I don't need a plethora of water or seasonal deities to comfort me thank you very much. Can you imagine what it means to confront one's aloneness without a safety blanket? I guess not. I'm not belittling you or vour tradition in any way, indeed it sounds to have solid morality, but don't imagine for a moment that your notions of 'freedom' have anything in common with mine.
I don't really like to be labelled with any 'ist' or 'ism', but existentialism is a useful contrivance if people ask. People might assume I'm atheist, agnostic or whatever, but in truth I just accept the mystery at the centre of my life and live it as best I can. Surprisingly, I could even accept notions of an afterlife and indeed I have had some very odd 'psychic' events in my life both as a child and an adult as I expect many people have. These are perplexing, but unlike Carl Jung, I'm too sensible to go down some unlit road chasing them into insanity as he did.
Matthew, the one overriding sense I gained from these psychic events was the absolute sense of 'aloneness' in the sense that a deity might shoulder. If there is a 'top' deity, pagan or otherwise, we can be sure that She is lonelier than any of us.