worldsinside:

writing-prompt-s:

For lack of better candidates, someone’s parents jokingly named the Norse God Loki as the child’s godfather. He decides to take this seriously.

The whole thing got started because my
dad was a professor of Norse Mythology.

When I was born he and mom had both just gotten jobs at a new
university, which meant moving to a new town where my parents didn’t
know anybody. That was my dad’s excuse for naming an ancient
Scandinavian trickster god as my godfather.

He claimed it made sense at the time; apparently I was something
of a trickstery child myself, always getting out of my playpen and
into strange places, or making rude noises at hilariously inopportune
times, or crying for no discernible reason and laughing for no better
one. Plus, it was pretty soon apparent that I had inherited my
grandmother’s bright red hair. So my dad liked to call me a child
of Loki, which amused my mom. It didn’t amuse her so much when he
told her dad, after he got a bit too pushy about me not having a
godparent yet, that in fact I did have someone looking after me and
his name was Loki Laufeyson.

Still, even my mom didn’t expect
anything more to come of that than a bit of a row when my grandfather
got home and looked a few things up, so they were both completely
stunned when Loki himself showed up on the doorstep a few hours
later.

I was much too young to remember that
particular meeting, but from what I found out later, I can imagine
something of how it went. Loki would have looked like a tall, lean
man with hair like fire. Not red hair like mine, which isn’t even
really red but orange-ish; this was hair in licks of red and orange
and yellow, really like fire. He would have had eyes like fire opals,
strange and glittering from one color to the next. And he would have
had scars running along the tops of and bottoms of his lips, little
rows of puncture marks, white and old but still clearly visible. But
the rest of him would have looked handsome and charming, like a movie
star, only better. He would have looked like what movie stars dreamed
of looking like, and he would have flashed my mom a brilliant
gleaming grin when she opened the door.

“Hello,” he said. “I’ve come to
see the child.”

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I’m just wondering what your tag for Loki stuff “he of the Andisol” means. Would you mind sharing?

welcometothewarren:

absolutely. andisol is a type of fertile volcanic soil, so it’s in reference to loki’s role as someone who drives change – especially sudden, drastic changes for the better. the disastrous nature of volcanic eruptions (hello, worldbreaker) is ultimately what leads to the creation of nutrient-rich, water-retaining arable land able to support some of the densest human populations with grain and fruit crops. not to mention andisols in the pacific northwest where i now live are home to some of the most beautiful and ecologically diverse forests and grasslands I’ve ever seen. loki might be the type of person to hit you with a volcano, but it’s always in service of some greater creation, some greater gift.

That moment when my religious experiences are called fanfiction or mental illness….have we really come to this?

This is why I stopped posting about being Pagan (especially about being Lokean) in the first place. My experiences are personal and I don’t need anyone else’s validation for them to have meaning.