Showing posts with label holidays. Show all posts
Showing posts with label holidays. Show all posts

Friday, 26 January 2018

Imbolc



The sabbat of Imbolc falls on the 2nd of February, although like every pagan holiday it has a few days le-way either side.
 Imbolc also goes by the names Candlemas, and the Festival of Brigid.

It is a fire festival, the quickening of the year, the time when the earth is pregnant with the promise of summer fruitfulness and the harvest to come.
 The Goddess returns as the Maiden, and the God as a vigorous young man who is ready to begin his pursuit of the Maiden.
It is a time for us to let go of the old, and await the new that is coming.

Brigid (sometimes spelt Brighid, Bride, or Brigit) was also honoured and celebrated at this time. She was a much loved pagan Goddess. She is a triple Goddess but at Imbolc is depicted in her Maiden form, bringing fertility to the land and it's people - making her extra special to medicine women, and midwives of old. A Goddess of fire and the hearth, with special connection to healing and poetry.
    She is often celebrated at this time with the making of "a brigid cross' or 'a bridey doll' - you can find out how to make both or either of these things by following the following link, which has even more amazing Imbolc ideas.
        
Goddess and Greenman - Imbolc/Candlemas










I'm going to share with you one way in which I celebrate Imbolc. 

To do this you will need 3 candles, a needle, and a wooden log that you have hand picked for yourself.

Focusing on your candles first, meditate and find three words that you wish to embody in the coming year. Three wishes, if you will, personal things. Personality, mind, and soul words. They can be either internal or external, in which case you will draw those things to you. My words last year were; Courage, Creative, Loved.
Next take your needle and carve these words into your candles...inscribing them with your thoughts and intentions.


Lighting each candle in turn, let wax drip and pool onto your log, to create a standing base for your candle. Press the base of the candle into the hardening wax. Make sure it is stuck tight.

Below is an image of mine, so you can better imagine how yours may look, although there are no guidelines here, follow your gut. Place your completed log onto your altar or on the hearth to your fireplace; and in the evenings light the candles and take a second to focus on your chosen words. Manifest them into being.




Happy Imbolc!
                                                                        Merry Part.


Wednesday, 29 November 2017

Yule

Second to Samhain, Yule is my favourite Sabbat.
The Winter Solstice is nearly upon us, falling on the 21st of December, this Sabbat is here as a time of celebration to remind us that there is life returning after the darkness of winter.
Yule marks the shortest day of the year, and the longest night; the opposite side of the wheel to the Summer Solstice.


The word Yule, and the general festivities, relate back to Germanic paganism, with the first recorded use of the name Yuletide being found in 1475. In it's earliest form the term yule, or yuletide, was significant to a 12 day festival in the month of December, or sometimes just a referral term for the month itself.

As with most of Witch tradition, the true origins and rites are rather jumbled - but the general belief is that the days of Yule, are a celebratory festival during the Winter festival, rejoicing in the rebirth of the SUN, and/or the Great Horned God.

In simple terms, you are thanking the gods/goddess that you have survived a long hard winter, and are joyful that the sun is being reborn. The longest night is behind you, and their is hope.

The Oak King rules from midwinter to midsummer - the period of increasing light.
At this time of year, the Oak King defeats his brother, the Holly King, and regains control of the seasons.

For December Witches and pagans take evergreen trees indoors, to encourage woodland spirits to reside within, and stay warm and safe.
The evergreen tree was sacred to the Celts, because it did not die! Its boughs became a symbol of the eternal divine. Your gods and nature have not abandoned you, when all the greenery around you cannot penetrate the hard earth. Bringing full trees into your house is a more recent tradition, but it held the same basic priniciple. This tree would live the winter, and so would you, and when the sun returned to the earth, you would replant the tree back to nature. 
This is one example of many where Christianity twisted and distorted the pagan holidays to suit themselves - thus was born the Christmas tree. When Christianity was coming into power, they tried to place their own holidays at the time of pagan rites, that people already knew and recognised. This made the transition easier for people at this time of change.

Mistletoe is another ancient tradition. - Druids revered the oak tree, and the mistletoe that grew from it. During the winter when all other signs of nature had vanished, the green twigs of mistletoe and their white berries, were seen as a sign of eternal fertility.
They travelled far, and climbed high for this mistletoe to clear couples of infertility.
Often hung over their doorways, over the years we have developed the tradition of kissing beneath it.
So...don't kiss too passionately, now you know the supposed effects ;)


 Yule Logs - Originally not a scrummy, chocolate cake at all!
Can you believe?!
The Yule log was just that, a log. Harvested with your own hands, and placed in the fireplace. The log would be decorated, for the season, and then put in the fire as the main kindling, at winters end. The fire here, representing the newborn sun.
Nowadays, what with fireplaces being hard to come by. Many witches, use their yule log as a base for three candles. The candles still represent the coming sun, it's a lot safer. and you can reuse the same log year and year again.


Holly And IvyA sprig of holly near the door is said to invite nature sprites. It is a deterant for evil beings, and a welcome to positive entities.
It is also a symbol of remembrance for the historic battle of the Holly and the Ivy; the one mentioned above, where the Oak King regains power over the seasons.

So...Christmas is probably more witchy than you thought.
Here are some correspondences for magical workings over the sabbat;

Colours
Gold
Green
Red
White

Animals
Stag
Reindeer
Bears
Deers
Owls
Snow Geese

Food
Gingerbread
Cinnamon
Mulled Wine
Spiced Meats

Herbs & Plants
Holly
Ivy
Poinsettias
Pine
Mistlestoe

Magic Working
Yule Log
World Peace Spells
Healing Work
Love Spells
Wreath Making
Kitchen Magic


Merry Yuletide!
Blessed Be!