Beyond Máttaráhkká as the cultural aspect of psychic life in Sami, there is Gieddegeasgalgu, a female entity we encounter outside of populated areas. Just outside of them where things quiets down inside us and we can meet her on our own terms. There she is the one who aide us in our psychic reflection, gently supporting us in our difficulties and conflicts with ourselves. Which is the tension arising from the underlying pressure of the self-organizing principle that is everywhere around us, our attitude and the balance that nature in its embodiment of a wholeness holds within all that is. She is the one that open us up to Rádienáhkká, the interior of the world in its own right which she present us with. But when Gieddegeasgalgu is ignored or misunderstood, she is taken for a nonsensical chattering crone and a real torment where she is percieved as something constantly turning our own psychic life against us. What makes it even more difficult then is that if she is not recognised at all, her negative side becomes confused with people around us wether they identify themselves with her or not. But she is otherwise always wonderfully helpful to us as we move out of our primordial psychic state and into the embodied experience of a wholeness of which everything is a part.