland during the late Middle Ages.
Unfortunately, the wisdom of those rune masters died, never having written their divinations down nor did they pass their experiences orally. Little is left of the original Viking practice except for stones, sagas, and far-flung runic lore. What we do know is to those who created the runes, the earth and all created things were alive.
To celebrate that fact, runes were carved into pieces of hardwood, incised on metal or cut into leather stained with pigment. There are twenty-four runes, plus one later innovation – the blank rune – the Unknowable. It is the rune of total trust and can be interpreted as exciting evidence of life’s progression.
How I Use the Runes
The rune cards I use on Instagram belonged to my aunt. She preferred the cards those while I have always felt a kinship to the actual stones. I keep the stones loose in a pouch and every morning, I let my mind go blank to open myself to receive what I should meditate on for the day.
I reach into the pouch, and a stone will let itself be known – hard to explain…it gets warm and my fingers automatically reach for it. I will then consult the book, The Book of Runes by Ralph H. Blum. The interpretations in his book are laid out clearly and in a loving manner. Easy enough to use and understand.
My aunt has been gone for several years now. Not a day goes by that I don’t miss telling her what was going on in my life.
I know she’d be thrilled I’ve finally realized my dream of becoming a published author…something she encouraged me to do since I was twelve. To celebrate her life as well as the teachings she gave, I proudly include her cards with my stones.
See…I did listen. Thanks, Auntie.
About Keri – Author of otherworldly romantic adventures” Stories of heroines who aren’t afraid to take a chance on life…or love.
Award-winning author, Keri Kruspe, writes otherworldly romantic adventures for readers who want to fall in love among the stars. Her lifelong fascination with the unexplained phenomena started at a young age when she discovered Sci-fi/paranormal stories. Then in her late teens, she stumbled on historical romances and fell in love with them too. When the two genres merged on the page, she finally found her passion.
A native Nevadan, Keri resides with her family in the wilds of Northwest Michigan where she enjoys the stark change in seasons and the pleasures each one brings. An avid reader, Keri loves an enjoyable bottle of red wine, a variety of delicious foods and watching action/adventure movies…usually at the same time. You can find her most days immersed in her fantasy world on her latest novel while foot tappin’ to classic rock. When not absorbed in her writing, Keri works alongside her husband in building their dream home or discovering intelligent life in America in their travels. Visit her website for all the fun news, updates, and a FREE novella!
Aw, what a sweet story. Your aunt sounds like a fascinating woman. Very interesting about runes. I’d never heard of them. So cool!
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Great post! I’ve heard of runes, but never knew how one was supposed to read them. Thanks for sharing.
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Very cool!
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Your aunt sounds like an amazing woman. What a role model! Interesting info on runes. Thanks for sharing.
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Your aunt sounds like a woman who lived life on her own terms. Wouldn’t she make a great heroine in a book? Thanks for sharing her story with us.
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How interesting!
My grandmother read cards. Not Tarot, regular playing cards. She gave that up and never taught or guided any of us in the gift but it’s interesting to know how many of our relatives have or do use these tools.
Good luck and God’s blessings
PamT
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Hi Keri,
I have to share: there are pagan masters alive and well today who understand and read runes very well. Vikings had seers and witches (volva is singular for a Viking witch, volur is plural). Seers and witches held two distinct roles in Norse society, but both used runes in their line of work.
The Elder Futhark, the 24 runes which descend from Bronze Age Vikings, morphed into the 16 rune, Younger Futhark around the Viking Age (late 8th century). Neither Futhark had a blank rune. The blank rune is a 20th century, New Age-y addition.
It sounds like what your aunt got involved with is/was a mash up of New Age/paganism rather true runic divination.
-Gina
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Love seeing this history, Gina. How interesting to see how the runes have evolved. Thanks for sharing!
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Very interesting to get to know about runes. Now the next time I see another rune post I might understand it!
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