Norse-Wiccan Simple Samhain Ritual for a Couple
By Willow Voss
Performed skyclad under the waxing or full moon closest to Samhain, in a secluded grove, with consent as the unbreakable Rede, honoring the thinning veil and the ancestors.
Preparation
Choose a sacred space in nature or a shadowed chamber, lit by the flicker of Samhain’s somber light. Anoint with oils of myrrh or patchouli for mystery and grounding. Bathe in stream water or an infusion of mugwort and rosemary for purification and ancestral connection. Set a simple altar with found items: stones for Earth, a raven feather for Air, a candle or small fire for Fire, a bowl of rainwater for Water. Symbols for Freyja (amber stone, falcon imagery) and Odin (raven imagery, a small staff or rune-carved wood) adorn the space, but hands and intent cast all.
Casting the Circle
Stand skyclad, facing north.
Join hands and walk deosil (clockwise) thrice around the space, visualizing a silver mist boundary, shimmering like the veil between worlds.
Chant together:
“By will and word, we cast this circle, a veil between the worlds, sacred and whole, on this Samhain night.”
- Call the Quarters, starting East, moving deosil, gesturing with open hands:
- East (Air):
“Hail Guardians of the East, powers of Air and wisdom, breath of Odin’s ravens, come witness and protect.” - South (Fire):
“Hail Guardians of the South, powers of Fire and will, Freyja’s burning seiðr, ignite our rite.” - West (Water):
“Hail Guardians of the West, powers of Water and intuition, Freyja’s tears of gold, flow through us.” - North (Earth):
“Hail Guardians of the North, powers of Earth and endurance, Odin’s rooted wisdom, ground our magick.”
- East (Air):
- Invoke the center:
“Spirit within, bind this circle true, as the veil thins.”
Invocation of Deities
Stand facing each other, beneath Samhain’s moon.
- Priestess raises arms:
“Freyja, Vanadis, Lady of love, war, and seiðr, golden-haired mistress of Folkvangr, descend into me, fill me with your ecstasy and power on this Samhain night. So mote it be.” - Priest kneels briefly:
“Odin, Allfather, Wanderer of wisdom, sacrifice, and runes, raven-crowned god of Valhalla, enter me, grant your insight and strength. So mote it be.” - Embrace lightly, awakening the divine presence, feeling the ancestors’ gaze.
The Five-Fold Kiss
To bless and arouse the gods within, performed fully twice. First, priest to priestess:
- Priest kisses priestess’s feet:
“Blessed be thy feet, that walk the paths between worlds.” - Priest kisses priestess’s knees:
“Blessed be thy knees, that kneel at the sacred altar.” - Priest kisses priestess’s vagina:
“Blessed be thy womb, vessel of creation and life.” - Priest kisses priestess’s breasts:
“Blessed be thy breast, formed in beauty and strength.” - Priest kisses priestess’s lips:
“Blessed be thy lips, that utter the Sacred Names.”
Then, switch: priestess to priest:
- Priestess kisses priest’s feet:
“Blessed be thy feet, that wander with the Allfather.” - Priestess kisses priest’s knees:
“Blessed be thy knees, that kneel at the sacred altar.” - Priestess kisses priest’s phallus:
“Blessed be thy phallus, spear of wisdom and life.” - Priestess kisses priest’s chest:
“Blessed be thy chest, formed in strength and vision.” - Priestess kisses priest’s lips:
“Blessed be thy lips, that speak the Sacred Names.”
Scourging for Purification
Stand facing each other, the priest holding the scourge. With mutual agreement, the priestess receives first:
- Priest says:
“By the touch of the scourge, I purify thee, releasing all that binds thee from the ancestors’ truth.” - Gently strikes the priestess’s shoulders and back five times, light and rhythmic, symbolizing the shedding of mortal weight.
- Priestess takes the scourge, saying:
“By the touch of the scourge, I purify thee, freeing thy spirit for the gods and the veil.” - Returns five gentle strikes to the priest’s shoulders and back.
- Both breathe deeply, visualizing cleansed energy rising, open to Samhain’s mysteries.
Ritual Dancing (Raising the Cone of Power)
Join hands and dance deosil around the space, feet stamping the earth, bodies swaying beneath the Samhain moon. Chant in unison, voices building:
“Freyja’s seiðr, Odin’s runes,
weave through us as the veil communes.
Power rise, from earth to sky,
in Samhain’s truth, our magick fly!”
Visualize energy as a glowing cone spiraling upward, shimmering with ancestral whispers. Continue until the surge peaks, breaths quickened, forms alive with primal heat.
The Great Rite Actual
At the zenith, enact the sacred marriage—the true union of bodies as Freyja and Odin. On a bed of fallen leaves, moss, or herbs, the priestess receives as the Goddess, the priest gives as the God. With reverence and consent:
- Priestess:
“I am the Goddess, vessel of creation and seiðr.” - Priest:
“I am the God, spear of wisdom and life.” - Unite in ritual intercourse, moving with the surging rhythm, channeling power into the joining. Female receptive, male projective, blending into oneness under the thinning veil. Chant softly:
“As Freyja and Odin entwine, so do we divine.”
Climax releases the cone toward the intent (connection to ancestors, wisdom, transformation). Linger connected, grounding the ecstasy, feeling the ancestors’ presence.
Cakes and Ale
Share simple food (apples, bread, pomegranates) and drink (mead, wine, or cider) to earth the energy and honor the dead.
- Priestess offers drink:
“May you never thirst, in this world or beyond.” - Priest offers food:
“May you never hunger, in this world or beyond.” - Partake, spilling libations to the deities, elements, and ancestors.
Thanksgiving and Closing
- Thank the deities:
“Freyja and Odin, we thank thee for thy presence and blessings on this Samhain night. Depart if ye must, but stay if ye will. Hail and farewell.” - Dismiss the Quarters widdershins (counterclockwise), starting North, gesturing farewell:
- North:
“Guardians of Earth, hail and farewell.” - West:
“Guardians of Water, hail and farewell.” - South:
“Guardians of Fire, hail and farewell.” - East:
“Guardians of Air, hail and farewell.”
- North:
- Walk widdershins thrice, visualizing the silver mist dissolving:
“The circle is open, but unbroken. Merry meet, merry part, merry meet again, across the veil.”
Ground by touching the earth, eating more, or visualizing roots sinking deep, carrying Samhain’s wisdom.
!!!Content below the break is NSFW!!!
Read More…Willow’s Guide to Norse Wicca

