
Dear all!
On the night like this we can have some fun and maybe not that serious talk about mysticism, witches and ghosts!!
Lets talk:
Do you believe in spirits, ghosts, whitches? Have you seen or felt any?
Do you believe in curses and spells?
Are you afraid or worried of a "bad eye"? Do you believe in telepathy? Déjà vu.?
Do you believe in magic and metaphorical cards?
I will bring methaphorical cards - so lets play the game!
I set the max amount 15 people so we can have more close group with max fun!
Vilija coming person ths time - fully charged !!!
****
More about Valborg - Walpurgis Night
The ideas about ghosts, witches, and mysterious beings during Walpurgis Night come from older European folklore, especially from Germanic and Nordic traditions.
People believed that during the transition from winter to spring, the boundary between worlds became thinner—between:
light and darkness winter and summer
life and death the human world and the spirit world
Because of this, it was thought that:
witches flew through the night evil spirits and ghosts moved more freely
In German folklore, witches were said to gather on the Brocken mountain (in the Harz mountains) during “Walpurgis Night” to celebrate with the devil. This became one of the strongest legends connected to the night.
That is one reason why people lit huge bonfires:
🔥 to scare away witches
🔥 to protect animals and crops
🔥 to cleanse the old energy of winter
🔥 to invite fertility, warmth, and good fortune
So originally, the fire was not just symbolic—it was seen as real protection.
Today in Sweden, Valborg is mostly joyful and social—spring songs, bonfires, students, friends, and wine—while the witches and ghosts remain more as old folklore and stories.
In simple terms:
People once believed the fire kept darkness away—both outside and inside.
The goal of the Practical Philosophy Club is to create a community that discusses i
Stora Nygatan 31, 111 27 Stockholm
ItinéraireStora Nygatan 31, 111 27 Stockholm
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