Not every god comes into a life the same way.
Some arrive through study. Some through ritual. Some through lineage, longing, or the slow pull of old names heard often enough that they begin to sound like home.
And some, if I am being honest, arrive because life has already carved out a place for them before you ever knew how to name what was standing there.
That has been part of this journey for me.
Brigid was the obvious one. She was almost staring me in the face from the beginning. Hearth-fire. Inspiration. craft. The useful flame. The fire that is not there for spectacle, but for warmth, for light, for making something, for keeping something alive. Looking back, I do not know how I could have missed her for as long as I did. She was written all through the grain of things I was already drawn to: flame, devotion, words, work, tending, the sense that the sacred is not only found in grand moments, but in what is kept going day after day.
Brigid was never just aesthetic to me. She was practical holiness. The fire that asks to be fed. The fire that gives back when honored. The fire that can warm, forge, illuminate, and heal, but only if somebody bothers to tend it. Maybe that is why she fit so quickly. So much of my life has been built around keeping things going when they would have been easier to let die.
That lands even harder now than it once did.
If you follow either Standing on the Ledge or Unplugged Pagan, then you already know this has not exactly been a gentle season of life. The last while has had more than its share of collapse, pressure, rebuilding, fatigue, waiting, and trying to find footing again after things went sideways. A lot of what Standing on the Ledge has become is exactly that: learning how to keep moving when the world stops being soft, learning how to pick things up, learning how not to mistake exhaustion for the end of the road.
And that is where Skadi entered the picture.
Skadi did not come to me as comfort. She came cold and alone.
She came like hard air in the lungs. Like winter silence. Like the part of the landscape that does not care whether I am having a good week. She came with the feeling of surviving in a world that can be bitter, sharp, isolating, and utterly indifferent. But more than that, she came with the reminder that surviving is not the same thing as surrendering. There is a kind of strength that only gets forged when life stops coddling you. There is a kind of clarity that only comes when the warm illusions die off and what remains is stone, frost, breath, and the next step.
That is Skadi to me.
Not cruelty. Not despair. Not emptiness.
Cold truth. Endurance. Distance enough to see clearly. The refusal to collapse just because the weather has turned mean.
For years now, I have known that feeling intimately. The sense of standing in the bitterness of the world and still having to remain upright. Still having to work. Still having to endure. Still having to find some way not only to survive the season, but to keep some part of myself from going dead inside it.
That is why Skadi fit.
Not because she made life gentler, but because she made certain things make sense.
She feels like the patron of the part of me that has learned to keep walking in bad weather. The part that has had to become familiar with isolation without turning isolation into identity. The part that has had to say, more than once, this is hard, this is unfair, this is colder than I wanted, and I am still not done.
And then there is Ratatoskr.
Ratatoskr did not arrive with the same weight or severity. He just… fit.
There are gods and powers that make immediate emotional sense, and then there are ones that click into place because they match the rhythm of your mind, your spirit, or the odd shape of your road. Ratatoskr felt like that.
Messenger in the branches. Runner between levels. Movement between above and below. Signal, chatter, warning, communication, mischief, meaning. For somebody like me, who lives so much in words, in thought, in interpretation, in trying to make sense of both the sacred and the wreckage, Ratatoskr feels right at home.
There is a lesson in that.
The mind is a messenger, but it is not always a wise one. Not every thought is revelation. Not every passing fear deserves a throne. Not every piece of noise deserves to be carried from one end of the inner world to the other as though it were holy truth. Ratatoskr reminds me that messages matter, but discernment matters too. Communication can connect worlds, but it can also stir chaos if left unchecked.
That is part of why he fits so well beside both Brigid and Skadi.
Brigid says: tend what is worth keeping alive.
Skadi says: hold your ground in the cold.
Ratatoskr says: pay attention to what is actually being carried.
Together, that is a theology I understand in my bones.
Because that has been the road, has it not?
Tend the fire.
Stand through the winter.
Learn the difference between signal and noise.
Come back to what matters.
Keep moving between the worlds you inhabit without losing yourself in either one.
That is as true on the spiritual side of life as it is on the practical one. It is true in devotion. It is true in collapse. It is true in rebuilding. It is true in ordinary Tuesday mornings when the cards are on the table, the weather is doing whatever nonsense it feels like doing, and life still expects you to put one foot in front of the other.
I think that is one of the biggest things this path has been teaching me.
The gods are not only found in the clean, beautiful, polished parts of spiritual life.
Sometimes they are found in the rubble.
Sometimes they are found in the waiting room, in the legal fog, in the exhaustion after work, in the hard silence of a house where you are the only one carrying the weight, in the ritual you nearly abandoned and then returned to because something in you knew it still mattered.
Brigid in the flame that must be relit.
Skadi in the part of you that survives the freezing ground.
Ratatoskr in the movement between despair and meaning, between noise and message, between what is below and what still calls from above.
And, always nearby, the Fir.
Evergreen through hard weather. Not untouched by the season, but not conquered by it either. The Fir has become one of the truest mirrors I know for this kind of path. Stay green. Stay rooted. Stay yourself, even when everything around you looks stripped bare.
So no, I do not think these gods came to me at random.
Brigid was obvious because the fire was always going to matter.
Skadi came when life had become cold enough for me to understand her.
Ratatoskr fit because I have lived long enough between thought, spirit, words, and worlds to know that messenger energy is not a side note. It is part of the structure.
This has been a journey, yes.
But not one of collecting gods like symbols on a shelf.
It has been a journey of recognition.
Of seeing which names were already written into the weather of my life.
Of realizing that some powers do not simply call to us.
They reveal that they have been walking beside us for a long time.
Maybe that is the truest thing I can say right now.
I did not go looking for abstractions.
I found presences that matched the road.
The flame.
The cold mountain air.
The restless messenger in the branches.
And somewhere in the middle of all of it, myself, still walking, still tending, still listening, still here.