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Showing posts with label God. Show all posts
Showing posts with label God. Show all posts

Tuesday, 17 June 2014

Ten fun facts about the Summer Solstice or Litha

Ten fun facts about the Summer Solstice

The Summer Solstice is the longest day of the year and is  generally celebrated on the 21st June. So those are facts that you knew already! Below are a few facts that you may or may not know about this wonderful time of year, a celebration of the wonderful strength of our amazing sun.

The common name used amongst Pagans for the Summer Solstice is Litha. Other names for Litha include: Lithia, Alban Hefin(Gaelic for light of the shore), Sun Blessing, Gathering Day, Feill-Sheathain, Whit Sunday, Whitsuntide, Vestalia(Roman), The Feast of Epona(Ancient Gaulish) Thing-Tide, Sank Hans Aften(Denmak) and St. John's Day. If you have heard of any more I would love to hear from you!

The word Solstice comes from the Latin ‘solstitium’ meaning 'Sun stands still' because the apparent movement of the Sun's path north or south stops before changing direction.

Litha is often synonymous with Midsummer and is said to be associated with Faeries or the fey folk. Offerings of milk and honey were often left out for them.


Transformed by Ruth Calder Murphy

As well as faeries there were thought to be evil sprits around at this time of year therefore our ancesters wore garlands of herbs and flowerflowers to protect themselves. The most popular of these was St Johns wort which was known as ‘chase’devil’

Litha was known as Sankt Hans Aften in Denmark and was an official holiday until 1770.

Litha was celebrated with bonfires as a reflection of the sun. Folk would jump through the fires and it was said that the height that they jumped would be the height of their crops the following year.

The Chinese celebrate this time of year by honouring Li the Goddess of Light

The Druids celebrated the day as the wedding of heaven and earth. They believed this to be a very sacred day, seeing the wonderful long day as a blessing given to us by mother earth. Handfasting ceremonies became very popular during June and even today it remains popular to have a June wedding.

The full moon that occurs near the time of the Summer Solstice is often termed Mead moon, name for the drink made from honey, often served at handfasting ceremonies.

In Poland the night of merrymaking - also known as St. John’s Night or “Noc Świętojańska” - is still observed in some areas and some Polish communities in the United States

Friday, 22 November 2013

Free Yule Winter Solstice E-cards.

Yule Blessings to you all! I've had a busy morning creating some free Yule ecards for you. You are welcome to copy these and send to friends and family. Just right click on the image then you can save to your computer and either print out or send as an email to all those you hold dear. You may like to use the e-card design as a basis for your own Yule card, just cut round the image and then you can stick to plain card and decorate with lots of glitter! I'm sure all the family will enjoy this fabulous Winter Solstice activity!










The Pagan Wheel of the Year: Yule or the Winter Solstice

Yule traditions and history

Yule or the Winter Solstice takes place on 21st December. Because the cycle of the Earth around the Sun isn't exactly the same length as our calendar year, the dates can fall on the 20th or the 22nd of December, however it is generally the 21st that is considered the festival of Yule. Yule is the celebration of the longest night and shortest day. After this point our days will begin to get longer and the light return to the world.
 
Yule by Margaret Ellis
Yule is one of the fire festivals on the Wheel of the Year, a time of great warmth and celebration. This special time marks a turning point for our Earth: the days have reached their longest point and from now on until the Summer Solstice the light will return. The celebration of the Winter Solstice therefore focuses heavily on the themes of hope and renewal. As new life is slowly breathed into the world, so we can look at new starts within our own lives. Yule is also all about family, love and security. We give thanks for the family and friends that we have in our lives and spending time with them during the Yule holidays helps strengthen that bond.

The world Yule appears to have many possibilities for its origin that I have found. The word is said to have been derived from the word Jul, Jol or Juul in the Pagan Norse tradition which is a word meaning ‘Wheel’ The Feast of Juul was a festival observed in Scandinavia at the time of the December solstice. In countries like Scandinavia and Norway, people were forbidden to use wheels on the day of the Solstice as they waited for the return of the light.  This is because they believed that the Wheel of the Year stopped turning for a brief moment as one cycle ended and another began.  The Old Norse 'jol' is said to have been borrowed in Old French as 'olif', which gave way to the Modern French 'joli'; "pretty, nice," originally meaning "festive"

Yule is also know as Alban Arthan (Gaelic for ‘the light of Arthur) and also may have derived from the Anglo-Saxon Hweol also meaning Wheel. According to Webster's Dictionary, Yule originates from "geola" (Old English for "ice"), another name for the month during which it was celebrated. "Modronacht" (Mother's Night) is another name for the Winter Solstice.
 
