

To the Gates of
Asgard!

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Welcome
to Angenga*
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Divination - Magic - Soul Power
"Angenga" means "the wanderer", and I like to wander around in the otherworld, the place where our souls travel at night. There are many different ideas about the otherworld, for example the nine worlds of Nordic mythology.
Asgard is the world where the gods, the shining ancestors, the Norns and good spirits live. As a shamanic practitioner, I (and anyone who wants to learn) can travel there and work shamanically for you. Or I can bring my allies into our world and let them give you their advice, transfer their power and work their magic.​​
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Perhaps not everyone experiences "supernatural" things in their life, such as premonitions that come true or a sudden feeling of the presence of a loved one who has died, but most people probably do, including you. Some react to this with rejection or ridicule, others with awe or shyness, some with the secret wish that it might be true. Strengthening the connection to the other world through our perception can fill us with new strength, new ideas, courage and confidence, and also with healing. What nature spirits keep "whispering" to me is that it does them good when we believe in their existence. My great wish is to strengthen this belief and trust in the healing powers of shamanic work.
In the animistic worldview, everything is animated, flooded with fate and sound, whether it is a grain of sand, a star, an organ or a thought. Nothing is meaningless. Everything has a soul.
Here you can view and book various offers. I also recommend that you write to me with your request, because then, after a diagnostic trip - which is free in this case - I can tell you whether and what treatment the spirits recommend.
If you have any other questions, please write to me at: info@angenga.com.​​​
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Rune Oracle
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Spell
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Healing
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Look around on the info page
or send me an email to info@angenga.com



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Witch - shamanic practitioner - Völva
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*Angenga is an old English and mysterious term. It means something like "the lonely wanderer". This was the name given to women who travelled around and offered their magical, prophetic and healing skills. An "Angenga" was a healer, witch, shaman or seer.
For me, the "Angenga" is on the move between worlds. She travels in shamanic flight and comes back with new knowledge, help and concrete applications.
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The word Witch comes from "Hagezussa", which roughly means "the old woman who sits in the hedge", so between here and there, meaning the wilderness, the other world, the other side. In the "old hag" as a term for an old (nasty) woman, this old word still resonates in the British Isles. "Hag" is outdated and is still used here and there, for example in the word "Rosenhag", a thorny, inaccessible rose hedge, but also in "behaglich" for cozy, safe, protected.
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The term​ Shaman comes from the language of the Tungus, now Evenks, a Siberian tribe. It originally traveled there from Mesopotamia. According to the Romanian religious scholar Mircea Eliade in his book "Shamanism and Archaic Ecstasy Technique", it describes a "master of ecstasy" and shamanism at its core as a religious "ecstasy technique".
The name of the Nordic god Odin, the shaman god, is translated as: "The spirit, the poetry, the ecstasy".
"Ecstasy" is the meditation-like state in which we are neither awake nor asleep, but are highly concentrated, completely here, in the now, and completely there, on the other side.
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A mythicalVölva is the narrator of the "Völuspa", the prophecy ("spa") of the seer in the Icelandic EDDA, ​​a collection of songs from the 13th century and the richest known source of Germanic religion and mythology. Translated, she is the "staff bearer", from the Icelandic "völr" for "staff". Such staffs were found as grave goods in Völva graves.