By Willow Voss
Hello, seeker. My name is Willow Voss, age 18, and I’m writing this from the quiet corners of my small apartment in Janesville, Wisconsin, where the woods whisper secrets and the moon watches over my solitary rituals. It’s 1992, fresh out of high school, and I’ve been walking the Wiccan path for a few years now, drawing from books that feel like old friends—Gerald Gardner’s wisdom, Starhawk’s earth-centered magic, and the ancient echoes of Norse lore that call to my blood like the wind through pines. I’m no high priestess in a grand coven; I’m just a girl with pale skin and black hair, clad in my velvet blouse and Doc Martens, tending my altar of stones and herbs. But I’ve woven together what I call Norse Wicca—a simple, powerful blend of British Traditional Wicca (BTW) roots with the raw, mythic strength of the Norse traditions. It’s not for rigid hierarchies or large gatherings; it’s crafted for solitaries like me, for couples who share a deep bond, and for casual small groups of friends who meet under the stars without fanfare.
This guide isn’t a rulebook carved in stone. It’s my personal map, inspired by the Wiccan Rede—”An it harm none, do what ye will”—and the Norse Hávamál’s counsel to live wisely and honor the gods. BTW gives it structure: the duality of Goddess and God, the circle casting, the tools of power. But I’ve oriented it toward the lone practitioner, the intimate pair, or a handful of trusted souls, because magic thrives in authenticity, not spectacle. We’ll keep it grounded, like the earth under my boots during a woodland rite. No need for elaborate robes or secret oaths beyond your own heart’s vow. Let’s walk this path together, step by step, with the simplicity of a rune-carved staff and the power of a thunderstorm.