Lights of Yule by Oshuna on DeviantArt
Yule is often celebrated as a 12 day celebration, it begins on "Mothers Night" (December 21st) and ends 12 days later on "Yule Night" (January 1st). This period of time is the origin for the Christian "12 Days of Christmas". ( can you recite all the verses for the song ‘On the twelth day of Chrismas my true love sent to me…..!). When ancient people used a lunar calendar, it left about 12 days left over each year.  So the twelve nights of Yule were considered to be not part of the old year, or part of the New Year. Thus as these twelve days were separate for the other days of the year they were considered to be especially important and sacred.

The twelve days are organized as follows:
Dec. 20 to Dec. 23. During the 1st 3 days - 
The virgin Maiden Goddess is honored as a guide for moving forward into the new year, to set you on a fulfilling and positive path.
Dec. 23 to Dec. 26. The 2nd set of 3 days - 
The Mother Goddess is honoured for fertility and all your projects ahead of you.

Dec. 26 to Dec 29. The 3rd set of 3 days - 
These 3 days are for the rebirth of the God, and honoring his guidance.

Dec. 29 to Jan. 1. - 
The last 3 days of Yule are a celebration of the Old Crone Goddess who is honoured for her wisdom and as the teacher in the lessons of life and spirit.  She is also honored as the waning year giving way to the new year. At the culmination of  these 12 days the new year was then celebrated. In Norse traditions Red Thor rides pas in his sled pulled by magical goats and brings presents for the children.

Yule is represented by the death of the Holly King and the birth of the Oak King, the God of the Waxing Year. Robert Graves suggests in his book The White Goddess that the two figures, the Holly King and the Oak King represent the two haves of the year. They constantly strive for superiority with the Holly King being victorious over the Oak King at midwinter and the Oak King winning in midsummer. The colours of Yule, red, white and green are said to have come from the Holly Tree, Mistletoe, and honoring the Goddess and the God. 

The Holly King from the Village Witch

The Goddess at Yule is Queen of the Darkness. She will give birth to the Child of Promise, the Sun God, who will bring light back to the world. The Sun God is often named Lugh in Celtic traditions. He is reborn in human form to rejoin his beloved wife Eriu. Eriu is described as a hag, who transfoms into a beautiful Goddess by the marriage and personifies the land of Ireland.

Many ancient monuments around the world have been found to be related to the Winter Solstice. Stonehenge is most famously believed to be in alignment with both the Winter and Summer sunrise and many people gather there each year to see the sunrise over the heel stone. The Newgrange burial mound in Ireland is another ancient monument  said to be aligned with the winter Solstice, the dawn light hitting the inner shrine. This Stone Age monument dates to around 3200 B.C., making it 500 years older than the Great Pyramid of Giza in Egypt and a thousand years older than England's Stonehenge.

Yule has long been celebrated as an important festival the world over. Of course in the Christian world it has been taken over by Christmas but as we will explore, many of the traditions we associate with Christma such as mistletoe and the Christmas tree stem from pagan practices in place a long time before Christianity.



Ancient traditions of Yule

Ancient Pagans’ lives revolved around harvest and livestock. Thus many traditions concentrated on giving thanks and ensuring that good luck would continue. The winter solstice was a time of honoring the sun and giving thanks for the bounty that sustains the family throughout the cold winter months.

Misltletoe. In the Pagan Norse tradition the Norse god Balder was son of Frigga, goddess of love and beauty. She loved her son to such a degree that she had the four elements (Fire, Water, Air, and Earth) promise that they would not harm her son. However the evil God Loki found that mistletoe could harm Balder and shot him with an arrow made from the plant. The white berries are said to be Frigga’s tears at the loss of her beloved Balder. Luckily Balder is restored to life, and Frigga is so grateful that she reverses the reputation of the mistletoe, making it a symbol of love and promising to bestow a kiss upon anyone who passes under it. Thus when we pass under it, the kiss we receive is a sacred kiss from the Mother Goddess herself! A kiss under the mistletoe was often considered to be a promise of marriage and commitment. 

