Axenthof Thiad
15 June 2026
52m 13s
Yggdrasil, the World Tree: Serpents, Stags, and Odin, Part 2
00:00
52:13

Axenthof Thiad
15 June 2026
52m 13s
00:00
52:13
What lives within Yggdrasil, the World Tree, and what do those beings reveal about the Norse vision of the cosmos?
In this conclusion to our two-part series on Yggdrasil and Norse cosmology, we return to the living tree at the center of the Norse mythic world. This time, we look more closely at the beings that move through, feed on, wound, and sustain the tree: the stags that eat its leaves, the serpents that gnaw at its roots, the eagle above, the squirrel Ratatosk, and the gods who move between worlds.
Rather than treating Yggdrasil as a static map of the nine worlds, we explore it as a living cosmic ecosystem, one where creation and destruction are inseparable, life feeds on life, death nourishes life, and nothing stands completely outside the whole.
Along the way, the conversation moves through world trees, sky pillars, sacred mountains, Axis Mundi symbolism, deer and serpent imagery, the fluid boundaries between gods, elves, dwarves, giants, and other mythic beings, and the strange possibility that Odin is tied not only to the tree, but also to the forces that sustain, damage, and transform it.
Ultimately, this episode asks what it means to be human inside a cosmos that is alive: a world that grows, decays, suffers, renews itself, and binds gods, ancestors, animals, death, and humanity into one vast process of being.