Chapter 1: Foundations – Understanding Norse Wicca
Norse Wicca is my way of honoring the old gods of the North—Odin the Allfather, Freya the Vanir queen, Thor the thunderer—through the lens of Wicca’s modern revival. BTW, as founded by Gardner in the 1950s, emphasizes initiation, polarity (the balance of masculine and feminine energies), and coven work. But in Norse Wicca for solitaries and small circles, we adapt: self-initiation replaces formal rites, and polarity becomes a personal dance, whether alone, with a partner, or in a loose group of 3-5.
At its core, believe in the Divine as dual yet one: the Goddess as the earth-mother Skadi or the seeress Frigg, weaving fate; the God as Odin the wanderer or Frey the fertile lord, bringing growth. The Norse pantheon isn’t distant; they’re allies in the web of Wyrd (fate), much like Wicca’s Lord and Lady. We follow the Wheel of the Year, but infuse it with Norse festivals—Yule as the Wild Hunt, Ostara as Freya’s awakening. Ethics are simple: Harm none, including yourself and the earth. Honor the ancestors, the land spirits (wights), and the runes as tools of insight.
For solitaries: Your practice is your own. No need for approval; the gods see your intent.
For couples: Polarity shines here—masculine and feminine energies in union, like Odin and Frigg’s wisdom shared.
For small groups: Gather casually, perhaps around a fire pit. No high priest/ess; rotate roles or let intuition guide.
Start with a dedication rite: Alone or together, under the full moon, cast a circle (more on that later), invoke the gods, and pledge your path. Use blood from a pricked finger on a rune stone if it feels right—simple, powerful, binding.

Chapter 2: The Sacred Space – Creating Your Altar and Circle
In Norse Wicca, your altar is your hearth, a bridge to Asgard and Midgard. Keep it simple: A wooden table or cloth on the floor, facing north for the earth’s strength.
Essential tools, drawn from BTW but Norse-flavored:
– *Athame (knife)*: A blade for directing energy, etched with runes like Algiz for protection. Use it to cast circles.
– *Wand*: Carved from oak or ash (Yggdrasil’s wood), for invoking gods.
– *Chalice*: A horn or cup for mead/offering, symbolizing the Goddess’s womb.
– *Pentacle*: A wooden disk with a carved pentagram, perhaps ringed by runes, for earth grounding.
– *Cauldron or Bowl*: For scrying or burning herbs, like Freya’s brewing pot.
– *Runes*: A set of 24 Elder Futhark stones or tiles—your oracle, beyond BTW’s tarot.
Add personal touches: Feathers for Odin’s ravens, stones from your local woods, a Thor’s hammer pendant.
For the circle: BTW teaches casting with athame, calling quarters. In Norse Wicca, adapt to the directions as realms—East (Air, elves), South (Fire, Muspelheim), West (Water, Niflheim), North (Earth, Jotunheim). Invoke the gods at center.
Solitary: Walk the circle thrice, whispering runes.
Couple: One casts, the other calls elements—masculine/feminine balance.
Small group: Pass the athame, each adding a rune chant.
Close by thanking, walking widdershins (counterclockwise). Simple ritual: Light a candle, say, “By Odin’s eye and Freya’s grace, this circle opens to time and space.”

Chapter 3: The Gods and Spirits – Who We Honor
Norse Wicca reveres a pantheon alive with stories from the Eddas. No blind worship; build relationships through offerings and meditation.
Key deities:
– *Odin*: Wisdom, poetry, sacrifice. Call for knowledge; offer mead and poetry.
– *Freya*: Love, magic, war. Goddess of seidr (Norse witchcraft); invoke for spells of attraction or protection.
– *Thor*: Strength, protection. Hammer for warding; offer ale and oats.
– *Frigg*: Home, fate. For divination and family magic.
– *Frey*: Fertility, peace. For growth rites.
– *Skadi*: Wilderness, hunt. For solitary strength.
– *Loki*: Change, trickery. Approach cautiously; he teaches flexibility.
Ancestors and wights (land spirits): Leave milk and bread outdoors. In rites, honor them first.
For solitaries: Meditate on one god daily, journaling visions.
Couples: Alternate invocations—her for Goddess, him for God.
Small groups: Share stories round-robin, invoking collectively.
Power comes from reciprocity: Give offerings, receive guidance. Simple prayer: “Odin Allfather, grant me sight; Freya fair, lend your might.”