Mistletoe was considered highly sacred by the Druids because, as a parasitic kind of vegetation, it never touched the earth (growing instead on oaks and other trees) and also like holly bore berries in the middle of winter. Druids gathered the leaves and berries from oaks trees with special sickles made of gold. They called mistletoe "all-heal" because they believed it had the power of protection against illness and bad events, and also because they believed mistletoe spread goodwill amongst people. Legend says that enemies meeting under the mistletoe cast their weapons aside, greeted each other amicably, and honored a temporary truce. Misteltoe was also considered as a symbol of fertility.

Yule Log. This was traditionally a large log that was selected on size because it had to burn throughout the twelve days of Yule. In ancient times   A tree was chosen on the eve of Yule, often an oak as they were considered sacred. The huge log was then pulled from the forest into the town or village. As many people as possible grabbed onto the ropes to help pull, because doing so was believed to bring good luck in the New Year. The log was lit with a scrap of burned log carefully preserved from the previous year, a practice that ensured the continuity of good fortune from year to year and from generation to generation. Various Pagan religions around the world used the ashes in various ways to ensure luck and protection throughout the coming year. The ashes were sprinkled under beds, at the threshold, around crops and trees. For the Vikings, the Yule log was an integral part of their celebration of the solstice, the julfest. On the log they would carve runes representing unwanted traits (such as ill fortune or poor honor) that they wanted the gods to take from them. It was thought that as the log burnt so these unwanted things were erased. You may want to have your own Yule log in your home this winter. Select a log that has fallen from a tree if possible.


In her book ‘ Wheel of the Year” Pauline Campanelli says  “The Yule Log is selected early in the year and set aside. It is traditionally of oak. Early in the season as you begin decorating the house with great sprays of fir and sprigs of holly, you might wish to adorn the Yule Log with traditional and symbolic greens as well. The bright green needles of fir represent the birth of the New Year that is about to begin. The dark needles of yew symbolize death, in this case the death of the waning year. Trailing vines of ivy represent the Goddess as the female element, as do bare branches of birch, whose wintry appearance actually promises the return of Spring. Sprigs of holly with bright red berries represent the Holly King of the dying year, while the oak log itself represents the Oak King of the new year.”

One common part of the Yule tradition was that no unnecessary work would take place in or around the household as long as the log burned. This encouraged people to get together and relax with family. This custom still continues today as we spend time with family and friends.


The ‘Christmas’ Tree. Again many parts of the world had different traditions concerning the Yule tree. Christmas trees are thought to have evolved from the rite of symbolically selecting and harvesting a "sacred tree," a practice found in many ancient cultures. Evergreens and firs were sacred to early peoples, including the ancient Greeks, Celts, and Germans. Evergreens remained green while other vegetation lost their leaves and appeared lifeless during the bitter winter cold, thus they were seen to be sacred trees. The German word for Christmas tree is not Kristenbaum, or Christmas tree, but Tannenbaum, or sacred tree. In Roman times, on the night before Saturnali Roman priests called "tree-bearers" cut one of the sacred pines, decorated it, and carried it into the temple. Many ancient cultures chose a special tree to be part of their celebrations, perhaps decorating the tress around their homes or bringing a tree into a special meeting point in the centre of their towns and villages. Decorating the Yule tree was seen as a way of ensuring the return of the summer abundance. Trees were often decorated with fruit, nuts, flowers and berries.
Try this Yule to bring in some greenery from outside into your home and decorate your tree with the fruits of the earth such as dried fruit and nuts.
The ancient Egyptians considered the palm tree to symbolize resurrection. They decorated their homes with its branches during the winter solstice. The ancient Pagan Romans decorated their Saturnalia trees with bits of metal and replicas of their god, Bacchus [a fertility god]. They also placed 12 candles on the tree in honor of their sun god".

Wreathes. The wreath circle symbolizes the wheel of the year and the completion of another cycle. Often wreathes are made with holly and ivy, the holly representative of the Goddess and ivy the God. Like evergreens holly was seen as magickal as it bore berries in the middle of the cold winter. Both holly and ivy were seen as sacred and as a protection against any negative forces. Perhaps you would like to make your own decorative wreath this year?
Christmas Wreath by Rodalvarez.com
Carol singing. Carol singing from door to door is said to come from the tradition of ‘Wassailing’. Wassailing or to "wassail," is a word derived from the Old Norse 'ves heil'. In Old English 'hál' meant "be in good health" or "be fortunate." By about the 1600s, the practice of taking a wassail bowl containing a type of wine or cider about the streets had taken root. Instead of consuming the drink at home, wassailers went house to house offering a warm drink and going Wassailing was born. The wassailing tradition also sometimes included drinking the cider or suitable wine as a toast to a tree or orchard in the hope that it would continue to flourish.

