Where two ancestral symbolic worlds meet — the Norse runes and the Maya glyphs — in one living practice.
Two voices, one calendar — runes that strike, glyphs that breathe, a long path between them.
Twenty-four runes. Twenty glyphs. One field of practice, met every day across a calendar that has not stopped turning since the winter solstice of 2012.
Long before this project, two great symbolic traditions held the imagination of their peoples. Here they are kept in conversation — neither absorbed into the other, both alive on their own terms.
The Norse and the Maya never met in the ancient world. But the symbolic intelligence each tradition carried — runes that strike like weather, glyphs that breathe through the calendar — can be set side by side without harm. The Uthark-Tzolkin work holds them in council: listening to one another, never speaking for one another.
This is not a fusion. It is a meeting place — a long table where two old voices speak, and a third one, quieter, listens.
Foundation, pairs, calendar, spreads, the day-keeper path, sacred stories, a thousand tips, and elixirs.
Beyond the public library and the open calendar — a quieter inner room where the work continues. Members enter a space that grows with their practice, and stays with it.