Selkie

Tradition / Region: Scottish Mythology
Alternate Names: Selkie folk, Seal folk, Haaf-fish (large seals in folklore)
Category: Mermaid, Shapeshifter


The Myth

Along the coasts of the Northern Isles it is said that certain seals are not animals at all, but selkie folk—beings who live as seals in the sea and as humans when they shed their skins upon the shore. On quiet nights they come out of the water, remove their seal hides, and dance in human form under the moon.

Many tales tell of men who find one of these skins and hide it. When the selkie woman returns and cannot find her seal coat, she is trapped on land. The man forces her to become his wife, and though she lives with him and may bear his children, her heart is always with the sea. She spends her days gazing toward the waves, longing for the place she came from.

Years may pass this way, until one day she discovers the hidden skin—sometimes by chance, sometimes with the help of a child who unknowingly reveals its hiding place. The moment she touches it, she runs to the shore, puts it on, and slips back into the water. However much she loved her children, she does not return. Some say the children later see a great seal watching them from the sea, crying out softly as if in farewell.

There are also stories of male selkies. In human form they are said to be strikingly handsome and dangerously charming. They come ashore to seek out lonely women, especially those whose husbands are long at sea. A woman wishing to summon one might weep into the ocean, and the selkie would rise to her. From such unions children might be born, sometimes marked by webbing between their fingers or toes.

Other tales speak of seals that are killed by fishermen, only for their bodies to change into human form. Without their skins, these seal-people cannot return to their underwater homes. In one story, a stranded fisherman is carried safely back to shore by a grieving selkie in exchange for the return of a stolen skin, for without it the creature could never go back to the sea.

Thus the selkie folk are remembered as beings of two worlds—living in the deep, walking the shore in borrowed human shape, and forever drawn back to the water that is their true home.


Gallery


Sources

Wikipedia contributors. (n.d.). Selkie. In Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. Retrieved February 14, 2026, from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Selkie


Interpretive Lenses

Religious Readings
  • Christian Ascetic Deep Dive
Philosophical Readings
  • Nietzschean Deep Dive
Psychological Readings
  • Jungian Deep Dive
Esoteric Deep Dive
  • Hermetic Deep Dive
Political / Social Readings
  • Marxist Deep Dive
Other
  • How to Invite The Selkie

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