Christmas Pudding. The Christmas pudding of Victorian times evolved from the medieval dish of frumenty -- a spicy, wheat-based dessert

Yule around the world

Yule or Winter solstice celebrations were held by many cultures around the globe. Yule celbrations were practiced among such diverse groups as Native South Americans, Celts, Persians, Orientals, and Africans. The Winter Solstice was known as Sacaea to the Mesopotamians, the Festival of Kronos to the ancient Greeks, and as Saturnalia to the Romans.

In the Norse tradition, the Valkyrie looked for souls to bring to Valhalla during Yule. Norwegians stopped hunting and fishing for the twelve days of Yule in order to allow the weary world to rest and to hasten the arrival of the sun.

In ancient Rome the festival of Saturnali begins on December 17 and lasts for seven days. It was held to honour Saturn, the father of the gods and was characterized by the suspension of discipline and reversal of the usual order, disagreements were often forgotten about at this time of the year and people forgivien for any misdemeanors. Wealthy Romans at the time of Saturnali  would exchange lavish gifts. There would be feasting, and they would hand over the Freedman's hat (also known as a Liberty Cap or pileus) to their slaves and serve them dinner, although the slaves still had to cook!

In Russia it was customary to sprinkle grain on your doorway as a way of bringing luck and ensuring plentiful food over the coming months. In many Baltic lands today corn is still scattered in the doorway, also the ashes of the Yule log are scattered near fruit trees to increase their yield in the summer/autumn.

In Poland the ancient winter solstice festival involved people showing forgiveness and sharing food. This tradition still survives today and is known as ‘Gody’

In both France and Germany ashes from the Yule log were mixed with cows’ feed to help them to produce healthy carves in the springtime. French peasants also believed that if the ashes from the Yule Log were kept under the bed, they would protect the house against thunder and lightning.
 
Yule by Rowiel on DeviantArt
In the northwestern corner of Pakistan, a festival called Chaomos, takes place among the Kalasha or Kalash Kafir people. It lasts for at least seven days, including the day of the December solstice. Chaomos involves ritual baths as part of a purification process, as well as singing and chanting, a torchlight procession, dancing, bonfires and festive eating.

In Cusco, Peru there is a major celebration for the Winter Solstice which begins in the town and proceeds to the local ampitheatre.

It is apparent therefore as we look at cultures around the world that Yule has always been an important festival. The themes of re-birth, returning of the light, love and family are ones that are echoed across many parts of our world. It is a time for protecting ourselves and the lives of those we hold dear, a time to ensure harmony amongst all people. How do you celebrate Yule? Do you have any particular traditions that happen every year with your friends and family?

#yule

Sources and Further Information:
I have found my information from various sites all over the internet. Also the following books are excellent sources for wheel of the year information:

Wheel of the Year by Pauline Campanelli and
Pagan in the City: Cassandra Eason
MacKillop, J, Dictionary of Celtic Mythology, Oxford University Press, Oxford, 1998









Wednesday, 11 September 2013

The Spiritual Meanings Behind Colours


The Spiritual Meanings Behind Colours

Different colours are very evocative to different people and so it has been throughout the ages. Celtic people, Native Americans and other earth based spiritualities assigned different colours for the different elements. Commonly air is seen as yellow, fire is red, earth is green and water is blue. Traditionally green is seen as associated with earth based or Pagan spiritualities. Diana Paxson and her branch of the Asatru associate colours with deities: Odhinn is black and blue; Thor red; Freya and Freyr green and gold, or sometimes brown.

In some wiccan/pagan paths, colour is combined into the crafting of spells these may be for various reasons: 
for health, peace, love, and personal growth. Colour conveys mood very quickly and can help with healing on a very deep level.

The ancient Egyptians, Chinese, and Indians believed in chromotherapy, or healing with colors. In chromotherapy, red is believed to stimulate physical and mental energies, yellow to stimulate the nerves, orange to stimulate the solar plexus and revitalize the lungs, blue to soothe and heal organic disorders such as colds, hay fever, and liver problems, and indigo to counteract skin problems and fevers. Premature babies with jaundice are cured by a chemical reaction triggered by exposure to blue light for several days.

Colour is very evocative of mood. Different colours can completely change the mood that we are in. Much research has gone into this and is behind a lot of the colour choices that go into our decorating decisions for our own homes.