Chapter 4: Magic and Spellwork – Simple, Powerful Practices
Magic in Norse Wicca is seidr meets Wiccan craft—intent woven with runes, herbs, and will.
Basics from BTW: Raise energy (chanting, dancing), direct it, ground.
Norse twist: Use galdr (rune chanting) for power.
Tools: Runes for divination/spells; herbs like mugwort for visions, oak for strength.
Simple spells:
– *Protection*: Carve Algiz on a stone, bury at thresholds. Chant: “Algiz guard, harm depart.”
– *Love (for couples)*: Bind two runes (Gebo for partnership) with red cord under full moon.
– *Prosperity*: Offer to Frey with seeds; plant them post-rite.
For solitaries: Self-focused, like rune meditation for insight.
Couples: Great Rite symbolic—union of athame and chalice for polarity magic.
Small groups: Circle dance to raise cone of power, then release for shared goal.
Ethics: Threefold law applies—what you send returns. Always with Rede.
Advanced: Seidr trance—sit with staff, journey to realms. Start simple: Breathe deep, visualize Yggdrasil.

Chapter 5: The Wheel of the Year – Norse-Infused Sabbats
Wicca’s eight sabbats, blended with Norse holy days. Celebrate simply: Outdoors if possible, with fire and feast.
– *Yule (Winter Solstice)*: Wild Hunt; honor Odin. Solitary vigil with yule log; couples exchange runes; group storytelling.
– *Imbolc (Feb 1-2)*: Brigid’s fire, Norse as Disablot (ancestors). Cleanse with snowmelt.
– *Ostara (Spring Equinox)*: Freya’s return. Egg rites for fertility.
– *Beltane (May 1)*: Maypole as Yggdrasil; polarity strong for couples.
– *Litha (Summer Solstice)*: Baldr’s light. Bonfire leaps.
– *Lammas (Aug 1)*: First harvest; thank Frey.
– *Mabon (Autumn Equinox)*: Second harvest; honor wights.
– *Samhain (Oct 31)*: Veil thin; ancestor feast, like Alfblot.
Esbats (full moons): Lunar magic, Freya’s domain. Simple: Scry in water, charge tools.
Adapt: Solitaries journal; couples share visions; groups potluck rituals.

Chapter 6: Daily Practice and Growth – Living the Path
Norse Wicca isn’t weekend magic; it’s woven into life.
Daily: Morning rune draw for guidance; evening gratitude to gods.
Meditation: Sit under a tree, breathe with earth’s pulse.
Journal: Track dreams, spells—my black-bound book is my grimoire.
For couples: Shared altars, joint meditations strengthen bonds.
Small groups: Meet monthly, no obligations—casual as a coffee chat, but with runes.
Growth: Self-initiate after a year and a day. Rite: Fast, bathe in herbs, vow to gods in circle.
Challenges: Doubt? Ground with walks. Loneliness? Remember, gods are company.

Chapter 7: Community and Ethics – Beyond the Self
Though solitary-oriented, connection matters. Join pagan meets casually, but guard your energy—I’m introverted, so I choose wisely.
Ethics: Rede first. Respect nature—pick herbs sustainably. Inclusivity: All welcome, no judgment on orientation (though I’m straight, magic is universal).
If forming a small group: No oaths; consent always. Rotate leadership.
Closing Thoughts
This is my guide, seeker—not the only way, but a simple, powerful thread in Wyrd’s tapestry. Walk it with heart open, boots grounded. May Odin grant wisdom, Freya magic, and the earth strength. Blessed be, in the old ways.
With quiet grace,
Willow Voss
Janesville, 1992

Heathen Grounding Prayer
A really great grounding prayer written by Amarina
“Great Mother of the Earth, Goddess Nerthus, I beseech you to take this excess energy that I no longer need that it may be returned to another that has need.”

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.
Volmarr Viking
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