ASMR- RuneStone Reading For PeacefulmindASMR - ASMR.NET

ASMR- RuneStone Reading For PeacefulmindASMR

10 years ago
My fourth RuneStone reading for my good friend, PeacefulMindASMR. You can check her out at: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC0TIPxlCiCF1_lqsNtuxZgg And please tell her I sent you. She does great roleplay and soft spoken videos. Thank you for allowing me to do a reading on you and I hope she tells me if I was close or way off in my interpretations. If you would like me to do a reading for you, please let me know in the comments below. I really appreciate it. There are several historical runic inscriptions, found on everything from swords to stones to bronze pendants, which list the entire runic alphabet in order. One of the oldest and most complete of these is the Kylver stone, found in Gotland, Sweden and dating from the fifth century. Others are less complete, but show a remarkable continuity in the order in which the runes are listed. The only surviving written accounts of the actual names and meanings of the runes, however, were not recorded until the advent of the Christian era. Some of these manuscripts, which date from the 9th. century until well into 12th, are known as rune poems. These poems have a verse for each rune, each of which begins with the rune itself and its name. Some of these poems are more Pagan than others, particularly those from Iceland, where Christianity was not yet as widespread as it was in the Anglo-Saxon regions. The rune names themselves appear to have been passed down relatively intact, and although no manuscript exists listing the names of the older, Germanic runes, the Anglo-Saxon and Scandinavian rune poems agree to such an extent that their common origin can be deduced. These names are probably our best clue as to what the individual runes actually meant to the people that used them. Autonomous sensory meridian response (ASMR) is a neologism for a perceptual phenomenon characterized as a distinct, pleasurable tingling sensation in the head, scalp, back, or peripheral regions of the body in response to visual, auditory, tactile, olfactory, or cognitive stimuli. The nature and classification of the ASMR phenomenon is controversial, with a considerable cult following and strong anecdotal evidence to support the phenomenon but little or no scientific explanation or verified data.

Tags

tingles
runes
frisson
paranormal activity
divination
fortune telling
runestones
rune stones
casting
runic