It is almost a given when we meet him, that also historically, in an inner underlying sense, it becomes evident that Máderáhttje, the earth father in an external cultural sense has become the one who synthesizes all the fragmented and individual parts of him in the form of male figures who are connected to different parts of nature. When he is absent, his qualities instead appear in the forest, in the mountains, in streams, in the fields, in wet misty marshes, and in the landscape around us. When we don’t have nature around us, he almost becomes human. A psychic form of fatherhood that connects us to an environment in its cultural sense. But as soon as we are back in nature, his qualities take on other forms, that individually act on us independently of him. However, he is always there. Because he has an important function as the one who mediates this connection to us in a cultural sense. And the one that gives us access to different parts of the interpersonal nature we are a part of and its own living forms, regardless of how we then try to control them when they appear to us.