I am not understanding, Loka. What is so “out there” about continuing in a pregnancy?
And what constitutes something being “out there”? How does one define it?
And! Why does something have to be not “out there” in order for it to be commanded by the gods?
IOW: why should something that the gods command be something that you have no problem with?
What I mean is that it seems so “out of character” for a deity (especially a Norse deity) to impose their will on someone like that (without a very good reason). Ideally, I should think, a god/dess would know a person well enough to know that they would be extremely resistant to following such an order. That is not to say that there are not times when the gods ask us to do things that won’t make us uncomfortable in some way.
To put this in perspective, I asked a group of women about the situation you described, and their responses were twofold:
a) I wouldn’t unless the god/dess had a VERY good reason to request such a thing.
b) I would take it as a sign that the goddess in question (Frigga in this case) was saying that I was financially and emotionally ready to care for a child
For myself, as someone who doesn’t want children, I would see such a pregnancy as a burden (especially since I wouldn’t go seeking it in the first place) and such an order would probably destroy (or at least, severely strain) my relationship with a particular deity. Contrast that with a person who wants children, but perhaps the pregnancy hasn’t come at the best time in their life. I think that person would be far more likely to not see the same order in such a harsh light as I would. There are probably other requests that some would balk at and I would jump at the chance to do.
Again, how does one determine that it’s a mini-issue or a maco-issue?
Things I would call “mini-issues” would be simple things like praying for a parking space (which seems to be a Protestant thing), things that impact an individual or an individual family. Macro-issues are things like the depletion of edible fish around the world, keeping cosmic order, “big” issues. However, that doesn’t mean that Frigga won’t respond to prayers from a couple hoping to conceive a child, she just has other things that are slightly higher on her list of priorities.
And if you did get a message from a deity that was a mini-issue, why wouldn’t you be compelled to follow it?
Oh, people get mini-issues from the gods all the time! A goddess like Frigga or Holda might nudge a person to do some house-cleaning (or one might find as they start working with these goddesses that they get the urge to clean house). However, mini-issues aren’t just given out by the gods though, sometimes one’s ancestors do the nudging (especially when the issue concerns an individual person). Keep in mind that I come from a tradition that has more of a focus on ancestors than most, and there are traditions that don’t put such an emphasis on ancestors. (The Romans, for instance, have gods devoted to such mundane things as door hinges, so the gods in that pantheon wouldn’t necessarily be as concerned with Big Things as my own gods might be.)
And as they were meant to entertain and not moralize, how is it that you know anything about these deities? That is, I don’t know anything really about Cinderella and what she would command to me, except for stories that are entertaining. Thus, I certainly wouldn’t assert that she would never command me to continue in my pregnancy based on entertaining stories about her.
Stories can entertain AND teach someone something at the same time. Even Jesus told stories to teach lessons. As for Cinderella, I don’t think she was ever worshiped as a goddess, that doesn’t mean that you can’t still take something away from her story (of which there are thousands of variations) but myths weren’t strictly meant as entertainment, they were used to teach listeners about the world they lived in (as they understood it). We also have some examples of prayers that were said (although not many) and names of places that were named for a deity. I don’t think Cinderella has very many places that were named after her (stuff at Disney World doesn’t count).