On a cool fall night, I lie down on my bed. As soon as I close my eyes, I see a form of the Great Earth Mother, vast and voluptuous. She rises before me, large as a mountain, and opens a fertile valley. I fly through this like a swallow, and come out in a world suffused by sourceless light.. There is a sense of being in a contained space, protected by translucent walls that are spirals of light.
There is a feminine presence. She lets me know she is willing to be a guide for me in this realm. She is very tall and slender, dressed in blue. Her name is of the North. Though the light is everywhere, she moves within a fine mist that makes her features hazy.
She tells me this is a place of purification, of cleansing “down to the bone marrow.” She speaks to me of soul, and where it travels.“Where your desire goes, there you go in soul flight out of the body, and in the soul’s journey after death.”
She shows me a ball fired high into the air, sailing up above the clouds. She tells me, “This is the Apple of Fate. When it returns to Earth, your present life will be over.” We agree I do not need to know the exact time or circumstances of its return.
Reading and reflecting
on this report in my journal, from nearly thirty years ago, I am stirred again
by the vision of the Apple of Fate. Now I am considering goddesses known to my
Northern ancestors who were especially fond of apples. Idunn is a Nordic
goddess who carries apples in a box crafted from ash wood. In the Prose Edda,
when the gods start to feel old, they ask her to feed them her apples, which
carry the magic of rejuvenation. This is why Idunn's name means Ever Young, or Rejuvenator. The Prose Edda contains the story of Idunn’s abduction and rescue, both the work of Loki) Idunn’s husband Bragi, the skaldic god of poetry, who gave his name to the cup (bragarfull) with which toasts to the mighty Viking dead were raised..
In
a story of the goddess Frigg in the Volsung Saga, an apple from the goddess can
produce a new birth as well as fresh juice. When king Renr prays for a child,
Frigg's messenger, a crow, drops an apple in his lap, and soon his wife is
pregnant. Then there are the Apples of Hel, They are mentioned in an 11th
century poem by the skald Thorbrion Brunarson, who saw the
apple as food of the dead.
I do not find the phrase Apple of Fate in the Icelandic texts, or
the excellent works of Hilda Ellis Davidson, the great English scholar of Nordic
paganism. But I see that the intriguing Nehelennia is also depicted as carrying
a supply of apples. With the breath of her name I feel a wind from the mythic
ocean gusting through my study. Nehelennia, whose best-known temples were on
the coast of the Netherlands, was a Celtic-Germanic goddess who was a special
patron of voyagers, those traveling by sea or across the astral tides, and
those making the crossing to the Otherworld and the afterworld.
Apple of Fate is a term that could fit the apple in the Garden of
Eden, or the apple in the story of Paris' choice between the three goddesses,
since in each of those stories a choice involving an apple determined a fate.
But those stories don't resonate with me in relation to the blue lady and what
she showed me. And anyway, the apple of Eve and the apple of Paris weren't
apples as we know them. Apples were unknown west of Kazakhstan until some of
the soldiers of Alexander the Great brought them back from his campaigns; even
then, these "apples" were only small and tart, like crabapples.
I wonder where my Apple of Fate is now, flying or falling or
bumping along the ground. As the lady in blue suggested, I don't need an exact
fix on that, at least, not yet….
Drawing by Robert Moss: Lady of Apples
I made the drawing after a vision in the hypnagogic zone on January 2, 2021. I heard the name "Idunn" quite distinctly. I was wafted into an enchanted apple orchard. I smelled the apple blossom in the golden hair of a lovely young woman who seems sweet and innocent.I let myself drift into a sleep dream in which I drove north, ever north, faster and faster with a young woman who seemed to be both my daughter and my research partner. The wind rushed past us as the beating of great wings. We were excited because we had found the key to a mystery.I drew Idunn by an apple tree with apple blossom in her hair, dressen in apple-green rather than blue and holding her golden apples in a basket rather than an ashwood box because that is the way I saw her this time.
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