As written on the SS Calendar,
“Hitler and Himmler began the tradition of making November the month to remember and honor our ancestors, loved ones and friends who have died. Life is sacred for us SS, and the lives of our ancestors are to be honored. Visiting graves, lighting candles, drinking a toast, and displaying any pictures of our friends and family who have died, are sacred and important rites during this month. Beloved pets can also be remembered.”
Remembering our ancestors and loved ones who have died helps to strengthen our bonds to our people, and reminds us that we are part of a whole. And this is what our people used to do, and why Hitler and Himmler re-started the tradition: because it helps us cope with the death of our loved ones.
Very often when a relative dies, we are then hit by how much that person meant to us. This happened to me recently after an elderly relative died. I knew he would die soon, he was past his life expectancy and had lived a long and full life, and had many health problems near the end. But it wasn’t until after he died that I realized how much he meant to me, and also how much he loved me. I definitely felt some remorse for not spending more time with him when I was able to. So, I sent him some positive energy, focused on my love for him, and told him I loved him.
Any day this November (and all Novembers) you can take some time to do a remembrance for your departed loved ones. Focus on one at a time, November has 30 days so there is no rush:
Light a candle if you’re at home, or visit their grave if this is an option, or go out into nature and find somewhere quiet to sit and think. Have pictures on display, if you have any. Go over your memories with that person, remember the good times and any personality trait or quality of that person that you liked or admired.
If you have bad memories such as fights or feuds or anything you regret, acknowledge those memories; this will help give you closure. And thinking over how those fights or feuds could have been resolved or handled better will increase your life experience with handling similar situations in the future.
You can then send positive energy to their soul. This is easy, just think of your appreciation and love for them, feel it build up, and Will the energy to them. You can ask your GD to help you.
You can “talk” to that person, which of course is for your own benefit, to sort things out in your mind and get closure. Say anything you feel needs to be said. Please not that only skilled and experienced people can have an actual conversation with the departed, and only if the soul has not incarnated yet. This is not like a séance, it’s remembering and honoring their memory and the life they lived.
If you never had a relationship with your grandparents for whatever reason, then you can do this remembrance for your ancestors further back. Maybe find out their names, where they were from, what they did; find out any stories about them, and so on. I recently found out about a great-grandmother who was alive when I was a child but I never knew her as she lived far away and died when I was still young. A relative recently told me some things about her personality, which made her feel more real to me.
A lot of members have written about problems with their parents, some even feeling like their parents didn’t want them or love them. If this is how you feel, know that no matter what, your ancestors certainly wanted you! Our ancestors fought through much of their life to ensure their survival and the survival of their children and descendants. If they met you right now, their hearts would be filled with love for you, and happiness that their bloodline lived on.
Hail Satan!