Colours are also very important as related to the Hindu philosophy of Chakras. I won’t go into a big explanation of the chakras here as I’m sure a lot of you already have that knowledge and that is a whole other post!


Below is a brief summary of the spiritual qualities associated with each colour.

White.
White is perfect for connecting with elemental spirits and angels, your higher self and spiritual guides. It is good for purification and healing. White also corresponds to the Maiden form of the Triple Goddess.

Yellow.
Yellow represents the element of air. Symbolizes vitality, progress, change and communication, willpower, confidence and warmth. Light a yellow candle if you are having relationship problems or need a boost in confidence, it will bring joy and happiness to your life. Yellow corresponds with the Solar plexus chakra.
Chakras from Pranagyoga.com

Gold.
Gold is the symbol of all sun-deities and masculine energy. Excellent for promoting self-confidence, success in business and financial matters, overcoming bad habits. Carry a gold coin to attract success.

Orange.
Associated with deities of good luck and good fortune. Represents charm, kindness, success abundance, prosperity, sexual desire, procreation, change, joy, tolerance. Sacral Chakra. Orange is wonderful for raising your energies, try wearing an orange top or scarf.

Red
Red represents the element of fire in many pagan religions. It is associated with deities of love, passion, sexuality and war. Red brings courage, will-power, determination, speed, assertiveness, aggression, masculinity, self-preservation, grounding and material stability. Red is the color of the Mother Aspect of the Triple Goddess. The ruby, a precious gemstone with a brilliant red color, was worn in China to promote long life. Represents the Root chakra. Wear red to promote self confidence and assertiveness, even if it is a small item of jewellery.

Pink.
Love goddesses, softness and tenderness, romance, caring, nurturing, emotional healing. While red is associated with fiery love and passion, pink corresponds to the gentler aspects of these emotions. Put pink rose quartz by your bed to re-kindle romance.

Green
Green is the element of earth. All earth based spiritualities. Corresponds with Nature and fertility deities, Mother goddesses. Represents: nature, fertility, growth, rejuvenation, recovery, healing, unconditional love, compassion, forgiveness. Represented by the heart chakra. Dirty or muddy green corresponds to envy, hate, and sickness (a "sickly green", so to speak) Green is especially useful in colour magic spells for healing and for wealth drawing. Green has great healing power. It can soothe pain. People who work in green environments have fewer stomachaches. Suicides dropped 34% when London's Blackfriar Bridge was painted green. Green was a sacred color to the Egyptians representing the hope and joy of Spring.

 Turquoise
Turquoise brings intellectual and intuitive insights, inventions and originality, renewal.
Blue
Blue is the element of water. Deities of the sea. Peace and tranquility, calmness, truth, wisdom, justice, prophetic dreams, protection during sleep, astral projection, communication, speech, creative writing. Representative of the throat chakra.

Violet/Purple
Elemental spirits and angels. Psychic abilities, divination. Crown chakra. Deepens personal spiritual awareness, as well as working with  divine power. Use fluorite to aid in deepening psychic abilities.
 
Amethyst rose quartz sun catcher http://www.astarte-moon.co.uk/shop/

Indigo
Indigo corresponds to the Brow (or Pineal, or Third Eye) Chakra. Justice, wisdom, inspiration, intuition, spirituality, psychic powers. It can also be used in colour magic to help reduce phobias and stress.

Brown
Stability, grounding, conservation, protection of household, family and pets, healing animals, finding lost objects.

Grey
Neutralizing negative influences, putting a halt to negative action.

Silver
Moon-goddesses, female energy, cycles, rebirth, reincarnation, healing of hormonal imbalances, emotional stability. It is very useful in divination and meditation

Black
Deities of the Underworld. Repel and banish evil and negativity, protection, deep meditation. Black is the color of the Crone aspect of the Triple Goddess.

You can use these colours in a variety of ways. You can wear the colour of your choice, if for example you wish to particularly connect with nature and be grounded then brown and green clothing would be a perfect combination. Wear yellow or orange to work if you need a self confidence boost.

For spellwork and blessings, coloured candles, altar cloths, talismans and writing in particular colours are very effective. Birthday candles make a very inexpensive way of building up your coloured candle cache or coloured t-lights which are abundant during the summer bar-b-q season.
Red Spell Candle http://www.astarte-moon.co.uk/shop/


When meditating imagining yourself surrounded by a particular colour is very effective. For example for protection you can imagine yourself within a beautiful bubble and then colour that bubble blue for peace and protection whenever you need it. Meditating in front of a coloured candle is a way of concentrating the colour.

