>>1877479Vargposter here, my point was to enlighten people to the fact that paganism is not really "muh Odin and Thor riding in the sky, let me sacrifice a goat real quick"--maybe in some distant past it was so, but today the most important thing is how we interpret the lessons of these surviving texts, fairy tales, festivals etc. That is why I made my comment about reddit heathens who are taking the wrong approach, a totally faux-reconstructionist one (and this is where the other guy agrees with me, without recognising it).
By saying that I am "in [the realm of my ancestors] and of it", it's basically a different phrasing of the traditionalist mantra "know thyself, be thyself". I, and you, should recognise the pagan origins of all our traditions, and seek the lessons from them. Therefore I also believe that the lessons and rituals of "paganism" (not reconstruction, but the fairy tales, mythical figures, festivals etc. that are STILL ALIVE, having never died, that I have been mentioning constantly) are more valuable to the European man than the lessons and rituals of the various Abrahamic religions, which have had a devastating influence on our subcontinent.