What colour resonates with you? Which colours to you shy away from? Try and examine why that is? Is there some imbalance that you need to look at within your life? For me I never wore red. I always justified it in that it clashed with my red hair but I eventually realized that I was imbalanced and needed to allow my masculine side a little more space. So now I do wear red, only a very little, a pair of red flip flops are a favourite and a few red bangles but it does give me a bit more self confidence, I’m a very moon gazy  girl and I do have to learn that the golden energy is there too!

Blessings of colour and sparkles to you, alison xxx






Sunday, 11 August 2013

Guided Goddess meditation for Mabon, the Autumn equinox.


This is a guided meditation for you to follow during the time of Mabon on the wheel of the year. It doesn't need to be at Mabon it's just that have I have made it relevant to that point on the wheel of the year. However you could use this Goddess mediation anytime you feel it would be beneficial. You could even take it and adapt it or even write your own meditation. I have given this one a Pagan feel trying to make it feel as though you were perhaps someone waking up on the day of Mabon back in the time of our ancestors and attending a traditional equinox celebration. I hope you enjoy!


Today is the day of Mabon, the second of the three celebrations of the harvest on the Pagan wheel of the year. It is a day to celebrate the wondrous bounty that we have been blessed with. Mabon, is the autumn equinox, it is a time when day and night are in perfect balance.  It is time therefore for balancing all aspects of your life and for reconciling any opposites. You feel totally in balance today, all aspects of your health and happiness are being resolved and feel calm.

We give thanks to our Mother Goddess Gaia for all she provides for us and ask her to bless us that the fertility of our land and projects may continue. 

Mabon is a day of much celebration and you awake today with a flutter of excitement in your heart looking forward to the wonderful day you have ahead of you.

Today you are going to see the sun rise before joining the celebration and you thrill in anticipation of feeling nature’s powerful energy course through your body.

You dress quickly and, carrying your wicker basket of corn and other offerings, set off down the lane to the meadow. Your basket is filled with the  fruits and vegetables from your garden and a lovely Mabon loaf you made yesterday. It is just pre-dawn and the fields are shrouded in a fine purple mist. This wonderful ethereal blanket feels cool on your skin.  As you walk you can hear the birds singing their early morning chorus and the grass tickles your feet and soaks your ankles as you brush past it. A rabbit scampers and hides, camouflaged among the browns and greens.

You pass a field that was planted last spring and remember the beautiful time you had there at Beltane, dancing and singing around the maypole. That field is now full with beautiful corn, ripe and dancing in the soft dawn breeze. The cornstalks are tall, almost as tall as you and truly look like Goddesses dancing to their own private melody. Their scent is sweet and is truly the smell of late summer. You feel a shiver of anticipation for the wonderful ceremony of thanks that will follow later on in the day to give thanks for the wonderful bountiful crop.

As you walk and experience all these wonders of nature you begin to think about all that you are grateful for and silently give thanks to our Mother Goddess, Gaia for all that she provides for us. You give thanks for your family and friends and all that is good in your life.

You continue walking along the lane with it’s beautiful hedgerows brimming with life, lost in thought and immersed in the beauty surrounding you.

Eventually the lane opens up to a wonderful wide open field, the sun is nearing the horizon now. Others have gathered here now in silent anticipation of this wondrous event. You smile at the gathered crowcrowd and then take your place, putting your basket of offerings at your feet. You then turn to face the east, palms outstretched. You feel your feet firmly grounded as though they have grown roots right down into the earth itself. Your palms are outstretched ready to reach towards the rays of the magickal sun and your crown chakra is open and receiving the wonderful celestial energy.

The anticipation of the sun’s rising is nothing compared to the actual event and the whole crowd gives out a silent gasp of wonder as the golden red ball slowly begins to rise. First just a tiny sliver but then very quickly a completely round and absolutely perfect sphere. It truly is a magickal moment. You are at one with nature. Your feet are truly grounded and your whole body is filled with a pure golden light from our magickal sun. You are at one with the God and the Goddess. Listen to any messages you may receive at this time.

You spend some time at one with the God and Goddess, soaking in the powerful sun energy as it rises high in the sky. You then turn to enjoy the rest of the day and join in the happy celebrations. You feel happy and relaxed, you are grateful for all that you have in your life and you are looking forward to an Autumn filled with love and hope. 

Mabon blessings to you, Alison xxx